ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Brittle Books Project, 2017.COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION In Copyright. Reproduced according to U.S. copyright law USC 17 section 107. Contact dcc@librarv.uiuc.edu for more information. This digital copy was made from the printed version held by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was made in compliance with copyright law. Prepared for the Brittle Books Project, Preservation Department, Main Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2017L I B R. A FLY OF THE U NIVER.S ITY Of I LLI N O I S e>oe>G T39eTHE ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITINGThe Etiquette of Letter Writing BY LAURA THORNBOROUGH author or "etiquette for everybody" PUBLISHERS BARSE & HOPKINS NEW YORK, N. Y. NEWARK, N. J.Copyright, 1924 £Y BARSE & HOPKINS VXXMTXD IK THI UNITED STATE8 OF AMERICAPREFACE "I must write a letter to Mary Blake to-day/' How often do we hear some such expression as this in the home, in the office, in the hotel, or on our travels; and so we sit down with pen in hand to send a written message to this distant friend. Letter writing has become so common that few people take the time to study its significance. We do not realize that this letter which we send out so hastily and carelessly is our own ambassador. It goes and meets our friend, greeting her in our stead. By its appearance and its message, we ourselves are tacitly judged. If it is "sloppy," or in bad taste, or written on a paper of loud tint or poor quality—the mental picture conjured up of the sender is not flattering. So much attention is being paid in this latter day to etiquette as applied to behavior, that another book on the etiquette of letter writing seems both timely and worth while. Such a book does not need to follow the old lines of the "Model Letter Writer," but should point out the canons of good taste. The present volume has tried as succinctly as possible to give some of these general rules. Instead of offering a number of model forms to be slavishly copied, it quotes wherever pos- sible from actual letters, both from well-known and unknown persons. Instead of saying, "This is how you should write," it says, "This is what others have writ- ten. Do you think they are good examples of their type?" The present book, which is a companion volume toPREFACE the same author's "Etiquette for Everybody," sounds the same practical, friendly note of that book. It is addressed not merely to the social "highbrow'' but to the rank and file of well-bred persons. It takes up, one by one, the first principles of letter writing, with sug- gestive examples usually chosen from famous writers. Every type of letter is considered, both social and busi- ness. A special chapter is devoted to children's letters; another to letter-heads; another to grammar and punc- tuation, and so on. There is no short cut to correct letter writing. Like any other form of literary composition, it comes only from study—from the capacity of taking infinite pains. If you would write a successful literary letter, study the models left you by some of the great masters of litera- ture, from Addison down to Stevenson. If you would aspire to be a successful writer of business letters, study each example of such communications as sent out by the masters of big business. There is real joy to be had in the writing of a letter. Every letter, no matter how trivial it may seem at the time of the writing, should be the very best of which we are capable, a pleasure to behold and a greater pleasure to read. Letters are such an everyday occurrence with most of us, that we have lost sight of the important part they play in our lives. Perhaps no better summing-up of the vital influence they exert can be found than these words carved in marble over the entrance to the stately Post Office building in Washington: Carrier of News and Knowledge, Instrument of Trade and Industry, Promoter of Mutual Acquaintance, of Peace and Good Will.PREFACE vii Messenger of Sympathy and of Love, Servant of Parted Friends, Consoler of the Lonely, Bond of the Scattered Family, Enlarger of the Common Life.CONTENTS ch4ptbb page Preface • • « • • • «•. v I. Letter Writing Yesterday and Today . 13 The First Writings. The New Picture Language. The Romance of Writing. The Decline To-day. A Safe Rule. The Timely Letter. II. Different Kinds of Letters .... 21 Common Errors. Stationery. The Head- ing of the Letter. The Salutation. Open- ing and Closing Paragraphs. The Body of the Letter. The Complimentary Close. The Signature. Addressing the Envelope. III. The Personal Letter......35 Qualities Essential to Good Letters. Three Essentials. The Typewritten Letter. Be- ginnings of Correspondence. Need of Let- ters. Writing the First Letter. Letters Are Self-Revealing. Specimen Letters. Love-Letters. IV. Social Correspondence ....... 63 Crests, Monograms and Markings. For Informal Correspondence. The Formal Invitation. Informal Invitations. "Just a Note." House Parties. The "Bread-and- Butter" Letter. Letters of Thanks. Greet- ing Cards. "Duty" Letters. Letters of Condolence. Letters of Congratulation. ixX CONTENTS CXAPTBB PAOB Birthday Letters. The Letter to a Con- valescent. The Letter of Introduction. The Letter in Behalf of Charity. fcV. Personal Business Letters .... 86 General Rules. Stationery. Heading. The Salutation. Different Kinds of Business Letters. Letters of Application. Inclo- sures. The Business Introduction. Sum- mary. Some Good Rules. VI. Business Correspondence ..... 105 Letter-heads. Business Forms. Typewrit- ten Signatures. Foreign Correspondence. Stamping Signatures. Physical Form of Letters. The Sales Letter. Form and Circular Letters. Inclosing Printed Matter. Follow-up Letters. The Form Letter. Re- plies. Letters of Apology. Letters of Refusal. Answering Letters of Complaint. Collection Letters. Letters Refusing Credit. VII. What to Say and What Not to Say . . 124 Style in Letters. Some Don'ts. Some Things to Do. Points for the Social Letter. VIII. Points in Good English.....142 Choice of Words. Verbs. Adjectives. Adverbs. Pronouns. Prepositions. Use of Hyphens. Use of Capitals. Paragraphs. Proper Punctuation. Figures and Numbers. In Conclusion. IX. Correct Forms of Address .. ^ . 143 X. Postal Information.......156 Foreign and Domestic Postage. First ClassCONTENTS Mail. Third Class Matter. Second Class Matter. Fourth Class Matter. Care in Wrapping Mail. Inclosures in Packages. Inclosures in Letters. Registered Mail. Unmailable Matter. Forwarding Mail. Special Delivery. Telegrams. XI. Children's Letters....... First Principles. Letters Written by Chil- dren. Thank-you Letters. Replies to Children's Letters. Children's Invitations. Birthday Parties, In General,Etiquette of Letter Writing I LETTER WRITING YESTERDAY AND TO-DAY IETTER writing is such a universal habit among civilized people that it is hard to imagine a time when it was not known. Yet staid scientists tell us that thousands of years elapsed after man appeared on earth before he began to express his thoughts in writing or to leave a written record of himself. And even to-day in many lands writing is unknown. A recent explorer in the wilds of Africa tells of send- ing a message he had scrawled on a piece of bark, by one of his native carriers to the nearest town. When the message obtained for the native the articles listed, the fellow in terror burned up the bit of bark. He thought it was bewitched—"bad medicine"! The First Writings.—In all likelihood, the first attempts at writing were merely crude pictures. One savage drew for another a likeness of a bear or elk to indicate good hunting grounds. Writing, like speech, is merely a medium for expressing ideas. Just as the child of to-day, given paper and pencil, draws crude pictures before he learns to write, so the earliest writing of which we know was picture writing. The purpose of the crude draw-i4 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING ings of paleolithic times found in ancient caves of France, Spain, and America, was, it is now believed, to issue warnings and to impart facts. It was not merely a form of interior decoration, as was once held. As writing progressed, pictured ideas became charac- ter signs, then syllable signs, then speech signs, until the alphabet, or separate letter signs, was evolved. Until recently the invention of the alphabet was credited to the Phoenicians, but now it is believed they obtained it from an earlier nation. The earliest writings of which we know are the picture writings of the early Babylonians, who, as far back as 4500 b. c., lived in cities and wrote on burnt clay tablets and on stone. Their writings resemble the picture writings of the American Indians who lived centuries before the discovery of America, and whose civilization is held by some scientists to-day to be even older than the civilization of the East. The Egyptian hieroglyphics clearly show the evolu- tion of picture writing into symbolic form, and the beginnings of an alphabet. But we must remember that the Egyptians attained a high degree of civilization. It is interesting to note that even as the Babylonians and Egyptians of old used thousands of signs, each fepresenting a syllable, so the Chinese of to-day use idea signs. Their alphabet with its numerous charac- ters is an evolution of picture writing, and the ideas the characters represent are translated into different words in different parts of China. Thus it will be seen that picture writing, though less accurate, has a more universal appeal. The New Picture Language.—In the modern mo- tion picture, which has been called "the universal lan- guage" and "the Esperanto of the eye," we have onlyLETTER WRITING YESTERDAY 15 gone back to expressing ideas in pictures. Truly there seems to be nothing new under the sun! It is generally conceded that differences in speech and in written language is a great barrier to amity among nations. Misunderstandings arise, delays ensue, commerce is impeded all for want of a common lan- guage among the nations of the world. Will the motion picture prove to be the medium through which we shall communicate with the bolsheviks in Russia, the scientists in France and the natives in darkest Africa? When the titleless motion picture becomes general, will we at last have found the universal language which can be understood wherever there are eyes to see and brains to understand the impressions being taken in by the eye? But just as the film will never replace the teacher or the textbook, wild predictions to the contrary not- withstanding, so the art of writing as it is now prac- tised will not be done away with by any other medium no matter how universal. The Romance of Writing.—Writing is perhaps the most generally used of all mediums for expressing ideas and conveying thought. We write forty letters to-day where we wrote one yesterday, and as the quality of our letters seems to be decreasing as the quantity increases, there is need to pause and consider the science and art of letter writing. "The business and social and diplomatic possibilities of writing letters are infinite," says one writer on the subject. "It is a process by which we make and keep our friends, or increase our business, or widen our influence. We can make them happy or drive them to despair." Critics generally agree that the art of letter writing16 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING no longer flourishes as it did in the eighteenth century, the heyday of letters when a letter was more than a brief social chat, an acknowledgment of an invitation to dine, or an effort to get more business or secure payment for services rendered. A century and more ago, a letter was frequently more than a letter—it was literature. The letters of Madame de Sevigne, Madame de Stael, Charles Lamb, Horace Walpole, Lord Chesterfield, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats, Thomas Carlyle, and other personages, are ranked among the best literature of their day. In our own day we find the published letters of Robert Louis Stevenson among the most delightful of his writings. The letter form of writing has proved popular among novelists from the time of Richardson, the first Eng- lish novelist, up to "Daddy Long Legs" and "Molly Make Believe," and "Letters from a Senator's Wife." It is true that we have fewer published letters to-day than a century ago, probably because so many of the letters written are not worthy of publication. In those days people took time to write. Letter writing was not a mere pastime; it was an art. In the days before the telephone, the telegraph, the wireless, the radio, the newspaper, and the motion picture, the receipt of a letter with its news and descrip- tions of people and places was a significant event. Such letters were read again and again, passed around among friends, and long treasured. The penning of such a letter was also an event—something to be planned thoughtfully and executed with care. The Decline To-day.—How different from to-day when we rush to our desks, dash off rapidly or dictate hurriedly the letters that must be written, and can be put off no longer, sign them rapidly, frequently with-LETTER WRITING YESTERDAY *7 out reading them over, and then heave a sigh of relief because that disagreeable task is done! How often we hear people say: "I hate to write letters! I never write letters if I can possibly avoid it." Why this deep-seated dislike? Why do we neglect to answer all letters except those that imperatively demand an answer? Ask any young person, and the answer you will receive nine times out of the proverbial ten will be: "I haven't the time, and I don't know what to say." But the real answer is laziness, indifference, thoughtlessness. We can always find the time to do the things we want to do most. The first difficulty is making a start. This difficulty may be overcome in part by having a supply of writing material conveniently at hand,—pen, ink, typewriter if possible, and business and social stationery. "But I don't know how to begin or what to say," is the cry; and judging from some of the letters we have seen, we are forced to admit there is much truth in that statement. And that is why another book is being written on the subject of Letter Writing. This is no attempt to teach the art of letter writing. It is, instead, a re-telling of correct forms to use and a re- minder to the thoughtless to be less thoughtless and to the careless to be less careless. It is surprising how many people of apparent educa- tion do not know how to write correctly the simplest of business letters, and whose personal letters, often few and far between, are wholly devoid of paragraphs, margins, punctuation, style, or individuality. Many members of the younger generation have become so careless that they fail to acknowledge even formal invitations but have recourse to the telephone, because "writing is so much trouble" 118 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING The lack of good manners and the failure to do the many little things of life, of which the bigger things are made, has become so appalling, that we feel more than justified in adding our voice to those already raised in protest. Hence this little volume which endeavors to tell things we want to know and to remind us of the things we know but forget or neglect. A letter is merely a chat on paper, with one person doing the chatting without fear of interruption. Viewed from this standpoint what a pleasure letter writing might become! Good letter writers may be born, but they can also be made. Any one can learn to write a letter correctly, and can acquire the habit of writing naturally. A Safe Rule.—A safe rule for all except the formal social letter is to write as you talk. But writing has the advantage that it gives you a chance to weigh your words and think before you write. If you had ten or twenty minutes to spend with a friend whom you had not seen for weeks or months, you would not spend the time discussing the weather or other trivialities, but would discuss the things of greatest mutual interest, omitting the less interesting. If you hear that a great misfortune or sorrow has befallen a neighbor, you hurry over to express your sympathy and to offer your services. To write a letter of condolence takes no more time than a neighborly visit, and can be made even more worth while as it is a more lasting record—perhaps treasured for years. Write what you would say in person. The same rule holds for the letter of congratulation, of thanks for favors received. When some honor has befallen a friend, the natural impulse is to call in person or tele- phone congratulations. Why not, instead, sit down.DIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS 19 the moment you hear the news, and write the sincere words that come naturally at the time? After a little practice you will be surprised at their ease, and the sense of satisfaction you yourself feel. It is only when one delays that such letters become difficult. The Timely Letter.—The prospective bride who writes her notes of thanks, notes that must be written without fail, as soon as she opens her weddings gifts has little difficulty in finding something to say. The notes almost write themselves. She finds it easy to express the pleasure she feels, but it is less easy when the first elation has passed and there are fifty notes to write instead of five. Letters of condolence, of con- gratulation, and of thanks are much more appreciated when timely than when delayed. Letters that are put off become burdensome to the writer and often flavor- less to the receiver. The efficient, business-like, and very busy person is the most meticulous about his correspondence, because he realizes the importance and necessity of promptness and dispatch. It is the same with large corporations. They cannot afford to get behind in their daily correspondence. Their motto is, "To-day's mail to-day." The much loved President Harding was a striking example in this respect. The kindliest and most con- siderate of men, he made it a point to answer punc- tiliously the thousands of letters addressed to him. Many who wrote to him on personal matters, thus add- ing to his heavy burdens, remember having received prompt and personal replies each time. If he, with all of his duties as president, could find the time to attend to his vast correspondence, is there any excuse for any of us?20 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING How many of us fail to acknowledge letters promptly and neglect entirely many kindly letters that do not actually demand an answer ! Each one of these rep- resents an opportunity neglected, a friendship suffered to languish because "jve haven't time" !II DIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS THE correspondence of the average person may be divided into three general classes: formal and informal social correspondence; personal and friendly letters; and business letters. In addition, we have the letter intended for publica- tion. This may be in the form of personal letters written by men in public affairs to relatives or intimate friends but intended for future publication, or public letters written to a newspaper or magazine and ad- dressed "To the Editor." Almost every newspaper to-day and many magazines have a department entitled "The Editors Drawer," "The People's Forum," "Here's Where We Let Our Readers Speak," "Letters From Our Readers," etc., etc., where, if one has an opinion to express and feels the urge to write, he may speak his mind to the public. Such letters are usually written, not for the love of letter writing, but from the very human desire to have one's say on the problems of the day and to see oneself in print. Of course, the editors publish only what they consider the best of such letters. But it is not to the writer of public letters that this book is addressed, but rather to the person who finds all letter writing a burden, who is not certain how to begin, how or when to end, or what to say. 2122 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Common Errors.—Errors common to many letters are: the letters are not dated; they contain insufficient address; they are written without margins or para- graphs ; they contain insufficient punctuation; the sentences are without verbs or subjects; they are written on paper of no particular size or style and which does not fit the envelope; and the real purpose of the letter is difficult to determine because of irrele- vant detail. Before we take up the art of letter writing, let us consider: (i) the kind of stationery to use; (2) the proper heading; (3) the salutation; (4) the opening paragraph; (5) the body of the letter; (6) the com- plimentary close; (7) the signature; (8) addressing the envelope. Stationery.—The kind of stationery to be used depends upon the kind of letter to be written. Buy the best quality of paper your pocketbook affords. A good quality of white paper is always in good taste. A standard size social stationery and regulation size busi- ness stationery should be in every desk both in the home and at the office. Occasions arise where a business letter has to be written at home and a social note at the office and appropriate stationery is not available. It should be, for it is not in good taste to write letters of condolence on business stationery, nor to write a business letter on monogrammed letter paper. In addition to the regulation typewriter bond paper, which usually measures eight and one-half by eleven inches, and the standard size folio paper, about six and three-quarter by five and one-quarter inches, a paper which is half-way between is most desirable and is coming more and more into favor for everyday use.DIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS 23 Single sheets measuring six by seven inches or five and three-quarter by six and three-quarter inches, with the name and address or address alone printed or engraved in the center of the page, are popular and equally appro- priate for the informal friendly letter or the personal business letter. The correspondence card is passing and is used to-day only very informally between friends to convey the briefest of messages. It is being replaced by the small size note paper. The postal (issued by the United States Government) is used only for business purposes. The use of the picture post card (note the difference between "postal" and "post card") is confined to trav- elers wishing to send a word of greeting to friends back home. Envelopes and cards should be of standard sizes. The Post Office Department has this to say on the subject: "Envelopes less than two and three-quarter by four inches or larger than four by nine inches can- not be conveniently handled and are therefore highly objectionable. Post cards manufactured by private persons when not exceeding in size three and three- sixteenths by five and nine-sixteenths inches, nor less than two and three-quarter by four inches are transmit- ted without cover to all places where the domestic rates apply at the postage rate of one cent each. Cards which do not conform to the foregoing conditions are charge- able with postage at the letter rate if wholly or partly in writing." From which it is seen that a penalty is attached for post cards above or below standard size. Mail sent in envelopes above or below standard size is frequently delayed in transmission, a natural result of the extra trouble caused postal clerks in the handling.24 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Therefore do not go to extremes. It is poor taste and poor business. A complete equipment needed by the average person to make correspondence easier would consist of the following items: A typewriter. Standard size bond paper, eight and one-half by eleven inches for typewriter use. Second sheets of same size but thinner for carbon copies. Carbon paper. Three sizes of social stationery, medium, large and small, preferably with address engraved. Post cards and greeting cards for special occasions. A good grade of black or blue-black ink. Pens, pencils, eraser, ink eradicator, paper clips, blotters, pencil sharpener, scratch pad for taking notes, a desk calendar, and desk dictionary. The list of accessories could be enlarged to include desk scales, file cabinets, a card index and numerous other items found in a well-appointed office. Here, however, we have mentioned the more obvious needs. Paper and envelopes should be of the same color and material. White, cream, or ivory are always in good taste for both business and social correspondence. Select the type most suited to your needs. The right kind of stationery for the right occasion speaks volumes, and the wrong kind fairly shrieks. The Heading of the Letter.—Both business and social letters should begin with the address, followed by the date. If a business letter-head is used contain- ing the name of the city and state, or if social stationery with engraved street address at the top, then only theDIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS 25 date is added. This is written in the upper right hand corner, allowing for margin to the right. The address may be written: Washington, D. C, September 19, 19... or all on one line as: Boston, Mass., July 6, 19... The street address may be used at the beginning or at the close: 550 Morningside Drive, New York City, June 6, 19. The expressions "5th" and "3rd" are no longer used either in business or social correspondence. In strictly social correspondence the date may be written out: "August the fifth," in which case the year would be omitted. It is far better, however, always to use both the day of the year and the month. Undated, or par- tially dated letters often put the recipient to much incon- venience. Practices differ in expressing the date of the months in figures. Business firms in the United States and Canada use 5/6 for May 6, but in all other parts of the world 6/5 is the usage. Moral—in order to pre- vent any confusion always write out the name of the month, especially in foreign correspondence. The Salutation.—In the social letter there is more latitude allowed in both the heading and the salutation than in the business letter. Correct forms of salutation for business letters are: Sir, Sirs, Gentlemen, Dear Sir, Dear Madam, Dear Mr.26 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Ashton. "Gentlemen" is more commonly used than "Dear Sirs" in this country, but "Dear Sirs" is pre- ferred abroad. In all business letters and in personal letters of a semi-business nature, the following form prevails: Miss Agnes Ames, Nashville, Tenn. My dear Miss Ames: In social correspondence "Dear Sir" and "Dear Madam" are used only when addressing some high dig- nitary. "Dear Mr. Morgan" or "Dear Mrs. Milton" are the terms most used, varying with the degree of intimacy, as: "Dear Mary," "Dearest Girl," "Dear old Pal," "Well, old Dear," "Hello, old Scout," and other colloquial expressions. Opening and Closing Paragraphs.—The opening and closing paragraphs are of extreme importance. The opening paragraph should immediately catch the reader's attention. Avoid preliminaries and preambles and come to the point at once. One can be gracious without being abrupt. The usual beginning is to ac- knowledge the receipt of a previous letter. "Your letter of June 4 is received" is the accepted way of opening a business letter, and "Your recent letter received a most hearty welcome" or some similar expression, is recommended for the friendly letter. The old copy book rule, "Never begin a letter with T," though no longer generally observed, is worth remembering. "Your letter of June 4 is received" is a better form than "I have your letter of June 4," because in the one the stress is laid on "you" and inDIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS 27 the other on "I." It is certainly in better taste for the writer to give first consideration to the person to whom he is writing. This is one of the little points worth observing. The closing paragraph should leave a pleasant im- pression. A letter should never close with a curt refusal or a bit of unpleasant news or anything that will leave a bad taste. A prominent official who dictates numerous letters told the writer that he often spent more time on the final sentence than on all the rest of the letter. To soften a refusal without leaving the point in doubt is difficult and requires careful thought. Never let a letter close with something unpleasant. "I hope I can do more for you next time" takes the sting from a refusal. The Body of the Letter.—In all letters, even the most informal of personal letters, there should be unity, coherence, purpose. Don't put too many ideas into one letter. Save some for the next time. First have clearly and definitely in mind what you want to say and then say it. As to the form of the letter, observe margins, both at the right and left of the paper, the size of the margin depending on the size of the paper and length of the letter. Use a new paragraph for each new thought. Don't forget to use periods at the end of sentences, or to begin the next with a capital letter. It is surprising how many people who really know better err in this respect. The Complimentary Close.—"In closing a business letter I never know whether to use Gratefully yours, Cordially yours, or Respectfully yours/' said a business woman recently. Coming from the person it did, the28 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING remark convinced me of the need of more established usage, for all of her suggested endings were incorrect. "Very truly yours" is the correct form for letters of a business nature. This is equally correct for the indi- vidual as for the conservative bank, the progressive business firm, or the president of a corporation. In using this form one can be assured of not going wrong. When writing to a perfect stranger or to some high official or public dignitary, or when an employee writes to his employer, the ending "Yours respectfully" may be employed, but as it denotes a certain inferiority and few people like to admit their inferiority it is rarely used. "I have the honor to remain your obedient servant" is given as the correct formal ending for letters ad- dressed to high officials, but I wonder how often it is really used! In writing a business letter to a person whom you know, the form "Sincerely yours" is customary. For the personal letter the most commonly used endings are: Sincerely yours, Yours very sincerely, Faithfully yours, Cordially yours, Yours affectionately, Devotedly yours, Yours lovingly, and many others, ranging from "Au revoir" to "So long, Bill," according to the degree of friendship existing between the two. To be grammatical, all adverbs ending in "ly" require "yours." "Yours" alone or "Sincerely" are not con- sidered the best form. The Signature.—In signing a business letter, a man uses the name by which he is commonly known, John J. Ayres or F. Martin Johnson. Initials only or the full name are not customary in business correspondence. But in social correspondence a man signs his full name: John Justice Ayres, Francis Martin Johnson. In all business correspondence a woman should indi-DIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS 29 cate whether she is married or single. Her signature should read: Very truly yours, (Miss) Mary Agnes Ayres. Yours very truly, Florence Jackson Ayres, (Mrs. John J. Ayres) If she is a widow she would ordinarily write, (Mrs.) Florence Jackson Ayres. So numerous are divorces in this country and so frequently do the divorced parties marry again, that to avoid confusion in names, it has become customary for a divorcee, when she does not take her maiden name, to use her surname with her husband's surname. If Mrs. Florence Jackson Ayres secures a divorce from her husband John J. Ayres, she would use on her visit- ing cards and as her business signature, "Mrs. Jackson Ayres." Every letter should be signed in ink by the person writing or dictating it. The name should be written plainly and legibly, and should stand alone on a line by itself. Many persons, particularly authors and artists and prominent business men, affect a signature wholly undecipherable. They sometimes excuse them- selves on the plea that it makes forgery of their name less possible. But there is no justifiable excuse for writing so illegibly that bank clerks and business asso- ciates and friends must waste valuable time and energy to decipher it. It is now; customary to type all names m business3o ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING letters either above or beneath the written signature. This is a custom that is most highly to be commended. In writing the social letter, special care should be taken with the signature. The natural inclination is to dash off the signature with a final flourish. Hand- writing experts say this is a form of egotism. It is in better taste to write simply and plainly. Never sign initials or the first name alone to a letter or to a card. Initials on picture post cards and Christ- mas cards are very common and frequently confusing. The writer has received picture post cards signed "Mary," when we knew at least six Marys traveling in that section of the country. Initials are even more difficult. One may know Mary Anderson quite well, but "M. E. A." may be from Marcia Ayres, Martha Ackers, Miriam Ash or Maria Ashton. Sign the first and last name or the last name with initials to avoid confusion. Always sign your name in ink. Never use an indeli- ble pencil. Avoid the use of rubber stamps. Addressing the Envelope.—Extreme care should be used in addressing the envelope. Largely because of incorrect or undecipherable addresses there were the enormous total of 16,586,419 undeliverable letters sent to the Division of Dead Letters and its respective branches during one fiscal year and this was a decrease of approximately sixteen per cent compared with the preceding fiscal year! Thousands of these letters were of great importance. A little more care and they would have gone through. The loss to the general public, largely through neglect, amounted in the aggre- gate to more than $423,000 during the year. This is from the annual report of the Postmaster General of the United States.DIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS 31 In giving directions for the proper addressing of the envelopes we can not do better than follow the instruc- tions of the Post Office Department. In a small pamphlet entitled "Postal Information," which can be secured free of charge by writing to the Post Office Department at Washington, we find the following per- tinent advice: "Write plainly the name of the person addressed, street and number, or number of rural route, post office and State in full. When the name of the State is abbreviated, frequently Va. and Pa., Md. and Ind., Colo, and Cal., Miss, and Minn., and others are con- fused and mail mis-sent, as post offices of the same names are located in several different States. Do not abbreviate or use lead pencil. "The words, 'General Delivery/ should be used as a part of the address only when it is known or believed that the addressee calls at the general delivery for his mail. "Directions for transmission, delivery, forwarding, or return of mail are deemed part of address. "Mail addressed to one person in care of another will be delivered to the first of the two persons named who may call for it, or to the address of the person in whose care it is directed, in the absence of other instructions. "Space must be left (not less than three and one- half inches) on the address side of all mail sufficient for a legible address and for all directions permissible thereon, for postage stamps, post marking, rating, and any words necessary for forwarding or return. "The sender's name and address must be placed on all fourth class or parcel post mail, on all mail in win- dow envelopes, and on all registered mail, and should32 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING be placed on all other mail, in the upper left corner of the envelope or wrapper. "The practice of some business concerns of omitting street numbers from their stationery and advertisements results in increasing the volume of insufficiently ad- dressed mail. The Post Office Department urgently requests the public to exercise the greatest possible care to see that mail is sufficiently and correctly addressed, in order to secure its prompt and certain delivery, thereby relieving the postal service of much unnecessary ex- pense and increasing its efficiency. "If the sender of a letter mailed in the envelope of a hotel desires to have the letter returned if not deliv- ered, he should add to the hotel card a request to that effect, as unclaimed letters bearing the card of a hotel, club, school, college, or other public institution, which has evidently been printed upon the envelopes to serve as an advertisement, will not be returned unless the sender so requests. "When remailing a letter which has been returned to the sender as undeliverable, it should be placed in a new envelope, in order to avoid confusion and secure prompt transmission. A new prepayment of postage is required. "It is recommended that stamped envelopes on sale at all post offices be used. The department issues six different sizes of stamped envelopes—the smallest three and three-eighths by five and seven-eighths inches, the largest four and three-eighths by ten and one-eighth inches—in three qualities and three colors of paper, as follows: extra quality, white; standard quality, white and blue and manila. The denominations are one, two, four and five cents. When stamped envelopes are purchased in lots ,of five hundred or its multiple, of aDIFFERENT KINDS OF LETTERS 33 single size, quality or denomination, the department will, upon request through the purchaser's post office, print his return card. Although no advertisement will be printed on stamped envelopes by the department, names indicating or incidentally disclosing the nature of the purchaser's business will be printed on them under certain regulations." Model forms of address given by the Post Office Department are: v Mr. Frank B. Jones, Rural Route, No. 3, Box 45, Oswego, Ohio. Smith, Doe & Co., 24789 Alaska Ave., Chicago, Illinois. When an identifying title is used it should be written on a separate line below the name, as: Mr. Frank B. Jones, City Commissioner, If the name and address of the sender are not stamped in the upper left-hand corner of the envelope,34 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING or on the flap of the envelope, they should be written there. So much for letters in general. In succeeding pages we shall take up the various kinds of letters mentioned in our general classification. In closing this chapter, however, we strongly urge that every letter, no matter how unimportant it may seem at the time of writing, be carefully planned and executed with due attention to appropriate stationery, general appearance and grammatical construction. Then after you write it— read it over before mailing.Ill THE PERSONAL LETTER HE personal letter is the letter that is optional, not obligatory. In the informal heart-to-heart talk on paper, one's culture and character are revealed. In this group I would place the letter from one mem- ber of the family to another, from lover to beloved, from friend to friend. These letters may be descrip- tive, critical, philosophical, gossipy, humorous, serious, conversational, intellectual or just friendly. These are the letters of which literature is made. The letters, or epistles, of St. Augustine and St. Paul, written in Greek; of Cicero among the Romans; of Mme. de Stael, Mme. de Savigne, Voltaire, and Mme. de Maintenon among the French; of Horace Walpole, Lord Chesterfield, Keats, Shelley, Carlyle, Thackeray, Dickens, among the English; of Sidney Lanier, Lincoln, and Roosevelt, among Americans, are noteworthy contributions to the literature of their day. These letters reveal not only the character of the writer, but also furnish a background for interpreting the history of the times. A good letter is intimate, self-revealing. The per- sonal note is essential. We are human enough to be interested in personalities. Some of us never rise above them. 3536 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Asking and Answering Questions.—There are three questions I ask the persons with whom I maintain a friendly correspondence: What are you doing? What are you reading? What are you thinking? For these are the things in which I am interested and which they alone can tell me. Speaking of questions, let us pause here and ask ourselves, How many of us really answer the ques- tions asked in letters we receive? Every letter should be kept, and re-read just before the answer is written. All questions asked should be answered in the first part of the reply. Nothing is more annoying than to receive a letter from a friend, which contains no reference to our last letter to him, and which completely ignores all that we have said. His letter may be extremely interesting in itself, but if our remarks, our comments, and our questions are ignored we feel a sense of irritation and neglect. Re-reading letters just before replying has another advantage. We often gain inspiration previously lack- ing, we find ourselves in tune with his thought, and so our letter to him shows interest and sympathy. Perhaps he has asked us, what we have been doing, reading, thinking. We may have been so busy doing many things that we have had no time for reading or for serious thinking, but we should be able to write a good letter about our activities. Perhaps we have been doing nothing that seems interesting to us, just the daily grind. In that case we should have found time for reading and thinking and can either write of such things or fill our letter with comments on the thoughts contained in his own communication. It is not always the people who lead the busiest lives who write the most interesting letters; often the contrary. Some ofTHE PERSONAL LETTER 37 the most beautiful and inspiring of letters were penned by those who had leisure for thinking and for self- expression. Qualities Essential to Good Letters.—"To write a really good letter the writer must himself be inter- esting and have interesting matter to communicate," says Dawson, in his introduction to Great English Let- ter Writers. "He must possess the intimate note, for without it he will produce an essay, not a letter. The man who can not unlock his heart to us can never write a great letter. The genuine letter-writer writes to gratify himself and please a friend." We speak of "art and letters," the word letters in this sense being synonymous with literature. It is the personal, family, friendly letter that has proved to be literature—the son writing to his mother, sister writing to sister, friend to friend. Three Essentials.—Among the qualities that the friendly letter should possess are: (1) interest, (2) clearness of style and diction, and (3) a friendly, conversational tone. First of all, the letter should be of interest to the person receiving it as well as to the person writing it. The tastes, likes and dislikes of the person to whom it is addressed should be considered. Here psychology enters in. What may interest one person may bore another. Parents are interested in matters of health and intimate personal details that may prove of lesser interest to other members of the family. Certain friends wish to hear of social activities, others of our intellectual pursuits. We should temper our letters to our friends, and write of the things in which we are mutually interested. Clearness of style and diction ! How many letters38 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING are lacking in these essentials, and how slovenly are some of the letters we write and receive! There are no punctuation, no paragraphs, no coherence, no unity of thought. There may be several thoughts in one para- graph, and in the next a subject far afield may be dis- cussed. We try to discover the relationship but fail —there isn't any! The writer has put down stray thoughts at random. He has written the letter with no preconceived plan or thought of what he wanted to say, and we finish it wondering why he wrote it. All of us have probably received letters with no periods from beginning to end, no paragraphs, no capi- tals, and from people who really knew better, but who had grown careless. There is the letter written on any and every kind of stationery,—on a leaf from the children's note book, on a sheet of the husband's business stationery, on stationery from the last hotel at which the writer stopped; the letter written on whole sheets and half sheets, on sheets of different hue and material, and folded into queer and unconventional shapes, and mailed in an envelope never intended for it, and which bulges at every corner. Such letters are the result of carelessness, ignorance, or indifference. There is no excuse for them. When letter paper can be purchased for fifty cents and one dollar a pound; when two hundred half sheets with one's address neatly printed at the top together with one hundred envelopes can be secured for one dollar, and five hundred sheets of bond paper, suitable for the office or home typewriter, are to be had for the same price, and an extra quality of stamped envelopes can be secured at the local post office, there is no excuse for such miscellaneous stationery.THE PERSONAL LETTER The Typewritten Letter.—The typing of personal letters among intimate friends is becoming more and more common, and the secretary of the busy club- woman or social leader types many of the letters of inquiry that form a part of her daily mail. Of course, the typewriter is never used for strictly social correspondence, or for personal correspondence, if it is known that the person receiving it dislikes type- written letters. Unless one's chirography is unde- cipherable, the personal letter should preferably be written by hand on medium-sized letter paper. The hand-written letter is considered a greater compliment than the typewritten one. To-day many of us write only those letters which business or social obligations imperatively demand, and these are written with the one thought of getting an unpleasant task concluded as quickly as possible. As a nation we are restless, wholly immersed in business, or madly pursuing pleasure. We do not enjoy our leisure quietly. The harder we work, the harder we play. We must be doing something,—playing golf or tennis or cards, or swimming, skating, dancing, motoring; or we spend our spare time at the theater, the vaudeville or the motion picture. An evening spent quietly at home reading or writing letters is extremely rare in the average household. Yet in order to receive letters we must write them, and all of us like to re- ceive them. Beginnings of Correspondence.—There are some friends to whom we never write, and others who may be no dearer to whom we write regularly. The ex- planation may lie partly in the fact that we naturally like to write to the people who enjoy writing to us, and who show their appreciation of our letters by answer-40 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING ing them with some degree of promptness and with some reference to the contents of our letters to them. The beginnings of correspondence—their continua- tion—their end—what an interesting, fascinating and sometimes tragic story lies behind these beginnings and endings. On our travels, and most particularly on long ocean voyages, we meet charming individuals with whom we part with regret, sometimes so great that we attempt to continue the acquaintance by means of correspond- ence. It is not of importance who writes first. More depends upon the promptness of the first and second answers. But a correspondence may begin most pro- pitiously, flourish gayly and joyously for weeks or months and gradually languish and die. That is the fate of the majority of correspondence. The reason is plain. When time and distance intervene and new sights, new activities and new interests fill the diverging lives, the friends gradually find that they have less and less in common. The longer the intervals between let- ters, the more difficult it is to write. There is so much to say that we do not know where to begin; so we write a brief note, mainly about nothing, which in the course of time brings forth the same kind of letter in reply, and the end is in sight. If we should meet these same people again we un- doubtedly would be tremendously glad to see them; the friendship would be renewed where it left off, and so would the correspondence, for a time. But far better to terminate it than to let it drag on after it becomes burdensome. Need of Letters.—There is only one reason for the friendly letter—the mutual pleasure to be derived there- from. But what of the filial letter, the parental letter,THE PERSONAL LETTER 41 the letter breaking bad news, and a host of others that give pleasure neither in the writing nor the receiving? Though individual letters may not give pleasure, the correspondence as a whole should be pleasurable or it should be discontinued. There is one general excep- tion : children should write to their parents, and parents to their children whether they enjoy it or not. There is nothing more agonizing or more nerve- racking than to expect a letter that fails to arrive; to wait for hours and days, one's imagination a prey to doubts and fears and misgivings. To fail to write the expected, longed-for letter is as cruel a bit of torture as any ever devised by a lawless member of the K. K. K. The worst offenders in this respect are grown-up sons and daughters who have left the parental firesides and who forget that as mother and father grow older they live more and more in their children and in their chil- dren's children, and to them letters mean much. If we knew what heartaches were caused by our carelessness, laziness or indifference, and what pleasure we can so often give by taking the time from our busy lives to write the letter we have been intending to write to mother or grandmother or Aunt Mary or Uncle Joe or old Cousin Kate, we would put it off no longer. Suppose we have not written to Cousin Kate for years. How shall we begin? What shall we say? Tell her you have been thinking of her more than usual, and your thoughts are at last taking form on paper, and tell her the things you have been doing since last you saw her or wrote to her, choosing from the list what would interest her most. The mere fact that you took the trouble to write to her at all will doubtless please her so much that she will answer immediately. Then you will wonder, "Will I have to keep this up indefi-42 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING nitely?" and probably curse your kind impulse. But a second letter dispatched in due time with a remark that you will try to write at least every few months after this and more often if anything of great importance arises will solve the problem. Writing the First Letter.—Suppose an intimate friend marries and moves to a distant city. You promise to write to each other. He gives you either a temporary or permanent address. If you are really good friends neither will wait for the other to write, but the one who first finds the opportunity will write the first letter. If the person who stays behind writes very promptly telling all the little bits of news of the home town that will be of interest, the distant friend is apt to answer speedily. He will want another letter telling the news of mutual friends. If you value his friendship and want his letters, don't wait for him to write first. Per- haps he has promised a dozen friends to write. He will naturally write first to those who have shown their interest by writing to him. A correspondence begun under such auspicious circumstances may continue in- definitely, and prove a boon to both. Letters Are Self-Revealing.—There are people who can express themselves much more freely in a letter than in conversation. There are men and women for whom self-expression is difficult. They have no conversational gifts, yet often these reticent, self-con- scious people can pour out their heart to a distant friend on paper. The inner thoughts and feelings of a man are fre- quently revealed through intimate correspondence; new traits of character are discovered. Although we may see and talk with a person frequently during a courseTHE PERSONAL LETTER of years, yet we may learn to know him better after a three months' correspondence, than in all our previous acquaintance. One discerning woman declared she would never marry until she had corresponded with her prospective husband. "Whether he is a good letter writer or a poor one," she said, "I shall be able to learn through his letters his traits of character and disposition that I would never be able to learn otherwise. A man often reveals a new side of himself in his letters." Women are said to be the best letter writers, yet some of the most self-revealing letters of literature were written by men. Specimen Letters.—It would be both foolish and futile to attempt to tell one how to write a friendly letter. Instead of saying, "This is how you should write a friendly letter," I shall present extracts from noteworthy letters. Read, study and analyze them. They will not teach you how to write a letter, but from them you may gain inspiration or discover the qualities that go to making the ideal letter. If you accomplish that you have gained much. In Keats we probably have the best example of inspired letter writing. He dwells more on his thoughts than on his actions. He is frankly the poet, gifted with imagination. In reading his letters one feels that he enjoyed writing them fully as much as his friends enjoyed receiving them. Imaginative letter (John Keats to George and Georgiana Keats.) "My passions are asleep, from my having slumbered until nearly eleven, and weakened the animal fibre all44 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING over me to a delightful sensation, about three degrees on this side of faintness. If I had teeth of pearl and the breath of lilies I should call it languor, but as I am I must call it laziness. In this state of effeminacy, the fibres of the brain are relaxed in common with the rest of the body, and to such a happy degree that pleasure has no show of enticement and pain no unbear- able power. Neither Poetry, nor Ambition, nor Love have any alertness of countenance as they pass by me; they seem rather like figures on a Greek vase—a man. and two women whom no one but myself could dis- tinguish in their disguisement. This is the only happi- ness, and is a rare instance of the advantage of the body overpowering the Mind. . . . "Circumstances are like clouds, continually gathering and bursting. While we are laughing, the seed of some trouble is put into the wide arable land of events— while we are laughing it sprouts, it grows and sud- denly bears a poison fruit which we must pluck. Even so, we have leisure to reason on the misfortunes of our friends; our own touch us too nearly for words. Very few men have ever arrived at a complete disinterested- ness of Mind. I can remember but two—Socrates and Jesus—Their histories evince it. What I heard, a little time ago, Taylor observe with respect to Socrates, may be said of Jesus—That he was so great that though he transmitted no writing of his own to posterity, we have his mind and his sayings and his greatness handed to us by others." Farther on in this "journal-letter," Keats discusses his views of religion and eternity. The entire letter is too long to give here, but it is most interesting in reveal- ing the poet's thoughts on "the problems of the uni- verse." In writing the letter of friendship it is the way aTHE PERSONAL LETTER thing is said as much as what is said that counts. There are persons who can relate the simplest incident in such a way that it assumes dramatic proportions. Comments on daily happenings may be so full of a humorous philosophy, so permeated with the writer's outlook on life, that every word is alive with the .writer's personality. Jane Welsh Carlyle has written this type of letter. As one critic says: "Mrs. Carlyle can make us more interested in her finger's ache than another writer in his most brilliant discussions." The failure of a birth- day letter to arrive when expected becomes a tragedy as related by Mrs. Carlyle. Letter describing disappointment {Jane Welsh Carlyle to Thomas Carlyle.) "Oh, my dear husband, Fortune has played me suck a cruel trick this day! But it is all right now; and I do not even feel resentment against Fortune for the suffocating misery of the last two hours. . . . But you shall hear all how it was. "Yesterday, in coming back from the post office, where I had gone myself with the letter to you, my head took to aching, and ached and ached on all day in a bearable sort of fashion, till the evening, when Geral- dine came over from Manchester, and the sudden bound my heart gave at the sight of her finished me off on the spot. I had to get myself put to bed, and made a bad wakeful night of it; so that this morning I was nervous, as you may figure, and despairing of all things, even the letter from you that I expected so confidently yesterday. . . . "At ten, the post hour, I slipped away myself to the post office, but was detected by Betsy and Geraldine,46 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING who insisted on putting on their bonnets and accom- panying me. However, I trusted there would be a letter, and their presence would only hinder me reading it for a little. And two were handed out which I stretched out my hand to receive. Both for Betsy. None for me, the postmistress averred! "Not a line from you on my birthday—on the fifth day! I did not burst out crying—did not faint—did not do anything absurd, so far as I know; but I walked back again without speaking a word, and with such a tumult of wretchedness in my heart as you, who know me, can conceive. And then I shut myself in my room to fancy everything that was most tormenting. Were you finally so out of patience with me that you had resolved to write to me no more at all ? Had you gone to Addiscombe and found no leisure there to remember my existence? Were you taken ill, so ill that you could not write ? That last idea made me mad to get off to the railway and back to London. Oh, mercy! what a two hours I had of it! And just when I was at my wits' end, I heard Julia crying out through the house, 'Mrs. Carlyle, Mrs. Carlyle! are you there? Here is a letter for you!' And so there was, after all. The postmistress had overlooked it. ... I wonder what love letter was ever received with such thankfulness. ... I am as much broken over that little incident as if I had come through an attack of cholera or typhus fever. I cannot even steady my hand to write decently. But I felt an irresistible need of thanking you by return of post." Just a simple incident related in detail, yet we feel her bitter disappointment, and rejoice with her at the ar- rival of the delayed letter. The diary type of letter—"It rained to-day; I wentTHE PERSONAL LETTER downtown when it cleared up and saw John and Mary and James. I read a bit in the evening and retired early,"—how dull it is! Yet a mere chronicling of events can be made interesting. The letters of Horace Walpole live to-day because they are a chronicle of that society of which he is a part. W&lpole was a keen critic of life and his letters are a mirror of his times. The gossipy letter (Horace Walpole to the Countess of Ossory.) "I have been to four balls since yesterday se'nnight; though I had the prudence not to stay to supper at Lord Stanley's. That festival was very expensive, for it is the fashion now to make romances rather than balls. In the hall was a band of French horns and clarionets in laced uniforms and feathers. The dome of the stair- case was beautifully illuminated with coloured glass, lanthorns; in the ante-room was a bevy of vestals in white habits, making tea; in the next, a drapery of sarcenet, that with a very funereal air crossed the chim- ney and depended in vast festoons over the sconces." And much more of the same order, pages of minute descriptions of balls, and teas, and dinners from which we gain an intimate picture of those times. Letters from parents to children are apt to contain more advice than news. Lord Chesterfield writing to his son at college gave advice as timely to-day as when it was written. It is worthy to rank with the famous lines of Potonius to his son in Shakespeare's "Hamlet/*48 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Letter of parental advice (Lord Chesterfield to his son.) "Dear Boy : "My plan for you, from the beginning, has been to make you shine, equally in the learned and in the polite world. The former part is almost completed to my wishes, and will, I am persuaded, in a little time more, be quite so. The latter part is still in your power to complete; and I flatter myself that you will do it, or else the former part will avail you very little; especially in your deportment, where the exterior address and graces do half the business; they must be harbingers of your merit, or your merit will be very coldly received; all can and do judge of the former, few of the latter. "I should be sorry you were an egregious fop; but I protest that, of the two, I would rather have you a fop than a sloven. I think negligence in my own dress, even at my age, when certainly I expect no advantage from my dress, would be indecent with regard to others. I have done with fine clothes; but I will have my plain clothes fit me, and made like other people's. . . . "In the evenings I recommend to you the company of women of fashion, who have a right to attention, and will be paid it. Their company will smooth your manners, and give you a habit of attention and respect of which you will find the advantage among men. . . „ If you will but, for the next year only, exert your whole attention to your studies in the morning, and to your dress, manners, air and tournure in the evenings, you will be the man I wish you, and the man that is rarely seen." It has been said of Thomas Carlyle that his letters are his true memoirs. In his letters to his brother, hisTHE PERSONAL LETTER mother, his wife, and his friends, he shows a side of his character that many of his intimates never saw. What a genial, kindly man he appears in this extract to his brother. Intimate, family letter (Thomas Carlyle to his brother, Dr. Carlyle.') Cheyne Row, Chelsea, London "My Dear Brother : "You can fancy what weary lonesome wanderings I had, through the dirty suburbs, and along the burnings streets, under a fierce May sun with east wind, 'seeking- through the natives for some habitation'! At lengtlr Jane sent me comfortable tidings of innumerable diffi- culties overcome; and finally (in, I think, the fourth week) arrived herself; with the Furniture all close following. ... I carried her to certain of the hope- fullest looking houses I had fallen in with, and a toil- some time we anew had: however, it was not long; for, on the second inspection, this old Chelsea Mansion pleased us very decidedly, far better than any other we could see; and, the people also whom it belongs to prov- ing reasonable, we soon struck a bargain, and in three days more a Hackney Coach, loaded to the roof and beyond it with luggage and live-passengers, tumbled us all down here about eleven in the morning. By 'all' I mean my Dame and myself; Bessy Barnet, who had come the night before; and little Chicao, the Canary-bird. . . . There then we sat on three trunks; I, however, with a matchbox soon lit a cigar, as Bessy did a fire; and thus with a kind and cheerful solemnity" we took possession by 'raising reek/ and even dined,.50 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING in an extempore fashion, on a box-lid covered with some accidental towel. .... "With the house we are all highly pleased, and I think, the better, the longer we know it hitherto. . . . At night we are pure and silent, almost as at Puttock. . . . On the whole I fear nothing. There are funds here already to keep us going above a year, indepen- dently of all incomings: before that we may have seen into much, tried much, and succeeded somewhat.,, Carlyle's last letter to his mother before her death is one that every mother's son might well read with profit. Parents receive too few letters of appreciation from ungrateful or mute offspring. Filial letter (Thomas Carlyle to his mother.) "Dear old mother, weak and sick and dear to me. . . . Let it ever be a comfort to you, however weak you are, that you did your part honorably and well while in strength, and were a noble mother to me and to us all. I am now myself grown old, but there is nothing I ever had to be so much thankful for as for the mother I had. That is a truth which I know well, and perhaps this day again it may be some comfort to you. Yes, surely, for if there has been any good in the things I have uttered in the world's hearing, it was your voice essentially that was speaking through me; essentially what you and my brave father meant and taughtIme to mean, this was the purport of all I spoke and wrote. And if in the few years that may remain to me, I am to get any more written for the world, the essence of it, so far as is worthy and good, will still be yours. May God reward you, dearest mother, for all you have done for me! I never can." Even members of our family do not like letters of woe. Though interested and sympathetic at first, theirTHE PERSONAL LETTER 51 interest soon wanes, and sympathy gives way to bore- dom. "I almost dread to hear from Jane/' was the pathetic remark made by a devoted mother concerning one of her married daughters. A thick letter had just arrived, and the old lady turned it over several times before opening it, and as she did so, said apologeti- cally: 'There is always something wrong—if the baby isn't ill, or one of the children isn't ailing, the weather has been bad, or the cat has gotten into a fight, or something has happened to some of the neighbors. If anything pleasant ever occurs she never writes to us about it." There is a great difference between the complaining letter and the letter that carries bad news. If there has been a death or an accident, the news must be broken to members of the family and to dear friends. These letters are difficult to write. The shock can be greatly lessened or greatly increased by the manner of the tell- ing. I recall an instance where a lady went forth from a serene and happy home to go shopping. As she was about to board a street car for the journey home a neighbor rushed up to her exclaiming—"They have been looking for you everywhere. Your house has burnt down and your husband is dead." How differently Leigh Hunt announced the death of Shelley. Letter announcing bad news (Leigh Hunt to his sister-in-law.) "Dearest Bessy : "Your sister is as well as she can be expected to be: so am I, and the children; all of which I tell you at once, at the head of my letter, lest the frightful note I am compelled to strike up, should affect you still52 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING .more than it must. Good God, how shall I say it? My beloved friend Shelley,—my dear, my divine friend, the best of friends and men, he is no more. I know not how to proceed for anguish; but you need not be under any alarm for me. Thank heavens! The sorrows I have gone through enable me to bear this; and we all endeavor to bear it as well as possible for each other's sakes, which is what he, the noble- minded being, would have wished. . . . "He was returning to Lerici by sea with his friend Captain Williams. ... It was on the 8th. A storm arose; and it is supposed the boat must have foundered not far from home. The bodies were thrown up some days after. Dear S. had retained a book in his pocket, which he told me he would not part with till he saw me again,—Keats's last publication. He borrowed it to read as he went. It will be buried with him: that is to say, it is so already, on the sea shore; but if he is taken up to be buried elsewhere, it shall go with him. . . . "Adieu, dearest Bessy, you will not wonder that I do not make this letter an answer to your last, which I was delighted to receive. It showed me you were well, and Henry out of danger." In contrast to the letter announcing misfortunes is the cheerful, happy, pleasant, delightful letter, the letter' that makes faces brighten with pleasure when familiar handwriting is recognized, and causes the look of pleas- ure to deepen as the letter is perused, or calls forth the comment, "I love his letters. They are so like him and so refreshing!" Some of the most noteworthy ^examples of letters in literature are those from one friend to another. They are descriptive, critical, gos- sipy, humorous, serious, literary, conversational, philo- sophical.THE PERSONAL LETTER 53 Robert Southey loved life, and his letters breathe a genial spirit and are full of humor. They may seem silly and foolish to the unsympathetic reader to whom they were not addressed, but we can imagine a friend receiving them opening them with a smile, and the smile deepening to a laugh as the letter progressed. Humorously philosophical letter (Robert Southey to Henry Taylor.) "Have you seen the strange book which Hope left for publication, and which his representatives, in spite of all dissuasion, have published? His notion of im- mortality and heaven is, that at the consummation of all things he, and you, and I, and John Murray and Nebuchadnezzar, and Lambert the fat man, and the Hottentot Venus and Thurtell, and Probert and the twelve Apostles, and the noble martyrs, and Genghis Khan, and all his armies, and Noah with all his an- cestors and all his posterity—yea, all men and all women —and all children that have ever been or ever shall be, saints and sinners alike—are all to be put together, and made into one great celestial eternal human being. . . . I do not like the scheme. I don't like the notion of being mixed up with Hume and Hunt, and Whittle Harvey, and Philpotts, and Lord Althorpe, and the Huns, and the Hottentots, and the Jews, and the Philis- tines, and the Scotch, and the Irish. God forbid! I hope to be I myself; I, in an English heaven, with you yourself—you, and some others, without whom heaven would be no heaven to me. God bless you!" Descriptive letters are many—such letters as trav- elers abroad write to friends back home. A travel letter should not read like a guide-book or an encyclopedia. Little, unusual things that impress the traveler, or his54 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING own feelings and thoughts on first beholding some of the wonders of the world, these are the things that in- terest "the folks back home." So numerous and so charming are the many descrip- tive letters before us that a selection is difficult. Nearly every one hopes to see Venice or Rome before he dies, so extracts from Dickens's impressions of Venice, and Shelley's impressions of Rome have been chosen. Travel letter (Charles Dickens to John Forster.) "My dear fellow, nothing in the world that ever you have heard of Venice is equal to the magnificent and stupendous reality. The wildest visions of the Arabian Nights are nothing to the piazza of Saint Mark, and the first impression of the inside of the Church. The gorgeous and wonderful reality of Venice is beyond the fancy of the wildest dreamer. . . . All that I have heard of it, read of it in truth or fiction, fancied of it, is left thousands of miles behind. You know that I am liable to be disappointed in such things through over-expectation, but Venice is above, beyond, out of all reach coming of near, the imagination of man. It is a thing you would shed tears to see. "When I came on board here last night (after a five miles' row in a gondola, which somehow, or other, I wasn't at all prepared for) ; then, from seeing the city lying, one night, upon the distant water, like a ship, I came plashing through the silent and deserted streets; I felt as if the houses were reality—the water, fever madness. But when, in the bright cold bracing day, I stood upon the piazza this morning, by Heaven, the glory of the place was insupportable! And diving down from that into its wickedness and gloom—its awfulTHE PERSONAL LETTER 55 prisons deep below the water; its judgment chambers, secret doors, deadly nooks, where the torches you carry with you blink as if they couldn't bear the air in which the frightful scenes were acted; and coming out again into the radiant, unsubstantial Magic of the town; and diving in again, into vast churches, and old tombs—a new sensation, a new memory, a new mind came upon me. ... I never saw a thing before I should be afraid to describe. But to tell what Venice is I feel to be an impossibility. . . Travel letter {Percy Bysshe Shelley to T. L. Peacock.) "Since I last wrote to you, I have seen the ruins of Rome, the Vatican, St. Peter's, and all the miracles of ancient and modern art contained in that majestic city. The impression of it exceeds anything I have ever ex- perienced in my travels. We stayed there only a week, intending to return at the end of February, and devote two or three months to its mines of inexhaustible con- templation. The Coliseum is unlike any work of human hands I ever saw before. It is of enormous height and circuit, and the arches built of massy stone are piled on one another, and jut into the blue air, shat- tered into the forms of overhanging rocks. It has been changed by time into the image of an amphitheater of rocky hills overgrown by the wild olive, the myrtle, and the fig-tree and threaded by little paths, which wind among its ruined stairs and immeasurable galleries: the copsewood overshadows you as you wander through its labyrinths, and the wild weeds of this climate of flowers bloom under your feet. . . . But a small part of the exterior circumference remains—it is exquisitely light and beautiful. . . . The interior is all ruin. I can scarcely believe that even when encrusted with Dorian marble and ornamented by columns of Egyptian56 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING granite, its effect could have been so sublime and so impressive as in its present state." Robert Louis Stevenson is the master of the con- versational letter. As one critic says: "From the mere literary point of view, his letters are in many instances superior to his tales and essays. In his letters there is the essential artist, instinctive, natural, triumphant, flexible and at ease." Some of Stevenson's best letters were written to his mother. Reflective letter (R. L. Stevenson to his mother.) "I wonder if you or my father ever thought of the obscurities that lie upon human duty from the negative form in which the Ten Commandments are stated, or of how Christ was so continually substituting affirma- tions. 'Thou shalt not' is but an example; 'Thou shalt' is the law of God. . . . But what led me to this re- mark is this: A kind of black angry look goes with that statement of the law of negatives. 'To love one's neighbor as oneself' is certainly much harder, but states life so much more actively, gladly, kindly, that you can begin to see some pleasure in it; and until you can begin to see some pleasure in these hard choices and bitter necessities, where is there any Good News for men? It is much more important to do right than not to do wrong; further, the one is possible, the other has always been and will ever be impossible; and the faithful de- sign to do right is accepted by God. . . . The whole necessary morality is kindness; and it should spring, of itself, from the one fundamental doctrine, Faith. If you are sure that God in the long run means kindness by you, you should be happy; and if happy, surely, you should be kind. I beg your pardon for this long dis-THE PERSONAL LETTER 57 course, it is not all right of course, but I am sure there is something in it." Conversational letter (R. L. Stevenson to J. M, Barrie.) "My dear Barrie,— "This is the last effort of an ulcerated conscience. I have been so long owing you a letter, I have heard so much of you, fresh from the press, from my mother and Graham Balfour, that I have to write a letter no later than to-day, or perish in my shame. But the deuce of it is, my dear fellow, that you write such a very good letter that I am ashamed to exhibit myself before my junior (which you are, after all) in the light of the dreary idiot I feel. Understand that there will be noth- ing funny in the following pages. If I can manage to be rationally coherent, I shall be more than satisfied. "In the first place, I have had the extreme satisfaction to be shown that photograph of your mother. ... I never in my life saw anything more deliciously char- acteristic. I declare I can hear her speak. I wonder my mother could resist the temptation of your proposed visit to Kirriemuir, which it was like your kindness to propose. By the way, I was twice in Kirriemuir. ... I have a distinct recollection of an inn at the end —I think the upper end—of an irregular open place or square, in which I always see your characters evolve. But, indeed, I did not pay much attention; being all bent upon my visit to a shooting-box, where I should fish a real trout-stream, and I did it, too, and it was a charming stream clear as crystal. ... It formed an epoch in my life, being the end of all my trout-fishing. I had always been accustomed to pause and very labori- ously to kill every fish as I took it. But in the Queen's River I took so good a basket that I forgot these nice- ties ; and when I sat down, in a hard rain shower, under58 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING a bank, to take my sandwiches and sherry, lo! and behold, there was the basketful of trouts still kicking in their agony. I had a very unpleasant conversation with my conscience. All that afternoon I persevered in fishing, brought home my basket in triumph, and some time that night, 'in the wee sma' hours ayont the twal/ I finally forswore the gentle craft of fishing. I dare say your local knowledge may identify this historic river; I wish it could go farther and identify also that particular Free kirk in which I sat and groaned on Sunday. While my hand is in I must tell you a story." Numerous other examples of letters worthy of the name could be given. From my own personal cor- respondence I could also give excellent illustrations of practically every type of friendly letter named, but they would not prove of the same general interest as the ex- tracts selected. There are many excellent personal letters being writ- ten to-day, so many in fact that the poorly expressed and slovenly appearing letter is the more noticeable by contrast and the more inexcusable. In the extracts here given one can feel the person- ality of the writer. No two letters are alike. They are as different as the men who wrote them. A read- ing of them makes it clear how futile it would be to attempt to instruct one in the art of letter writing. To read carefully the published letters of the great writers is of greater value than all the advice that could be given. Love-letters.—I mention the love-letter with great hesitation, feeling that discretion lies in leaving the greater part unsaid; yet a chapter on "Personal Let- ters" would hardly be complete if all mention of love- letters were omitted.THE PERSONAL LETTER 59 There will be no attempt made to give models. I remember with what amusement I read a series of model letters that attempted to cover every possible contingency, letters of proposal, acceptance and re- fusal ; a letter of proposal from a widower to a young girl, from a young man to a widow; from a wealthy man to a poor girl, from a man to a girl to whom he had not been introduced; letters breaking off an en- gagement; from a mother to her daughter's fiance breaking the engagement; letters from a jealous girl to her fiance and his answer; letters from a man taking his fiancee to task; and many others. How dif- ferent were those letters from the love-letters we have seen! They were much more dignified; the kind of letter that one would not blush to see in print. Every one knows that he (and more particularly she) should be careful what is said in a letter—it may be used as evidence some day—yet how many real lovers are care- ful what they put on paper? Take, for example, the letters of Keats to Fanny Brawne. It is the kind of letter poetic lovers have written during the ages. Though filled with ardent passion there is nothing that offends, yet is hardly the letter you or I would recom- mend as a model. A letter of love (John Keats to Fanny Brawne.) "My dearest Girl : "This moment I have set myself to copy some verses. I cannot proceed with any degree of content. I must write you a line or two and see if that will assist in dismissing you from my Mind for ever so short a time. Upon my soul I can think of nothing else. The time6o ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING is passed when I had power to advise and warn you against the unpromising morning of my Life.- My love has made me selfish. I cannot exist without you. I am forgetful of everything else but seeing you again —my Life seems to stop there—I see no further. You have absorb'd me. I have a sensation at the present moment as if I was dissolving—I should be exquisitely miserable without the hope of soon seeing you. . . „ My Creed is Love and you are its only tenet. You have ravish'd me away by a Power I cannot resist; yet I could resist until I saw you; and even since I have seen you I have endeavored often to reason against the reasons of my Love. I can do that no more—the pain would be too great My love is selfish. I cannot breathe without you. "Yours for ever, "John Keats." The love-letter changes little, less perhaps than any other form of letter. It springs from the heart and expresses feelings common to lovers the world over, love, passion, desire, doubt, anxiety, longing, fears and hopes. A century after Keats penned the words of love just quoted, another lover less known to fame wrote in simi- lar vein: A love-letter "A queer thing happened yesterday. I was standing waiting for my car when I felt a hand on my arm, and a voice—feminine—said 'Oh, here you are!' I looked around, and there was your hat and under it a girl of your size and general type. It gave me such a start that I must have looked as if I had seen a ghost. AsTHE PERSONAL LETTER 61 soon as I turned she informed me she thought it was 'someone else' and departed hurriedly. And I just stood staring after her. You can't imagine the jump it gave me. And it sent through me, from head to foot, a hot, eager longing for you that was like one great big ache. I am almost sorry it happened, for it has had almost the effect of seeing you just for an instant and then losing you again. It brought back all the hurt of parting and the bitterness of waiting. My arms ache for you. I want you and love you more than it is pos- sible to tell you." Among the famous love-letters of the present day are those of Sarah Bernhardt, edited and published by M. Dorian. They reveal the temperamental artist and the emotional woman and are frank with the frankness of the French. In her published letters, which are nu- merous, the famous actress expresses her views on many subjects. In a letter to Victorien Sardou, the famous poet and dramatist, she writes of love in much the same terms: Letter from Sarah Bernhardt "Paris now without thee is but a morgue; before I knew thee it was Paris and I thought it heaven; but now it is a wide desert of desolation and loneliness. It is like the face of a clock when the hands have been taken away. I can not now live away from thee—thy words, even though they were bitter words—would give chase to all the world's uneasiness and make me glad; my art has been nourished by them and softly rocked in their tender cradle until they are as requisite to me now as are the sunlight and the air. I am hun- gry for them as I would be for food. . . . Thou art all to me!"62 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Protestations of love do not seem to change greatly -whether written by man or woman, this century or last. The Adler collection of letters gives forms used in proposing marriage five hundred years ago. The true lover needs no such help. He will write in his own words what his heart dictates. It may come falteringly, but its sincerity will compensate for rounded phrases or poetical thoughts clothed in the language of another.IV SOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE HERE is a distinct difference between the social letter and the personal letter. The social letter is written for a distinct social purpose: to extend an invitation, to accept or decline one, or to acknowledge some social obligation. Social letters are of two general kinds, formal and informal. Included in the informal group are letters of condolence, of congratulation, of introduction, birthday letters, letters to a convalescent, letters in be- half of charity, because all of these letters are an im- portant link in the social chain. For the writing of the formal social letter there are very definite rules which should be strictly observed. Failure to observe them immediately classifies one as lacking in social knowledge. Social Stationery.—In the social letter, appropri- ate stationery plays an important role. A high grade of paper in white or cream is conservative and always good. Three sizes are desirable—large, for special cor- respondence; medium, for general correspondence; and note paper for the writing of letters of thanks and notes of condolence. The fad of the present moment is for large size paper with rough edges, measuring about six and one-qtiarter by seven and one-half. If you get only the one size, it64 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING is better to keep to the standard size, measuring about six and three-quarters by five and one-half, which is always in good taste and is used year in and year out. Note paper comes in two styles, square and oblong, both good. The oblong is more popular at the pres- ent time. The tendency to-day is towards simplicity and re- finement. Many men and women adopt a conservative style of stationery and use it year in and year out re- gardless of changing styles. Fads of the moment are left to the faddists and are to be avoided generally. They may be, and frequently are, taken up by the debutante or the school girl, but rarely by the man or woman moving in the best social circles. But one may be individual in one's stationery. Sta- tionery in light colors, gray or tan being the most popular, is frequently used. Thin white envelopes with bright colored linings are now in favor. Thin paper with colored envelopes is rather generally employed in foreign correspondence. Light in weight, it tends to reduce the bulk of first-class foreign mail. A leading stationer is the authority for saying that the greatest demand to-day is for plain white paper of good quality in the large and medium sizes. Much less "fancy stationery" is carried to-day than formerly, the tendency being toward "elegant simplicity." In choosing one's writing paper, it is well to re- member that the size of the paper should depend some- what on the handwriting. Angular writing looks better on large-size paper, preferably oblong, while small writing looks better on medium-size paper, preferably rectangular. Crests, Monograms and Markings.—Stationery, as well as clothes, hats and the manner of dressing one'sSOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 65 hair, can and should reflect one's personality. In line with the trend towards simplicity, the use of the crest has given way to the monogram, and this in turn to the one or two line engraved address. There is more demand to-day for the two-line ad- dress, than for the three-line with name, and for ad- dress dies than for monogram dies. The address engraved in varying shades of blue and placed in the center of the page is in high favor, as: 1157 Oak Hill Avenue, Los Angeles, California Stoneleigh Court, Washington, D. C. When residing in a large city the number of the apartment is usually added, as: Apartment 56 880 West Seventy-third Street New York City For Informal Correspondence.—For the informal personal letter the half sheets with address printed at the top are recommended. These single sheets with address alone, or name and address neatly printed in blue or black ink, are very popular with the man and woman in the ordinary walks of life. They are sen- sible, practical, and have much to recommend them, but should not be used for formal social correspond- ence where plain, unmarked white folio paper is preferable. It is surprising how many people of sup- posed culture use inappropriate stationery and acknowl- edge a formal invitation to dinner on small note paper66 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING which should be reserved for informal acknowledg- ments, or on the single sheets now so popular, instead of on the medium-sized plain or engraved stationery which the occasion demands. One's individuality may be somewhat freely ex- pressed in the stationery for the suburban home or country house where wide latitude is allowed. Often a gay color is employed, which is permissible if appro- priate. Most attractive was a distinctive gray paper with the following marking: Gray Gables Telephone, Clarendon 99 Cherrydale, Va. If the railroad station and the post office address are different they are both given on the letter-head, the object being to give the information that friends and visitors may require in order to get in touch with the person living near a big city. The Formal Invitation.—Invitations to weddings and wedding receptions and wedding announcements are engraved on the first page of folio paper of ex- cellent quality. All other formal invitations,—to re- ceptions, dances, dinners, teas—are engraved on cards of the proper size. Any stationer will show a prospec- tive customer all styles in fashion from which a selec- tion may be made. Formal invitations should be Issued two or three weeks in advance, and should be answered promptly, within two or three days or a week at the latest. The acceptance or regret should be definite—never pro- visional. If formal invitations are written instead of en-SOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 67 graved, as is sometimes done, they follow the style of the engraved invitation, taking the following form: Mr. and Mrs. James Monroe request the pleasure of Mr. and Mrs. Hooper's company at dinner on Thursday, November the eighth at seven o'clock to meet Mr. and Mrs. James Monroe, Jr. 778 West End Avenue The acceptance to the formal invitation is usually spaced as follows: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hooper accept with pleasure Mr. and Mrs. Monroe's kind invitation for dinner on Thursday, November the eighth at seven o'clock to meet Mr. and Mrs. James Monroe, Jr. Regrets would read: Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hooper regret that a previous engagement prevents their accepting Mr. and Mrs. Monroe's kind invitation for dinner on Thursday, November the eighth to meet Mr. and Mrs. James Monroe, Jr. It is permissible, however, to write consecutively, observing sufficient margins. When an invitation is accepted, the date of the en-88 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING tertainment should be mentioned to avoid any possi- bility of a mistake. If the invitation is declined, the date may or may not be mentioned. If a dinner or tea or dance is given at a place other than the home, the place should be mentioned and the home address should be placed in the lower left hand corner of the invitation, so that the invited guest will know where to direct the reply. The third person is always used in acknowledging formal invitations, even though the persons are the most intimate of friends. A formal invkation demands a formal answer and should never be answered in- formally. The following points should be noted: heading, date and salutation are omitted In the formal invitation and reply; replies follow the form as well as the wording of the invitation; the hour and the date are mentioned in the acceptance; these may be omitted in the regret. The formal reply is written on medium-sized letter paper, so that it is contained on the first page without crowding. Note paper is reserved for the informal note. Informal Invitations.—Invitations to a tea, small dance or an informal dinner may take the form of in- formal written notes. Sometimes visiting cards are used for such invitations, but never in acknowledging them. A note must be written. An informal invita- tion to dinner might properly read: 800 Ninety First Street, New York City, October 10, 19— My dear Mrs. Clarke : Mr. Brown and I are asking a few friends to dinnerSOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 69 Wednesday evening, October the twentieth, at seven o'clock and hope that you and Mr. Clarke can join us. We trust that you have no other engagement and can arrange to be with us. Cordially yours, Alice Lake Brown. The acceptance would read as follows: Dear Mrs. Brown: Mr. Clarke and I are delighted to accept your kind invitation to dinner on Wednesday, the twentieth of October, at seven o'clock. Thank you so much for thinking of us. Sincerely yours, Mary Clarke. Do not make the mistake made by Mrs. Just Arrived, who wished to show her knowledge of social forms and wrote a formal acceptance in the third person to an invitation written in the first. Answer all invita- tions in kind. These are little things but they are important. Re- member then to acknowledge in the third person invi- tations worded in the third person, and in the first person invitations written in the first person. Formal invitations are engraved or written, never printed. It is far better to write informal notes bidding friends to your wedding, than to send out printed in- vitations. While there is no reason for this except custom, custom is an all-sufficient reason and in this case failure to observe this rule indicates ignorance and lack of social experience. Either do a thing right or not at all, is a rule to be scrupulously observed in social correspondence.70 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING When formal invitations are issued to several mem- bers of the same family, one is sent to the parents, one to the daughter or daughters, and one to each of the sons invited. It is no longer correct to add "arid family" to any invitation. One invitation to two sis- ters reading "The Misses Brown" is correct, however. An invitation issued on a visiting card is never an- swered on a visiting card but a formal note in the third person is written. The use of the visiting card in ex- tending invitations seems to be passing. Formal en- graved invitations or informal social notes are more in favor. "Just a Note."—In this day and age of informality the informal social note is used for a variety of pur- poses—to bid one's friends to a quiet home wedding, to tea, dinner, a garden party, a house party or a dance. For the writing of these notes, small or medium-sized writing paper with the address engraved at the top is in the best taste. The notes are usually brief, the word- ing cordial but not gushing. They follow no pre- scribed form, but should express the personality of the writer. House Parties.—In extending an invitation to a house party, the words "house party" are not employed but the guests are invited for "the week-end," "from Friday to Tuesday" or "over the holidays." Such in- vitations should be explicit and should give the day and hour at which the guests are expected to arrive and depart, specify the kind of clothes that will be needed, and how the home can best be reached. A week-end invitation, when not otherwise stated, means from Saturday afternoon until Monday morn- ing. If something is planned for the first evening, theSOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 71; fact is stated in the invitation so that the guest can plan accordingly. A holiday house party invitation might read: My dear Clara : Please say that you can and will spend Thanksgiving with us. We find our country place so lovely at this season that we are inviting a few friends out for Thanksgiving to enjoy it with us. Can you reach here in time for six o'clock dinner Wednesday evening? After dinner we are planning to attend a dance at the Country Club. For the re- mainder of the week there will be golf and tennis and horseback riding and motoring. So bring your tennis racquet and golf sticks and of course evening clothes for there will be another dance Saturday evening. We are anticipating a jolly time, to which your pres- ence will add materially. I do hope you can come. You can take an early train back to the city Monday morning. Affectionately yours, Mary Gray Stone. The answer should be equally explicit. Dear Mrs. Stone : Your kind invitation to spend the holidays with you answers the question I have been asking myself— what shall I do Thanksgiving? There are certain things I ought to do but your invitation is so tempting that I can not refuse. You may expect me Wednesday afternoon about five o'clock. I shall come with eve- ning and sport clothes and the tennis racquet you sug- gested. I know we shall have a jolly time under your hospitable roof. I am already enjoying it in an- ticipation.72 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Many thanks for thinking of me and for including me in your guest company. Very sincerely yours, Clara Endicott. The "Bread-and-Butter" Letter.—The thank-you or ^bread-and-butter" letter should be written at the earliest possible moment after the conclusion of such a visit. To have "broken bread" with a friend and to have slept beneath her roof demands a prompt ac- knowledgment of the accepted hospitality. The thank- you letter may be short but should be sincere. No formal, stilted words are needed. Dear Mary : I had a wonderful time at your Thanksgiving house party. It was a grand success. Mr. Stone and you are the perfect host and hostess and every member of the party fitted in to such an extent that it seemed like one big family. I enjoyed every moment of my stay with you and feel wonderfully invigorated and re- freshed. Being with you and that jolly crowd was better than any tonic. I want to thank you and Mr. Stone again for one of the most delightful Thanks- givings I have ever spent. Friends like you are indeed something for which to be thankful. Devotedly yours, Clara Endicott. Although it is customary for a married woman to acknowledge social invitations for her husband, sisters and mothers are not expected to attend to the social correspondence of brothers or sons. The young man entering society is only too apt to neglect the "bread- and-butter" letter, the letters of thanks and of con-SOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 73 dolence and acknowledgment which good breeding re- quires of him. The fact that he is a man does not excuse him, but because he is a man he expects to secure a "repeat" invitation even though he neglects his social obligations. From some hostesses he may receive it, from others he will not. Letters of Thanks.—Important among social letters that must be written are the letters of thanks for any and all favors received, and for all gifts,—birthday presents, Christmas presents, gifts to the new baby, Howers sent in time of illness or bereavement, and last but not least, wedding gifts. These should be ac- knowledged within a week after their arrival. Wise is the bride who writes her "thank-you-for-the-lovely- gift" notes as soon as she opens the package. Although the bride must acknowledge all presents sent by relatives and friends of the groom, even though she has never met them, it is also customary for the groom to write a personal note to his particular friends thanking them for the wedding gift, which he knows was sent on his account. Such letters are the more appreciated because comparatively few men take the trouble to write them. There are some punctilious people who make it a rule to acknowledge all Christmas gifts before New Year's Day and who answer Christmas cards with New Year cards. Others answer all greeting cards with per- sonal notes. This is as rare as it is delightful. Greeting Cards.—A pretty custom which is fast growing in favor, is that of sending greeting cards on various occasions to friends and relatives with whom one does not correspond regularly. There are many pretty and attractive cards on the market, some daintily hand colored, some unusually74 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING artistic, with appropriate sentiments charmingly ex- pressed. Among the greeting cards are those that say "thank you" in appropriate ways—a thank you for the person to whom you neglected to send a post card but who sent you one; a "sorry you are ill" card; a greet- ing to speed the traveler on his way; a bon voyage and a welcome home card; birthday cards for every mem- ber of the family, including aunts, uncles and cousins; Easter cards and Thanksgiving cards and Hallowe'en cards, congratulations on graduation day and on the announcement of an engagement. Of course, at Christmas such cards are sent by the million. When the card is artistic and the sentiment appropriate it may give as much pleasure to the recipient as a letter. Every well-appointed desk should have a set of greet- ing cards for emergencies. These cards are a pleasant way of letting friends with whom we do not cor- respond regularly know that we have not forgotten them. They should not be used as a substitute for the note which should be written, but in addition to it. They should not be used unless they will be received with a feeling of pleasant surprise and not with a feel- ing of disappointment because they are not the letter that was expected. "Duty" Letters.—Informal social correspondence, in addition to the "duty" letters—letters of thanks, "bread-and-butter" letters, acknowledgments of invi- tations—also includes the letter of condolence, of con- gratulation, of introduction, and various miscellaneous letters difficult to classify. These are the letters which no one can tell you how to write, for unless they express your personality they are valueless. When you hear that a friend is in sorrow or has received some honor, sit down at once and writeSOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 75 the sincere words of sympathy or of congratulation which naturally spring to mind. It is when you put off the writing of such letters to "a more convenient time" that the writing of them becomes a burden and the words come haltingly. Letters of Condolence,—Among the letters which etiquette demands of us and our own feelings should dictate are letters of condolence. A guiding rule should be, don't say too much. Be brief, be sympathetic, be sincere. Write the kind of letter you feel will give most comfort to the recipient. If your brain fails to function and your heart does not inspire you, send a brief telegram saying "Sincerest sympathy," or write a few words on note or letter paper saying merely, "I have heard of your sorrow and want you to know that I sympathize with you sincerely. I only wish there were something I could do or say, but words are inade- quate to express my feelings." It is not so much what is said as the feelings that prompt it, that makes even the briefest letter of sym- pathy appreciated by those in sorrow. Do not dwell unnecessarily on sorrowful details; a few sincere words of admiration or an expression of your personal feeling of loss may bring a bit of comfort to the one bereaved. Probably the most famous letter of condolence ever penned is that written by Abraham Lincoln to Mrs. Bixby. The letter reads: Executive Mansion, Washington, November 21, 1864. Mrs. Bixby, Boston, Massachusetts. Dear Madam : I have been shown in the files of the War Department a statement of the Adjutant-General of Massachusetts76 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING that you are the mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so over- whelming. But I can not refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save. I pray that our heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom. Yours very sincerely and respectfully, Abraham Lincoln. Any comment on a letter that speaks so eloquently for itself seems unnecessary. Its beauty lies in its brevity, the nobility of sentiment and the simplicity of expression. All is said that need be said. Though this letter, written to fill a special need, is not given to serve as a model, it should nevertheless furnish inspiration to all writers of letters of condolence as to what to leave unsaid and the manner of saying that which may bring some comfort to the person bereaved. Letters of condolence should be acknowledged. A short personal note is sufficient. Here are extracts from two acknowledgments which are given in the hope that they may serve as an inspiration to the unin- spired : "Thank you for your recent letter. The tender sym- pathies and condolence of such good friends as your- self have done much to soften the sorrow incident to the loss of my dear mother. She always appreciated your friendship, kindly interest and attention, and often spoke of you and the tender affection that sheSOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE had for you and the appreciation of your kind cour- tesies to her." It is worth writing a dozen letters of condolence to receive in answer one such letter as the above or such a reply as this one: "Your letter to me after the death of my father did more really to help me to get myself where I could look on my work again than any I received. Too, your sympathy was so genuine." Probably no person in the world has ever received as many letters of condolence as did Mrs. Harding on the death of President Harding. In range and in depth they represented the sentiments of a thinking, grieving, sympathetic world. The hearts and brains, not of one nation, but of the nations of the world, spoke their grief and their sympathy. Among all the messages received, those of two former Presidents of the United States stand out: "Allow me to express my profound sympathy," Mr. ^Wilson said in his message. "I deplore with all my heart the loss which the nation sustained." Chief Justice Taft's message read: "Mrs. Taft and I send to you our deep personal sym- pathy in your great sorrow, which we share. Our hearts go out to you in this hour of your inestimable loss." He also wrote: "I am shocked beyond expression at the news of President Harding's death. The loss is a deep personal sorrow to me. The loss to the people of the United States can not be overestimated. He had impressed78 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING the whole country with his nobility of character, the sweetness of his nature, his wonderful patience, breadth of vision, high patriotism and his love of human kind. His death at this juncture in the affairs of the country and the world is a great calamity/' Letters of Congratulation.—Among the informal social letters one should write are: letters of congratu- lation, of introduction, the letter in the interest of charity, the request to serve as chaperon, as patron or patroness to a benefit, and acknowledgments of such letters. The letter of congratulation is easier to write than the letter of condolence. The great difficulty seems to be in getting started. It is an excellent practice to write our congratulations as soon as we hear of a promotion received by a friend, learn that he has been elected to a public office, read a speech he has made, or see a book or article he has published. The letters are easier to write when the news is fresh, and the first letters received are the most appreciated. Even the busiest and most prominent people enjoy the sincere words of congratulation of their friends. Don't excuse yourself from writing with the thought, "He will doubtless receive so many letters of congratulation, mine will not be noticed." An extremely prompt and gracious acknowledgment to a letter of congratulation, which the author recently received from a prominent man who had gained honor after honor, bore evidence that those accustomed to honors appreciate the con- gratulations of their friends when new honors befall them. A brief note saying, "Accept my heartiest congratu- lations on the wonderful work you are doing," cameSOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 79 when the first flush of elation on undertaking a new line of work had passed and discouragement had set in. It brought needed cheer and encouragement. When an engagement is announced, congratulatory letters should be written to both parties. The day has passed when the bridegroom alone is congratulated. In this day of freedom and frankness the bride may receive a double share of congratulations. On receipt of a birth announcement, always write the parents a congratulatory word. The event is a most momentous one to them and should be recognized. If a gift is sent the new baby, a short note usually accom- panies or precedes it. Graduation day is a great event in the life of a boy or girl. Letters of congratulation from older mem- bers of the family, family friends, and acquaintances may add much to the significance of the event. It is customary to add words of advice, but it is extremely doubtful if they have much effect on the graduate, though helpful advice from an experienced business man contained in a letter written at graduation time has changed one boy's life in our acquaintance. Re- ceived at a time when he was just starting out in life and trying to decide between two courses of action, that one letter decided him to make what proved to be a wise move. Such may be the power of a letter. Its possibilities stir the imagination. Birthday Letters.—Birthday letters come in the congratulatory class. Every one likes to be remem- bered on anniversaries. The birth and wedding anni- versary are most frequently remembered. A letter at these times is often more appreciated than a gift. Some people make much of birthdays, while others make little. One old lady of my acquaintance enjoyedBo ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING the birthday celebrations arranged by her children far more than Christmas. On her birthday she was the central figure. The birthday letters and cards and tele- grams she received reached frequently into the hun- dreds. These kept the dear old lady happy and inter- ested for days and weeks thereafter. I have friends from whom I rarely hear except on my birthday, but I look forward to these birthday let- ters telling me the happenings of the past year, and I feel that it is worth growing older to get these kind, friendly letters and to know that friends do not forget with the passing years. I know of people who evidently keep a card catalogue of the anniversaries of all of their friends, for not one do they miss. They remember the birthday and wed- ding anniversaries of the parents, and the birthdays of all the children. Either their memory for dates is mar- velous, or they have an excellent system. But it is pleasant to have anniversaries remembered that we our- selves sometimes forget. The Letter to a Convalescent.—It is a very human trait to prefer receiving letters to writing them. But if there is ever a time when a letter is a little more welcome than at another, it is when we are ill or con- valescing. The letter to the person recovering from an illness is one that the person who is well and busy with many things is apt to overlook; yet no letter gives more gen- uine pleasure, or yields better returns in friendship. A chatty, newsy letter bringing the out-of-doors and the world of affairs to the invalid is often a better tonic than that prescribed by the doctor. The light-hearted, gay, inconsequential letters of a young girl brought much cheer to an incurable invalid,SOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 8r who said those letters made her forget her pains for the moment, while the letters of most of her friends- commiserating with her on her troubles reminded her of them. It is trite but true that the world is full of trouble and sorrow and disappointment. The purpose of all letters belonging to the friendly group or informal social correspondence should be to ease pain or to give pleasure. To fail in this respect is to fail completely. The Letter of Introduction.—Important among informal social letters is the letter of introduction. The social letter of introduction is a more delicate matter than the business letter of introduction. It is not con- sidered good form to ask for a letter of introduction except from intimate friends. It is a thoughtful cour- tesy to offer letters of introduction when we feel the acquaintance will be mutually agreeable to both parties. However, be very chary about asking for or giving letters of introduction. If a friend asks you to write a letter of introduction for a friend, refuse rather than commit the greater error of introducing a person for whom you do not wish to be responsible. On the other hand, letters of introduction from one friend to another are an important link in the social chain. The letter of introduction is usually a short social note written to the person to whom the introduction is made, but delivered, with the envelope unsealed, to the person being introduced, together with her card and address, to the person for whom it is intended. Such a letter might read: Dear Mrs. Mann : This will introduce to you Mrs. Arthur Bennett, a very dear friend of mine, who arrives in your city82 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Thursday of next week to spend several weeks. I am eager for you to know each other, as I feel the acquaint- ance will prove mutually agreeable. When two such good friends of mine as you and Mrs. Bennett are to be in the same city at the same time I feel I should be lacking in kindness to you both if I did not try to bring about a meeting. I hope you will see much of each other. She will let you know where she is stopping. Very truly yours, Martha A. Blake. Mrs. Blake gives this letter to Mrs. Bennett, who writes a short note to Mrs. Mann saying she is inclosing a letter from their mutual friend Mrs. Blake, and add- ing that she is stopping at the New Hotel, where she can be found any morning. Or Mrs. Blake may write directly to Mrs. Mann, telling her that Mrs. Bennett is to visit in her city, stopping at the New Hotel, and hoping that Mrs. Mann will call on her and show her other courtesies. Mrs. Blake informs Mrs. Bennett that she has writ- ten Mrs. Mann about her forthcoming visit. The latter method is becoming more and more employed. It is less formal than the other and does not put Mrs. Mann under as great an obligation. In fact, there is less obligation all around. After Mrs. Bennett and Mrs. Mann have met, both should write Mrs. Blake who brought about the meet- ing. If Mrs. Bennett, for any reason, does not use the letter of introduction, she should still write her letter of thanks to Mrs. Blake and explain why the letter of introduction was not used. A letter of introduction, it will be seen, entails not one but a series of letters. The Letter in Behalf of Charity.—One of the first duties of those in charge of charity benefits is toSOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 83 *mte notes to prominent and well-to-do people, who may or may not be acquaintances, asking their assist- ance. A list of patrons and patronesses who are socially known is essential to the success of most charity benefits. The chairman of the committee on arrange- ments or the entertainment committee usually writes these notes which may read: Mrs. Harrison Harris, Washington, D. C. My dear Mrs. Harris : The Southern Society is to give its annual benefit ball on May the tenth at the New Willard Hotel, and the entertainment committee would very much appre- ciate being allowed to use your name as patroness. I am inclosing six tickets which I hope you will be able to use. Perhaps you would prefer a box. They seat ten persons and cost-dollars. All checks are to be made to the order of Arthur M. Rhodes and should be sent to me. We hope you will allow us to use your name as patroness and that you will honor the occasion with your presence. Sincerely yours, Mary E. Martin, Chairman Entertainment Committee. Mrs. John J. Martin, Woodley Road, Washington, D. C. Such a letter should be acknowledged promptly. If Mrs. Harris decides to serve as patroness she is ex- pected to subscribe to the extfent that her means allows. She incloses her check for the six tickets with her note84 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING of acceptance. If she decides to take the box she sends a check for it and returns the six tickets. If she does not wish to serve as patroness or to keep the tickets she must write a polite note of regret and return the tickets. It is the height of ill breeding to ignore or to delay replying to such a request. The note of regret may seem difficult to write. The following will serve : Mrs. John J. Martin, Chairman of Entertainment Committee, Southern Society of Washington. Dear Mrs. Martin : I regret that I am unable to accept your very kind invitation to serve as patroness at the Southern Society Charity Ball, and beg to return the six tickets sent me. Please let me thank you for the courtesy of asking me* Very truly yours, Alma M. Harris, (Mrs. Harrison Harris) The begging letter asking for a donation for some charity should also be answered. There are times, how- ever, when persons of wealth and influence are more than excused from answering the many inconsiderate requests made of them. In writing the social letter, both formal and informal, it is the little things that count—promptness, appro- priateness, the right stationery at the right time, for- mality when formality is demanded. "Do it now" is an excellent motto to follow in regard to social correspondence. If in doubt as to whether a letter requires an answer, the mere fact that there is a doubt should cause one to reply.SOCIAL CORRESPONDENCE 85 Even apparently trivial letters often become impor- tant, if neglected or laid aside for a more convenient season. Pigeonholes in one's desk are dangerous; they are too liable to become hiding places. Make a practice of leaving all incoming letters on the front of your desk until disposed of. Do not take them to the dinner table (a poor place for them, anyway) or toss them among the magazines on the center table. Keep them in their proper place and answer them at the proper time.32 PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS IT is surprising how many people there are of edu- cation and culture who find great difficulty in writing even the simplest kind of business letter. They may know the exact form for acknowledging all formal invitations, they may write the informal social note with unerring good taste and rise to every demand of social correspondence unhesitatingly, and yet feel absolutely helpless when it comes to writing a letter of reference, of inquiry, of complaint, writing an order, sending money, requesting definite information. And many a college-bred person when the question of earn- ing a living or of carving a career is demanding an answer, finds himself puzzling and laboring over the letter seeking a position or requesting an interview. So here we^shall consider letters of a business nature that the person not in business is called upon to write. Individuals usually put off the writing of personal business letters till the last possible moment, and when they finally sit down at their desks it is with a hopeless feeling of not knowing what to say or how to begin. The writing of any business letter requires the same care as the social letter, and even greater attention to detail. One can learn to write correctly and efficiently with a little study, a little care, a little pains. Witness 86PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 87 the best type of business letter turned out by the blonde young bobbed-hair graduate of the average business college. Any one with any intelligence whatsoever can master the form of a business letter, but one's individuality may and should be expressed by the contents, the man- ner of expression, the excellence of one's English, the distinction of one's style. Style in writing is as inde- finable as charm in an individual, yet as important to business success as the other is to social success. Some writers affect a formal dignified style; some a clear, straightforward, concise style; some a breezy, conver- sational style. By the style of your letter you will be judged. This is particularly true of the letter seeking a position, or asking an interview, or requesting a favor of a stranger. General Rules.—A few general rules to be ob- served are: clearness, conciseness, courtesy, neatness. Before starting to write, have clearly in mind what you are going to say. Then write it as directly and simply as possible. Be brief without being abrupt, be definite without being profuse. Remember that any kind of letter, if it is worth writing at all, is worth writing carefully. Anything recorded on paper and appearing over one's signature is a more or less perma- nent record of one's character. An order for goods, and a letter transmitting money over the signature of George Washington are among the relics at Mt. Ver- non. From these and other apparently insignificant letters on personal business we learn that George Wash- ington was careful, painstaking and always the cour- teous gentleman. When he penned them he doubtless little dreamed that they would serve as a permanent record of his character.88 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Though the writings of few of us will ever assume such significance, a poorly-written, poorly-constructed letter, lacking paragraphs and punctuation, would indi- cate ignorance or carelessness, or both, and thus we would be judged. If a letter when finished has not a neat appearance it should be copied a second or even a third time. We are judged by the appearance of the letters we write as well as by the subject matter, just as first impressions are made by the clothes we wear. Stationery.—With these simple facts in mind, we sit down at our desk and begin our business letter. If a typewriter is available, we should use it. For a letter of average length, the ordinary typewriter paper, eight and one-half by eleven, is to be preferred. For a shorter note the half sheets with letter-head or printed or engraved address at the top of the sheet, are used. For any letter of a business nature, the single sheet is preferable to the folded letter paper used in social correspondence. The latter is to be used only when nothing else is at hand. Every household should be supplied with the single sheets now so popular and use- ful for so many occasions. Heading.—The heading proper consists of the name of the place from which the letter is sent and the date of the writing. If there is no printed or engraved street address, it is written first. The heading occupies the upper right-hand corner of the page, about one inch from the top, and may be written on one, two or three lines. The usual form is: 810 West Main Ave., Knoxville, Tenn., October 7, 19—.PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 89 Another form is: Morristown, Tenn., November 3, 19—. Points to be noted are: (1) The date is not spelled out, nor are 5th or 3rd used. The figures alone suffice. (2) The name of the month is not abbreviated but spelled out in full. (3) The name of the state may be abbreviated in the body of the letter and in the heading, but never on the envelope. (4) Punctuation may be omitted in the heading and there is a growing custom to omit all except the period, which must always follow an abbreviation. The maximum punctuation is used above. The punctuated heading looks more finished, and is therefore recommended. (5) When the desig- nation of the street is a number it is customary to spell it out unless it contains more than two parts: 12 West Eleventh Street; 17 East 197th Street. The Salutation.—The salutation or introduction consists of the name and address of the firm or indi- vidual to whom the letter is written. Its proper place is at the left-hand corner of the page, several spaces beneath the heading, and beginning at the margin line, about one inch from the edge. The amount of space is regulated somewhat by the length of the letters. Short letters should not be crowded to the upper part of the page. In all business letters, formal and informal, whether addressed to firms or individuals, to friends or strangers, the introduction should contain the name and address of the person or firm addressed; the name being written on the first line, the street address on the second, and the city and state on the third, as:go ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Miss Mary Scott, 519 Oak Street, Columbus, Ohio, My dear Miss Scott: The greeting follows the introduction, and is written on a separate line beginning at the margin line. The American custom is to use "My dear Mr.-" for the more formal address, and "Dear Mr.-" for less formal. The usual form of greeting in a business letter where a firm or organization is addressed is one of the following: Gentlemen: Ladies : Sir: Madam: Dear Sir: Dear Madam: My dear Sir: My dear Madam: Sir and Madam are used only in very formal letters. The following forms are correct for addressing busi- ness firms: The International Film Co. New York City. Gentlemen: Mr. M. Y. Mimms, Gen. Mgr., Universal Insurance Company, San Francisco, California. Dear Sir: If Mr. Mimms is personally known to the writer, the greeting may read "My dear Mr. Minims" instead of "Dear Sir."PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 91 In opening your letter, use the personal instead of the impersonal form. Correct forms of opening are: "I inclose check for—" "Please let me know" "I should like to know" "I acknowledge" "In answer to your advertisement." Avoid such expressions as, "Inclosed find check/' "Kindly advise," and other stereotyped expressions used by business firms in writing to the public. Remember that you are writing a personal letter on business. Invest the simplest and shortest of business letters, an order for stationery, a request for a catalogue, with a bit of your personality, if possible. Let your letter be kindly, courteous, informal, and human. Avoid stereotyped phrases in closing as well as in opening. Participial phrases are best omitted. They are usually ungrammatical and mean nothing. "Thank- ing you in advance, yours very truly," is incorrect. If you are wedded to this form, be grammatical and say, "Thanking you in advance, I am, Yours very truly." Another form once greatly used is, "Please attend to the matter, and oblige." The "and oblige" is no longer good usage. Avoid senseless and unnecessary formulas. Be as considerate in your letter as you would be if you had met for a business chat. When a favor is asked and the reply confers a favor on the first writer, it is the courteous thing to inclose a stamp or, better still, a self-addressed stamped envelope. Different Kinds of Business Letters.—Among the many personal business letters that the average indi- vidual finds himself called upon to write are letters92 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING ordering goods, requesting prices, engaging rooms, asking for catalogues or samples, subscribing to a magazine, etc. There are also letters of recommenda- tion, of inquiry, testimonials, business introductions, letters of application, and letters requesting an inter- view. The examples here given are not to be followed blindly, but are to be used as a guide. No two cases are exactly alike. The wording of the letter should fit the occasion. One often answers an advertisement in some magazine. In writing for the goods advertised it is well to state where you saw the announcement. This not only identifies the order, it serves as a personal favor to the advertiser in enabling him to judge the value of the medium or advertisement. A specimen letter inclosing money would read: An order with inclosure Bristol, Tenn. June 30, 19—. De Luxe Stationery Company, 1921 Linden Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Gentlemen: I inclose money order for one dollar for which please send me a box of "Personal Stationery" as advertised in the June number of-magazine. According to the advertisement the box will contain two hundred sheets five and seven-eighths by seven and one hundred envelopes, with name and address printed thereon, which should read: Phyllis Scott 1919 Oak Avenue Bristol, TennesseePERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 93 Please let me know how soon I may expect it. Very truly yours, (Miss) Phyllis Scott. In letters ordering goods, there are certain things to be remembered. The various items should be in tabu- lar form, that is, set down one beneath the other so that they may be easily deciphered and checked off by the order clerk. For the same reason, figures are used. If you are not ordering from an advertisement or a catalogue, state size, style and all other details that will help to identify the article beyond a possibility of mis- take. In ordering from a catalogue where articles are given a number, give this number, the name of the article, and the particular catalogue from which you are ordering. Each firm has rules regarding payment. Conform to these and state in your letter how you intend to make payment. Also state if you wish the goods sent by freight, express, or parcel post. In other words, be definite and exact If, for example, you are ordering canned tomatoes from a wholesale house which carries four different sizes in the same brand, specify the size, otherwise the order clerk will have to guess at what you want. Here is an order for goods that is explicit: An itemized order Cumberland, Md. July 31, 19—. Sears, Roebuck & Co. Philadelphia, Pa. Gentlemen: Please send me the following: 25 lbs. of granulated sugar94 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING i doz. cans "Early June" peas i doz. cans (No. 2) tomatoes, Elite brand 1 bu. Irish potatoes Yz doz. cans "country gentleman" sugar corn y2 doz. cans white cherries (No. 2 size) Please charge to my account. Very truly yours, MARY N. White. Mrs. James S. White, 4 Pine Street, Cumberland, Md. Request for, catalogue and information Seattle, Washington, August 15, 19—. Georgetown Visitation Convent, Washington, D. C. Dear Sister: Will you please send me a catalogue of your school? My fifteen-year-old daughter has completed the seventh grade. What class would she enter at your school and how long should it take her to graduate?. Very truly yours, Estelle Mabston, Mrs. Ralph Marstofi, 5100 East 19th St Seattle, Washington.PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 95 Requesting terms Box 77 New Orleans, La. Manager, Hotel Seabrigkt* J00® I9""~• Atlantic City, N. J. Dear Sir! Please quote me your rates by the week and by the month for two communicating rooms with bath for a family consisting of myself and wife, and two daugh- ters, aged seven and fifteen. Can you make us a special rate for three months—from June 15 to September 15 ? Very truly yours, Robert S. Sautelle. Engaging rooms 6 N. First St. Birmingham, Ala. October 11, 19—« Manager, Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City. Dear Sir: Please reserve a single room with bath for one week beginning October 22. I expect to arrive in the late afternoon. [Wire me if impossible to reserve this room. Very truly yours, R. Leroy Morris.96 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Letters to servants and tradespeople The busy housewife may find it necessary to write the letters engaging rooms for herself and husband, and it will also fall to her lot to write the servants and tradespeople notifying them of the family's return from their summer outing. Such a letter might read: My dear Ellen : We expect to reach home Tuesday morning on an -early train. Will you please be at the house promptly at eight o'clock Tuesday morning. If you should arrive before we do, please wait on the porch for us. I hope you have enjoyed your vacation as much as we have, and will be as eager to come back to us as we shall be to reach home. I shall expect to see you Tuesday. Very truly yours, L. E. Sautelle. The initials alone are generally used in writing to servants. rA household order Mrs. Robert S. Sautelle wishes the Gulf Ice Com- pany to leave a hundred pounds of ice at her home, 816 Elm St., Tuesday, September 17, and to call at the house daily thereafter until further notice. t Letters of reference During Mrs. Sautelle's absence for three months, her maid Marie probably desired to secure a temporary position, in which case Mrs. Sautelle may have given her the following letter of reference:PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 97 This is to certify that Ellen Rourke has been in my employ as waitress and housemaid for nine months. I have found her satisfactory in every way, quiet, neat, efficient. I am giving her up reluctantly, because I am closing my house for the summer. I am very glad to recommend her highly. Lucia E. Sautelle. (Mrs. Robert S. Sautelle) Before leaving for the East, Mrs. Sautelle has re- ceived a letter of inquiry concerning a chauffeur whom she dismissed because he was unsatisfactory, which reads: Mrs. Robert S. Sautelle, 8 La Salle St. New Orleans, La. My dear Mrs. Sautelle : Please forgive me for troubling you, but James Wilson, who said he was lately in your employ, has answered our advertisement for a chauffeur. I shall greatly appreciate any information you can give me regarding his character and ability and shall treat the matter as confidential. Very truly yours, Marie M. Hill. (Mrs. R. L. Hill) (In this letter a self-addressed stamped envelope should be inclosed.^ Mrs. Sautelle is puzzled just how to answer this letter. She cannot conscientiously recommend James, but she does not wish to prevent him from securing98 ETIQUETTE OF BETTER WRITING another position. Her husband, who Is a lawyer, has warned her that servants failing to secure recommenda- tions may prove troublesome, even revengeful; some have even been known to sue their former employers for libel and defamation of character, and though few such suits have been won by the plaintiffs, such affairs may prove exceedingly unpleasant. Mrs. Sautelle, there- fore, words her reply very carefully: Mrs. R. L. Hill, New Orleans, La. My dear Mrs. Hill : I have your letter of inquiry concerning James Wilson. He was our chauffeur for two months. The first month he proved so satisfactory in every way that I feared it would not last. My husband and I remarked that he was without doubt the best chauffeur we had ever had. But, as I feared, it did not last. His one failing, so far as I have seen, seems to be drink. Where and how he got it we do not know. He failed to put in an appearance for two days and left no word. When he arrived on the third morning he looked as if he had been quite ill. It was only when these illnesses re- turned and we were convinced that they were caused by an evidently inferior brand of intoxicant which made James untrustworthy as a driver that we reluctantly dismissed him, telling him our reason. For the sake of our children it is necessary for us to have a chauffeur upon whom we may rely. He promised to stop drink- ing and if he does I am sure he will make an excellent servant. I would not ask for a better servant than he proved to be the first month he was with us. Yours very truly, E. L. Sautelle,PERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 99 > Letters of Application.—It is quite possible that the Sautelle family meets financial reverses, and it may become necessary for the eldest daughter to go to work. She has always wanted to write, and decides to try to get a position on the local newspaper, so writes to the managing editor as follows: Letter, of application Mr. H. L". Brown, Managing Editor, New Orleans Item. Dear Sir: I have always wanted to write, and as I must go to work and as I have made excellent grades in English throughout my high school course, which I have just completed, I am writing to you to ask if there is an opening in the editorial department of The Item. Per- haps the society or club editor can use an assistant. Our family has lived here for several generations and we are what is known as "the old residents/' so in addition to my own friends I know a number of mothers whom I am sure would be glad to give me social news for the paper. I am seventeen years old, and although I have had no newspaper experience, I was assistant editor of our High School Journal. I feel that I can make good and am willing and eager to learn, and have the advantage of having nothing to unlearn. I am willing to start at a modest salary and work up. Will you not give me a trial? And may I see you one day this week and dis- cuss the matter in more detail? I will come at any time you specify. Hopefully yours, Evelyn Sautelle.300 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Although this is not the conventional letter of appli- cation, it is the kind of letter that an enthusiastic, am- bitious young high school graduate might be expected to write, and would probably bring better results than the letter of application composed in a business college. It contains, moreover, all the essentials of the formal letter of application, which should state: (i) the reason for applying; (2) age; (3) education; (4) experi- ence, if any; (5) salary; (6) references. Inclosures.—When references are inclosed, copies of the original should be made and marked "Copy," and the word "(Signed)" in parentheses should be placed before the signature. In all letters where inclosures are made, it is cus- tomary to write the word "inclosure" at the end of the letter in the lower left-hand corner. If more than one inclosure is made, the fact is noted thus: (2 inc.) When checks, money orders, receipts or bills are inclosed in a letter they should be placed, face upward, across the face of the letter and folded with it. Some- times they are attached to the body of the letter with a paper clip or pin, but the post office department frowns upon this practice. The Business Introduction.—The business letter of introduction, like the social letter, should not be solicited, except from an intimate friend. A mutual friend, however, may suggest that such a letter would be appreciated. A short note may be written, but a calling card with "Introducing Mr. H. M. Black" written at the top is usual. If Mr. Black is an old friend, this fact may be noted and the words, "an old friend whom I want you to meet," may be added at the bottom, or on the back of the card. The person receiving this will recognizePERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS iol the informality of the note and greet your friend accordingly. If business reasons make advisable a letter of intro- duction for a business acquaintance whom you know slightly, a formal note would be in order, reading somewhat as follows: Dear Tom : This will introduce Mr. H. M. Black, with whom I have had pleasant business relations. He wishes to discuss business with you, and I hope you can give him a few moments of your time. Sincerely yours, Allen Taylor. Most letters of business introduction are written to gain admittance to a busy or well-known person. Ad- mittance once gained, the person must make his own impression. A letter of introduction does not go into detail regarding the qualities and qualifications of the person introduced. Such a letter would be a letter of reference. In writing a letter of introduction, the writer should be guided by such considerations as, how well he knows the person addressed, how well and favorably he knows the person for whom the letter is written, and the pur- pose of the introduction. This can be indicated in the way the letter is couched. A letter of introduction which every business man is often required to write is for the college graduate seek- ing a position. The graduate may be the son or daugh- ter of a relative, or an old friend or a business associate.102 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING The man writing the letter usually knows the parents far better than the son. Such a letter might read: Dear Mr. Marston: The bearer, James Lansdon Brown, has just grad- uated from - College and wishes to enter business in your city. His father and I are college chums and life-long friends. Anything you can do for the son will be very much appreciated by me. Horace Mandell. This letter tells nothing about young Brown except that he has graduated from a certain college. From the tone of the letter, Mr. Mandell realizes that he will have to be his own judge of the young fellow seeking a position, and young Brown should realize that the letter is merely an opportunity which he must follow up. Summary.—The personal business letter should not be stereotyped in form but should bear the impress of the writer. On the other hand, it should come at once to the point. Individuals writing to a firm often make the mistake of asking questions on unrelated points in the same letter. This makes it necessary for the firm to refer the letter from one department to another, and the result is unsatisfactory to all con- cerned. Several letters each dealing with one subject would bring better results. Some Good Rules.—In writing the personal busi- ness letter, the same general rules apply as for corre- spondence handled by any business firm. We recom- mend the individual to read carefully the following instructions pertaining to the form of correspondencePERSONAL BUSINESS LETTERS 103 t used in one of the departments of the Federal Government: Spacing.—All letters will be double spaced except for quotations, which will be single spaced. Neatness.—No soiled or rubbed letter will be signed, nor any letter in which corrections are carelessly made. Margins.—Letters of not less than one full page should have a margin approximately one inch at each side of the page. When a letter occupies less than one full page, the margins should be such as to give it a symmetrical appearance. Numbering and initialing pages.—The pages of all letters and documents, except those of only one page, will be numbered at the bottom and initialed at the top on the left side, triple spaced above the body of the letter. Date.—The date should be half an inch below the lowest printed line on the letter-head. The month should not be abbreviated. Figures alone should be used, as—March 30. Salutation.—"Dear Sir" should ordinarily be used unless the letter has a more intimate form. "Sir" is used only in very formal letters. Titles should be written out. Language—brevity.—Use direct clear-cut language. Avoid odd or lengthy words when shorter, simpler ones will express the idea. Avoid laborious arrangements which might well be expressed in half the space. Very few letters need be longer than one page. Be concise but not curt. Avoid preambles.—Never use the substance of the letter received as a preamble to the reply. For acknowl- edgments or replies the initial sentence should usually be in this form—"Your letter of March 30 is received." Courtesy of diction.—The phrase "you will" shouldio4 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING not be used in giving orders or instructions. It is peremptory without adding force and a friendlier tone is more courteous and fully as effective. Punctuation.—It should be borne in mind that the purpose of punctuation is a clear understanding of the text by the reader. Too little punctuation is almost as bad as too much. Promises.—When a promise is made do not use such indefinite phrases as "within a few days," "before long." Specify the date, or when that is impossible give the approximate date, as "not later than-."VI BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE TO-DAY a large part of the business of the world is conducted by correspondence. Therefore the importance of the business letter can hardly be overestimated. As a matter of fact, it is usually un- derestimated. We have discussed, somewhat in detail, the business letter written by the individual to another individual or firm, and now come to the other type of business letter, which probably comprises the bulk of all matter carried in the mails,—the business letter written to the public by a firm, club organization, or by the Federal, State and local government. Of these letters there are many kinds; the sales letter, the follow-up letter, credit and collection letters, reply letters, official letters, letters of information, circular and form letters. Whole books have been devoted to the subject of how to write the commercial letter. Here we shall attempt to give only some of the salient points to be considered. The same general advice as to form given at the close of the preceding chapter applies here. Letter-heads.—Letters by business men for busi- ness purposes should be written on standard business stationery with an appropriate business letter-head. To the selection of the paper and the style of the letter- head careful thought should be given. 105106 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING The letter-head that sprawls across the top of the page and straggles down the sides is a form of garish advertising in questionable taste; it is no longer "good form." This desire to impress too often impresses unfavor- ably. Therefore a conservative letter-head is recom- mended. In studying letter-heads used by the various Departments of the Government, high officials, large corporations, civic institutions, philanthropic and chari- table organizations, clubs and societies, we have been impressed with the general conservatism displayed. Here are a few examples: THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE WASHINGTON In the above the words are engraved in blue on a fine grade of white paper. The seal of the Department is embossed in the upper left-hand corner. Where a particular bureau or section is writing, the letter-head may read as below: UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE OFFICE OF DIRECTOR OF EXTENSION WORK WASHINGTON MOTION PICTURES Two other official letter-heads which manage to con- vey a good deal of specific information, without the appearance of crowding, follow: THE UNIVERSITYIOF THE STATE OF NEW YORK THE STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ALBANY VISUAL INSTRUCTION DIVISION ALFRED W. ABRAMS. CHIKPBUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE 107 BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY OF NEW "YORK OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF LECTURES 157 EAST 67TH STREET ERNEST R. CRANDALL DIRECTOR OF LECTURES WENDELL M. THOMAS .ASSISTANT DIRECTOR Examples of simplicity in style are afforded by the following from large corporations: EASTMAN KODAK COMPANY ROCHESTER, N. Y. GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY RESEARCH LABORATORY SCHENECTADY, N. Y. Where heads of different departments conduct con- siderable correspondence, the office is noted on the letter- head, usually in the lower left-hand corner, reserving the lower right-hand corner for the date line. Large business houses use such expressions as "Office of the Secretary," "Office of the Treasurer/' "Office of the General Manager/' "Auditing Department/' etc. The old days of garish letter-heads, carrying adver- tising matter or cumbered with the names of many officers, have passed. The simpler the form, the better and more lasting. The examples given above, which might be extended indefinitely, are inserted only as suggestions to be studied rather than followed, neces-108 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING sarily. Having studied them, do not copy slavishly but select a letter-head equally distinctive, one that is appropriate and in keeping with the nature of your busi-* ness,—one that will wear well and carry a good impres- sion to the stranger who may never see you face to face. Business Forms.—With the letters of well-known business firms and organizations before us, let us glance a moment at some of the forms used. Replying to letter of inquiry Dear Madam : In reply to your letter of March 13, we regret it if not possible to give you detailed information on the^ subject of your inquiry. However—, etc., etc. We trust the somewhat meager information we hav^ been able to furnish may be of some assistance to yotk With best wishes, Yours very truly, Eastman Kodak Company, (Signature) .............. Sales Manager. - A letter with a slightly different opening and clos-» ing reads: My dear Mr. Black : •4 We have your letter of January 4th in regard to —^ We will be glad to advise with you further, etc. | Yours very truly, (Signature) ................. | Engineer, Research Laboratory. jBUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE 109 The name of the firm is frequently used in the formal closing, sometimes above the name of the individual and sometimes below it. Here are two other forms in use by business concerns: Very truly yours, (Written Signature) Don Carlos Ellis, Secretary, National Non-theatrical Motion Pictures. In the second example the name of the firm is used on the line above the written signature: Yours very truly, National Auto Corporation, (Written Signature) L. L. Mann, Secretary-T reasurer. (Typed) L. L. Mann MMT Typewritten Signatures.—In practically all busi- ness letters to-day the signature is both written and typed. Sometimes the typed signature comes first, as: Yours very truly, H. K. House, Contract Service Dept., (Written Signature) ................. The more common form is to type the name beneath the written signature instead of above it. Never use a typewritten signature alone. Every letter should be signed in ink by the person writing orIio ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING dictating it. In all business letters where a letter is dictated, it is customary for the stenographer to type the initials of the person dictating, and her own initials in the lower left-hand corner. In some corporations the custom is for the initials to appear only on the carbon copy kept in the reference files. .This gives the original a neater appearance. In some firms where the heads are too busy to read over all the letters, a postscript is used, saying, "Dic- tated but not read." This adds nothing to the value of the letter, and is apt to impress the reader unfavor- ably—it makes him feel so unimportant! Yet it is used as a sort of protection against error. At times it is necessary and unavoidable; but in many offices it is overworked. Foreign Correspondence,—Many business firms offend in letters sent abroad through ignorance of the customs of the country. In a recent announcement from the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce we read: "It is safe to say that relatively few persons, ad- dressing correspondents in Great Britain and certain British colonies and possessions, use 'Mr./ 'Esq.' and 'Messrs.' in the way prescribed by custom in those countries. "It is not easy to explain when to use 'Mr.' and when 'Esq./ but as a general rule 'Esq.' is used in cor- respondence with individuals of a certain social or busi- ness standing and with the heads and important officials of a concern. The title 'Mr/ is used in addressing tradesmen or subordinates. One must therefore be very careful in writing to a banker or an officer of a foreign concern to address him as 'Esq.' and not a$ 'Mr.'BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE hi "The title 'Messrs.' is used before the names of all companies and even in the case of banks—when the names of individuals appear in the corporate name— and this title should never be omitted, whether one is addressing a firm or mentioning a firm in the text of the correspondence. "American and English usages differ somewhat in regard to the salutation. The term 'Dear Sirs' is pre- ferred abroad to the term 'Gentlemen.' The compli- mentary close should be: 'We are, dear Sirs, yours faithfully/ " In letters from the United States to South America, blunders are so frequent as to be habitual. The trouble is that we are so cocksure of ourselves (apparently) we do not take the trouble to learn our neighbor's point of view. Every writer on South American topics notes this fact with surprise and pain. Stamping Signatures.—Never rubber-stamp the signature on a letter. If routine letters are too numer- ous for the head of the firm to sign, a clerk, whose handwriting is similar to his, should be delegated to sign his name in ink. The only case where a rubber stamped signature is justified is in signing multigraphed or form letters. The personal signature isn't merely a matter of good taste, it is good business. The per- sonal touch in business is coming more and more to the front, and is proving more and more valuable. Physical Form of Letters.—Too much attention cannot be paid to the form and appearance of the busi- ness letter. Independent of its message it can be made or marred by its spacing, typing and paragraphing. In typing letters (and all business letters should be typed) it is customary to double-space letters that are very short and will occupy a page or less. A longer letterii2 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING is single spaced, with a double-space left between para- graphs to set them off, and make the letter more easily read. Each paragraph should contain a single thought. In advertising, in sales letters, and in business correspond- ence generally, the tendency is toward short paragraphs, and the omission of all extraneous matter. The Sales Letter.—The sales letter is perhaps the most important of all business letters. To write a sales letter that brings in business is a career in itself, and the science of selling can not be taught in a few pages, or even between the covers of a book. Big advertising firms have experts in charge of their correspondence. Although these experts may have gotten valuable sug- gestions from books on salesmanship, they have learned through experience and by being ever alert and on the job. Some "correspondents" (this being the official title given to those whose duty is to write letters to agents and customers for their firm) make a point of keeping a note-book or card index files, in which they keep all the snappy expressions, catch phrases, clever or artistic expressions they hear or read and which may prove of use. It is a good practice, as the average memory is most unreliable. A good rule in regard to the sales letter is to keep the letters you receive that impress you, and analyze them to discover why they make an appeal. From a study of numerous sales letters we have come to the following conclusions: (I) the letter that catches and holds our attention is brief and to the point; (2) it gives a sound and logical reason why it would be to our advantage to purchase that particular object; and (3) it gives reasons why we should act within a definite period of time, and thus makes us decide to keep theBUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE 113 letter and think the proposition over, instead of throw- ing it at once into the waste basket. The most irritating of all letters is the one that leaves unanswered all the questions the reader is mentally asking. In writing any kind of business letter put yourself in the reader's place and write the kind of letter that would interest you and hold your attention; or take the person of your acquaintance whom it would be most difficult to interest and write your sales letter presumably to him. Give the letter a personal tone if possible. Don't address some mythical person, but make the reader feel that you are interested in him and in his needs. Don't deal in generalities; be as specific as possible. Don't deal in superlatives. No one will believe you. Stick to facts. Even if you think you have "the finest product on the market," the mere statement will not convince the skeptical reader who may have received dozens of other letters containing the same statement. If you think you have the best, tell some of the reasons why you think it to be so, and let the reader draw his own conclusions. In the telling be careful to say noth- ing derogatory to any competitor. "Knocking" a rival firm merely arouses suspicion against your product. The reader of your knocking letter may remember the old saying, "Anything that is good enough to knock must be pretty good," and be led to investigate and perhaps purchase the rival product. Make your prod- uct appear so worth while that it will be bought at your price. Without running down your competitor, you may state in what essentials your product excels. "Honest Advertising" is a slogan that is sweeping the country. The good-will of one's customers has a highii4 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING financial rating and can only be secured by dealing fairly, squarely, honestly and openly with them. If you are offering special rates say so, but don't say it unless it is a special offer, for you are apt to be found out and lose the confidence of a possible client. Satisfied customers are the best assets of any business concern. Probably half the business of the world is conducted through correspondence. This correspond- ence requires thought and care and brains. There is much being written about the psychology of business. In writing a business letter it is well to study or at least give thought to the nature of the firm or locality to which the letter is to be sent A sales letter written to persons in the far West may not be appropriate for those living in the South. In other words, don't try to sell luxuries to the farmers in the South, when the cotton crop has been a failure, or to the Western farmers when wheat is selling at a dollar a bushel. The sales letter requires that the writer thereof be alert and alive to every situation. Form and Circular Letters.—The efficient sales letter is personal and individual. While form and cir- cular letters have their uses, they have been greatly abused. The form letter has been so greatly overdone that a comparative few reach the persons to whom they are addressed. Exact statistics in regard to the value of form let- ters, circular letters, and follow-up letters are not easily obtained, though some business concerns keep elaborate check-up accounts, and are convinced, in their own minds, that the money so spent is well invested. Others are sent broadcast, on the assumption that from one to five per cent will respond.BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE 115 Such letters are necessarily impersonal, but much of what has been said regarding the sales letter applies here. The circular letter is in the nature of a general ad- vertisement. As a general rule, it should be brief and make one specific point. One page is more apt to be read than two, and it is what is actually read that counts. The beautiful three-page story is speedily con- signed to the waste basket, while a half-page letter has a chance of being read—especially if it starts off with snap. Inclosing Printed Matter.—The printed circular is not to be confused with the circular letter, though it is sometimes a first cousin to the latter. The printed circular containing additional information is often in- closed with the circular letter, or with the sales letter or follow-up letter. It should contain essential facts in a concise, easily accessible form, but without flam- boyant style or superlatives. In inclosing a printed cir- cular or catalogue, it is good business to mark special paragraphs or sections in which the reader may be spe- cially interested. For example, if a catalogue of avail- able educational films is sent to ministers, in a personal letter call special attention to the religious films, and mark this section in the catalogue. If the catalogue is mailed to teachers, mark the section containing peda- gogical films, or else call attention to the section in the letter with some such phrase as, "You will probably be especially interested in the films listed on page 16 in the catalogue, being sent you under separate cover." Do not inclose more than two pieces of printed matter with one letter. One piece is better. Follow-up Letters.—Many firms have an elaborate system of follow-up letters. Their principle is to maken6 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING one telling point at a time, letting each point sink home before making the next one. The system seems to have proved profitable, and the theory is plausible. A series of letters often produce replies, where the first letter is passed by in silence. The follow-up letter is one of a series of sales let- ters. It should invite correspondence and make it easy for the reader and possible client to secure additional information. For this reason, an addressed postal for reply, or addressed envelope is usually inclosed. The follow-up letter when used consistently (some firms send out from twelve to twenty follow-ups) in- variably has one of two effects on the recipient. It irritates him and makes him vow he will never patronize that firm, or else the very persistence of the firm ex- cites a certain admiration and respect, or arouses an interest which makes of the recipient a purchaser. The result is a gamble, but the majority of firms using the follow-up system seem to have found it profitable. "We have found," said one business man, "that where the first letter may go unread, the second arouses a slight interest, the third catches the attention, the fourth sets the reader thinking, and the fifth brings results. Our experience has been that persistence wins and that success comes by hammering away." The Form Letter.—The form letter is different from the circular letter or follow-up letter in that it is not usually a part of a direct sales campaign, but is an answer to letters from correspondents. So many people write asking the same kind of information, that the person dictating the replies sooner or later decides to compose a letter which will cover all inquiries of the same nature. He does not stop with one form letter. There is a series, marked Form A, B, C, D, etc.BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE 117 Oftentimes the secretary, in glancing over a letter, sees at once which form letter will answer the questions asked, and makes a memorandum accordingly. The form letter is dispatched, and the busy head of the office is saved the worry of attending to this routine matter. The form letter makes for efficiency. It should be composed with greatest care, and should never be used when it does not cover all the points in the letter of inquiry. In such cases individual letters should be written. Occasionally form paragraphs may be inserted in the body of a letter, thus saving much time. The Departments of the United States Government, where requests for information are constantly being received, makes extensive use of form letters, and rightly so, as the form letter is a great economy, and in many instances serves the purpose as well as a spe- cially dictated letter. Publishing companies are among the many business concerns making wide use of form letters. A manu- script reader connected with a well-known magazine told the writer that all manuscripts were graded, A, B, C, D, E, etc., and one form letter went to those graded E, another to those graded D, a third to those graded C; while the A and B manuscripts went to the editor- in-chief and if rejected were returned with a personal letter from the editor. This bit of information may be interesting to collectors of rejection slips. Complete records are usually kept of all form letters and follow-up letters sent out. Many firms keep a card index of their mailing list, and make notations on the cards. Replies.—It is good business to answer promptly all letters received, even when a reply is not required.ii8 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Many high-class firms make this a rule. A form letter or a printed card to the effect that "your order has been received and is being given attention" serves as suf- ficient acknowledgment. The receipt of money in any form should always be acknowledged promptly. All replies should be brief and to the point, unless the nature of the inquiry de- mands a detailed explanation. All letters of complaint should be answered courte- ously. The manner in which a complaint is acknowl- edged can make a friend or an enemy of the person writing. If objections are met frankly, if the firm is in error and acknowledges it promptly, the complain- ant is usually appeased. When the complainant is in the wrong, the reply may require considerable tact. Letters of Apology.—It is equally difficult to write a letter of apology gracefully. This opening paragraph is one of the ablest that has come to our attention: Dear Mr. Blanck : Your letter of June 10 is received. I am afraid the earlier part of my previous letter was overharsh. Your reply is of the kind that turneth away wrath, and if I may be allowed to say so, certainly shows a fine spirit. Such an opening immediately reestablishes the entente cordiale. It is a most graceful apology and the essence of tact. Although it is not good business to open a letter with an apology, if an apology is in order make it in as few words as possible, and proceed at once to the realBUSINESS. CORRESPONDENCE 119 business of the letter. The following is an instance in point: June 30, 19— Dear Mr. Brown : Please accept apologies for the delay which has taken place in replying to your letter of May 10. I returned to Washington at the end of last week from an extended Western trip, to find my desk piled high with material requiring immediate attention. When there has been an unavoidable delay in the answering of a business letter, some explanation is in order. One should avoid the necessity of apologies. Letters of Refusal.—Another difficult letter to write is the polite letter of refusal. Because of its difficulty, such letters are sometimes entirely ignored on the plea that "the less said the better." But to keep a person in suspense is far more unkind than a definite refusal. The following answer to an application for a posi- tion is very definite but is at the same time considerate. Mr. Martin F. Smith, New York City. Dear Sir: Your letter of May 2 is received. The positions in this office have not yet been filled, but an offer has been made for one of them, and we have two men under consideration for the others. The chances are, I think, that one of these men will be secured. I am sorry that it does not look as though there would be an opening for you here. Very truly yours,120 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Requests of any kind sent to the Federal Govern- ment invariably receive a courteous answer, even though the reply is in the negative,—an example that business organizations might follow with profit. The following letter, though a definite refusal, leaves the recipient feeling kindly towards the writer: Dear Sir: Your letter of April 2 is received. I am very sorry to say that the Forest Service has no picture of a cedar tree suitable for your purpose that we could send you. Possibly you could buy a photographic print of a good specimen of red cedar (Junipens Virginia) which, I presume, is the tree you have in mind, by writing to the Forest School, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. I wish I could make some suggestion more likely to be helpful. Very truly yours, There are several points worth noting in this letter. The writer might easily have said, "We are sorry but we have not what you want," and have stopped there, but he didn't. He shows by his reply that he has given the letter careful attention. He makes a practical sug- gestion, gives the inquirer definite information as to what to ask for and where to get it. The closing sen- tence is the kind that leaves a pleasant taste—"I wish I could make some suggestion more likely to be help- ful." It shows interest and a desire to be of as- sistance. Many business organizations have learned that this spirit of service pays. Answering Letters of Complaint.—One business firm has as its motto: "Our patrons are always right";BUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE 121 another "Our motto is service." The public-be-pleased policy of a large New York concern, considered revo- lutionary when inaugurated, has been almost univer- sally adopted because it has been found to pay. This same policy has been found particularly profitable in the answering of letters of complaint. In many large and successful houses, the complaint department is one of the most important in the entire establishment. Many complaining letters are so trivial as to be absurd. It is unfortunately a trait of human nature to find fault over trifles. Other complaints are due to the failure of the customers themselves to give correct addresses, or the right shipping instructions, or write their names legibly, or any one of a hundred other lapses which rise up daily to vex and perplex the busy shipping department. But the complaint desk must allow for this human equation, and must proceed on the motto above men- tioned, "Our patrons are always right." When the patron is clearly wrong, he (or she) must be told so in as tactful a manner as possible. The letter should end with an expression of regret that the error or delay occurred. Every one has probably heard of the famous letter of complaint, in which the client receiving a box of machinery wrote to the firm a scathing letter for send- ing the machinery with one of the essential parts miss- ing. The letter was a lengthy one of several pages and filled with bitter denunciations. At the close there was a postscript reading, "We have just found the missing part." The original story did not add that a polite letter was sent in answer, saying—"We have received your letter and are very much pleased that you found the222 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING missing part," though the temptation to write a scorch- ing letter in reply was hard to resist, unless the firm's letter-writer had a sense of humor. If you must be angry, do not be angry on paper. Politeness pays. This does not mean that there are not times when one should not be firm. It is one thing to be polite, and another thing to let your corre- spondent gain an unfair advantage. Collection Letters.—A combination of firmness and politeness is essential in collection letters. The writing of the collection letter, like the writing of the sales letter, is a science in itself. As each case requires individual attention, examples of collection letters that have proved successful would not prove of sufficient benefit to justify their inclusion here. The subject is too broad to attempt a brief analysis. Special books have been written on the subject, and a successful col- lection man usually commands a good salary. Not one, but several kindly reminders should be given the delinquent, followed by a sterner reminder before the account is turned over to an attorney for collection. Do not resort to the "big stick" until necessary; but there are some persons who respond to no other method. Letters Refusing Credit.—Letters refusing credit also require tact and consideration. Even when the person refused credit would undoubtedly prove to be a liability instead of an asset on your books, avoid in- curring his ill-will, as he may harm your firm by malicious or unkind remarks. This chapter is not written with the desire to tell a business firm how to write its letters, but is included because no book on correspondence would be complete without some consideration of that vast bulk of letters sent out daily to buyers and sellers. We have refrainedBUSINESS CORRESPONDENCE 123 from quoting form letters, contenting ourselves with a few extracts and general observations. After perusal of numerous letters of distinct merit, we have found them so applicable solely to individual cases as to be practically valueless here. Conciseness, politeness, with a human, kindly, per- sonal note, where possible, should form the basis of every business letter. Never deal in superlatives; never knock the other fellow; never make promises you can't keep; never create a demand you can not supply. Keep faith with the public.VII WHAT TO SAY, AND WHAT NOT TO SAY IN both business and social correspondence what not to write is often as important as what to write. There are many letters which should never be written, many expressions which should never be used, many statements which should never be made. The letter filled with misstatements and unbelievable superlatives, the letter that is overboastful, that runs down a competitor, that contains derogatory statements, that is curt, short, surly, discourteous, or that is written in anger or under the stress of any very strong emotion, should never be sent. If such letters are ever written their place is in the waste basket of the writer. Style in Letters.—In the business, as in the social letter, principles of grammar and composition as well as certain conventional requirements as to form should be observed. Many stock expressions in common use are neither good English nor in good taste and should therefore be avoided. An eminent English authority says: "Ability to write a clear, terse, courteous, busi- ness letter is a test of one's training in the use of Eng- lish." The choice of the right word to express the exact shade of meaning is highly important in the business letter, particularly in the letter involving governmental policies or legal matters. The letter should be worded so carefully that there is no possibility of misunder- 124WHAT TO SAY 125 standing. To achieve this requires care, thought, a good vocabulary, a knowledge of grammar and com- position—in fact, a mastery of English. Some Don'ts.—Although psychologists inform us that we should not say "don't/' a summary of the things to avoid in letter writing may prove helpful at this point, so we shall have recourse to the time-hon- ored "don't" and hope the psychologists will forgive us, as the rest of this volume is devoted to what to do rather than what not to do. In both business and social letters, then,— Don't use superlatives. Don't make misstatements. Don't write when angry. Don't be curt, vindictive, rude or discourteous. It does not pay. Don't sacrifice clearness for brevity, and don't be brief to the point of brusqueness. Don't use stock phrases and stereotyped expressions. Don't abbreviate dates. Write plainly,—thus, May '5> 1923- Don't abbreviate addresses. In addressing the en- velope always spell out the State in full. Don't sign your name in pencil. Use ink, and (if the letter is typewritten) type your name beneath the written signature. Never use a typewritten signa- ture alone. This is frequently done but is bad form. Don't write on both sides of business stationery. Don't use postscripts. Don't send out any letter which has unsightly cor- rections, erasures, lacks sufficient margin, or is crowded at the bottom of the page. It is better to take time to retype the letter so that it has a neat, attractive, busi- ness-like appearance.126 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Don't use cheap, lined, perfumed, or unusual sta- tionery. Don't boast. Stick to facts. Don't use superfluous words. Of two words mean- ing the same thing, use the shorter. Don't use long paragraphs. Shorter paragraphs are more easily read. Don't write dunning letters on post cards. We be- lieve there is a law against this. Don't fail to be polite, even though stern measures may be required. Some Things to Do.—To sum up a few things which should be done without fail, we would set down the following: Be brief, accurate, clear, courteous, consistent, sincere. Spell words correctly. Use a dictionary if neces- sary, and be particularly careful in the spelling of proper names. To misspell the name of the person addressed is not only bad manners but bad business. Make and keep a carbon copy of all business letters. Acknowledge at once receipt of money, or order for goods. Answer all letters promptly. Points for the Social Letter.—In the social letter there is more latitude. There are, however, a few things which are never done, and other things which must be done without fail. Always acknowledge every invitation promptly. Always use the third person in acknowledging the formal invitation and follow the form of the invitation received both in wording and spacing. Always use high-grade stationery. All formal social correspondence should be written by hand. ForWHAT TO SAY 127 the very informal social correspondence the single sheets with address printed or engraved at the top and typewriter may be used. Always write legibly, taking special pains with the signature, which so often is the most illegible part of the letter. Always acknowledge with a sincere, cordial note all gifts; this includes gifts to the bridal couple, Christmas gifts, birthday gifts, gifts to the new baby, flowers sent when there is an illness, or bereavement in the family. Always write a letter of thanks to one who has en- tertained you over night. It is also customary for visitors to write letters of thanks to all who have enter- tained them during their visit to another city. When folio letter paper is used, write on consecu- tive pages, first, second, third, and fourth, unless the letter requires only two pages,—then use the first and third. Do not use the first and fourth, second and third, nor first, third, second and fourth. The last named order may be more convenient to the writer, but the consecutive order is more convenient to the reader, who should be given first consideration. Write the kind of friendly, social letter you would like to receive. Write the most legible hand you can, not the one that looks artistic and is almost undecipherable. Always keep a friendly letter until it is answered, and make a point of really answering it. Read the letter over just before answering it, comment on the things mentioned, and reply to all questions asked. How often have we heard parents say of absent chil- dren, "Yes, we hear from them, but they never answer;128 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING our letters. We wonder sometimes if they really read them." Never write a bitter, sarcastic, nagging, scolding letter. The bitter letter engenders bitterness; the sar- castic letter hurts, sometimes very deeply; the nagging letter lowers the morale of the receiver and like the scolding letter does no good and may do much harm. Nagging letters from home have seriously hindered many a business man's efficiency. The man or woman who receives scolding, unsympathetic, letters from those from whom he or she has a right to expect sym- pathetic and encouraging letters suffers a severe handicap. The friendly letter may prove a powerful weapon. A few words of cheer and encouragement from a loved one; a hearty word of greeting from an absent friend; a letter of commendation to one in public office for an act requiring courage, may start a whole day right and give renewed strength for fighting the bat- tles ahead. A single letter has been known to make or mar a life, to change the destinies of a nation. Some letters are as dangerous as dynamite. The letter that has done the most harm in the world is perhaps the love-letter which falls into the hands of persons for whom it is not intended. We therefore suggest that in penning a love-letter, the possibility of its falling into the hands of your worst enemy be always lcept in mind. The time-honored advice to writers of love-letters is—write nothing you would fear to see in print. After all, it's the little things that count in letters, as in life. Be thoughtful, kind, considerate. Don't begin your letters with apologies for notWHAT TO SAY 12$ having written sooner. Elaborate apologies irritate, for every one knows that we find the time to do the things we want to do the most. Better to say, "I have thought of you many, many times these busy days and weeks," than to say, "I have been so very busy I haven't had a moment to write." The former is flat- tering, the latter isn't. Don't fill your letter with what you have been doing, unless you are certain that the person receiving the letter will be interested. Parents, brothers, sisters, lovers are interested in your comings and goings, and friends may be. Before beginning to write, think of the person's likes and dislikes, and write what he wants, to hear, rather than what you want to tell him. How few of us do that! The old copy-books told us never to begin a letter with "I." That rule no longer holds good, but it is certainly in very poor taste to begin every paragraph with "I," or to have an over-abundance of "Fs" scat- tered throughout the letter. Generally speaking, there should be more "you's" than "Fs" in both the business: and social letter. Don't take people to task for not writing to you. If you have missed their letters, tell them so frankly. Speak of the pleasure their letters give, of how much you enjoy them, how you miss them when you expect them and they fail to arrive. Such a letter from you will be far more likely to bring a prompt answer than a letter of complaint. Make your letter as personal and human as possible. At best there is something cold and impersonal about a letter. There are many things one should not say in a letter that one may say in person. Oftentimes the tones of the voice lend warmth and kindness andI30 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING geniality to that which, when written, sounds unkind, even cruel. What may sound funny, witty or facetious when said lightly or jestingly, may hurt deeply when we read it. Therefore, avoid the double meaning. If what you have written may, by a different inflection of the voice, be given another meaning, change the wording so that the meaning will be clear. Make it a rule to read every letter before it is sealed and mailed. If this rule became universal, many letters which now burden the mails would never be sent at all, and others would be rewritten. Do not be "stingy" with your letters. If you have good friends living across the continent from you, do not wait for letters from them. Send them a line whenever the spirit prompts you. If you have run down to Atlantic City for a few days, take time to tell them so. If anything out of the ordinary has transpired, such as removing your residence from one part of town to another, advise them of the fact. How often do we hear the remark, "I never know what the Blanks are doing unless I chance to see them." Another form of stinginess is from the "out of sight out of mind" folks. I know a girl who has been study- ing music in New York and while there lives with near relatives. She seems devoted to them and they to her; but when she goes to her Western home for a summer vacation, they may not receive a line from her except one announcing her safe arrival there. She is always "too busy." We are a restless, hurrying, careless people, and nowhere is this more apparent than in our correspond- ence. Let us not forget the art of taking pains. Let us project ourselves, as it were, into the inner circle of the friend or acquaintance to whom we areWHAT TO SAY writing. What are his interests? Have we seen or done anything that would interest him? If he were with us in person, what should we talk to him about? A few simple interrogations to ourselves such as these, as we sit down and "take our pen in hand," will mark the difference between a real letter and a sheet filled up with words.VIII POINTS IN GOOD ENGLISH 70RTUNE has been lost because of a misplaced comma, and a good position because of a mis- spelled word. Many large firms require applicants for positions to apply by letter, and are guided in their decisions by the neatness, correctness and general appearance of the let- ter, as well as by its contents. Other things being equal, the place goes to the person most careful in small details. In writing letters, attention should be paid to style, grammatical construction, and punctuation. If we are to practice the art of letter writing, a knowledge of good English is essential. There are so many errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation made by letter writers who should, and often do, know better, that before leaving this subject let us stop and consider a few of the most common faults. Slang.—There is the question of slang. Is its use permissible in letters? "No one should use slang until after he is thirty/' says one writer, and adds, "Though this is the rule, the practice is that all young people use slang until thirty; after that they usually drop it for a more re- spectable form of expression/' To use slang indicates that one is lazy, careless, and possesses a limited vocab-POINTS IN GOOD ENGLISH 133 ulary. Slang has no place in a letter. If it is used only when nothing else expresses the meaning as clearly —the excuse usually given—it will be used rarely. Colloquial expressions, on the other hand, which are generally understood, are frequently used by the best writers in informal letter writing, and give the letters a conversational tone. Foreign words and phrases should also be used with discretion, and only in informal correspondence with those who will understand them. Scientific, legal and technical terms should be avoided when writing to those outside the profession. It is even more important in writing than in con- versation, to use simple and specific terms rather than general terms. Choice of Words.—The use of the right word to express the exact shade of meaning is important in letter writing. The English language is rich in words of varying shades of meaning. The misuse of words is a common failing. It is surprising how frequently formerly and formally are misused, for example, due to carelessness because of the similarity of sound. Affect and effect are often confused. To affect means to move or be acted upon or to influence, while to effect means to bring about, to accomplish. Often we are in doubt when to use further and when farther. Farther usually refers literally to distance, while further is used figuratively. Whole volumes have been written on the subject of misused words. We mention only a few to show that eternal vigilance is required in the mastery of correct English. Verbs.—Every sentence should contain a verb. This is one of the elemental rules of grammar, yet134 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING many writers omit the verbs in sentence after sentence. The verb should be near the subject, and should agree with it in number. Plural nouns require plural verbs. When the subject is separated from the verb and the verb from the subject, one is apt to forget the real subject and use the wrong form of the verb. Many persons are confused in regard to the use of verbs with collective nouns. Use a singular verb when you are thinking of the group as a unit, and a plural verb when you are thinking of the individuals forming the group. ; "Use the tense of the verb that Accurately expresses the time of action," says the Manual of Good English. Letter writers too frequently use the future tense in- stead of the present. "I am pleased to accept your kind invitation," is correct; "I shall be pleased," is incorrect. The correct use of shall and will puzzles even the best writers. The confusion is due largely to the shades of meaning involved. The greatest error is using will for shall in the first person future. Shall should be used far more often than it is. In referring to the future, always use shall after I and we; and will with you or he. In asking a question use shall not only in the first person but also in the second and third when its use is expected in the answer, as, "Shall you go?" "Yes, I shall go." Many writers use will on all occasions. The major- ity of errors prevalent in letters is to misuse will for shall in the first person future and in asking questions. The following sentences are correct: "I shall write to-day." "Shall you write to-day?" "He will write to-morrow." "We shall write to-morrow." "They will write to-day." If, however, you are not making a mere statementPOINTS IN GOOD ENGLISH 135 but a positive promise the correct form would be: "I will write to-day" (meaning that nothing shall pre- vent me). "He shall write to-day" (meaning that you will make him write to-day if necessary). This is where the confusion arises. First know what you intend to say, be clear in your own mind as to your meaning, then take care to use the correct form to express it. Can and may are frequently misused. May and might express permission, while can and could express ability. A scholar asked his teacher—"Can I go home?" and the teacher answered, "You can} but you may not." Lie and lay are also frequently confused. To lie signifies a state; to lay is active and denotes an action on an object. We lie down in order to rest, but we lay a book on the table, where another book already lies. Sit and set are similarly misused. We sit down but we set a vase of flowers on the table. Adjectives.—Many forceful writers use few ad- jectives but many verbs. The overuse of adjectives is a fault common especially to young letter writers who are "just wild" or "simply crazy" about things that are "simply adorable," "perfectly sweet," "awfully nice," and "too darling for words!" Be chary in the use of adjectives. It is better to use too few than too many. When using adjectives be sure to use the correct form. When comparing two objects use the comparative form of the adjective and the superlative when three or more are meant, as, "He is older than I, and is the tallest boy in our crowd." Adjectives are usually placed before the noun or pronoun they modify. Some adjectives can not be136 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING compared, such as round, square, right, unique, perfect, alone. A ball may be more nearly round than another, but not rounder„ Adverbs.—Adverbs have two uses, they modify a verb, adjective or another adverb, and they also con- nect. They should be placed as near the words they modify as possible. Double comparisons and double negatives are incor- rect. Adverbs are used to answer the questions, how, when, where, why, how long, but never how many. Adverbs are frequently wrongly used for adjectives to express the condition of the subject. "She looks sad" (not sadly), but "she sings sweetly" for sweetly expresses the manner of the action and not the con- dition of the subject. "Candy is sweet"; the adjective here shows the condition of the subject. Pronouns.—How often one hears "It's me," "This is him." And as we speak so do we write. "It is I" and "This is he?' are correct. The objective forms of the pronouns are me, us, him, her, them, and whom, and are used after prepositions and as objects following transitive verbs. Remember that pronouns must agree with their ante- cedents in person, number and gender, though not in case. When a person writes a letter, he (not they) should write good English. The use of the plural for the singular is to be avoided. The following is cor- rect: "None (literally no one) wrote his parents." Prepositions.—The use of the correct preposition gives many writers trouble. Only by care, study and practice is this knowledge acquired* A preposition shows the relation of its object to some preceding word to which that object refers. Do not omit a preposition unless the sense fully permits itPOINTS IN GOOD ENGLISH 137 Place the preposition immediately before the word used with it. Probably every one has heard the paradoxical remark, "A preposition is a bad word to end a sentence with" Do not use one preposition when two are needed. Here are a few suggestions that may prove helpful in selecting the correct preposition. Use between when speaking of two objects and among when speaking of three or more. Use in when speaking of a large city. "While in New York he stopped at the May fair Inn." Use by to indicate the actor and with to indicate the instrument, as: "He was hit with a stone, by a boy." Use the preposition that corresponds with the prefix of a word. De means from, therefore with such words as derive, deduct, we use from. Com means with, so we compare one object with another. One person is married to or with another, the latter preposition being popular to-day on wedding announce- ments. The writer should guard against omitting preposi- tions, making one do the duty of two, and should not end a sentence with a preposition. The awkward use of prepositions can be avoided by entirely recasting the sentence. Use of Hyphens.—The correct use of words is important; but there are other points of which the letter writer should be reminded, such as paragraphs and punctuation, capitals, abbreviations. The hyphen, for example, causes much confusion. An excellent general rule is to omit the hyphen unless clearness demands it. It is better to write compound words frequently used together as one word and those less frequently as two words, as electric light, airship*138 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING The "Government Style Book" says, "omit the hyphen In civil and military titles as attorney general, lieutenant colonel, and in such Latin forms as ex officio member, ante bellum days." The same authority says that com- pound adjectives usually take the hyphen; but do not confuse a qualifying word with a subject word, as: shoemaker, and a wooden-shoe maker. Compound nouns, however, are usually written as two words, as post office, parcel post, foster mother. Note that all right is two words. There is no such form as alright,— one of the most common mistakes of careless writers. Fractions, when spelled, usually require the hyphen for the sake of clearness, as: one-fifth, six twenty- thirds, sixty-six hundredths. Prefixes and suffixes are usually joined to a word without a hyphen, unless the prefix ends and the word begins with a vowel or the same consonant, as anti- American. The following words are among those that usage has sanctioned as a single unit: oneself, railroad, someone, semicolon, candlepower, lighthouse, workman, anybody, battleship. Use of Capitals.—Letter writers frequently use capitals with no regard for grammatical construction. It is true that we may capitalize words according to the thought of our sentences, but the best usage is to use capitals sparingly. The great fault with many writers is that they capi- talize individual words, by way of emphasis, which should not be capitalized, and fail to capitalize others. They are not consistent. They go even further and run sentences together, using dashes and commas in- stead of periods. In general, capitalize: (i) the first word of everyPOINTS IN GOOD ENGLISH 139 sentence; (2) the first word of every direct quotation; (3) the first word of every line of poetry; (4) the pronoun I and the exclamation O (but not oh); (5) proper nouns and words used as names; (6) adjectives and words derived from proper names; (7) the name of a specific individual, place or organization. For example one says: "I am going to the post office " but in referring to a specific post office as "the Washington Post Office/' capitals should be used. We write Roman coins but roman type, because in the latter case the specific force of the word has been lost. Be consistent in the use of capitals. tWhen in doubt it is usually safe to use a small letter. Paragraphs.—Many writers fail to observe para- graphs. They ramble from one subject to another in such a desultory fashion that they probably do not realize they have changed the subject until well launched upon the new topic, and then it is too late to begin the new paragraph at the proper point. Correctly speaking, "a paragraph is the complete development of a single thought." The hasty writer flits from thought to thought, then back again, develop- ing none of them. Miscellaneous and unrelated thoughts are huddled together in one long paragraph, while in the middle of the next he returns to something previously mentioned. Many letters lack this unity of thought as well as the dignity of expression consistent with the laws of gram- mar. Paragraphs should be used consistently. The tend- ency is away from involved sentences and long para- graphs. Short paragraphs are popular. They are easily read and give a pleasing, open look to the letter.140 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Proper Punctuation.—When to punctuate and when not to punctuate is a question that puzzles many letter writers. Many solve the problem by omitting punctuation entirely, which is all very well for the writer, but is confusing to the reader, who may be compelled to read a sentence or paragraph several times before the meaning is clear. That is the object of punctuation—to make the meaning clear. Children frequently omit the period or question mark at the end of sentences; but the fault is by no means confined to children. One is apt to use too little rather than too much punctuation. He becomes careless and omits question marks, commas, quotation marks and apostrophes. He very rarely uses a semicolon even when obviously required, as between coordinate clauses distinctly separate in thought, resorting to a comma or a period. The exclamation mark, "screamer" in news- paper parlance, is overdone in letters, being commonly used more than any other mark of punctuation. There are times when the comma should be used without fail, and times when it is used but should not be. A general rule is to omit the comma unless the sense of the sentence requires it. The sense of a sen- tence is often completely changed by the position of a comma. The comma is essential with a descriptive relative clause. When a clause is introduced by for, it should be separated from the rest of the sentence to prevent the reader from mistaking for for a preposi- tion. A comma is ordinarily used to separate a short direct quotation from the rest of the sentence. Writers frequently forget to use quotation marks to end a quotation. If the quotation extends through several paragraphs, the marks are used at the beginningPOINTS IN GOOD ENGLISH 141 of each paragraph and at the end of the last onlyv Quotation marks always follow other marks of punc- tuation, when the other marks belong to the quotation^ The apostrophe is used: (1) as a sign of the pos- sessive case: as, six days' time; (2) to indicate the omission of letters in contractions, as, "he doesn't care"; (3) as a sign of the plural of figures and letters,, as, "he should cross his t's and spell out all the 4's" Writers often misuse the dash, making it take the place of a comma or a period. Strictly speaking, a dashi is used only to mark an abrupt change. Abbreviations and contractions so frequently en- countered in letters denote laziness. Never use ain't. There is no such word. Cannot is preferable to can't... Don't and doesn't are frequently used and often misused. If you insist on using these forms take care to use them correctly. Don't is a contraction for do- not and should never be used with the third person singular. He don't is incorrect, as is readily seen when translated into the full form—he do not. Abbreviations should be followed by a period. When* an abbreviation ends a sentence, one period suffices. When in doubt on all such matters, it is well to con- sult the "Government Style Book" or other equally recognized authority. Figures and Numbers.-—When to use figures and when to spell them out is confusing to many. On this- point the "Government Style Book" says: Ordinarily under ten spell out, over ten use figures. If compli- cated spell, as, "five 5-cent pieces." Where any single enumeration in a group is ten or more, use all figures, as, 120 horses, 10 cows, 6 goats. If an expression contains two or more enumerations, some definite and others indefinite, spell the indefinitei42 etiquette of letter writing and put the definite in figures (unless under ten), as, "four or five thousand spent out of $6,000 appro- priated." If sums of money are used as adjectives express in figures, as, a $1,200 clerk. Use figures for all enumerations of weights and measures, for numbers referring to numbered pages, rooms, houses, etc., for dates of the month and year. Write out any number beginning a sentence, because it is impossible to capitalize figures. Write out sums of money less than a dollar, and do not use a dollar sign in referring to sums less than one dollar. Above all be consistent. Do not write ten cents in one paragraph and 10 cents in another. Decide which form you prefer, and use it exclusively throughout your letter. In Conclusion.—It is not possible, of course, to point out all the pitfalls in good English in a single brief chapter. If one's grammar is a bit uncertain, it would be wise to invest in a good school grammar, and keep it on the writing desk alongside of the dictionary. Read it through, first of all, to familiarize yourself with its contents. You will be surprised how interesting a grammar can be, and how helpful. Then mark the chapters or pages which deal with your special weak- nesses, and go after them. If, for example, you have been saying, "Between you and I," put it on your black list. If you have used "providing" for "provided" (a very common mistake), learn the difference between the two words. If you use split infinitives, study your verbs and learn why you should not separate "to" from its proper verb. If you are in the habit of saying "these kind" (for "this kind") learn why such an expression betrays you. If you misuse your adjectives for yourPOINTS IN GOOD ENGLISH 143 adverbs, or use double negatives, or say, "this one is the best," when there are only two objects compared,—hie you to a grammar. A careful regard for the niceties of speech marks the careful writer. They are just as essential as the clean collar that the careful dresser puts on in the morning before going downtown.IX CORRECT FORMS OF ADDRESS NO book on correspondence would be complete without information as to the correct form to use in addressing officials of Church, State, ambassadors and ministers from foreign countries, and members of the army and navy. Occasions arise where, in a personal or official capac- ity, we have occasion to write to some high dignitary. Here are certain forms that are usually observed. Addressing the President of the United States The President of the United States, Washington, D. C. Sir: (Formal) My dear Mr. President: (Informal) (Formal closing)—I have the honor to remain your most obedient servant. (Informal closing)—I have the honor to remain most sincerely (or respectfully) yours. Addressing a Member of the Supreme Court The Hon. William H. Taft, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 144CORRECT FORMS OF ADDRESS 145 Mr. Chief Justice, Sir, or Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Justice Taft: (Informal) (Formal closing)—I have the honor to remain your obedient servant. (Informal closing)—Believe me, most sincerely yours. Member of the Cabinet Hon. Charles E. Hughes, Secretary of State, Washington, D. C. Sir, or Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Mr. Hughes: (Informal) Senator Senator Albert B. Cummins, Washington, D. C. Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Senator Cummins: (Informal) Representative Hon. Hubert F. Fisher, House of Representatives, Washington, D. C. Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Mr. Fisher: (Informal) Governor Governor Gifford E. Pinchof, Harrisburg, Pa.146 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING His Excellency, the Governor of Pennsylvania, Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Governor Pinchot, or Dear Mr. Pinchot: (In- formal) Mayor Hon. John Brown, Mayor of Chicago, Chicago, 111. His Honor, the Mayor of Chicago, Dear Sir: (Formal) My Dear Mayor Brown: (Informal) The formal and informal closing for all of these public officials is the same: for extreme formality, "I have the honor to remain your obedient servant"; for informal closing, "Believe me, most sincerely (or, most faithfully) yours," or "Yours very sincerely/' Formality prevails in addressing members of the foreign diplomatic service. Many Americans fail to give the proper title to accredited representatives in this country. !'Ambassadors His Excellency, Mr. J. J. Jusserand, The Ambassador of the French Republic, Washington, D. C. The Belgian Ambassador, Baron de Cartier de Marchienne, Washington, D. C.CORRECT FORMS OF ADDRESS 147 His Excellency, Don Gelasio Caetani, The Royal Italian Ambassador, Washington, D. C. Mr. Masanao Hanihara, The Japanese Ambassador, Washington, D. C. All other ambassadors are addressed, His Excellency, Ambassador of-. His Excellency, -, Ambassador of -. Sir: (Formal salutation) Ministers Mr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, The Chinese Minister, Washington, D. C. The Siamese Minister, Mr. Phya Buri Navarasth, Washington, D. C. Mirza Hussein Khan Alai, The Minister of Persia, Washington, Dr C. Where the name of the person is not known, the letter would simply be addressed to "The Minister of -, Washington, D. C."■148 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING In writing to our representatives in foreign coun- tries, we would address them as follows: Hon. Frank B. Kellogg, American Ambassador to Great Britain, London, England. It might be well to mention here that we have am- bassadors to the majority of the European countries, to Brazil, Chili, Peru and Argentina among South American countries, and ministers to other countries where we are officially represented. In addressing our foreign ministers we would write: Mr. Jesse S. Cottrell, American Minister to Bolivia, La Paz, Bolivia. In formal introductions one would say, "His Ex- cellency, the Ambassador of France," or "His Excel- lency and Madame Jusserand." In referring to him or addressing him personally, "Mr. Ambassador" and "Mr. Minister" are correct forms, and are more frequently used than "Your Excellency." "Mr. Governor" and "Mr. Mayor" are also more commonly used than "Your Excellency" and "Your Honor." Church dignitaries Certain prescribed forms are used in addressing church dignitaries.* In writing to the Pope, head of the Roman Catholic Church, the usual form is: ♦Prescribed forms are strictly observed in Catholic circles. When in doubt consult the National Catholic Directory.CORRECT FORMS OF ADDRESS 149 To the Cardinal, the Secretary of State, For His Holiness, Pope Pius XI, Rome, Italy. Your Holiness: (Formal salutation) Other forms of address are : His Eminence, Cardinal William O'Connell, D.D. Boston, Mass. Your Eminence: (Formal salutation) The Most Reverend Patrick J. Hayes, D.D. Archbishop of New York, New York City. Your Grace: (Formal salutation) The Right Reverend J. L. Howard, D.D. Bishop of Kentucky, Covington, Ky. Right Reverend and Dear Bishop, or Your Lordship: (Formal closing)—I have the honor to remain your obedient and humble servant, or I beg to remain your obedient servant. The form of salutation for Catholic bishops is "Your Grace"; for English bishops, "My Lord Bishop," and for Protestant bishops in the United States, "Right Reverend and Dear Sir." Catholic priests, Protestant clergymen, and Jewish150 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING rabbis are addressed "Reverend," and, if entitled to it, "Doctor." Catholic Priest Rev. John S. Brown (D.D.) Reverend and dear Sir: (Formal) Rev. and Dear Father: (Informal) Protestant Clergyman or Jewish Rabbi Doctor John S. Brown Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Dr. Brown: (Informal) Judge Hon. Judge Brown, U. S. Circuit Court, Nashville, Tenn. Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Judge Brown: (Informal) Officer of Army or Navy It is a general rule that all officers above the grade of lieutenant should be addressed by their titles and rank. General B. H. Wells, Brigadier General, United States Army, War Department, Washington, D. C. Dear Sir: (Formal salutation)CORRECT. FORMS. OF. ADDRESS 151 Admiral R. W. Jackson, Rear Admiral, United States Navy, Navy Department, Washington, D. C. Sir: (Formal salutation) Dear Admiral Jackson: (Informal) A lieutenant is generally spoken of as Mister, but his title is also given: Mr. Cortlandt Spencer Johnson, Lieutenant Air Service, United States Army, Governors Island, N. Y. Dear Sir: (Formal) Dear Mr. Johnson: (Informal) When writing to a member of the United States Army, if you do not know where he is stationed, give the name, the rank, the regiment, and send to the Adjutant General's Office, War Department, Wash- ington, D. C. Captain John J. Smith, nth Cavalry, United States Army, Care of Adjutant General's Office, War Department, Washington, D. C. If you do not know the address of a member of the United States Navy, the letter should be addressed to Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, Washing- ton, D. C. If he is stationed with the Pacific fleet, the letter would be addressed Via Postmaster, San Francisco. If you know he is at an Asiatic station the address would read Via Postmaster, Seattle, Washington; if he152 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING is with the Atlantic fleet or at a European station, Via Postmaster, New York City, is the correct address. The more explicit the address, the better will be the mail service. The War, Navy and Post Office Depart- ments all cooperate to facilitate the delivery of mail to persons in the service of the United States, civil, mili- tary or naval. Parcels as well as letters will be for- warded without extra charge, if change of address is caused by official orders. Men and women in professional life, physicians, pro- fessors and those holding public office are addressed by their titles. The title is usually abbreviated on the envelope, but is spelled out in the heading of the letter. "Mister" is not used in connection with a title, nor is the term Esq., which is used in England far more than in this country. Dr. John J. Brown, Teachers' College, Columbia University, New York City. Dear Doctor Brown: Dr. C. H. Morgan, President of University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. John J. Brown, M.D. (or LL.D. or Ph.D.) are forms that are occasionally used. The term Doctor covers all of these but it is ambiguous, as it does not state whether John Brown is a Doctor of Divinity, Doctor of Medicine, Doctor of Law, or Doctor of Philosophy. But if these initials are used, do not use "Mr." or "Dr." before the name.CORRECT FORMS OF ADDRESS 153 Addressing Royalty and Nobility Members of the royal families of Europe are fre- quent visitors to this country)-and they are usually widely and elaborately entertained. They are not only invited to private social functions, but are asked to serve as patrons and patronesses at charitable benefits and to address clubs and organizations. If you are the corresponding secretary of a club or president of some philanthropic organization, you may have occa- sion to write to some distinguished royal visitor, and may find this brief table helpful: Title King or Queen Royal Prince Duke or Duchess Marquis or Marchioness Dowager Mar- chioness Earl, Countess Daughter of Duke, Marchioness or Earl Address To His (Her) Most Gracious Majesty, King Albert To His Most Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales To (His) Her Grace The Duchess of Marlborough To the Marquis of Fife To the Dowager, Marchioness of Fife Right Honorable the* Earl of Warwick, Countess of Warwick Right Hon. the Lady Jane Grey Salutation Sir, May it please your Majesty Dear Sir: My dear Duchess: My Lord Marquis: Madam: Dear Lady Fife: My Lord: Dear Lady Warwick: Madam t Among the titled persons who are or have been con-154 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING nected with the foreign diplomatic service at Wash- ington are: The Right Honorable Sir Auckland Geddes and Lady Geddes. Baron de Cartier de Marchienne and Lady Cartier. Prince A. Bibesco and Princess Bibesco. Count Laszlo Szechenyi and Countess Szechenyi. Baron Leopold Plessen. Don Gelasio Caetani. Barone Giovaenni di Giura. Marquise di Bernezzo. Senor Don Juan Riano y Gayangos. The Honorable H. W. Brooks and the Honorable Mrs. Brooks. Jonkheer Dr. A. C. D. de Graeff. In writing to any of these, the envelopes would be addressed as here given. The formal salutation in the majority of cases is Sir or Dear Sir, and Madam or Dear Madam. Failure to observe the forms prescribed for official and social correspondence when addressing persons entitled to the recognition shows ignorance of social customs. It has been said that Americans are greater offenders in this respect than any other nation. It is partly the fault of our democratic upbringing, but is none the less inexcusable. Abroad, the finer points of etiquette are observed in all things: the right dress to wear at formal occasions; the proper forms of salutation to dignitaries, whether verbal or written; and many another social nicety which we are too busy or too superior to affect.CORRECT FORMS OF ADDRESS 155 Let us not push our "liberty" to the point of "license" in matters of taste any more than conduct. A proper regard for social rank, or the use of titles which per- sonally we might perhaps disdain is, after all, only the mark of education and social finesse.X POSTAL INFORMATION BUSINESS concerns and individuals with a large correspondence are advised to secure a copy of the pamphlet entitled, "Postal Information," from the Post Office Department at Washington for ready reference. Here are a few facts culled from it which everyone should know: Foreign and Domestic Postage.—If you have a friend residing in London, or in Canada, Mexico, Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, and certain other coun- tries of South and Central America, you can send him a letter weighing as much as an ounce for two cents; but if your friend is traveling through Europe, and his address is Paris or Geneva or Rome or any other European city outside of the British Isles, five cents will be needed for your letter. If your friend has gone abroad for the summer and gives you London as a forwarding address, be sure to attach a five-cent stamp, for if the letter is forwarded to the Continent difficulties may arise because of insufficient postage. First Class Mail.—Domestic mail matter is di- vided into four classes. First class mail is the most expensive to send. Letters, post cards and all sealed matter are first class mail. If you seal the envelope in which your photograph is mailed, it becomes first 156POSTAL INFORMATION 157 class matter instead of third class and is charged for at the rate of two cents an ounce instead of one cent for two ounces. You may send clippings in an un- sealed envelope, provided the envelope contains only clippings and no written matter. If you are a writer, your manuscript should be sent to the publisher by first class mail. If the manuscript is mailed in a large flat envelope, it should be distinctly marked "First Class Mail," and should be sealed, pref- erably with sealing wax, which, by the way, is used to-day only for official and valuable mail and not for social correspondence. The manuscript, when it is returned to you with the proof sheets, comes third class, and in returning it to the publisher you may take advantage of the third class rate, which is one cent for each two ounces, provided you have not made too many corrections in your proof. (For permissible corrections in proof sheets mailed at the third class rate, see Postal Guide at any post office.) Third Class Matter.—Third class matter em- braces "circulars, newspapers, and periodicals not ad- mitted to the second class, nor embraced in the term 'book,' miscellaneous printed matter, proof sheets, matter in point print or raised characters used by the blind, and matter produced by the photographic process including blue prints." (But matter printed on mate- rial other than paper is fourth class.) The limit of weight for third class matter is four pounds. Printed, mimeographed, or multigraphed letters may be sent third class, "provided they are mailed at the post office in a minimum number of 20 identical unsealed copies." Second Class Matter.—Second class matter in- cludes newspapers and periodicals bearing notice of entry as second class matter. No limit of weight is158 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING prescribed. The rate of postage is one cent for each four ounces not mailed by publishers, with special rates for publishers. Now here is an interesting point. To be entitled to this rate (second class is cheaper than third or fourth) copies of newspapers must be com- plete. "Incomplete copies are subject to the third or fourth class rate, according to their character." Fourth Class Matter.—Rates of postage on fourth class matter (domestic parcel post) vary from one cent for four ounces and one cent for two ounces to six cents a pound, according to character of article and distance it travels, the zone rate being in effect for articles over a certain weight. Under fourth class matter is included books, seeds, plants, parcels of printed matter weighing more than four pounds, and miscellaneous matter of all kinds. All mail should have—and second, third and fourth class mail must have—the name and address of the sender plainly written on the outside. Care in Wrapping Mail.—The Post Office Depart- ment issues frequent bulletins asking the public to help insure the safe delivery of their parcels by careful wrapping. Fragile, dainty things in transit need pro- tection against heavy objects, like scientific instruments, auto parts, tools, electrotypes, weighty machine cast- ings and similar objects which travel by mail and which may easily injure delicate things if the latter are not adequately protected. For packages generally the most recent bulletin gives the following rules: "In the first place strong, tough paper should be used, preferably two thicknesses. All packages should be tied with a strong cord. In fastening the cordPOSTAL INFORMATION 159 around the package, whenever the cord crosses, bind it over and under and over and under again before pro- ceeding, so that it cannot slip in either direction. "Also it is well to see that the cord is so placed that it is far enough from the ends of the package to pre- vent it slipping over them. "Before wrapping the article to be mailed, a copy of the address for which it is intended and the address of the sender should be attached to it (inside) as a precautionary measure, in case of loss of the outer wrapper or tag in transit. "Articles liable to breakage should be inclosed in corrugated or heavy wrapping paper, or wooden boxes and packed in excelsior or some similar substance. "Remember," says the postmaster, "that the package will be transported in a mail sack with others of irreg- ular size, weight and shape, and that many other sacks may be piled on top of it while in transit, in railway mail cars, steamers, or motor vehicles, and that you must protect it by such careful wrapping as will provide against the strains which will be experienced. "And, finally, when the package is ready to mail, make a practice of giving it the 'once over' to verify the postage, the address, the inside address, your re- turn address as sender, the wrapping and the packing." The sending of packages is a corollary to corre- spondence and so is mentioned here. When packages are sent, it is customary to write letters of transmittal stating that such and such a parcel was mailed at such and such a time. Inclosures in Packages.—Letters should not be inclosed in packages. "Matter of a higher class in- closed with matter of a lower class subjects the whole to the higher rate and persons knowingly concealing such matter are liable to a fine of not more than $100."160 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING But there are provisions by which letters may accom- pany parcels, provided the letter is paid for at the letter rate and is attached to the outside of the parcel. Com- bination envelopes or containers having separate por- tions for a letter and matter of a lower class may be used for mailing together two classes of matter. In third class matter there may be inclosed a card or envelope bearing the written or printed name and address of the sender. In fourth class matter a card bearing the inscription "Merry Christmas/' or "Best wishes," may be inclosed without changing the char- acter. There may be written on the blank leaves of a book a simple dedication or inscription, "not in the nature of a personal correspondence," and there may be inclosed with fourth class matter a written or printed invoice. Inclosures in Letters.—Printed matter inclosed in letters subjects the whole to first class rate. It is better to send additional matter under separate cover or in a separate envelope than to crowd too much into one envelope. Checks, money orders, drafts and receipts are fre- quently inclosed in letters. A letter of transmittal should accompany them. Money should not be in- closed in a letter unless a coin-container made for the purpose is used. In sending stamps do not stick them to the letter. Do not send stamps for reply when writing to the United States Government. Stamps, or preferably stamped envelopes, may be inclosed in let- ters to city and state officials when a reply is desired. The rule is to inclose stamp or stamped and self- addressed envelope when writing to a stranger or an acquaintance for information which benefits you solely. The local post office supplies stamped envelopes inPOSTAL INFORMATION 161 several sizes, so that the smaller may be inclosed in the larger without folding. Registered Mail.—When sending check, draft or money in a letter, or when mailing valuable papers, it is advisable to register them. First, second and third class matter may be registered. Fourth class or parcel post matter cannot be registered, but can be insured. All valuable mail should be registered if the sender wishes a receipt and insurance. Articles for which the sender wishes a return receipt showing delivery should be marked on the outside "Receipt desired." Letters which the sender desires delivered to the ad- dressee in person should be marked "Deliver to addressee only." The registration fee of ten cents for each letter or article insures it against loss, rifling or damage up to $50 for first class mail and $25 for third class mail. No indemnity is paid in connection with second class registered mail, nor for any matter on which both postage and fee are not fully paid. One registers first and third class mail and insures fourth class or parcel post matter. Return receipts for: insured parcels may be obtained by endorsing the par- cels "Return receipt desired." Unmailable Matter.—Under unmailable matter we find listed "post cards bearing tinsel, glass, metal, mica, sand or similar substances" and post cards of a dun- ning character or "calculated by the terms or manner or style of display, and obviously intended to reflect injuriously upon the character or conduct of another." Clubs are advised not to send bills out on post cards. Forwarding Mail.—Only first class mail can be for- warded from one post office to another without a newf payment of postage. This includes letters, post cards, postals and official matter.162 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING A person desiring to have his mail forwarded should file with the postmaster at the office of address a request signed in writing giving his present address, the full address to which the mail is to be forwarded, and period of time during which the order is to be observed. When individuals forward mail they should strike out the old address and add the new plainly in the left- hand corner of the envelope. Mail opened by mistake upon misdelivery can be forwarded when endorsed "Opened by mistake" and signed by the person who opened it. Inscriptions not necessary to proper for- warding subject the matter to new prepayment of post- age. If a friend's mail continues to come in your care after his visit has ended, don't write a note on the envelope saying, "Dear George, this has just come and I am sending it on to you. Hope you are fine. Cer- tainly do miss you." Just forward the letter and omit comments. Such a message written on the envelope would either make the letter come under "unmailable matter" or cause additional postage to be collected when finally delivered. In other words, you would be forcing your friend to pay for the letter you wrote him on the envelope of a letter to him. Special Delivery.—Special delivery means prompt delivery of mail by messenger during prescribed hours to persons residing within certain carrier limits. Packages as well as letters may be sent special de- livery by using a special delivery stamp in addition to the required postage. Ten cents' worth of ordinary stamps may be used instead of a special delivery stamp, writing the words "Special delivery" directly below the stamps. Do not use special delivery carelessly. There are often occasions when a special delivery stamp delaysPOSTAL INFORMATION 163 delivery instead of expediting it, and other cases where the special delivery letter came in the regular mail and nothing was gained. There is obviously no advantage to be gained by using special delivery for mail directed to rural communities or small villages, where there is no carrier service and where facilities for special delivery are not available. The city dweller frequently writes to friends at a mountain resort where there is never more than one delivery of mail a day, and wonders why the special delivery letter does not bring a speedier answer. There are very definite and fixed rules regarding spe- cial delivery service. The hours of delivery are from 7 A.M. to 11 P.M. at city-delivery offices and from 7 A.M. to 7 P.M. at other offices, and the service applies only to persons "who reside within the carrier limits of city and village delivery offices; to residents within one mile of any village delivery post office, and house deliv- ery by rural carriers to patrons of rural service who re- side within one-half mile of the rural route." All the special delivery stamps that may be purchased will not expedite delivery of mail to persons not included in these specifications. Impatient lovers are the worst offenders in the mis- use and over-use of the special delivery service. They have been known to send a special delivery letter to a post office box number! The special delivery arriv- ing at a small village post office often causes much annoyance and inconvenience. The postmaster may try for hours to secure a messenger to take the parcel or letter and then find that not even the boy with the bicycle will deliver it for ten cents, and the postal regu- lations say "special delivery service is not accorded par- cels that are of such size or weight that they cannot164 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING be promptly delivered with the means available or for the fee authorized by law for such service/' Special delivery service is recommended when the person addressed lives in a city, and a prompt answer is desired. When addressed to a business man with a large daily mail, the special delivery letter usually receives first attention. The special delivery should be used, not abused. Telegrams.—Don't write a letter if a telegram is better. On the other hand, don't send a telegram when a letter would be better, and always follow up a busi- ness telegram with a letter of confirmation. Such a business letter should be written the day the telegram is sent, or not later than the day following, and should begin "To-day we wired you as follows": Then the telegram, with all needed punctuation, should follow. In sending telegrams, remember that no punctuation is telegraphed unless specifically requested and paid for. Each mark of punctuation is counted and charged as one word. If the meaning of the telegram is not clear without punctuation, by all means add it and pay the additional charge. It is customary to write the word "stop" or "period" at the end of each sentence, and the word "stop," instead of the period for which it stands, appears in the telegram when received. It is surprising how many people do not know some of the very simple facts regarding the sending of tele- grams. There are still some people who do not know that the address and signature do not have to be paid for, others who use "Dear Sir" and "Respectfully yours/' in ignorance of the fact that such words are extra. With the increasing use of the telegram in business and social correspondence, stimulated by special ratesPOSTAL INFORMATION 165 for day and night "letters," the writing of a telegram lias become more or less of a science. A knowledge of English and a large vocabulary are extremely valuable in the writing of telegrams. It is even more important to use the right word in a telegram than in a letter, for a telegram does not go into explanations. The mean- ing should be clear at the first reading. As punctua- tion is not telegraphed unless requested and paid for, the telegram should be so worded that the meaning should be clear without punctuation. This can usually be done if sufficient thought is given to its construction. It takes more time and thought to write a clear, concise telegram than to write a letter. Some business firms and government offices have a secretary whose particular business it is to revise all telegrams and improve the wording where possible. Frequently the same thing can be said better in fewer words. Don't go to the other extreme and sacrifice clearness for brevity. Don't stop at ten words when twelve will make your meaning clear and ten will not. There is only a very small charge for the additional words. There is still a mistaken idea abroad that twelve words cost as much as twenty. This is not the case. There are a few points regarding the writing of tele- grams of which the general public is largely ignorant. Don't write 2nd. It will be counted two words, while "second" is counted one word. Don't use numerals in a telegram. Write out the numbers. Say "eight billion," "eight hundred thou- sand," "nine sixty-eight." If, for example, you use 800,000, it is counted as six words, where spelled out it counts only three. There are certain "short cuts" allowed by the tele-166 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING graph companies. According to their rules words like night letter, post office, parcel post, postal telegraph, C.O.D. are counted as one word, but "all right," even if incorrectly written "alright" is counted as two words. There is no such word as "alright" in the dic- tionary, and with a few exceptions, as noted, the dic- tionary is the basic authority. If a code is used, words containing more than ten letters are counted as two words. Although the signature is not charged for, titles such as "general manager," "president," "secretary" are charged for according to the number of words used. It is customary to omit all articles and unnecessary conjunctions such as a, the, and, but, etc., unless abso- lutely necessary to make the meaning clear. After the telegram has been written and turned over to the telegraph company, do not attempt to add a postscript or ask if you may change the wording of a telegram you handed in a half hour ago. This request is very frequently made, according to a branch manager of a telegraph company. Such changes can not be made. Don't ask it; send another telegram and be more careful next time to say what you mean. Telegrams for social purposes are becoming more and more popular. The Christmas telegram, the birth- day telegram, the telegram of condolence, of congratu- lation, because of their timeliness have certain advan- tages over a letter. The telegram dispatched so as to reach bride and groom near the hour of the ceremony, or a graduate on his or her return from the graduation exercises, or a relative or friend on the morning of his or her birthday, makes one feel both pleased and im- portant.POSTAL INFORMATION 167 Here are a few suggestions for such telegrams: Christmas greetings Once again it is Christmas time and our wish is that it may bring you joy and happiness. Would that I could be with you to share with you your Christmas joy. May the day be a happy one for you and yours. A Merry Christmas to all the dear ones at home. Birthday messages May all your birthdays and all the days that lie be- tween them be happy ones. Birthday greetings. May each passing year dimin- ish care and bring new joys. All join in best wishes for a very happy birthday and many years of health and prosperity. Wedding congratulations Heartiest congratulations. We wish you many years of happiness. I greatly regret that I cannot be with you to-day. Congratulations and every good wish for your hap- piness. Let an old family friend send her love and congratu- lations to the bride and groom. Messages on the birth of a child We rejoice with you in the happiness that has come into your lives. Love to mother and son. I am delighted to hear the news. Hearty congratu- lations.168 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Messages of condolence My sincere and heartfelt sympathy. I have just heard of your great affliction. Let me send to you my heartfelt sympathy. We realize that nothing we can say can lighten the burden of your grief but we want you to know that our deepest sympathy is with you in the hour of your af- fliction. To a graduate We are thinking of you to-day. Every success in life be yours and hearty congratulations upon your graduation. I regret that I cannot be with you to-day to see you take your new honors. Sincerest congratulations. Congratulatory messages to a public man Congratulations on your victory; a hard fight, well won by the best man. You fought a good fight in a good cause. Heartiest congratulations on your splendid success. Have heard the good news. Congratulations on your success so well deserved. Have read your address. I wish I might tell you personally how fine I consider it. Congratulations. Heartiest congratulations on your splendid speech of last night. Everybody is praising it. From these examples appropriate messages for Thanksgiving, Easter and the New Year will suggest themselves. A few things to be noted in the examples given arePOSTAL INFORMATION 169 that they read smoothly when the punctuation is omitted. Each sentence is complete. They vary in length, the point being to express the idea simply but effectively. The curse of the ten word limit has be- fallen many a telegram and marred its efficiency. An extra word costs only a few cents. Say what you have to say simply but clearly.XI CHILDREN'S LETTERS THE children's letter is one to which too little importance is given. Many parents are "too busy to bother." Fortunately, letter writing is being taught in the schools, even in the lower grades, as a part of composition, English, and grammar. Children should be encouraged to write letters. I have seen this accomplished by the simple expedient of appealing to self-interest. The majority of children, as well as many grown-ups, write only the letters which they feel it is to their advantage to write. I have known children to become very fond of writing letters to grandmothers and grandfathers and distant uncles and aunts just before Christmas and just before a birthday. Very early in the letter will occur the state- ment, "I shall be ten years old on the tenth of July, and I want a baseball and a bat," or "I hope you will come to see us soon." This is natural and childlike, and the wise parent will let Junior send his letter to Uncle Bill uncensored. Too much censoring is apt to result in a great falling off in production, or the letters produced may prove as inane and insipid and as lacking in originality as some of the censored films we see. Small children can often be encouraged to write let- ters to absent relatives and friends by the gift of at- tractive children's stationery. Having writing paper 170CHILDREN'S LETTERS they will want to use it. Larger children will like a box of regular letter paper like mother or dad uses. When a child desires to write a letter, assist him in every way possible. Have writing material conven- ient and a handy-sized dictionary on the desk. Help him to look up the words he does not know how to spell, and as his patience diminishes increase the assistance as needed. In other words, if letter writing is made as pleasant and as interesting as possible in youth, it will not prove so boring and so dreaded in after life. Often the memory of letters they were forced to write when children and which they dreaded and finally loathed exerts a potent influence all through life. Children should be taught to acknowledge all gifts received. If the gift is one they enjoyed, the matter will not be so difficult, but if one the child did not like, then tact, diplomacy and persuasion, backed by firm- ness, may be necessary. By pointing out that if he writes and tells auntie some things he wanted but did not receive she will at least know what he likes, a letter to auntie usually follows. All children are nat- urally selfish. It is only education and training that makes them otherwise. It has been said that all of us are savages by instinct and gentlemen by education. If that be true it is well to recognize the fact and act accordingly. To write letters of thanks and acknowl- edgment is the act of the true gentleman. We can not begin too early to acquire the habit. If it is important for children to write letters of thanks, it is equally important for the grown-ups to answer these letters. Auntie or uncle or grandfather usually accepts the child's letter as a matter of course and thinks of it as just a thank-you letter which the child ought to write to show his appreciation of the172 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING gift sent, but to the child, failure to answer his letters is as serious a breach of good manners as failure to acknowledge a gift appears to the grown person. To receive a letter is a significant event in the life of the average child. Few letters come their way, and the majority of those few are merely notes inclosed in a letter to their father or mother and not addressed to them. Send the children's letters direct to them. The pleasure given is worth far more than the cost of the extra time and stamp. I would divide children's letters into several classes: those they write to one another, those they write to grown-ups, and last, also least, invitations to children's parties. A fourth class should be included, the letters grown-ups write to children. First Principles.—Before the child begins a letter he should be told or reminded that the city and state should head the letter, and the day of the month and the year should appear beneath it. Often children are more careful to write the proper heading than their parents. They should also be impressed with the im- portance of sufficient margin and told that paragraphs are used to express a new thought, a period is placed at the end of each sentence and each new sentence begins with a capital letter. These few simple rules suffice for the beginning. Let him make a rough draft of his letter, perhaps in pencil, correct glaring mistakes and then have him copy it neatly with ink, impressing him with the importance of neatness of appearance. The typewriter has proved a most valuable aid. In order to be allowed to use the typewriter, the child will write to relatives he had not thought of since their last gift. If he writes the first draft on the typewriter enthusiasm may wane before copying time has arrivedCHILDREN'S LETTERS 17s and the question arises, shall he send it as it is or be made to copy it. The wise parent knows what mis- takes to overlook, what allowances to make. If per- fection is required before the child is allowed to send his letter, grandmothers may be great-grandmothers, before the letter is dispatched. Personally I enjoy children's letters before they are copied. A child can be very individual in his mistakes and I have known much originality and ingenuity shown in spelling. The perfect letter from a child isn't his—it is mother's or father's or teacher's, but it isn't the child's own creation. When it has been copied until all mistakes are corrected, one feels that the orig- inal bloom has been lost. Some standard, however, should be set. The child should be made to take a certain pride in the appearance of his letter and be made to feel ashamed to send a letter filled with mis- spelled words. These are merely suggestions. One can not give any fixed rules. The child should be taught a few essentials, and then learn to write letters by actually writing them. If he can be encouraged to write to friends of his own age, to cousins, known or unknown, to playmates who go away for a visit, to his brothers and sisters when he is visiting, there will be more individuality in his letter writing. He will write more freely to a child of his own age than to a grown person. Letters Written by Children.—If one could spend the next year collecting letters from children, set them down here exactly as written, and then analyze them, a most interesting chapter might be written. But here are a few children's letters that happen to be at hand. Let us glance over them sympathetically in order to174 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING learn something about the kind of letters children write, before we attempt to teach them letter writing. (From an eight-year-old girl to her aunt.) (Written originally on the typewriter and transcribed practically as written.) Why dont you come to see us any more I want to see you so bad I can hardly wait for you to come down to see us. I can write on the typewriter fast now. Write to me soon and tell me how you are getting aloung. I am takeing swimming lesson. I can duck and float on my face and my back by my self. I can lay on my back and kick my legs. And I can do my arms a surtein way and feet together. Aunt Mary and her famly went west and Aunt Mary brought Mother a. case with white power in the bottom and red power in the top and she brought little sister and me a little Indian lady and a little pare of Indians shoses and brought baby Brother a boat that the Indians use it is not a big boat it is just a toy boat a little boat that a doll could get in. Little brother can laugh out loud. She brought sister a little Indian man and she brought me a little Indian lady. The misspelled words are very natural mistakes. The punctuation is fair for her age. Apostrophes proved too much for her and so did commas. If I were to have her copy this letter, I should not tell her about commas and apostrophes until she had learned about them in school, but would concentrate on the mis- spelled words and suggest that the letter would look much better if divided into paragraphs. She observed margins and used periods, which are frequently omitted by grown-ups as well as by children. She also usedCHILDREN'S LETTERS 175 the name of the city and state at the top but not the date, which she probably did not know. As she left sufficient room this could have been added later. (From a nine-year-old girl to her cousin the same age.) Dear Margaret, Do you go swimming. I have just come from swim- ming. Can you swim. I can swim a little but not much. They gave a lawn-party so they could get money to keep the swimming pool open next year. Laura Marie and I went. It was last night we got a lot of things. We will soon have to go back to scool. Are you going to School. I am going to the forth grade and Marie is going to the fith and Laura is going to the sixth. What grade are you going to. Write to me soon. Much love. This was the first copy of the letter. I looked it over and remarked: "Do you know how to make a question mark or have they taught you how to use them at school ?" "Oh, yes," was the answer. "Let me have the letter, for I asked lots of questions and left off all the question marks." "You also misspelled several words," was my next comment. "See if you can find them; and you omitted the name of the city in which you live." I returned the letter to her and she read it over care- fully. "What a dumb-bell I am!" she exclaimed, "spelling fourth f-o-r-t-h." But I had to help her with "fifth." In a few moments she returned the letter to me correct except for two commas which were missing. All the question marks, however, were in the proper place. The result was a letter as nearly correct as to176 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING form and appearance as nine out of ten that one re- ceives. The point of all this is that correct letter writing, for children as well as for grown-ups, consists in taking pains, and the earlier they begin the better. (A letter from a ten-year-old to her grandmother.) My dear grandmother, I passed to the fifth Grade. All of us had a good time friday. How are you getting along. I wish you were up here. I am lonesome for you. I will have to be closing my letter now. Much love and kisses for all the family. Please do not forget to answer this letter. The way children capitalize is revealing. To this child the fifth "Grade" was much more important than "friday." Fridays are a weekly occurrence, while pass- ing to the fifth "Grade" occurs only once in her life- time. The tendency to capitalize words we wish to emphasize or which seem important to us is surprisingly common. Children are taught at school that the first word in a sentence should begin with a capital, and that days of the week, the month, names of persons, countries, cities, streets, oceans, rivers and ships also begin with a capital, and in general proper nouns and words used as names and adjectives and other words derived from proper names are capitalized. It remains for the teacher or parent to point out in specific cases words that should not be capitalized. The tendency to-day is to discourage the use of capitals and when in doubt to use the small letter. Points of form, expression and style should not be overlooked in the child's letter. A child can not writeCHILDREN'S LETTERS a brilliant letter, but should be expected to write a. correct one. Here is a letter from a child of nine that was prac- tically correct as to form. She used margins but no paragraphs. Where one person will use paragraphs in profusion, another ignores them entirely. New York Sept. ii, 19— Dear Aunty: I am in four B yesterday I was in four A and this, morning I was promoted into four B. I like one of the books that you sent me more than the others because it has so many nice things in it. The baby is very cute. Mary is writing a letter to you also. I went up to Connecticut for the week end. We went up in the auto. It took us all most all day. I had a very good time up there. I just love school. One delightful thing about real children's letters, the kind they actually write, is their naturalness and their newsiness. Thank-you Letters.—The most common of child- hood letters is probably the letter of thanks for a Christmas or birthday gift. Here is an original "thank-you letter" from a child of twelve to her grand- mother. "We received the box and I the letter. The pink dress fits me very well and the cape fits me too. I love the cape best of anything I got for my birthday." She then enumerates other things she received and closes characteristically, "I am tired now and must say goodbye. Please write to me."178 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING It is almost pathetic how frequently this plea "Please write to me" appears in every child's letter, and behind it is a childlike faith that perhaps some day the plea will be answered. Replies to Children's Letters.—I can not empha- size too strongly the importance of replying to chil- dren's letters. Here is where many adults are at fault. How can they expect the children to write the letters they should in acknowledgment of letters and gifts received, if their letters and little gifts are ignored? Here is a characteristic letter from Abraham Lincoln, who took the time and trouble to acknowledge letters from his little friends and acquaintances. His example should be followed: My dear little Miss: Your very agreeable letter of the 15th is received. I regret the necessity of saying I have no daughter. I have three sons—one seventeen, one nine and one seven years of age. They with their mother constitute my whole family. As to the whiskers, having never worn any do you not think people would call it a piece of silly affectation if I were to begin now? Your very sincere well-wisher, A. Lincoln. Anff not only did he reply to her letter but he answered it. He did not dismiss her letter and the ques- tions it contained with "it's just a child's letter filled with silly questions." Courtesy demands that all questions asked in a letter be answered in the reply. A child understands even less than a grown person why his questions are ignored. In writing to children, write of things in which they will be interested. A child enjoys a travel letter ifCHILDREN'S LETTERS 179 simply told. He does not care for lengthy descriptions of churches, and pictures and works of art, but he likes to hear about other children and their activities, things one sees on the streets, anything unusual or distinctive. An account of a humorous incident that occurred yes- terday will interest the child more than a general de- scription of more important happenings of the week. Children's Invitations.—The writing of the invi- tation to children's parties has been left till last, because the writing of letters seems so much the more impor- tant, and this is a book on correspondence, not on etiquette. Attractive cards of invitation specially prepared for children's parties, on which the place and date are to be filled in, can be secured at almost any stationer's, but often the informal note is written. If the child can write, let him first compose a speci- men note, and then write and address the rest. In this way he secures his first lessons in social correspond- ence. As soon as the letters are dispatched, he will begin to expect an answer and from his own experi- ence will learn that the early reply is appreciated. Children, strange to say, like a touch of formality. To receive invitations that look and read like invita- tions to a grown-up party pleases and impresses. Note paper or correspondence cards may be used and the following wording employed: Miss Marie Summers invites you to her birthday party on Thursday, June the third, from three to six o'clock Please reply But the informal note is often used.i8o ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING Dear Katherine, Won't you come to my party on Thursday after- noon of this week from three to six o'clock? Mother says I may invite ten of my friends and I do want you to come. Can you? Sincerely yours, Marie Summers. In answer to the first invitation the reply should read: Miss Katherine Jones accepts with pleasure Miss Marie Summers's kind invitation for Thursday, June the third, from three to six o'clock And to the second: Dear Marie : Mother says I may come to your party on Thursday afternoon. I am so excited that I can hardly wait and I know I shall be there promptly at three o'clock. Thank you for asking me. Very sincerely yours, Katherine Jones. These invitations are appropriate for younger chil- dren. When the child is too young to write the invi- tations, the mother writes the note in the name of the child or addresses it to the child's mother, who replies in kind. For older children, members of the "younger set," engraved or written invitations following the style for adult parties are used for formal affairs. Often theseCHILDREN'S LETTERS 181 "younger set" dances are most elaborate and the utmost formality prevails not only in the style and wording of the invitations, but in all the appointments. Children's parties are usually either quite formal or very informal. In the latter case, invitations are given by word of mouth or by telephone and so answered, but the formal invitation requires the formal reply in the third person. The informal note requires the in- formal personal note in reply. For the formal invitation the following is recom- mended : Miss Dorothy Drake requests the pleasure of Mr. Arthur Ormsby's company at a dance on Friday, November the fifteenth, at seven o'clock The usual hours for children's dances are from seven until nine, from eight until eleven, and from eight- thirty until twelve, according to the ages of the children. Mr. or Master Ormsby (he is usually addressed as master until he is twelve or over) should acknowledge the invitation promptly, using the third person. Mr. Arthur Ormsby regrets that absence from the city prevents his accepting Miss Dorothy Drake's kind invitation to her dance Friday, November the fifteenth. More often the acceptance or regret follows the form as well as the wording of the invitation. I recommend the formal invitation for the children's party. That does not mean that the party itself must be large or elaborate. It does mean, however, that the182 ETIQUETTE OF LETTER WRITING little hostess as well as the young guests should follow prescribed social forms. The earlier the knowledge is acquired, the easier it is to learn. Birthday Parties.—To use or not to use the words "birthday party" in the invitation is a mooted question. Parents generally are inclined to frown upon it and children to insist upon it. The child is usually so thrilled with the fact that he is having a birthday party that he tells all of his young friends and wants the fact announced in the invitation. There is no reason why it should not be mentioned. The point is made that mentioning it suggests that one should bring a gift, but if the child who is invited discovers that it is a birthday party he will insist on taking a present whether it is mentioned in the invitation or not. If it is not mentioned, James may neglect to take a present to Mary and feel very bad about it when he discovers that the majority of children knew it was a birthday party and acted accordingly. There are usually only two motives for giving parties for young children—birthdays and young visitors. Sometimes a Thanksgiving or Hallowe'en party is given when the reason for it is plain. If it is a birthday party be frank about it. This, of course, applies to children. In General.—In general, rules for correspondence by and to children follow the same general rule as letter writing for adults. I should like to make a plea that children be taught early the few general principles here mentioned as to form and general appearance, and that they be encour- aged to write letters by every means possible. The ability to express one's thoughts on paper is a valuable asset.CHILDREN'S LETTERS 183 Letter writing, like anything else, if mastered early in life, is not difficult. It requires care. It can be learned. When a few simple principles are mastered, it becomes pleasurable, and often proves profitable. The child feels a thrill over the receipt of a letter that custom has made stale to the man or woman of affairs. Therefore, I urge again, that we write more frequently to children, that we try to put ourselves in their mental attitude when writing, and that always we answer their letters to us. The child who early learns to write a good letter finds himself with valuable equipment which will prove useful to him in his business and social relations, and in every walk of life. THE ENDETIQUETTE FOR EVERYBODY By Laura Thornborough IT is now generally recognized that one's standing in the community, in business, in club circles, and in every walk of life is profoundly affected by one's behavior. There is a right and wrong way to do everything—writing letters, introducing friends, entering public places, dining out, walk- ing on the street, etc. This friendly book answers all such questions, clearly, interestingly and authoritatively. Size 5% x 7% inches. Bound in Cloth. SCHOOL PLAYS FOR ALL OCCASIONS By Madalene D. Barmim As the title indicates, this book presents a series of original plays suitable for acting in school or at home on Christmas Day, New Year's Day, Lincoln's Birthday, and other holi- days throughout the year. The plays are short and simple and easily presented, and the book as a whole will fill a long-felt want. Size 51/4 x 7% inches. Bound in Cloth• BIRTHDAY HOROSCOPES By Dr. J. R. Phelps This book predicts the future by means of Astrology—the science of the stars. For an evening's entertainment it is a novelty that you will be quick to appreciate. If conversation lags, read aloud one or two of the horoscopes, and you'll be busy the rest of the evening. Size 5 x 714 inches. Bound in Paper and Cloth* BARSE & HOPKINS NEW YORK, N. Y. NEWARK, N. J.This book is a preservation facsimile produced for the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. It is made in compliance with copyright law and produced on acid-free archival 60# book weight paper which meets the requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992 (permanence of paper). Preservation facsimile printing and binding by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2017