Class M & 7 Book. M »^/ Cioi!yiightF_. COPYRIGHT DEPOSm %z^in de iiiede 6crm ..xf "CperettaSf txhibiticn Brilh^ dpedal S!)ai{ t^ermes, and dpedaeular tntertainments. 9rice, 15 'Cents taek. -^ I. Of Surpassing Interest io every Teaciier A BOOK FOR CONSTANT USE. Olasbitidton's Birthday, Hrbor Day, memoiial Day, Tourtb cf 3uly, tbaiiksgivinfl Day, Christmas, and the Birthdays of noted men and Authors. Prof. John R. Slxdd. lltitt Tda m. fve4riclc, mrt. Emnu t. match, mrt. €. €. Cbtsttr. nttWuM Rvmboldf. Full and complete programs provided for everv Holiday, and for the Birthdays of Noted Men and Authors— 20 in all. The programs are suited to any school, are practical and delightful. A valuable Handbook of American Literature, since it contains a complete outline of the life *nd writings of each author treated. )Pr^ce, postpaid, SB cents. MARCH BROTHERS, Publishers, 48 Bast nulberry 5t., LEBA^^ON, O. Copyright, 1900, by March Brothers . FIN DE SIECLE Lincoln's Birthday Exercises Arranged by ARCHIBALD HUMBOLDT. INTRODUCTION. T INCOLN! Magical name. How the heart thrills at ■ >•) the memory of the wonderful life he lived! Chosen of God for a mighty task, reared among difficulties unsurmountable except by him ; Divinely inspired in words and deeds ; no other life was like his. Scholars enter with enthusiasm into the celebration of Lincoln's Birthday. They love his name. These exercises provide more material than will be needed for one program. Select that best adapted to your grade, but be sure to combine instruction with entertainment. Let the program embrace an outline of Lincoln's life, and describe his good qualities and character. Bmbellish the program with his own words and pictures of his wonderful deeds. Use decorations freely. They will add much to the program. ARCHIBALD HUMBOLDT. 61391 pwc Copies Received OCT 15 1900 Cof ynght intry SECOND copy. 0«iiverfld to OROtR DIVISION, 13'^ 24 mo Decorations and Essentials. The following articles should be provided for the cel- ebration of Lincoln's Birthday: A good portrait of Lincoln. An abundance of flags. Wreaths and other decorations. Blackboard stencils illustrating the life of Lincoln. A motto from Lincoln's sayings.^ A supply of "American Patriotic Songs." A Lincoln souvenir for each scholar. The publishers of this' book make a specialty of supply- ing these articles. They are described in the advertising pages. Write for full descriptive catalogue. MARCH BROTHERS, Publishers, 48 East Mulberry Street, LEBANON, OHIO. Lincoln's Birthday Exercises. SONG—" LINCOLN." Tune — " IIoUl the Fort." O'er the land to-day is ringing, Praise of Lincoln's name ; Childish voices now are singing Lincoln's glorious fame. Chorus. Yes, we love the name of Lincoln ; Lincoln good and true ; Under God he saved the nation ; Saved for me, for you. He had sworn to do his duty, Sworn to do the right ; And our Flag, in all its beauty, Saved from foeman's spite. Lord ! we come to thee, confessing, Bound in sin were we ; Lincoln, working with thy blessing, Wrought and we are free. JV. IV. Stone. SYMPOSIUM ON LINCOLN'S LIFE AND CHARACTER. Have ready short papers by the scholars on the following:: subjects : a. Lincoln's Boyhood. /;. Lincoln's Early Manhood. (See McClure's " Early Life of Lincoln" for material on these two topics.) c. Lincoln's Political Speeches. d. Lincoln as President. e. Lincoln's Character. /. Lincoln's Religion. {Material on these topics may be found in any of the many lives of Lincoln. For the last topic, see especially The Christian Advocate, of February 27, 1896, or The Independent, of April 4, 1895.") '3) LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. A LINCOLN EXERCISE By Alice E. Allen. From Primary Education. Enter: — Seven small boys, each carrying large letter of bright red paper. All recite : {May be sung, if desired, to tune of " Ya7ikee Doodle. ''^ We're seven boys of seven kinds, Each brings a bright red letter ; We've much to say this holiday, That all may love it better. First : {Stepping forward and holding out letter.) This "L#" is a big one, but means " little lad," And also "log hut," the first home that he had. Second: {As above.) To him " I" meant " Indians," — many were near, But still in the forest he played without fear. Third : "N" says there were no schools, like ours, for small boys. And tells of no games and no fun and no toys. Fourth : My " C" means his cap. 'Twas the funniest kind — 'T was made out of coon-skin — the tail hung behind. Fifth Sixth This round " O " says older and older he grew, A strong little fellow, quite honest and true. My " L," tells of lessons he liked and he learned, And then how the love of all people he earned. Seventh : My " ]S " means the " Nation " so great and so grand. He ruled when a man — our own noble land. All {recite or sin g^: We're seven boys of seven kinds, Each one has shown his letter, And said his say upon this day, That all may love it better. Beginning with the first each lifts his letter high and names it clearly. After the seventh has named his, all pronoimce LINCOLN. 77^1? 7vhole school may ?iow recite the motto : " God make us worthy of the memory of Abraham Lincoln." — Phillips Brooks. LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. '" ^ $ RECITATION. _ For a Boy. Our Lincoln, when he was a boy, Was very tall and slim. You see I'm just a littlp tall; I wonder if I look like him. Our Lincoln, when he was a boy, -^^ Was very brave and very true. To-day I'm just a little brave; In this I'm like our Lincoln, too. Our Lincoln, when he was a man, Was loved and honored everywhere. I'll be the man that Lincoln was, To do this I must now prepare. CROWNING LINCOLN. An Exercise for Four Pupils. LincoMs picture may be placed upon an easel. The first three who speak may lay a bit of evergreen at the bottom of the picture — where it rests upon the easel. The last one who speaks may slip a laurel wreath down over one of the uprights of the easel, 1. To-day I bring this laurel fair, For him our hero grand. For Lincoln's name is dear to all Throughout this whole broad land. 2. My evergreen I bring for him, His heart was true and brave ; In all his work, in all his deeds. The best he always gave. 3. Our country, strong and grand to-day, He joined in love and might. His praise we sing, his name we love; His life was pure and right. 4. And so this crown of evergreen Is for our hero great. He saved our country. Freedom gave; O, praise him, every State ! — American Primary Teacher. LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. EXERCISE FOR THREE PUPILS. First Pupil {carrying an armful of books, "-Robinson Crusoe," '^Filgritn's Progress," ''Life of Washington," Bible, ''History of the United States"): The books were. few that Lincohi had, He read the Bible, histories, too, "The Life of Washington " charmed the lad, And "Pilgrim's Progress" he read through. Second Pupil (joith small shovel, ax, and hoe): Our Lincoln worked from morn till night, He swung the ax and tilled the land, Each duty met with will and might. Each deed was brave and true and grand. Third Pupil {carrying s7vord and fag): In war, in peace, throughout each day He planned for every state. And safely, through a dangerous way, Brought Union, Freedom great. All: With joy and truth we celebrate His birthday every year. Long live our Lincoln true and great. For him give hearty cheer. LINCOLN EPIGRAMS. Let the roll M called and the Scholars respond to their nafnes by quoting one of the Lincoln Epigrams. We can not escape history. Let none falter who thinks he is right. If slavery is not wrong, then nothing is wrong. Come what will, I will keep my faith with friend and foe. All that I am, all that I hope to be, I owe to my angel mother. There is no grievance that is a fit object of redress by mob law. This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. I authorize no bargains for the presidency, and will be bound by none. LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. 7 For thirty years I have been a temperance man, and I am too old to change. No man is good enough to govern another man without that other's consent. Gold is good in its place ; but living, brave, and patriotic men are better than gold. This Government must be preserved in spite of the acts of any man, or set of men. Nowhere in the world is presented a Government of so much liberty and equality. Slavery is founded in the selfishness of man's nature — opposition to it in his love of justice. If I live, this accursed system of robbery and shame in our treatment of the Indians shall be reformed. In law, it is good policy never to plead what you need not, lest you oblige yourself to prove what you can not. Understanding the spirit of our institutions to aim at the elevation of men, I am opposed to whatever tends to degrade them. The reasonable man has long since agreed that intemperance is one of the greatest, if not the greatest, of all evils among mankind. The purposes of the Almighty are perfect, and must prevail, though we erring mortals may fail accurately to perceive them in advance. I know that the Lord is always on the side of right; but it is my con- stant anxiety and prayer that I and this Nation should be on the Lord's side. Many free countries have lost their liberty, and ours may lose hers; but if she shall, be it my proudest plume, not that I was the last to desert, but that I never deserted her. By a course of reasoning, Euclid proves that all the angles in a triangle are equal to two right angles. Now, if you undertake to disprove that prop- osition, would you prove it false by calling Euclid a liar ? I am profitably engaged reading the Bi])le. Take all of this book upon reason that you. can, and the balance on faith, and you will live and die a better man. (Said to Joshua Speed, about a year before the President's assassination.) With malice toward none ; with charity for all ; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in ; to bind up the Nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphans — to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations. 8 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. LINCOLN ANECDOTES. {These may be recited or read by the pupils, or %voven into a dialogue, each pupil telling which he likes best. ) Shortly after he was inaugurated, when ofifice-seekers were besieging him, and important news of the outbreak in the South was coming to him hourly, he said : "I am like a man so busy in letting rooms in one end of his house, that he can not stop to put out the fire that is burning the other end." To his cabinet, who asked him whether it would be right to allow the archtraitor, Jacob Thompson, to slip out of the country disguised, Mr. Lincoln replied: "Well, let me tell you a story. There was an Irish soldier here last summer who wanted something to drink stronger than water, and stopped at a drug store where he espied a soda fountain. ' Mr. Doctor,' said he, ' give me, plaze, a glass of soda water, and if you can put in a few drops of whisky unbeknown to anyone I'll be obleeged.' Now," continued Mr. Lin- coln, "if Jake Thompson is permitted to go through Maine unbeknown to anyone, what the harm ? So don't have him arrested." One day the Hon. Thaddeus Stevens called with an elderly lady in great, trouble, whose son had been in the army, but for some offense had been court-martialed, and sentenced either to death or imprisonment at hard labor for a long term. There were some extenuating circumstances, and after a full hearing the President turned to the Representative and said: "Do you think this is a case which will warrant my interference?" " With my knowledge of the facts and the parties," was the reply, "I should have no hesitation in granting a pardon." "Then," returned Mr. Lincoln, "I will pardon him;" and he proceeded forthwith to execute the paper. The gratitude of the mother was too deep for expression, save by her tears. When a friend brought to his attention the fact that a member of his Cabinet was seeking for the nomination, while Mr. Lincoln was candidate for renomination, the President accepted the announcement with the utmost good humor and said : " My brother and I were once plowing corn on a Kentucky farm, I driving the horse and he holding the plow. The horse was lazy, but on one occasion rushed across the field so that I, with long legs, could hardly keep pace with him. On reaching the end of the furrow I found an enor- mous ' chin fly ' fastened upon him, and knocked him off. My brother asked me what I did that for. I told him I didn't want the old horse bitten in that way. 'Why,' said my brother, 'That's all that made him go.' If Mr. has a presidential ' chin fly ' biting him, I'm not going to knock him off, if it will only make his department go." LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. 9 After Mr. Lincoln's nomination jn i860, an admiring hatter sent him a new silk hat. Mr. Lincoln put it on, and walked to the glass to see if it fitted, and remarked to his wife: "Well, wife, we are going to have some new clothes anyway." Mr. Lincoln's good nature was such that even in the busy war times he received almost everybody who had a grievance, and would even give pre- cious time to those who had no particular claim upon his attention. On one occasion Robert Dale Owen called upon him to read him a long manuscript, on one of the abstruse subjects with which that rather erratic thinker loved to deal. Mr. Lincoln heard him patiently all through, and when the author looked up to him for his opinion, responded: " Well, for those who like that sort of thing, I should think that is just the sort of thing they would like." JUSTICE TEMPERED WITH MERCY. "Well, my child," he said, in his pleasant, cheerful tone, "what do you want so bright and early in the morning ? " " Bennie's life, please," faltered Blossom. "Bennie? Who is Bennie?" " My brother, sir. They are going to shoot him for sleeping at his post." "Oh, yes;" and Mr. Lincoln ran his eye over the papers before him. " I remember. It was a fatal sleep. You see, child, it was a time of special danger. Thousands of lives might have been lost for his culpable negligence." " So my father said," replied Blossom gravely; " but poor Bennie was so tired and Jemmie so weak. He did the work of two, sir, and it was Jemmie's night, not his; but Jemmie was too tired, and Bennie never thought about himself, that he was tired, too." "What is this you say, child? Come here; I do not understand," and the kind man caught eagerly, as ever, at what seemed to be a justification of an offense. Blossom went to him : he put his hand tenderly on her shoulder and turned up the pale, anxious face toward his. How tall he seemed ! and he was the President of the United States, too. But Blossom told her simple and straightforward story, and handed Mr. Lincoln Bennie's letter to read. He read it carefully, then, taking up his pen, wrote a few hasty lines and rang his bell. Blossom heard this order given : " Send this dispatch at once." The President then turned to the girl and said: "Go home, my child, and tell that father of yours, who could approve his country's sentence even when it took the life of a child like that, that Abraham Lincoln thinks the life lo LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. far too precious to be lost. Go back — or wait until to-morrow. Bennie will need a change after he has so bravely faced death; he shall go with you." " God bless you, sir," said Blossom; and who shall doubt that God heard and registered the request ? Two days after this interview the young soldier came to the White House with his little sister. He was called into the President's private office and a strap fastened upon his shoulder. Mr. Lincoln then said: "The soldier that could carry a sick comrade's baggage and die for the act so uncomplainingly deserves well of his country." Then Bennie and Blossom took their way to their green mountain home. A crowd gathered at the Mill depot to welcome them back ; and as Farmer Owen's hand grasped that of his boy, tears flowed down his cheeks, and he was heard to say fervently : "The Lord be praised!" LINCOLN. GOV. R. Q. OQLESBY'S TRIBUTE. "Who shall measure the usefulness of the life of such a man, and who shall hope to do his memory justice ? In the long range and course of time, come what may — whether a republic grounded on the immovable foundations of justice and freedom, approved after long experience and ages of human happiness as the best form of human government still standing, or whether a republic, tore into factions and rent by the mad ambitions of men, in ruins — this monument, an enduring testimonial to humble life, glorious deeds, and shining example of the great citizen and martyr, will stand for the illumination of all men of every clime, nationality and condition, who in search of the highest aims and loftiest purposes of life shall come to this fountain for inspi- ration and hope. Here the humble may take new courage, the proud learn humility, the ambitious, that the true way to greatness lies through industry, integrity and patriotism, and all men that only the good can be truly great. In no other country under the sun could the obscure boy have found his way through the long succession of mysteries and grave events to such em- inence and power ; and where and in what can one be found who wielded power with such grace,' humility and wisdom? The living assign him his proper place in the affections of all men. Posterity, profoundly moved by the simplicity of his private life, elevated and enlightened by the purity and splen- dor of his administration and public services, can not fail to fix his place amongst those who shall rank highest in their veneration. He has gone to the firmament of Washington, and a new light shines down upon his beloved countrymen from the American constellation." LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. il GENERAL GRANT'S TRIBUTE. "To know him personally was to love and respect him for his great qualities of heart and head, and for his patience and patriotism. With all his disap- pointments from failures on the part of those to whom he had intrusted com- mand, and treachery on the part of those who had gained his confidence but to betray it, I never heard him utter a complaint, nor cast a censure for bad conduct or bad faith. It was his nature to find excuses for his adversaries. In his death the Nation lost its greatest hero. In his death the South lost its most just friend." WM. J. BRYAN'S TRIBUTE. "Abraham Lincoln is one of America's immortals. He grows in the affections of the people with each passing year. He was a product of our civilization, reared among the people, and their friend. As an orator, he has seldom, if ever, been surpassed in simplicity of expression and force of argu- ment ; as a patriot, he was wholly devoted to his country's welfare and fol- lowed lofty ideals ; as a statesman, he fought principles rather than men, and thus avoided the bitterness of personal antagonisms. His birth, his boyhood, his political contests, his public life and his tragical death combined to give him an unique place in our Nation's history." HON. HENRY WATTERSON'S TRIBUTE. "Where did Shakespeare get his genius? Where did Mozart get his music? Whose hand smote the lyre of the Scottish ploughman and stayed the life of the German priest? God, God, and God alone; and as surely as these were raised up by God, inspired by God was Abraham Lincoln ; and a thou- sand years hence no story, no tragedy, no epic poem will be filled with greater wonder, oi be followed by mankind with deeper feeling than that which tells of his life and death." SENATOR THURSTON'S TRIBUTE. " What we need in this country is the emancipation proclamation and the Stars and Stripes at every American polling place. We need a revival of the American flag. Let it float over every American school-house; let- the true story of every American battlefield be taught at every school. " It does not matter whether the American cradle is rocked to the music of ' Yankee Doodle ' or the lullaby of ' Dixie,' if the flag of the Nation is dis- played above it. Our Nation has stood for twelve decades, a menace to oppression, the hope of the oppressed, mother of republics ; her lullaby is sung over every cradle of liberty throughout the world. 12 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. "On freedom's roll of honor the name of Abraham Lincoln is written first. The colossal statue of his fame stands forever on the pedestal of a peo- ple's love. About it are the upturned glorified faces of an emancipated race ; in its protecting shadow, liberty, equal rights, and justice are the heritage of every American citizen ; the sunshine of approving heaven rests upon it like an infinite benediction, and over it calmly floats the unconquered flag of the greatest Nation of the earth." SENATOR DEPEW'S TRIBUTE. "As we study the characteristics which made Lincoln great and suc- cessful, we find them not in the usual gifts of great statesmen. They were an instinct for the right, a comprehension of justice, a boundless sympathy and compassion, an intense and yearning love for his fellows and their welfare which knew neither rank nor race, but gathered within its boundless charity all mankind. The force and effect of this power in Lincoln can be best illus- trated by the contrast between him and his great antagonist, Douglas. In any condition of the country's affairs, when great moral questions were not at issue, Stephen A. Douglas would have been President. "A clerk in a store on starvation wages, a storekeeper without capital, and his business sold out by the sheriff, a surveyor earning ten or fifteen dollars a month, and a lawyer with no other equipment than Blackstone and the statutes of Illinois — such was Lincoln at a period when the accomplished and cultured Douglas was already the idol of his State. And yet this, on the threshold of such a career, with such surroundings, such teachings, and such impressions ; in the midst of a community which drank, Lincoln was a tem- perate man ; in the midst of a community that swore, Lincoln was free from blasphemy; in the midst of a community not highly moral, Lincoln was as pure as an angel ; in the midst of a community which regarded the negro as no better than the horse or the mule, Lincoln was an abolitionist. " He did not represent hereditary privileges, for he came from the plainest of the plain people ; he did not represent heredity, for he had none ; he did not represent the colleges or the universities, for he knew them not; he did not represent capital and great accumulations, for he had neither ; but he did represent the toiler upon the farm, in the workshop, upon the highway, in the factory, anywhere, everywhere where honest men and honest women were striving to better their conditions and to illustrate the dignity of labor and the nobility of American citizenship. "Lincoln knew nothing of the dignity, so far as it is expressed in man- ner and dress, which belongs to high station. The instinctive sense of pro- priety and consciousness of superiority and greatness which hedged Washington was absent in him. The test of greatness is the wearing of the halo. It LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. 13 destroyed Napoleon, it ruined two-thirds of the generals in the war, it has driven great and little politicians, from the commencement of our republic until now, into obscurity. But Lincoln was never troubled as to the size of his head. He never overestimated nor underestimated who he was, what he was, nor what he represented. He never forgot where he came from, and never lost sight of the fact that except by the accident of position he was neither better nor worse than those who placed him in the Presidential chair. He possessed what no other ruler ever did, or, if he did, no other ruler dared to use, the power of humor. The portentous solemnity of our public men pervades our political atmosphere, even to depressing melancholy. The less the statesman knows the more solemn he is, the thicker his head, the more owlish his bearing." The following shows the war President's quaint diplomatic tact: "Dur- ing the war John Ganson of Buffalo was a member of Congress. His face and his head were hairless and polished like a billiard ball. He was a Dem- ocrat, but supported the President. The conditions of the army were very blue in the East and in the West. Ganson came in one day and said : ' Mr. President, I am risking my re-election in supporting your war measures. The campaign seems very unsatisfactory. Of course, I will not give out anything you tell me. What is the situation at the front?' Mr. Lincoln, in his search- ing and sad way, looked at him for a moment as if he was about to reveal the secret of the whole army, and then tumbled Ganson out of the reception room by saying, 'Ganson, how clean you shave.'" PRESIDENT McKINLEY'S TRIBUTE. * ' It is not difficult to place a correct estimate upon the character of Lin coin. He was the greatest man of his time, and especially approved of God for the work He gave him to do. " History abundantly approves his superiority as a leader and establishes his constant reliance upon a higher power for guidance and support. The tendency of the age is to exaggerate, but of Lincoln certainly no one has spoken more highly than those who knew him best. "A distinguished orator of to-day has said : ' Lincoln surpassed all ora- tors in eloquence; all diplomatists in wisdom; all statesmen in foresight, and the most ambitious in fame.' "This is in accord with the estimate of Stanton, who pronounced him * the most perfect ruler of men the world had ever seen.' " AN ANONYMOUS TRIBUTE. "Abraham Lincoln, like the prophets of old, lived in the future. His wisdom was more than mortal; his charity more than human. His whole life gave evidence that he was divinely prepared for a great purpose." 14 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. LINCOLN'S GETTYSBURG SPEECH. " Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth upon this con" tinent a new Nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. " Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that Nation, or any Nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as the final resting-place of those who here gave their lives that that Nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. "But in a larger sense we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our power to add or detract. The world will Kttle note, nor long remember what we say here ; but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly carried on. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us — that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to the cause for which they here gave the last full measure of devotion — that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain, that the Nation shall, un- der God, have a new birth of freedom, and that the government of the people, by the people, and for the people, shall not perish from the earth." MY CAPTAIN. O captain ! my captain ! our fearful trip is done ; The ship has weathered every rack, the prize- we sought is won; The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting. While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring. But, O heart! heart! heart! O the bleeding drops of red, Where on the deck my captain lies. Fallen, cold and dead. O captain ! my captain ! rise up and hear the bells ; Rise up — for you the flag is flung — for you the bugle trills. For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths — for you the shores a-crowding, For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning ; Here captain ! dear father ! This arm beneath your head ; It is 5ome dream, that on the deck You've fallen, cold and dead. LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. 15 My captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still ; My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will ; But the ship is anchored safe and sound, its voyage closed and done, From fearful trip the victor ship comes in with object won. Exult, O shore, and ring, O bells! But I, with mournful tread, Walk the deck, my captain lies Fallen, cold and dead. — JValf Whitman on the Death 0/ Lincoln. OH, WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT OF HORTAL BE PROUD. (Lincoln's Favorite Poem.') Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud? Like a swift-fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud, A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave, Man passes from life to his rest in the grave. The leaves of the oak and the willow shall fade. Be scattered around and together be laid ; And the young and the old, and the low and the high, Shall molder to dust and together shall lie. The infant, a mother attended and loved. The mother, that infant's affection who proved, The husband, that mother and infant who blessed, ' Each, all, are away to their dwellings of rest. The maid, on whose cheek, on whose brow, in whose eye, Shone beauty and pleasure — her triumphs are by. And the memories of those who have loved her and praised Are alike from the minds of the living erased. The hand of the king that the scepter hath borne. The brow of the priest that the miter hath worn, The eye of the sage, and the heart of the brave. Are hidden and lost in the depth of the grave. The peasant, whose lot was to sow and to reap, The herdsmen, who climbed with his goats up the steep. The beggar, who wandered in search of his bread. Have faded away like the grass that we tread. i6 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. The saint, who enjoyed the communion of Heaven, The sinner, who dared to remain unforgiven. The wise and the foolish, the guilty and just. Have quietly mingled their bones in the dust. So the multitude goes, like the flower or the weed, That withers away to let others succeed ; So the multitude comes, even those we behold, To repeat every tale that has often been told. For we are the same that our fathers bave been ; ' We see the same sights that our fathers have seen ; We drink the same stream, and we view the same sun, And run the same course that our fathers have run. The thoughts we are thinking, our fathers would think ; From the death that we shrink from, our fathers would shrink ; To the life that we cling to, they also would cling ; But it speeds for us all, like a bird on the wing. They loved, but the story we can not unfold; They scorned, but the heart of the haughty is cold ; They grieved, but no wail from their slumbers will come; They joyed, but the tongue of their gladness is dumb. They died — ah ! they died — and we things that are now. Who walk on the turf that lies over their brow, Who make in their dwelling a transient abode. Meet the things that they met on their pilgrimage-road. Yea, hope and despondency, pleasure and pain, We mingle together in sunshine and rain; And the smiles and the tears, the song and the dirge. Still follow each other like surge upon surge. 'Tis the wink of an eye, 'tis the draught of a breath, From the blossom of health to the paleness of death. From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud. Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud? — PVm. Knox. LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. 17 MR. LINCOLN'S POEM. « The follounng poem was written by Mr. Lincoln when ne was about thiiiy- five years old. The occasion was a visit to the neighborhood of his old Indiana home to make a political speech in behalf of Henry Clay. My childhood's home I see again, And sadden with the view; And still, as memory crowds my brain. There's pleasure in it too. Oh, memory ! thou midway world 'Twixt earth and Paradise, Where things decayed and loved ones lost, In dreamy shadows rise. And freed from all that's earthly vile, Seem hallowed pure and bright. Like scenes in some enchanted isle All bathed in liquid light. And dusky mountains please the eye. When twilight chases day; As bugle notes that passing by, In distance die away. As leaving some grand waterfall, We lingering list its roar; So memory will hallow all We've known, but know no more. Near twenty years have passed away. Since here I bid farewell To woods and fields, and scenes of play, And playmates loved so well. Where many were but few remain, Of old familiar things ; But seeing them to mind again The lost and absent brings. The friends I left that parting day, How changed, as time has sped; Young childhood grown strong manhood gay, And half of all are dead. i8 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. I heard the loud survivors tell How naught from death could save, Till every sound appears a knell, And every spot a grave. I range the fields with pensive tread, And pace the hollow rooms, And feel (companion of the dead) I'm living in the tombs. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. They say that God no longer talks with men ; And when some man to fame attains, quite free From college lore or school's traditions, be He grand and pure as saint of old, 'tis then They cry self-made as tho' beyond their ken. How mind attuned to Divinity, Interprets well the mighty symbols He Doth hourly trace on life with powerful pen. Then not self-made, but God-wrought let us say Of these great souls, whose very printed deeds Illume our hearts by hint of God-like sway That thrills and lifts us far above earth's needs And dragging cares. The modern prophets they Decrying each his age's Baalist creeds. Our martyred hero Lincoln was of these ; For who can think that his serene, clean soul Of only worldly wisdom sought a toll — Caught but ambition's message from the breeze That whispered thro' the gloomy forest trees ? Who doubts while cleaving clean the mighty bole, He fought with self and wrong till o'er him stole A quickened sense which his great work foresees. And having struggled up to heights where God Affords to stoop to men, henceforth no more He strove, but like a child obeyed and trod The higher, rocky way, heartsick, footsore, Afar from shade or flower-sprinkled sod, With prescience dim of martyrdom in store. — Marietta Hoover Dunn. LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. 19 ABRAHAM LINCOLN. This man whose homely face you look upon, Was one of Nature's masterful, great men ; Born with strong arms that unfought victories won, Direct of speech, and cunning with the pen, Chosen for large designs, he had the art Of winning with his humor, and he went Straight to his mark, which was the human heart ; Wise, too, for what he could not break he bent. • Upon his back a more than Atlas' load, The burden of the Commonwealth was laid ; He stooped, and rose up with it, though the road Shot suddenly downwards, not a whit dismayed. Hold, warriors, councillors, kings! All now give place To this dead Benefactor of the Race ! —R. H. Stoddard. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. He went about his work, — such work as few Ever had laid on head and heart and hand, — As one who knows, where there's a task to do, Man's honest will must Heaven's good grace command. ] So he went forth to battle on the side That he felt clear was Liberty's and Right's, As in his peasant boyhood he had plied His warfare with rude Nature's thwarting mights. So he grew up, a destined work to do, And he lived to do it; four long-suftering years Ill-fate, ill-feeling, ill-report lived through, And then he heard the hisses change to cheers. The taunts to tribute, the abuse to praise, And took both with the same unwavering mood: Till, as he came on light, from darkling days, And seemed to touch the goal from where he stood. — Torn Taylor. LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES, OUR PILOT. Voice. Who guided our noble ship of State Through crimson seas of strife? Who saved it from the rocks of fate, And waves that sought its Hfe ? Who stood so nobly at the helm Through voyage four years long? When dangers threatened to o'erwhelm. Who kept his courage strong ? And when our gallant ship of State Into safe harbor sailed, What name in all the land was great, With joyous honors hailed ? All. We know the name. We know it well. With gratitude our hearts now swell, As Abraham Lincoln's name we tell. THE PARDON. 'Twas in the war-times early days, When eyes looked forth with anxious gaze,. A young lad had been doomed to die, And would'st thou know the reason why ? He had been placed as sentinel, And at his post asleep he fell, And for that closing of his eyes. Before him dreamless slumber lies. The President read the sentence through. And murmured "The act I cannot do. Brought up on a farm, at work late kept. Poor boy ! No wonder that he slept." And o'er the paper he drew his pen, And signed his pardon there and then. Great-hearted man ! Shall I unfold What later on the sequel told ? LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. At Fredericksburg, among the slain, A lad beyond all mortal pain, Was lying by himself apart, A picture next his youthful heart. 'Twas Lincoln's picture that he wore, And just beneath these words it bore — *'God bless Abraham Lincoln." Thus he showed The debt of love to him he owed. — Popular Educator. LINCOLN. With Hfe unsullied from his youth, He meekly took the ruler's rod, And wielding it in love and truth He lived the noble work of God. He knew no fierce unbalanced zeal. That spurns all human differings, Nor craven fear, that shuns the steel. That carves the way to better things. And in the night of blood and grief. When horror rested on the ark. His was the calm, undimmed belief That felt God's presence in the dark ; Full well he knew each wandering star That once had decked the azure dome Would tremble through the clouds of War, And, like a prodigal, come home. He perished ere the angel Peace Had rolled War's curtains from the sky, But he shall live when wrong shall cease— The good and great can never die ; For though his heart lies cold and still We feel its beatings warm and grand. And still his spirit's pulses thrill Through all the councils of the land. The flag of strife at length is furled Rebellion drops the gory knife ; The spring of peace glides up the world, Its buds are bursting into life. 22 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. Beneath the death clouds low and dim, The serpent shrinks in black despair ; We lift our ey6s to freedom's sun, And see the eagle hovering there. Oh, for the hosts that sleep today, Lulled by the sound of Southern waves ; The sun that lit them in the fray Now warms the flowers upon their graves ; Sweet flowers that speak Hke words of love Between the forms of friend and foe, Perchance their spirits meet above. Who crossed their battle-blades below. 'Twas not in vain the deluge came, And systems crumbled in the gloom, And not in vain have sword and flame Robbed home and heart of life and bloom; The mourners' cross, the martyrs' blood, Shall crown the world with holier rights, And slavery's storm, and slavery's flood, Leave Freedom's ark on loftier heights. — James G. Clark, LINCOLN. In all the Heaven one object holds my gaze, Compelling witness of a reverent heart, And ever, as I look increased amaze That mighty soul does to my soul impart. It bids me see in every clime and race The common bond that makes the world akin To find the fatherhood in every face ; To feel the love that brotherhood should win. With malice none — with charity for all It led a nation in its darkest hour, As though in silence it heard but the call Of Hini who sent His own, divinest power. Oh, son of sons ! all time to come will scan Thy wondrous soul and cry, "Behold the Man!" LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. 23 WHEN LINCOLN DIED. When Lincoln died a universal grief Went round the earth. Men loved him in that hour. The North her leader lost; the South her friend; The nation lost its savior ; and the slave , Lost his deliverer ; the most of all, Oh, there was sorrow 'mid the humble poor, When Lincoln died. When Lincoln died, a great soul passed from earth. In him were strength and gentleness so mixed That each upheld the other. He was firm And yet was kind ; as tender as a child. And yet as iron-willed as Hercules. His power was almost limitless, and yet His mercy was boundless as his power. And he was jovial, laughter loving still. His heart was ever torn with suffering. There was divine compassion in the man ; A God-like love and pity for his race, The world saw the full measure of that love When Lincoln died. When Lincoln died a type was lost to men. The earth has had her conquerors and kings, And many of the common great. Through all She only had one Lincoln. There are none Like him in all the annals of the past. He was the growth of our new soil ; a child Of our new time ; he was an American ; Was of the people, from the lowest rank ; And yet he scaled with ease the highest height. Mankind one of its few immortals lost, When Lincoln died. When Lincoln died, it seemed a providence; For he appeared as one sent for a work. Whom, when that work was done, God summoned home. He led a splendid fight for Liberty ; And when the shackles fell, the land was saved, He laid his armour by and sought his rest, A glory sent from Heaven covered him When Lincoln died. — J. A. Edi:^erton. 24 LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES. WE SING HIS PRAISE. O Lincoln ! great, and wise, and good, Our gratitude to thee is due ; A man beloved and understood, Sojjust, so loyal, and so true! Struggling, striving, pushing onward, Ever doing what seemed best ; Guarding, guiding, planning union. Peace, and love, and rest. So now our Lincoln I would crown With evergreens so fair ; And may his name forever live, Our love for him declare. All {with school) repeat. — And ever anew our hearts shall love His glorious deeds, his life, his name ; And ever anew our voices sing In loyal praise our hero's fame^ ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Mid the names that fate has written On the deathless scroll of fame, We behold the name of Lincoln Shining like a living flame. Mid the deeds the world remembers, (Deeds by dauntless heroes done,) We behold the deeds of Lincoln, Blazing like a brilliant sun. Mid the hves whose light illumines History's dark and dreadful page, We behold the life of Lincoln, Lighting up an awful age. When the storm of peril threatened His loved land to overwhelm, Safe the ship of state he guided. With his hand upon the helm. -Statesman, ruler, hero, martyr — Fitting names for him, I say, Wherefore, let us all as brothers. Love his memory today. • Susie M. Best. pebruary *^ The month of School Celebrations. ^: * '■ — '1 1^ z ^ 2 1_ — '1 : ^ — ^--..-^ FEBRUARY is crowded witF] holi- days and birthdays of noted persons, It contains more special days that give occasioq for school celebrations and observations thaq any other month[, Lincoln's Birthday, - Pebruary 1 2 St. Valentine's Day, - " 14. Washington's Birthday, " 22 Lowell's Birthday, - " 22 Longfellow's Birthday, " 27 FOREMOST OF AMERICA'S PATRIOTS AND AUTHORS. This Catalogue has to do with the means for the proper observance ot the special days in February. At no other time of the year are such opportunities afforded for instruction in Patriotism, Biography and Literature. Published and Manufactured by MARCH BROTHERS, 48 E. Mulberry St., Lebanon, Ohio. Remittance must accompany the order. Samples sent only upon receipt of price. All Orders filled the day received. March Brothers. Lebanon, Ohio. Books ot.... Entertainments. "HOW TO CELEBRATE" contains full and complete programs for every holiday, and for the Birthdays of noted men and authors. The programs for Washington's and Lincoln's Birthdays aie especially full. Ample provision is made for all grades. The programs are practical and delightful. Postpaid, 25 cents. FIN DE SIECLE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES for Primary, Intermediate and High Schools. Spicy recitations, dialogues, tableaux, original songs, and other features. Nothing impractical or un- desirable. Just what every teacher wishes. Postpaid, 15 cents. THE WASHINGTON GUARDS AND LADIES OF HONOR. A happy combination drill and cantata, including the attractions of each, but made so easy that almost any school can give it. Introduces George and Martha Washington in solos and a duet. Can best be given byi;en boys and ten girls, though fewer will answer. Delightfully pleasing. Postpaid, 15 cents. HATCHET MARCH AND DRILL. A new spectacular entertain- ment for Washington's Birthday, for either 16 or 24 boys. Not difficult, but very effective and beautiful. Decidedly unique and original. Post- paid 15 cents. Sunflower March. For sixteen boys. ^ Rose March and Drill. For sixteen girls. > Spear Drill. For sixteen girls. ) Similar to Hatchet March and Drill. While not intended specially for February, they are perfectly appropriate, and will prove delightful numbers for any program. Bach 15 cents. American Patriotic Songs. FOR SCHOOLS. Contains words and music complete. A splendid collection of the best patriotic songs. Nothing so stirring, hearty, helpful. Just the book for the February celebrations. 5 Cents each, postpaid; 50 Cents a dozen; $4.00 per hundred. March Brothers, Lebanon, Ohio. Blackboard Stencils Nothing affords more pleasure than these Stencils. No school entertainment is complete without them. Thousands of schools hare used them with entire satisfaction. New Washingrton Stencils. A Series of Specially 4ttractive Pic- tures Illustrating the Life of Washington. Size, 5 ct. Stencils, 18x24 in., 10 ct. Stencils, 24x36 inches. Washington and his Moth- er 5 cents WashingtonandhisHatch- et.... 5 -" Washington as Surveyor.. 5 " Washington as Command- er-in-Chief. 5 " Surrender of Cornwallis...lO " Washington as President.. 5 " The Home at Mt. Vernon,10 " Washington's Tomb 10 " Washington's Monument.lO " Flag and Liberty Bell 5 " Washington Crossing Del- aware 10 " American Flag (18x24) .... 5 " American Flag (24x36) ....10 " Statue of Liberty 5 " Goddess of Liberty 5 " Child of Liberty 5 " U.S. Coat of Arms 5 " Hatchet and Cherry Bor- der .-. 10 " Martha Washington 5 " Any selection amounting to 60 cents will be sent for 50 cents. Brilliant Crayon Should Be Used with These Stencils. We have it in boxes containing 2 sticks each of 6 different colors, 12 in all. The colors are most beautiful. 20 cents a box. New Lincoln Sten- cils. Beautifully Portraying the Important Events in His Life. Size, 5 ct. Stencils 18x24 in.; 10 ct. Stencils 24x36 inches. Lincoln's Birthplace 5 cents Lincoln at Study 10 " Lincoln the Railsplitter 10 " Home at Springfield 10 Lincoln as President 5 " Writing the Emancipation Proclamation 10 " Lincoln's Cabmet (30x40 in.) 15 " Lincoln's Monument 10 " Lincoln's Statue 10 " Emancipation Statue 10 " Sold separately at prices given, or all for 80 cents. New Longfellow Stencils. Charming Pictures of Our Most Loved Poet. Sizes as stated above. Longfellow's Portrait 5 cents Longfello w^'s Home at Cambridge 10 " Longfellow^'s H«)me at Portland 10 " Longfellow in his Library, 10 " Longfellow's Statue 10 " Sold separately at prices given, or all for 35 cents. Other Stencils. Lowell's Portrait 5 cents Lowell's Home at Cam- bridge 10 " Mailing the Valentine 5 " February Calendar 10 " Send for complete Catalogue of Stencils. Makch Brothers, Lebanon, Ohio. Portraits of Washington, Lincoln, Longfellow, Dewey. The most important requisite to the celebration of the birthdays is a likeness of each of our heroes. We have prepared remarkably pleas- ing portraits of Washington, Lincoln, Longfellow and Dewey, each size 22x28 inches. Printed in black on white cardboard, as fine as steel. In the preparation of these pictures, ihe drawings have been hand- led with intense feeling, and the pictures lack entirely the hard, metallic effect so pronounced in many others of a similar style. The hkenesses are pc feet. That < f Lincoln is pronounced by Hon. Robert T. Lincoln to be the best portrnit of his father pubhshed. The photo from which the Dewey portrait is made was selected by Hon. Charles Dewey for the purpose, as the most authentic likeness of the Admiral. Price, 25 cents each, or the tour for 80 cents, postpaid. We also have the following Imitation Crayon Portraits of Eminent flen as£ Women. Per&ct likenesses, fiill life size. Finely executed. Each 22x28 inches. Sent securely packed and postpaid for 25 cents each, or five for $1,00. Gen. Nelson A. Miles. Blaine, Gladstone, Fitzhugh Lee. Jetterson, M^^^^V Admiral Pchley. Columbus, Handel. Admiral Dewey. Weoster. Haydn, Admiral Sampson, Mrs. H. B. Stowe, Liszt. Admiral J. C. Watson, Dickens, Gounod, Gen. W. R. Shafter, Bancroft, Mendelssohn, Gen. Wesley Merritt. Lieut. R. P. Hobson, Wagner,. Gen. Garcia. Capt O. D. Sigsbee. J^P^.y Lind, Frances E. Willard. Gen J. R. Brooke. William Penn, Grant. Pestalozzi, LaSalle, Martha Washington. Froebel, DeSotp, Sheridan, Eugene Field, ^ps,!?^' . t • Garfield, John Wesley. Washington Irving, Andrew Jackson, Horace Mann. S"??n Victoria, Benjamin Harrison, Bryant. McKinley. Gen. Sherman, Lowell, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Franklin, Whittier, Bryan, R. E. Lee. SolP?^?- -c -, r. ^f"**^' Cleveland, McKinley Family Group, Moore. Hayes, Shakespeare, LaFayette. Tennyson, All the Presidents on one sheet. Guaranteed Perfectly Satisfactory. Frames for Our Pictures. Elegant frames made of 2-inch Polished Oak Moulding, with glass, etc., complete, 95 cents each ; 3 for $2.60, by freight or express, not pre- paid. Add 20 cents for packing each shipment of frames. March Brothers, Lebanon, Ohio. Washington Souvenirs. A new line of our own manufacture, Very appropriate, and Wonderfully Pleasing. "WASHINGTON HATCHETS, carved from wood, two inches long, appropriately decorated in color and silver, and tied with a bow of ribbon. A unique and fitting souvenir. Postpaid, 3 cts. each. LARGER HATCHETS. Much more perfectly made, and very de- sirable. Four and one-half inches long, 5 cents each. CHERRY BOUQUETS. A bouquet of cherries, branch and leaves, full size, natural color, perfectly hfe-like, and full of beauty. A very dainty and appropriate souvenir. Postpaid, 4 cents each. PIN FLAGS. A very pretty flag, made of stiff crinkled paper, and mounted on a large pin ; resembles a flag flying, a splendid sou- venir. Per dozen, 18 cents. March Brothers, Lebanon, Ohio. (^ehool-poom (^eeomtions AMERICAN FLAGS. "There are many flags in many lands, There are flags of every hue; But there is no flag, however grand, Like our own Red, White and Blue." Printed Miislin Flags, Mounted on StaflFs. Heavy Muslin. Fast Oil Colors. 45 Stars. No. I. 3- 5- 6. 7- 7^. 8. 9- 2/^x3^ inches. Price per Dozen, Postpaid, $004 4x 6 in. " " " " oS 6x10 in. " " " " -20 8x13 in. '' " ]^' *| .35 12x18 in. '■ " " " '5^ 15x23 in. " " " " -7^ 20x28 ;n. " " " " 1.25 23x36 in. " " ** " 1-5^ BUNTING FLAGS. Sewed Bunting Flags, Fast Colors, 45 Stars, Machine Sewed, Best All Wool, U. S. Standard Bunting. Length, 5 Feet " 6 " Price, $ 2 00 " 2 75 " 7 " " 3 25 " 8 " " 4 00 " 10 " " 5 75 " 12 " " 7 50 •' 15 " " 10 00 << 18 " " 15 00 " 20 " . " 18 00 SILK FLAGS. Not on sticks .Specially desirable for fine decorations. 10 Inches Each $ .12 12 " " -20 18* " " -35 24 " " .50 36 " " 1-00 March Brothers, Lebanon, Ohio. St. Valentine's Day.... In many schools a delightful time is had by having a post-office in the school room. Allow the scholars to send val- entines to one another, (not comics). The teacher may send one to each scholar. This will create an era of good feeling. Valentines. The very best goods obtainable. Selected from all manufacturers, do- mestic and foreign. We have all kinds An envelope or box free with every valentine. Mo.i. ^^ Handsome Lace Valentines, nfX'U lace Paper, irotinted by raised bands oq cardboard, elegantly decorated m g Id, sih tr .lud colors. Bright and handsomely colored designs showing through the lace. Anapp'O- priate inscription on the front, and a suitable verse inside each valentine. Prices as follows: No. 1. 5^/4x4 inches, 1 cent each. No. 2. 6^2x4% inches, 2 '■ No. 3. 61/^x4% inches, with lace spring top, 3 ' " No, 5. 6%x6% inches, " " " " 5 " . " Sent postpaid at these prices.. An envelope free with each valentine. Larger ones any price you wish to pay, just as cheap in proportion. Valentine Cards. These are very delicate and artistic. Many prefer this style of valen- tine to the others, which are more showy. No. 251 — Beautiful landscapes, floral designs, etc.; embossed, cut out, and other effects 1 cent each No. 256 — Larger and more artistic. All embossed, rococo edges and cut out. Very choice 2 cents each No. 261 — Very fine assortment of children designs, flowers and land- scapes. Artistic 3 cents each No. 266 — Very richly decorated with gold and jewels. Beautiful and pleasing 4 cents each No. 270 — A very choice assortment. Jeweled and open-work folders; unique designs, very attractive 5 cents each No. 274 — Very elaborate folding cards, richly decorated in gold and colors. Very fine 10 cents each X/qlpkn-finA RrkfkH#a+c These are new and very desirable. Covers are YaiCllLlllC UUlllVICtS. handsome and contents appropriate. No. 202. 7x25^ inches. Covers of board, No. 206. 3 V^xs in. Very elaborate covers decorated in colors and jewels. " with rococo edges, very pretty design in colors. Text illustrated in monotint, 6 cents each. Rococo edges, some made of open work. 8 pgs. inside illustrated in choicest colors. Very rich, 10 cents each. Valentine Novelties. Innumerable shapes, de- signs, styles, made of silk, satin, celluloid and parch- ment, profusely and taste- fully decorated. It is ira- I pos.sible to minutely de I scribe these novelties 1 Large values for the mon- ey. Theyare packed each one in a box. Prices 20c 25c., .^oc., 40c., 50c., 75c , $i.oo,|i.50,|2,|3,$5. Send the amount of money you j wish to pay, and we will make a selection, and guarantee it will please you. One of Our Novelties. One of Our Novelties. 15 1900 March Brothers, Lebanon, Ohio. School=Room Decorations. Alhambra Decorative Paper. A new and ingenious article of manufacture for in and out-door decorations and ornamentations. It consists of running strips of fringed tissue papers, of the best quality and highest colors, so fast- ened around linen thread that it can be wound or hung in any form or design desired. May be made into stars, ban- ners, wreaths, etc., or hung in festoons. After shaking out, the strands are about 3 inches in diameter. Made in the following colors : Red, White and Blue, (Tri-color), Pink, Purple, Lemon, Black, White, Green, Orange, Dark Blue, Red, Lilac, Light Blue. Put up in rolls of 10 yards of a color. (We do not sell less than a roll). Price per roll, including postage, 35 cents. Alhambra Wreaths. Wreaths made of Alhambra Decorative Paper, 16 inches in diameter, mounted on paste- board. Very nice. May be had in any color. Price, including postage, each 25 cents. Letters for Mottoes. Many persons have difficulty in making mottoes on account of their inability to cut out letters correctly. ^Ve have P^o^^^f ed 8-inch letters, printed on cardboard. These letters may be used as they are, or cut out and covered with Alhambra N Paper or evergreen. 1 1. u * . «,^ It is not necessary to buy the whole alphabet, we will send just the letters necessary for your motto 1 eu us what the motto is, and remit for the number of letten it contains. Price of each letter, postpaid, 2 cents. All goods in this Catalogue sent postpaid at prices quoted. CoiPflii Volie 10 low 10 kMi SuttcD to £vcrB 0ra&e. New Celebrations for LAST DAY OF SCHOOL . FLAG DAY, BIRD DAY. Arfan§fed by MISS IDA M. HEDRICK. Ample material of all kinds— Songs, ReciUfions, Dialogues, etc., from which the teacher may select a full program suited to her grade. The author has had large experience in writing and compiling entertainments, and has learned to provide the much coveted material that insures a successful entertainment. Not a dull number in the collection. PRICE, Postpaid, 25 Cents. MARCH BROTHERS, Publishers, 48 East Mulberry Street, LEBANON, OHIO. "f' 9ke^in dediede 6mes ...^f Operettas, t^hibiticn S)rilhf ^pedal S)ai{ t^erehes, and tipeetaeular Entertainments. 9nee, 15 'Cents taek. ^^^ I. THE TWO INVITATIONS. For ThanVsjiving. A jolly new operetta. Fun from iMginning to end. The music is bright and catchy. Full of clever hits. Easy to give. For 4 boys and 5 girls. a. NOVEMBER'S CROWN. A new Spectacular F.niertainment for Thanksgiving. E»sy to preteat, b\it wonderfully brilliant and pleasing. A sinking success. For 14 boys and girli. 3. FIN DE SIECLE THANKSOIVINQ EXERCISES. Contains material for several entertainments. Separate program for each grade. Origin;il songs, recitations, dialogues, and many other features. Bright, enthusiastic, sensible. 4. FIN DB SIECLE CHRISTflAS EXERCISES. Sii^iilar 10 Thanksgiving Exercises. Incomparably the best book of Christmas Exercises published. 5. A SURPRISED QRUHBLER, or how Kriss Kringle Made a Convert. A new Christmas operetta. Brilliant music and sparkling words. Full of life. Original, jolly, and clever; sure to capiivate the audience. Requires about twenty-five minutes. «. 5UNFLOWER flARCH. for sixteen boys. 7. ROSE HARCH AND DRILL, for sixteen girls. 8. SPEAR DRILL, for sixteen girls, 9. CHRISTHAS STAR riARCH AND DRILL. Variout figures of fancy march**. and a captivating drill. Superbly brilliant. For 16 or 34 girls. These drills ^Nos. 6 to g) are simple and easy to get up, require no scenery, can be produced indoors or out, without special music, and are picturesque in efiecl. All ar« made pertei-tly clear and plain by means of diagrams that are fully explanatory. These drills are exceedingly effective in their execution, and are especially adapted for reprc* senta.tion at Church or School Enicrtaininents. 10. PIN DE SIECLE WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY EXERCIS6>, for Primary, In- termediate, and High Schools. Spicy recitations, dialogues, tableaux, original songs, and other features. Nothinj; impractical or undesirable. Just what every teacher wishes. II. THE WASHINqTON GUARDS AND LADIES OP HONOR. A happy combi- nation drill and cantata, including the attractions of each, but made so easy that almost any school can give it. Introduces George and Martha Washington in solos and a duet. Can best be given by ten boys and ten girls, though fewer will answer. Delightfully pleasing. la. HATCHET HARCH AND DRILL. A new spectacular entertainment for Wash- ington's Birthday, for ritiier 16 or 34 boys. Not difficult, but very effective and beautiful. Decidedly unique and original. 13. FIN DE SieCLE LINCOLN'S BIRTHDAY EXERCISES, By ARcniMAi.n Hum HOLDT. For all grades. Practical and instructive, but decidcdlj' pleasing. A sure success. 14. PIN DB SIECLE ARBOR DAY EXERCISES. By Mis.s Anna Sn ler. A gen erous collection of the choice.st quotations from noted authors, clever recitations, unique exercise and other splendid features Full of good things. Just what you need. 11; K<^/<\ m LIBRARY OF CONGRESS '■' 'Miil ilii I IliJiililliiililllJlJj ,| 012 026 437