mmm iw tops fci Mara EmaiOTfe ir TT N tho records, ot tke war department appears the namo of Henry B. , Clltz, who waa a major "P V In tho regular service. uu wuo rose 10 me runis of a brigadier general of Volunteors while In the Union army during the Civil war. Old army of ficers remombor Clitz well, but possibly mil lions of civilians have woll nigh forgotten him. Af tor tho short official story of lila service written on the now timostalnod paper hlddon away In a vault of tho war depart ment, thoso words appear: "Mysteri ously disappeared In tho year 1888." Tho disappearance ot Henry B. Clttz Is one of tho mysteries of army llfo. On other records In the war de partment aro brief official linos, also on tlmc-stalncd paper, tolling of tho career of Jasper A. Maltby, colonel of the Forty-flfth Illinois Infantry, more familiarly known In tho darker days of tho country's history as tho "Wash burn's Lead Mine Rogtmont." Mnltby's namo waa brought' back not long ago sharply to memory by tho death of lila widow In St. Luke's hospital, Chicago. Sho was a llttlo snow-hair-d woman . who had borno llfo'a burdens for Just the time al lotted by tho Psalm ist. During tho days that this woman lay 111 at tho hospital of tho Bolovod Physi cian, If her oyos wan dered about the walls of her room, It Is probable that for tho first time In many years when within any room chosen by her as an abiding place, thoy fallod to rest upon tho folds of an American flag. Tho stories of Gen erals CHfz and Malt by were stories of sterling patriotism, of action and of wounds received In the dis charge of duty. Mys tcry has added its In terest to tho lifo'B story of Major Clltz, perhaps one should say to his death's story, though thero ls always a posslbll Ity that at a great ago tho major somo- whoro in somo condition still has left In him a epark of tho Bplrlt of llfo which movod him to soldier deeds, Rocontly a brigadier general ot tho regular servico, many years retired, camo to Washington. In tho lobby or a hotel ho met a votoran as grlz zlod and wrinkled as he, but still of an upright physical bearing. Tho general looked at tho man a moment actually aghast and then with words that camo out In tho dlsordor of a "route stop" gasped: "John I heard you wore dead. I would as soon havo thought of meeting Clltz." The two hnd been subalterns In CUtz's regi ment during tho Civil wnr and after, and had loved him. It was pcrhapa tho flashing thought of an anniversary of a dlsappoaranco at hand that sent tho returned soldier's thought to Major Clltz when in tho lobby of a Washington hotol ho met the former comrado, who bo had heard was dead. Tho army archives bear so stranger records than that of this case of General Henry ,B. Clltz ho waB only a major, howoxpr, when ho won distinction by his gallantry. is twenty three years ngo now that Major Clltz was lost. Twenty-throe years, but a man may bo found after twenty-throo yoars. Major Honry B. Clltz, Twelfth infantry, TJ. S. A., was onco dead and burled and was allvo again, was lost, and tho other word that Bhould natur ally fit here Is either yet to bo supplied, or for ever Ib to remain unwritten. Thero aro scores of soldlora today, old soldiers but onco a soldier ' always a soldier who," in the memory of what happened after Gaines Mills, think that ono day thoy may again clasp this side of tho grave tho hand of Comrado Clltz. Henry B. Clltz of Michigan ontored West Point in tho year 1841, graduating four years after. Ho was a schoolmato of Grant, McClolIan, Sheri dan and Burnsldo. Clltz wont into tho Mexican jwar and won pralso on tho field and a brevet rank afterward for conspicuous gallantry at Cer ro Gordo. Clltz waa a fighter. Ho proved this fact every timo he had a chance, and during his forty-flVo years of sorvlco ho had chances in plenty. Whon the Civil war had been on for a timo Clltz found himself major of the Twolfth regu lars. Ho was transferred to that' outfit from the Third, another fighting regimont It camo along toward tho timo of Mechanlcsvllle and Gnlnos Mills. The Twelfth and tho Fourteenth were ly ing pretty close together. When tho Gaines Mills battlo was on nnd war's, hurricane was at Its height tho Twelfth and the Fourteenth were given a position tj hold. Tho two regiments were at tacked by overwhelming nifmbcrs, but tho num bers weren't overwhelming for a long timo. Thero wasn't any retreat in tho mako-up ot those two regiments ot regular infantry. The wave of battlo simply had to como down on them and engulf them. Afterward when General Sykes wrote a report about the Twolfth and Fourteenth and tho fight that thoy put up, ho said tho ranks of tho Twolfth wore "decimated." General Sykes had probably never Btudled "English Lessons for English People." Unless things havo changed, decimated moans tho cutting out of ono" In ton. This Is tho way tho Twolfth was "decimatod." It went into tho fight with 470 inen j . wroe out "with, 1 i 200. Thoy say Major Clltz fought that day as ho did at Cerro dor do, only a llt tlo more so. Tho regulars resisted stren uously for an hour or two. Finally some ot tho mon saw Major Clltz go down. A big wall ot gray was fall ing on them just then, and many othors wont down HERO OF THE AMERICAN NAVY Rear Admiral Melville had "we fame for heroism la Arctic expteray ttoR as r naval eBgtaeer a&d cotr! tlett as a naval enRlswwAKdcoMtnw tor. He was a member of Be Leag' party, which sailed for the Arctki vtn gfoaa front San Francisco la 1879 la the Ill-fated Jewiette, aad he com manded tke boat' crew which es-; caped from the Icy waste of the Lena Delta aftor the wreck ot the expedl-f tlofl. He afterwards commanded tke' expedltloas which recovered D Long's body aad the record of the' Jeanette, for which services he re colved a gold medal by special act of congress. But that la another story. Roar Admiral Melville entered the navy as an assistant engineer at the beginning of the Civil war. A New Yorker by. birth, he had received hla education at tho Brooklyn Polytechnlo institute. He served throughout the war nnd was subsequently stationed.' at various navy yards. In 1887 the. lato William C. Whitney, then secretary of tho navy, under Presldont Cleve land, picked Molvlllo as tho man to take ohargo ot tho construction ot the new navy ot tho Unltod States and appointed him cnglnoer-Ju-chlef. To this post Molvlllo was reappointed In 1802 and again in 18D0. As n naval engineer and designer Roar Admiral Molvlllo Tiaa combined) progrosslvonosa with caution. Ho has been quick to glVo practical tests toi How designs anfC appliances, but careful not to adopt them Boncrally until they had been thoroughly tried out and approved. Tho magnificent allowing made by our navy in tho war with Spain la no doubt nttrlbutahto in a largo dogroej to this policy ot his. PREACHER ELECTED MAYOR too. When tho fight was over, and afterward, whon somo order camo out ot tho chaotic hell, thlB ro port was turned In by Gonoral Sykes: "The Twolfth and Fourteenth woro attacked by over whelming numbors. Tho ranks woro decimated, and Major Clltz was sovoroly it not fatally ln- Jured. Around his foto, still shrouded In mys tery, hangs the painful apprehension that a ca reer so noblo, no soldierly, so bravo, has termin ated on that Hold whoso honor ho so gallantly upheld." Major Clltz wont on tho Hat ot the dead and what was loft of his regiment mourned him as fow Boldlors aro mourned. Suitablo orders were issued lamenting tho death of this hero ot Cerro Gordo and Galnos Mills, but before the period of tho real mourning was over, though tho official kind had been over for months, tho dead camo to llfo again. Major Clltz had bcon shot through both legs and in ono or two other places, but on his showing a few signs of llfo tho Confederates made a prisoner of him and sent him to Lihby. Major Clltz was paroled. When he went back into tho servico again and when the war was over ho put in twenty years campaigning on tho plains. 'In 1885 ho retired after nearly half a century of servico, nnd went to llvo in Detroit, Mich. Two years Jator his old command, with which ho had stood in tho bullet storm at Gaines Mills, passed through Detroit on Its way to tnko station at tho posts of the great lakes. Thoro were not many then in tho Twolfth who were in it in tho old days, but It was tho same outfit with tho samo old tattored regimontal bannors. Major (then Gonoral) Clitz met tho command and old memories stirred him to tear's. Tho Twelfth choorcd its old officer and thon Detroit was left bohlnd. Was ft tho stirring ot old memories or what was it? His old comrades In arms had bcon gono but a llttlo whllo when Major Clltz went to tho railroad station from which tho train .bearing tho soldiers pulled out, and there purchased a rail road ticket for a lako city which hold a garrison ot United States troops. From tho hour of tho purchase of that ticket no one haB been found, soldier or civilian, to say that ho has ever seen Major Henry B. Clltz. The army records give in detail tho story ot his gallantry in battle, and at the end ot tho shining record aro theso words, "Mysteriously disappeared in tho year 1888." Thero was no mystery of disappearance in tho caso of Brigadier General Jasper A. Maltby. He died as tho result ot wounds received in action. His widow who survived him many yoars auti who died at St. Luko's hospital In Chicago held tho Amorlcan flag and her husband's memory as tho most cherished things in life. Neither was over long absent from her mind. How many mon aro thero today, bar a fow old Boldlors,-to whom the namo Jasper A. Maltby would mean nnythlng unless it woro coupled, as is tho abovo, with somo specific information? Yet this man Jasper A. Maltby was chosen by General Grant, on tho advlco of McPhorson and Logan, to lead, with his Blnglo regimont, tho most desporato onterpriso at tho slcgo of Vlckaburg, and, as some historians havo It, ono of tho three most dosporato enterprises of tho ontlre war. Thoro nre today surviving mombers ot the Forty-fifth IJllnols in whoso veins tho words "Fort Hill MIno" will mako tho blood tlnglo. It waa only a week before tho Fourth on which Pombor- ton surrendered the Confederate city. In Logan's front lay Fort Hill. It was decided at a council of the generals that Its sapping and mining and tho subsequent seizing and holding ot tho em' brasuro mado by the explosion would bo of tre mendous moral aud strategical vnluo to tho Union cnuso. Tho placo was commanded by Confeder ate artillery and by sharpshooters In a hundred rlflo pits. It was known that If tho explosion ot Fort Hill was a ruccobb that fow of tho men who rushed Into tho crevasses could hopo to como out alive. It would bo what tho Saxons called a deed of dorrlng-do'. Owing to tho limited, spaco to bo occupied only a single regiment was to bo named to Jump into tho great yawning holo after 'tho ex plosion and to hold it against the hell fire of tho enemy until adequato protective works could be thrown up. Thoro was as many yoluntoors for tho enter prise ns thero woro colonels of regiments in Grant's army. Tho choice fell on Jasper A. Malt by and his following ot Illinois boys. Tho timo camo for tho explosion. Tho Forty fifth lay grimly awaiting the charge into death's pit. Tho signal was given; thero camo a heavy roar nnd a mighty upheaval. Sllenco had barely fallon before thero roso ono groat rovorberatlng yell, and tho Lead Mlno Regiment, led by its col onel, Jasper A. Maltby, with his Houtonant col onol, Malancthon Smith, at his olhow, hurlod Itself Into tho smoking crnter, The llcutonant col onel was shot through tho hoad and mortally wounded beforo his feet had fairly touchod the pit's bottom. Tho colonol was shot twlco,. but paid llttlo heed to his wounds. A battery ot Confederate artillery belched shrapnol Into tho ranks and sharpshooters scorned fairly to bo llrlng by volloys. Tho question bocarao ono ot getting somo Bort of protection thrown tip before tho en tire regiment should bo annihilated. Cortaln mon in tho pit were tolled off to nnswer tho sharp shooter's flro and to mako It hot for tho cannon aders in tho Confederate battery. Thoy did what thoy could, but It availed llttlo to savo their com rades, who woro tolling to throw up tho redoubt Men fell on every side. Beams woro passed Into tho pit, and theso wore Pitt into position as a protection by tho surviving soldiers. The Joists were placed lengthwise and' dirt was quickly piled about them. Colonel Malt by helped tho men to ludgo tho beams. Ho wont to one sldo of tho crater where there was no ele vation. Thoro he stood fully exposed, a shining mark. Ho put his shoulder under a great pleee ot timber, and, weak with wounds though ho was, he pushed It up and forward lifto placo, Tho bul lets chipped tho woodwork and spat In tho sand nil about him.. Ono Confederate gunner of artil lery trained his great piece directly at tho devoted leader. A solid Bhot struck tho beam, from which Colonol Maltby had Just removed his shoulder, nnd split it into kindling. Great sharp pieces of tho wood wore driven into tho colonel's sldo, and bo was hurlod to tho bottom ot tho black pit. Tho action was over shortly, for tho gallant Forty-flfth succeeded In maklrig that death's holo tenable. Then thoy plokcd up their colonel. He was still allvo, though the surgeon shortly after ward said that it would bo hard work to count his wounds, They took him to the field hospital, and beforo ho had been thoro an hour thoro was clicking over tho wires to Washington a message carrying the recommendation that Colonel Jasper A. Maltby ot tho Lead MIno Regiment bo mado a brigadier general of volunteers for conspicuous personal gallantry In tho faco ot tho enemy. A week later Grant's victorious forces marched into VIckBburg. Colonel Jasper A. Maltby or General Jasper A. Maltby as It soon becamo, lived until tho end of tho war, butno system could long withstand tho Bhock and pain ot thoso gaping wounds, Ho died In tho very city which ho had helped to conquer. Afterward a flag and a precious momory woro rarely absent from tho llfo which finally flickered out when tho white-haired llttlo widow died at St. Luke's hospital,. Chicago. One of tho most notnblo political changes in Now York at tho recent oloctlon wns that In tho city and coun ty ot Schonoclndy, whoro cortaln Re publican and Domocratio factions unltod with tho SocInllstB and elect ed all' the city officers, excopt one and gained a majority of the county offlco3, beside electing an assembly man. Tho leader ot those mixed forces was Rov, Dr. George R. Lunn, their candldato for mayor, whoso por trait is shown, and who pollod prac tically two-thirds ot tho entire vote. Rov. Dr. Lunn was at ono timo pas tor ot tho First Roformcd church, one of the most aristocratic In the city, Thrco years ago his advanced polit ical vlowH, some of them in harmony with Boclalistio principles, forced his resignation from the First Rotormed pulpit and he thon organized tho Unit ed People's Congregation, which- re cently unltod with the First Congre Rationalist. Dr. Lunn edits a weekly papor called tho Cltlzon in which he expresses his political and sociological vlowo and frequently conducts Sunday oveulng meetings In theaters for the samo purpose. The Socialistic voto In Schonectady at tho last preceding election waa 2,240. Tho,.town has a pppulatlon of 81,000, with an assessed valuation of $51,000,000. Dr. Lunn'a plurality was 1,900, i f HEADS RELIGIOUS MOVEMENT Although tho active efforts in the mon and religion forward movement were begun only a short time ago,, practically all ot the seventy-six cities participating have reported complete organizations and campaigns under! wny. Tho gonoral headquartors in, Now York city la being kept In close touch with the work all over tho coun try. , Tho gonoral interest which has, been manifested by tho loading busl-j noBS and professional mon Is espe cially encouraging to tho men ln( charge of the movement Jamoe G. Cannon, who Is here pictured, presl dont of tho Fourth National Bank of Now York, Is chairman ot the general! campaign committee and he believes the effort will be the most significant' made by the church la tho religious history of America, Ono of tho extraordinary incidental of the campaign In Grand Rapids, oc-i curred at a mass meeting whoro Rev. Charles Stelzlo of the New York Labor Temple and Dr. I. J Lansing discussed "Tho Church nnd Labor." The audience at this mass meeting includod men of every social station nnd of almost every occupation, Laborers and capital ists, professional mon and merchants, artisans and factory operatives sat el bow tn nlbow. ovinclntr tho utmost interest Mr. Cannon Is enthusiastic over tho apparent success of tho campalgnl of which ho is tho head. I IS FIRST WOMAN OFFICIAL Miss Edith Campboll Is tho lady who has boon olected a member of tho Board of Educntlon for tho city of Cincinnati. President Taft in a pub lic speoch hoartlly endorsed her can didacy and though sho was not on his ticket ho voted for her. Sho Is a brilliant woman with marked execu tive ability and wldo educational ex porlonco. Presldont Taft says ho bo llevos that every city Board of Edu cation would bo tho hotter for women in Its membership and doubtless his endorsement had much to do with Miss Campbell's election. Her election gives her a thrco-fold distinction. Sho Is tho first woman eloctcd to any public ofllco in Cin cinnati, though eovoral hnvo boon candidates beforo. She Is tho first candldato over elected to tho Board of Educntlon In Cincinnati who ran as an independent, nnd sho gooB on last ing record as tho first woman in tho United States for whom a president of tho United Statos cast his voto, Miss Campbell, who Is thlrty-flvo years of ago, is of medium holght, slen der, with dark eyes and hair. "It Isn't thnt I am elected, It is tho fact that a woman has bcon elected to tho Board of Education," sho said. "Moreovor, tho registration showed that tho mon ot Cincinnati havo decided that women.' should have a chance to demonstrate their efficiency in this direction.; Though but fow women voted, tho wny that thoy were orgaulzed and'workedj showed what womon can do In politics if given a chanco."