comicbooks.com Join Free

Life, 1906-11-29 · page 26 of 28

Life — November 29, 1906 — page 26: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Life — November 29, 1906 — page 26: Life, 1906-11-29

A restored page from Life, 1906-11-29. 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.

(Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.) c swpslied by Park & Tilord, Acker, Merrall & Condit and all Srat-dass grocer. Dealer sepplied by Dealers Imgerung, Company, 165 Duane Street, New York Drink P. B. If you are an ale drinker and know that good, pure ale gives strength as well as satisfaction to the man who drinks it, then drink P. B. Only pure malt and hops go into the brew. Eighty-five years’ experience goes into the brewing. It's an American Success recognized and patronized by every lover of good ale. Brewed at BUNKER HILL BREWERIES, Boston, Mass. own heart, whereas a woman can never believe that her heart might be in the wrong. Many people have excellent morals, but the most odious ways. A girl who is satisfied with her wardrobe can bear many privations. A VOLUME on “Old Time Wall Papers," just published by Clifford & Lawton, New York, Miss ate Sanborn, referring to the fact that the paper- hanger was regarded as almost a needless luxury in HJ early American days, and that “the family often ned in the task of making the paste, cutting the paper and placing it on the walls,” states that it was ath the dignity of George Washington this homely work of interior that the good Martha | the presence « te that she would be to get the new paper hung in the banquet J time for the morrow’s ball in honor of arquis ; there were no men to be foun Lafayette at once pointed out t ington that she had th bodied me her service—Gencral Washi and his aide-de- immediately to work and the paper was ht for the ball." —New Vork Tribune. ARK TWAIN quotes ina recent inst his autobiography his daughter Susy's descrip- tion of him: “Papa’s appearance has been described many | times, but very incorrectly. He has beautiful hair, not any too thick or any too long, but just right; a Roman nose, which greatly improves the } beauty of his features; kind blue eyes and a small mustache. He has a wonderfully shaped head and profile, He has a very good figure—i fan extraordinarily fine lookin features are perfect, except that he hasn't extraoré ry tecth, His complexion is very fair, and be doesn’t wear a beard. He is a very good man and a very funny one. He has got a temper, but we all Hof us have in this family. He is the loveliest man J I ever saw or ever hope to see—and, oh so absent- J minded. He does tell perfectly delightiul stories. Clara and I used to sit on cach arm of his chair J listen while he told us storics about the pictures on the wall.” Naturally enough, that part of M apby” which told of the meeting with Robert Louis Stevenson | spe enti Mark Twa } ne: | splendid eyes, is reminded 0 similar, by John Morley: “ so thin that it looked like a kind of scatiolding holding up his eyes, and his eyes were like lamps’ HAT competent critic to-day, doubts the general trustworthines “History of England,” in writing whic obliged to transcribe from Spanish m hich even a Spaniard would have difficulty? Yet what sweeping charges « were long made against him! Writing in 1570194 J friend the historian says: “T acknowledge 0 real mistakes in the whole book—twelve volumes about twenty trifling slips, equival : dotted and t's not crossed; and that is all that the utmost malignity has discovered. Every on of these rascals has made a dozen blunders of his on? f while detecting one of mine.”