NO PLAYS EXCHANGEC FRDCE. iSf DENISON'S ACTING PLAYS. Price 15 Cents Each, Postpaid, Unless Different Price fs Qfven. COMEDIES, MELODRAMAS, Etc. All that Glitters is not Gold, 2 acts, 2 hrs Aunt Dinah's Pledge, temper- ance, 2 acts, 1 hr Beggar Venus, 3 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min (2oc) Blow for Blow, 4 acts, 2 hrs. . . Bonnybell, operetta, Ih. (2oc). Caste, 3 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min. . . . Chimney Corner, 2 acts, 1 hr. 30 min Danger Signal, 2 acts, 2 hrs. . . . Diplomates, 4 acts, 3 hrs. (2oc) Down in Dixie, 4 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min , (25c) Early Vows, 2 acts, 1 hr. .(25c) East Lvnne, 5 acts, 2 hrs Elma, The Fairy Child. 1 hr. 45 min., operetta. ..(25c) Enchanted Wood (The), 1 hr. 45 min., operetta ;(3oc) Eulalia, 1 h. 30 min (25c) From Sumter to Appomattox. 4 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min. .(25c) Fruits of the Wine Cup, tem- perance, 3 acts, 1 hr Handy Andy, Irish, 2 acts, 1 hr. 30 min Home, 3 acts, 2 hrs Jedediah Judkins, J.P., 4 acts, 2hr. 30 min (25c) Lady of Lyons, 5 acts, 2 hrs, 30 min- London Assurance, 5 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min Lost in London, 3 acts, 1 hr. 45 miu Louva the Pauper, 5 acts, 1 hr. 45 min Michael Erie, 2 acts,l hr. 30 m. Mitsu-Yu-Nissi, Japanese Wed- ding, 1 hr. 15 min Money, 5 acts, 3 hrs My Wife's Relations, 1 hr Not such a Fool as he Looks, 3 acts, 2 hrs Odds with the Enemy, 5 acts. 2 hrs ". . . Only Daughter (An), 3 acts, 1 hr. 15 min On the Brink, temperance, 2 acts, 2 hrs Our Country, 3 acts, 1 hr Ours, 3 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min Out in the Streets, temperance, 1 hr. 15 min Pet of Parsons' Ranch, 5 acts, 2hrs Pocahontas,musical burlesque, 2 acts, 1 hr Rivals, 5 acts, 2 hrs. 45 min.. School Ma'am (The), 4 acts, 1 hr. 45 min 8 4 4 2 8 7 9 15 5 3 G 6 4 5 2 Sea Drift, 4 acts, 2 hrs 2 Seth Greenback, 4 acts, 1 hr. 15 min 7 3 Shadow Castle, 4 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min (25c) 5 4 Soldier of Fortune, 5 acts, 2 hrs. 20 min 8 3 Solon Shingle, 1 hr. 30 min,... ■; '2 Sparkling Cup, temperance, 5 acts, 2hrs 12 4 ■ Ten Nights in a Barroom, tem- perance, 5 acts, 2 hrs 11 5 Ticket of Leave Man, 4 acts, 2 hrs. 45 min 8 3 Tony, the Convict, 5 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min (25c) 7 4 Toodles, 2 acts, 1 hr. 15 min.. 6 2 Uncle Josh, 4 acts, 2)4 h. (25cj 8 3 Under the Laurels, 5 acts, 1 hr. 45 min 5 4 Under the Spell, 4 acts, 2 hrs. 30 min (2oc) 7 3 Wedding Trip (The), 2 acts, 1 hr 3 2 Won at Last, 3 acts, 1 hr. 45 min 7 3 Yankee Detective, 3 acts, 2 hrs h .3 FARCES AND SKETCHES. Assessor, sketch, 10 rain 3 2 Babes in Wood, burlesque. 25 rain 4 3 BadJob,30min 3 2 Bardell vs. Pickwick, 25 min.. 6 2 Beautiful Forever, 30 min 2 2 Blind Margaret, musical, 30 m. 3 3 Borrowing Trouble, 25 min ... . 3 5 Breezy Call, 25 rain 2 1 Bumble's Courtship, sketch, 18 min 1 1 Cabman No, 93, 40 min 2 2 Christmas Ship, musical, 20 m. 4 3 Circumlocution OlRee, 20 min. G Country Justice, 15 min..... .. 8 Cow that Kicked Chicago, 20 mm 3 2 Cut off with a Shilling, 25 min. 2 1 Deception, 30 min 3 2 Desperate Situation, 25 min. .. 2 3 Dutchman in Ireland, 20 min. 3 Fair Encounter, sketch, 20 m. 2. Family Strike, 20 min 3 3 Free-Knowledge-ist, 2 acts, 25 min 3 3 Friendly Move, sketch, 20m.. 4 O Hans Von Smash, 30 min 4 3 Hard Cider, tem})erance, 15 m. 4 2 Homoeopathy, Irish, 30 min.. ., 5 3 Ici on Parle Francais, 40 m ... 4 3 I'll Stay Awhile, 20 min 4 I'm not Mesilf at All, Irish, 25 min 3 2 Initiating a Granger, 25 min. .. 8 0' In the Dark, 25 min 4 2 T. S. DENISON, Publisher, 163 Randolph St., Chicago. BABY COACH PARADE A SKETCH By LEVIN G. TEES CHICAGO T. S. DENISON, PuBLiSKER 163 Randolph St. ^9 BABY COACH PARADE. charactp:rs. Jimmy Jumper. Mrs. Jumper No. 1. Mrs. Jumper No. 2, Uncle Eustus. Claude Dashaway. Jakey. Time of playing fifteen minutes. STAGE DIRECTIONS. R means right of the stage; (7 centre; R C right centre: 7y left; R D right door; L D left door, etc.; 1 £^ first entrance; fAi? upper entrance, etc.; D i^'door in flat (back of the stage); 1 O first groove, etc. The actor is supposed to be facing the audience. Clock striking may be done by boy outside, real clock on mantel. Copyright, 1894, by T. S. Denison. TMP96-006791 THE BABY COACH PARADE. Scene. — Parlor in Jimmy Jumper's 7iou8e at Ashury Park. A large window at back, practical, wide enough to display the jjai'ade as it passes in the rear. Scene set in 3d G., backed by landscaj^e view in 4 G.; door R. 2 E., door L. 1 E.; closet or alcove covered by curtains to admit man, R. 3 E. Large round reading table C, wit?i chairs R. and L. Sofa L. U. E. Pictures on loall, etc. Enter Claude Dasiiaway, R. 2 E. Claude. I love that woman and will win her or perish in the attempt. I have tracked her all the way from New York down here to Asbury Park. But where is she? {Looks off L. 1 E.) Aha! she comes, and with her husband, confound him. I must conceal myself. {Hides in closet, R. 3 E. Peeps out.) Enter cit L. 1 E. Jimmy Zx^iav'&'K, followed by Mrs. Jumper No. 2. Mrs. J. No. 2. {Clinging to him.) Jimmj', must j^ou go? Jimmy. I must darling; it is me duty. Dress rehearsal at the Asbury Park Dramatic Association is called at three, and I have to make up in my new costume. We are to produce m}' new drama, "The Tramp's Revenge." I'm the tramp. As soon as I get my make up on I'll come over and let you see how I look. (Claude pokes head out of closet and sneezes.) My dear, you have a cold. Mrs. J. No. 2, Jimm3% it wasn't me. It was the clock. Jim. That clock wants oiling. Whj% as I live, there comes Uncle Eustus. Enter Uncle Eustus, R. 2 E. Jim, and Mrs. J. Why, Uncle Eustus! Uncle Eustus. Yes, it's Uncle Eustus. dlad to see me, eh? Well, well, that is right. I have been away fourteen months — fourteen months passed in hopeful expectancy. {Looks around.) Well, where is he? Jim. and Mrs. J. Where is who? Uncle. Uncle. Who— the boy? Jim. What boy? 3 4 THE BABY COACH PARADE. Uncle. Oh, pshaw! No boy? The girl, then. I suppose I'll have to content myself with a girl. Mrs. J. No. 2. Girl! what girl? Uncle. Come, come, come! No funny business with me. You remember, nephew, I went away with the distinct understanding that when I returned there would be a little boy here to perpetuate the race of Jumper. Now, don't say you forgot it, for you haven't. Where is the boy? Where is your little son and heir? I want him. This is to be a great day at Asbury Park. I learned all about it the moment the train stopped. There is to be a baby coach parade, and our little darling is to lead the procession if I push the perambulator myself. Jim. But, uncle, really it was an impossibility. Uncle. Fire and fury! Here I've set my heart on being in that baby coach parade, and this is what comes of it. Degenerate viper! I brush the dust of your house from my feet, and never again shall this old bald head pass j^our portal. Jimmy Jumper, good-bye for- ever! {Rushes out R. 2 E.) Jim. Well, well, I am sorry uncle is angry, but really I think he is unreasonable. My dear, if there's to be a baby coach parade we'll have to raise our Hag in honor of the event. ;^Here, precious, go and get your flag. {Kisses Iter.) Claude. {From closet.) Break away! break away! Mrs. J. No. 2. Jimmy Jumper, that closet is haunted. I wont remain another minute in the house. {Exit Mrs. J. No. 2 X. IE.) Jim. That closet haunted. Nonsense! She believes in ghosts. I don't. Why, as Shakespeare says: " 'Tis now the witching time of night When graveyards yawn — " Claude reaches out of closet and stiHkes Jimmy witJi bladder; Jimmy goes spinning around and sinks on his knees in an attitude of prayer. Jim. Help! help! Mrs. Jumper No. 1 comes rushing in, R. 2 E. Mrs. J. No. 1. {Laughs derisively.) Help! Well you may cry for help, Jimmy Jumper. For look! I have found you at last here in the house of another woman — the house that should be mine. You thought when you procured that Dakota divorce that would be the last you ever see of me; but I've hunted you down and brought with me your boy. THE BABY COACH PARADE. 5 Jim. My boy ! my boy ! Mrs. J. No. 1. Oho! You didn't know, then, there was a boy. He was born after you left me, and unless you come down with the needful I'll bring him here and deposit him in your wife's lap. Claude. {In closet.) Hoorah! Jim. Confound that ghost ! Mrs. J. No. 1. Do you hear me? The boy is outside. Shall I bring him in? {Goes to R. 2 E.) Jim. {Clingmg to her.) Don't do it. You'll ruin me. My Wife don't know I was ever married before, and if she discovers the truth she 11 never sew another button on my shirt. Mrs. J. No. 1. Then come down with the dust. Jim. I've only got fifty cents in my clothes. Mrs. J. No. 1. Give me that. {He gives it.) In an hour I'll be back for the other fifty cents, and if it is not forthcoming back comes the child. {Rushes out R. 2 E.) * Claude. {From closet in deep supernatural voice.) Back comes the child. Jim. Spooks! {Rushes out L. 1 E.) Claude. {Comes from closet.) Now, if I can only frighten that fellow to death, in six months I'll marry the widow, and then — {Noise outside L. U. E.) Hello! {Rushes hack and re-enters closet.) Jakey Jumper, a ragged tramp, is seen at windoio C. coming from L. Disappears R. after inspecting room and presently enters R. 2 E. Jakey. Well, here is a go. There is nobody around. I wonder if there is anything worth stealing. {Picks up books, etc.) Claude. {In closet.) Drop that. {J akky darts under table.) Enter Mrs. Jumper No. 2 L. 1 E. She espies Jakey under table, and mistaking him for her husband in his theatrical disguise, takes him by the ear and pulls him from under the table. Mrs. J. No. 2. Oh, no; my darling, you may be a splendid actor, but you can't deceive me that you are a real tramp. Jakey. Come, let go, let go. You ain't going to holler for the police, are you? Mrs. J. No. 2. How well you do it. Oh, you darling. {Kisses and embraces Mm.) Ji^KEY. Well, I swear. Mrs. J. No. 2. You'll have plenty of time to eat your dinner be- fore the performance begins. See, I have saved it for you. {Removes 6 THE BABY COACH PARADE. cloth, discovers dinner on table. Pushes .Takey into a chair and places mctuals before him.) Now, eat the turkey and I'll go and get the ice cream, {Exit Mrs. Z.^o. 2, L. 1 E.) Jakey. She is crazy. This must be a lunatic asylum. But it suits me. {Sits doicn and rolls uj) liis sleeves and eats.) He-enter Uncle Eustus, B. S E. Uncle. Why, Jimmy, what are you doing in them togs? But there, never mind, I wont quarrel with you. You must excuse my hasty words, my dear nephew, for I didn't mean all I said. There, shake hands and forgive me. I'll give you another chance. If you're the father of a baby in half an hour I'll give you ten thousand dollars, and there is fifty cents on account. Come, my boy, stir yourself.. The parade is starting. {Rushes out R. 2 E .) Jakey. Another lunatic. The house is full of them. {Sits at table icith back to closet. Prepares to eat. Claude emerges from closet, reaches over Jakey, 2^'^cks up turkey, knocks Jakey off the chair with it and then disappears with it into closet, Jakey roUinfj about wpsetting chairs, etc.) Mrs. Jumper No. 1 enters R. 2 E., takes Jakey hij the ear, leads him front. Mrs. J, No. 1. Come, I've no time to lose. Where is the money".' Come; the money or the baby. Jakey. Lunatic No. 3. Mrs. J. No. 1. The money, I say; the money or I produce the child. Jakey. What child? Mrs. J. No. 1. What child? Your child. {Zky.y.x collapses.) Oh, you needn't think I don't know you, Jimmy Jumper, even if you are disguised in that beastly fashion. Come, fifty cents, or I bring the baby. Jakey. {Struck with an idea.) Bring it along. I can get ten thousand dollars for it. Mrs. J. No. 1. Tremble, wretch, I will bring it. {E.dt Mrs. J. No. 1 R. 2 E.) Enter Jimmy Jumper L. 1 E., disguised as trampi, made iip as the very counterpart of Jakey. Jakey. Well, this is the funniest snap I ever struck. (*SV^« Jimmy.) Now 1 have got 'em. JiMxMY. Have I been drinkinor? THE BABY COACH PARADE. 7 Jakey. I wonder if it is real, or is it a spirit? Jimmy. This must be spooks. {They approach each other cau- tiously. ) Claude. {From closet.) T3reak away. {The two double turn a flip- flap backioards.) Enter Uncle Eustus. Uncle. Now, Jimm}', if you've the bab}' — {sees the tico brothers.) Why, what is this? Why, as I live, it is the twin brothers. Jimmy Jumper, this is 3'our twin brother, Jakey, stolen by gipsys when a child. I read all about it in the Fireside Companion. You will recognize him by a strawberry mark in his inside vest pocket. {Music outside.) Aha! the baby coach parade approaches. Jimmy Jumper, where is that child ? Ten thousand dollars — twenty thou- sand dollars— one million dollars for an heir to the Jumper estate! {Rushes out R. 2 E.) Jakey. I'll have a kid if I have to steal one. Mrs. Jumper No. 1 rushes on R. 2 E. Mrs. J. No. 1. My child! my child! Jakey and Jimmy! Where is your child? Produce it! Mrs. J. No. 1. He is gone! An old gentleman snatched him from me as he rushed out the door. {Falls fainting into the arms of the two brothers.) Enter Mrs. J. No. 2, L. IE., carrying a tray with ice cream on it. Mrs. J. No. 2. Jimmy, here is your ice cream. {She sees Mrs. J, No. 1 embracing Jakey and Jimmy. Drops tray and screams. Noise of the ])arade heard outside, icith brass band, etc. Jimmy, Jakey, etc., all cry, ^''The baby coach parade!^^ and all rush to the icindow Claude, in his effort to see the parade, stumbles and rolls over and over. Business ad lib. Great excitement. The parade passes the windoic at back preceded by brass band. At the finale Uncle Eustus pushes on the perambulator containing a big man made up) like a baby . The per- ambulator breaks down, struggle beticeen the baby and Uncle. Grand tableaux. Quick Curtain. BY H. 2wr. THAN THE SCRAP-BOOK RECITATION SERIES S O P E R. FBICE, POST PAID, PAPEK, 25 CENTS '*The selections are choice in quality and in large variety." — Inter-Ocean^ Chicago. "It excels anything we have seen for the purpose."— £r/^, The Babies (Humorous;. What Is It to Me ? Our First Commander (Patriotic). Horseradish (Comic). The Doom of Claudius and Cynthia (F^ft* Description.) Weaving The Web (Fine Poem). Broken Home (Pathetic). Dream of Eugene Aram (Poem of Great Beauty). An Expensive Chicken (Humorous). Faithful Little Wife. Money Musk (Humorous Poem). Resisting a Mother's Love (Fine Patho?». Spring (Poem). The beacon's Call (Fine Poem). The Ghost (Humorous Poem). The Bridge. Keenan's Charge. The Father of His Country (A Play). T. S. DENISON, Publisher, 163 Randolph St.. - - CHICAGO. DEN ISDN'S ACTING PLAYS. Price IS Cents Each, Postpaid, Unless Different Price is Given. FARCES AND SKETCHES. In the Wrong House, 20 min. . . Irish Linen Peddler, 40 min. .. Is the Editor in? 20 min John Smith, .'JO min :... Just My Luck, 20 min Kansas Immigrants, 20 rain. .. Kiss in the Dark, 30 min Larkins' Love Letters, 50 min. Limerick Boy, 30 min Love and Rain, sketch, 20 m. . Lucky Sixpence, 30 min Lucy's Old Man, sketch, 15 m. Mike Donovan, 15 min Misses Beers, 25 min Mistake in Identity, sketch, 15 min .... Model of a Wife, 25 min Movement Cure, 15 min Mrs. Gamp's Tea, sketch, 15 m. My .Teremiah, 20 min My Lord in Livery, 45 min My Neighbor's Wife, 45 min. . . My Turn Next, 50 min Narrow Escape, sketch, 15 m. . Not at Home, 15 min On Guard, 25 min Persecuted Dutchman, 35 min. Pe : of Society, 30 min Played and Lost, sketch, 15 m. Pull Back, 20 min (iuiet Family, 45 min Realm of Time, musical al- legory, 30 min Regular Fix, 50 min Rough Diamond, 40 min Row in Kitchen and Politician's Breakfast, 2 monologues. . . Silent Woman, 25 min Slasher and Crasher, 1 h. 15 m. Squeers' School, sketch, 18 m. . Taming a Tiger, 20 min That Rascal Pat, 35 min Too Much of a Good Thing, 50 min Turn Him Out, 50 min Twenty Minutes Under Um- brella, sketch, 20 min Two Bonnyeastles,4.5 min. ... Two Gay Deceivers, 25 min Two Gents in a Fix, 20 min. .. Two Ghosts in White, 25 min. Two Puddifoots, ^0 min Uncle Dick's Mistake, 20 min . Very Pleasant Evening, 30 m, . Wanted a Correspondent, 1 hr. Which Will He IMarry ? 30 m . . White Caps (The), musical, 30 Who Told Tlie Lie? ' 30 min '. . '. Wide Enougli for Two, 50 min. Women of Loweuburg, histori- cal sketch, 5 scenes, 50 m. . Woman Hater (The), 30 min.. 3 3 4 2 5 3 4 3 5 1 2 3 3 2 1 1 4 2 2 3 1 3 3 3 2 3 2 5 2 3 2 4 3 3 3 4 3 2 2 4 2 6 3 7 8 15 6 4 4 3 3 6 3 3 1 1 3 3 3 2 8 3 3 3 2 3 4 4 2 8 8 5 3 10 10 2 1 Wonderful Letter, 25 min .... Wooing Under Difficulties, 3." min Yankee Peddler, 1 hr ETHIOPIAN FARCES. Academy of Stars, 15 min All Expenses: Or, Nobody's Son, 10 min Baby Coach Parade, 20 min. . Back from Califoruy ; Or, Old Clothes, 12 min Deaf, In a Horn, 12 min Hamlet the Dainty, 15 min Handy Andy, 12 min Haunted House, 8 min Joke on Squinim (The). 25 m.. Jumbo Jum, 30 min Mischievous Nigger (The), 20 min No Cure, No Pay, 10 min Othello and Desdemona, 12 m. Prof. Black's Funnygraph, 15 min Quarrelsome Servants, 8 min.. Rooms to Let, 15 min Sham Doctor (The), 15 min. .. Sports on a Lark, 8 min Stage Struck Darky, 10 min. . . Stocks Up, Stocks Down, 8m.. Tricks, 10 min Two Pompeys (The), 8 min Uncle Jeff, 25 min , Unhappy Pair (An), 10 min. . . Villikensand His Dinah. 20 m. Wax Works at Play, 30 min. . . William Tell, 15 min M. F. 4 1 2 4 2 3 2 () 1 2 2 4 2 4 3 4 2 3 1 2 4 3 4 1 4 U The publisher believes that he can say truthfully that Denison's list of plays is on the whole the )>est se- lected and most' successful in tiu' market. Neio Flays will be added from time to time. Manuscripts, not only of plays but of any books similar to those in Den- ison's catalogue, will receive careful attention and if accepted will be paid for at current prices. 'i^T T. S. DENISON, Publisher, I63 Randolph St., Chicago. Any Play on this List 15 Cts. P( LIBRftRY OF CONGRESS Plays by T. S. DENISON. That the plays written by T. S. Deni- son are, all things considered, the best for amateurs, is attested by their very large and increasing sale. ODDS WITH THE ENEMY. A drama in five acts; 7 male and 4 female characters. Time, 2 hours. SETH GREENBACK. A drama in 4 acts; 7 male and 3 fe- male Time, i h., 15 m. INITIATING A GRANGER. A ludicrous farce; 8 male. Time, 25 m. WANTED, A CORRESPONDENT. A farce in 2 acts; 4 male, 4 female. Time, 45 m. A FAMILY STRIKE. A farce,, 3 male, 3 female. Time, 20 m. TWO GHOSTS IN WHITE. A humorous farce, boarding school life; S female characters. Time, 25 m. THE ASSESSOR. A humorous sketch; 3 male and 2 fe- male. Time, 10 m. BORROWING TROUBIiE. A ludicrous farce; 3 male and 5 fe • male. Time, 20 m. COUNTRY JUSTICE. Amusing country lawsuit ; S male characters. (May admit 11.) Time, 15 m. THE PUIili-BACK. A laughable farce; 6 female. Time, 20 m. HANS VON SMASH. A roaring farce in a prologue and one act; 4 male and 3 female. Time, 30 m. OUR COUNTRY. A patriotic drama. Requires 10 male ^ Sfemale. (Admitsiini. 15 f.) Four fine tableaux. Time about i hour. THE SCHOOLMA'AM. A brilliant comedy in 4 acts; 6 male, 5 female. Time i hour, 45 m. THE IRISH LINEN PEDDLER. A lively farce; 3 male, 3 female. Time 40 m. THE KANSAS IMMIGRANTS. A roaring farce; 5 male, i female. Time, 20 m. TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING. A capital farce ; 3 male, 6 female. Time, 45 m. 015 910 041 8 • .a.ri u.nijX UAUGHTER. A drama in 3 acts; 5 male and 2 fe - male. Time, i hour, 15 m. PETS OF SOCIETY. A farce; 7 female. Time, 25 m. HARD CIDER. A very amusing temperance sketch; 4 male, 2 female. Time, lo m. - LOUVA, THE PAUPER. A drama in 5 acts; 9 male and 4 fe- male characters. Time, i hour, 45 m. UNDER THE LAURELS. A drama in five acts; a stirring play, fully equal to Louva the Pauper. Five male, 4 female. Time, i hour, 45 m. THE SPARKLING CUP. A temperance drama in five acts; 12 male and 4 female. Time 2 h. THE DANGER SIGNAL. A drama; 7 male, 4 female. Time, 2 h. WIDE ENOUGH FOR TW^O. A farce; 5 male, 2 female. Time, 45 m. BOOKS FOR ENTERTAINMENTS. WORK AND PLAY. For little folks. Exercises in letters, numbers, objects, geography, animals, motion-songs, dialogues, charades, etc., etc., postpaid, 50c. PRANKS AND PASTIMES. For home, school or church. Nearly 100 games, charades, scenes, etc., 50c. Negrro Minstrel Book, 25c. Social Games at Cards, 25c. Private Theatricals, how to get up, 25c. W^HEN LESSONS ARE OVER. Dialogues, Plays, Nuts to Crack, 25c, ENCHANTED WOOD. Bright, New Opera. Price, 35c. Dialect Readingrs, humorous, 25c. THE FRIDAY DIALOGUES. Short, lively. Boys and Girls. Price 25c. FRIDAY AFTERNOON SPEAKER. For little folks, for older boys and girls, short, pithy dialogues. Price 25c. Dialogues from Dickens. 25c. Shadow Pictures, Pantomimes, Tab- leaux, etc., etc., 25c. Choice Pieces for Little People, 25c. School and Parlor Tableaux, 25c. Debater's Handbook, cloth, 50c. Everybody's Letter Writer, SOc. Good Manners, paper cover, SOc. T. S. DENISON, Publisher, 163 Randolph Street, CHICAGO.