It The Praise of Liberty By JAMES ARTHUR EDGERTON Copyright 190C by J A Edgerton tVTE call with tumult of acclaim On Libertys enchanted name With flowers of fire and wreaths of flame We strew her radiant way Our uproar fills the earth and sky As bomb and cannon we employ In sheer abandonment of joy To celebrate her day A ND yet when glare and damor pall When ends the merry carnival When her tricolors cease to faII As star showers fall by night Why then desert her 7 Why forget The paths in which her feet are set Why cease to march where beckons yet Her high and holy light Vf E are her children All we hold She ave us when the files were rolled In wars red vapor as of old She led the battles van She needs us not our fitful praise But our support through a11 the days Thaf we her flag again should raise And teach the rights of man IHE song of free humanity Who yet has heard its harmony The gospel of democracy Who yet has understood Who yet has seen the happy light That all the world shall render bright When earth has truly reached the height Of human brotherhood IMS deeds that gratitude requires Such deeds as glorified our sires Relight once more their altar fires For all the world to see Lift up the standard voice the word Till all the lands are thrilled and stirred And thus in very truth is heard The praise of Liberty The Soft Answer If nature had made me an ostrich said old Grouch I suppose I could eat your cooking Wouldnt that be nice answered his Imperturbable spouse Then I could get some plumes for my hat Boston Transcript Extravagant Shoes During the reigns of William Rufus Henry I and Stephen all sorts of ex travagant shoes were worn The toes were sometimes long and pointed and sometimes made to curl like a rams horn Occasionally they were twisted In different directions as though the feet were deformed The clergy pro tested and threatened but the fashion continued in spite of the maledictions Several persons were excommunicated for wearing pointed shoes but they took the risk Contractor Brick Mason and Plasterer Ornamental Cement Worker Prices Right Work Guaranteed Can be found at the Wall Paper and Paint Siore J R DECKER 0000003 A 000 LOAN with the Building 4 McCook Co operative Savings Association can be paid off monthly payments i 1252 If 7ou are paying more you pay too much We can mature your loan on smaller monthly payments and less money in the aggregate than any comepting associa tion Call on the secretary who will explain our system Office in First National Bank IMook Building Savings Association This Beautiful 8 Day Clock Was Given To HARRY ALLEN for Returning the Most 10c Purchase checks on June 25th The Ideal Bargain Dejui Opposite P O McCook C 1YFCQOK TRIBUNE Only One Dollar the Year AyerfePill Want your moustache or beard abeautiful brown or rich black Use Act directly on the liver cure constipation biliousness sick headache Sold for 80 years UCKINGHAMS DYE niTI OS Or DXUCQIST3 0B K F HAIi ft CO NASHUA W B AIS TRIC Y9RIC1WN AS ITU TDAY BY WALT Eft MJ iwwB8SJMiuiagjiiMi a nt a hmjuj COPmiGIWDIWBUNlM T has been 12C years since the surrender of Lord Cornwal lis to General Washington at Yorktown The capitulation took place on Oct 10 17S1 A century later a centennial celebration o f the event was held at which time was laid the cornerstone of the beautiful monu ment that commemorates the victory which ended the American war for in dependence At the celebration were President Arthur and several members of his cabinet Baron vou Steuben of Ger many a descendant of the Baron von Steuben who fought in the Revolution Count de Itochambeau of France a descendant of the Count de Kocham beau who commanded the French al lies at Yorktown several other French representatives and many more nota bles including governors of the states The oration was delivered by Robert C Winthrop of Boston The military parade was especially imposing General Sherman was pres ent with his full staff as were also Generals Hancock and Fitz Hugh Lee There were fully 9000 men in line French and American warships were in the York river as those of the French had been 100 years before Sa lutes were tired one being to the Brit ish colors as a token that the animosi ties of the old struggle were ended if not forgotten Addresses were deliv ered by President Arthur Baron von Steuben Count de Rochambeau and others In the quarter of a century that has since elapsed the monument has been completed The most notable part of the shaft is that consisting of the fig ures of thirteen maidens representing the thirteen colonies About the base of the obelisk are appropriate inscrip tions reciting the terms of the surren der and attendant circumstances The shaft itself is tastily carved and deco rated and the whole is surmounted by a gigantic figure of Liberty At the spot where the surrender ac tually took place is a smaller monu ment now surrounded and overtopped by trees The cave used by Lord Corn waliis is still pointed out Yorktown itself is a small village much as it was in Revolutionary days The story of Yorktown is familiar to every schoolboy in the land Wash ingtons masterly strategy leading up to this crowning victory established his military reputation for all time It was here that Alexander Hamilton though a mere stripling distinguished aMttgri L ygwg rtN57 AT Sm III LORD COIINWAXLIS abandoned the world to the caprice o despots In point of numbers engaged or fierce lighting it was not a great battle but measured by its ultimate effects on mankind it was one of the most mo mentous engagements in the history of the world It kindled a lire in the hearts of the French soldiers that burn ed up the throne of the Bourbons It paralyzed tyranny in England and made possible an era of freedom for all the Anglo Saxon race In short with the Declaration of Independence which it sealed with the magic seal of success Yorktown uttered a prophecy of democracy in all lands How common and insignificant are many of the scenes of immortal deeds Thermopylae is but a small and unim portant mountain pass Gettysburg is but a country village Yorktowii had about sixty houses at the time of the siege nor is it much more ambitious now Yet these furnish the settings of some of the chief jewels of history Yorktown the village is little dis turbed by the currents of the great world that were so importantly modi fied by Yorktown the battle It yawns in its content fishes for oysters and knows but little change Such places are not disturbed by the fever of tran sition It is rather a sightly town ly ing high on its peninsula It is proud in its own way of its monument and memories but it is too close to them to realize their significance Speaking of Cornwallis cave Los sing casts doubt on its being the exact hole in the wall where the British gen eral met his officers for council That according to the Lossing version is now eradicated This which passes for the cave was used at the time of the investment as a hiding plaee for valuables However it serves The door was placed in front of the opening for commercial purposes that some of the villagers might charge an entrance fee Above the retreat still stand the British breastworks reminders of a struggle that gave a new republic to the world One of the most touching incidents in the siege of Yorktown centered about Governor Nelson of Virginia Nelson was in command of the militia of his state and directed the battery that opened fire on the British the morning of Oct 17 the last action before the surrender Nelsons house was situat ed in Yorktown the largest and most pretentious in the place In this man sion Cornwallis had his headquarters Despite the personal loss he would suffer by the bombardment the gov ernor ordered tne guns trained upon his own home for the purpose of dis lodging the British commander The mansion was severely injured by the cannonade which followed but Corn wallis and his officers were driven out and as a result proposed a cessation of MSB SSm MSmm WASHINGTON HAMILTON himself by leading a splendid and suc cessful charge and it was here that Count St Simon and other gallant Frenchmen gained the undying grati tude of Americans There were many things about the entire Yorktown campaign that seem ed almost providential The departure of the British fleet allowing the French fleet of Count de Grasse to occupy Chesapeake bay the storm that pre vented Cornwallis from crossing to Gloucester and cutting his way out the withdrawal of the British forces from the outer line of intrenchmeuts these and many other similar incidents all favored the colonists The victory at Yorktown enacted the Declaration of Independence into in ternational law It not only made America free but pointed a path to liberty for all oppressed peoples of the future It established a precedent of revolt and marked a limit to tyranny It was a divine reminder that God has not DE KOCHAMBEAU DE GRASSE hostilities and two days later surren dered Washington publicly thanked Nelson for this act of patriotism The surrender itself was as pathetic as it was memorable The French troops were drawn up in a long line on one side the American troops on the other thus forming a lane through which the conquered army marched The aspect of the British was as sub dued and dejected as their thought Cornwallis pleaded indisposition and did not appear His sword was sent by a subordinate Whether this was the reason that Washington designated a subordinate to receive it or not is unknown but at any rate General Lincoln was put for ward to take the token of surrender ne then gallantly returned it It was a piece of poetic justice that Lincoln was chosen for this office as he himself had been forced to surren der in a particularly humiliating man ner the year before When all the stragglers were ered together the number of Iho d v h capitulated reached between 7000 and 8000 no small urmy for that day The Americans and French had probably twice as many Three young men who played a prom inent part in the campaign of York town afterward became important fig ures In history They were Alexander Hamilton and Marquis de la Fayette each at that time aged twenty four and Count de St Simon just turning twenty one Hamilton gallantly led an important charge at Yorktowii and jfzis r22 SSSSSSESSSEes s 1 K1y iitni v3gi yyym y sp fay vfc - y i f MONUMENT TO HEROES OP THE TION AT YORKTOWN captured a British outpost He was also officer of the day at the time of the surrender His subsequent career as a member of the constitutional con vention and as Washingtons secretary of the treasury is familiar to every student of American history At the time Cornwallis retired to Yorktown La Fayette was in command of a Continental army of about 3000 men in the vicinity of Baltimore While his army was not large enough to at tack that of the British he was able by a threatening movement to prevent Cornwallis from escaping into North Carolina and thus made Washingtons Yorktown siege possible La Fayette also commanded a body of light in fantry during the investment and fur ther distinguished himself After re turning to his native land this unselfish friend of liberty participated in the French revolution where if his more moderate policies had been followed many of the horrors of that upheaval might have been averted He also liv ed to be the dominant figure in the rev olution of 1S30 which finally ended the Bourbon regime and placed Louis Phi lippe on the throne Some historians believe that if La Fayette had been of a self seeking nature he might have made himself president of France at that time Count St Simon had volunteered in the American cause at the age of sev enteen He was in command of the land troops with Admiral Count de Grasse which were landed at York town and played a conspicuous part in the siege St Simon afterward serv ed in the West Indies and was a mili tary prisoner there Then he visited Mexico and proposed a canal connect ing the Atlantic and the Pacific Re turning to France he became one of the founders of French socialism and of a new religious system that at one time had a very considerable follow ing He was one of the first if not the first to propose the Suez canal He was far in advance of his age and while many of his notions were fantas tic others were prophetic of human itarian movements now taking place If measured by effects on after ages St Simon was second only to La Fay ette as the most conspicuous French man who participated in the American Revolution Dont Kill the Hawk Man has sinned more than any other animal in trilling with natures bal ance Clover crops and the killing of hawks are apparently unrelated yet the hawks eat the field mice the fielu mice prey on the immature bees and the bees fertilize the clover blossoms The death of a hawk means an ovei increase of field mice and a consequent destruction of the bees Country Life In America A Clinrity Dance Awkward Spouse I see our set is to have a grand charity ball Did you ever dance for charity Pretty Wife Of course Dont you remember how I used to take pity on you and dance with you when we first met London Telegraph His AVixli They had just moved into a new house and they stood surveying th situation I wish she said that this carpet was velvet I dont re sponded the husband unfeelingly I wish it was down Easy iraisie Arent you coming to my party Daisy How can I when Im in half mourning Maisie Oh well come and stay half the evening Cleveland Leader Not to understand a treasures worth till time has stolen away the slightest good is cause of half the poverty w feel and makes the world the wilder ness it is Cowper YOU WOULD DO WELL TO SEE J M Rupp FOR ALL KINDS OF Rpjok WOfk DR A P WELLES Physician and Surgeon Office Reileui 524 MninAvtuno Ollico and Residence phone ii Calls nuswored nteht or day McCOOK NEBRASKA V P O Box 131 McCook Nobraskn II P SCTTOK PIcCOOK -v JEWELER MUSICAL GOODS NEBRASKA r Herbert J Pratt IiEOISTfcEED GltADUATK 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