THE SCHANTON KRiBUNE, SAWKDAY MOKjS1.NO, MAKCH 17, 18JH. BRAVEST DEEDS OF THE WAR. Recollections of Heroism by Land and Sea, TOLD BY MEN WHO WERE PRESENT. Mli-rlng Contributions trom t'aptnin Robert Gates, Colonel .11. L. Little field, Minor It. .11. Flint, Dr. E. T. Billings and Major J. R. Doyle. it is vrooosed in the series of pavers, of WMah the JTlfloWtltg fornu the tenth number to ijive to the public for the first time ami in authentic form, "by a large number of dift in yuishtd contributors, tke stories of the most et'jinul deals of individual heroium and self-i sacrifice oecuring under their personal O&MTMM Hon while in the service, either by lend or sea' .iuriny the tear of tSSt The collection, tchen :omple'.td, trill form a sjdendut monument to the proiress, patriotism attd chivalrous may lanioiity of the American soldier. Thus those luroes ickn, by tin ir indivittttal deeds of during, added hutrt ami nthutiastn to the eonfiiet -tome in ilistinguished cm! others m humble role Iffifl find thru- true place in the lovimj and cdiniriii'j hearts of a united nation. TOLD BY CAPTAIN ROBERT li ATE". I know the story bM been toM before, iut as one who knew the little hero I venture to tell it again. We aaaoelate timidity with childhood, yet one oi the moat gallant sol dlera I ever met with waa a private in the Second Florida. I have forgotten the youth's name, but ho whs only fourteen, and we found tliu instant and dashed forward. He wad by the sido of the gallant young Colonel Shaw I when bo leaped the diteh, little thinking that It wus so soon to bo his grave. Vseless to tell hero of how the black men swarmed up the earthwall, only to Ikj swept away by the ceaseless point blank flro from the brigade in poiBOBBioil. Carney was shot In the head and n bullet ptSSad through bis leg below the knee, smashing and tearing it in u horrible way. Ho luooeeded In getting out of the ditch carry ing the colors with htm. When our beaten and demoralized forces reached their original lines, they saw a United States flag now and then rising above the swaying sou grass, and u9 it came nearer and nearer they knew that the man who boro It was creeping. The firing from Wagnor rendered it unsafe raised to stop him, the Illinoisan sprung lightly over the earthwork uud ran fur the house like u deer. The act was so sudden that we supposed I the enemy could not tire before he was under cover, but we knew they were on the lookout now, and that he would be sure to eaten it When he tried to make his way buck. We with in hopes that he would not return, but after a few minutes of serious waiting, we could see the tall form In the door of tho house, his arms piled up with something that at the distance looked like stove wood. The man was too heuvlly burdened to run on his return. Hack ho came, uud his up peurunee was the signal for the rattle and roar ol musketey from the enemy. How the man eaoaped is one of those miracles never seen in these days outside I battle Held. Ho nine over the works with out u scratch, ami us he luid his loud of grape and caso shot down in the midst of the cheering gunners he said with a drawl : "That aint a very big mess of food for cannon, boys ; but us soon us she's used up, I'll go out uud git you a lot more rations of the same kind." It. M. Flint. RWD HE LOE, SAB, I KKBBBB LET 1AT FLAG TBTCB i 'i' QBOUHD. nun rou pracay, tnougn wounuea, trying 10 (or , to Vl.n(u,. , mn noaror iim, load bis piece alter Ins older comrades hud lied from the crest of Missionary Ridge. Johnny Olem Is the hero ol whom I write. When I first saw him In the full of 1803 he was a drummer in the Twenty-second Michigan, frequently, when there was no drumming to do, currying the guidon and blood that it nearer came the colors, now rising, now full ing, but never out of sight for long. At length, out on the road in front of the Union works, the color bearer appeared. He was on one knee, dragging hit after him, and bis face was so . TOLD lit EZRA T. BILLING. I agree with one of your writers who snys it is easy to DS brave in a crowd, and Intim ate-, that the true test of one is thrown entirely on his own resources The undergrowth about Port Suunders had been cut down, uud along the ground over which tho Confederates must iuss in charg ing, telegraph wires bad been interwoven and spread, about six or ten inches Irom the ground. The object of this was t j throw Into eon fusion tho 111011 assaulting the works, and to hold them under the lire of our artillery and riflemen as long as possible. To clear the way for the assault, Long street's gUUS Opened a terrltle Ore on the fort, the artillery of which was In the command of Captain Benjamin, who to my mind, exhib ited on this occasion more coolness and nerve than any man I ever met. There whs not in either army a more gallant body of men than Longsl root's old corps; this much justice compels ono to say. I hud seen them in action many u time, but never before did they display such reoklosa gallantry as distinguished them on this occasion. On the edge of the timber they formed, 08 if f01 review, though out guns begun to roar us soon as tlie grey ranks came a sight. Over the slashed space with the meshes of telegraph wiies, they oame in gallant style. They wei vidently unprepared for this OUrage is where kind 01 obstruction, for they tell m rank", but only to lean to their feet, slouch their GENERAL HOWARD TO RETIRE. One of the Last of the Great Military Leaders of the War. HE IS STILL STURDY AND VIGOROUS. Ills Duties as Commander ot One ol i tie Departments ot the Army Little Mention is Hade of mm in These Days, but He Is Mill an Interesting Figure. uud his nerve is tile outcome of deliberate thought. Anson Watts was a private in tin' Klevelitb Kentucky Union Oavalry. He was of good family in Hardin County, and might have hud a commission, when the regiment was raised in IMS had be been so inclined, but he chose to serve in the ranks. Waiis was well-educated, a good horseman, and as brave US they make them. Hut I he incident in oonsldoraUon'shows an amount of nerve that appalls When one considers that there was really mi good reason for running i Into such a danger. Watts was captured at CampfeH's Station in East rennessee, and had be not boon wounded broken leg I he might have been s-'ut directly on to Belle nered With Iele With the two or three hundred men acting as marker. At this time bo was thirteen and small enough for his age; indeed, I never before nor since saw such a mite of u boy In uniform and attached to a command that was ready for business, It was understood that he was an orphan, born In Ohio, and that in some way he drifted off till he fell in with the gallant Klchlganders, who fairly idolized him, The boy must have come of good stock, for id was gentle in his manners, very affection- . was impossible to tell if he was taken In that action bv Longstn for the blood of all heroes has 's advnnei l b. a ' white or black, tor the blood of all heroes has n October Wtit the same hue. Like many of the other prisoners, Watts Men of his own regiment by this time NO- bad been despoiled ol hi-bo,,(s, hut ami tunic, ognlzed the Beg, which they supposed had and compelled to attire himself In tho grey been left in the hands of the enemy, and but dolapldatod olothlng ot his captors, hurrying out, they bore buck the sergeant. j He was wounded In the head. and, affecting It was not till an officer appeared that he J tt greater illness than he felt, he was left nt could bo made to loose his hold on the flag. I the houso of a miller named Murdoch, bo ThOD, weak from torture and loss of blood, tween Ringgold and Tunnel Hill. This man he handed tho colors to his captain and was originally from Ohio, and a cousin of gasped : James Murdoch the famous actor, whose Before do Lor', sab, I nebbcr let dat flag totcb do ground ! " m. s. Ltmvmun TOLD 111 MAJOR R. It, FLINT. I have spoken with Confederate and Union jldiers who took purt in the desperate bat-1 no oi .luaiooua raw in v.eorg.a, on me ,uu Secret, and they soon provided him with u of October. lSfiL and all are agreed that for . nlform. The m, .numbers engaged and t be bloody L-nroved. the sicker he pretended to be, and oi me wors. n DBS no parauel in me uisiory , ,. ., , k i L - HO na ui ui ill ."I'm ui ii.iutc... niwui 1 OU1 1W . bids, and dash on again, with their levelled bayonets and fierce yells. Only Longsl reef s men could hnvu kept on under that destroying lire. Xow and then they were cheeked, like men pushing on in tlte teeth of un awful storm, but they gave nol ll font buck. At length they poured Into the diteh, hoping to foroe their way through tho em brasures, but though the guns could not bo Hired, ihev were kept in position, and so blocked tho way. There were only a few hundred men Inside Hie fort, for the space was limited, and the coolest fidt that if the enemy could get over the earthwall we would have to surrender or abandon th" place, From the firs!. Captain Benjamin whs con spicuous for his coolness, 1 recall that In.' smoked cigars all the time When it was found that the guns could not be depressed so ns to reach lie" men In the ditch, he nt once short ened the fuses with his knife, lit them with his cigar and us fa t as he did so ho tossed thorn over tho parapet into the crowded ditch. This he kept up till voices from the outside shouted: "We surrender I " when the guns were run back and they oame in. Tfft shells lit by Captain Benjamin were put down so that tho fuses burned not more than five see, ads, and a slip in throwing one Confederate officers going between Atlanta would have meant death. Bui that young and Brsgg's Army at Missionary Bldge. officer kept bis cigar going as if he enjoyed Almost trom the first. Watts WHS regarded it, and hurled tho shells ns coolly as ii as a Confederate, but the family knew bis bowling ten pins. James n, uoyle. Ono of the lenders of our civil war of whom little mention is made those days, but who is none thu less un Interesting man witb an enviable record l General 0. 0. Howard, com mander of the department of the East and successor to the gallant Hancock. I saw the General the other day on lower Broadway and later at his headquarters on Governor's Island overlooking Now York Bay. Looking at him striding down Broadway, head well up, ebeSt out and with military step, or seeing him at his desk ill undress uniform attending to the thousand and one details that h a must pass upon, writing easily with his left hand, his empty right sleeve pinned across his breast, one would scarce think the man old enough to have commanded the lelt Wing Of Sherman S army on its march Irom Atlanta to the Bet, ins REuray lonu Dears no mare oi age. ms . heavy beard is not yet fully gray nor is his j hair. His bee Is that of a man who has lived temperately, and his eye Is as keen as when he fought with Sherman mid Slocum und Logan and flehofleld and McPhersnn over debatable ground from Dalton, Georgiu to Atlanta. a, somewhat singular fact was recalled by pose of receiving some advice Unit bethought to bo good for them. In every case tho Gen- ral wus genial but none the less firm, kindly and dignified. There wus nothing of the martinet ubout him so far as I could see. In each cuso too, bo seemed to make a distinct impression, and u good uue, on ) man with whom ho wus dealing. ' I do not find It necessary to he harsh with tho iftHii" said the General. "You soe lu these duys all sorts of men drift Into tin. ser vice, and tact Is needed. In time ol warit Is different A.s matters stand uow it Is well to temper justice with common sense und kind ness. I find such a policy to be the best at any rate." The duties of a gunorul in commund of an uriny department l:i these duys though multi farious are not interesting to thu ordinary person. Passing upon the reports of Subor dinates, approving of flndmgi of unimportant courts martial, reviewing parades on special occasions, keeping a morO Or less sharp eye upon quarterpiasters, dictating huisscs of cor respondence to his superior ut Washington or to subordinates ill foits and stations In the East, South and West, these routine and clerical duties are not calculated to stir tin blood. Yet General Howard suvs be likes his work. The social sid.s of General Howard's" life In these times is less monotonous than Is his official. He is a distinct (uuntity in New York society and is much sought efter by those leaders who make It u point to have wmesortots lion to roar gently nt their KWlsJ functions. General Howard lives quietly THEY WADE fWlOR BV TUB PANIC How Ike Loan tinkers Reaped n Rieli Harvest During the Hunt Times. The men of Now York who make loans in Wall Street have rcwicit a harvest sir..'.' the hard times began, early last summer. ir. Tl th Union sentiments he shared, though.it was prudent to keep them to himself. He had three pretty daughters all good cooks, so that his place was a popular resort for the A d RAISED THE MCSKET AND F1T.ED. ate, and without any of the self-assumption that is apt to distinguish boys who are thrown much into contact with men. There may have been more desperate bat tles than Chieamauga, but I must confess I was nevertn one. It is particularly mem orable to me on another account, and that is. that for tho first timo I felt that we were badly licked, something that had not hap pened to the Army of the Cumberland up to '.his time, and which was destined not to be repeated. At the ft&le. ot Chieanuuga Johnny Clem lost his guidon, but instead of going to the 'ear, as sjas told, he picked up a musket, there w 'JThousands scattered about that awful summer day, and bravely took his place in Uio ranks. Johnny's regiment did a good deal of firin lying down that day. and he followed the fashion of his comrades and loaded and fired as rapidly as the best. Late in the afternoon the regiment fell back to the hill which Thomas made immortal, but Johnny did not hear the order. He was left almost alone in th.. whirl of the battle, and did not discover his danger till he heard th well-known yells of the enemy about him. Johnny had his piece loaded, when he sprang to his feet and started to run for the lull, which was BOWaoone of lire. A mounted Confederate officer, who must have been sur prised and amused at sight of this littl- mite of a soldier in blue, reined In and shouted: "Surrender ! you little son of a 1" Ah Johnny looked up ho brought hi? piece to an '-order arms," slipped his hand to the hammer, eflflthd it and as quickly raised the musket uniCfired, and the officer reeled and fell from the saddle. The next minute the boy, with n hundred ithers, was scooped up a prisoner, but before 'ie had gone back a hundred yards be was re oaptured by his own regiment, as were his companions, and carried up tho hill amid ringing cheers. After the buttle General Itosoerans made the hoy a sergeant, and he wore the chevrons with ntfmuoh prldo as ever a general felt in his stars. Secretary Chaso forwarded him a Bllver medal, and the boy would have been sent to West Point, but ho lacked four years of the legal age. After this Jobuny Clem became an orderly at hnadnjiartors. und ho performed his duties as welland modestly ns when be beat tho drum for the Twenty-socond Michigan. He is now, 1 believe, a captain in the regu lar army, and it is safe to say lie Is the young est veteran In tho service. If it be truo that tho boy Is the father of tho man, Captain Clem is as gentle and modest as an officer as when he carried the guidon and stood fearless amid the varnagu of tbut hell at Chicamuiigu. ItoiiEiiT Gates General John M. Corse, late a resident of Boston, with about two thousand men, was pressed in bv General French, of Hood's command, with a force estimated at nine thousand, all trained and tried veterans. Although hardly one-fourth the enemy in numbers, we bad vastly tho advantugo in position, and thanks to Colonel, afterwards General Tourtlette, who had had command before we come down from Atlanta, tho place was well fortified, though it was deficient in artilery and particularly in artillery amuni tion. The hymn " Held the Fort For I Am Com ing," had its origin in this light. Knowing that Corse was pressed in. Sherman twonty miles away, signalled, for tho telegraph lines wore destroyed, " Can you hold out, help Is coming? " To which It is said Corse signalled back tho confident but rather profane re sponse, " I'll hold out till h 1 freezes over! " Soon after sunrise the enomy appeared on the hills and in tho woods all about the fort, and a flag of true:) was sent in by General French demanding by virtue of his superior forco, an Immediate surrendor. Corse re plied in effect that he was thero to fight, and that ho was ready. At once, six batteries opened on our works and from tho encircling lines of men in grey, such a storm of lead was poured In that nothing could stand exposed against it. Young's Texans and Sear's Georgians charged again and again on our works, but the ad mirable disposition of our men made every ffort at dislodgement futile. Here and thero the skeletons of regiments n the advance works were driven back on the main Imdv, and by noon one-half of Corse's garrison was killed or wounded. From the first rt seemed a hopeless fight, but never before nor afterwards did I see men so resolved to hold out or din as were those who defended the Allntoonn Pass that lay. I distinctly recall that it was not the frenzied vulor that distinguishes men in a :harge, but tho oalm resolution of men who determine to die rather than yield. On such an occasion, whero every man does tho full measure of his duty and so shows himself to lie tho equal of tho bravest, il would seem to be impossible that any one uld particularly distinguish himself above the rest. Yet such was the case, and unfor- wcek utter reaching Murdoch's a young man from Bragg's army stopped there. He was a Texan named Boll, und he had transportation and papers from General Bragg authorizing him to go on to Uiclimond. and gel the en dorsement of the War Department there to his transfer, on account of ill health, to the command of General Magruder in Texas, where h;s parents lived. The young Texan hud a burning fever when II nE chaSoed clothes witu the dead man. ho reached Murdoch's, and forty eight hours afterwards he died. Watts did not make his Purpose known to Mr. Murdoch or his family TOLD BY GENERAL T. L. WT.iT. I have been told that the word "Chic.". manga" in the language ot tho Cherokees who oneo owned and lived In that country, means " the river of blood." If this tie so, it is certainly very appropriate, for no matter the reason for tho aboriginal name, it is no longer a misnomer. OENEIUL Bowls!) AT THE PBESENT DAT. General Howard. It was that while Sherman Grunt. Sheridan, Baooock and most of the great leaders of the civil war are dead, the three men who commanded the two wings of Sherman's nrmy are still alive. One was Gen eral Henry W. Bloucum, whoso hair and cavalry mustache are now as white as tho driven snow, but who otherwise does not show his age. He is now in civil life. Since leaving the army he has come into control of a syndi cate of electric railroads and is a rich man. General Howard baa fallen upon pleasant days in the afternoon of his life, but he Is as haul und energetic n worker ns ever, for besides his duties us eommandorofanlmport- V... I:.-. "r,,.,l I m1 11., l,.o,.,iin .ln.il.t If . ., , , ,. , .. , ., ant army department, which even in times of is the most vivid in the memorv of the i , , , , , a peace are arduous, ho is a voluminous and ,o,u.,. ,.,, ....,,"... mm us w.e uwuro , ,,,,,,. wrilor (or )itomry papers and .syndi- lUUKUbBUU IIIom ueBUOruW, UU1 I UllUK v. Ilea- ' , n manga is an exception, and to those who par ticipated in it, no matter their subsequent experience, it must always stand out as the bloodiest, and fiercest contest in ull their ex perience. It was Sunday, September 30th, 1868, and the Union army was represented on the field by tho Fourteenth Corps, and thy broken fragments of regiments, brigades and even divisions of the Wrecked corps of Crittenden and Mcf'ool;, under the command of that splendid soldier, whose ability on this trying occasion saved our cause from irreparable disaster and won for himself the proud name of "the Book of OhloamaugB." The irregular elevations, the tortuous .our-' of the shallow river, with its red, precipitous banks, nnd the jungle of bind: jack and stunted cedars, besides forests of larger growth, made it difficult for moving but they must have understood it. He troops to maintain direction, white order in changed clothes with the dead man, took bis I advance or retreat, was simply out of the papers, and started for Atluntn as Joshua j question. To these difficulties should be Bell. added the condition of tlieut mosphere, whie'n He had changed characters from a prison, r k(.)( , mjst frm ,n waf, ,r am (h(, snlok(, of war to a spy, and he knew that detection I fnm th burning timber und guns hanging low over tho field, nnd which often brought friend and foe into unexpected collision. vmt!KL n. h. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 fii ti. The nest evldenco of valor men can give on the battlefield, or any place else, is their readiness to die for a principle, or at the command of a superior. I am about to bring a negro forward ns a hero, and in doing so I am aware thut it may bo call Ml bad taste, but truth is truth, and lustico justice, without regard to color. Willlrtin H. Carney, nged twenty-three and n iimfsunlly Intelligent negro, was color sergeant of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts, regiment made up, with the exception of ttio commissioned officers, of men of bis roc On the 18th of July, 1H6H, an attempt was made to curry Fort Wagner, near Charleston, by assault. That the attempt was a failure ;wd resulted in disaster to the assailants, ioes not in tho loss dim the glory ot tho men vho made it. Tho colored brigado was boaton, but not ill ItjJmd planted its flags on tho walls of tho brvlnd In the assault and retreat one-half Ihn forco wus killed or wounded. Sergeant Carney regurded tho colors In .rustod to his chargii much as ono of his an ;estnrs on the Congo regarded bis tribal feUsh. Disgrace to Uiat would mean unpar donable profanity to film. Tho assault began, nnd when wiUiin one hundred yards of Wagner the man carrying flag lull, und Sergeant Carney soizod it on meant death. He avoided observation as much us possible, but not so much us to excite attention. When ho reached Richmond, he examined his papers, or rather Bell's papers, carefully, md he wes shocked to learn that the man whom he represented had an uncle, a colonel in the Wur Department, whownsu waiting his arrival, and wn ready to help him through. To meet this man would be disastrous, so he changed ids mind, and determined to examine the ground und make nil way through as soon us possible to the Union lines. He put up at a retired hotel, when? ho re mained quietly for a week, und then, one stormy night In curly November, he started to make his way through to Fortress Monroe. The story of his adventures on this trying journey would make a most liiteresUng book. At length, after being out ten days und nights, ho ran into the Union pickets near Williams burg on the peninsula. He was taken in as u deserter, but after a time he succeeded in establishing his identity, and wus sent on to Washington, from which point he subsequently rejoined Ids command. Sad to relate he was killed u few months afterwards. Efou T. Brumal, M. D. THAT AIN'T A tWXt BIO MESS. tunately the name of the hero of this Inci dent could not be leurned. and it Is supposed that ho subsequently went down in tho strug gle, to lie numbered with the heroic, but nameless dnad. The. Twelfth Wisconsin battery had ex boosted Ita ammunition, and this when it was most needed. Thero was an abundance of grape und case shot in a house about n hun dred yarJs outside our lines, but it looked liko courting death for any man to Irnverse tho Intervening space, Swept by the tiro of thu onomy's vigilant sharp-shooters. I'olntlng to the house, and without any thought of exciting any one to inukn tho at tempt, General Corse said : " The ammunition In that building is worth to us Its weight in gold ; I wish we hnd some of It lioro." On hearing this, a tall young man, n private In the Twelfth Illinois Infantry, stepped out, and saluting said': " Aro we 'blocged to have tho ammunition, Gonlral?" " Yes, but It Is work I can order no man on," was tho roply. " No noed to order, Genlral," Baid the sol dier, " in such d d tight times as these we'd orter to bo uccomsiodatin'." Thou before a hand or a voico could bo TOLD BV MAJOIt J. It. D0YLK. I think the old Ninth corps did Its full share of fighting during the war. iiml more than Its share of travelling. We were with the Army of the Potomac, taking an active part in every great battle up to the spring of 1HC.1, when orders came to pack up anil go West, though not to carry out Horace Grcely's advice. In the Bummer Ol isr,3, one division was sent down to Join Grant before Vlcksburg, ami two divisions under Bumsldii himself, were sent Into (,'entrnl Kentucky to prepare for the Invasion of Fjist Tennessee, then and since the beginning Ol the win, ul the mercy of t he enemy. In November of that year, we had forced our way through to Knoxville, but we had hnrflly reached them when our scouts brought lu word that l.ougstreet, with his whole corps and a lurge force of cavalry, WBI pushing north to destroy or capture us. liuriisiue, ir not a great MluWr, was unsurpassed as a corps commander, and nover boforo nor afterwards did ho show more ability than in preparing Knoxville for the siege that followed and in keeping Longstroot out. Fort Suuiiders, named after u brave soldi who had fallen in this camiaigu, was the key to our position. The enemy knew this as wollau did we, and as a consequence a I terrific strugglo for its possession took pluce, I was witli some Wisconsin troops behind extemporized breast works in a dense under growth on the left. Twice the enemy under Breckenridge, and again, us we understood from prisoners under Polk, nlso charged on our thin lines and tWiOS were Hung buck towards the river. It wus still early in the afternoon, und the firing in our front censed, but It Increased In the direction of tho bill to the right. We were beginning to feel that we were to have a rest, when suddenly tho men, lying down in my vicinity, opened again, but I could see no enemy. While 1 wus wondering as to tho cause, n voice called out angrily from the clouded woods : ' You d d buds! Don 1 you know you are firing on your own men? " Accompanying this, a grey horse leaped into sight from the direction of the enemy, ami on his buck wus it handsome young officer, With grey eyes ,o,. the shadow of a coming moustache., n his upper lip. I shouted to the men about me not to lire, and then invited the handsome cavalier to come in und be and for. Instead of complying with my request, he ihortened bis bold on the rein with bis left hand, waved his hat in his right, and called Imck : "You're mighty kind, but I'll see you dend first I " The next Instant, he hnd wheeled, leaped out of sight, und we could hour bis horse crushing through the timber. As soon as our men could recover from this umiizeinent, they llred in the direction Inked by the young Confederate. But even till this day. it delights me to think that bo was not hit, for conduct more daring and audaciously coesseforver beewtnet dn I ,ol nor since, and 1 doubt if it will be ever re peated. T. L. Wkst. There Is a railroad now in construction In Africa, from Lake Victoria Nyunzii, that will be completed ill four years uud will be (;."," miles long. " I wonder why Balden doesn't keep up his life insurance policy? " " He knows his wife Is perfectly able to take care of liersolf." " Teach, I suppose." " No, a freak, Bhe never stepped off a car on the wrong side." atcs, and he is also in a measure interested in one or two business enterprises. To see him at his best ono should visit him at his hondquarters on Governor's Island. There is little difficulty about this. A ten minute ride on the Government tug from the battery and you are on the Island. A short walk across the parade ground and you come to tho largo building overlooking the bay whero General Howard has his office. Unlike many regular army officers, ho is neither a martinet nor a lover of red tape. A single guard stands at the entrance to the General's quarters, and there is a messenger in an ante room who at one takes your name and m a moment returns, and ushers you into the large room in which the commander sits with his secretary near him. The room is u large light one and from it yon can see the highlands of the Nnvesink Btrdtchlnit awav to the southeast. The hills of Stnteti Island rise rough and brown in the distance and further away yon may just see the outer end of Fort Hamilton and the white buildings of quarantine, past which vessels are making their way out to sea. From these windows too you may see some fifty yards away, the dingy Uttle chapel lq which Grant, Lee. Sherman, "Joo" Johnson, Phil, Kearny, Lee, Oustpr and other military heroes knelt liefore Sampler had been fired on and where those men who were to light each other so fiercely used to worship. The walls of the General's office arc covered by maps of battle fields, famous In history. and the General smiles us he notes tho visi tor's look of surprise nt the collection. They cover a good bit of ground," the General snvs with a smile. "I can remember when every inch of that ground seemed to bo red hot with hornets' nests over every inch of It." It might be thought that the commanding general ot a department of an army which in waa only uccewury to loan and he will . to loan and a form no WSJ yours, re was plenty of spore cash all through panto, but Its owners were nearly se-;red ot their senses ami locked it up in safe posit vault, or bought gilt-odced bonds and ! 'iked them uy. They were a'raid to take idtantago Oi the situation. The; wen sure to Increase their resources very materially, for inwioy was rjjvur so Iwlty needed mid it never brought such rates c.f laterttt. Nobody thought of ii-ury. There was nothing of the Bbylock about the current transactions of last year. The nu'.:i in need of money eagerly offered terms that even Shnkespenre's char acter would never have dreamed of demand ing. But all the men Of means were not fright- "nod. S hi I them had bcn through panics before and knew how the WOSR of the many could become a bonanca for the few. These shrewd dcalert took advantageof the situation. They got togethorall the ready cash they could and either put it out In loons themselves or hired a loan broker to negotiate for them, Of course tho leans were only madfl for tin rt time in mo'-t cases, and the collateral had to i bO the best, there was ill ti.. i. .i. Ve: and it on uovornor s i.iann ana entertains out note bad to be In exorbitant himself, but he is to be met almost every wh':re luring the wlntei Mouths when society in New York la In a constant w hirl. Now you nuiv sec him at the opera with his wife and laughter, or again you will meet him at an afternoon tea exchanging courtesies with lames who take an admiring interest in the lid warrior. His faculty (or enjoying himself is remarkable, it Is sometimes a nuzsle to his friends bow the veteran ' an seem to enjoy with about equal vim a small social affair or a dry lecture upon a more dry subject before the Now York Historical Society, for that is running the gauntlet wth a vengeance, But he does It. General Howard i-1 also u club man of re nown. He is prominent in the Union League Club, and in others less prominent. He is also a member of the Authoi s Club, and of several literary organisations. In a goneral way be cultivates the Society Ot literary men rather than that of army men, and what i." more, he is popular with them. He at times seems more proud of his work as a writ! r than of his achievements in the West with Sherman, und he said to me on one occasion that lie had the satisfaction of knowing llC wus not altogether dependent upon his pay for he, made as much by writing as he receiv ed as sulury. He bus in his library carefully cherished a collection of wur maps that is al most invaluable. These are not copies, but originals drawn by such men as Sherman, Slocum, the brilliant uud Ill-fated Mcpherson, Grant, Sheridan und others. In omeCBSei these are copies Uiat were laid before coun cils of generals and there deluded. Her.- and there in some of them you may see where the strong hand of some man now dead has cor rected or amended the original plans, until thoy look more like a tanele of lines an out and out Chinese puzzle than an intelligent guide to important military operations. To mo thev were interesting in the extreme though I utterly failed to understand them. I venture l to suggest t .ioie r.il Howard that right here he hud materia) for an inter esting book upon war. He smiled signifi cantly. ' flint is but n very small portion of the mnlerial I have and t hat has come into un hands during and since the war," he said. " Then you contemplated u war book." I suggested. "I did not say so," replied the General warily, and with this reply 1 was fain to be contented. The friends ot the General lay, however. X " Jlmmle, where did you gto this Hvo cents? " " Its the money you gave mo lor the heathen, mamma." " Then why did you keop it?" i " My teacher said 1 was a hoathen." W flip im GENEcAI. FOWAKD IX WAr. TIME. that he is and has been torn longtime pre paring a work, not necessarily a history ol the ordinary tyie, treating of the wer, but rather a (orieB of sketches ol seenesth.it he SOW and toek part In. It i- Ciener.il How ard's opinion that ho is in u position to cor reet some false impressions into which setiv writers have tailed, Ono at least of these er rors hus to do with General Howard himself, and his old commander Sherman. The latter wus often criticised for appointing Howard to succeed Mel'hcrson when the latter was killed before Atlanta, and Shonnan WU charged with injustice in not appointing Logan to tho vacancy. General Howard lias the material to set this mutter right. In speaking of it to the writer be said: General John A. Logan was a magnificent soldier, brave and capable. But he was also a force In polities and General Sherman al ways hud net exactly a prejudice against volunteer officers, but he did feel that he could depend mofC on men who, like himself, were educated at West Point About the tune Sherman was preparing for bis great raid through Georgia the political campaign between Lincoln and McClellan was on. It was believed that Mr. Lincoln's success was ns essential at this time lis the triumph oi our armies in the held, and so General Lo gan, who was mi excellent stump-speaker, went back to Illinois, where for a few months he gave his eloquence to the cause. "As n matter of fact, however. General Hooker was even more disappointed than Logan, for he felt that he should have had the position. It will be reniemlvrcl that after the lighting before Atlanta he coma hoineand did not serve again during the wur. But it is due Logan nnd Hooker tosav that if Sherman bad selected either of them the work would have been as thoroughly done as It was by myself. General Howard is as modest as be is able. He knows that be did the full measure of his duty and so Is satisfied, but he is ever ready to Sve the fullrst praise to every officer a 180 olated with him in the serve-'. He is, us ever, a deeply religious man and u worker in Boon mis-on worn us no iiiuyruke part in. He is truly culled "the Christian Soldier. Gen Oral Howard moves quietly und without any blowing of trumpets. Ho some times remarks whimsii allv that one of the IB hiB department, Tills is a largo dopurl- 'greatest obstacles In his puth to sucess with Dent and Is the most Important lu our nrmy, ! the rank and 111" was the prejudice that the hkins in ns it does ihe New Fneian.i slates, i common soldier bad BgolnM roilgiou8mlnded the Atlantic and Gulf states, tho District of 0 , OENEKAI. IOWABD AT HIS PKSK. TT ill lime of peace is limited in numbers, would not be an over busy man since be tins a lurge staff of officers to assist him. Hut General Howard says that there Is no luck of work for him to do. Besides it bus always been his i habit to keep in touch with every movement Columbia und stub's as far west und south inland us Ohio, Kentucky nnd Tennessee. F.very fort, or recruiting station, In ull this district is under his direct commund. Every thing must come to him for llniil endorsement or disapproval, and while his jiowcrs aro not absolute, since he hus superiors at Washing ton, they lire well nigh so, und If his decisions are over reversed tho fact is not known. The day I saw him on Governor's Island, General Howard was less busy thiin usual, yet while I was with him fully a score of men. petty officers und privates cunio tn him, either for advice or to seek some favor. In some easosn leave of absence was wanted; In others tho men desired advice as to tho investment of their pay In such a way that they would not squundor It off hand, and In yet other cases Uio muu woro before tho General for tho pur- officers. "They utterly refused for n lime" he said "to believe Unit a mun could be a good soldier and h good Christian. I think I over came this prejudice, and by a good deal of hard work and hard lighting, but I imagine some of my old boys, who survive, look upon me us more of n praying than a lighting man. The time for (leu! Howard's retirement Is yet some months away, but he Is looking for wiird to that event with equanimity. It is now Uilioved that General Howard will be granted u leave of absence in Miiyllll his retirement in November, and that General Miles will be ordered to take coiuiiiand of this department. Fostf.ii Goates. "Sis," said a bright Hutlem youth to his sister, who was putting the finishing touches on her toilet. " you ought to marry a bur- Mar. " What do vou mean nv sunn non sonsc?" "I moan that you and a burghir would get along well together; you have go; tho false locks and ho has got tho (also keyf " quantities. A great (leal of i' was loaned to b ..s.-s tbut laid to have it and give security worth five times the amount advanced. The security,' no matter how good it wus. could not be disposed ..f on the exohangO except at ii ruinous saerlfloe. It WBB deemed bettor to pay for money und retain the socuritb s than sacrifloa the collat eral for money nnd afterwards lack both money and securities. It would be bind to tell just what rates were paid tor loans' in the darkest hours of the panic. For the use of money for a very few duys, interest ut tin; rate of one hundred per cent, a year was frequently given. It even iuu higher than that some times. Hauliers were carrying valuable customers and needed money, rnoir vaults were mil ol first class COlkvteml and they time and again emptied their vaults in order to r-itaiu their standing ou tho Stock Exchange and save themselves from failure. It ir.uy seem an outrage that money lenders should have leourod such tremendous rates, but as the cloud of depres sion gradually lifts it discloses hundreds of concerns that would have gone down With a crash but tor the help of the COSh ruis-t at such expensive figures. Of the individuals . n the street who made fortune-, or rather added to the fortune? al ready possessed, two stand out prominently. Russell Sage and Mrs. Hetty Green bad ;..iii- Ior.s on tap nnd they turned their bonk ac- ' counts over and over ogain and every tine i increased the figures in the Kink booka. Sage spent tho busiest summer ( f his life, T.'Lile most of his loans were made directly by tho shrewd old financier m his i oop-like offices on Broadway, he Severn! times allowed reliable broken to tot f r him. Jr..kcre flocked arourd Sago's office very day and through even- ..,..jt;s hour of the day. U is not true that Sag" will not talk t broker. Ho is always ready to make a trade, but it takes a clever broker to meet him in trade and cme , .ut whole. How much Sage leaned when the sums wore all added up. is guess work. He is reputed to keep from S5,00e.O9O to S15.CKW.00li, where he can lay his haiids on it at any minute. Probably $10,000,000 would bo a fair estimate of the amount he kept shifting from loan to loan throughout the panic. Now and then the loan would not Is? met ut the period appointed. Occasionally, owing to tho rc'li return in the sliapo of interest, tho loan would be renewed. But more often as the clock struck the hour when the mo-.cy was to be repaid and it failed to appear, the securities that were taken as collateral pass 1 into the possession and become the property oi Mr. Sage, He kept them and in met has many ot then; yet. But tli-ir vnlf - has mostly increased n hundred fold arid one of these davs tic sngaeiuits .id manipulator will dispose of them .niietly.it big figures and rake another load of shekels into his private cohequor. Mrs. Hetty Green muue fewer loans than her rani., financial oounterport, but she got higher rate- on thowi sic made. This mys- rious woman of the flnanclol realm abso lutely and actually aquootod tho rich men who had to have Caah and have it nt once. The tele oi the way in which she cornered nd compressed x-Judge Bitten Is a pai I .' contompenuMOUi history, Then arc tome , twtenaotthattnuisaeHoni i which the publl is igr.orent however. The firm of Hilti e. Hughes Co., was in t raits. Business dull. Collections wwe frightful. Cash had to be used constantly for purchase- and (uy rolls. Hilton could not moke a loan en any securities he had. Government bond- wen refused as collateral. The distress signal WoS about to bo dlB laved, when Mr. Green was applied to. She bad the money and sho would loan it on certain conditions. The conditions v. ere something unheard of. The groat marble building at the comer of Broad way mid Chambers street, was the only cell.-.' 6nl She WOUM take. She loaned on less than one-third of its panic value ami if the i sm win nor met promptly in the instalments agreed upon, the palace of which Alexander T. Stewart was so proud was to Instantly puss Into her bunds. She made Hilton pay the Title Guarantee Co. a big sum for a cast iron guaranty of the title. The day the deal was closed and the richest woman in tho land took a certified eheok on the Chemical Nntioniil Bank to the Trust Co., where (hi papers were finally signed, she made Judge Hilton pay live dollars for a cub to take her 0 distance ol live blocks ur.d also give her ten cents for a sandwich, out of which she made her lunch. Bhe doubtless made other exten sive deals of Uie same description and on tho same rigorous and exacting terms, but the details have not been disclosed. It is onb known, on good authority, that tho nan e up to date, has been worth t3,MO,000 to tier, l'rebabiy the outside broker who mode the most mouev on loans during the stiingcnt tunes, wus Howard 1'. Frothinghom. He bus been in the bUSlMM forye.irs. He acts foros- tates.trusi oomponieaand bonkingiiisUtqtions ui the placing of money. He Startled, wan street one dav in the midst oi the panic by appearing on the floor of the steel; Exchange and offering to loan 11,000,000 at a fairly high rate of interest on the be.-! sc. unties. The street was looking for siu.li a savior nnd every cent of the money Was taken in less than an hour nnd commission enough was earned by Frethinchinn to make him com fortable for lid-. Too next day be appeared ot the Exchange with ftroinei million mid be repeated the operation for several days. All his loans were gtrt-odgeti and hc turned in a very bandsome profit to the people whom he represented, besides making a lortune him self. While he is very proud ol this achieve ment, he is really more proud of tic fact that ht is mayor ol Lake Hopotoong, N. J. He ban a beautiful house on the shores of thai hike and the citizens of the borough there aboute appreciated his residence amoni them and madohlffl the chief functionary t the vicinity. He is greatly delighted und i, addition fools honored be -uuse jiis skill as nu angler led the governor of NOW Jersey to make him one of the fish wardens of the state. Frothiiighum Is short., a tnlle stoat uud a full Hedged blonde. . Laweexce S. Mott. I