BLACKIE’S BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. WITH COLOURED ILLUSTRATIONS. ELEGANTLY BOUND IN CLOTH. Highteenpence Each. THE TROUBLES AND TRIUMPHS OF LITTLE TIM. A City Story. By Grecson Gow. ‘Strong in character and full of incident, and the narrative all through is in. teresting and touching. Superintendents of Sunday Schools and others who are now making their selections should include Little Tim.”—Edinburgh Daily Review. ‘*Mr. Gow sketches life in London with a swift flowing felicity that shows him to be at home in our Modern Babylon, and there is a Dickens-like humour in his delineations that helps to carry the reader rapidly as well as pleasantly along.”— Christian Leader. INTO THE HAVEN. By Annis 8. Swan. “There is a simple dignity and pathos about this story that raises it far above the level of most tales of the kind.”—School Guardian. “No story more attractive . . . by reason of its breezy freshness and unforced pathos, as well as for the wholesome practical lessons it conveys.”—Christian Leader, THE HAPPY LAD. A Story of Peasant Life in Norway. From the Norwegian of Bjornstjerne Bjérnson. “This pretty story has a freshness and natural eloquence about it such as are seldom met with in our home-made tales. It seems to carry us back to some of the love stories of the Bible.” —Aberdeen Free Press, BOX OF STORIES. Packed for Young Folk by Horacz Happyman. ‘*A score of fine old legends, fables, and stories retold in a manner adapted to the taste and imagination of young readers of this generation.”—School Board Chronicle. The Patriot Martyr: And other Narratives of Female Heroism in Peace and War. LONDON: BLACKIE & SON, 49 & 50 OLD BAILEY, E.C.; GLASGOW, EDINBURGH, AND DUBLIN.