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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, JULY 4, 1898. 8 « VOLUNTEERS MOWED DOWN | DULY PRAISED BY HUNDREDS Gallant Attack of the Crack! Seventy-First New York at San Juan. Advanced in the Face of a Galling | Fire and Routed the Enemy From Thei ispatch Boat Gold Port Antonio, Jamaica, July this di G om have to contend out to reap the full fruits the great victory »body of General )een more potent v York Regi- New Yorkers R h Riders as as has come to troops. There was rywhere yesterday at no point did the more desperate re- nding the heights against this all- boys of the the center attacking | subjected to a galling | Great | but they h and Six had | king column su found ‘ t Thus hemmed in | t had to face a ter- | They were mowed | h being | € ork by the ', thus puzzling to locate the | forward. | st the enemy with | ept all befo from their | Juan soon afte session of our troop: giments which as wounded. > then Cap- com- | r Position. mand of the regiment, but he fell with | a wound before the fighting ended for the day. The heavy losses among the officers of the Twenty-fourth Infant also took place during the engagement. Lieutenant Colonel Liscum, who was in command, and Captain Burton were lightly wounded. Lieutenant Ducat, whom I mentioned | in a p ious dispatch as being among the killed, led the attack on San Juan and was the first man to be Killed. t fires burning on all sides of Morro ¢ le are thought to be si from General Garcia for an advance upon the city from the northw else a demonstration by the C celebrating the victory of the American forces, at that time entering Santiago from the east. Hot fighting in the vicinity of Sibo- | ney was the forerunner of a melan- choly spectacle as train after train of ambulances were callefl to bring in the wounded. GALLANTRY IS Comment of the London Papers on Battles. |“NET CAST TOO WIDELY” THE AMERICANS SHOULD HAVE FIRST TAKEN HAVANA. Now That the Spaniards Have “Vin- dicated Their Honor” the Times Says They Should Seek Terms. LONDON, July 3. — The Dalily Graphic, in its editorial, observes: “The signal gallantry and devotion displayed by both Spaniards and Amer- | fcans sends a thrill of pride through- out the Anglo-Saxon world. The story of the splendid manner in which the Rough Riders carried San Juan is instinet with the indomitable spirit of Balaklava.” The Daily Graphic says, however, that “the blunder lies deeper than any mere temporary miscalculation,” add- ing that “the Americans cast their net too widely, as it might have been better to have left Santiago and Manila alone and to have concentrated their efforts upon Havana. The Times this morning, discussing the fighting at El Caney, says: “Both sides have shown courage of a very high order, and it is hard to say whether the splendid dash and bravery of the American advance in the teeth of a galling fire, or the stubborn ten- acity of the Spanish defense is the more admirable. Both sides have learned to appreciate the splendid military qualities of their adversaries. It is a pity that enemies who have shown themselves such worthy foemen in the field cannot see their way to save blood- shed by coming immediately to an ar- rangement on a peaceful basis. “The Spaniards have vindicated The hospital arrangements ' their honor, and if they were wise, they | Epectal Dispatch to The Call. WASHINGTON, July 3.—The follow- | Ing dispatch from General Shafter was | received at the War Department to- | night: PLAYA DEL ESTE, July 3—Ad- | Jutant General United States, Wash- {ington: Camp near Santiago, July 3.— The following is a partial list of officers | killed: COLONEL CHARLES A. WYCK- OFF, Twenty-second Infantry. | LIEUTENANT COLONEL JOHN M. | HAMILTON, Ninth Cavalry. | LIEUTENANT W. H. SMITH, Tenth | Cavalry. MAJOR ALBERT G. FORSE, First | cavalry. | CAPTAIN WILLIAM O'NEILL, | First Volunteer Cavalry. | LIEUTENANT MICHIE, Seventh | Infantry, son of Professor Michie. L1sUTENANT JULES G. ORD, | Sixth Infantry. LIEUTENANT WILLIAM E.SHIPP, Tenth Cavalry. Following is a partial list of officers wounded: LIEUTENANT COLONEL JOHN H. | PATTERSON, Twenty-second In- ‘ fantry. LIEUTENANT COLONEL HENRY CARROLL, commanding First Brigade, Cavalry Division. | MAJOR HENRY W. | Third Cavalry. WESSELLS, SOME OF THE - VICTIMS OF THE CONFLICT Shafter Reports a List of Officers Killed or Wounded. In All About One Thousand of the Brave American Troops Have Fallen. if not quite, a thousand, about fifteen per cent of which were deaths. To-day’s casualties of the American side were much lower, because our troops had been well entrenched the night before. The following is the latest list of the casualties in the battle before Santiago, so far as obtainable: Killed: CAPTAIN MORRISON, Company K, Sixteenth Infantry. SECOND LIEUTENANT BENCH- LEY, Company E, Sixth Infantry. JOHN BUTLER, private, Company E, Sixth Volunteers. HENRY ANDERSON, sergeant, Com- pany A, First Cavalry. SECOND LIEUTENANT S/ETER, Company A, Thirteenth Infantry. CAPTAIN W. E. BRUM, Tenth In- fantry. LIEUTENANT McCORKLE, ty-fifth Infantry. ‘WASS, Battery A, Second Ar- Twen- tillery. McCOY, Battery A, Second Ar- tillery. WAGNER, Batter: E, Second Artillery. A. H. UNDERWOOD, Battery A, Sec- ond Artillery. JAMES HOLLON, Battery A, Second | Artillery. LIEUTENANT W. E. STRIPP, Tenth | Cavalry, brigade quartermaster on THREE YANKEES AGAINST NINE SPANIARDS. | The lively engagement that took place in Manzanillo harbor between the auxiliary gunboats Hornet and Hist and the tug Wampatuck and a Spanish squadron of nine vessels, resulting in the discomfiture of the latter. are satisfactory, the tents stretching out for a distance of two miles to the | westward. The wounded were made comfortable by the army and Red who was com-| Cross nurses. Several trainloads of h Regiment, was | Wounded regulars are stalled in the the engagement, | Mountains, being unable to advance led him in command, | over the muddy roads Magnificent courage is being display- ed by wounded. | would now prove their common sense by | offering terms to their opponents, terms | which if they were reasonable, would | almost certainly be discussed in a gen- erous spirit.” ceali g Major Dominguez Killed. MADRID, July 3.—A dispatch to EI Imparcial from Havana says that Major Dominguez was killed in the fighting at El Caney. TWENTY THOUSAND MEN TO BE SENT FROM CHICKAMAUGA | CHICKAMAUGA MILITARY PARK, , July 3.—Late. this afternoon | r was it from the ‘War Depar t to General Brooke, directing him | te about 20,000 men for i | parture to the South,: and at e was great ement and | the camp. - General Brooke de- | ce public the order, but it | d that he has’ selected the on of ‘the First Corps and es of the Second Division to he moved at once,. The First Division is composed of the following regiments: | —Fir:t Keritucky, Third | h-Illinois. | de—~Fourth’ Ohio, Third | h Penr i 1de — Si Wisconsin, eenth Pennsy Third Ke Duvision: 3rigade—Thirty-first Mlchman.‘ ed and Sixtieth Indiana, | ade Sixth . Ohio, One | Fifty-eighth . Indiana, rginia. | 1ents of ‘the. 1*ifst Division | ccted -this evening. and are | to move:. They have been kept thie ordet to prepare for ths | weel. ago, getting rid o of equipment and ‘chothing, little time to.| p and dep cipation of this order ‘the rail- ° ‘been accumulating cars at for a week. ‘‘the Western ad is crowded with’ tated-to-night that f twenty cars eady to trans- regiments will em- 2ssville and Ringgold to in- sportation, as was done wh ulars were moved South, and’ it is thought the railroad authori- can-. move the 20,000 men in two Tt'is understood at this hour that ents will move to-morrow CRREROE® ol Firé. Ahoard a Spanish Steamer. CADIZ, July 3.—The Spanish steamer ‘Alfongo XTIII,.at this port from Porto Rico, reports that a fire broke out in her hold and caused damage before the flames were subdued by flooding the hold. The Alfonso XIII is the ves- sel which has figured prominently in oerrying supplies to the Pornto Ricans. LINARES' WOUND SO SERIOUS AS TO RETIRE HIM Geperal Vara del Rey Now in Command of the Spanish Forces at Santiago. Special Cable to The Call and the New York Herald. Copyrighted, 1898, by James Gordon Benmnett. ® ® dispatch boat Golden Rod to Port Antonio, ® received positive information that General ® ® B to his command. 9 his troops to the plateau oppesite ahd Hamilton Fish Jr. and a half General Linar his men and encouraging them to advance of our troops. against that place, and he was one From the moment cf our attack ing himself to our fire. his own actions he was struck by a fiercely to keep back the Americans soldiers. [oJoJoJoJoJojoXo] {OJOJOIOXOJOJOXOJOYOJOIOROJOXOJOJOROKC WITH THE ARMY AT SAN JUAN, CUBA, July 1, by Herald-Call Spanish forces abour Santiago, was so seriously wounded during the fighting to-day that he had to retire. CGeneral Linares had thrown himself into the fore front of the battle from the minute the American forces under the command of Major Gen- eral Shafter effected a landing in Cuba. the landing of General Shafter's troops. ambuscade at La Quasina, in which the Rough Riders were caught remained at'that point, taking personal charge of He was at the head of his men in the several skirmishes that took place while the American troops thelr way foot by foot from Juragua to Sevilla. quarters in Sevilla when General Shafter's men made cans drove the Spaniards back toward Santiago. morning General Linares was much in evidence. He went to the front to take personal command of his men. the Spanish general rode up and down the directing their defense of the city’s intrenchments and freely expos- ‘While General Linares was thus inspiring his men to bravery by was surrounded immediately, and while the Spaniards were fighting point-of temporary safety in the city by members of his staff. General Vara del Rey at once assumed command of the Spanish 9@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Jamaica, July 3.—I have Linares, commander of the General Vara del Rey succeeded General Linares went with Altares, and frcm ithere witnessed He it was who planned the dozen others killed. make a desperate resistance to the were fighting He had his head- an assault of the last to retire when the Ameri- on the enemy’s outer defenses this Mounted on a spirited horse lines ‘before his trocps, bullet and fell from his horse. He General Linares was carried to a {olofololololofolofolofolofolololololofolofolofotolofololololclotolololo) CAPTAIN AUGUSTUS P. BLOCK- SOM, Sixth Cavalry. CAPTAIN JOHN B. Cavalry. CAPTAIN GEORGE K. HUNTER, Third Cavalry. CAPTAIN GEORGE A. DODD, Third | Cavalry. CAPTAIN CHARLES W. TAYLOR, Ninth Cavalry. LIEUTENANT FRANK R. McCOY, Tenth Cavalry. KERN, Sixth WINTHROFP LIEUTENANT s. Y. . .D, Adjutant, Ninth Cavalry. LIEUTENANT HASKELL, First Volunteer Cavalry. LIEUTENANT A. Cavalry. LIEUTENANT OREN B. MEYER, Third Cavalry. LIEUTENANT ARTHUR THAYER, Third Cavalry. LIEUTENANT WALTER SHORT, Sixth Cavalry. CAPTAIN JOHN BRODMAN, Tenth Infantry. SHAFTER, Major General. LOSSES SUSTAINED IN THE DIVISION OF GENERAL LAWTON Copyrightgd, 153, by the Assoclated Press. HEADQUARTERS OF GENERAL SHAFTER, Friday, July 1, evening— By the Associated Press dispatch boat Cynthia, via Port Antonio, Saturday, and Kingsten, Sunday, July 3, 2:30 a, m.—Although it is impossible at this time to give a list of the dead or wounded, it is safe to say that the loss in General Lawton’s division will be 150 killed or wounded. Among the officers wounded are: COLONEL CARPENTER, command- ing the Seventh Infantry. LIEUTENANT COLONEL. PAT- TERSON, commanding the Twenty- second Infantry, will probably reccver. LIEUTENANT BESARO, Adjutant of the Seventh Infantry, wounded twice. MAJOR CORLISS of the Seventh In- fantry. CAPTAIN JACKSON Seventh Infantry, sho breast. LIEUTENANT CHARLES FIELD, Second Massachusetts, through the forehead. General Ludlow’s horse was killed under him. s In General Lawton’s division the Sec- ond Massachusetts had, up to the middle of the day, suffered the heaviest loss, although other regiments were more actively engaged during the after- noon. E A conservative estimate by army men —not official—is that our casualties during yesterday’s fighting were nearly. L. MILLS, First C. f Company G, in the left E. shot General Young’s ~taff. MAJOR F. A. G. FORCE, First Cav- alry. ‘Wounded: CAPTAIN M. JEFFREY, of the Vol- unteers, shot through the hip. ADJUTANT G. L. MILLS, adjutant general Second Brigade, cavalry divi- sion, shot through the head. MASON MITCHELL, Troop B, Rough Riders, right shoulder injured. SERGEANT SAMUEL DEVON, arm fractured. TROOPER LONG, shot through the leg. X LIEUTENANT JOSEPH ARM- STRONG, cavalry. LIEUTENANT PURDY, Sixth In- fantry, through the thigh. MAJOR MONT, Tenth Cavalry, the groin. LIEUTENANT SEABORN, Eighth Infantry. LIEUTENANT WOOD, Ni alry, in the mouth. E. J. CARROLL, Second Massachu- setts. B. BLACKMORE, Second Massachu- setts. — REVERE, Second Massachusetts. — SHORT, Second Massachusetts. FRED JUNSKE, Seventh Infantry, in head. . SERGEANT BITE, Battery A, Sec- ond Artillery. SERGEANT CORNFIELD, Battery A, Second Artillery. CORPORAL KEANE, Battery A, Second Artillery. — BOOR, Battery A, Second Artil- lery. LIEUTENANT HORACE. — DEVEREAUX, Troop K, Rough Riders, through arm. JACOB PAUSTER, Troop H, Third Cavalry, in head. F. R. McDONALD, Rough Riders, in the head. — WAGNER, Company F, Thirteenth Infantry, in the leg. CHARLES JOHNS, Company B, Fourth Infantry, hurt by bursting of a shell. A. DORCUTT, Company H, Sixteenth Infantry, in the arm. JACOB KUHLEN, Second Infantry, shot twice on right of chest and left leg. E. H. ERSTEIN, Second Infantry. E. F. THRO, in the throat. in nth Cav- JOHN BONNER, Third Infantry, in right side. CAPTAIN GEORGE K. HUNTER, Third Cavalry, in right leg. MAJOR H. W. VOSSELLS, com- For Infants and Children, G T S o slgRazure every O AL - manding Third Cavalry, in the neck. CAPTAIN GEORGE A. DODD, Third Cavalry, in the forehead. FIRST LIEUTENANT O. D. MEY- ER, Third Cavalry, in the hip and groin. FIRST LIEUTENANT ARTHUR THAYER, Third Cavalry, in right hip. SECOND LIEUTENANT J. T. CON- RAD, Third Cavalry, in the ankle. CAPTAIN KAVANAUGH, Thir- teenth Infantry, in left hip. CAPTAIN FARSEY, Sixth Infantry, in the leg. CAPTAIN J. J. BURTON, Twenty- fourth Infantry, in left leg. LIEUTENANT W. C. SHORT, Sixth Cavalry, in right arm and shoulder. LIEUTENANT COLONEL HENRY CARROLL, commanding First Brigade, cavalry division, shot through both hips. COLONEL C. A. WINTOFF, severe- 1y wounded, probably fatally. CAPTAIN J. B. KERR, Sixth Caval- ry, in right arm. FIRST LIEUTENANT WOOD, Ninth Cavalry, in mouth . C. AUGUSTIS BARTON, Troop E, Sixth Cavalry, in right hand. John H. BUSS, Troop E, Sixth Cav- alry, in right hand. CORPORAL WINHALL, Troop E, Sixth Cavalry, in right shoulder and back. WILLIAM J. TURNER, E, Tenth Infantry, shot through arm. WILLIAM A. HUSSTER, Company E, Seventy-fourth Indiana Infantry, in breast. i BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Cavalry, in side and wrist. CAPTAIN GEORGE WALKER, Company E, Sixth Infantry, in right leg. PETER BERGNER, Company E, Fourth Infantry, in chest. SECOND LIEUTENANT T. A. ROBERTS, Tenth Cavalry, through the stomach. FIRST LIEUTENANT M. H. BAR- NUM, adjutant Tenth Cavalry, in left side. W. T. CONROY, Ninth Cavalry, struck by a shell. CAPTAIN RODMAN, Twentieth In- fantry, neck and shoulder. LIEUTENANT COLONEL KELL, Seventeenth Infantry. CAPTAIN BLOXHAM, Sixth Caval- ry, in the leg. CAPTAIN BRERETON, Twenty- fourth Infantry, slightly wounded in left leg. LIEUTENANT COLONEL WORTH. CAPTAIN McFARLANE, Eighteenth Infantry, slightly in the leg. CAPTAIN DODGE, Twenty-fourth Infantry. LIEUTENANT TURMAN, Sixth In- fantry, fatally in spine. LIEUTENANT ROBERTSON, Sixth Infantry, below heart, in left leg, right leg 1.actured by third bullet. GEORGE B. COOPER, Company G, Twenty-fifth Infantry, hand shot off by a shell. CHRISTOPHER P. JORDAN, Sec- ond Infantry, in the wrist. J. O. S. WHITE, Troop E, Tenth Cavalry, in tlLe left hand. HENRY McCORMICK, Troop E, Tenth Infantry, in right foot and left leg. SERGEANT JOHN L. TAYLOR, Troop E, Tenth Cavalry, in right foot. CHARLES ANDREW, Company K, Seventy-first New York, in the right elbow. THOMAS G. HARDY, Troop G, Tenth Cavalry, in the right arm and side. W. WASHINGTON, Company E, Seventy-fourth Infantry, through the right arm. FRANK RIDGELEY, Troop Tenth Cavalry, in the left leg. WILEY HIPPSUR, Troop E, Tenth Cavalry, through the foot. ALEXANDER HIGGINS, Company G, Twenty-fourth Infantry, in the thigh. T. H. DOUGLASS, Troop C, First Cavalry, in the left arm. * SERGEANT PATRICK WELCH, Company G, Ninth Infantry, in the right leg. GIDEON DALEY, Troop B, First Cavalry, in the right thigh. CORPORAL DENNIS GUINEZ, Company A, Sixth Infantry, in the left knee. CHARLES MOLKE, Troop ¥, Tenth Cavalry, in left arm and in left leg. C. L. POPE, Company A, Twenty- fourth Infantry, in thigh: NATHANIEL ACHE, Company H, Thirteenth Infantry, in the right thigh. JAMES TURNEY, Sixth Infantry, in the right leg. alsc hurt by shell. GLELJRGE P. DOUGLASS, Company G, Tenth Infantry, run over by cannon. CLARENCE B. LEEDY, Company A, Sixteenth Infantry, in the back. J. BLEDOVE, Company B, Sixth In- fantry, in the right leg. HAS- C, Company | | Tenth T. G. GUMP, Company E, Sixth In- fantry, in the foot. F. BALL, Company H, Thirteenth In- fantry, in the ankle. JOHN J. MILLER, Company H, Eighth Infantry, in the wrist. H. R. O'MALLOY, Company B, Sixth Infantry, in the right hand. JAMES McCLURE, Company A, Sixth Infantry, in the right leg. WILLIAM ARMS, Company A, Sixth Infantry, in the left leg. CORPORAL FRANCIS CHRISTIAN, Company C, Sixth Infantry, in the right leg twice. R. H. RHEMAN, Company E. Eighth Infantry, in the right shoulder. JAMES GANDS, Troop C, Ninth Cav- alry, in the foot. CHARLES JAMES, Company I, First Cavalry, in the right leg. J. R. BURNS, Company C, Sixth In- fantry, in the right knee. WILLARD MEYERS, Company D. in left ankle. JOSEPH SULLIVAN, Company A, Sixth Infantry, left foot. EDGAR NICHOLS, Company M, Sixth Infantry, in right hip. WILLIAM TAPHORN, Company A, Sixth Infantry, in the left foot. JOHN PARAM, Company B, Six- teenth Infantry. through shoulder. CHARLES TENNANT, Company E, | Sixth Infantry, through the hip. FRANK H. JEFORD, Company B, | Sixteenth Infantry, in head. LAWRENCE DIVEN, Company B, | Thirteenth Infantry, in right arm. MOUNT MINING, Company E, Sixth Infantry, in the right hand. JAMES MINVEN, Company E, Sixth Infantry, in left hip. CHARLES W. ENTEMAN, Company D, Sixteenth Infantry, in right knee. R. L. McMILLAN, Troop D, Rough Riders, in left shoulder. HUSTED W. ROBINS Company. E, Twenty-fourth Infantry, in the left ip. ALFRED THOMPSON, Company A, Twenty-fourth Infantry, hurt by burst- ing of a shell. W. T. WEAVER, Company A, Twen- tieth Infantry, in the leg. T. JOHN MULLER, Troop B, Rough Riders, in face and shoulder. CORPORAL JOHN MASON, Troop H, Ninth Cavalry, through the back. CHARLES DAHLSBORZ, Company A, Twenty-first Infantry, in the right knee. HENRY MAURER, Company A, Sixteenth Infantry, in the right leg twice. ED JUERGUESON, Troop I, First Cavalry, through the left hip. FREDERICK RIPBERGER, Com- pany H, Sixth Infantry, in the left arm. Twentieth Infantry, in the right foot. WILLIAM PAYNE, Troop E, Tenth Cavalry, in the left foot. Thirteenth Infantry, in the right ankle. SMITH JOHNSON, Troop A, Tenth Cavalry, in the left arm. FRED J. WILLIAMS, Company F, Twenty-fourth Infantry, in the left leg. GEORGE B. HAYES, Company..:C, Sixteenth Infantry, in the stomach. JOSEPH A. GOLDEN, Troop K, Third Cavalry, in the right shoulder. BURLEY H. ARGAN, Troop I, Third : Cavalry, in the left leg. N. G. GUNTER. Troop I, Tenth Cav- . alry, in the left arm. < 0. B. MEYER. Third Cavalry, flesh’ wound in the hip. 3 CAPTAIN CHARLES W. Ninth Caval in the neck. COLONEL H.. LISEUM, Twent: fourth Infantry, in the shoulder.. JAMES CR..ELMAN, correspond in the shoulder. 3 PRIVATE JAMES O'BRIEN, Eighth Infantry, seriously hurt by bursting" shell. 2 SERGEANT DYALS, Tenth Cavalry, in head. ISHAM TAYLOR, Company F, right arm. ) LINTON W.ATSONS, Company: Twentieth Infantry, in the head. f DONALD C. McCLELLAND, Coms pany E, Seventy-first New York, in right knee. 2 MILTON ALLSHEZ, Troop H, Cavalry, in'right arm. JAMES GRUNES, Twenty-fourth Infantry, in arm. TAYLOR, ent, - Troop - : D; i Th! Company - : the " left To Cruise Near Cadiz. GIBRALTAR, July 3.—It was: serted here that the cruisers Lepal . 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