HIGH CLASS TRAIN SERVICE. DEDICATION NATIONAL MILITARY PARK AT CHICKAMAUGA SEPTEMBER 19 & 20. 1895. LOW RATES VIA THE QUEEN & CRESCENT ROUTE. W. C. RlNEARSON, G. P. A , . . CINCINNATI, O . Veterans Will all be interested in knowing that low rates and abundant accommodations will be at their disposal for traveling cheaply and comfortably by the Queen & Crescent Route to the dedication of the Chicka- mauga National Park this fall, on the anniversary days of the great battle fought on the same ground thirty-two years ago—(September 19th and 20th, 1863). It will be the occasion of one of the greatest and most brilliant assemblages of veterans that has ever been known. G. A. R. organizations and their friends all over the country are preparing to attend the ceremonies. Abundance of hotel accommodations will be found, and the veterans who desire, will be provided with means to tent on the old battle-field, there to live the old days over again. The question of how to get to Chattanooga is answered by the announcement that the Queen and Crescent Route offers all possible inducements in the way of low rates, elegant trains of Palace Day Coaches and through Vestibuled Sleeping Cars; scenery along the way that suggests the days of the '60's; schedules that carry one to Chattanooga in only TWELVE hours from Cincinnati, and a high class service which is a revelation to those who traveled southward in the ranks, thirty years ago, footsore and tired, over un- broken hill and mountain. The scenery along 1he line of the Q. & C. is known as the most beautiful in all of the great Central South. The line passes through the Blue Grass Region, over the famous High Bridge, and through the Cum- berland Plateau, past Perryville and Mill Springs, (each a short distance from the line), across the Cumberland at Burnside's old headquarters, and down the valley of the Tennessee past Walden's Ridge, Missionary Ridge and Orchard Knob, past the National Cemetery, and under the brow of Lookout Mountain to the busy city of Chattanooga. The route is replete with historic interest, traversing the very ground over which the boys in blue made some of the greatest charges known in the history of bat tles. It is also marked by an unending panorama of natural beauty, both picturesque and characteristic of the southern country. Veterans should avail themselves of this opportu- nity to visit Mission Ridge, Lookout Mountain and Chickamauga. The government has made these historic fields into one great and lasting monument to the American Volunteer. No Union veteran, and no son of a veteran, should fail to make the trip. Full information, with printed matter, may be had on application to any of the undersigned. NEW YORK, JNO, MENZIES, G. E. A., 343 BROADWAY. CHICAGO, W. A. BECKLER, NOR. PASS'R AGT., I I I ADAMS ST. CINCINNATI, CHAS W. ZELL, DIV. PASS'R AGT., FOURTH AND RACE. “ W. W. BROOKS, CITY PASS'R AGT., “ “ CLEVELAND, W. W. DUNNAVANT, TRAV. PASS'R AGT. DETROIT, C A. BAIRD, TRAV. PASS'R AGT , WOODWARD AND JEFFERSON AVENUES. [Written sideways on left side] A PART OF THE BATTLEFIELD. (THE KELLY HOUSE.) [End]