Historical andi Miseellaneous Books.



65



YOUN;a. HISTORY OF WAYNE COUNTY, INDIANA. From its First
   Settlement to the Present Time. With numerous Biographical and
   Family Sketches. Embellished with upward of Fifty Portraits of Citi-
   zens and Views of Buildings. By ANDREW YOUNo. 8vo. Cloth.         2 00
   This is a stately volume, printed with clear late the inhabitants of Wayne county, that
 type, on thick, fine paper. The author ap- they have found one who was both able and
 pears tohavetakengreat pains i. the prepa- willing to perpetuate the history of the
 ration of this volume, and has made a very heroism of their ancestors., sd the pr-.-
 v.lAabl contribltIon to the local history of perity which has r.owned their humble
 l:,diaun.-Hjslorie,,i Record.       labors writh .O much patient fidelity and so
 It promises -ell for the history of "the much minute  1hess.  The volume L. very
 West ;that s-uh a v',lozose a, thik has hven neatly printed, and is ,worthy of an em-
 already devote- tax rac-rdl of the simple tende l rirc l'aton.-Hjtsrtcal Magazine.
 annals of a -,i   Zy.e ' ; an. we cotsgrasu

 ZEISBERGER.     THE    DIARY    OF   DAVID    ZEISBERGER, Moraviantl
   Missionary among the Indians of Ohio during the years 1781 to 1798.
   Translated from the Original Manuscript in German by EuCGCE F. Bl.iss.
   2 vols. 8vo. Cloth.                                               6 Wi)
   This Diary embraces the most eventful period of the life of this cele-
brated missionary. It contains an account of the removal of the Indian
Church from the Mluskingum to the Sandusky; of the journey of the Mis-
sionaries to Detroit and their return to Sanduskv in 1781; of the removal
of the Indian Church to Clinton River, M1ichigan, the next year. and their
settlement there till 1786, when they returned to Ohio. settling on the
Cuyahoga and Huron Rivers. There thev rensained till 1791, when they
again crossed the lake to the mouth of the Detroit River. 1791-2. They
then established themselves on the River 'I lames, in (a.nada, about t'ePlty
miles from  Detroit. In 179S Zeisberger returned with a portion of the
Indian Church to their old settlement in Tuscwarawas counts', Ohio.  Much
is said of the troubles between England and the United States which fol-
lowed the Revolutionary War and of the machinations of the English
among the Indians. An account is given of the massacre at Gnadenhut-
ten in 1782.   Incidentally, remarks ar' made upon the country, the
climate, the various people, white and Indian, with whom Zeisberger came
in contact.

ZSCHOKKE. A SYLVESTER NIGHT'S ADVENTURE. By HErzRiCe
  ZscHolKx. Translated by or. B. W.    l2mo. Cloth.                     75
  This pretty little story occurs in Germany plumed hat, and the masker, who is tfie wild
on a New Year s eve. A masker, in a some- Prince Julian, undertakes to blow the horn
what jolly mood, on his way to a ball, ltists and call out the hours. The complications
upon changing both dresses and occupation which epsue, especially with the two young
with a voungnightwstchman; thelattergoes men's sweethearts, ae very entertainlng
to the ball in the masker's silk cloak ant an. l capitally told -Th Publishr' Weekly.