AVY day (October 27) this year finds an interesting memorial nearing comple- tion, for when the Perry homestead at Wakefield, R. I, is thrown visitors as a patriotic shrine, it will be not only a monument to two of our greatest naval heroes but open to in our paval unique. For that family was rich in “a naval heritage,” If ever any American family was, and it is not to be wondered at, perhaps, that Oliver Hazard Perry and Matthew Calbraith Perry should distinguish themselves aboard ship. ther of the two naval heroes, was only thirteen years old at the outbreak of the Revolution, he immediately en- listed in the Kingston Reds and served in the Continental army. He next served on a privateer, then on board the Mifflin, was captured by the Brit. ish and for three moaths endured the horrors of the British prison ship, Jersey. Escaping from the Jersey, Perry enlisted on the Trumbull under Capt. James Nicholson and had a -r Jritish privateer, Watt, in 17 he was captured again and sent to Newry, Ireland, as a prisoner of war, There he became acquainted with Sarah Alexander, a pretty Scotch girl, whose grandfather had fled from Scot- land to Ireland and who had been left an orphan in her childhood, At the for America. passenger on the her arrival at the home of Dr. Benja- min Rush in Philadelphia, Christopher sought her out and they were mar- ried. He took his bride to the Perry homestead in Rhode Island, a house that looked out toward the sea and from which her husband and her sons were to “go down to the sea in ships” and become officers in the navy. There were five of them-—Oliver Hazard, Raymond H. J., Matthew Calbraith, James Alexander and Na- thaneal Hazard. As if this contribu tion to her adopted country's forces was not enough, two of her three daughters married naval officers, Capt. George W. Rodgers and Dr, Wil. liam Butler! The Influence of this mother on her sons had much to do with their later fame, BShe told them stories of her warrior ancestors in Scotland ; she closely supervised their education, she “fitted them to com- mand by teaching them to obey” and when, still in their teens, they an- swered the call of the sea, she sent them forth cheerfully. She lived to see all of them make honorable rec. ords in the service of their country and two of them win fame and one of them receive the highest honors which his countrymen could pay him. He was Oliver Hazard Perry, born August 23, 1785 In the home which is soon to be opened as the Commodore Perry Memorial. He entered the navy as a midshipman at the age of four teen when war with France seemed inevitable. But It was not until Com- modore Preble was sent to subdue the Barbary pirates that he saw his first active service in the war with Tripoll, In 1810 he was commissioned a lieu- tenant and placed in command of the schooner Revenge, The Revenge was sea wrecked off Watch Hill, near his | home, but a naval board of Inquiry not only cleared him of all blame for By the time of the second war with England, Perry was known as one of | the best ordnance officers in the navy | and early in 1812 he was placed in command of a flotilla Harbor, Then for him to win fame. The War was badly for the Ameri. The British had captured De troit and were threatening to conquer | had been won for us by George Rogers Clark during i the To check them, it Was obtain mastery of Lake Erie and there Perry was or- dered to go, build a squadron of ships, defeat the British fleet on Lake Erie, which was manned by some of Nelson's veterans, and co-operate with General Harrison and his land forces. It seemed like a hopeless task, but Making his way through the wilderness in a sleigh in February, 1813, he arrived at Presque Isle (now Erie, Pa.) and with the aid Master Daniel Dobbins built five ships, despite a dishearten. ing shortage of money, shipwrights, arms and sailors to man them after they were done. His green timbered squadron was joined later by four | ships from Buffalo and with these he was expected to fight six well-manned British ships, On September 10, 1813, the two fleets met off Put-in-Bay on the Ohio shore of Lake Erie. In less than two hours and a half, the Americans were victorious, They had inflicted a loss on the British of 200 killed and 600 made prisoners, Perry's loss was 27 killed and 96 wounded. Before the smoke of battle had cleared away he sat down and, resting his cap on his knee, used this impromptu desk for penning his immortal dispatch to Gen. eral Harrison: “We have met the enemy and they are ours. Two ships, two brigs, one schooner and one sloop.” Perry's victory bad saved the North- west again to America. The news of it thrilled the country. Congress gave him a vote of thanks and awarded him a gold medal. He was promoted from master commander to captain, At the close of the war he was placed in command of the Java, a first-class frigate, and salled with Decatur for the Mediterranean. In 1810 he was made a commodore and placed in com- mand of a squadron which was sent to the West Indies to suppress piracy. There he fell ill of the yellow fever and on August 23, 1819, Lhe died In Port Spain, Trinidad. He was buried there, but in 18206 the American government gent a sloop of war to bring his body back to his native state. He was buried nt Newport with all the hon- ors due him and today a tall granite of gunboats In Newport came the chance cans, ne or the Northwest ) which Revolution, necessary to of Salling LD, RL, marks “hero of Lake Erie” Perry was monument the Inst place of the Matthew years younger than his Hazard, and served ns under him on Revenge attained Calbraith brot! an the never one brotl action. It biographer as “He convoved the fis f groes from this country ship regulations for use on long the navy: he fought pls West Indies, ged tected commerce from in the Mediterranean, firgt United States -rava system, commanded lina, the warshi took John Randolph as envos American 1 were a model yoya finest czar in the first enter Russian waters, was by the founder of the Khedival dyn: jn Egypt, made a brilliant r demonstration in the harbor of Naples gerved ten years shore duty at Brook Iyn navy yard where his work caused the chie jucator 3 ni him to be called of the navy, lumination and went to E of the first regular steamships, en forced the Webster-Ashbtirton in Africa, had oversight of the navy in the Mexican war and breached the walls of Vera Cruz with guns when Scott's light failed, and visited the wate foundland to settle pute.” 3ut the thing for which he ig most famous Is the fact that he organized and commanded an expedition in 154 which wag to have world-wide signi cance. For centuries Japan had cu! herself off from contact with the na tions of the Western world and had steadfastly refused to have either trade or diplomatic relations “foreigners,” Under the excuse of making arrangements for protecting American sailors, engaged in the Pa. cific whaling Industry, who might be shipwrecked on the coasts of Japan, Perry proceeded there with four war. ships. Despite the suspicion and thinly-veiled hostility of the Japanese the American commander conducted his negotiations so diplomatically, combining firmness with the polite ness, so dear to the heart of the Oriental, that on March 31, 18M, Japan signed a treaty of peace, amity and commerce with the United States. From that day dates the end of the “hermit nation” and the rise of mod. ern Japan to a position among the world powers, It was brought about by a Commodore Perry, whose diplo- matic victory was no less brilliant than the victory In warfare won by another Commodore Perry 31 years earlier. studied lighthouse il urope on one treats sleam navi art ‘ry rsa of New the fisheries dis with Yiddish Kot Hebrew Yiddish is spoken by a large num- of Jews of German or Polish an- costry, and is not the natural language of the Jewish people, who speak mod- ern Hebrew. The Jews who left Ger- many in the Middle ages for the Slavie lands of Bohemia, Poland, Galicia and Lithuania spoke, besides Hebrew, the middle high German. In course of time Hebrew and Aramale and Slavie words became customary, and a certain modi. fication of the sound of the German words nlso took place, and by the Rixteenth century a world-defined dialect, or language, known as Yid- dish had become common, It was not adopted as na literary language until the Nineteenth century. Half Way A family of small children spent this summer on a farm, thelr first experience, The country life charmed them especially because of the multi tude of new things to learn, Their mother quite enjoyed the following conversation which she overheard: “No, it's not a cow. It's n jersey. The man sald so when he was talking to Daddy.” “No, no, Bessie, you're wrong. Dad: dy told we, It's a halfer. That means, it's half way between a cow and a cult.” Nearly 00,000 Orangemen took part in the West of Scotinnd celebrations in connection with the anniversary of the battle of the Doyne recently, WHY WE BEHAVE LIKE HUMAN BEINGS By GEORGE DORSEY, Ph. D,, LL. D, 3 n How and Why Bodies Fossilize NLESS well protected, or in rain- less Peru or Egypt, or in dry cuves, or the cold storage of Arctic fee, or In oll, wax, or amber, the body soon yields to the bacterin of decay or to the teeth of wolves and hyenas For bone or other tissue to be replaced by mineral whereby It “fossilizes,” likelihood of its being caught In quick. silt of little buried floods. Primitive enamored as we alive, man are Fossil Magnon remuing of the famous Cro- man have been Wales, and especially in France. Possi- bly earth never saw finer bullt human beings. His brain was 15 per larger than ours , his stature taller than any living race by two inches clean-limhed, lithe, and swift, had a good chin, thick and Jaws. His head was long. broad. He buried his dead. artist and an artisan. He lived about 25000 yenrs ago, Did he become an ordinary European, or did he disap peur? No one knows, cent He was an Beyond Cro-Magnon, our forebears rather run to brutish casts. Grimaldi man wags of the Negrold type. Nean- derthal man had a huge head, chipped flint, and buried his dead. down at MOO B. C and known heirs, He is the first cave-man The jaw of gorilla, but the teeth 400,000 years possibly a der He Is set known fits a He is Plitdown thousand think he wus un the first Eng Hishinan, We have reached un point in time The champion thropus erectus Heldelberg man Hre ours, possibly old. mun is hundred years Some ape. Some say he was fossil is Pithecan- (ape-man erect), dis Java In 18041, He Iy a half million ! a million, He is more pithe- cid than any more anthiropoid than He was and as the average European covered hy Dubols in is cert son known any almost as He uted ar Was a known ape. ns erect tall left the "well-venti He fow- i¥ be reg whether he resent. is i | {0 of ine a ended is not normously sig nan, with yet definitely known is « hat, after un debate more than a the biologists of decide wl Pithe lasting of a century, the world cannot ether canthropus erectus belongs to the first or the second of the That that is no First prefty earth's Families makes him a good link To import monkeys for glands is ghastiy ht the lowest that hns engaged the cupld- ity and lust of man, but to shoot down siminang as we do mad dogs or boys in longer missing. their sex isiness, uniform Is a crime. pold apes our they should be respected as and not exterminated as Indians, are OC, Bn orang. or a No biol ogist ever made such Wheth- er these apes could “ave developed into humah beings is a different story. Trey have the makings—all the paris, If we knew how heredity works and could control variation, we might breed from an ape a belag that could dig a ditch, play the plano, talk Eng- igh, and ging the “Messiah™ gibbon, a Claim tobacco, drink beer, wear clothes, and eat with a knife and fork. We do not to learn human wars. Why do zoologists put our diseases? Because they thropoid. Nothing has yet hem in the race to become Their anatomy, embryology, morphology, paleontology, nnd psychology entitle them to second place in the Ancient Order of Firsts, are An histology, one is in all ways closest to man, The orang looks like an Irishman; the gorilla is built like Jack Dempsey; the chimpanzee is the most angelic; the delicate gibhon has a lady-ike skull =1d an upright carriage. The first three—the Great Apes—are the ex tremes of variation from a generalized ancestor. T' gibbon varies least, and to that extent is nearest the tree man climbed down when he decided to stand up and talk, Except in teeth, the young female gorilla Is the most human. Her fa- ther is a brute in size and appear ance. Only five feet high, he may weigh over 400 pounds: mostly neck, chest, and arms. If his legs were of human proportions, he would stand over seven feet high, The chimpanzee, like the gorilla, lives In jungle Africa. Like the goril- In, he has a shufMe-along galt, swing. ing his body between his long crutch. like arms, He has the gorilla's propor tions, but never ‘the great bulk of chest, And so is more st home in the trees, where he builds his nest, as does the orang. The chimpanzee's skull is not unlike the one ape-man erect tried on when turning into man «and gave up because it had too much jaw for the teeth required and not enough brain box for ideas. AR) by George A. Darsev.) w The Mark of Genuine Aspirin.. true. Love and Humanity Love is Lut for Inserutable presence by which the soul Is connected unother name with humanity. —Siinms If there is opportunity his sooner or later, anything In a man will come Baby ills and ailments seem twice as serious at might. A sud- den cry may mean colic.- Or a sudden attack of diarrhea—a con- dition it is always important to check quickly. How would you meet this emergency—tonight? fave you a bottle of Castoria ready? There is nothing that can take the place of this harmless but effective remedy for children; nothing that acts quite the same, or has quite the same comforting effect on them. For the protection of your wee one—for your own peace of mind ~keep this old, reliable prepara- Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufactures of Mono aceticacidoster of Ballcylicacid Starting a Fire Safely Fill a and Put the the dry bucket with Hine ashes them wilh Kerosene three tablespoonfuis of mixture in the wood Farm and grate, iny on fire is Fireside, and the ready 10 go. tion always on hand. But don't keep it just for emergencies; let it be an everyday aid. Its gentle ence will case and soothe the infant who cannot sleep. Its mild regulation will help an older child whose tongue is coated 1 15¢ of sluggish bowels 1 have Castoria; the genuine Chas dd ears H. Fletcher's signature on the wrapper. “Goes Army” Perhaps he doesn’t learn a few things! ON'T envy a man who “only has to work a typewriter.” So we were told by Mr. Solon S. Bloom of 3503 Woodbrook Avenue, Baltimore, Md., whose health began to give way because his work gave him no bodily exercise, #1 decided to get away to a military training camp,” says Mr. Bloom, “thinking the rough and tumble with the army would do me good for a month, I asked the doctor what to do about my condition. “I've seen men, I've known men,’ he said, ‘I know what they eat, drink, and how they live, I know cathartics, physics, and all the ways men try £0 keep themselves regular—and the only two that go together well are men and Nujol. Nujol soothes and neals the membranes and expels bodily poisons normally, naturally, easily, so that you are regular as clock-work.’ 2 That was what Mr. Bloom learned when he left his typewriter and went into the army. If you are like most other people, you too will find that Nujol will make all the difference in the world in the way you feel. Remember Nujol is not a medi- cane, for it contains no drugs of any kind. It is simply bodily lubrica- tion that everybody needs. Tou can get a bottle of Nujol st any good drug store, in a sealed pack- age, for the price of a couple of good cigars, If you will start today and try it for two weeks you will agree that Nujol is the easy normal way to keep well and make a success out of your life. You will be astonished at the results! THE NEW