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Judge, 1924-01-26 · page 36 of 37

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Judge — January 26, 1924 — page 36: Judge, 1924-01-26

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When Your Guests Are Gone — Are You Sorry You Ever Invited Them ? OST of us are, you know. We spoil the very impression we try to create. We in- vite people to our homes, eager to prove ourselves good hosts and hostesses, anxious to im- press, certain that wewill becalm, atease, well-poised. But somehow little unexpected problems present themselves. Somehow things do not go exactly as we had planned. An introduction clumsily made. A course served incorrectly. Conversation slowly dying—and with obvious effort brought to life again. Embarrassing!’ You just know that your guests must be noticing, silently misjudging, underestimating. And you wish fervently that you never had invited them—that you never had exposed yourself to this humiliation. No one can achieve any amount of plea of entertaining unless one can be absolutel It is discomfort and uncertainty that cause em- barrassing blunders. And such blunders instantly betray one’s inexperience, one’s lack of knowledge. Only by knowing precisely what is expected of you on every occasion, under all circumstances, can you be thoroughly at ease. Only by being sure of yourself can you avoid the embarrassment of blunders. The secret of being a good host or hostess, an ever-welcome guest, an agreeable and likable person is simply the secret of knowing what to do and say on every occasion—of being always calm, poised, self-possessed. sure out y at ease Be Free From All Embarrassment! Let the Famous “Book of Etiquette” Tell You Exactly What to Do, Say, Write and Wear on Every Occasion. Thousands of men and women who were embarrassment, free from the little crudities tects against embarrassment, Tt is one of the only a short time ago self-conscious and timid — which perhaps even you do not suspect most useful works you could possibly own a’ who were constantly exposing themselves to The Book of Etiquette is todays and half a million people have found this to the embar At and humiliation of blun- secretary in hundreds of thousands of homes. be positively true. ders, who betrayed themselves instantly among It is consulted whenever a wedding is planned. yers—are today winning respect and ora party, ora dinner. It gives authoritative A Rare Offer to You admiration wherever they go because of their mation. It gives helpful advice. It You want the Book of Etiquette. remarkable poise and ease of manner. solves instantly the little problems that puzzle cannot help work. so helpful, Instead of learning through painful errors, you. 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Now yours for practically half! tame How Manners Dress Your Personality Send No Money _ Just your name and address on th As clothes dress your body, manners dress is Sufficient. As soon as we receive it we will your personality. Not manners as the world agad 3 ou your set of the Book of Etiquette ordinarily understands them—stilted un- i oe ore angen 20. act at once, however, as it natual mannerisms—but poise, ease, dignity, # possible that this offer m: drawn. yn jo oda! The kind of manner that the Book Saas ee ] tne Sue Feat \— with same return privilege | Siesesrase™ SESS Winding outside Ue $3.45 Si omar r binding at § | | 1 with- NOW, while PRESS OF WILLIAM GREEN, NEW YORE comicbooks.com