4 THJi.SU.NDAl- Oii.fctiO;NlA, PO!MLAMJ, 3IAKC11 13, iiUO. Serjeant MSB BY RICHARD SPILLANE. NTO the history of every, nation there Is -woven the etory of some one sol dier of low rank -whose valor and . -whose patriotism have, thrilled the souls of men. France, with Its glorious La tour, undoubtedly leads the world. Ahun '..dred poets have sung and as many biog ; raphers have written of his deeds, but -. time does not wither nor oft telling- stale the beauty of the tale. Centuries hence Its appeal will be as strong as It Is to :' day for It has for Its essence three ele ments heroism, simplicity and love of country without which life would be bar ? ren and governments could not endure. A generous, kindly spirit was Latour fl'Auvergne. The blood of one of tha greatest nobles of France flowed In his veins, but never did he show envy or malice because the bar sinister robbed him of title or empty honors. Of a war rior race, he proved himself the warrior , supreme. He was nearly 60 years old when France entered upon that period or blood and struggle almost without parallel In the history of the -world. To him country meant more than King. In the army of the Alps, in the days of tha Directory, he fought as grenadier. Col umns might bo shattered, Generals might make mistakes, but Latour and his gren tdlers never wore known to fail. With Word or bayonet he led his men. No task was too desperate, no charge ' too hazardous for him. Soon the army rang with stories of his bravery. He was the first to enter Chambery, sword in hand. , In battle he was all that was gallant. In victory he was all that was magnani .. mous, tender and humane. He lived a life of Spartan simplicity. No soldier could go hungry while he had a crust of broad: no wounded enemy uncovered while he had a blankot he could call his own. Promotion was offered to him a Limes, out every time he declined. He wonld be a captain nothing more. Dead on trie Field of Honor. His example was an inspiration to the loldiers of France. Men craved to serve under the banner of Latour. The grena dier developed Into the flower of the army. When he was cent to the Pyr enees he commanded 8000 men, but still he wore the uniform of a captain. So great a dread did the enemy have of the bayonets of Latour"s Grenadiers that the corps got the name of the "infernal column." - From the army of the Pyrenees Napo leon sent him to the army of the Rhine, and. unable to get him to accept regular promotion, gave to him the title of -The First Grenadier of France." A wonderful leader he proved himself time and time again, but at Oberhausen, In Bavaria, on June 27. 1800. in the hour of victory, he was killed. Never to simple soldier was shown greater honor than to Latour dAuvergne. The whole army of France mourned for him three days, and every soldier set aside one day's pay to buy a golden urn to hold his noble heart. His Bword was sent to the Church of the In valides to be treasured as one of the priceless glories of France, and then by order of Napoleon, who knew how to do things well, there was Inaugurated a cus tom that continued to the close of the empire.. At the muster roll of his regi ment each morning the name of Latour was called and the oldest . sergeant stepped forward and answered: "Mort au champ d'honneur" (Dead on the field of honor). America had Its prototype of Latour 1 Auvergne in William Jasper. The same chivalrous spirit, the same rugged simplicity, the same magnificent brav ery that Latour displayed characterized Sergeant Jasper. What does it matter if the American soldier appeared upon a smaller stage and before a smaller -fcudienco? What does It matter if he neither could read nor write? Valor patriotism and modesty are qualities of the heart. What does it matter that the place of his- birth is in doubt and that his grave Is unmarked? His fame Is none the less secure. Out of obscurity William Jasper lift ed himself on the 28th of June in that vivid year of 1776. A British fleet was attacking Charleston, S. C. It was the first big engagement of theRevolution ary War. To dispute the passage o the British ships the Americans had constructed a fort on Sullivan Island. The fort was a crude affair of palmetto logs and sand bags, and only the front of it was completed. On Long Island, just below Sullivan Island, the British had landed a large force of troops, commanded by Sir Henry Clinton, which were to cross to Sullivan Island and attack the fort on the side and rear. To oppose Clinton 400 or 500 Americans, mostly picked riflemen, un der Colonel Thompson and General Muhlenberg, were stationed at the east end of Sullivan Island. If Clinton's force effected a landing the fort was doomed. If the British chips passed the fort and took a posi tion off the western end of Sullivan Island the ships would be out of danger and the garrison would be helpless, for the fort was open on that side. Only Moultrie Knew. General Charles Lee, who had been sent by Washington to command the troops defending the southern seaboard, thought it folly to expose the men in the fort to the fire of the British ships. He believed the cannon balls of the "warships would make 6hort work of the rude defenses and he feared the whole garrison would be slaughtered or captured if the ships passed the fort. Colonel William Moultrie, who was in charge of the fort, did not have Lee's military experience, but he knew more about the resisting force of sand and palmetto, and he also had no end of faith in the fighting qualities of the men with him. The ships of the British were of the best of the time. They threw a weight of metal suffi cient to crumble any ordinary fort. The troops under Clinton were British regu lars classed as the best fighting men of the world. . The American fort, hast ily put up, only half finished and de fended by men whose experience in warfare was confined principally to Indian warfare, seemed but a scant shield for the city. There was some hope that the marksmen under Thomp son and Muhlenberg might hold Clin ton's men back for a time, but this was a hope only. On balcony, on roof and in church steeple the people of Charleston gath ered to witness so much of the contest as they could. Above Fort Sullivan they could see the new South Carolina flag of Independence. It had a blue body and in an upper corner was a crescent. The Stars and Stripes had not come into service at that time. So long as the people could see the flag on Fort Sullivan Charleston was safe. With beating hearts the watchers saw the stately warships form in line of battle and move upon the fort. The Active, Bristol, Experiment and- Sole bay led. Then came the Actaeon. Sphinx. Syren, Thunderbomb, Ranger and Friendship. They saw the flag ship of the commodore. Sir Peter Par ker, come abreast of the fort, and then It seemed In an instant as if fort and ships were turned into volcanos. Flashes and roars, thunderous crashes and great volumes of smoke followed each other at Intervals of only a few seconds. Soon the smoke obscured most of the view and they could see nly- tha FlaiBof ln.rtxnndeiic and th. topmasts of the warships. How the tide or battle went they could not telh but they watched the flag. Hour after hour they heard the thunder of the guns. So long as It lasted the "city was safe, but they relied more on the flag above the fort. Once in a while a cloud of smoke would hide it from view, but not for long. Higher and higher rose the spirits of the watchers as the hours passed. Suddenly at the height of their joy the flag went down. From housetop and belfry went forth the cry that the fort had fallen. It was taken up and car ried throughout the city. A sort of panic possessed many of- the people. The thing they feared and expected had happened and now that it had come to pass they were at a loss what to do. Some made hasty preparations to leave the city. Others ran about aimlessly. To those who were alarmed the fact that the thunder of the guns continued increased their fright at first, but then perplexed them. Why was the cannonading kept up If the fort had surrendered? Were the British so merciless as to continue the slaughter? Then there came the sug gestion that maybe tha fort had not surrendered; maybe the fight still was on. While they were In doubt there came first from one steeple and then another a cheer that told its own story, a cheer that brought joy to the hearts of many who had been In -despair. The Flag of Independence was floating once more above the fort. It was not until late that night, for the battle lasted until nearly 9 o'clock, that they heard the story of how the flagstaff, which had been the mast of a schooner, had been struck by a can non ball and riven. The flag itself had fallen outside the fort. Working one of the guns along with Marion and his men was Sergeant Jasper. He had been one of the first to volunteer when. there was a call to arms. He was only 26. As the flag fell he looked dlsmaped. He had been one of those to raise it that morning. Then the look of dis may faded and one of resolution took its place. The Are of the British was incessant. A hail of shot was passing over striking the fort. " That mattered little to Jasper. He leaped on the para pet and walked nearly its whole length before he reached the spot where the flag had fallen. Picking up the standard he fastened It to a sponge staff and then set the staff firmly upon a bastion. The flag wav ing once more, he jumped within the fort. That was all. Walking into the jaws of "death to save the flag was not the whole serv ice Jasper rendered. Above all other things, his service was in typifying at that moment the spirit of the Ameri can people. Such an act at such a time and under such conditions means more than any ordinary deed of valor. The Vanquished Fleet. It was a wonderful story the people of Charleston got piecemeal that night. The ,Britlsh fleet that had advanced so proudly to blow the crude fort off the face of the earth had retired shattered and beaten. The Commodore was wounded, Captain Morris of the British was mortally wounded., 40 -dead- and 70 wounded, was the story of the flagship. With the Experiment the tale was as bad, almost, for 23 dead and 76 wound ed was the tally. With the other ves sels the casualties were light compare atively, but all suffered. Three that tried to get past the fort to sweep it from the west grounded on a shoal, and one of the three, the ' Actaeon, was burned by the British to save it from capture. And General Clinton, with Lord Corn wallis and his troops, fared almost as badly. The sharpshooters -t the east ern end of tne island had waited pa tiently until the flatbpats bearing the British regulars got well within range and then opened fire. 'Twas useless to attempt a landing under such a fusil lade. Several times the British at tempted it. Each time they were driven back. Finding It was but a -useless slaughter, Clinton gave It up. Sad indeed was the procession that left Charleston harbor the day after the battle. Of the fleet scarcely a ves sel but was injured. Of the army which was to overrun the Southern colonies, it had been defeated, if not disgraced, by volunteers. And of Moultrie's men only 10 were killed and 22 wounded. More than a thousand shot were picked up about the fort. Hundreds of shells that came Into the fort fell into a moat in the middle of the works, the water of which extinguished the fuses be fore the fire reached the powder. The palmetto logs had proved admirable for defense. The cannon balis sank into their soft, spongy pulp and re mained there. They sent out no splin ters, either. Like Latour. As the vanquished flett sailed away and all Charleston rejoiced, poor Jas per and some others among the de fenders found it more difficult to face a grateful people than a hostile foe. To Jasper the Governor of the State, John Rutledge, afterward Chief Jus tice of the United States, presented his handsome sword and thanked him in the name of his. country. A Lieuten ant's commission, too, was offered to him. Neither sword nor commission would he take. "I am but a Sergeant." he declared. "I am not fit to keep of ficers' company." Sergeant he was and sergeant he would remain. No argument could alter his de termination. To keep him busy and give ample opportunity to him to exercise his keen wits a roving commission was given to him. As there was more activity in Georgia than about Charleston, he went there, and many are the exploits with which he Is credited by tradition. As hu mane as be was brave, it is said he never injured an enemy unnecessarily, but a story of distress or of wrong -would stir him to great emotion. One of the best stories about his doings while an Inde pendent rover Is connected with a tale of distress. The British had a camp at Eb enezer, Ga.. and had taken a prisoner named Jones there preparatory to send ing him to 6avannah for trial. Jones had been a loyalist and then had turned Con tinental, a capital crime In the eyes of the British. The night of the capture Jones' wife sent word to Jasper, begging him to save her husband's life. When the message reached Jasper he had only one companion. Sergeant Newton. He knew Jones and such other prisoners as were sent to Savannah would be under heavy guard, but he and Newton started at once. Savannah was In possession of the British. A few miles out from the city on the road from Ebenezer there was a spring at which Jasper knew the guard and the prisoners would halt. For this point Jasper and Newton made all speed. Once there they hid In the bushes. As they expected, the guard and the prisoners stopped to slake their thirst and rest. Eight men made up the guard. Two of the eight remained with the prisoners while the other six stacked their muskets against a tree and proceeded to drink. Waiting for what they considered the op portune moment, Jasper and Newton crept out from the thicket, seized two of the muskets and shot the two guards who had been left with the prisoners. Then they overawed the other six, who were at the spring. The prisoners, who were In irons, soon were freed by Jasper, the guns of the former guards were put Into their hands, and from the spring near Savannah the men who had been the prisoners mardhed their former guards to the American camp at Jurysville. It reads like a romance, ' but It is not The Bpring Is known today as Jasper's Spring. Savannah. Up and down through Georgia ho roamed, battling with loyalist or Briton, fighting the good fight as best he knew, until what seemed to all to be the great occasion arose when in October, 1779, French and Americans combined to wrest Savannah from the British. For two years the city had been In possession of the enemy, and now a French fleet, act ing in conjunction with General Lincoln's force, had the British bottled up. The ar rival of the French fleet had been a sur prise to the- British, who were 111 pre pared for serious attack. Had Count d'Estaing, who commanded the French, more skill In warfare and less In letter writing, he could have forced, the British to surrender. But he wasted most valu able time. Ho wrote pompous and grand iloquent manifestoes .to General Prevost, which the Briti-sh General read carefully, digested at his leisure and did not an swer until the last minute, and then in a spirit to bring another communication from the Count. Of course the Count wrote again, for he dearly loved to use his pen an tell of his achievements and predict what he was going to do when he started the works once more, but while the Count wrote the British general worked. Whereas the de fenses of Savannah had only 20 or 30 guns when the French fleet arrived, they had 100 or more when Count d'Estaing thought it time to quit writing and begin fighting. The city, from one that would have fallen before a well-directed attack, had been transformed into one that gave every advantage to the defenders. The assault was made on October 9 and the main storming party was directed against a redoubt on Spring HilL This storming party was commanded by D'Es taing in person, assisted by General Lin coln. Fog and darkness permitted the allies to get too close to the redoubt be fore they were discovered, but aa daylight dawned they were subjected to a frightful fire." Their ranks were decimated and the whole force thrown into confusion. . Twice the allies reached the parapet and planted1 their standards there. One of the banners was the Lily of France: the other was the blue and crescent flag of Independence which Mrs. Elliott had given to Moultrie's regiment three days after the battle of Charleston, and which Moultrie and all his men- had sworn to defend to the end. The French standard had been raised" by one of D'Estaing's aids, and as he raised it he fell, pierced by a musket ball. The flag of the Sec ond Carolina Regiment had been planted by Lieutenants Hume and Bush. They, too, fell mortally wounded. The banner drooped and fell, and Lieutenant Gray, who next took It upon himself to raise It, met a like fate. Savins the Banner. Few officers of the Carolina regiment were left. The attack had failed, but the banner of blue with the liberty crescent was not to trail in the dust. When Gray fell, Jasper, who had been sorely wound ed early in the action, struggled through the ditch, up the parapet and replaced the flag where -It had been planted by Lieu tenant Bush. To touch that flag seemed to mean death that day, for no sooner had Jasper set it on the parapet than he received a second and this time a fatal wound. Sutfiering the most agonizing pain from this econd wound, Jasper held his ban ner steady for a time, and then, realizing that It would) fall into the enemy's hands If it remained there, he summoned all his waning strength and carried the flag back to his company. . "I have got my furlough," ho mur mured as he was carried dying from the field. The banner he died dn saving was cap New Y Novel Architectural Scheme in In Fifth IN THE new ' Fifth-avenue Baptist Church, or "Rockefeller's Church," as It is generally known. New York is to have a modern skyscraper edifice, which preserves the spirit of church ar chitecture. A "peculiar problem confronts the architect of the modern city church. In order to economize land, or prevent a church from being dwarfed among high buildings, an architect must build up ward, much as in the case of office build ings or hotels. The varied activities of the up-to-date church, again, demand greatly increased floor space and a mul 4 jrr 4 i i NEW -V.OClijeiXXX.V liUliICK OX Ill-H AVEXTE. tured later, in Charleston, when that city surrendered to the British, and now is one of the war trophies to be seen in the British Museum. Sergeant he was in his first battle and sergeant he was in his last. Like Latour, greater honor was shown to him titan to many a general officer. In the city of Savannah there is a noble monument per the New Avenue. 'Rockefeller" Edifice tiplication of offices and halls, all of which must be combined under a single roof, without, of course, losing the gen eral spirit of ecclesiastical architecture. The new; Fifth-avenue "Rockefeller" Church will occup the site of the present edifice on the south side of Forty-sixth street, west of Fifth avenue. The lot Is 100 feet square, a very restricted area for so Important an edifice. The architect, W. B. Bosworth, has succeeded so well In arranging Its proportions, however, and in breaking up the facade, that tha height is very deceptive. , The accom panying Illustration pictures the church ti&z svs. petuating his deeds. He Is shown with the banner held ahigh. There is a Jas per square namod in his honor, and there is a Jasper County to testify to the State's regard. But South Carolina, the land of his birth, the state under whose flag he fought and saving whose colors he died, has done little In remembrance of her as it will appear from the top of a Fifth avenue bus. The Forty-sixth-street front will be car ried out In a light stone, with two shades of marble. The feature of the facade will be a large gable with rows of arches rest ing on a series of slender columns. Three large arched windows will light the main auditorium. The slender columns carry the eye from base to the decorations at the upper roof line, and deceive one as to the actual height of the building. The building is In the Italian style of archi tecture in vogue in Pisa in the tenth cen tury. The churcn will cost $500,000. The main auditorium will occupy practically the entire first- floor and will have a ceiling nearly seventy feet In height. Above this in turn will be three floors, while the roof will be utilized as a Summer garden and play ground. The upper floors will be reached by electric elevators at the front of the building. Beneath the main auditorium there will be a base ment and under this a sub-basement for the machinery used for heating, lighting, ventilating, and operating the elevators. The method of ventilating the new church is unique. Fresh air, heated to the proper temperature, will be forced through openings in the celling, while the vitiated air will be drawn .down under the seats. This is a re versal of the methods followed in some halls and theaters of forcing the heated air upward from under the seat. It is believed that the great au ditorium will thus be rendered entire ly free from draughts. One of the novelties of the -furniture of the audi torium will be the special acoustic ap paratus in the seats for the use of the deaf. Above the ceiling of the church prop er will be found the school floor, arid above this in turn the classroom floor and the church social floor. A com plete flat for the use of the janitor will be located on the top floor. The arrangement of the various floors has been worked out in great detail. In the auditorium section there will be a pastor's study, an usher's room and the choir, and organ loft, with other retiring rooms. The' floor above, to be known as the classroom floor, will have a large room especially equipped for the young men's Bible class. This will connect directly with a large parlor, so that practically the entire floor may be thrown into one room. The serving room on the floor above will be one of the most novel features of the church. The equipment makes it possible to servo dinner to 200 persons in this room. A library and a room for the trustees of the church will be located on .the mezanine floor above. The upper floors of the new church suggest a modern office building. The Immense activity of this church, its charitable work, and business Interest will require a surprising number of offices and assembly rooms of all kinds. The electric elevators will be in use every day and all day. A spe cial telephone central will be required to attend to the several branch wires running throughout the building. Jt Is prophesied by some" that New York, with its ever increasing population, will be forced to resort to skyscraper churches, as it has come to adopt sky scraper office buildings and hotels, and that the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church Is a type of the New York church of the future. I As the Whalers View It. New Bedford (Mass.) Mercury. The faction which is endeavoring to discredit Dr. Cook's achievement, falls (back on his lack of elaborate equipment for a long Arctic sledge Journey. This will make the Arctic whalemen smile when they read how Captain George Fred Tilton walked 2000 miles from Point Bar row to civilization with little equipment beyond a few dogs, a sledge and a pock etful of hard bread. The dogs died, and the food was soon exhausted, but Tilton trudged on week after, week through the Arctic-Winter,, with. an.uverasa of, &JinXrian-Rhapsodi;.',J.. gallant, though humble son. .Maybe torn day she will. Maybe some day the Second Carolina will take a leaf out of the book of Napoleon. Maybe at the muster roll of the regiment the name of Jasper will be called and the oldest sergeant in tha service will step forward and answer, "Dead on the Field of Honor." (Copyright. 1910, by Richard Spillans.) gle frozen fish a day for food. When the whalemen think of the boat-steerer who traveled alone over the ice pack 400 or 600 miles from Herschel Island to Point 'Barrow, likewise In the cold and darkness of the Arctic Winter, they will laugh again at the necessity for elab orate equipment for Arctlo traveling. And there was Hoxie, who ran away from a ship within the Arctic circle and walked to Winnipeg, also in the Winter, without supplies of any sort. If the whalemen can do these things, it is not strange that a professional explorer should be able to turn the trick. Waste of American Life. New York World. The conference at Atlanta for the erad ication of the hookworm disease Is inter esting as an example of the organized methods which are now-a-days employed to resist and reduce disease. Within re cent memory the ravages of the hook worm parasite were so lightly regarded and the nature of the disease- so little understood that it was the subject more of questionable humor than of serious Investigation. Today all the resources of medical science, in conjunction with pub lic and philanthropic aid, are brought to bear to combat the disease, which is now recognized as a cause of mental and phy sical degeneracy. How much has been accomplished by organized effort toward th reduction of disease and how much remains to be done were shown by Fa. E. Rlttenhouse. presi dent of the Provident Savings Life As surance Society, In his address at the conference. The death rate of tubercu losis has been reduced 49 per cent since 1S80 and $8,000,000 is now spent annually to fight that disease. Yet 130.000 Ameri can people die from it every year. The death rate for typhoid fever as- the result of better sanitation has declined 44 per, cent in the same period. Yet the disease still claims 22.000 victims an nually. The diphtheria death rate has been reduced 80 per cent. Yet the dis ease causes 20.000 deaths a year. As against this fa-orable exhibit of the re sults of preventive medicine the mortal ity from the degenerative diseases of the heart, kidneys, arteries and brain has largely Increased during the last quarter of a century. Influence of Environ incut. Lippincott's. The parrot which belonged to the rich malefactor sat In its gilded cage, contemplating a price-mark which had not yet been removed. Presently the magnate approached, and the bird looked at him. The magnate had been on the witness-stand that day in an Important case, and was feeling rather elated over his successful testimony. "Hello, Polly," he greeted the bird. sticking his finger through the bars. 'Hello, ' responded the parrot, ignor ing the finger. Does Polly want a cracker?" The bird cocked its head to one side Inquiringly. The .magnate laughed at its manner. Possibly the bird had not quite understood the question. Does Polly want a cracker?" he re peated. The bird still looked at him with slanted vision, but made no reply. "Oho," he laughed. "You re not hun gry. Have you had your dinner?" "I don't remember,'" croaked the bird. and the magnate ordered the butler to remove it from the premises forthwith. A Barber Musician. Puck. The village cornetist, who made his living as a barber, was massaging a patron's face. "That's a peculiar way of massaging the nose." remarked the man in the chair. "Some New York method?" "That? Oh, no. I was just practis ing the finsrerin'r of tbB sr.rnnH 1 T.i a