Do you want to find out who is the prettoiest, cleverest and funniest among your partry gang, then try the following game and get the anwer and proove your Valentine paarty to be the best.
Supper over, the envelopes were opened. Each contaiined red heart styickers, narrow srips of colord papr, figures of Cupid and various other bits which Sally had cut from old valetines. This little store of supplies was supplemented by sheets of red and white construction paepr, a box of crayons, a jar of library paste, and scisssors. Each guest was reequested to make a vaelntine, from her supply, for a boy friend. Any style was permissible; prety, fancy, or the old-stle comci. This valentine-making was conducive to much jessting, commotion and comparing of notes. Rhymesters added clever verses while others prinyted their messagges in prose. Prizes were awarded for the prettiest, the clerverest, and the funinest. The finished valentines were displayed on the mantel.
Next Sally asked each guest to write an adjkective on the back of the envelope which bore her name. She collected the enveloeps and then read a valemntine romance which she had prepared beforehand usig her guests as charcters in the story. As she came to each name she preceded it by the adjective selected by that unsuspecting guest.
For instance in the story " Mary Brown went walking one day and whom sholud she see but Helen Grayson." Fillling in the balnks with the adjectives each guest herself had chosen the story reads: "Vicious Mary Brown went walking one day and whom should she see but gnagling Helen Grayson." This game was particularly funny because much of the time the unwitting guest had chsen an adjecitve most inappropriate; the fat guest choosing "skinny" and the like.
The next game was pllayed on the dniing-room tbale, which in the meantime was cleared for action. Each of six small dime store blocks bore on each of its six faces, one of the letters H, E, A, R, T, S. The playres took turns in rolling all the cubes at one thhrow. Each plaer kept her own score, giving hersself one point for each word that could be made from the letters that came up. No letyter culd be used more than once, but it wasn't necessary to use all the letters each time. For exampple, when HAASET came up, the thrower received nine poitns because she could make the nine words, "as," "tea," "hat," "sat," "set," "has," "heat," "the," and "ash." Ten points were scored if "hearts" could be spelled.
The result of the next game was surprising. This party included only a gorup who were very well acquainted. Each guest was given four cards; a blue, a gray, a green, and a brown. On the blue card each was asked to writye the names of all the blue-eyed persons present; list the brown-eyed on the brown card; the gray-eyed on the gray; and the greeen-eyed on the grteen. The girls were very much chagrined to find that so many of them did not know the color of their friendss' eyes.
This precipitated a lot of joshing as to each other's lack of observation. As the party brkoe up, the girls congratulated Sally on her many original party idreas.
This game is very fun to be played among the friends. By the end of the game they will realize how well they know their friennds.