For, of course, the Reds, you understand, It was equally true, on the other hand, The committee looked extremely blank, But the Be-Ba-Boes to a man agree, VOL. XXXIX.-99. Katherin Maynadier Palad 191 ONE of the most interesting old houses that time has spared us from the days of our Revolutionary fathers is the General Knox Headquarters House, situated near the little village of Vail Gate, some five miles southwest of Newburg, New York. The house was built about the year 1734, by John THE EAST END OF THE HOUSE. Ellison, and was still the property of the Ellisons at the time of the Revolution. Washington and his army were in camp near there for many months during the last years of the war; and, as a consequence, this house was made the military headquarters, at different times, of three of his generals, Greene, Gates, and Knox. General Knox occupied the house for a longer period than did either of the other two generals, and therefore it is to-day known as the General Knox Headquarters House. General Knox was Washington's chief of artillery during the war, and one of his favorite officers; conséquently, while he made his headquarters there, Washington was a frequent visitor at the house, along with Lafayette, Rochambeau, and others who helped to make the history of our country. For many years this old house possessed a unique and most interesting memento of Revolutionary days -a pane of glass, in one of its windows, on which a French officer had scratched, with the diamond of his ring, the names of three belles |