The Child's Pictorial (S.P.C.K.) is a capital magazine, with good
letterpress and good pictures. Sundry stories by Mrs. Moles- worth, as "That Imp of a Dog" and e Very Ill Indeed." and a series of twelve papers on "The Zoo," by the Rev. Theodore Wood, are among the attractions. Mr. Wood's papers are pub- lished in separate volumes. That which we have now before us is the "Fourth Series."—Tommy at the Zoo (Nelson and Sons) is a collection of comic pictures and rhymes.—The Dawn of Day (S.P.C.K.) is an "Illustrated Magazine for Sunday School and Parish Use," and may be recommended for that purpose.— The Silver Link (S.S.U.) contains reading, both in fiction and fact, which will be found useful for "Home and School."—Darton's Leading Strings (Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co.) gives us prose and verse with good comic illustrations.