It is quite proper to thank any public servant, such as a railroad conductor, for any information he may give, but it is not necessary to be effusive about it.

It is not in good taste, nor even proper, for young women to go alone to a hotel to dine with a man.

When a girl is young and pretty, a Platonic friendship is very difficult to keep up.

When a man friend has driven a woman in town to go to church he should take her direct to the church and leave her there while he drives where his carriage and horses are to wait until after the service. Of course he would walk to church and join her there.

It is not in good taste for different members of a party to go off in pairs, and spend the evening alone on the seashore.

It is not wise for a young woman and young man living in the same city to correspond. If meeting each other often they ought to be able to say all that is necessary.

One has no right whatever to read a postal card addressed to another without permission.

The very minute the married man begins to tell of his wife’s faults, the time has come to cut his acquaintance.

It is more than wrong for a young girl to receive visits from a married man.

In entering any public place a woman should precede a man, but going down the aisle, the usher, of course, would precede her.