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Show 'HR WEEKLY NEWS EXPRESS. LAYTON. UTAH ' Copper Indestructiblea thousand from comes Copper, sources and goes back into usw ja as many and varied way. Though copper is virtually inde Structible and seemingly could' re flux to balance with consumption ase- - Hom fcirap this is not th all consumption equals eventually because it goes back into use. but there are losses from wear and through the dissipation tit small objects. Supply is, of eourse, ton trolled by the obsolescence rate of topper products and this may or may not balance with consumption at any given moment, - ef Stable There are two kinds ot tfu 'rabies first, what is known as dumb rabies, andl second, furious or violent rabies. In the first the dog acts as il It has something be. c.aught lu Its throat Generally beJaw Lower haves abnprmally.. with a comes dog Childhood rigid. Natorally this type ot rabies does little bitTugwella Little Girl ing, Condition I his lower Jaw Holland Buy Plane , prevents it In violent rabies the Rev,' Webber Know symptoms are much the same as .Childhood lasts loftgeMn France in the' dumb variety, with the evithan in America and it is real child- dences of uneasiness or nervousrahood. Boys in ness, and drooling. In violent at bies the dog always snaps things their teens,-wrir people. That is the outstanding ing letters, call the!; fathers difference between the two types. Twe Kind Tailiered" American Cities Ions of Quebec WIio scon BY ELMO ' 'MERICAN . visitors . to Quebec this summer are due to learn some facts about the history of their own country of olet, The province of Quebec, Moreover he was a trusted lieu' a however', has done better .by him tenant of Cadillac and a W with bo(h a county' and a tbwn fighter of the India) f the French until he perbearing his name. i "Gijt in Utah to a city which ished pt the stake in a Chickawhich they probably bears the name of a' man who saw vBIa-gin Before that a have never before, been was born in the City of Quebec. time", "however, he had built a aware. At least, they It .is. of Ogden which trading post and earth fort on will if their journeying honors efer Skene- Ogdert, .son the present site . of an Indiaft happens to take then) through of a New York Loyalist, who fled city which now bears his name. certain cities, towns and villages to Canada during the Revolution To 'this little, town of. on highways connecting . these and who became ftne of the leadin 1789'came a young man communities with Montreal and ing magistrate) of thp province. who was a Dative of St. Antoine the City of Quebec and the. main His sph Joined the Hudson's Cay On fh Richelieu river in the trunk roads in Maine, New .company at .aft early age and as province. of Quebec and during Hampshire, Vermont, New York one of Its factors played, ap im- the next few years his name be.' ; and the Middle West. .. portant part' in history came famous- in the adjoining of .the fuir trade in-- , the Gpeqt territory ' of Illinois. It was At the entrance to these SAMUEL DE CHAMPLAIN ' ' Pierre Menard. He was a friend they will see .sign- West. One of his contemporaries In of Francisco Vigo, the Italian posts bearing, plaques ' similar to was adopted by the Fo this: . . this period was another Quebec-bor- n trader who h.ad been such an aid settled, and married a girl of Indians to- George Rogers Clark in the that tribe. lie began working the boy. Dr. .John- MoLoughlirt, who- also- ehtered the II. B. conquest of Vincennes ten yeatu lead mines on the west bank of BSIW If U wsiosstii established Fort Van- earljer and he accompanied Vigo the Great River and today both nwuii iffiwat t couver m, the. Columbia, rejgned on a trip cast, to Carlisle, Ja.f the city of Dubuque, Iowa, whiqh there as .the Emperor- - of, the where they had an. interview grew up from that mining camp, West and has come do'Ovti in with' George Washington in re- and a village named Julien, a fe'fe history as the Father of Ore- gard to a plan for defense of ihe short distance away, perpetuate Itiviere-du;LouEN CETTE LOCALITE VtCUT was his western frontier, gon, his fame. . A few years fatef Menard birthplace tmd there' the Michel of Another DECOU , ene.-nii- X e) ! e 4t J.73-fl- the-"Cit- f week:' THIS WATSON t - Cher petit Vin-benh- es ... - - - j YULE LASALLE p- tom-Triemorati- ve CAYELIERDELA SALLE, VREURduMISSISSIPPI INftRIEUR. FONDATEUR oc NIAGARA St. native to Kaskaskio, 111., the oldplaque has been moved - was Noel Le Vasseur, who at the valin est town the Mississippi erected. age of seventeen went West in Like the City of Quebec, that with 60 other adventur company olhqr Canadian metropolis., Mont-realous youths, joined up with a cer was. also the birthplace of tain Rocheblave (who was later home town ot.a number of notathe last governor of the territory bles In the early history ef the ' of Illinois Under British rule) and United States., it was the birthbecame a fur trader In the cm " ; place oi .two brothers destined for ploy of John Jacob Astor, He 5 . fame by 'their exploit? in the roamed the new state of Illinois Lower. Mississippi valley. One. of and became the founder of the ' them was Pierre lo Moyne, present town of Bourbonnais, Sieiir DTbefville; born in 111. (Incidentally, this town was 1661, who became tjje founder of named for Francois Bourbon the French fcolony- of Louisiana nais, and Beauharnois, the town an'd later founder of the City of Of his birth, has a plaque com Mobile, Ale. The other was Jean memorating that fact.) Le Vas Baptist? le Moyne, Sfeitf. seur became a great favorite of born to. 1680,' whp became, the Indians and his influence the founder of. the City of New with them was so great that he Orleans and of Biloxi, Miss. As was appointed United States governor of the colony which his agent to supervise the reniovat brother founded, Bienville efetab- of some of the tribes from Illilishe.d.thd cpde-noinois toi Iowa. Resenting their In force until the purforced departure- from tneir chase.' of Louisiana by the. United NOEL LE VASSEUR homeland, the Indians threatened States and much "of it was incorto stage an.uprising and only the porated in the law pf the. Amer- ley, fcndf from that time on he forceful character of Le Vasseur ican state which bears- the name played on increasingly important prevented a serious outbreak of of the French colony. Another part in the development qf the hostilities. Because of this feat native son of Montreal . was territory. When Illinois became he has been called a second Jacques Porlipr,-founde- r pf the a Staid he was its first lioutenant-goverp- William Penn., and he' also was one of City of Green Bay4' Wis. In the town- of L'Asumptiort in St; Louis bt the founder the Molhe In de Antoine Although a marker recording the stahds Cadillac was boro in France, famous Missourl'Fur company. that-herfact was. born Salo Alnhpst as famous as Pierre Montreal claims him as one of mon founder and first Juneau;heir .sons, hut Detroit, Mich.; eblls Menard was Ms nephew, Michel of Milwaukee. Juneau mayor at on the Denis Menard, St borp For it was Cadilson was of Francois and .the lac. who laid thq foundations of Richelieu in 1805, He become a Thejrese .La who left Tulipe, tradeif-ithe .Old Northwest fi(r at the age of ixtectij workod for France at the outbreak of the his uncle in Illinois and Missouri French revolution and changed and became sft attached to. the their name' to Juneau in an ef Indian piodo df life that he joined fort to put their old life behind a band of Shawnees, Who later them, ns much os possible,. At an early age Salomon' Juneau bemade him He went came aft employe of the Amer- in 1833, became a memew-ber. of the convention that declared the ipdi'pecidpnce. of the Lone Sfar republic 100 years figo 1 and Was (he foun.dcl- of the pies-en, v; j 1. .. . city of Gidycston. It seems, a far cry from such . .. bustling modern; cities ,qs' Mi- tW'iVv-:pf k i4a lwaukee and Superior, Wis.; f Ogdeitsburg, N, Y.;: Sault Sle. Mario, Mich,; Dubuqne, Iowa; St. Raul, Minn., and . Kpnknlcc, 111., to the quiet little villages VfDR. JOHN McLOUGULIN ' X 1. i 'h and towns in Quebec, but the will visitor find in to, the latter that city in 1701. At one time ore rreited also he w.qs commander .at Fort the , plaques-vvhic'the link between thein. Michilimackinpc (bn the present there At Mascopche .ts 'one which Mackinac Island Mifrh.) and later .he. became ..'governor.' of tells him 'that here lived Repen-tlgnfounder' of Sault ',Se.' Louisian)'. Aqotlrer of Cadillacs connections - with .American hisi Marie; at Oka is tie which retory lies in the fact that in iODl cords the fact that .'it was- the he was mhde'lojd of Bouagnat home. tf Francois Picquct, tvho .and Mount- Desert, Maine,- - and founded Ogdensburg; at BerlhiCr born J.' IJ.' Faribault, foun. nearly a century later the. com- Was of dor 'conKankqkce, and St. MicfteJ monwealth of. Massachusetts . . SAI.O.MON JUNEAU ctYamasilca was the birthplace of to. firmed his granddaughter, Su-B. Lefebfe,-wlJ. founded ' icon Fur Mrria. Gregorre,- sd much of company in Wiscopsin Mount' Desert Island. as was not perior, and in 1318 settled on the present .Vital Gjiiefirt, a pious churchman- site 6f Milwaukee 'as. agent for already 'granted to other). who wa) born at St, Rcmi-de- the A. F. C. Two n 6f Another ..Frenph-borson years later he' Napierville,- feninded a mis- married and he and his wife beMontreal 'was Daniel 'Greysolon Du Lhut, leader of a famous band sion, which he called St. Paul's; came, the first permanent white coureurs 'du . bois, of ..fur on the Upper Mississippi. Today settlors in. '.Milwaukee. He was and" of the trader explorer Upper the Capital of Minnesota, Its name the first, postmaster of the new Mississippi, whose name- i) pertown, the first president when it became a village in 1857, ami petuated in the. modern 'city .of when-i- t Duluth, .Minn. Two other.' exvs made a erty in'ISK ' he. Jpceamp.its first' mayor. .' plores- whose birthplaces' . are m.a r k e d hy commemorative i Among, the- other' towns in jv. x V: first plagues are L Verendr-ye- , Q'uebpc- 'where. cordmerhoVative LWhite man ,in Wyoming and dismarkers have been erfeted are-thvy coverer of the Big Horn, mounfollowing: St.- Pierr-- de ' tains, .whd was born at birthplace of Norbert and (Three1 Rjvej-sBianchct, .first bishop of Oregor; 'Nicplas Terrot, who' lived at St. birthplace . Becancour. of. Louis' Blanchette, founder, of , At the entrance hf the- village St. Charles; Mo.; Ste. Anne-de- s of Contrecoeur in Quebec' stands Plaines, birthplace of Prudent a signpost which tells the visitor Beaudry, a pioneer nnd mayor that here was born Captain Con-- , of Los Angples, Calif., and trecoeur, who erected a fort Louiseville, birthplace of Bepja- -' where now stands'- the city of min Gervais', founder of Gervais, Minri. ' Pittsburgh, Pa. But that is not his only claim to fame. For it And last but not' least is the was this same captain, who, as little town of Maskinonge, where commandant of Fort Duquesne, was born Francois. Xavier sent out the force of French and the man who won enduring Indians, to try to delay the adfame as one of the greatest long vance of General Braddock and PIERRE MENARD distance 'riders- in the history of who won that amazing victory the West In 1846, Aubry. rode over the superior force of British shortened to St. Paul, occupies from Santa Fe, N. M., to Inderedcoats and Colonials one hot that site and a great deal more. Mo., a distance of .800. pendence, summer day in 1755. In 1762 in the little town of St. miles, in eight days and ten Visit the little town of Beaua boy was and two years later, to mont and the marker will tell born to whom was given the hours, win a bet of $ 1,000, he Cut down you that here lived Jean Bap- name of Julien Dubuque At an that time to six days! Aubry tist Bissot, Sieur de Vincennes. early age he left his native land City, Ariz., and Aubry City, Colo., He was not only a relative of and made his way through savperpetuate the name of this great Joliet, the explorer, but he was age tribes to Prairie du Chien in frontiersman. ' also an explorer in his own right. y Wisconsin where be 6 Watttra Ntwiptpcr Caloa, ,- DE JOLIET (hiwob) etde VlRNNESSCE.) V W MEMPHIS THIS TOWN LIVED CAVELIER DE LA SALLE, THE LOWER : ) DISCOVERER OF MISSISSm FOUND- ER OF NIAGARA, MnoRK, JOLIET, ANO MEMPHIS Tckssrf) ju ve soldiers and civil officers who had a leading part in the development of regions now embraced in nearly half of the states of the Union. Moreover, many of these native sons of Quebec fathered some of our most important cities, situated, in alTpartrt)! the United States from' New York to California 6 and from Minnesota to Louisiana, Outstanding in this list is the name of Cavelier de La Salle, who has the distinction of being the founder of no less than three American cities Niagara, N. Y.; Joliet, 111., and Memphis, Tenn. Another city in Illinois bears his name,- os does the county in which it is located, and there is a La Salle county in Texas and a La Salle parish in pmrpcrp irate .the deeds oi this Intrepid explorer in the country where the last scenes in the drama of his life were enacted. Although La Salle was born in France, Vil.le La Salle was his home town? and there the commemorative marker has been erected. The City of Quebec, .the first settlement in the province; founded by Samuel de Charnv. plain (whose name is perpetuated in the beautiful lake in northern New York) was the home, town of three other explorers in what is now the United States. They were Father Marquette, the priest; Louis Joliet, the fur - V A -- -V ( 1 - For the province. Of Quebec has erected such markers in more than a score of it! cities and towns. It has done this to commemorate the deeds of gqme of its sons-whmade good in foreign parts and .to draw the attention of Americans to the historical link between it and their country through these men. The list of them is truly an one. It inoludes . ex-- , plorers, fur traders, churchmen, 1. r 4 i 'V-- 1 -- Blen-VUl- e, which-remaine- r . - . - of - him-father- . . n their-chief- . ?.? - - . j ) ; y, - i - - . - V- - - S' ' .,- - j Trois-Rivier- r e" - - r e - e Mon-t.agn- y,' IIcnri'-de-JL.auzo- hr SIEUR DIBERVILLE trader, and an almost forgotten man of our early history whose explorations preceded those of the other two by 40 years. He was Jean Nteolet, discoverer of Lake Michigan, the first white explorer of the present state of Michigan, the first white man to set foot in what is now Wisconsin Wnd by some historians believed to be the first white man to see the prairies of Illinois and the present site of Chicago. Illinois has a city named for Joliet; both Wisconsin and Michigan have Marquette counties, and the latter has a city named for the Jesuit priest. But neither state has thus honored Jean Nic- - pap-p- a to Spain, a laundry fof mick,' organized washing dogs. They advertised: Small dogs, 30 eents; middle-sizedogs. 35 cents; groomed and washed. Dogs not must be sent with muzzles, and we cannot wash large dogs. Too bad that parental severity broke up the dog laundry. It bad announced working hours 10 a. m, to 5 p. m. on Saturdays, the studious little girls only holiday, all hours after school cm other week.; days. What a good example tot government enterprises: the little girls really meant to work to groom and wash the dogs, not merely stand around and collect the JO . good-nature- . - olive orchards, bridges and promenades and everywhere vestiges of the Middle ages this is Valencia. It first appeared in history to B. d C 132,. . ' Cardinals Red Hats 1243 cardinals have worn hats til brilliant red. At that time an important council Was held at Lyons in France and Pope Inno-- cent VIII bestowed upon the cardinals their red hats. The color signified that they should always be ready to shed their blood to defense f the church. ' ' Strikes Held Blots In the first half century of our history, before labor, was organized,, the courts almost invariably, convicted striking- workmen brought before them on the ground of conspiracy in seeking to raise wages more than the law of sup.would otherwise ply and demand ' allow. . . Statue of Evangeline Hebert's statue ot Evangeline weeping for her lost country stands to Grand Pre Memorial park, 9 miles from Digby, N. S. Nearby is an Id chapel housing Acadian relict. Evangelines well, used by Massachusetts troops during the tragic expulsion of 1745, is still in- Plucky tittle Holland and her wise queen seem to have decided that the 1914 waf to end all wars did not finish its job, Holland went through the big war safely, selling butter, cheese, eggs, hot disturbed, not making any bad 110,000, 000,000 Joans.' ' Now Holland is buying IS. heavy bombing planes in ' Baltimore, spending f 1,600,000 for the 13, and spending many ether millions for other killing machinery. That means work and wages In Baltimore; it may mean poison gas and death for some f Jlolland's . neighbors, . tact Bora ' Foreign countries read everythiabout'them In America; hot that foreign countries care what Americans, think, or attach importance to American opinion, as such; but America, has inoney, raw products, and .' gpvernment) that'. are sometimes' whimsical, . ea Battlefield the bat- A baby girl was born on Peel Off Flaws of Pearl As a pearl grows, it is possible fop an expert to peel cl! flaws or Imperfections If they are not too deep. While a pearl may be bettered In this manner, it is well to remember that fine pearls are sold by weight and the larger the earl . , Karakul Sheep Attractive Karakul sheep 'are beautiful animals with soft wool curled tightly to their sides.. The lamb hides are so. valuable that the imperial fami- -' jy of Japan paid $12,000 for one garment made from' the furs, and prices of $1,200 for' the cheapest to $8,ooq and $10,000 for the more expensive garments are common.' . Since cents,- f T BL1 Words Few but Effective 4 Washington seldom spoke to pui lie and when he did, it was but few pointed remarks. In the con vention that framed the Consti' tution he .made but two speeches, . of a few words each-,- yet the convention acknowledged the master spirit and it is- said that but for the 39 words of his first speech the Constitution Would have been .re,' jected by the people. Here the City of Joy, . - amid white, gold and blue tiled roofs, green gardens, orange groves, old farms half hidden in d . sage. tlefield of Waterloo, between' the cross fire of the English and the. French, and not only lived, but grew up to become the grandmother ot the youngest wife of Baron de Lesseps who first planned the Pan- ama canal ng-said Xs changeable and boyish. .Europe, Asia find Africa' watch with equal interest statements of Americans that count and more numerous. Americans.. .'that float like feathers in the air. One "fimple. minded Russian pointed with pride .to the statement of a clergyman in our Union The; .. ological seminary, That gentleman, Rev. Charles C. Webber, has .a plan for a. better government hot based on the. text ebou.t rendering unto Caesar' that which i.s Caesar's. The big idea is to take, away what is Caesars. ' Eight hundred ' young people were told by Reverend .Webber: God, who is not content . with things as .they are, is a revolution a.ry Being, constantly seeking la make all things new, 'J f v ? i I 1 I 5 ft V - v s I 11 TdJi feci 1 i Jr ' :"': VI L ' v ; s ' ?v I V 1 1 i;: ,"' 1 i: iU! '- - Y i . : V. . I s - , . MllW - . iXfv.T " Fearls far Decoration! Since the dawn of history, pearls Imagpapa ine that from an have been a source of joy and wonder to the human race, writes La American peep Place Bostwick in Nature Magaschool. Little French zine. They were found in the tombs girl? play inno of the Egyptians; in the burial-place-s of some Indian tribes f the cently with Toto, their little dog, Southeast, and in the mounds of hardly knowing the mound builders. A thousand that such things years ago they were used for decas francs exist, orative purposes In Japan, and when much oldUrge abalone pearls are found in er than Assistant Secretary Tug images of Buddha made to the well's intelligent young daughter, year 300, Marcia, aged twelve, who, in partValencia, City of Joy nership with her friends, Mary The Moors used to call Valencia Frances Cottrell and Joyce Hel - - - - Au-br- y, . Pierre-les-Becque- - ts far-awa- . Rev. Webber, recognizing this, about God being a' revolutionist, has a plan to help God in his efforts;- a- plan as simple as a, b, C Capitalism, he says, must be abol lshed. Rer, WeBher want planned and planning Social economy in the United State. Under the Charles Cl Webber plan, people would , own and manage such things, ae. industry and property; no money Rpuld be spent for war, ' . , and youth Would rule, , Ntrig T - the Those 'brought idea of God might ask Rev. Webber, respectfully; It God really is a .revolutionary 'constant-- , ly seeking to make all things new. why does He not cany, out .lii will .and makie all things new every, few minu'tes? Can.it be that He needs' the' help of Rev. ' Webber? Lenin andStqlin got .along without Hurt Sealed-iiuste- G-- . claimed by Miami, Los Angeles', San Diego, Chicago, Cleveland, and with a great deal of reason by San Francisco and Oakland, thanks to the magnificent bay, and to the fact that the greatest air line, running from America to Asia, starts from that neighborhood. C Kins F-- (r WNU Syndicate, Ins, Servlc. . . exclusive lubrication ni Oil (oolitic C-- Is rneaa quieter . EASY. TERMS ,t: It sal-arl- es France calls Paris the aerial port of Europe, proudly. In America the still prouder title Chief Air Traffic Port of the Whole World, is T lORcia-m- a . - THRIBT-UNI- B. Fldiof Modelt , Also arises this qtfestiorji With capitalism abolished,, who would 'bujld the churches, the Union The--' ological seminaries,, and pay, to- Rev.'. Webber's for reading the mind of. the Divinity? . Dean 'Swift should have known Rev. Webber when he wrote ' hi . , tala of a, tub. el both Mon itor Top and Up. With that Kelp.'' ' ' BlIMtt : . ). ' will . per'., .. trtioft, tpngef life end r operating cost, ; iZVoilKT. . .. . Indian Language a Putxi During the World war the Germans often tapped the underground telephone systems of the allies and secured valuable information, aays a writer to Colliers Weakly. But one day ftew and strange sound began to.come over tha wires, baf . ping the code experts and linguist! up to the time of the Armistice. It was the language. f a group f American Indiana who had been' taught to send and receive thf mes- Dear little (l - the-earl- y . Ljr ttirrcnt than ' net before . a plccsurfl to show you..the$0 ; New. General lec tries. Yfiull be in- , teicsterf in their fea- tures and their low cost. b$i . 1 ( 'i, Electricity is the Biggest Bargain iii the Home OTAKI POWEE & OGM'ir 20, |