OCR Text |
Show Nlnetails. n m j, comfortaWe star " ' -t in the s,bs;nu ',1 as It often i3. still m H-b ou. I think, i3 it nmK0re 4 a t, because it is ml the S Gained, and isL0S, Tact, I should inn , tht("itl tuitive'Sb! JtS thing and do the Ln a,tti t time, and nevef wrong thing. No one n0 more complete eon,preh Hi value of tact than th, DSlon or nearly always, Sa, P ,h thing, to the emfi" of ourselves, but of l ntn' 'Tbosewhowouat? have tact; but, on !' those who succeed in I her must often be bored, f able burden of popular! 1' ess boredom. To be sure ,;0 lack tact, are often, as V said, embarrassed, and porarily seems worse 0fL but as we so often c, , ourselves from being of compensation would se2 : somewhat to our advanta' ,be, too, that there are C so supenorily tactful that tk I avoid being bored. C ef princes of human society h 7 ter the world Is and who ? I away, more blessed than tw began with and continue J silver spoons.-Indianapolis The Scotch-Iriih The Scotch-Irish arg ctlf, I Scotch descent, though the I ! th's couTntry fr Englam 1611 King James I began col, Ulster, a barren and neglecte-i of Ireland, with people from land and the northern part of land. They began migrati, ' America about the year ) at the outbreak of the RevmJ ary war about one-sixth of tie nlation of the colonies was a Irish. |