Superior Chronicle (Newspaper) - April 1, 1856, Superior, Wisconsin VOLUME NUMBER 4.3 CHRONICLE little after nine with a full of AT or other over your MI i of being filled with fruit and this morning the melon beds are found to have been completely f there in that Like fire itself glowed the of the detected lad spoke not a word Ml the school had their eyes directed towards urn perspiration ran down Iris white like rain drops Speak exclaimed with a loud strike of his rottan on DOUGLAS COUNTY AVIS TUESDAY APRIL 1 Superior county Wisconsin T li It M one in within MX months A v li it T i a i x o or nut HUM venr fix 00 uO SI 00 25 r on oo 2 00 Quarterly nml inserted on nml Secretaries of Mining will net us in nml tho fur Midi nml bo to WISH The hoy looked as t hough he would faint but the teacher confident brought to light a criminal and ex- the idea of the ment he should now In in was to give his dismission scholars would 11 m mid sometimes in school a joyfully received and then ono of the direct a glance at pity sometimes in- difference or inquiry they knew that he tlm Interesting Letter from Superior 8th hear that you have had cold weather nnd though below at Milwaukee glance however TWO A YEAR and when surveyed will be j her Husband for Juit ing kept working himself up to a still greater degree of passion In the time the child seemed hardly to know to with himself His tongue clave mi-Mi liy in lo roof of his mouth Hither he was i very or he was actually on nl in a various portions of the Southern country I'l-oui the of December lo the 4lh Lakes Millo Kivor and on tho Shore beautiful sites have been selected as thc scats in ture of commerce and the arts Quito a number of paper towns have baen sent to New York to be will bo in next season in scares and customers Some of new towns r before him li Now he said we'll settle that little business of yours up Tim did not move as still the The Devotee I wint in wou is me nf I i ii t i urn I i li n I MIW lint I nit at tlie Si i lour I nly if I calm I In I It in my -in i In I in my iii lieing last I lit milieu win The was Not a sound was to i heard except occasionally a drawn ins hand his rattan breath l J a ia vorv I Mind 110 sir or it will be tho worse for you Step up here and take yean sir said the poor fellow j jacket The boy did not stir any more than if he had been shook with sion lie sat still a moment as if ered above t hard faintly voice was husky and thick other time o to my am not is nothing in former experience with which 1 can compare it and in our cold houses hastily constructed of green lumber it required some degree of industry to up VVith the exception of those ten days the winter bus been without a lel in my experience No rain no snow jince the middle of November no wet the snow not bavin We find are boing settled and soon the whole try between tho lake artd the river will show signs of improvement Farming will be largely remunerative al many in it in the bml by many I declare Mr this too Here you are stretched win on the it up and my nice carpet is nli spoiled by thc tramp of your coarse boots I shall be ashamed to bring one into parlor I so much pains to keep everything I do think Mr Smith you are the most careless man I ever did don't trouble you country are adapted to grass but in j If t no more care than von have we every direction there are large tracts of dry would soon have a nice looking arable land which are found tt bu very not be long before our new productive 1 he small farms already furniture would be just as bad the old the -st Louis and on the j said John Smith's wife to him as shu saw rivers nave yielded largo to the him in the parlor taking a nap on the sofa A number of houses have been built in j I tired md Mary since the winter so hot and so quiet I lie work has scarcely been intermitted and cool and the sofa looked so 1 will tell you to let me well the ly every day The magnificent It to be presumed that we have bly undergone a process of acclimation as wrong I'm i i I calmly I it n i time then I 111 vain to I o in flint strife liy her holy I lull n us urn A Sketch from Life went the bell on the i nl a village room ino hen the of the earlier half vlic ve endure with comfort a j u yet melted on rtn of the weather and 1 am that I could not resist the temptation to sun shines with one man formerly a snooze a littlo when nights arc j out during that cold and building a new house and furnishing it t thus that we wero doing it because c house and furniture were not com- e j as desirable and that land my dear Mary would indulge ourselves in a to your ungracious perm many a month lo tome enough of the and not a sound the child trembling to bis bench He felt us it he was in a thaii in real life and laying his arms on Ids bowed down between Tint pupils their accustomed Tim's asleep nt length said one of tho buys who sat near him at this intelligence allowed his i features to relax from their j savage anger with a smile but that smile i looked more malignant if possible than his former scowls It might be that he j i felt amused at the horror depicted on the of faces of those about him or it might be ra II i I II iw tor during tho reign of Lugaro in that ho was gloating in pleasure on way School I 1 i- people here wear heavier ling or from cold than they bulow Various elements of discomfort rp certainly and driving In this I have been happily disappointed The snow all about the middle of November twelve and eighteen e and there not been day before alluded to but his feet thus that we wero doing it bacause were slightly He says that he j old house and furniture were not did not suffer from the e nor was he j fort aware that he had sustained any injury mi- dea til ho came near the lire j tin quiet leisure in these room n and if has boen completed i we in on the and and a school commenced with about thirty i rocking in these cushioned chairs away pupils Tho First Presbyterian Church of i from the noise of the and the smell superior N S on the first of thc cooking stove Sabbath of November Thc Church of thc Redeemer Episcopal was organised in January A course of lectures on literary and scientific subjects has been instituted Still the time passes heavily business is Uur mail com- V J rc the village school they hail been so used to scenes of violence and severe that such things made but littlo tion in tho tenor of I heir way in which he intended to wake thc poor tle any comparatively on the of the 11 U i Now while the intervening hour is j thing to tickle vour hat this II r and attention and been obtained master a low man and n he I have a it d night some of you were from Mr garden f i I Lnow i thief Tim I if I tn he forward a buy 1 bis bad a I 1 1 even the ell him nnd iho stern i- look of I ho teacher Li i The of b y was too fair for it had n irs fleshy M a as in- that a seated the stood that that place so often undo of and course brutality confused helpless and on him witli a In felt in no very a worthier and inure is proving to men that In- better governed than by and sighs Wo are fast that when one with his heavy birch rod and his of will IM- upon as a sacred memento of and exploded doctrine I gales speed that glorious ing wo will clear up the mystery of the bag and of young being under garden fence tho preceding evening i The mother was a they both had to live in the very narrowest limits Mis father had died was six years infant whom no nnc expected to live many To the surprise of all ever the pour alive and seemed to ho certainly did railroad to the Pacific the are you trunk of said ho lot us see if we can't find bcon eves onen There U nave Si Ui i tho of boat ot the season thc Algonquin nothing like making the best of a bud case boys Tim here determined not to be worried in mind a little flogging for the thought of it can't keep tho little scoundrel awake smiled again as ho made last observation He grasped the rattan firmly and descended from his seat With light and stealthy steps he crossed the room and stood by tho unlucky sleeper Tho boy was still unconscious of his punishment as ever lie might having reached our harbor on the Sth Ice v as not formed on the lake until thc 1 he vessels on the upper lake last year were inadequate to thc demands of commerce aid consequently are short of provisions at nearly all the ports The supplies though purchased or ordered wore ft below This is to be lamented A HJW country to pny time for the necessaries of life The of and Detroit might have This wax owing to kind nf an I be some dull society is small with tho great world is lar and slow and when we get the do not know but that it may bo obsolete superseded below My letters from and Cincinnati are from throe to six on the way There are deprivations in a new country and especially at a point so remote during tlie year from the great of trade but to those who have energy and 1 not dream of displeasing yon Marv and I thought it would give you to see me enjoying a nap on the this warm afternoon 1 notice when Merchant Swell or Higman and their are here you appear delighted In and cushioned arm chairs for them to sit in or lounge upon 1 thought thc house ami sofas were to that we were seeking our own pleasure paid a of them but I suppose I mistaken and that the house and furniture nro for strangers and that we arc to sit in the i old and if 1 waul to taken rest a when fatigued 1 am to lie rj down on a slab in the wood and if it is full of promise may be dis- you want to you -o to thc children's oin appointed but those most deeply interested trundle bed in the little close are sanguine of success Milch depends upon the opening of the on the building of thc railroads Jive us a pi at of Superior the North we where can have a chance at The irony of Mr Smith's reply only his wife and seeing out ami illimitable the eye stretches ment sho would think of g away to the Kiver of tha tired of defeat he himself ou beyond and we can almost sec thc left Mrs Smith to fix up and dust out and nus of the railroad at Sound It lock him out of his own house and look n was n magnificent of an old chair in tha kitchen which ing up a grent commercial city at the head Lake Superior Lot it speedily bo The high northern latitude is in its favor the uniformity of thc climate Mrs Smith taid was good enough to every the where no one it Poor mistaken MM Smith thought I it would not be wonderful if he should in which lie practice moment of good health be brought it down on Tim's back with a force suddenly taken away j sound which seemed poor was at first in a continual to wake a freezing man in his lethargy of uneasiness but several years had I Quick and fast blow followed now and none the impending j Without waiting to see tho effect of his j first cut tho brutal wretch jilted his ment of torture first on one side of the boy's back and then on the other and only evils bad upon the boy's mother seemed to feel that he would live andle a shield and honor to her old age and the two together in each other and enduring much of poverty and discomfort without re- pining each for the other's sake friends in the village and among the rest young farmer named Jones with his elder brother worked a large farm in the on shares very frequently made Tim a present of a of potatoes or corn or some garden vegetables which he took from bin own stock but ner was a parsimonious high-tempered man nnd he had often remarked that Tim Were in Mr Nichols garden Lust JJC was Mr an idle fellow and ought not to be helped r because lie did not work Jones generally made presents in a manner that no one knew anything about them except self and the grateful object of his with sir the boy 1 was i I'm glad to find you so ready And so you thought a little robbing and enjoy I do iii n manner you ought to be to being punished It might be too that the widow was stopped at the end of two or minutes from very weariness But still Tim showed no sign of motion i and as provoked at his torpidity made him many jerked away one of thc child's arms on j which ho had been leaning over his desk I his head dropped from lib grasp and his eyes stretched wide open glared at some monstrous spectacle of horror and death The sweat started in great ingly from every pore in his face his ny contracted and showed IIH and when he at length stretched forth his arm and with the end of one of his fingers touched tlie child's cheek each limb ered like the tongue of a snake and his strength soemod us though it would fail him Thc boy was Tie had probably been so for some time for his eyes were turned up and his body quite cold The Of hay pats corn flour butter of pork and lard wo did not receive tl e amount that would have found a market remunerative price Many ol tie mines are partially Asmal force kept at on the military road Many of our young men have gone below ai d had it not been for tho sleigh road al ling us to obtain provisions from St many of the families would hare been under the emigrating It was a great oversight Chicago merchants did not send half a freighted with provisions loth to have it understood by the neighbors widow was now too Death was I rnt been replied the in the and had been uith ly His face was ment or fright it was difficult and I didn't do anything last I'm ashamed to exclaimed the there is always an excusable pride in people of her condition which makes them shrink from being considered as objects of charity as thoy would the severest pain On the night in question Tim had been flogging a following is from the pen of Waiter Savage The of autumn vink into the Ami pray sir continued as and convicted by his teacher as a of wrath from I what were you about tho That teacher was ono little fitted for his f- you only received important and responsible office Hasty to decide nod inflexibly severe he was the part of the job i i way because it is on my was there again afterward to an t under Mr Nichols garden fenc terror of tho little world he ruled so ically Punishment he seemed to delight in Knowing three sweet tains which in children's breast open ly at the call of gentleness and kind words GOD made both tears and laughter and both for kind purposes for as laughter enables mirth and surprise to freely so tears enable sorrow to vent itself ly Tears hinder sorrow i from becoming despair and madness and laughter is one of the very privileges of reason being con- fined to the human species is no man so contemptible but in t Lake Superior are general in snts Lot me give you the Flour twenty dollars p< rk fifty dollars beef twenty cents a pound Li forty cents sugar eighteen cents one dollar and a half dollars per hay fifty dollars a ton Fortunately we have reached the highest point since these prices we can obtain the rit s of life from St Paul If thc produce dealers of Chicago do not turn the Luke Si trade to a good account hereafter it will be their own fault for the consumed is immense The miners the villagers the workers on the roads the and the cr wd of speculators constitute a little army to he fed from the of no's and Indiana The Lac Mine ten miles from Superior on thc South is opening prospects It is believed that no richer vein has been struck on the lake share Tho surveys of the Superior and Hudson railroad have been Tbo Land Co have laid out an addition to the town on the east side of the river called East Superior The lard titles of Superior on the upper end of the Hay of Superior have not been tle I That will ultimately be one of the mcst beautiful portions of and it is infortunate that the have noi long since been adjusted The work of lands not only in Wisconsin is vigorously prosecuted One hundred and fifty been tiled in day of Ti In number is not known but ho was feared by all for his and distress requires pity It is loved by none I would that he were an altogether insensible of another's j oa the North isolated instance in his profession your own passions be fifty The hour of grace had drawn to a close fonyou lint and the time approached at which own heart than be to fertile awl may be dis- i family only when Both I tant but it sure I and are too grand for use It proposed to establish a new line of i carpet is too fine for to boats from to Superior so that i mirrors arc too him to Inok Buffalo Cleveland Detroit and Chicago j is all too fine for him will be the competitors for the trade to sec or use Justso it travel of iho lake Competition needed and am sorry that Prices of freight and passage were too high j many men arc us foolish as we are to please last year and cases have come to our others or Hitherto excite their of arrogance and oppression j we build and part of the of of the outside the family live UK poorly The proprietors of the voxels have j we are as we did when we bly been advised of the j but tho J as poorly in thc new house as iii the edy is in competition for tho isa day to merit when a family always liable to oppress tho weak Give us j guts a house and furniture too fine for has scon on any sea i large enough to and thu such all use at All Sorts of Minda disposition in in men of Ax ix TUB site each other A grave J her head buck and seemed inclined fj slumber the Om of and asked in B I man cannot conceive the wit in ciety a person who souse view of the subject is for by the hend and ingenious it theorist who catches and who could bat death near me faintest and scents the ridiculous from afar will hold ito and I not him this way f have been preparing for commerce with him i A1 1 1 1 I I its daily motion and views cause its annual rotation ridicule chastises folly and impudence and keeps men in their proper sphere subtlety people nd children seizes hold of tlie finn threads of truth analogy darts away in thc most dis- passions Tur U iro more than ica feeling paints all the of man's soul and rewards him by i a ifor tlie rows that come from without mndo it It must despise t 0 despise i no sort they mta a t- rate duties And the happiness of man for their covot T divided into Vf ports j i to