Show E D I 1 TO T 0 R I 1 ALS THE HOT WEATHER WELTHER TAKE OARE OP OF YOURSELF eird erld A AND ird OF YOUR CHILDREN iv IF you wish WI sh to live to see tho next centennial learn to ba very temperate in all things especially in hot weather like this when the mercury soars away into theline the nine ties tics in the shade and when the nights are not nut s so 3 cool in the summer as they were commonly in former years in such extreme heat aa a we have in the day t time me hereabout it 13 not healthful to drive the human machinery with strong stimulants especially with intoxicating liquors it ia Is not healthful to overwork over work oneself nor to work oneself into a passion nor in any way wiy to overia sk or unduly un uly excite ones energies not even to eat eit too much nor to drink too much for man is not so strong nor BO so able to endure fexer fixer exertion tion in hot weather as in cool weather and he ia is more predisposed to disease in tile tho former than in the latter there are a large number of people whom it ia Is not necessary to advise not to overwork 4 as they are ate never guilty of doing any such thing in any kind of weather jwill there are others who are if you look at tho thermometer you will find that at 60 degreeff degree sF it is marked temperate but in the shade shad ejust just now tho the mercury is at 90 or over much of the day at 93 it is marked blood heat that is the heat outside your body is as great aa as the heat of the blood inside your eay emy body lay now 60 degrees ia Is pleasant weather very favorable for almost any kind of labor or exertion or enjoyment physical or mental at any ordinary work or exercise you feel comfortable then neither too hot nor too cold that is if you like work or exercise at nil ulf nil all you can work or exercise moderately all day at that temperature and enjoy it if you ever enjoy it and not feel exhausted at the close of the day the mercury may riso rise even to 70 or over and still you will not feel uncomfortable but if it rises toward 80 you begin to feel uncomfortable for table and lazy which in this instance ia is natures warning to be cautious cautions and not to exhaust yourself if the mercury passes 80 and approaches 90 you feel decidedly uncomfortable and oppressed when it passes 90 and goes on for it is time to take good care of yourself for if the atmosphere is as warm as your blood exertion will tend to make make the latter still warmer and very unhealthily so if continued to the extent of exhaustion for you will find marked fever heat that is the air id Is as hot as a person is in a fever when the pulse beats rapidly the brain and the body generally burn the tongue ia is parched and the tho whole system is in great and dangerous disorder not only is heat unhealthful directly but it is so indirectly for it causes the rapid decay of dead animal and vegetable matter whence arise sickening and even deadly V vapors ors or gases to poison the atmosphere here and endanger human health and life hence also another necessity to be careful and temperate in hot weather not only that the s system ste may a be e na naturally aurally strong in itself but the more ore able to resist the insidious approaches of disease c created abed or intensified by tile the increased heat of the atmosphere VENGEANCE OK ON THE INDIANS As tho the news of the custer coster disaster runs through the country there arises a loul ioui and passionate cry for vengeance on the indians bensi senst ble citizens who do not give thel their violent passions full play but endeavor to keep them curbed within rational bounds do not join in this unreason unreasoning ing and frantic cry the scriptures say vengeance vengeance ance anco is mine I 1 will repay the lord and although the recent disaster was great and deplorable fer far the sake of the slain yet it would be most becoming in the authorities of this great nation io to sufficiently inquire into the me merits merite ritEl the justice of the case cases and then act amr accordingly crocketts croc Croo ketts ketta advice was waa sound d e enough to become pro first rat be sure you are right and then go ahead but there thero are many vanny who foolishly urge a contrary rule of action first be sure to go ahead and then find out whether voll you sou are right light or wrong thib this is how tho the fool always does docs exe excepting ept g that sometimes ho he never finds out whether he was right oc or wron vron wrong 9 he be has not sense enough for that even for though some fools learn by experience others do not as it is written though thou bray a fool in a mortar among wheat with a pestle yet will not his foolishness depart from him if it the government authorities wish to do right in this indian crisis they will first protect their troops tro in the field and the exposed white settlements then ascertain the real nature of the situation and find out what is right and just to both white and red man giving the more ignorant and aud uncultivated party the benefit of all am doubts that may ariae arise and lastly when a jurt juet and wise policy has been ascertained and decided upon carry it out without wavering this Is th the creditable course to pursue As for thoe those madmen mad men who delight in casting fire brands arrows and death around 7 and imd think it but sport and who exclaim in their blind recklessness II 11 exterminate E tile the indians and then sit ht down town and discuss the merits of the case they should be treated as dangerous lunatics which they are in regard to the organization of a regiment of volunteers in this territory to go to the indian country it may ruay be well enough for those who have a desire t to 0 9 glin lin tin that kind of glory and certainly tile the troops already there hould bould be protected but the more calm and candid class of citizens will say they would rather do justice to the indians than fight them if justice had been done to them in the tile past no such sanguinary scene aa as the custer ouster massacre would have happened it I 1 is safe to say eay that because indians have as strong a sense ef of justice men have and they have suM bum elent clent sense to know who are their friend friends s who are disposed to treat them fairly one great mistake in dealing w with ith the indians is to adopt the po policy licy ilcy that they may bo be annoyed and abused and even killed hilled but at the same timo they must mast remain unprovoked and as p passive as traditional saints sainta and angelh angels under undo r the abuse or if they resent the abuse they must be ruthie ruthlessly raly exterminated U every vory very people that adopts such an wa unjust and cruel policy must pay for it some time or other CERTIFIED transcripts OF territorial RECORDS tim THE following is a portion of the proceedings of the U 8 senate june 29 as reported in the con grass gressional fonal ional recerd record mr hitchcook hitch niTCH COOK coor tharom tha committee territories to whom was referred the bill S no to pro liro vide for furnishing certified transcripts of territorial records have had the tho same under consideration and direct mo me to report it back without amendment aad and recommend its passage I 1 presume there will be no objection to the bill and I 1 ask for its present consideration there being no objection the senate as in committee of the whole proceeded to consider the bill it makes it lawful for each secretary of the several territories of the united states to receive for all certified coplas copies of records and papers in his onn off official lelal custody furnished by him hirn to any person for private use a fee of fifteen cents for each one hundred words for such copy and fifty cents for Js his official certificate thereto mr EDMUNDS EJ fifteen cents I 1 per hundred words is too much mr HITCHCOCK not in the distant territories I 1 think 11 mr ur EDMUNDS ten tea cents is enough but I 1 do not object to the bill athe the bill was reported to the f senate without amendment ordered to be engrossed for a third reading read the third time and passed THE REYNOLDS CASE tnie THE decision of or the supreme court of the tho territory published in the NEWS of yesterday sustaining and confirm confirming ing the too action of the district court in the reynolds case ends sends the case up to the court oi of last fast resort the tho supreme court of the trilled ted states if the ase caso case awaits the regular order of aes mes appealed it may not hot be ed in less tima time than thail two or yea yeara 1 owing to the great numb number erpf of cases already on the docket wait ing tug to be disposed of if the reynolds case should bo be advanced it may bd bet decided decide dat at any time at the option of the court some people have the idea that if the present case should be decided in tuat that court against the defend ant it would bo be an in end to appeals in polygamy bigamy caseb but we nye do not seo see that such result would by any means necessarily follow fullow there are two main gt general points which cases are tire appealed one ono i the merits of the case as to the V of the law ol Tended and the oilier is the legal technicalities of the case and the question of errors in the proceedings of the lower courts if this case caso ia Is ultimately decided upon legal technicalities and errors of procedure in the lower courts it will by no means follow that subsequent cases eases will not be appealed on questions of technicality and errors of f procedure if lothe wie U S diu tiu preme ourt should decide this case as reams reans the constitutionality of the law jaw offended that would be the end of court controversy upon that point polut but it would not necessarily lo 10 ihm thy end of cont controversy rovers y und of concerning tec hint lint i and errors of pr lle lie hence n ce on the latter accounts polygamy c cases 4 e would baill still be anti and would very likely be appealed on buch such grounds generally the constitutional constitutionality it of the law in a case is one of the last things which lawyers take up to appeal upon or courts to consider and decide upon as it is not pleasant for the judicial branch to decide 1 ee ide in opposition to the legislative and executive branches of the government in this decision of the supreme court of the territory tory we do not cot see that the court took up the great and decisive question of constitutionality PITY PITS THE APPLE TREES tiie apple tree is in rather poor plight from being oui best it has bas come como to be our out poorest fruit tree the crop to be least relied u upon poll for advantage or br pi pibil profit bil it first the worm took tho the fruit and now the leaves turn rusty and many man y of them fall 6 off T on examining the trees they thes are found to be i badly infested with minute moving spat epochs iks which gha magnifying glass glass assume the ap appearance pe arance of active red bugs termed by somei some red spiders ep iders though they have nothing ut f the tho appearance of spiders A caustic wah wash might destroy them though c h this is too much trouble to be used as generally and as frequently as inight might be necessary as the tho insects come early in the spring and continue all the season we believe this Is the third season of their appearance in this city these small insects cause the apple tree to become a filthy tree if it you sit u under it you are liable to become covered with them and if ocl jou brush them off offard and crush them your clothing is covered with red bt allis stains some somo something thing like those results ing lug from the tho crush crushing ing log of bed bug brug only much IB smaller maller As long as these insects continue the apple tree is not a profit but a loss and a nuisance and there is no encouragement to plant that tree nevertheless it ia Is not advisable to destroy the apple trees for it may bo be that we wo shall have the good for tune to find the insect pests gone one of these years and then the apple tree may again take tabo its place abour as our most useful and most moat valuable fruit tree and the one most to be depended on for at present wherry cherry apricot peach plum and pear trees are much more satisfactory to the grower than apple trees and much more certain to bring a p profitable return the worms are found in the pears as well as in the apples but not to nearly so great an extent in the former as in the latter this thia year grapes are a general failure in tha the city owing to the late snows snowa and frosts but most moat seasons they do very well where they are trell treff meed leed irod and properly attended to especially the early and hardy varieties amoe FIRST jusino JUSTICE E 1 LAST IF EVER 1 AT T the meeting at the federal court hole home on saturday evening oli on the subject of v volunteers for the indian war yar mr sir james 13 A n w was as present and president on which be casion occasion he dispensed to the audience bo some bome 1 m 1 e of his peculiar wisdom ile ho was one bno of those excite ble hlo blea nod rabid ilowe f whose votes were first for fbi vengeance right or wron wrong and then to discuss the question n of justice afterward that la Is sometimes done la in civil ilfe life the murder murde erlo eKlo rr tile the scaffold has a lit tle tie time given him to meditate upon the hight right or of his vengeful fui ful acts but it at is too tad late then to bo be of any avail to him the timer time to consider the justice the right or wrong af pf afan an action ora course of procedure i before acting not after aften it 1 ia often utterly useless to consider deeds in the light of justice after arter they have been committed ile he believed the present was not the time to consid erthe right or of the govern governments men meu ts policy da ahe the ab sioux his idea iden nasr virtually to takei take vengeance abee ahee on them therb to coh conquer them or to and arid then to con lifer iller whether the government loverti ment or the indians weri were were in the wrong A nik nih n who talks in this fashion demonstrates not only that he is ig unfit to at sit upon tb judgment the lahat si seat at but bui bu that li he is destitute of the elementary ideas of justic justice ennd and woefully fa ily lly lacking in common a senke tenie GOVE GOVERNOR kNOR HA HAZES HAS ZES yes SPEAKS A PIECE OF HIS MIND HAYES has written a letter formally accepting thanom the nomination for the presidency and expressing his opinion on some things he heartily concur in the republican platform id iri a general way he abominates the doctrine that to the ibb victors belong the spoils s oil 11 7 believes bel belt leves ieves evea ovea that thai honesty capacity hild and fidelity sho swo be the test nor for ap appointments to office and asserts that if be he is elected he will make ap appointment on that principle he ia N inflexibly op opposed posed posea to a a second term and wili will not be ii a candidate for re ie reelection election ravone early resumption and aua nonsectarian secta r n se schools il 0 and also aavo cates cites the speedy edy and nd complete comple tepa pacification j of tile the country upon the basis basla 0 equal eqbal full nud rna freo frea constitutional i tut ional lonal na rights and obedience to flo law he wants i a pure ua efficient and economic public service strict regard for the public d welfare in a appointments p p speedy and unsparing ln j pu ashment of official rascals a sound currency rree tree and secular educil education lidil simplicity an and frugality iu in private anatra aud and I 1 these be hevlin wiil labor toT tol secure euie cuie if ild lid aos hes s elected |