comicbooks.com Join Free

Life, 1896-04-16 · page 19 of 20

Life — April 16, 1896 — page 19: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Life — April 16, 1896 — page 19: Life, 1896-04-16

A restored page from Life, 1896-04-16. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

LL” Rab ehhhehhehheeheeete illian Russell Mrs. Frank Leslie Mrs. Jenness Miller ‘The genuine article is plainly stamped Fibre Chamois : i Ye 39 Broadway, N. Y., Hartfo HE CLUB= T Cecrats MANHATTAN, MARTINI, WHISKEY, HOLLAND GIN, TOM GIN, VERMOUTH and YOBE. ‘We guarantee theso Cocktails to be made of absolutely pure and well matured liquors and the mixing equal to the best cocktails served over any bar in the world. Being compounded in accurate proportions, they will always be found of uniform quality. Connotsseurs agree that of two cocktails made of the same material and propor- tions, the one which is aged must be Letter, ~ Try our YORK Cocktail—made without MS) any sweetn! and delicious, by ? Por pomp Ty ining and Buffet Cars of the principal railroads of the U. 8. AVOID IMITATIONS. For Bale by all Druggists and Dealers. 'G, F. HEUBLEIN & BRO., Sole Props., rd, Conn. 20 Piccadilly, W. London, Eng. roR SAMPLE ADORESS . FREE scuvs janowrrz, 13§ GranaSt, ¥.Y, AN old New York gentleman, meeting his grandson, said to him, in an impressive tone of voice: : “ My dear boy, I hear some very discouraging reports about you. They say that you go behind the scenes, and are very much gone on Miss Topsie Lift Is that so?" ‘es, grandpa, to some extent.” ‘Drop them, my boy. I know them, my son. They are a bad lot.” “ But, grandpa, the actresses of the present day are different from what they were when you were a yo an, fifty years ago.” Not much, my boy. ‘They are mostly the same identical actresses. Why, I was engaged once to Miss Topsie Liftoe myself."— Texas Sifter. “T MAVE always thought,” he was saying to himself, ‘*that the division of the intellectual his- tory of the race into the three so-called brilliant epochs, the age of Pericles, the renaissance, and the revolution, is fanciful and arbitrary. To the student of history, who marks the advance of hu- manity, not by the shadows cast by the great names along the wayside of the ages, but rather by those silent influences that insersibly mould character and leave their unmistakable traces in the—" A voice from the next room interrupted the speaker: “What are you doing, Elliottson ?” “Lam playing, mamma,” replied the dear little Boston boy.—Chicago Tribune. The truly gifted engineer always makes one part of his work fit into another, and no energy is ever wasted. A wealthy engineer who had set up a very fine place in the country, where he had carried out many pet constructive projects, was visited there by an old friend. The visitor had so much difficulty in pushing open his front gate that he spoke about it to the proprietor. " “You ought to fix that gate,” said the guest. ‘*A man who has everything ‘just so’ should not have agate that is hard to open.” “Hal” exclaimed the engineer, ‘you don't understand my economy. That gate communi- cates with the water-works of the house, and every person who comes through it pumps up four gal- lons of water !"—Exchange. Wuen Mme, Melba was in Washington recent- ly she met Speaker Reed in the Capitol. ‘* Why don't you have a fignt here?” she said to him in laughing protest. “I would much rather see a fight than hear a speech.” ‘' Then why didn't you let me know you were coming?” said Speaker Reed, gallantly. ‘I would have had a fight for your special delight, and if you will only wait I will go on the floor and start a row this minute.” TACT. Hail, graceful Tact! That to no fool denies A charm to tame the wild and cheat the wise, And, without lying, reaps the gain of lies, That, courteous ever, kills without a blow, And with a Yes contrives to act a No; And can compress a volume into “*Oh!"" That wins by losing ; and by serving reigns; By silence argues; and by giving gains ; That throws its stones, yet saves its window-panes. That looks like porcelain, when ‘tis made of delf ; And, pilfering, by its very storm of pelf Tricks all the world ; yes, even tricks—Itself. —Exchange. comicbooks.com