THE LIFE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN 



By IDA M. TARBELL 



Drawn ft 



Original Sourc 



" We have here Abraham 

 Lincoln the Man described, 

 and not Abraham Lincoln 

 the President. A perusal 

 of the volume leaves a very 

 satisfactory feeling. It 

 makes our hearts warm 

 more than ever toward 

 that homely figure and the 

 homely speech. The man 

 Lincoln seems to loom up 

 more prominently than ever 

 from the midst of his con- 

 temporaries as the great 

 central figure of his gener- 

 ation." — New York Times. 



and containing many Spt 

 hitherto unpublished. 



Letters, and Telegrams 



With 32 full-page illustrations. 



"Of the rich mine of 

 material presented in Miss 

 Tarbell's 'Life,' the most 

 illuminating is that pertain- 

 ing to the war, to Lincoln's 

 relations with his generals 

 and men, his relations with 

 incompetency, his quiet ac- 

 quiescence under the storm 

 of criticism of his policy. 

 Hundreds of des- 

 patches are here printed for 

 the first time, many of them 

 marking the turn of the 

 moment's crisis, some of 

 them pungently characteristic." 



— Boston Transcript. 



Svo, 6% xgyi, $3.00. 



The best critical study of Mr. Moody 



-)■ ivntten. 



DWIGHT L. MOODY 



By HENRY DRUMMOND 



With an Introduction by Dr. GEORGE ADAM SMITH. 



The First Impression— A New England Boyhood — His Early Church Work— 

 His World Ministry — His Training School — Results of His Work. 



"Delightfully and instructively written. I found much that was inspiring in it, 

 and shall be glad to call the attention of my clergy to it." — Bishop Vincent. 



With a portrait of Mr. Moody in photogravure, and decorative head and tail pieces. 



' 121)10, -T ' S X 7 % . $I.OO. 



LIFE OF 

 HENRY DRUMMOND 



By Dr. GEORGE ADAM SMITH 



" Mr. Smith's appreciation is extremely 

 cordial and well borne out by the facts 

 which are in evidence. We lay down the 

 book with the feeling that nothing that 

 Drummond ever wrote is so morally in- 

 spiring as his character." — The Nation. 



Third Edition, raith frontispiece in photogravure. 

 >xg% , $j.oo. 



ULYSSES S. GRANT 



HIS LIFE AND CHARACTER 



By HAMLIN GARLAND 



" Besides the diligent scholarship of the 

 investigator, Mr. Garland shows himself 

 possessed of the higher and rarer qualities 

 of the biographer. . . . This life shows 

 us not a mere figure draped with certain 

 qualities; it shows a living, moving man." 

 — New York Times. 

 With 32 //.'//strati, •// r. Svo, 6 x 9 ' 4 . $2.50. 



