<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>CHAPTER SIX:<br/>A CHAPTER FOR SCHOOLGIRLS</h2>
<p>Every Fall a larger number of young girls leave home to come East to the
various Finishing Schools in this section of the country. For the benefit
of those who are making this trip for the first time, we outline a few of
the more important points in connection with the preliminaries to the trip
East, together with minute instructions as to the journey itself.</p>
<h3> SELECTING A PROPER SCHOOL </h3>
<p>This is, of course, mainly a parent’s problem and is best solved by
resorting to the following formula: Let A and B represent two young girls’
finishing schools in the East. Mrs. Raleigh-Jones (X), from the West,
sends her daughter to A; Mrs. Borax (Y), from the same city, sends her
daughter to B. Upon consulting the local social register, it is found that
Mr. Raleigh-Jones is a member of the Union, Colonial, Town and Country,
and Valley Hunt Clubs; upon consulting the telephone directory it is found
that the Boraxes live at 1217 S. Main Street, and that Mr. Borax is an
undertaker. Shall Mrs. F. B. Gerald (Z) send her daughter Annette to A or
to B, and why?</p>
<p>Answer: A, because life is real, life is earnest, and the grave is not its
goal.</p>
<h3> CORRECT EQUIPMENT FOR THE SCHOOLGIRL </h3>
<p>Having selected an educational institution, the next requisite is a
suitable equipment. Girls who live in other parts of the United States are
often surprised to discover that the clothes which they have purchased at
the best store in their home town are totally unsuited for the rough
climate of the East. I would, therefore, recommend the following list,
subject, of course, to variation in individual cases.</p>
<p class="letter">
1 Dress, chine, crepe de, pink, for dancing.<br/>
1 Dress, chine, crepe de, pink, for petting.<br/>
1 Dress, Swiss, Dotted, blue, or<br/>
1 Dress, Swiss, undotted, white.<br/>
15 yards Tulle, best quality, pink.<br/>
4 bottles perfume, domestic, or<br/>
1 bottle, perfume, French.<br/>
12 Dozen Dorine, men’s pocket size.<br/>
6 Soles, cami, assorted.<br/>
1 Brassiere, or riding habit.<br/>
100 boxes aspirin, for dances and house-parties.<br/>
1 wave, permanent, for conversation.<br/>
24 waves, temporary.<br/>
10,000 nets, hair.<br/>
100,000 pins, hair.<br/>
1 bottle Quelques Fleurs, for knockout.</p>
<h3> EN ROUTE </h3>
<p>After the purchase of a complete outfit, it will be necessary to say
goodbye to one’s local friends. Partings are always somewhat sad, but it
will be found that much simple pleasure may be derived from the last
nights with the various boys to whom one is engaged.</p>
<p>In this connection, however, it would be well to avoid making any rash
statements regarding undying friendship and affection, because, when you
next see Eddie or Walter, at Christmas time, you will have been three
months in the East, while they have been at the State University, and
really, after one starts dancing with Yale men—well, it’s a funny
world.</p>
<p>In case you do not happen to meet any friends on the train, the surest way
to protect yourself from any unwelcome advances is to buy a copy of the
<i>Atlantic Monthly</i> and carry it, in plain view. Next to a hare lip, this is
the safest protection for a travelling young girl that I know of; it has,
however, the one objection that all the old ladies on the train are likely
to tell you what they think of Katherine Fullerton Gerould, or their
rheumatism.</p>
<p>If you are compelled to go to the dining car alone, you will probably sit
beside an Elk with white socks, who will call the waiter “George.” Along
about the second course he will say to you, “It’s warm for September,
isn’t it?” to which you should answer “No.” That will dispose of the Elk.</p>
<p>Across the table from you will be a Grand Army man and his wife, going to
visit their boy Elmer’s wife’s folks in Schenectady. When the fish is
served, the Grand Army man will choke on a bone. Let him choke, but do not
be too hopeful, as the chances are that he will dislodge the bone. All
will go well until the dessert, when his wife will begin telling how
raspberry sherbet always disagrees with her. Offer her your raspberry
sherbet.</p>
<p>After dinner you may wish to read for a while, but the porter will
probably have made up all the berths for the night. It will also be found
that the light in your berth does not work, so you will be awake for a
long time; finally, just as you are leaving Buffalo, you will at last get
to sleep, and when you open your eyes again, you will be—in Buffalo.</p>
<p>There will be two more awakenings that night—once at Batavia, where
a merry wedding party with horns and cow bells will follow the lucky bride
and groom into your car, and once at Schenectady, where the Pullman car
shock-absorbing tests are held. The next morning, tired but unhappy, you
will reach New York.</p>
<h3> A JOURNEY AROUND NEW YORK </h3>
<p><i>The Aquarium</i>. Take Fifth Avenue Bus to Times Square. Transfer to 42nd
Street Crosstown. Get off at 44th Street, and walk one block south to the
Biltmore. The most interesting fish will be found underneath the hanging
clock, near the telephone booths.</p>
<p><i>Grant’s Tomb</i>. Take Fifth Avenue bus, and a light lunch. Change at
Washington Square to a blue serge or dotted Swiss. Ride to the end of the
line, and walk three blocks east. Then return the same way you came,
followed by three fast sets of tennis, a light supper and early to bed. If
you do not feel better in the morning, cut out milk, fresh fruit and
uncooked foods for a while.</p>
<p><i>Metropolitan Museum of Art</i>. Take Subway to Brooklyn. (Flatbush.) Then ask
the subway guard where to go; he will tell you.</p>
<p><i>The Bronx</i>. Take three oranges, a lemon, three of gin, to one of vermouth,
with a dash of bitters. Serve cold.</p>
<p><i>The Ritz</i>. Take taxicab and fifty dollars. If you have only fifty dollars
the filet of sole Marguéry is very good.</p>
<p><i>Brooklyn Bridge</i>. Terrible. And their auction is worse.</p>
<p>When you have visited all these places, it will probably be time to take
the train to your school.</p>
<h3> THE FIRST DAYS IN THE NEW SCHOOL </h3>
<p>The first week of school life is apt to be quite discouraging, and we can
not too emphatically warn the young girl not to do anything rash under the
influence of homesickness. It is in this initial period that many girls,
feeling utterly alone and friendless, write those letters to boys back
home which are later so difficult to pass off with a laugh. It is during
this first attack of homesickness also that many girls, in their
loneliness, recklessly accept the friendship of other strange girls, only
to find out later that their new acquaintance’s mother was a Miss
Gundlefinger of Council Bluffs, or that she lives on the south side of
Chicago. We advise: Go slow at first.</p>
<h3> BECOMING ACCLIMATIZED </h3>
<p>In your first day at school you will be shown your room; in your room you
will find a sad-eyed fat girl. You will be told that this will be your
room mate for the year. You will find that you have drawn a blank, that
she comes from Topeka, Kan., that her paw made his money in oil, and that
she is religious. You will be nice to her for the first week, because you
aren’t taking any chances at the start; you will tolerate her for the rest
of the year, because she will do your lessons for you every night.</p>
<p>Across the hall from you there will be two older girls who are back for
their second year. One of them will remind you of the angel painted on the
ceiling of the Victory Theatre back home, until she starts telling about
her summer at Narragansett; from the other you will learn how to inhale.</p>
<h3> A VISITOR FROM PRINCETON </h3>
<p>About the middle of the first term your cousin Charley Waldron, that
freshman at Princeton, will write and say that he would like to come up
and see you. You go to Miss French and ask her if you can have your cousin
visit you. She sniffs at the “cousin” and tell’s you that she must have a
letter from Charley’s father, one from Charley’s minister, one from the
governor of your state, and one from some disinterested party certifying
that Charley has never been in the penitentiary, has never committed
arson, and is a legitimate child. After you have secured these letters,
Miss French will tell you that Charley will be allowed to see you next
Saturday from four till five.</p>
<p>Charley will come and will be ushered into the reception room. While he is
sitting there alone, the entire school will walk slowly, one by one, past
the open door and look in at him. This will cause Charley to perspire
freely and to wish to God he had worn his dark suit.</p>
<p>It is not at all likely that you will be allowed to go to New Haven during
your first year, which is quite a pity, as this city, founded in 1638, is
rich in historical interest. It was here, for example, in 1893, that Yale
defeated Harvard at football, and the historic Pigskin which was used that
day is still preserved intact. Many other quaint relics are to be seen in
and around the city of elms, mementos of the past which bring to the
younger generation a knowledge and respect for things gone. In the month
of June, for example, there is really nothing which quite conjures up for
the college youth of today a sense of the mutability and impermanence of
this mortal life so much as the sight of a member of the class of 1875
after three days’ intensive drinking. <i>Eheu fugaces!</i></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/image23.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="“Who Shall Write First?”" /> <span class="caption"><i>“Who shall write first?” is a question that has perplexed many a lady or gentleman who is anxious to do the correct thing under any circumstances. A lady who has left town may send a brief note or
a “P. P. C.” (“pour prendre congé,” i.e., “to take leave”) card to a
gentleman who remains at home, if the gentleman is her husband and if she
has left town with his business partner. Neither the note nor the card
requires an acknowledgment, but many a husband takes pleasure in penning
his congratulations to the lady, concluding with an expression of
gratitude to his friend.</i></span></div>
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