WHERE DREAMS ARE SOLD. i silken sign of the Poppy, ‘ shop that is never old, the twilight silence lingers, there that dreams are sold 's the scent of love's lost roses, soft echo of childhood’s laughp Where's the ring of empty glasses, For the white lips never quaft, We the erimson sign of the Poppy We shall come when the darhaht dies, When the curfew music quivers "Neath the gray of evening skies, Dwst beyond the gates of sunset, the grim toll of death we pay, We shall find the shop of dream-wares, Where the poppies hang alway. we long for the dusk of twilight, ben with wealth or no earthly gold, We ahall come where sleep-tlowers cluster, Ao the shops where dreams are sold. Canadian Magazine, {he Light That | 4 Never Failed |. ROM a fisherman's cot on the bleak seashore a father and son were looking through the small window f at a night of tempest, The wind howled dismally weund the little structure that ever and amon trembled as in fear. But the Rearts of the two were staunch and Brave, for they were inured to the ‘westher and had known many a storm. "her could hear on the rocks below fhe hard beating of the surf that thun- dered and bellowed with fearful sound. Ft was such a night as might bring fo them a wreck at any time, and the #ld man lit his pipe and made ready gor thé call if the lifeboat was to be sun wut. For with his fishing he com- Dine? that of a lifesaver. “Father, I hope you will not have to go out to-night. I hope there will be Ap poor ship come this way and beat its kife out on the rocks.” “Aye, aye, lad, it is a night of terror ger the poor souls who live far from he sea. God alone knows how many fhere be quaking in their rooms this might with the wild seas washing over the decks. Your prayer is mine. 1 wish that there may never be another wreck. Amen.” “Where do all the people live, father, and what do they do in the big world?” said the lad. “ft would be a long story, lad; I could mot tell you in a week. But the most of them live safe and snug enough when they ave at home. Once in a wirile there is a bad storm on land, and RB does great damage. Cyclones they eall the winds that sweep funnel-shape and carry all before them. The same wind will make a waterspout at sea. Sometimes they destroy whole towns.” “1 would rather live by the sea,” said She boy, thoughtfully, adding: “And are there lifesavers on the land?” The grizzled seaman smiled at the maive question of the lad, and replied, Ralf in jest: “Not many, my son, unless it be those. who are trying to save their own lives at the expense of others.” =I da not understand that, father!” “You asked me what the people do fa the great inland cities and on the ‘wide plains. They toil hard, my son, for a mess of pottage. They dig the soil, and build houses and trade and sell every conceivable thing in the atores and market places, but not one of them tries to sell something so that _amother will have more life. He tries %o get all he can in’ the exchange for Aimself.” “put do they never do anything to xing gladness to another? You do. gather. I have heard the men and women thank you who came from the wreck with tears in their eyes. And #hink how much money they have given you!” “Yes, lad: I must not deceive you. There are kind hearts even on land, . my son; taousands are willing to do and die for another when the peril of sickness stirs the heart. But it is not vocation. When you grow up I am to quit the sea and take you to of the big colleges and make a man out of you. That is what 2 am saving all this wreck money for. whére is a good pile of it now. And #f 1 mever come back,” there was n faint catch in the voice, “you will now what you ave to do.” Take the gold and get an education. But always gemember that your father, though a rough and ignorant man, gave his life for the good of others. It is the best #eritage I shall leave you.” “The loud boom of the surf dominated fhe silence that now fell upon the two. gach busy with his own thoughts. Then there was the sound of a rocket Bursting in air. The old man started up and listened intently, but he heard §t mot again, and sank into his seat and genewed his meditation. The boy looked out of the window Sntently. He could see the hurrying slonds with their Dbillowy flashes of fightnings, aud he never tired of the sight. And through all the darkness he fixed his eye on one spot low down on #$te horizon where a star shone. It was a light that never failed him on the Blackest night, and he had grown to Fove it with all his starved little heart, for he knew only the rocks, the sea gulls, the pasing steamers by day, and ghe wrecks by night, and the fishing _ Boats that nestled in the cove at the foot of the cliff. There were few com- panions for his life, and he made friends with inanimate things. “The star shines Brighter to-night, gather!” he said. &1t is because you love it so, my son,” _ seplied the father. “Have you ever ised that when we are together and J collector until the beginning of the six- that do so much destruction the star shines more brightly?" “Indeed, now you tell me, father, it Is g0. When the storms come it shines there and never leaves the sea, I won. der if it Is possible that it knows there may be beings in distress and would light them home." “Aye, aye, lad, it does that very thing. Some day you will know this better than you do now. But it is be- cause you think of these things that it shines so brightly. There is nothing like kindness in youfr own heart to make you know the kindness of others, Never forget that, son, wherever you may go in the years to come. 1 will not always be with you to tell you these things, and you must remember them and think of the old man who loved you, Don't forget.” “I could never forget you, father! But the storm is growing harder, is it not? I do hope you will not have to go to-night.” For answer the man took down a huge torch and placed fresh oil in its wick, and then resumed his pipe. “It is blowing great guns now, lad. Perhaps this is the last of it. I hope so. I do not want to leave you to- night. We are having such a snug time here together.” The boy thought of his pale-faced mother, who had been so patient with the broken nets, and who had given him many a soft caress when the father was battling with the waves. «F#her, did my mother know the star like I do?” “Better than you will ever know it, lad. Your mother was one of the saints of earth that the world never knows. She knew more ot the star than either of us. I think it burned in her heart more than in ours.” “IHow could it burn in her heart? Ts the star not in Heaven?” The man’s face took on a strange expression, and the boy saw it in one of the brief flashes. It awed him into greater silence. It was some time be- fore the father replied: “There is sometimes heaven on earth, my son. The star is but an emblem of that. It shines then out of human hearts. If you will but think of this when you worship it in the night it will make your own heart grow ten- derer. But there, let us talk no more of it to-night. Some day you will know.” . The storm died out. The low rumbling of the earth continued. Overhead thé flying clouds grew lighter, and the star on the horizon shone with added lustre: Still the two sat on while the moments Jed by and said no word. The boy put his hand out and the father pressed it on his knee and held it with a firm, warm grasp. “Look, father, the star is gone!” ex: claimed the lad, with sudden agitation: rising from his chair. But ere the words left his lips it flamed out as before, and he wondered: The father made no reply. Something tugged at the hearstrings of this silent man. He loved his child with all the idolatry of one cut off from the world, and with all the ardor of his noble nature. He had never deceived him about anything, and now the thought came to him that the lad had grown older. Was it best always to let him dream? Must he not be truthful to him in everything? What if he should die, and the faint trace of a falseliood came upon the boy in after years? Always there had been this thought on his mind. ‘To-night it became a burden more than he could bear. With a husky cough he cleared his threat. He let his pipe go out. “My son,” he began, “let me tell you the story of a star. Once the people I told you about in the great cities grew pitiful over the wrecks of the poor ships that lode their way in the night and are dashed to pieces on shore. And they ordered that their government, which. you will understand, is some- thing like a father and yet is nof, should take some of the money of the people and build a tall tower and put a light in it that should shine forever and never go out. And they put this tower by the sea, that when the storms blew it could shine on the ships as if it were a light from Heaven, and guide them, while they were sleeping in their homes and knew nothing of the perils of the deep. And this light represents the love of good men and women, who would be kind to the distressed, who- ever and wherever they may be. And yonder light, my son, is this love, and it is your star. Some day I will take you to if. 3ut you must worship it none the less.” “And my star, then, is love?” queried the boy. in a whisper. “Phe light that never failed!” mur- sured the father.—Charles W. Steven. son, in St. Louis Globe-Dmeoerat. Autograph Fiend Not Modern. A certain atossa in early Rorian days seems to have been the mother of autograph collectors. Cicero had a col- lection, which must have been a fine one, for he speaks of it with particular pride. The fever, even in those far- back days, was contagious. Pliny speaks of Pompeius Secundus, at whose house he had seen auto- grapns of Cicero, Augustus, Virgil and the Gracchi, and his own collection was valued at $15,000 of our money. Then came the inrush of barbarians, and we do not again meet with the teenth century, when he reappears in the person of a Bohemian squire, who kept a book to record his exploits in the chase, and enriched it with the signatures of his great hunter friends. —Stray Stories. |=irst Painter of Record. The oldest known picture was “A Battle of the Magnetes,” by Bularchus, who is the earliest painter of whom there is any record. This picture was purchased by Candaules, King of Lydia, about 716 B. C,, for either its weight in gold or for as much gold coin Novelties and Oddities OF PRESENT-DAY SCIENCE. BLECTRIC AERIAL LINE—A Rare wAY 10 Br RUN ALONG THE QRINDLEWALD (GLACIER, THERE is apparently no more attrac. tive field for engineering than the mountains of Switzerland, and the greatest skill and ingenuity have been exercised in the various railways de- signed to carry tourists to the sum- mits. Recently there has been an en- tirely new departure from existing practice in a plan proposed for ascend ing the northwestern side of the Wet. terhorn, which rises precipitously to an altitude of 7700 feet above the sea level. The new scheme consists of a combination of the fundamental prin- ciples of the ordinary aerial cableway, now so much used in constructive en- gineering for the transport of mate- rials, and of the elevated mono-rail- way, best exampled in the line between Barmen and Elberfeld, in Germany. In the latter a car is suspended from a single rail supported by a system of girders, while in the new Swiss rail- way, instead of a rail, a stout steel cable will be stretched from station to station, and from this will be sus- pended by its running gear a car or cage for the passengers, Lach car will contain ten passengers, and be of the lightest possible construction. The line will run from the Grindle- wald upper glacier, at about 4000 feet altitude, up to the Enge station in one lift, a distance of 1300 feet. This sta- tion is of massive masonry. and af- fords an anchorage for the cable. The gradient of the cable for this part of the line is about eighty per cent. This station affords access to a series of rine views, and there is a path along the Enge to the departure station of the second section of the line, which ex- tends to a point at an altitude of T761 feet, or a lift of 2300 feet. The motive power is to be electricity at high ten- sion, and part of the installation is al- ready completed. The summni. of the Wetterhorn is 12,150 feet above sea level, and from the present studies there is apparently no reason why ac- cess to it should not be gained by a series of such railways as the two sec- tions already described. Only once be- fore has the mono-rail system been used on a mountain railway, on Ve- suvius in 1880, and this method was supplanted when the line was recon- structed. WHEN DO WE DIE2—Wr ARE ALL GrApUALLY SHOFFLING OFF For YEARS. IN the first place, there is no definite moment of death. We all are grad- ually dying for years. The moment which is ordinarily ascribed to death is when the breathing stops, but this is purely arbitrary and the survival of an old belief that life was drawn in in the breath and the soul passed out with the breath. The heari may continue to beat many minutes, and in animals under experimental conditions even for hours after respiration has stopped; the muscles are still irritable; the nerves are still able to carry nerve im- pulses. But while the cessation of respiration cannot be called the mo- ment of death, it is the cause of it, because the body cannot live without air: the heart accordingly stops and the tissues die of suffocation. How arbitary it is to call a man dead when his heart ceases to beat and he no longer breathes will be apparent when it is remembered that dogs may easily be revived after they have lain in this state for six. or more minutes. If the dog's chest is opened and arti- ficial respiration begun, and if the heart is taken in the hand and rhythm- ically squeezed, gradually it begins to beat again, the dog begins to breathe; in fact, he recovers normal life. I be- lieve the same experiment has not been tried in men, for the reason that in ill- ness the system is generally so pois- oned by the toxins of disease as to make it impossible spontaneously to re- cover, even though the Leart should be kept beating. \ WILL MAN DIE OF THIRST! Lowa T.008 AREAD NECESSARY TO PFO VIDE AN ADEQUATE WATER SUPPLY SCIENTISTS are able to point out various tendencies and movements on the part of the planet earth and its people which may result in the destruc- tion of hum:n life by overcrowding, starvation, cold. heat or thirst. For centuries Biblical students, starting from the promise of Noah that man- kind would not again be swept away Ly a flood, derived from other texts the opinion that the “end of the world” would be by tire. The largest collec tion of facts bearing on the point is probably in the works of Prince Kro- potkin, and relate to the Russian Em- pire and some of its Asiatic neigh- bors. Explorations in Central Asia have shown beyond question that vast areas now desert were once fertile. Lakes and rivers which within historic times were important factors in commerce have disappeared or are disappearing. The Siberian lakes have shrunk since the eighteenth century, Novgorod, the great market town of the Volga region, owed its early importance to its pro- tection from Mongol raids by vast marshes, which have gone dry without any large effort to drain them. In Africa, Lake Tchad, which loomed so large in the tales of explorers, is now a half-dried water bed. Lake Chiroua, to the southwest of Nyassa, has gone from the map. Lake Ngaml, discovered by Livingstone, and then navigable, has ceased to exist, And in Australia, Lake Eyre, to mention only the largest water body, has greatly lost its size In fifty years. In Europe no such great change can be noted, al though Spain is certainly drier than it used to be. In America no such startiing changes are recorded, though it is manifest that such rivers as the Ohio now flow less regularly, if not less copiously, owing to the destruction of forests about their head waters. And here is the practical point of such collections of data as Mr, Whitby and others have made on this subject. To speculate upon the nltic mate end on earth of the human race, and whether it is destined to die of thirst, is to reach so far into ihe future that no conclusion of practical utility can be drawn. But it is perfectly plain that if this and other nations wish to avoid the inconveniences of an irregular, and probably diminishing, water supply, they must take care of their forests. A LIGHTNING CATARACT —-TweNTY Cases Taar Were THE RESULT or Turis UNUSUAL AGENCY. A CATALACT is a cloudiness of the liquid in one of the lenses of the eye Usually it takes months (or even years) to form, and after it has reached a certain stage of maturity it can be removed by an expert surgeon. That operation restores the sight. The most common cause of the formation of cat aracts seems to be advancing years for they are rarely heard of in young people. A new but unusual agency which produces them, or, at least, stars them, is mentioned by a French med ical journal, the Gazette des Hopitaux, In the columns of tha. periodical Dr Verhaegue reports that he has collect ed from literature about twenty-twc cases of cataract resulting from the action of lightning. These evils are not caused by the light, that is, by either heat or chemical rays, but by the passage of the electric current. I they were the result of the light they would be found as the result of the action of ordinary electric illumination Troubles caused by lightning may in volve other parts of the eye or produce paralysis of the muscles which move it. The lesions of the crystalline lens are most frequent. The opacity of the lens may begin within a few dayy after the stroke of lightning. or in a few weeks, or it may be delayed in it¢ appearance for some months. Such cataracts are a long time in maturing, so as to permit of successful opera The author's case had no bad until six months after the stroke. They were three years in ma. turing, and at one time there wi long period in which the process was entirely stationary. The operative re sults were excellent, tions. effects a CLOTHES OF WOODP—A GARMENT Traar Looks as ir Ir WouLp Wear Lixe LEATHER, THIS waistcoat is made of pine wood, said the cardroom boss of a woolen mill. The garment, of a thick, stiff, bluish stuff, looked as if it would wear like leather. It will wear like leather, too, said the cardroom boss. If my experiments suc. ceed, cheap clothes in the future will be made of spruce or pine, instead of wool or cotton. A suit, then, will cost half a dollar and last five years. Nap- kins, shirts and collars are made of a plant fibre, the tibre of hemp. Why, then, I asked myself last year, shouldn't heavier, coarser stuffs be made of the fibre of wood? I began to experiment, and here—he tapped his stomach, which the waistcoat covered — here is the result. First, I grind the wood into a soft pulp. I press this pulp through perforated iron plates. It comes forth in long ropes, each rope as thick as a sausage. 1 dry these thick ropes, which a breath would break, ¢nd then I twist them, twist them tighter and tighter, smaller and smaller, till finally they become threads. J Once the threads are gotten, the rest is casy. Part of the threads become a warp, and form the lengthwise lines of a piece of cloth in a loom. Part of them become filling and dart in clatter- ing shuttles across the warp. Thus the weaving goes on, and out of the warp, or lengthwise threads, and the filling or crosswise threads, we get a strong piece of wooden cloth. Some day, when I'll have perfected my experiment, you'll hear men saying in clothing stores: Is this suit all oak? Do you guarantee that there is no cheap yellow pine in it? A Melancholy Career. A young man who will some day in- herit an enormous fortune and who is being brought up as a “gentleman,” was interviewed the other day. ‘Among other things he said: “If I did not have my career cut out for me, if I were to lose my fortune, I should turn to the law and study some phases of it that interest me greatly.” Probably, if the young man were ac- tually thrown on his own resources he would resort to something less entirely “elegant”’—and more useful. But, tha aside, what is this “career” that he fan. cies that he has “cut out” for him? Io take care of his property. That is, put out our own little taper ere listening to the waves as would cover it lar to that of a watchman or a police. man, but far more mechanical and less exciting. What a miserable, what a melancholy conception of a career! Te spend one’s life at just making money is poor encugh use of the one chance to live; to spend it at watching a heap of money—what duluess, what dreari ness! And in a world teeming with op: portunities to live honestly, vividly, iu terestingly, usefully!-—Saturday Even. Ing Post. In the southern Caucasus & trav. adler may still apply for food and shelter in any hoase and be sure of a welcome and tae best available fare. to spend his life at an cccupation simi- CUT FLOWERS, Cul flowers will 'ast much longer in water if the stalk is peeled. This is especially true in the case of any shrub plant, Succulent stalks may be split up the ends. This riocess expedites the absorption of water and keeps the plant fresh. I'he Japanese dab a bit of salt at the base of some blossoms tc postpone the dropping which is occa: sioned by dryness, —— SAND AND FLOWERS, For bulbs in the mixed border white sand has a very pariicular service quite distinct from its use to the young roots. It never cakes, and when dig ging its color warns one if too near a bulb, Its cost is infinitesimal, as a sack can be had from the grocer for al most nothing, and that quantity goes a long way. We not only set all out lily and other bulbs in this white sand, but a little of the earth is removed from the crowns of such plants as lark spur, foxglove, columbine and hoily- hocks and replaced with the sand. In the spring the crow:s are fresh and clean, and the sand prevents trouble from baked or saggy soil during the following sumner.—Garden Magazine, GROWING FERNS IN POTS. Many persons have given up grow- fng ferns in pots on account of poor success with them. They get fine plants from the florist and in a few months they go to pieces. There are but a few things to know in drder to keep ferns in good condition, and have them .increase in beauty from year to year, says an authority. They must be grown in a moist atmosphere. If kKepi in a hot, dry room they will do ne good. For this reason they do poorly in rooms heated by steam or hot water unless provision is made for adding moisture to the air. A room heated by a hot air heater which has an evap orating pan is the best for ferns. Alsc the soil must be kept moist at all times, yet well drained. The soil should be made up of peaty loam, one part, and leaf mold, one part, and a handful of bone meal to a pote APPLE DAY, We are gratified to receive good re: ports of the general observance of National Apple Day all over the United States. Like other movements, it had its day of small beginning. but its quiet observation in many places was effective in sowing good seed that will take lasting root and show excellent re- sults with passing years. The Boston papers gave good reports of the observ: ation of the day in that city and throughout different parts of New England. Among ihe pleasantest things noted in the work of those in terested in apple industry in New Hampshire. In many places in that State the school-children were given trolley-party rides into the country te see the orchards and the autumn foli age on the trees. Oklahoma deserves special mention for its enthusiasm in observing this day. In most places the school-children were given apples, lit erary exercises were held suitable for the occasion, and many families vied with each other in efforts to discover the many different ways apples could be cooked and served on dining tables. —The Apple Specialist. A GOOD APPLE STOREHOUSE. I am convinced that every orchard should have some sort of a storag room as near as possible owing to scarcity of help and it should be co operative, if favorably situated for such a plan. I will describe my own. The underpinning was carefully fitted pointed with a mixture of lime and cement. air tight save for two small places left for ventilation. Our house is built with four air-tight partitions making three dead air spaces, made by two thicknesses of boards with sheathing paper between. The outside and inside of the build ings are of sheathing boards. All the other parts are made of ‘the very clieapest materials, Upon the tight ness of the partitions depends the sue- cess of the building. We have two double windows fitted with shutters outside and in. For sommon use we have an ordinary door arge enough to drive a double team nto, with an extra door containing an wir space, to close up for winter. A jue 10x12 inches opens from the floor ypposite the door, going down four or ive feet. then rubbing oft into a hol low. This is used for cooling the ap- sles when first stored, also for ventila- dion. Two small flues and a movable stair way, so constructed as to make an air space like the rest of the ceiling, lead to the chamber above. This ceiling is of two thicknesses of board and one of sheathing paper, and the floor of the ehamber is made in the same way, making an air space between. The pouse has been in use eleven years, the fruit keeping in practically a perfect ondition. The appies are stored as they are picked, being careful not to bruise them. There is as little waste as if shipped to cold storage. Even ness of temperature favors keeping. We have known the house after being pooled down to neariy freezing to .re- main weeks without varying a degree. There is little *oss from shrinkage, and we have got from twenty-five to fifty cents more per barrel by holding the fruit awhile. Our orchard has outgrown the storage. and we are add- ing another room built on about the same principle.—F. H. Mecrse, in the American Cultivator. ” The man who takes everything foi granted rarely has time to be sur. prised at anything. A KETTLE CLEANER. A little article which housekeepers who have used pronounce indispens- able could easily be made at home if not found in the local store, but the cost being only a dime it is of course cheaper to purchase if. possible, It is a piece of heavy zine, cut about three inches long and two inches wide with a slanting piece cut from one end, all the corners rounded and a hole pierced in one end by which it can be hang on a nail beside the sink. It is a kettle cleaner, and it does its work well, COTTON WASTE CLEANSER. Why do not housekeepers adopt cot- ton waste as a cleaning agent? Watch the engineer pick up a bunch of waste, wipe off oil or dust and throw the cot- ton into a heap to be burned at his convenience, How much better than to nse a cloth which some one had to hem and some one else would have to wash and iron, Why is not cotton waste the best possible stuff to use instead of so many floor cloths, wall cloths, dust cloths, stove cleaners and mops? It is cheap, and it can be had anywhere. Cotton waste, by the way, is one of the best agencies for polishing waxed floors or furniture. i CARE OF LINOLEUM. A household economies authority says: “In caring for linoleum do not use soapsuds as for scrubbing a floor. 1t stands to reason that soap is going to injure the varnish and the finish. On a farm where there is plenty of milk, a cloth wrung out of skim milk is the best means of taking up the dust and brightening the linoleum. Whers milk is scarce, or nceded for food, use lukewarm water, to which has been added half a cupful of kerosene. Wring the cloth rather dry from this, and go over the linoleum after sweep- ing, and it will be quite new and bright, and the finish uninjured. * * * Most housewives serub oilcloth and linoleum as though it were a bare floors it is dusty rather than dirty, since everything remains on the top, and for this reason a clean cloth slightly damp is all that is necessary.” HINTS ON CAKE-MAKING. Home-made cakes, skillfully mixed and baked, are wholesome, more nour. ishing and far more appetizing than bought omnes. The art of cake-making is simple, -the important points being exactitude in the proportions of in- gredients, care in preparing them, and lightness of hand in mixing. Here are a few “sign-posts” which will point the way to success in cake- making: All ingredients to be of good quality. The flour should be thoroughly dry and sifted well, if the cake is to be light. Damp flour makes heavy cakes, Fruit should be freed of stalks, stones and be rubbed in a clean cloth. Fresh butter is better than salt; and sweet, pure beef dripping makes ex- cellent plain cakes. Weigh each ingredient carefully, and be sure the quantities are correct. Before greasing a cake-tin or lining it with greased paper, the tin must be greased properly, and, therefore, the cake will stick. A pinch of salt should be added ta every cake; it brings out the flavor of the ingredients. For all light and fancy cakes butter is usually creamed, and the operation iis well worth the trouble. Warm a hasin slightly, put the butter and sugar in it, and with a large silver fork or the hand work it round and round, until it is creamy. Tutti Frutti Gems—Into a cupful of sweet milk stir the well-beaten yolks of three eggs, add one teaspoonful of salt and two and one-half cupfuls of flour into which has been sifted a tea- spoonful of baking powder; when these ingredients have been thoroughly mixed. stir in one and one-half cupfuls of chopped raisins, almonds and can- died pineapple; lastly, beat in lightly the yolks of three eggs, and bake about twenty minutes in a quick oven in gem pans, Celery Toast—Clean the celery and cut into inch pieces, cover with boiling water and cook until tender; drain off the water. Prepare a cream sauce in the following manner: Scald one cup- ful of milk; melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, stir in two tablespoonfuls of flour, then add the milk gradually; stir constantly until smooth, cooking for five minutes after- ward; add the cooked celery to the sauce and pour over small, crisp slices of buttered toast; garnish with toast points. : \ Russian Salad—A Russian salad is. described by a correspondent of Good Housekeeping. Small tomatoes were skinned and partially scooped out, ta be filled with a slice of cucumber cut very thin, a ring of green pepper around the cucumber, and a small round of trufile to garnish. Place the decorated tomatoes in nests of lettuce jeaves and pour over them the follow- ing highly original dressing: Mix four tablespoonfuls of mustard, one-fourth pf a teaspoonful of salt, half as much paprika, one tablespoonful of vinegar, hand one-half teaspoonful of table ance. Add very slowly, stirring all he time, half a cupful of olive oil. French mustard is indicated and the est imported should be used.