I CHICK AM AUG A PARK 1 &£ Its Superior Advantages as a Maneuvering Ground j|| For Troops. The Government finds itself fortu nate in the ownership of such a ground for the assembling, instruc tion, and manoeuvring of troops as the Chickamauga Park reservation proves to be, writes General H. V. Boynton, in the New York Sun. Un der the aot of Congress making the park a national manoeuvring ground, and authorizing the Secretary of War to assemble there such a portion of the regular army as he may choose, and also to allow and arrange for the concentration and instruction of the National Guard, it was the intention to inaugurate such use of the reserva tion during the coming season. The Adjutant-General of the army was considering what should be done in this direction, and the troops of sev eral States were looking forward to summer or autumn camping at the park. Suddenly the practical uses of actual war set these plans aside, and replaced them by others which in volved the concentration of armies and their preparation for battle. No other nation owns such a field for manoeuvres. Eleven square miles of the tract are now fitted for regula tion camps. Eight of these are in open forest, carefully cleared of un derbrush, and three square miles are in fields. There are four square miles within the legal limits of the tract not yet purchased. This section is largely forest, and is available for manoeuvres by which it might be de sired to instruct troops in movements through virgin forest. The entire area within tho present limits of the park is clear of fences, and teams can drive over the fields and through the woods in every part of it. forests were cleared out the future uso of the park for a camp of in struction was kept in mind, and orders were given that room should bo made for teams to be driven through it in any direction. Tho forest portion of the tract was thus made practicable for artillery movements as well as for cavalry and infantry. There are no swamp grounds in the park, and the soil in all sections is ex cellent for camps. The natural drain age is good, the whole tract rising gradually from the Chickamauga River, which bounds it on the east for several miles, to the spurs of Missionary Ridge on its western boundary. Aside from ' THOMAS'S HEADQUARTERS, BNOD GRASS HOUBE, CHICKAMAUGA. - the river it is a watered tract. Several small streams fed by abundant springs traverse it. There are never-failing ponds, meeting all requirements for the animals of infantry, cavalry, and artillery camps. Looking forward to the occupation of the park as a camp of instruction, the Commisjiouers have provided eight artesian wells in order that it might not be necessary for the troops to use surface water for drink ing purposes. The nat ural features of the park pre sent every element of topography likely to be met with in actual cam paigning. There are fields and forests, each of great extent, low ridges anil precipitous elevations, some clear of woods and some in timber. The Chickamauga River, with its steep banks, affords every needed facility far instruction in bridge building. The roads of the park system extend along the crest of Missionary Ridge for eight miles and cross Lookout Mountain through the field of the "Battle Above the Clouds." All the roads by which the Union and the Confederate armies approached and left the various fields within the limits of the park have been highly improved, and give easy access to every portion of the seven battle fields about Chattauooga which are reached by the mileage system of the park. These are Chickamaugu, Wau- ENTEANCE TO OHATTANOOOA CEMETERY. hatchie and Brown's Ferry, Orchard Knob, Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge, Tunnel Hill, and Ringgold. Practice inarches over these roads will make known to officers and men alike the unsurpassed strategy by which Chattanooga was finally secured, the intricate and quick tactical movements of notable battles, and the splendid fighting of both sides, which has not been elsewhere surpassed in v.-ar. In addition to the marches over the actual ground of such contests, the observa tion towers on the main fields, the crest road on Missionary Ridge, the roads over Lookout, and the summit of the mountain itself, afford eleva tions from which every movement, either strategy or the tactics of the several battlefields, can be distinctly traced. The dimensions of this national TJOOKOUT STATION COMMANDING MISSION ARY RIDOE. manoeuvring ground will appear from a few figures. The legal limits of the Chickamauga section embrace fifteen square miles. The crest of Missionary Ridge for eight miles is owned by the Government, as are the battlefields of General Sherman at the north end of the ridge, and of Hooker and Walthall on Lookout Mountain. The central driveway of the park system is already finished from the northern extremity of Missionary Ridge southerly for twenty-five miles thi-ough the Chicka mauga field toward Lafayette. Tho remaining five miles are under con struction. In an east and west direc- tion tlie drive from Ringgold to the western limit is eleven miles. From Missionary Ridge at Rossville to Wau liatchie Ridge beyond Lookout Moun tain is six miles. From the same point by way of McFarland's Gap the western boundary of the park to its southern limits is eight miles. The total mile age of the park system is over 100 miles. A few concise statements will show the advantages which the park pos sesses for practical field instruction. Standing on the point of Lookout, the three mountain ranges and the river over which General Rosecrans's strategic campaign extended are all in full view. The front of his move ment, which when it reached the Ten nessee River after crossing the Cum berland had a front of 150 miles, can be readily traced. All the battleiieL's mentioned in the course of this letter can be located, and the ground of all tho tactical movements of the battles of Wauhatchie, Orchard Knob, Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge can be seen and readily under- ; stood. The observation towers upon < the battlefields of Chii-kamauga are' under the eye and show the relative positions of the movements of that engagement to those of the battles about Chattanooga. Ringgold Gap, the closing engagement in the series of battles embraced in the park sys tem, is also clearly discernible. Leaving Lookout Mouutain and taking position on Orchard Knob, which was the headquarters of Gen erals Grant, Thomas and Granger throughout the battle of Chattanooga, a near view is obtained of the Con federate position upon Missionary Ridge, and the movements of the Union troops in the Army of the Cum berland, Army of the Tennessee and Hooker's army for their dislodgment can be readily followed. Passing to the crest of Missionary Ridge and driving along its summit, every feature of the Confederate position and all the Union movements as seen from | that side are under the eye, as are j the battlefields of Lookout and ! Chickainauga. The observation towers upon the Chickauiauga field, which occupy the I highest elevations and rise above the j timber, enable the student to trace all the tactical movements of the three days' operations upon that field. The Government road to Ringgold will be j completed early in the present season and the lines of battle at that point have already been ascertained and partially marked. It was decided to establish the first camps in the Dyer field, which in one direction adjoin the ground where Longstreet's columns broke the Union lines on.the second day of the battle, and caused a considerable portion of the right of the army to be driven from the field in confusion. At its other extremity, it sweeps up to the heights of Snodgrass Hill, where those famous but unsuccessful attacks of Longstreet's columns broke in unend ing succession of magnificent assaults, continuing from 1 o'clock till sun down, against the unshaken lines of Thomas. These camps will be the centre of a division line of three brigades, if the present plan of estab lishing the reserve division at the park is carried out. It was also determined to estab lish the right brigade in the fields about the Bloody Pond in front of Widow Glenn's, which was Rosecrans's headquarters, and on the Viniard field. At this latter point, on Satur day, seven brigades on each side swept back and forth in succeeding victories and defeats, from noon until sundown, in one of the bitterest contests of those which marked the severe fight ing of the two days. This portion of the line also embraced the brilliant fighting of the poet Lytle's command. The camp of the left brigade is also in plain view of the fighting ground about General Thomas's headquarters at the Snodgrass House,and will cover a por tion of the territory over whioh Gor don Granger's troops rushed without orders toward the sound of battle, to the relief of General Thomas and"the salvation of an army. An adjoining camp overlooks the Kelly field, into which Breckinridge's division of Confederates, turning the Union left, penetrated on Sunday morning, and over which five brigade charges occurred in the movements necessary to drive his columns back. In front of this field also ran the four divisions of the Union left, which stood as firm as did Thomas's troops on Snodgrass Hill, and bore the brunt of frequent assaults by the entiro right wing of the enemy. The camps for cavalry have been es tablished in the open country along the Chickamauga River from Alexan der's Bridge to Reeu's Bridge, thus occupying the ground where Forrest's cavalry, stationed to observe the right and rear of Bragg's army, was at tacked by the head of General Thomas's corps, which, by a night march, had passed around the Confederate right to a position fully in its rear, and cov ering the roads to Chattanooga. Here Forrest's cavalry dismounted, and fighting as infantry, so fought, in well ordered lines, with a pluck and en durance which carried them into the very flashing of the guns of the Union batteries, as to create the impression with Thomas's veterans that they were lighting infantry. On this portion of the field the soldiers now camping there will learn how for five hours a contest raged constantly at point blank range and often almost hand-to hand where the severity of the fight ing is well illustrated by the single fact that one brigade of Forrest's com mand here lost a quarter of its entire force in killed and wounded in the first hour of the engagement. TO RESCUE ANDREE. An Kxpetlition of French Scientist* to Uu mi Airship. An expedition sent out by the French Geographical Society arrived recently at Now York. Its object is to reach the Kloudike by balloon or airship, and then togo to the rescue of Andree. AIRSHIP TO RESCUE ANDREE. Their airship is made of silk aud is now in transit to Vancouver, B. C. Its capacity is 3000 cubic meters. It carries 3300 kilograms (about four tons). The great merit of the ship is that it is impossible for it to lose any gas. When any escapes it is forced into a separate chamber, where it is kept for use when needed. The great drawback to the airship is that it con tinually loses more or less gas. This flying machine is the most perfect in existence. It was built by M. Mallet, who built Andree's famous airship from the plans of the great aeronaut, La Chambre. It is oblong in shape and is constructed on the plans of the well-known De Lisse sys tem. The machine is steered by a system of guide ropes, which are thrown from the car as occasion re quires. The River Nile has its rises, but Jhose that do mischief are not Ire quent. During the last 1000 years there has been only one sudden rise of the Nile, that of 1829, when 30,000 people were drowned. Undulating laud is better for the growth of crops than a level soil. HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES. InvUible Cement. Isinglass dissolved in spirits of wiue will produce a transparent ce ment which will unite broken glass so as to render the fracture impercepti ble. Glass Spoons. Glass spoons are sold at the drug stores for the taking of medicines which may tarnish silver. Better, however, than these are the glass tubes which keep such powerful drugs away from the teeth as well; aud bet ter, perhaps, than both, is the atten tion to food and hygienic living, which does away with the necessity of any such heroic dosing.—New York Post. llraM Clothes-Trees. Brass clothes-trees are late addi tions in the furniture shops. They have the advantage of weight, which gives tlieni stability, a quality often lacking in the article. With them are seen, too, standing brass towel-racks. It has been supposed that this form of the rack was practically eliminated from use, and to have such made of brass does not commend itself espe cially. Wet towels, thrown over the brass rack, would soon work injury alike to themselves and their support. Cooking Fruits for Children. "Baked apples may be used where they agree with children, and a raw scraped apple may be given," writes Mrs. S. T. Rorer on "Proper Cooking for the Nursery" in the Ladies' Home Journal. "Bananas should always be cooked, unless they are very ripe and the skins quite black. To bake a ba nana nicely you should have a porce lain or granite baking-dish. Strip the skins from the bananas, place them in a dish, sprinkle over a tablespoouful of sugar; add four or five tablespoon fnls of water, and bake in a quick over for twenty minutes, basting once or tv ice. Serve warm. Blackberry jam, if properly made, is quite au im portant nursery food." Ironing Napkins. Tn ironing napkins, fold like table cloths, with the selvedges together, then iron straight up and down with the warp, not across. Fold .first wrong side out, then fold back even ly to tho edges. This allows it to open readily. If there is a monogram fold outside. Fancy folding is a mat ter of choice, but most private famil ies prefer the plain fold. Sherry al lows but one way, the English pocket to hold the roll. English papers ad vertise paper patterns for showing how to fold linen in fancy shapes. Among these is the "prince's feather," where the napkin is folded first in pleats, then crinkled by running a silver knife or pencil through the cen tre fold. The "salt cellar" of the kindergarten is also a favorite shape. —Washington Star. Along the Fie V-r*,. Cranberry Pie—Linen pie dish with plain pastry, then fill it with uncooked cranberries, add one cup molasses and four tablespoonfnls sugar. Cover with an upper crust and bake in a quick oven for 30 minutes. Plain Pie Pastry—Cut one cup shortening into three cups flour; add one teaspoonftil salt, one teaspoonful sugar and sufficient cold water to moisten. Turn out on the board and roll from you. Fold and roll three times and it is ready to use. It is much better if it stands on the ice over night.—Mrs. Rorer. Rice Pie—Boil one-half cup rice un til tender, after which add milk until it is a thin batter, the yolks of four eggs and a tablespoouful sugar. Bake with one crust until brown and spread over the top a frosting made by beat ing together the whites of four adding six tablespoonfnls sugar; flavor with lemon aud putin the oven for five minutes. Apple Cream Pies—One cup steamed apples, one cup sweet cream; sweeten to taste anil flavor with cinnamon anil lemon. Beat to a smooth cream, place in a rich crust anil bake in a quick oven; Put the whites of two eggs anil one spoonful sugar, beaten to a stiff froth, ou top with a wet knife; return to oveu a few moments until of a rich brown color. Quick Mince Pie—Pare anil chop two apples; add to them two broken crackers, one tablespoonful vinegar and one tablespoonful sherry, one quarter cup sugar and oae-half cup chopped raisins or clean currants. Add the grated riuil of one lemon and one teaspoonful orange juice. Fill this into a pie dish lined with plain paste; cover anil bake in a moderate oven for 30 minutes. Chocolate Pie—Takepne and one-half coffee cups sugar, one tablespoonful butter, yolks of three eggs, one cup sweet milk, two coffee cups flour and one teaspoonful soda. For the tilling' Wlytes of three eggs beaten stiff,then add one and one-half cups sugar, three tablespoonfuls grated chocolate, one teaspoonful vanilla. Beat all to gether and spread between the cake, which has bean baked in layers. Orange Pie—Squeeze the juice from two large oranges, grate the thin yel low, mix together anil save one table spoonful. Beat together one-half pound sugar anil one-quarter pound butter; add yolks of six eggs beaten light and the orange juice. Stir in the whites of four eggs beateu fto a froth anil pour the mixture into pie plates, lined with puff paste. Bake in a quick oveu and when done spread with a meringue made of the two re maining egg whites, two tablespoon fuls powdered sugar, a pinch of soda and the tablespoon of juice. Brown in oven. This will make two pies. The design of the mace in the House of Representatives is borrowed from the emblems of the Roman Re public. AN EXTRAORDINARY LILY. A New lloime Plant, Recently Discovered in the Illmvlsya*. A new plant of extraordinary beauty, discovered in the Himalayas, has re cently been cultivated. Placed on a shelf in a moderately warm room, the dry bulb, without having been planted, produces a flower that unfolds and blooms in midwinter. This curious plant belongs to the family of the calla lily. Its scientific name is sav romatum pedatum, and its bulbs are round and flat at the top. The petal is of a rich, deep crimson, extending from a greenish yellow calyx,*the inner surface of whose ex tremity shows crimson spots on a yel low ground. After blooming the planted bulb bears long, pointed leaves on a spotted stem, while the WILL (-.ROW ON A SIIELF. (New House Plant from the Himalayas That Blooms Without Care.) implanted one soon perishes. Another interesting novelty in plants is the little mimosa spegazzini, first cultivated in the botanical gar den in Rome. It was discovered in the Argentine Republic by mission aries. The pretty little plant is much hard ier than the well-known sensitive plant (mimosa pudica). It has the same habit of shrinking and closing its leaves at the slightest touch. The leaves are soon after raised and opened, but at night they are invari ably closed. The sensitive movement of the plant is termed a threefold one. First, the feathery leaflets close, bending their points forward; then the littlo ribs that bear them move together, and at last the stem of the leaf siuks with its four spindles. Fact* About Our Country. The United States are inhabited by inly tive per cent., or one-twentieth part, of the population of the world, but tive per cent, of the world's people use one-third of the world's iron, steel and copper, one-quarter of the world's product of wool and more than one-quarter of its cotton. Texas alone makes as much cotton as the entire South did before the war, al though less than one-tenth of her area is in cotton lauds. Since 1860 the number of farm-owning families in the country has increased from 1,850,000 to 8,392,000, while farm-tenants' families are only 2,132,754, against 1,508,750 in 1860. Farm owners are increasing more rapidly than farm tenants, and of the two combined 6,000,000 families are at work on the farms. In Favor of Delny. "Sometimes," said Mr. Cuinrox, "1 am inclined to think that people are unnecessarily slow in concluding en terprises of public interest." "Well," replied his wife, "maybe it's just as well. I've been listening to Dollie's graduation essay, and it'll be a great thing if the public can wait till after it comes out."—Washington Star. A Curious Windmill. A farmer of nautical tastes living in Westohester County, New York, has constructed a curious windmill. A NAUTICAL FARMER'S WINDMILL. It pumps water from the Bronx into a Williamsbridge farm house. The four sloops are correctly built and rigged. They fill, jib and tack as they swing around the circle, often making great speed. THE MINUTE. A button I am, man fastens by me The robe of his future, his great "To b«." I close up the past so none can look In, I hold fust forever the great "Has Been," I go like a pebble that drops In the sea, I urn one of the ticks of Eternity. —Mary E. Page, in Boston Transcript. HUMOROUS. Belle—And BO they were happily married? Nell—Yea; each of them married somebody else. Brown—Jones strikes me as a man who is afraid to think for himself. Smith—Why doesn't he get married? Father—Has the young mnu any prospects? Daughter Well —er Papa, he has relatives in the Klon dike. First Friend—So he married iti haste ! Did he repent at leisure? Second Friend—No; he repented iu baste, too. The Tramp—Can you tell me how I can get some work, sir? The Citizen (crustily)— Yes; buy a bicycle and try to keep it clean! Bacon—And he's kind-hearted, is lie? Egbert—Kind hearted? Why, I don't believe he ever said an unkind word, even to an alarm clock ! Mr. Hopeful—How dull it was at Wilkins* party, last night. She —Yes; in the early j art of the evening. It got brighter soon after you left. Mrs. Straight—My daughter has beeu very carefully brought up. Col. Blunt—But, notwithstanding, madam, I tind her a very interesting com panion. "Now, Beiinie, here's the medicine, and here's the dime papa left to pay yo.i for taking it." "All right, mam ma. If you take it and don't tell, I'll give you half." "So you refused him?" "Yes; I told him it was better \o make a great many men happy by being engaged to them than to make one miserable by marrying him.",, Visitor (to insane asylum)— That man looks rational. Keeper—Yes, but he is really the craziest one in the whole place; he keeps wanting to see his mother-in-law. Business Man (to clerk, whom he has caught kissing his typewriter) Do I pay you to kiss my typewriter, sir? Clerk—You don't have to; I'm willing to do it for nothing. "What," asked the dreamer, "would you do if you could be a king for a day?" "Me?" asked the practical mail. "I'd borrow enough money to live 011 the rest of my life." American Tourist—l understand, Marquis, that you 112 11 in love with a distinguished American lady on ac count of her pretty foot. Marquis— Dat is it. Dat is it. De pretty way she foots de bills. Cos Stick—l don't see you out rid ing lately, old chap. You don't mean to say you have tired of your wheel? Henry Peck—No, not at all; but you see my wife has taken my tires for the baby to cut his teeth 011. Simpkins Did you notice how sheepishly Wigwag looked when I asked him how the fare was at his old boarding place? Timkins—No won der. They fed him on mutton chops three times a day as long as he was there. "I understand that Jones is in hard luck." "Yes, indeed! He has been obliged to become an agent for the 'flmvmer' wheel after insisting for yearn that the 'Scorcher' was the only wheel any self-respecting bicyclist could ride." "How is your husband?" asked one o" two women. "Very much run COWL," was the answer. "Perhaps he works too hard." "No, he doesn't. But he loses sleep and wrecks his con stitution trying to figure out some way to live without working at all." The Chin 1111*»n ami the Bluejackets. H. 31. K. Rapid recently called at Cairns, in Northern Q ueeus ln u d< 8 town with a large Chinese population, among whom a boisterous party of bluejackets from the warship ran riot when on shore leave, with the result that a bill for st>2s damages was for warded to the captain, together with the following explanatory letter; Misser Captain—What for you send him sala man aluugniy fellow-countly man shop, smash em window, steal etn hat, blake em door! What fot your sala man blake em window? Window no lun away. My country man want blake em sala man;sala man lun away. Window more better sala man. I get your countlymau makem bill longa you. Suppose you no pay him, mo te'le your Missie Queen. She no pay, me tell em my empeior. You look out! Suppose she no pay him bill God save em queen no more. No more Chinaman callem queen good fellow. Good-by, Misser Captain, hope you 110 catchee seasick. —Westminster Gazette. "Hobson'» ( liolre." The first man in England to keep 8 stable of hack-horses for hire was named Tobias Hobson. His methods of doing business were strictly impartial. He strongly ob jected to one customer having an ad vantage over another. In accordance with his peculiar sense of justice, therefore, his stable rules were such that when a man came to hire a horse he was obliged to take the one nearest the door, and naturally the style of animal he got depended entirely on chance. This unusual procedure attracted at tention, so that when n man was obliged to accept something when he should have had his selection, he would say it was "Hobsou's choice." France and Germany are endeavor ing to acclimatize the American lob ster, as hardier and healthier than his European congener.