<h2>CARDS</h2>
<p class="drop-capi">VISITING-CARDS are of
three sizes, which remain
practically the same year
after year. The largest is
that used by matrons, while
that of the unmarried woman is a very little
smaller, and that of the man much smaller.
The present style as to materials favors a
polished bristol board that is white and
substantial without being too heavy. This
should be printed from an engraved plate
in black ink. The lettering may be a running
script or old English.</p>
<p>Under no circumstances should a woman’s
card carry any prefix other than <i>Mrs.</i> or
<i>Miss</i>, but one or the other of these invariably
appears. This rule does not apply in
the case of professional women who may
wish a distinctive card for business purposes,
with its prefix of <i>Dr.</i> or <i>Rev.</i> Such<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
a card would also carry the address in the
lower right-hand corner and perhaps office-hours
in the lower left-hand corner. But
even the professional woman requires the
plainer form of card for social purposes.</p>
<p>There is a tendency at present to give the
name in full on the card. For example,
<i>Mrs. John James Smith</i>, or <i>Miss Maude
MacArthur</i>.</p>
<p>It is permissible for the senior matron of
a family to use only the family name on
her card with the prefix: for example,
<i>Mrs. Fuller</i>. It is more common, however,
to omit the Christian name of an eldest
daughter who is unmarried: <i>Miss Fuller</i>.
The other daughters require the Christian
name on their cards: <i>Miss Mary Fuller</i>,
<i>Miss Gladys Fuller</i>.</p>
<p>The tendency in this country is strongly
against the omission of the name in either
of the above cases. Although it is perfectly
correct as a social usage, it is opposed to
the spirit of our institutions.</p>
<p>There is some variation in the use of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
name on the card in the case of a widow.
It is within the woman’s choice whether
she will continue to use the Christian name
of her husband on the card, or will put
her own in place of it. In other words, she
may use the same cards after the death of
her husband as before if she prefers, or she
may follow the <i>Mrs.</i> with her own Christian
name. A common form to-day gives the
woman’s Christian name and the surname
to which she was born and finally the surname
of her husband. A present vogue
permits also the use of only the two surnames,
without the Christian name. Thus,
Mary Brown marries James Robinson. The
husband dies and the widow changes her
visiting-cards, which have read, <i>Mrs.
James Robinson</i>, so that they now read,
<i>Mrs. Mary Robinson</i>. Then presently she
grows ambitious socially and has her cards
changed to read, <i>Mrs. Mary Brown Robinson</i>.
Soon, she seizes on a newer style, and
again changes her cards in accordance with
it to read, <i>Mrs. Brown Robinson</i>.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It should be noted that the variations in
cards practised by widows are used also
by divorced women. And when a divorcée
resumes her maiden name she properly
uses with it the prefix <i>Mrs.</i>, not <i>Miss</i>.</p>
<p>As a matter of strict propriety, a girl
during her first social season does not formally
use an individual card. Her name
appears below that of her mother in the
same lettering. When making calls unaccompanied
by her mother, the latter’s
name is crossed out with a pencil mark.</p>
<p>Where two daughters of nearly the same
age are concerned, both are included on
the mother’s card by the words <i>The Misses</i>,
followed by the family name.</p>
<p>The above details are applied especially
to a débutante in the first season. Afterward,
a young woman uses her own individual
card when calling alone. But this
card should not carry on it the day at
home. The at-home statement appears
on the mother’s individual card. It is
given also on the card combining the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
names of mother and daughter. The combination
card may with correctness be
frequently used in appropriate circumstances
until the daughter’s marriage.</p>
<p>The notice of the day at home is placed
in the lower left-hand corner of the card.
Only the day of the week is given, or with
such qualification as may be required if
the at-home day is not of weekly recurrence.
The hours should not be specified
unless they are a distinct variation from
the customary time, between three and
six. In addition, a time limit to the at
homes may be specified. Thus, <i>Fridays
until March</i>. Of course, the beginning is
set for any individual by reception of the
card.</p>
<p>A married woman finds frequent use for
a card in combination with her husband,
though this by no means takes the place
of her individual cards, and, while it bears
the address in the lower right-hand corner,
does not usually give the at-home day.
This card may properly be used for those<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span>
formal occasions in which her husband is
concerned. For example, it may fittingly
accompany a gift from husband and wife.
It serves also for announcing a marriage
with the residence of the bridal couple.</p>
<p>A man’s visiting-card always carries the
prefix <i>Mr.</i> The single exception to this
is when <i>Jr.</i> follows the name. The name
is commonly given in full, but it is permissible
to use only the initial of the middle
name. It is strictly proper for the male
head of a family to use only the family
name on his card, preceded by <i>Mr.</i> Thus,
the head of the Smiths—could he be
located—might use on his visiting-card
merely <i>Mr. Smith</i>, instead of <i>Mr. John
Smith</i>.</p>
<p>The home address appears in the lower
right-hand corner of the card, and a bachelor
may add also the name of a club in the
lower left-hand corner. The business address,
of course, should never appear on
the card used for social purposes. Likewise,
a day at home should not be given<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
by a bachelor even though he may entertain
regularly.</p>
<p>It is a safe rule to avoid titles on the
visiting-cards of men as of women. The
only exceptions are in instances little likely
to concern the average reader of this book.
Such instances are afforded by the President
of the United States, the Vice-President,
Ambassadors, the higher Judiciary,
Army and Navy Officers, clergymen and
physicians. The custom in the army, however,
forbids any prefix except plain <i>Mr.</i>
to an officer below the rank of Captain.</p>
<p>In the case of all officers the nature of
his command is properly stated in a lower
corner of the card.</p>
<p>Lawyers and physicians should have
only the home address on the card used
for social purposes. Another card with
the business address should be used for
business purposes. But <i>Dr.</i> is properly
used by the physician in place of <i>Mr.</i> on
his visiting-cards. Likewise, a clergyman
uses <i>Reverend</i>, or its abbreviation <i>Rev.</i>,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
on all his cards, which are commonly identical
for both social and professional uses.</p>
<p>The letters indicative of degrees are not
given after the name on the visiting-card,
though a single exception is sometimes
made by clergymen who omit <i>Rev.</i> before
their names and, in lieu of it, use <i>D.D.</i>
following the name.</p>
<p>When it becomes necessary, for any reason,
to write one’s name on a visiting-card,
the prefix <i>Mr.</i> should be given, following
the ordinary form of the engraved card.</p>
<p>Care should be taken in the case of
mourning-cards to avoid a too ostentatious
parade of grief by an unduly broad margin
of black. Somewhat less than a half inch
is permissible for a widow’s card, and,
after the first year, it is well to have this
width reduced. Often, other reductions
in the size of the border are made at intervals
of six months, as long as the period of
mourning continues.</p>
<p>The card of a widower must carry a
border proportionately narrower, as its<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
size is smaller than a woman’s card, but
the decrease in width is made after the same
manner.</p>
<p>When a woman elects to remain in
mourning permanently, the narrow black
border may be retained throughout her
lifetime.</p>
<p>It is not customary to make variations
in the mourning border for the commemoration
of persons other than husband or
wife. For these, a fitting width is about
a twelfth part of an inch, which remains
the same throughout the period of
mourning.</p>
<p>When a call is made on a day at home,
the card or cards are commonly left in the
hall on a tray placed for that purpose. A
married woman calling on the at-home day
of another married woman for the first
time in the season leaves her own card
and two of her husband’s cards. But
in later calls on the at-home day she
leaves her card and the two cards of her
husband’s only when the call acknowledges<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
entertainment offered to them by
the hostess.</p>
<p>There has been considerable simplification
in recent years as to the leaving of
cards. They are no longer weirdly bent
in sign of delivery in person, and a smaller
number are used. Thus, though the hostess
referred to above may have unmarried
daughters receiving with her, cards for
them need not be left. But the presence
of a married daughter or a friend formally
assisting in the reception of the
guests requires the leaving of a card.</p>
<p>A woman leaves no cards for the men
of the family where she visits.</p>
<p>It is the business of the wife to fulfill
her husband’s formal social duties by leaving
his cards with hers whenever entertainment
should be acknowledged.</p>
<p>Where two spinsters share a residence,
a woman caller, the first time in the season,
should leave two of her cards, and also, if
she is a married woman, two of her husband’s.
So, too, a card should be left for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span>
a daughter or sister who is hostess of the
house, even though she may be unmarried.</p>
<p>When an unmarried girl uses her individual
card, she should follow the procedure
indicated for the matron in the
use of hers. Or she may use the combination
card of her mother and herself as already
described above.</p>
<p>A call on a mother and daughter who
are out requires the leaving of two cards.
The same procedure is necessary in the
case of a hostess who has a friend staying
with her. Likewise, a call made
on a friend who is a guest in another’s
house demands the leaving of two cards.
This rule applies in the case of a man as
well as of a woman. It should be observed
that two cards are deemed sufficient in
most cases. Where, however, the hostess
has a guest staying with her and also
daughters of her own, three cards are to
be left.</p>
<p>A man wishing to call on a particular
woman must be punctilious in leaving cards<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
not only for the particular one in whom he
is interested, but also for the mother or
chaperon, and still a third for the host.
But, if a call is made on a woman on her
at-home day, no card need be left, unless
the call is in acknowledgment of entertainment.
In the latter case, a single card
is left for the host. It is advisable, however,
that in his first call he should leave
a card for convenience in the matter of
address.</p>
<p>It is permissible on certain occasions to
leave visiting-cards with the servant at
the door, or to send them through the mail
or by a messenger, instead of making the
call in person. Sometimes a woman who
is owing a call thus sends her card along
with an invitation, as for luncheon or dinner.
The invitation is considered to justify
the merely formal matter of the card. So,
too, a person receiving an invitation from
a hostess who is a stranger must, if the
invitation is declined, leave cards within
two weeks after the date of the entertainment.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
An invalid may send cards through
the post in acknowledgment of calls of
inquiry, and a woman in mourning is able
to fulfill her obligations in the same manner.
Cards are formally left by all who
receive invitations to a church wedding,
and the requirement is the same for those
to whom an announcement of the marriage
is sent. Such cards are demanded of men
and women both, to be left for the mother
of the bride within a fortnight after the
ceremony. Cards are left within a proper
time after any form of entertainment to
which the members of a club are invited,
though there may be no other social acquaintance
with the hostess. In calls of
condolence or inquiry, cards are always
left. They may be used also, as hereinbefore
stated, to announce a prolonged
absence or a change of address.</p>
<p>When cards are left in person, they are
delivered to the servant at the door. One
or two or three are to be left according
to the circumstances. The caller should<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
tell the servant the persons for whom the
cards are designed.</p>
<p>Good taste dictates that calls of inquiry
concerning the condition of a sick person
should be made in person. Cards should
be left at the time of such calls, except in
the case of intimates. The cards should
not be mailed or sent by messenger.</p>
<p>Acknowledgment of cards of condolence
are made after a funeral by a large black-edged
card of thanks, which should be sent
within a month. Such cards are usually
merely printed, not engraved. The wording
should be of the simplest.</p>
<p class="center">
<i>Mrs. Jack Robinson<br/>
<br/>
returns thanks to<br/>
<br/>
.............................<br/>
<br/>
for her kind sympathy</i><br/></p>
<p>The address of the one sending the card
should appear at the bottom.</p>
<p>The form is varied according to circumstances.
Thus:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="center">
<i>Mrs. Montgomery James and Family<br/>
return thanks for your kind sympathy</i><br/></p>
<p>Some persons prefer to leave their visiting-cards
with the mourning border on
those to whom acknowledgment is due,
instead of sending the special card by
mail. Personal calls, however, are not
made by those in mourning within three
months at least of the time of the funeral.
If earlier acknowledgment is to be made,
the visiting-card with mourning-border may
be sent by mail within a few weeks. A
word of thanks should be written on the
card. For example:</p>
<p class="center">
<i>With grateful appreciation of your sympathy</i><br/></p>
<p>The use of <i>P.p.c.</i> cards has already been
described in the chapter on calls. It should
be added that they are convenient when
one is leaving on short notice without time
to pay in person all calls due. The <i>P.p.c.</i>
card involves no duty of acknowledgment
on the part of its recipient.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>A woman temporarily stopping in any
place sends cards containing her address
to any acquaintances she may have there.
Her ordinary visiting-card serves the purpose,
with a pencil line drawn through the
engraved address and the temporary one
written above it. But a man, in the same
circumstances, makes his calls in person.</p>
<p>The new-born infant embarks on its
social career by means of the card. The
birth of a child is made known to the
mother’s social list by mailing the mother’s
card, which has tied to it by a strip of
white satin ribbon a card only a quarter
as large carrying the full name of the baby.
In this case, the prefix <i>Mr.</i> or <i>Miss</i> is
omitted, but the date of birth appears in
a lower corner. The recipients of these
cards are required to call with inquiry as
to the health of the senders, and to leave
their cards in return. Persons residing
at a distance may post their cards of acknowledgment,
with a penciled phrase of
congratulation.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />