TOR THX YOUHtt PEOPLE. ni> re*t. My tittle rough dog and I Live a lite that U rather rare, . We have eo many good walks to take And eo few bad thlnge to bear; So much that gladdens and reoreataa 80 little of wear and tear. Hometlmee It blows and rains, Bat ettll the eix feet ply j Ho oare at aU to the following four If the leading two know why. "Tie a pleasure to have Hi feet, we think, My little rough dog and 1. And when we go all|Otie way, E T is a thing we should never do, To reck en the two without the four, Or the four without the two ; It would Dot come right tf any one tried. Because it would not be true. And who shall look up and say That it ought not so to be, Though the earth that is heaven enough for him Is lees than that to me I For a little rough dog can swell s Joy That enters eternity. Felly ller.rv'. Pm It was Polly's—whatever anybody may say—for she baited the trap and set it, aud caught the little fellow, and fed him afterward, and named him John Henry. He was a young rat, not much bigger .4 than—well, not mnch bigger than a goose'a egg, which everybody knows the size of, of course. He was*soft and silky, delicate shades of slate-color los ing themselves in tho tendereet shades of gray, and a tail abont the size of a bran, span, new slate pencil—and such ears 1 They looked like little brown shells, in which was the daintiest shade of pink, and they were so thin that Pol ly ooold see the light shining through them. As for hn Henry's eyes, they were no better ooking than two jet black—black jet beads, and they twinkled, and twinkled, and twinkled. Buch hands as John Henry had ! Deli cate little fingers, about as big around as fine zephyr needles, and abont as long as Polly's eyelashes. I have drawn John Henry's portrait carefully, because he was for some time Suite an important member of our fam y, and Polly'B chief pet. He was a baby rat when she canght liirn in the cage-like trap; but he grew wonderful ly, and became very tame. He must have been in the trap for some time when Polly discovered him, for he was nearly starved ; his hunger had made him lose all fear and take food directly from Polly's hand, and Polly fed him with all sorts of nice things—bits of 4 cake, pieces of meat, scraps of cheese, and finally topped off the fine meal with a thimbleful cf milk, which ho drank so greedily that we could see him "swell ing wisibly before onr weryeyes." And from that day—when sitting up on his hindlejpi and washing his dainty little hands with his pink little tongue, he looked into Polly's face aud saw the goodness there—he and she became fast friends. Polly wasn't afraid of him— not a bit. Bhe would put her hands into the trap and Btroke his ratsbip's beck, and even tickle hia ears with his tail, without remonstrance. John Hen ry grew tamer and tamer. He would run and find Polly in any part of the 4 honae if she called him, and he would search Polly's pocket* for aweetmeata, and sometimes be would crawl into the depths of her cloak pocket, nestle down there among the gloves and the hand kerchief, and take a nap. Yon see Pol ly's cloak hung just over the hall regis ter, and was always warm and comforta ble. One Sunday morning, just as Polly was starting for Hunday-achool In ail the glory of her new sealskin cloak, it began to rain, and as a wetting is rather bad for fur. Aunt Elinor was forced to insist on Polly's changing her new cloak for her old one. "The idea," said Polly, " of anybody wearing ac everyday cloak to Sunday school I Nobody ever heard of such a thing. I shall be ashamed all the time." But Annt Nell insisted, and so Polly made the beet of it, and off she went, brushing a great tear-drop from her eye as ahe shut the door. It was late when Polly reached the Monday-school, and the serviocs had be gun. They were just singing. Polly took her place in her class as quickly as she con I.l,and got settled just in time for the superintendent's prayer. The school was very quiet; it was a very gopd school, and you might have heard a pin drop while Mr. was praying. Polly had bowed her head with the rest, l and was trying to understand every I word of the prayer, when the little girl next to her shrieked, and then another little girl shrieked, and then all the little girls of Polly's cisss jumped up on benches, and then the teacher screamed, and then the boys in the next class to say: "There he goes. Here he is—under this bench. No, he ain't; he's out in the aisle"—all speak ing right out in the Sunday-school, and flinging Bunday-aebool books ami lusts and anything ehw they could lay hands on, at something on the floor. They made such a rumpus that nolxxly knew when the superintendent aaid "amen;" but presently be was among them with a cane, jabbing it nnder settees sad un der the book cases, and anywhere else he could jab it under. Then the sexton came with a poker, and ha and the *u- Grintendent rattled and banged away e everything. Polly was bewildered—she didn't -know what they were after, and what it all about; and she opened her eyes vary wide at raeb a confusion in Sun day-school. She had just made np her mind that It moat be a rat, when be jumped right out from behind the book case. Polly saw him, and gave a little **" My. my," ahe said, "it is John Henry 1", " And sure enough it waa, and Polly caught him easily enough, poor little fellow, all bruised god bleeding, and frightened almost to death. And Polly him np in ber pocket handker i&hief, and walked out of school, with a sense of personal injury on her face such as I never ssw before. "The idea," she said, "of being afraid of John Henry I" And poor John Henry was siek for • long time sfteruard. He never wanted to go to Sunday-school again, you may bo mire. And yon may bo eqnally mire that the superintendent didn't want him there Polly bandaged him,and bathed hia brained none, and fed him spoon food for aome daya, and to the delight of her dear little heart, John Henry re covered. Ho ia now a very dignified and gray old rat, and Polly say* he winka knowingly, aa mnch aa to aay " Rather not," whenever he heara Bun day-school mentioned.— Wm. M. F. Round, in St. Nicholas. A Colorado Xlning Town. Eureka, to an Eaatern nan, ia prob ably one of the moat forlorn, unfinished, demoralised looking towns in the coun try, and before going into da tails of the manners, customs, bnaineaa, etc., of the place, I will, writes a correspondent, give a brief description of the town, so that yon may form some idea of the sit uation The town proper ia built in a narrow canyon running about north and south. At the eastern side the mountain rises abruptly above the town several hun dred feet, the houses being built partly into it, each house having a storeroom dug under a hill. On the west side the slope is more gradual, rising into high hills some half mile out of town ; while above and beyond all, tho towering form of Prospect mountain looms grandly up, and asserts itself tho monarch of the range. The center of the town is com pactly built, extending for about half a mile up tho length of the canyon, while the width is not mnch over five hundred feet from hill to hill. Three streets run the entire length of tho town, with an >ccaaional cross-street,stopping abrupt ly at the foot of the mountain on the •aat, or straggling up the sloping hilla on the west side for a short distance, ending in a hog corral or ore dump, or anything else that happens to obstruct its further progress. Tb6 town has outgrown tho narrow limits of tho canyon, and is spreading np the slopes and ravines on the western aide, but with no regard to system or order. Men came here to make money, not to live; until lately very few brought ! their families. They needed a shelter, and a hut was as good as a palace; they built into the hills aud under the hills, Hhanties of logs, of lumber, of stone, of ; everything that was linndieat and cheap est. Each man built his cabin where he I chose; there was no grading, no laying | out ofstreets, no sewerage; footpathsand trails wound in and out from one to the j other, until now the man who is highest up the hill throws his slope upon his neighbor's roof, or, if his fire gives out, walks out of his cabin aud warms at his neighbor's chimney. The principal street is Main street, which is entirely devoted to stores and saloons. Tho buildings are mostly mere shanties, one story high, and each one built in sir.e and stylo to suit the ! caprice and busincra of its owner. The j general grade of tho hill is quite steep; each property owner bnihls the side- | ftlk in front of his premises to suit : mself, so that, in walking np Main street you sre continually climbing np 1 steps, the sidewalks being somewhat on ! the plan of a terraced garden. On all other streets and by-ways there are no sidewalks; you can take your choice be tween the middle of the street or nearer the fence, and navigate as best yon can i between piles of wood snd lumber or refuse matter, which impedes progress j everywhere. Nothing is finished or set tled. A street is clear to-day and to-morrow a pack train of a dozen mnles comes down from the mountsins snd unload* n pile of firewood as high as the house right iu the middle of the thoroughfare; a house or a cabin which to day looks as if it had quite made np its mind to stay where it is, to-morrow is seen moving gajly down the street to some new locality. Nobody seems to have aDy back yard, or if he has he doesn't use it; all the refuse of the kitchen is thrown into the street. We have sev eral times narrowly escaped s shower bath from the contents of s washbowl lieing thrown from the front door of a dwelling. Rest Required. The true worker understands the im portance of rest, snd rarely overtaxes himself; consequently he can work at any time. Many a man can work only at particular seasons snd in particular moods. His mind is like s hone run ning loose in the psstnre, snd be can not always catch it; at least, it will Uka some time to bring it np and put it into harness. Now it is evident that s man can do uothing in twenty minutes if it takes him half an hour to get his mind st work ; but the true worker has his Sowers always st command. In any odd fteen minutes be can do a full quarter hour's work. These fragments of time count np in the long run. The gift of work must be accompanied with the gift of resting. To get tne most money ont of a team of horses, not only mnat they be poshed hard when nnder harness, but between work hours they must be unharnessed, rubbed down, snd made most comfortable. Some men manage their mimls in so bad sway as to leave the harness on over night. They worry over their work daring the intervals of labor, so that when they come back to their toil they are half exhausted before they begin. Bat the noted workers are thoee who in intervals of toil take things more easily. Such a one. when the work boor is over, drops his task sod unharnesses his mind. Then, when called again to his work he can pat bis whole strength in it Orange* as a Regimes. A van! number of orange* ara eaten by the Spaniard*, it being, in fact, no nnonmmon thing for the children of a family to oonanme ten or a doaen onuigea each before breakfaat, gather ing them freah for thia pnrpoae from the treea. Snob wboleaale oonanmption of what la commonly looked upon aa a inxnry appears to have no unhealthy effect upon the system. On the con trary, the testimony of a late eminent phyaieian authorises the uae of fruit aa most wholaaome immediately upon wak ing in the morning ; he, Indeed, pre scribed ennh a rtgimtn to a friend aa the only invigorating and permanent cure for indignation, faoetioosly remark ing at the time that he gave her a piece of advice which, if it were known to bia dyspeptic patients, would cost him his practice, aa they might prefer ao simple a remedy to bia professional visits; WHAT PEOPLE EAT AND DRINK. *%• tdilimitou la Maar Art I. rlaa at CuiaartlM. The following is from • paper read before the American Bocial Bcienoe asso ciation , in Boston, by Mr. George T. Angell: Cayenne pepper is adulterated with red lead, mnHtard with ohromate of lead, curry powder with red lead, vinegar with sulphuric acid, arsenic and corro sive sublimate. It is stated that prob ably half the vinegar now sold in our cities is rank poison. One of our Bos ton chemists analysed twelve packages of pickles put up by twelve different wholesale dealers, and found copper in ten of them. Many of our flavoring oils, sirups, jellies and preserved fruits contain poisons. The adulterations of tea are too numerous to mention. Oof fee is not only adulterated, but A patent lias been taken out for molding chicoory into tho form of coffee berries, and I am told that clay is now molded, and per haps flavored with an essence to repre sent coffee. Cocoa and chooolate are adulterated with various mineral sub stances. Several mills in New England, and probably many elsewhere, are now en gaged in grinding white stone into a fine powder for purposes of adulteration. At some of these mill sthey grind three grades—soda grade, sugar grade and flour grade. It sella for about half a cent a pound. Flour has been adulter ated in England, and probably here, with plaster of Paris, bone dust, sand, clay, chalk and other articles. lam told that large quantities of damaged ami unwholesome grain are ground in with flour, particularly with that kind called Graham flour. Certainly hun dreds, and probably thousands, of barrels of terra alba, or white earth, are sold in our cities every year to be mixed with sugars in oonfectionery and other white substances. lam told by an eminent pbysician that this tends' to produce stone, kidney complaints and variona diseases of the stomach. A Boston chemist tells me that he has found sevonty-flve per cent, of terra alba in what was fold as cream of tartar used for cooking. A large New York house sells three grades of cream of tartar. A Boston chemist reccntlv analyzed a sample of the best gracing about aa aimple aa that of a tele ancestora settled in Ilnaaia long ago, phone. A pieoo of aoft iron balanoed having been guaranteed immunity from °n the neutral line in the magnetic field military service. The guarantee haa produce* electricity with every vibra bocn withdrawn, hence the exodna. tion, and, being attached to a lever which ia manipulated at a key in tele- An lowa paper report* that William SfiSfeJ^ , L n', n sr®, l i eleven houra and a quarter. Tlie corn waa huaked, weighed and cribbed in the above-stated time. A Rock Inland man An aaaoriatiou baa been organized in claima to have huaked 126 bushel* in England to protect peraona charged with eleven houra and a half, but it waa lunacy. The secretary of the a ciety ia gucaaed at a lady, ami abe makea some atartling aa aertiona aa to the abuae of thriae alleged to be insane, and the imperfections of the British law. She does not pay a bigh compliment to the gallantry of English gentlemen, and aaya : "Sup pression of a wife by lunacy certificate ia coming to be practiced as an ordi nary marital right; and that the lunacy commission* unscrupulously counte nance the iniquity." Efforts are being made to obtain the appointment of a royal commission to inquire into the whole subject. Tbrre are now in the United HUtra ten Roman Catholic archbiahope and fifty-five biahopa, againat aix of the former and tw nty-eeven of the latter in 1860. The nntuher of prieata wan then 1,800, and of chnrehee, I,OTB ; while there are now 6,034 prieate and 5,648 chnrobea. The collegia have increased from aevenUen to aeventy-fonr, and the Roman Call olie population haa doubled. The perfnme man nfarttiror* in the department of the Maritime Alpn eon a lime annually 8,000 hundredweight of roeee, and the neighborhood of (iraaae aid Cannea ia thiekiv atndded with roae fprma. On one hectare of two| and a balf acre* 30,000 bnahea are planted; a aiogle bnah yielding for twelve yeant. A ainglo hectare in good cultivation will net an average profit of twenty-fonr per cent, per year. It will aotind a bit fnnny when the forty-nine Dakotaa take their scats in the chapel of Hampton inatitute, near Norfolk, Vs., to bear the " Faenlty man " call ont behind bia apeca: " Mau- T hat-Look*-Around, Frank Yellow-Bird, Langhing Face, Man That Honta, One- Wbo-Ooroea-Flying. Liuie Hpider ami Walking Cloud." The government will pay the inatitnte $167 apiece for one year'* instruction. A co-opcrstive store has been estab lished in Paris by English capitalists, which omplovs about ninety peraona, and deals in aJmoet everything required by housekeeper*. The oapital ia $600,- 000. The London co-operative societies teport handsome profits One concern, npon sales of $5,200,000, ia said to have realised $lBO,OOO clear of expenaea, though selling about twenty per cent, below the ordinary retail prices. An attack by wolves in the streets of an American village is an nnnanal oc currence, but it waa the experience of Mr. Miner, of Joaelyn, Minn. Five of these animals, sprang at hia borae and tried to get into hia wagon, but hia dog coming up diverted the attention of the animals who immediately seised and de voured him. His wife and three chil dren, who were with him, at length brought assistance by their incessant shouting. During the year 1878 forty-eight American railroads, with a mileage of 8,902 miles and an invested capital of $811.631,W0, were aold or passed into the bands of receivers, the totals for three yeara being 182 roads, 11,623 mils* and $728,468,000 of oapital. In th at period one - seventh of the total m ileage and considerably more than one seventh of the total capital investment have passed through the final stage of bankruptcy. , An eagle measuring eighty-four inch es from tip to tip of wing* swooped down upon e flock of geern m the farm of Samuel MeOune, near ZancavUle, Ohio, when a terrible combat ensued for twenty minutes. Feather* flew in all directions, the geese standing np hero ically to the work. The eagle succeed ed in killing one and wounding several others, but was himself captured by a farmer, in a condition of sore distress. Its naked talons measured two and one half inch.-a. California cactus is one of the newest articles from which paper is made, and a process has been patented in Ger many by a Mr. Nordlinger, of Btutt gart, for rendering the fiber of the bop plant sufficiently tractable for the pur pose. The sterna and other parte of the plant are boiled in water and soap for three-quarters of an hour, thor oughly washed and then again boiled in very mnch diluted acetic acid. The libera are then washed, dried and combed, and are ready for working. The London Daily Arwi finds it not easy to determine on aooount of what event the year 1878 is most likely to be oorne historical. Will it be as the year of tho Berlin congress f Will it be ss tho year of the war in Afghanistan ? With many persons no doubt its chief title to fame will seem to be the fact that it is the year of the great exposition iu I'sri*. Others will probably long think of it as the year in which Pope Pius IX. died, others, again, as the year that saw the death of the first king of Italy, At Princeton, 111., throe brothers of the poet Bryant live, all of them farm ers ; good, solid men, conspicuous for a sturdy purpose, and a certain inflex ible honesty, bnt not more than ordina rily gifted ; that is, two of thorn are not. Mr. Jobn Howard Bryant is more than an amateur poet. Borne of his works have been widely copied, and a few of them have fonnd their way into the enduring form of, book. The residence of Mr, J. H. Bryant is the finest house that side of Chicago, and it was a gift from the poet to his brother. Indiscriminate kissing does not gen erally have the very beet reunite, as some of America's sensational court records go to show. The physicians of the late Princess Alice fiave serious charges against kissing. They have in vestigated the cause of the peculiar virulence of the diphtheria which at tacked her family with such fatal results, and have agreed that the rapid spread of the infection was entirely due to im prudent kissing. A child with a sore throat ought not to be permitted to kiss any of its companions. While John Hogg* end Lewder Mo- Elfreah were taking ice from Sugar lake, Kuow, a few feet from the ah ore, a tree standing at the edge of the lake, at the roota of which a fire waa horning, amidenly toppled orer and fell with cmahing force npon the men and their wagon. Hoggs waa etmok on the head by a hoarT limb and waa killed inatant lv. McElfresh waa badly crippled by the heavy hranchea, but waa not fatally injured. A man on the abore warned the men aa be aaw the tree falling, but too late ; Hogg* bad barely time to look upward when he received the fatal blow. The fire had been bnilt at the tree for the men to warm by, and had been burning aeveral days. A Pelseaed Valley. Near Batten, in Java, ia a poisoned valley. It ia known by the name of Gnevo Cj>as, or Poisoned Valley ; and following a path which had been made for the purpose, a rirriting party short ly reached it, with a couple of dogs and fowls, for the purpose of making ex periment*. On arriving at the moun tain, the party dismounted and scram bled up the aide of the hill, at the dis tance of a mile, with the assistance of the branches of trees and projecting roots. When at a few yards from the valley a nauseous, suffocating smell waa experienced, but ou approaching the margin, the inconvenience was no longer found. The valley ia about half a mile in circumference, of an oval shape, and about thirty feet in depth. The bot tom of it appeared to be fiat, without any vegetation, and a few large atones scattered here and there. Skeletons of human beings, tigers, bears, deer and all aorta of birds and wild animals lay about in profusion. The ground on which they lay at the bottom of the valley, appeared to be a bard, sandy substance, and no vapor waa perceived. The aides were covered with vegetation. It was proposed to enter it, and each having lit a cigar, managed to get with in twenty feet of the bottom, where a sickening smell waa experienced, with out any difficulty of breathing. A dog waa now fastened to the and of a bam boo, and thrust to tha bottom of the valley. At the expiration of fourteen seconds he fell off hia legs without moving or looking around, end eon tinned alive only eighteen minutes. The other dog now left the company, and went to hta companion. On reach ing him ha waa observed to stand quite motionless, and at the end of ten sec ond* fall down; be never moved hie limbs after, and only lived seven minutes. A fowl waa now thrown in, whioh died in a minute and a quart**. AH 1 IT Dili A CUUOfHTT. A M a i # Tree " ■ rM , n i nrt Tewrr 106 freai iteUrMU. Tbetowerof tbeooortboeneat OrsenS burg, Ind., ia 140 feet in height. One hundred and five feet from the ground ia the water sheet of the tower, and above that it ia ooversd with dressed atone, made to fit closely, in slabs two by five feet, including an angle of about thirty degrees from upright. In the summer of 1870, a citizen of the place was examining the tower with a glass, when he observed, springing from the third crerioe about the water aheet on the east hide of the tower, 110 feed from the ground, s little twig. Bat little was thought of it, and it was scarcely diaoernable with the naked eye. The next spring some interest was ex hibited to know if the miniature tree in its strange and exposed position had survived the wintry blasts. It bad sur vived, and when san and spring showsra came on, put ont its leaves plentifully and grew luxuriantly all the season. By this time it was easily seen with the eye, but as it could not be approached in auv ordinary manner nearer than from the roofs of hnildinga on the oppo site side of the street, its species oould not be ascertained. The (bird spring it put forth with renewed life, vigor ana size. Instead of dwindling and droop ing from the effects of winter's oold or summer'a heat and drought, the atmos phere of justioe from below seemed to cause it to flourish extraordinarily. Tli is season it was decided to be a silver maple, sprang, no doubt, from a seed carried by a bird or whirlwind, and lodged in that exalted plaoe. By this lime the tree had become famous. Ac counts of it had appeared in the papers, but the story was not generally believed. But, nevertheless, the tree lived and grew. It was there, and no mistake. And so it has continued until this day. It ia now more than twelve feet high, and it is thought to be three inches in diameter. The top ia quite bushy, and in the summer season the leaves are numerous and luxuriant. It on be seen for many miles around, and the stranger approaching first teas the tower and then this phenomenon. The rapid growth of the tree ia forc ing the stonou apart. This oan readily be seen with a glass. Ere long the am bitions maple will have to be brought lower or damage to the building follow. The sheriff has already had several ap plications from expert climbers to take it down, but the people will not permit their tree to be removed yet. An artist, representing a New York illustrated paper, called to sketch the cariosity, but the h area were bff, and he postpon ed it until a more favorable time. Per sons approaching the plaoe from Cincin nati get a good view of it by looking from the north windows as they draw near Ore* nsburg. Of oourse it appears to much greater advantage when in fall ieaf, and at such a time it ia indeed a strange curiosity. About Horse-Can. John HtcTenaon, who built the first street car in 1881, is still making them at New York and shipping them all over the world. His first oar waa in three compartments, held thirty passengers, and waa a cross between an omnibus, a roc ka way and an English railway coach. Stevenson's best make to day ia the bob tail one-horse car, costing man $BOO to 81,000, and ia supplanting the heavier and less manageable two-horse affair wherever they have been placed in com petition. Btevenson has lived to see nearly 400 street railways built in the United H tales, and sent his first foreign shipment to listeria, Java, in 1858. Toe attempt to introduce street cars in Lon don caused a riot, in which the roils were torn np, bat now American ears are running at London, Liverpool, Not tingham, Leeds, Wolverhampton, Hall and Birkenhead, in England; at Edin burgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen, in Boot land; and at Bwausea, in Wales. In the British possessions, also, they have been established at Montreal, (Juebee, Toronto. Hamilton, Ottawa, St. Johns and Halifax, in the Dominion; at the Cape of Oood Hope, the only plaoe in Africa; at Christ Church, Wellington and Dunedin, in New Zealand; at Bom lay, the only plaoe in India; at Kings ton. in Jamaica; at Adelaide, Port Ade laide and Gamberton, in Booth Austra lia, and are aoon to be built at Melbourne, Sidney, Tasmania and Ho bartstown, in New Booth Wales. Hie French protective policy has dint American street oan out of all that re public'! cities bat Calais; bat they sirs running and popular at Berlin. BC Petersburg, Vienna, Stockholm, Chris tiana, Hamburg, Bremen, Amsterdam and Brussels, on the continent Inks the British flag, the son never seta on American street oars, which are also running at Havana, and at the principal cities of Mexico, Brazil, Uruguay, the Argentina Republic, Chili, Pars, Vene zuela, Guayaquil in Ecuador, Ban Joae in Costs Rica, Mid are to be substituted for omniboasas at Bogota, the capital of Colombia. A Woman mho Saw Wasftdagtea. The reosnt deoaose of Mrs. Hephxiboh Thomas, an aged Frieod, at her borne in Philadelphia, recalls the foot that Mm waa one of Urn few surviving to so Into a day who hod a distinct and trustworthy recollection of having sssaf George Washington. Her father was Nathan Bpenoer, who had, eighty yean ago, a considerable estate jn*i east at German town, on which, by the way, Godfrey, the in renter of the quadrant, was buried. • In 1798, the yellow fever prevailing in Philadelphia-—it carried off 5.657 per sons during August and three following months—Oliver Woloott, who was seme tary of the treasury in Washington's cabinet, was boarding with Us wife at Mr. Bpsoosr's, and the President, ac companied by his wife—" Lady Wash ington " by universal usage from his ont-of -u wTi rnstdscee to sss him. They rode in the customary etete, in a ooaeo drawn by tour cream-colored horses, and tbstr advent at Friend Spencer's manstrei created naturally no little excitement. His II tils daughter of five yearn, after the great general and the -lately "Lady bad passed into the Woloott apartments, ran with othsr chil dren to look St the di-tingnishr.l visi tors, and peeping in at the window saw them seated inside. "Why," sold Hephatbah, "is that Lady Wsa'hirgtont Why, she's only a woman, after aU."