i0 Juvenile Books. cee OCC Seaboy the Bird Robber—Alice Gray, or the Young Dreamer—The Little Wanderers—The Freshet, or the Morning Walk—The Little Gardener—Umbrella and the 'Tiger—The Orphans, &c. COLORED TOYS, six kinds, containing Nouns or Things—Child’s Own Alphabet—The Picture Alpha- bet, ard the Child’s Own Book, 3 Nos. SERIES OF FRENCH READING BOOKS, FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. No. 1. Easy Lessons ror LEARNING FRENCH. Selected from the most approved Authors. The purpose of the present work, is to furnish stories and other pleasant exercises for translating from the French into the English, adapted to beginners in the study of the language who are yet children, No. 2. TaLes 1N FRENCH, FOR YouneG PER- sons, by Madame Guizot. The stories in this volume are taken from the works, entitled Une Famille and Les Enfans, and it is be- lieved they will not suffer from a comparison with the similar works of Miss Edgeworth, whose spirit they breathe, and whose merit they at least equal in the dramatic interest with which they inculcate the most im- portant principles in the formation of character. No. 3. CAROLINE OU L’ erret D’ un Mat- HEUR, a Tale for Young Persons, by Madame Guizot. This book consists of a single story, and is taken from dhe second volume of Une Famille, ouvrage a |’? Usage de la Lermeuse. Like the other stories of Madame Guizot, it is beautifully written, and may be read with pleasure, not only by the young, for whom it was origin-