- mmm y tn ce So A I - ——— : . sagged and he suffered from severe Simple that anyone should be able stomach goes out, which shows that it: Lie flat on your back on the - ~ FOR ‘AND ABOUT WOMEN." : leg pains, He had developed a high to follow them, However, in my you are breathing from .. the “lower floor - hands to your sides, “Place a . ~~ LK rT nT TE Demorralic atch, right hip and high right shoulder as private Pea 1 have found dia 30 SBIEERE: 8. Habit t you should: not ; stove Nig: or fiat bok © op. the “ab. > Daily “Thought. ee ped) : " ‘a result of working with his right grams ful, and have supplied cultivate. = ~~ °° domen. Your assistant .should.press y is Born Into t . rE —= hand and keepng' his left foot benind fhousands of pers ons With - these TE Ee Live pelow are Sowu on the lid or book. until from Ne Cn ee Ym January 1930. his right the greater part of the charts free of Cost. * .. _.. practiced conscientiously for a few ten to twenty pounds have been a _Belicfonte, Pay oe m—— 5 time, ii pe One sueuber k my training class’ weeks” when % Fe “are walking, you brought to bear. .Your part is to BOL Dorn. With him;. There is glvays His trouble had become so acute was a lawyer fifty years old who 11 pro y f yourself breathing lift and lower the weight on your f THE PATH OF LIFE that he could work only in snatches, When ke came, had a Jendency to regularly in a narmal way. tae siomen by JBusCHlar gHfot. Heise: 2" 19018 to work wilhal, for Mose-Whe twenty minutes at a and dur- Carry head down. He made a s you put your oot out, t ower. fourteen times, Rest : Thole 18 en Y po. = pan tite ing this short interval, order to get Practise of “wearing” his hands in a Eo deep = inhalation, ome that fifteen seconds, 8% the exer." Plested afeitis homiy ends of iis And many a tone from the bitter land, If the querulous heart would make it. To the soul that is full of hope, And Whose beautiful trust ne'er faileth The grass is green and the flowers are bright, Though the winter storm prevaileth. Better hope when the clouds hang low, And to keep the eyes still lifted, For the sweet blue sky will soon peep through When the ominous clouds are rifted, There ne'er was a night without a day, Or an evening without a morning. And the darkest hour, as the proverb goes, -Is the hour before the dawning. There is many a gem in the path of life, Which we pass in idle pleasure, That is richer far than the jeweled crown Or the miser's board of treasure, It may be the love of a little child, Or a mother’s prayer to heaven, Or only a beggar's grateful thanks For a cup of water given. _ Better to weave in the web of life A bright and golden filling, And to God's will bow with a ready heart, And hands that are swift and willing, Than to snap the delicate innate thread, Of our curious lives asunder, And then blame heaven for the tangled ends, And sit and grieve and wonder. HOW TO WALK, STAND, SIT AND BREATHE Mr, McGovern, who was formerly physical director and instructor at Cornell University Medical College, is one of the foremost experts on ex. | ercise in the United States. He con- ducts the McGovern Gymnasium, in New York City, where he specializes on physical training for the correc- tion of intestinal and other functional defects due to faulty habits, In this article he gives many of the exer- cises used in his practice for the.cor- rection of defects in posture. Which Shoe Do You Put on First? —“Bad posture is largely a matter of habit,” says Mr, McGovern. The chances are that every morning when you dress you put on the same shoe first. Most right-handed men step into their trousers with the left first. The right-handed person stoops to pick up things with his right hand about ninety-nine times out of a hundred. In many other ways the right-handed man tends to develop his right side more than his left, By following for years a certain habit, which was harmless to begin with, you can acquire round shoulders a high shoulder, or displace some of your vital organs, Sitting down seems harmless enough but many of us. sit in such contorted positions that we impair our health. It is particularly harmful to slump down on your backbone and curl your feet tightly up under you, as many peo- ple do. Even the habit of keeping one’s legs crossed may have bad ef- fects,” Some months ago a broker who had been suffering fo six or seven years from headaches, vertigo and nervousness, was sent to an ortho- pedic specialist. Previously the brok- er had consulted specialists for the | stomach and heart, but there was nothing wrong with him oganically, | though his symptoms very stubborn. Except when he was on his feet on the floor of the Exchange, from ten until three, he had been getting no exercise. He had acquired a ner- vous habit of standing with his heels together and his toes out and, in this position, he would flex his knees and continually raise and low- er himself, When he walked, he toed out, : At night he was kept awake by pains in his neck and blades, and he had formed the habit of sleeping on two or three pillows as he had found that in this way the strain was sometimes taken from the muscles and nerves that pained him. had proved The foot specialist sent the brok- er to me to see if his arches could be built up. I found that he did not have broken arches, but that they were in a weakened condition owing to inadequate exercise and to the long-continued wrong use of the muscles of his leg, His whole car- | riage had sagged, He walked, stood, sat, and breathed incorrectly. It was necessary to put this man through correctional exercises, not only for flat feet but for the whole body, so that he might acquire strength and energy to carry himself properly. At the end of two weeks he was sleeping on one pillow and had gained four and a half pounds in weight, In two months he had gained ten pounds, his chest expan- sion had increased, and his posture had greatly improved. Instead of sagging as he walked or sat, he held his head up so that his chin was in a line with his chest. ; Now when he walks to and from work, he toes in slightly, with heels out, He breathes once more freely and naturally where formerly he took his oxygen by panting three or four times. On the floor of the Ex- change, instead of flexing his knees, he does one of his flat-foot exercises. it is a very simple one—rising on the toes, he rolls on the outside of his feet, coming down on his heels so as to perform a complete circle with both feet from toe to heel. ... Anyone suffering from weak arches or flat feet will find this exercise gives a measure of instant relief. It brings into play muscles which are not sufficienly used By the person who walks incorrectly, and relieves the muscles that have been subject to strain, co Another patient sent to me by a physician was a magazine illustrator ;forty-nine years of age. His work ...required him to stand before his can- ‘vas seven or eight hours a day. He had acquired the habit of putting his weight solidly on one foot, which, as he walked, would be several inches behind the other. His arches had shoulder | relief, he had to walk back and forth in front of his canvas. Arch sup- ports in his shoes had only aggra- , vated his condition. The illustrator’s arches had sag- ged and weakened, but his was not ‘a true case of flat foot, The trou- {ble in his case, too, was the result “of incorrect standing and walking, I i gave him leg exercises, handball, and bicycle riding, and taught him how to stand and walk, just as though he {| were learning these things for the {first time. By the end of a month | he was working as usual. He gained “in weight and his chest measurement {| went from thirty-four to thirty-sev- ; en inches, One of the most important things the illustrator learned was to stand | on both feet and toe in slightly. You will find that when you toe in, your | carriage { without a deliberate effort you can- not carry the weight of your body {on one foot. Weakness in the arches, a condi- ition which may eventually lead to flat feet, is a very common trouble. In most cases it is due to incorrect use of the legs and feet, It is espe- cially common among people who sit at their work, the trouble arising both from inadequate exercise and use of the leg muscles when they do walk, More than any other one class, waiters suffer from flat foot. The reason in their case is that carrying trays causes them to “flounder.” With their toes out they shuffie or flop along, with no spring in their steps. Those of us who, as we walk, throw the weight of our bodies on the inside instead of the outside of the feet soon acquire the habit of floundering. This floundering is especially com- mon among fat people, and men and women who are merely what we call heavy-set. It is due not to the weight of their bodies, but to incor- rect ideas as to how to walk. Probably you can remember that, when you were a child, some well- intentioned member of your family kept coaxing you to “toe out,” and perhaps you were made fun of for walking ‘“pigeon-toed.” It is true that most children, as well as grown- ups, if not schooled in proper car- riage develop harmful habits, How- ever, the instinct of children to toe in is more in accord with the proper method of walking than the acquir- ed habit of toeing out. The correct way to walk is with the feet parallel, or even with the toes turned in a fraction of an inch. To see for yourself the different ef- fect of toeing out and toeing in, try this experiment: Stand, for a half- minute, with your heels together, and your toes out, Then part your heels, turn your toes in—and feel how your arches come up! Toeing out causes the weight of | the body to come on the inside in- | stead of the outside of the feet. Be- i sides causing arch trouble, it tends to make you knock-kneed. It upsets ithe carriage to such an extent it ! may be a factor in causing intestin- ‘al or stomach trouble, and hollow | chest. The person who has always ! walked with toes ries himself incorrectly in other re- spects, | Recently the “attention” position { has been changed at West Point in keeping with what we now know to i is not (likely to sag, and P pockets, I remember the first day he came to the gymnasium, He asked for me and stood beside a desk in my office waiting until I came; head down, hands in pockets, weight on one foot and his mind far away. In his case, improper posture had caused the development of severe intestinal trouble. His colon had been pushed down and adhesions had developed, He was given a course of exercises in the nas- jum to raise his stomach and large intestine and special mild exercises for. use in his own home to develop his back and chest, He learned to carry himself correctly before he left, and with that change there came a great relief in his condition. Partly to stimulate him to remem- ber his old defects in posture, and artly as a tonic for the muscles he was likely to neglect, I gave him for use in his home certain wall ex- ercises. These are printed later on in this article, Defective posture often begins to appear in a man at the age of thirty or thirty-five. He shows a tendency to droop on one side or the other when standing. The result is that the muscles on one side are stretch- | ed, while those of the other side deteriorate. ‘When he. has so. stood - for some time, he begins ~ to walk that way, and will acquire the habit of taking a somewhat longer step on the drooping shoulder side. The wall exercises I give are de- signed to correct the tendency of people to slouch when standing and walking, If you have no physical defect, and yet take a longer step on one side than on the other, it is because you have become addict- ed to a slouching posture. ‘el with your shoulders. Keeping: your ; out usually car-' be the right methods of standing and’ walking. Now, when at attention, [the West Pointers stand with their | feet parallel, instead of, as formerly, { with their heels together and their toes out. Their hands are now held at the side with palms back which is a natural position, without the | strain of the old position, when the ! palms were held against the sides | of the legs. { If you have been suffering from i flat foot make a practice of toeing 'in when walking, In some severe | cases it may also be advisable to have your shoemaker cut out for you a piece of leather in the form of a quarter-circle that will reach {from the back of the big toe to the | point where the arch rises. Wear | this on the inside of the shoe in the position indicated. It will make you ! throw your weight on the outside of | the foot and will raise your arch. The exercises for flat foot and | weakened arches will be most bene- | ficial if practiced without - shoes, | They are: 1. Stand with feet parallel. Turn over so that you are standing on the outside edges of your feet, the soles of your feet “facing” each other as nearly as possible. In doing so, keep knees stiff, Repeat ten times. 2 Toes in, heels out. Rise on toes and come down without touching the floor with the heels, Ten times, 3. Toes in, heels out, Rise on the toes. Come down so as to form a circle with the outside edge of the feet from toe to heel. Ten times, 4, Cross feet, left foot on right side, right foot on left side, so that toes and heels are on parallel lines. With legs rigid, rock sidewlise from left to right. Ten times. 5. Knees stiff feet parallel. Walk on the toes without bending the knees, for one minute. 6. Feet parallel. Walk on the out- side of the feet without bending the knees, One minute. 7. Left foot straight. Bring right heel in front of left toe so as to form half of a perfect square, the right toe pointing left. After taking position make legs rigid and bend body straight forward. Raise right toe as far as possible, keeping heel to the floor. 8. Repeat Exercise No. 7 with left foot. 9. Feet parallel. Bring toes and heels together as far as possible, making an effort to grip with them. Keep knees stiff, Ten times. 10, Walk up and down, toeing in as far as possible. One minute or more. These exercises have proved of great value in many cases of arch This exercise will help you correct the habit of taking unequal steps: Lie on your back so that, with your knees bent, your feet are against the wall. Keeping your feet to the wall, push back so that you rock to and fro, the weight of your body shifting, as you rock, from your hips to your shoulders, This is merely , to show you the motion of the exer- cise. The exercise itself requires you to rock by pushing with one foot at a time. Push most with the foot with which you take the longer step when you walk, That is, raises the chest but does not force the stomach out. Exhale as your left foot comes forward a second time, This method of breathing should be followed regularly at least twice a day for periods of ten to fif- teen minutes at a time. The following breathing exercises are for use in the home: Stand with feet parallel, chin, chest, and toes in a straight line, hands at the side, palnfs back, Breathe in slowly, turning palms back. Breathe in slowly, turning palms forward. When the lungs are fully dilated count five slowy. Then exhale, turning palms back, Count five before inhaling again. Repeat from ten to fifty times, It is a good practice to do breath- ing exercises just after waking, while lying in bed in the morning. This is the method: Flat on your back, Palms down to start. Deep slow inhalations, Raise chest high, bringing abdomen in and turning palms up, while keeping the shoulders to the bed. Hold until you have counted five, Then inhale and so on, Ten to fif- ty times. Some time ago the vice president of a big New York public utilities corporation came to me and com- plained of a pain in his neck. He was sixty “years.old. - The pain he said, had become as sharp as a toothache: and was reaking it im- possible for him to work at a desk. I gave him a pen and paper and asked him to write out in full what he had told me about his trouble. When he began to write, I left the room, and stayed just long enough to let him settle down and take the position which it was natural for him to take at a desk. On coming back I found him writing away with his head hanging down and tipped slightly to one side. It was easy to see how his neck mus- cles had come to lose their tone; but he was unconscious that he had developed such a confirmed habit until it was called to his attention. Exercises for his neck relieved him of the pain in three days; but to tone up his muscles and get his circulation in good order required deveral months. The habit most people acquire when sitting is to let one shoulder if your low shoulder is on the left and side fall lower than the other. so that you take a longer stride This causes the chest to sag also. with your left leg, push fifty times The man who sags on the left side with that as against ten times oh while sitting is apt to keep his left the right ‘side, The following exercises are to cor- rect round shoulders, low shoulders, curvature and flat chest when these have developed from a slouching posture: 1, Stand facing the wall, feet par- allel, both arms extended so your palms are against the wall on a lev- - heels to the floor, let your body come forward until your chest and chin touch the wall. Push back from the wall and take a deep inhalation, As you return to starting position, with your palms, chin, and chest against the wall, exhale, Repeat ten times. Be sure:to keep your heels to the floor, or the exercise will not reach the muscles it is designed strengthen. ‘ 2. Right side to the wall, feet par- allel. Right palm against the wall at level of shoulder; left hand on hip. Turning forward, bring the left ' shoulder in to the wall as far as possible without raising heels from the floor. Inhale as you come back to the first position with your left hand on your hip, Exhale as you go forward again. Repeat ten times on both right and left sides, : This exercise is mild and very beneficial and can be done by the growing boy who has a tendency to round shoulders or by a man or wo- man of eighty years. It requires no change of clothes, and if done three or four times a day will give the best results, This like the other ex- ercises I am giving for correct pos- ture, shoud be taken with the win- dows open. | -The right kind of walking can be used as a continuation of the two sets of exercises just given, Even the athletic type of man seems to think that when he holds his head back he is in a proper position for walking. But holding the head back strains the back and uses unneces- sary energy, so that the man who . walks with his head in that position trouble, The instructions are so soon becomes fatigued, When walking do not throw the head back nor force the chest out, nor the abdomen in. The chin should be on an even line with the chest, while the hands hang loosely at the sides. The feet should be parallel or toeing in slightly. The graceful walker springs slightly from the toe at the end of each step or the beginning of the next, Breathing should be through the more than normally nose never through the mouth. If you find you have difficulty in breathing through the nose, you should consult a physician regarding the removal of any obstructions. Many people take breaths that are too short, while those who have de- liberately set themselves to breath- ing by rule, without proper instruc- tions, are very likely to breathe too deeply. I have known some who ac- quired the habit of lower diaphragm breathing, This presses the stomach out and down and has a tendency to narrow the chest. People who get little exercise are very apt to take short breaths, Most men of middle age should hand to his face 'or chin for sup- port, which results in a position that crowds the liver, stomach and intestines, ! Another common habit is that of putting the feet up on a desk or porch railing. Eventually, this prac- tice will make a man round-should- ered. The only way I know of for a man to correct bad sitting postures is to. deliberately watch himself over a considerable period of - time, Remember. that you are most apt to slouch and sag in an easy chair and at the same time you take shorter breaths, because you are breathing merely with the apex of the lungs. The person who works at a desk should always use a straight-back chair. For writing he should move forward from the hips, with his back straight keeping his chin and chest in a line, The first -tend- dency of the man who is not in good physical condition is to use his hand and elbow to support his head when workng at a desk. This means a distortion from the correct sitting position. There are many comfortable, easy chairs with straight backs. Make a habit of using one of these, if you can, when reading or resting at home, Lean back if you want to and relax the abdominal muscles, but avoid letting the head sag forward over the chest at any time. As long as you keep the chest and the chin in a straight line, your posture is n/t likely to displace stomach and intestines. A good many people make a practice of sleeping on more than one pillow, This is bad, for the rea- son that two pillows hold the head so high that the circulation is less- ened, The acute angle of the posi- tion is sufficient to cause a stiff neck. The main thing to remember about your position when in bed is to lie so as to be without tension in any part of the body. your limbs, neck, and jaw A good many people suffer occasional sleep- less nghts because they try to sleep with their jaws tightly clench- ed. Many people who walk a great deal, or follow even far more Vig- orous recreations, suffer from un- der-exercise of the abdominal mus- cles, Any person whose abdominal muscles are in proper condition should be able to do the following exercise: Lie on the floor flat on your back, hands under your head. Bring yourself up to a sitting position without letting your heels come more than an inch or so off the floor knees to any great extent. You should be able to do this exercise ten times without feeling much strain, in which case your ab- dominal muscles are properly devel- oped. Here are two exrcises for the ab- dominal muscles. They are espe- cially good for persons with intes- tinal trouble—constipaton. Practic- ing these two exercises will in the course of a few weeks, enable you Relax and without bending your breathe more deeply than they do, to do the one just given. Then you but this does not mean that one should use the three together reg- should breathe as deeply as he can. ularly, to keep your abdominal mus- ' In proper breathing one does not cles in good condition, take a consciously long nor a con- 1. Clasp your hands sciously short breath, Proper breath- just below the waist line. Resist ing is known as upper diaphragm strongly with the pressure of your breathing, that is, it is from the up- hands as you force the abdomen up per chest. Take your breath slow- and out. Relax, Then repeat slow- ly. and notice that your chest rises ly. Continue, with resting intervals and your stomach comes in, If you for from three to five minutes. continue to inhale d a certain (This is still better exercise if point, you will notice that your you can get someone to assist in together cise three times in sets of four- teen with the fifteen-seconds in between.) 2, Stand in front of a table so that it touches you. With your feet parallel on the floor, bend so that your body from the hips up restson the table. Catch hold of the table with one hand along each side, Keeping your feet together and your knees rigid, swing your legs together from the right to left and back again, Swing vigorously. Ten times, The second part of this exercise is to keep the left foot on the floor and to swing the right Jeg back and up ten times. Repeat with the left leg swinging back and up. A good many cases of bad posture are due merely to auto-intoxicaton. Constipation—which is often due to faulty diet——causes one to feel below par in general, with the result that the sufferer begins to slouch and sometimes acquires permanent de- fects in his carriage, To professional and business men who take physical training under me, I recommend certain diets which have been carefully worked out in accord with the best medical and scientific experience. , Diet No, 1 is for the rest sedentary man who does little or no hard. physical work. On rising he should exercise for five to ten minutes. Then ‘a warm bath finishing up with a cold shower. Take a large glass of orange juice if possible’ immediately after the bath, Breakfast: —Cereal mixed with bran and cream. Very little sugar. Bran muffins or toast made from graham, whole wheat, or rye bread. Coffee substitutes preferred. If cof- fee is taken, use three-fourths milk to one-quarter coffee, Luncheon:—A vegetable luncheon or a vegetable salad of any of the following vegetables: Lettuce, toma- toes, spinach, string beans, turnips, carrots, caulifiower, cabbage, celery, cucumbers, Brussels sprouts, water cress. Fresh cheese. Dark bread. Buttermilk, or some fermented milk, Dinner:—Any vegetable soup: To- mato, pea, lentil corn, celery; one broiled lamb chop, a piece of chick- en or a small piece of roast beef with at least two vegetables, Dark bread. Unsweetened cocoa. Any stewed fruit for dessert. Note:—Avoid rich, complicated dishes, heavy meats, or greasy fish, Do not eat red meat more than three times a week, substituting fish or chicken at other times. Avoid starchy foods such as white bread, potatoes, and so forth. It is a good idea to make a lunch of fresh fruit once or twice a week, Drink at least six glasses of water a day. Try to be regular with your meals. Diet No. 2 will result reduction of weight. in a mild The man who has been eating: too heavily and un- : der-exercising, suffering in conse- quence the ills that come from slug- gish intestinal action can “taper off” with this regime: Breakfast—Grapefrut, peach with- out sugar, or a sour apple, White bread, not more than one and a quarter ounces. One soft-boiled egg. Coffee, not more than four and a quarter ounces, Cream one ounce, The coffee should be taken with the cream, without sugar, asd may be sweetened with a half-grain of sac- . charine. Luncheon:—Cup of tea (no cream, sugar, or milk), small sandwich of white bread. A small portion of meat may be eaten, No crackers. Dinner:—Clear soup, Roasted or broiled beef, lamb, veal game and only four to five ounces. One or two of the following green vegetables: Spinach, string beans, green peas, peas, Brussels sprouts, celery, stew- ed or raw tomatoes; but only one and a half ounces of any of these. For dessert plain rice pudding junk- et, cup custard, all sweetened with saccharine; or fruit (except bananas or strawberries), either raw or cooked, from four to five ounces of them, Take a glass of water when - fruit is not eaten. Drink a glass or two of water at nine, eleven, three five o'clock and at bedtime. Take buttermilk between meals if desired. —American Maga- zine, "TOO MUCH RED TAPE, BUT HE SAW THE DOCTOR It seems we have too much red tape now. I am not strong for that sort of thing, Red tape always re- minds me of the young man who called at the house of a celebrated physician and asked to see the doc- tor, The office nurse asked him if he had an appointment and answer- ed that he had not, Then the nurse consulted the doctor’s appointment list and said: “I think I can work you in after the patient who is now with the doctor. So please go inside that room and take your clothes off.” “Take my clothes off!” the young man exclaimed “What for?” The nurse was firm, She said: | “The doctor has made it an absolute , rule not to see anybody unless that is done, It saves time.” “But I don’t want to take off my clohes,” the young man insisted. He did not believe in this red-tape stuff. “Well,” said the nurse, “I am sor- ry, but you can’t see the doctor.” “If that’s the case, I'm game” said the young man, and he went into the room, A few minutes later the doctor en- tered the room and found the young man awaiting him stark naked. “Well, sir” said the doctor, “what seems to be your trouble?” “Doctor,” the young. man replied graciously, “I called to see if you would renew your wife's subscription to the Ladies’ Journal'’—Exchange. ! ene re fete ere ! Mother—“What is the matter with {little Chester?” Tommy-—He’s dug a hole and he , wants to bring it into the house.” —James Russel Lowell. . —This season the choi is the test of a a rially speaking. Never have there been so many opportunities to find the per- fect hat, which will enhance one’s individual charm. And never have there been so many opportunities to go hopelessly astray and eclipse one’s self completely—just as the woman who walks the streets on a rainy day with trailing wisps of georgette or silk flapping at her an- kles is certain to find herself a crowning confection whose only Nghia place is under glass in a mu- m devo to 1 Sous: 930 horrors of the As always simplicity is the tes true chic. As the rot of the hd frocks manage to achieve an effect of subtle simplicity, despite their elaborate detail and workm so the hat worn by the really smart woman will have a simple casual air, and will not distract the from the effect of the ensemble. But here, as in frocks, it is simplicity of sophistication rather than naivette and is achieved by miracles of pa- tient handwork, perfect fitting, art- ful tucks, pleats and folds which in the end produce the perfect frame for the Jace of the wearer, or the so-called “dressmaker” mode, the mode of handicraft - and detail, has markedly affected the new hats, and the true milliner, in whose deft fingers a flat piece of felt becomes a masterpiece of smart lines, has returned to her own. Never has there been such va- riety in hats. The hat witha brim has definitely returned. But it is a brim with a difference, designed to reveal rather than conceal the face This effect is achieved in various ways. The brims of the new cloche hats are shallower in the front than at the _sides, and the front of the crown is frequently an inch shorter than the back. Sometimes a ban- deau is introduced, or, when the hat is steamed, the brim is pinched back against the crown to give a becom- ing lift. Sometimes the brim is fold- ed back in the front and finished with a knot or ornament, revealing the face in becoming lines, The new brim designs seem to promise that fur collars are destin- ed to be worn on the first Spring suits, for those Spring hats that have recently been imported from France make provision for them. The cloche brims sweep down and back in a widening line as though starting to imitate the sou’wester, but just as they reach the point where they would be in the way of the collar a wide wedge-shaped piece is cut out or the back is crumpled against the crown and held with a saucy little bow, giving the same effect as though a triangular piece had" been cut out. When the brim is actually :cut away the trimming is usually laid against the back of the crown in an up and down line, which permits: the lower part to lie against the neck. Even newer than the hats with simulated bandeaux and the evenly drooping brims cut away at the back are those bandeau hats with the brim laid in short pleats at the right side or lie raher closely against the face while the brim flares out at the left in a becoming scooped dip. This is a mode capable of being interpretec in every mood from the tailored hat to the filmiest of afternoon creations but whatever the spirit or the me. dium in which it is made, its trim. ming will be found nestling at the right side as though to hold the pleats against the cheek. Hats ir this style have a way of achieving the envied Gainsborough silhouette the slanting, picturesque line whick runs like a motif through all the new Spring millinery. One finds thi: same charming slanting line in the off-the-face models, as well as in the hats that have brims, Small hats are by no means abol ished. For early Spring LeMonnie is making tiny caps of straw, tuck ed to hug the head tightly, and al the leading Paris designers have ver ‘sions of the beret, some gevere, oth ers draped to give a softened effect A hint of a new trend is indicate in Rose Valois's sailor hats, whicl she is introducing for Spring ant resort wear, It is almost & decad since we have seen the sailor, bu it is quite possible that, with suit and shirtwaist blouses to the fore we shall see this classic shape retur: to favor. —OQur homes are for recuperatio: and rest. and nothing destroys th desired atmosphere of ease mor than a thoughtless and abusive us age of color. —Hot tomatoe Sandwich: Fo each sandwich, spread one slice © bread with butter and another wit either pimento or cream cheese. Fr the sandwiches gently in melte butter. Put them in a shallow pa and top each sandwich with a thic slice of tomato. Sprinkle with sal’ pepper. and a few drops Worcester shire sauce. Bake in a hot oven c broil them under a hot flame for few minutes, The sandwiches mus be served very hot. —For potatoes baked in half-she select sx medium sized potatoes an bake for about forty minutes. Re move from the oven, cut slice fro: the side of each and scoop out th inside. Mash and add two tablespoons « butter salt, pepper and two tabl spoons of hot milk; then add tk whites of two eggs well beaten. Refill the skins and bake fro five to eight minutes in a very hc oven after you have sprinkled ti tops of the potatoes with grate cheese, Encourage others to subscril for the Watchman,