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Anonymous

"Manners and Conduct in School and Out"


11) For you to sit at a social gathering with hat and coat on,
girls,--even though you must leave in a few moments,--is discourteous
both to your hostess and to the other guests.


DUTY TO OLDER PEOPLE
_The mildest manners, and the gentlest heart._
--Pope.

1) Show especial deference--not indifference--to your superiors in age,
office, and the like. Do this not once, but always. Watch for
opportunities.
2) Rise, when an older person who is standing begins to talk to you.
3) If you wish to become a musician, you seek help from the finest
musical instructor within reach. Just so in the greater art of living
effectively, seek help from those who have learned wisdom. As a rule,
your parents and your teachers are your best counsellors. They have
traveled the road before you, and have your highest interests at heart.
Listen to them. Don't make your life a wild experiment in blundering; it
doesn't pay.
4) Never regard age, even advanced age, as a joke. To do so blunts your
own sensibilities.


INVITATIONS
_That man may last, but never lives,
Who much receives, but nothing gives._
--Gibbons.

1) If you receive a written invitation, send a written reply. Let the
reply accord with the invitation in being either formal, or informal.
2) You will be thought discourteous if you fold your note carelessly,
write on soiled or ragged paper, use pencil instead of ink, or delay
your reply.


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