Superior Chronicle (Newspaper) - August 18, 1860, Superior, Wisconsin Si I I VOL 6 SUPERIOR WISCONSIN SATURDAY AUGUST i SUPERIOR CHRONICLE AT Superior Douglas Co Wisconsin TB HO 8 no One sli months Tj IN AD VANCE anil ten lines or less one insertion nn Kurt subsequent insertion Business Curds of not nne 00 six 00 ff All transient is not for rill be nt the of nne per for the insertion ami cents square for each Advertisements at the r sir's by to 00 cents folio for nn advertisement in all for before the of publication is tiore int u- the will be at one Half column one one nn n nn o ln Wisconsin fl 8 S 0 TK K R Y SELL DEALER IS REAL Ki TO NOTARY PUBLIC Justice of the WISCONSIN July 0 R QV CO BURN AXT MERCHANT Ann ix Groceries Provisions Fish salt y QUEBEC riKK I J Particular attention or I PETER E AND GOODS Superior Wisconsin ty of Deeds E CO STEAM now CATCH In Frank Adventures the fol amusing of the of ing crabs as practiced by At length they reached the boundary of the former dry sandy soil and strip ol beach where all censed and only single fill tree whose roots were thickly interlaced with creeping vines formed it were the advanced post of the vegetable kingdom this they crawled alow and cautiously raising their heads saw several apes at a distance of two or three hundred pace some of whom were looking for something as they walked along the beach while others motionless it was the tailed brown ty and F was beginning rearet that he had not his with him to watch the of these strange beings more closely when one of them a tremendously long fellow began to draw near them the ground aver which hu went on all he stood at intervals to scratch himself -u wine insect that buzzed around him He so close that that Ire must and alarm the when passing over a little covered with with ered grass lie discovered s parly of crabs parading up and down the hot sand a bound thu ape was among them bin not quick enough to catch a single one lor the crabs though apparently clumsy darted like into a quantity of small holes or ties which made the ground here resemble a sieve the ape could not thrust his for the orifices were too narrow The mandoor nudged gently to Ins attention and they saw au ape after ing once or twice up and down tho strin of ami peering the various holes his nose close to ground suddenly teat himself verv by one of that he fancied He llis tai tc front thrust tho end of it iato the ae met with an obstacle and made -t ace vv Mch so Frank that would laughed loudly the mandoor a fin ger warningly j aad after the ape drew out extraordinary lino with At the cnri of it however humr the desired booty a fat lose its hold he took it into his left p-w I up a stone iu the other and after c devoured tiie contents wiU evident signs of five he thus in cession on each occasion when the crab him face yf heroic resignation and time he waa and he must have u tbo dainty dish and the re- satisfaction for the pain or not have set to so the npe quite with the Without taking his eyes off the hud to within about twenty of th party concealed behind the Ou this the coral is presented to the diver ol the must and ever beheld The water varies from ten one hundred e submerged with tie obstruction to tee sight in Qn these banks is as a marble in it is studded with coral columns from i en to one hundred feet in height from one to eighty feet The tops of th se lofty support a pyramid of pendants forming a myriad more giving the of some wa- In the pendants form as diver stands at the and into these deep avenues fill with as sacred as if he were within some old had hoei m wives Here and there the coral extends even to of the water as if columns were lowers to these stably uaw in ruins were countless varieties diminutive trees shrubs in crevice of the where the deposited Hie least earth were nil a faint hue to the pah they received of every plants 1 tun familiar with that vegetate dry land One in it resembled a fra fan I of the most hue The which inhabited these Lilver Banks in UK 1 lunns colors goby the sun r-n from of the dullest bus the of the the Vrom share had squirrels others like cuts he small size tin hull r darted tho water like footsteps could scarcely be joen to move i the ground was full of and C at Law and General j snl 10 Latest MAYER out the one he conjectured to be tin best threw in his line once more and ably felt ivas something alive within foi he the result with signs of most attention The affair however lasted longer than he anticipated but being already tolerably wel by his past successful hauls ha pulled up his knees laid his long arms upon them bowed his head and half closing his eyes he assumed sucl a resigned and yet exquisitely comical i as only an apo is capable of on under these circumstances But his quiet was to be disturbed in a ps unexpected as cruel he musi have discovered tome very in object in the clouds Jbr he was fixedly when he suddenly uttered a let go of his felt with both hands for his tail and made a haund in the air as it ground under him was to grow red hot At the end ot his I a crab torn with from its hiding place that not i any longer and burl into o loud laugh The at first his gravity but when the ape alarmed by the slm nge sound looked up in spite of men and then bounded oft at speed with his still at his tni I the eld man could no longer I and both laughed till the tears van down their j Tho npe meanwhile flew across narrow 1 of sand followed by all the others towards Uie jungle and in a moment after not pne was viable i FOR A Writer in the Boston Transcript in 5 the recent Schiller n in this country says I ask when thy dny will be that amis of our countrymen wanderers and ex on some distant shore will celebrate thily of themselves and their theme the day uf some child of the people man and among our writers The answer is when we too have our and have learned to love and prize them should Thirty years ago a poor man from Germany fishing for his daily brean in a dvc vat in his lowly cottage on the banks of the with as bluens the sea his bookcase my He had been in America but a few years yet hero was his savings mini in Bacon Milton and and all the classic chiefs of the English tongue are my favorite and only authors said he Miss says the same thing is true of of the German servant girls of Fork And summer before last I looked over the shoulder of a German reader at an open dow close to the sidewalk He was a gentleman and a scholar a graduate of the normal schools of Berlin Could his native land have teed him ene hundred and thirty dollars e year lie would not have deserted her But the tra of an American theatre pays better than that and so he ir oua countryman by adoption He was reading given to the Bo ton Library by Edward Everett This tough reading I love to grapple with said he done thought I German education has much to do will this Their best schools make it a chief to the children judgment and taste of rood writing imparting ad appreciation nn admiration for the best What was your English text book iu your School in of i boy who had learned to read other n the same way Hail said lip All this to the surface n the Schiller feier and the sparks vere in every bosom that is alive to adorns and dignifies our common ure cse of my raised spirit hath away glory All B upon thy living u the love that mantles hite of Cornelius and his mail matters the New York Century VS J Curiosity is always alive to know they arc great in or la generous qualities lit feet an with toall the I carries that full to the stature ef the Adam six feel of self will dix feet of energy of obstinacy Sir ee of sharpness at a bargain and six management in general six bUt of polish but outweighs excuses profane language C V began life as 11 i J in and so to a steam ferry boat llo wng e boats on tho North After that be is he s ow States e ls ho only We have ever heard of who his own of Ulo national war vessel and drove the ocean stopping lt of coach round he streels of New York to liis cards He has n of nhy Meal conquest which fills him witl and admits no superiority 01 T ocean and Europe were not so amIC A Much as we curse the tyranny of such a man we must admit the grandness of t MS clement of character tho and of It re- duces humanity to common terms tho blood of the farmer as good as that of the czar Let the farmer be 1 if he con as C V has come to be from n boatman K AT HIS I F OF Mrr Green the fatuous diver tells stories of his adventures making in the waters cf the ocean He gives the sketches he u tee Silver near The f on t 1 A wealthy lady in New Orleans lately a much younger than herself made him useful about the house in various wajs KS the family He Tras also sent on and very until he was entrusted with her Wile and ran away with of his wife's She looks the air HI a and that I he why her two they should r is Catholic Mirror is a series of letters from Europe ten by the Kcv Mr Obermyer late pastor of bt Vincents church of Baltimore The reverend gentleman of the observance of day in Paris Amid so mud that is gratifying in there is one thing that shock and ize an American It is an awful cration nf the Lord's lay A Mn perceive any outward difference be- tween Sunday and ony other day in the week Here on Sunday nil kinds of servile work is formed To keep open stores and shops is too bad bnt it is worse to see the mason stone the carpenter busy at cutler hewing his the blacksmith mering iron the carlman hauling his the digging the foundation cf houses he scavenge cleaning the streets and the huckster singing out his little seems to be no rest for man or bust J Ins open violation of one of tho ten with the at IMS quasi el the ruling cannot hut a from high Heaven Even after ail many of the retail stoics on the Boulevard are kept open How long 1 have I aw n mm there the Vnn the them all The