قراءة كتاب McClure's Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 4, March, 1896
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">FRANK E. BROWNELL, WHO KILLED THE ASSASSIN
THE DEATH OF COLONEL ELLSWORTH.
THE MARSHALL HOUSE, ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA, IN WHICH COLONEL
COLONEL ELLSWORTH AND A GROUP OF MILITIA OFFICERS.
"THE OLD BRICK ACADEMY," PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER,
ABBOT ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS.
"THE STONE BUILDING," PHILLIPS ACADEMY, ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS.
THE HOUSE IN ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS, WHERE THE SCHOOL CALLED "THE
HENRY MILLS ALDEN, EDITOR OF "HARPER'S MAGAZINE."
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON AT THE AGE OF FOURTEEN.
"'WALL, ARMIDY, WALL, LUCAS, THE DOCTOR DON'T SEEM TO THINK I
THE DIVIDED HOUSE.--"ARMIDA'S SIDE OF THE HOUSE FELL MORE AND
AS ARMIDA SAT ON THE BENCH UNDER THE OLD RUSSET APPLE-TREE, ...
EVENING IN THE DIVIDED KITCHEN.
HARGRAVE LIFTED SIXTEEN FEET FROM THE GROUND
Frankfort Street. PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEW FROM A KITE.
Frankfort Street. PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEW FROM A KITE.
NEW YORK, EAST RIVER, BROOKLYN, AND NEW YORK BAY, FROM A KITE.
PHOTOGRAPHING FROM A KITE-LINE.
CITY HALL PARK AND BROADWAY FROM A KITE.
MY GOD!--YOU WERE RIGHT--AFTER ALL."

LINCOLN IN 1860.—HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED.
From an ambrotype taken in Springfield, Illinois, on August 13, 1860, and now owned by Mr. William H. Lambert of Philadelphia, through whose courtesy we are allowed to reproduce it here. This ambrotype was bought by Mr. Lambert from Mr. W.P. Brown of Philadelphia. Mr. Brown writes of the portrait: "This picture, along with another one of the same kind, was presented by President Lincoln to my father, J. Henry Brown, deceased (miniature artist), after he had finished painting Lincoln's picture on ivory, at Springfield, Illinois. The commission was given my father by Judge Read (John M. Read of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania), immediately after Lincoln's nomination for the Presidency. One of the ambrotypes I sold to the Historical Society of Boston, Massachusetts, and it is now in their possession." The miniature referred to is now owned by Mr. Robert T. Lincoln. It was engraved by Samuel Sartain, and circulated widely before the inauguration. After Mr. Lincoln grew a beard, Sartain put a beard on his plate, and the engraving continued to sell extensively. While Mr. Brown was in Springfield painting the miniature he kept a journal, which Mr. Lambert also owns and which he has generously put at our disposal. It will be found on page 400.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
By Ida M. Tarbell.
LINCOLN'S ELECTION TO THE TENTH ASSEMBLY.—ADMISSION TO THE BAR.— REMOVAL TO SPRINGFIELD.
HE first twenty-six years of Abraham