First Grade Read Aloud Banquet



Songs for December

I Saw Three Ships



The Mulberry Bush



The North Wind and the Robin



Dance a Baby






The Swing

How do you like to go up in a swing,

Up in the air so blue?

Oh! I do think it the pleasantest thing

Ever a child can do!


Up in the air and over the wall,

Till I can see so wide,

Rivers and trees and cattle and all

Over the countryside—


Till I look down on the garden green,

Down on the roof so brown—

Up in the air I go flying again,

Up in the air and down!


  Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
Week 34 The Journey to the Great Oz from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum Audubon in the Wild Woods from Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans by Edward Eggleston Nuts from Seed-Babies by Margaret Warner Morley The History of Tom Thumb from Fairy Tales Too Good To Miss—Around the Fire by Lisa M. Ripperton The Story of Romulus and Remus from On the Shores of the Great Sea by M. B. Synge Mr. McQueen Makes Up His Mind from The Irish Twins by Lucy Fitch Perkins The Tent Where God Lived among His People from Hurlbut's Story of the Bible by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut
All Busy, Anonymous
The Mirror by A. A. Milne
To the Sun Door by Kate Greenaway
My Kingdom by Robert Louis Stevenson The Sea Princess, Anonymous Robin Redbreast by William Allingham Mother Hen by Christina Georgina Rossetti
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The Aesop for Children  by Milo Winter

The Milkmaid and Her Pail

A Milkmaid had been out to milk the cows and was returning from the field with the shining milk pail balanced nicely on her head. As she walked along, her pretty head was busy with plans for the days to come.

"This good, rich milk," she reused, "will give me plenty of cream to churn. The butter I make I will take to market, and with the money I get for it I will buy a lot of eggs for hatching. How nice it will be when they are all hatched and the yard is full of fine young chicks. Then when May day comes I will sell them, and with the money I'll buy a lovely new dress to wear to the fair. All the young men will look at me. They will come and try to make love to me,—but I shall very quickly send them about their business!"

As she thought of how she would settle that matter, she tossed her head scornfully, and down fell the pail of milk to the ground. And all the milk flowed out, and with it vanished butter and eggs and chicks and new dress and all the milkmaid's pride.

Do not count your chickens before they are hatched.


[Illustration]