The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 13, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1899 Page: 2 of 8
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VANDERBILTS, ETCETERA J
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«f« of ; r '}rtn.i?"i kit by
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i'tU f *t f /f r—.
I'ot It «botk*-r way: TVr 'i lao q . •
I«a tbal a whit* *fc'J fold room :• ').►
«'/at brilliant tm) *(.'/■" y kii.'i of roor/j
«5 0, r ' nofnxtjol th '
ib ordinary mi,mutt tarka U-ti*r ipiwl
> r«J twcl(fT'/oi«f; ny a r>-«;<ii*t
mt, with ii tow Ij of aliu'Mt
IIi«m rMoirki *fply only to gr t
wtirre ar iirn«") w ^v-
Ug g'S*l.* Of <i*l>' t ti ;> ; tfc> .or*
V/iw«'lc ro«aM will ar> at ir.-.'h aa
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JV/as't iik a* how Jor./ 'br .fita wiii
r« ; ti on wb// r rn|//r t,W fvr It
• «, 'tti.g- ll « rotor* of tt ir ro«m
'/t,'« a tiMth if tUr f S )<k ft. '/f
wgm th whoi« |/fof t*)on of ar'lii-
r.<J <J «r^/r*ior wiJJ «wi|i!y,rtlkn
agaibat thrir will, at <J will i, it exrrt
lb*ir IiIiwh* In fator of another
•har.|r . V s tn r «-an t ll.
Talking of ii</rcltif , Nm York'* new
agtorriot<ii* ambtlliii't it attracting
a tnornrnt'i attn.-
tloa. Of loom th
t rw vrhi'-l* la uii-
drr more perfc t
'-onlrol an>l < an bt
krpt from )/((-
fflltiif more abto-
lulely than any-
tliiiiK drawn by a
horn*, while t h -
Ii ii k e prieuriiali''
tire are an Inval-
uable aid.
It l the tip to N«« York". Autoir o-
e*(.e« t that t h e Wla Awbulanc.
auto will be |iructi<'all,v u in>rial In
two or three yenr*. 1 have been rather
kur[iri*e<1 to find within the pnut two
weeka that a (jreat many ronntry
hotikea, even tho e of lutxlrriitc ev|iciitie,
mi' lii-iii^ built with nutomoblle rooint
In the baaemeut. 'i'heke roorna are < n-
tereil by a nlopeil way mill doted by
blir bnrn door*. 'I'liua. Inatend of n horni!
3
f Hfceri w..l rm t
MM. fU Larf aet '
apast ■ cm from ^ ^ v
tkat 4kt t tkk. W \ I
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Vort 1 al.'.wi a year af* r
t*h Wf'.rt kit will a> .it lit
adn5.'tte«i to pn^
^••e. Ai etfori -
itert ik w/ iiwatk
•trie! to tbc day.
it luy lit aaore
tL L 1kat time !*•
for* ' L diif^ti-
tioT: of Ctm>f!ie
VtRderb.lt'* prr 7>-
erty ia kiw a.
Wbetker he left
the r/ri;k of the es-
tate to Alfred, or
reeatablithe Cor-
t.. jj „
r*j r f* t.
**1
• > -
Fit
ti H# e. d««
t V r. for ^rant
that
it may b
M' *. Harry
I'a rue Wiitoi'v, Vandert/ilt
and Ciiaoj* Vaixiert>ilt, the other chii-
•Jren, will ea' b receive ti** cotnfortab'x-
om of Slft/M/V.<>. aa Ocorje am) Fred
Vai.derWIt ar.d the da'Ufiiteraof W. f!
VaoderWlt dio under hia will in 1%"'.
A* to the wealth ,*ft by Mr. Vander-
o'lt, many wild gv-t+r* are made. I I
t-.s> I* well within tb Iar^e*f eatimatr^
In "jrr.mou with other inreatrnent <-*.
latta, the Vanderbilt rniilior.t rea' /e
• rer foor p r cent, than fite of profit
t*r year. Take the aingle item of
V'-rk Central bond*, wbitb eompo e the
*t ainffle item in the eatate. Thrt
f/ay only five j^r lifion a pr< ei t
irierket valuation, which, allowing for
the length of time they have to run, t,et*
not uiuck o'er three per cent.
'I!ie ca*e waa different when the old
-o nrtiodore wa* putUnif the e*tate h>-
•.' tb r, manlptiUtii;{f "corner*," ton-
tolidating line*, working the market.
HI* heir* have wi*ely limited them-
aelvea to *afe inveatmenta; and aafe in-
ve*tmenta in New York do not pay over
four per cent, upon an average, if ao
much.
When a fortune, no matter how large,
increaae* at the rate of four per cent,
or le**, when million* are paid for pnl-
are*, great yacht*, expensive entertain-
ing; when other million* go to charily
and education, the fortune doe* indeed
grow, but It growa le** rapidly than in
commonly auppoaed. The new million-
aire*, the Carnegie* and Rockefeller*,
have pai>*ed the Individual Vanderbllta,
partly becauae they get a larger return
upon their active fund*, partly because
of the frequent subdivision* of the more
fatnou* entate.
J'ut the wealth of all the thirty-
eight Vanderbilt heir* together, and it
in the largent fortune in America ntill,
though it may not be very long. No in-
dividual Vanderbilt will lingly hold
better than third rank among American
millionaire*.
It. wfco > the lea*-
at kpe-ct hi* money.
b t wnstry koriK
crwea the font city
boogh *ot kw the Bxwt eost'y,
York. He ha* built two eaor-
!«• yaehtk. He ha* dowered
X ' r at a r. .cher •, *er hi* v<c -^p
a* a oilHosaire and the kot-
1 ar. h*:re*a n<! (T''^ 05 '2:or*
to a drvoneed wife. If with all hi* way*
r/f it-'tli./ rid of money, he i* to-day
w.rth a eent cw> %1'> . lOt • he i*
a a ore capable f.nar,<ier than moat men.
T'/r that mat'er. William K-, who***
'or t -art '-on*idere<l by no mean* *
baiinet* mac. haa developed a very
t r* tty talent for affair* ti nee hi* di-
i lorr* W>,en the old mf dore wa*
aiive. ke had to bribe Willie K. to keep
off Wall atreet. -where the yonng man
wat makiLg dock* ar.d drake* of hi*
money. Then for year*, thus deprived
a loeatj'/r,. he wa n-ainl;. a rran of
p . .re; he made a bci inea>* >f ti : iv-
! ing life, and did It to wi*ely that he ia
now the healthiest of hi* family.
I: ;t hen the late Comelica Vander-
bilt auffered hia (Int paralv-tic *troke
Home tear* ago the tr.ipfjoned dilettante,
'he pleasure-loving Willie, ca..- : to the
front nobly; be hak really Keen the
head of the house in all active way* ever
-ince. The million* and the reputa'ion
of the house are *afe in hi* hand><.
t urio i*ly enough, he is the mo*t pop-
ular memlier of the family; ha* been
eier *ince hi* divorce from the lady v. ho
I* now Mr*. O. H. P. T>lmont. Instead
of bin ie|f seeking a divorce from the
then Mr*. Vanderbilt, as hi* kinsman,
Mr. Sloane, ha* *ince done in the caie
where Perry Belmont waa concerned,
Mr. Vanderbilt made it possible for hi*
w ife to bring the suit again*t him.
a* New Havet on November 2i. but m
the ritita ea*t of the western men. 1 be
(>trfonitk£,'"t of the Wi*con*in crew in
•fee Po";jll e[ft e regatta la*t apring.
• ken they fairly won flrat honora so
fir as watermanship went, have In-
;<.red eastern metj with deep respect.
'J tote fali ViMOt iit'l and All <.ati-
for- '* footba teama wlllteeet Yale;
C ago and Michigan will meet
Petr.sj; Oberlin and Chicago will meet
Corr . It may happen that In more
•ban one of the** contesta victory will
rest wi-h the westemera: and In the
>tber a. <->, that ta* 'ern team* will owe
t itioriea in part to the help of atudenta
raited west of the Alleghenie*.
0' '-o e. the Carlisle Indians, won-
><c the foott/al! field, will meet
i I the principal eleven*; but tbelrmar-
• irk—marvelou* when yoo con-
der t o* few are the men from whom
l*- can pi< < a team, and the lack of
«- ■ for athie'ic training—i* no ijot-
alty. OWEN LANODON.
A HEROIC NUN.
fort* ot ttie itusstan women tbeink
Jiy 1 "0 they bad managed to get four
university colleyes for women, with
1,442 students; one medical acac'en.-.
with VjO atudenta, and numerous inter-
mediate aeboola. There are 700 women
doctors in Ituasia, of wbom ceaxly one-
half are emnloved In the civil service.
CLOTH CARRIES PERFUME.
Rewarded kr Ike Kln« of the Rel>
Clan* far Her *# ble Condoel
a* .%or>e.
King Leopold baa jost bestowed on
Ulster Teresa Hickey, an Englikh nun
of the Apostoline community estab-
lished in IJelgium, the civic medal of the
first class (a decoration instituted as a
reward of conspicuous civic merit), in !
recognition of her heroic ser-iees to :
the people during the outbreak of a ter- I
ribie epidemic which ravaged the dis-
trict of Oordegem, in Flanders. So
j^reat was the consternation of the in-
habitants that no one would venture to
approach the houses in which the vic-
tims lay dying. *ays the Westminster
Cazette. During the panic Sister Teresa
volunteered to go and tend the unfor-
tunate *ufferers, for w hom purse* could
not be found. For several w eeks she de-
voted herself day and and night to the
noble work of ministering to the sick
ar.d dying, receiving no other assistance
than that given by the clergy of the
parish. With unflagging devotion the
brave woman remained unflinchinglv
at ber po*t of duty until the epidemic
abated, although almost broken down
by her untiring efforts.
Public manifestations of giatitude
for her inestimable services were ren-
dered by the people, and her conduct
bating come under the notice of the
government, the king ha* rewarded her
self-sacrifice by bestowal of the honor
mentioned. Sister Teresa has been It
... Peigium for nearly 30 year*.
I he Football Sranoii.
One rei -on why the Vanderbilt* are GIRL STUDENTS MUST MARRY.
so Khort-lited i* tnat tbev do not pay
attention to tbeir ,
')! health. There 1*
n°t an athlete iu
the family; not
I *Ci;r\r>\ even so much aa a
good golf player.
Young Whitney,
who married the
daughter of Cor-
nelius, was a mem-
ber of a Yale crew;
the V ndt:bilta in
Yale have never
a b o n e upon the
athletic field.
for the 'Varsity hence their affair*
Bor'' must now take a
bnck seat while those of some hundred
or more yourig men of muaclc are dis-
cussed.
The football games thus far played
are but trivial affairs The real interest
of the Beason begin about the middle of
October, when Ynleand Princeton meet
the smaller colleges and show their
"form."
For once the chief interest does not
center in the tfreat Yale-Princeton crame
Huaelan lalveraltlra (lequire That
Women Must He Married
' Fun*
If a girl in Itussia wishes to study at
any of the universities in that countrt
etiquette does not allow her to do so
nntil she is married, so she goes through
the civil cerernyiy of marriage with a
man student, whom very probably she
has never seen before, and this mar-
riage is quite legal, though perhaps
they may never speak to each other
again, says Stray Stories.
On the other hand, if they like each
other, and they wish it, they are mar-
ried for life. If they don't, the marriage
is dissolved when their university
course is finished, *nd they are free to
marry some one else.
I be celebrated mathematician, Sonya
Kovalevski, went through the marriage
ceremony with a student whom *he
then saw for the first time, and who
afterward became her husband.
The education of women in Russia
stands better than in most European
ccuntries, gyving to the ijersistent ef-
Raveltr That Oac Drettnaker ta
nit Mln* Aauiac Her Favarlle
(. ■••turner*.
A dre**rnaker, recently returned
from Paria, brought a small but very
valuable piece of red material, which
ibe i* going to dlride aparinf'y
among her moat favored cuatomera,
After awhile, taya the Chicago Inter
Ocean, it will lie accessible to a larger
circle, an (he material will ultimately
be put upon the market. Juat now the
manufacturer have not been able to
complete the material in the way they
de*ire. Now the only color in which
thia material can be made ia light red,
of the hue that the farmer wear* when
he ha* rheumatism, or did wear until a
abort time ago. Later it will be po*si«
ble to impart the merits of thia inven*
tion to other colora, although it would
probably become juat aa popular in the
present red monotony. For thia cloth
can retain in the moat wonderful way
the odors of perfume. It ia expected
to solve, in the best fashion, the prob-
lem as to the best way in which to per-
fume dresses.
Many other expedients have been
tried, such aa small sachets sewed in
the draperiea, but none of them ia so
simple as this cloth, which is laid in
the lining or otherwise concealed about
the waists. It diffuse* a delicate odor,
which i* never exhausted, however long
the time of a gown's use may be. Vari-
ous scents may be given to the cloth,
and the number will be increased as the
makers complete the detail* of the
work.
When the material goes on the mar-
ket there ia little danger that this uaw
invention will ever become common.
The price is prohibitive to any but
wjmen who are willing to pay for what
they want, whatever it may cost.
Jullna Halph'a Great Kind.
Julian Ralph tells of hia delight in
finding green corn in Europe. In the
course of many yeara of extensive
travel on the continent he had never
seen an ear. lie recently stopped at a
bote! in Paris and met a porter in the
ball carrying a basket of genuine Amcr-
I ican green corn. "Green corn!" he
shouted. "Is it possible that this ia
what I aee?" "Yes, monsieur," said
Mine. Brunei, the wife of the proprie-
tor. "It is veritably the green corn of
America. We grow- it upon our farm.
So many of our guests are Americans
uud so fond are they of this peculiar
food that we have seen it to be to our
advantage to make for them this sin-
gular product in our fields in the coun-
try. "I took Mr. Brunei's hand," saya
Mr. Ralph, "and pressed It. I raised my
hand as one does who bestows a bene-
diction. 'God bless vou, madam,' said
1. with such evidem piety that she
could not take offense. 'You are the
most magnificent and the most won-
derful woman in France.'"
Ilread for Horses.
In Germany potato bread is used by
the natives of Thuringia to feed their
horses, especially when they are
worked hard in very cold weather. The
animals thrive on it, and their health
and strength are excellent.
Regular i<> „ Fault.
Boggs—Ia Dobbs a man of regular
habita?
Riggs—Yes. Be gets drunk erery pay
day.—N. Y. Journal.
r*\
J cfecjfrcjfr
| <&<$><$>
* cfocfoch
$ efrefrcjfr
£ Fine Cigars
* AND -
I TOBACCOS
w AAA
w vpwep
cfrcfrcfr
: <$ <$><$
SCHOOL BOOKS!
The Summer Vacation
Closed with August.
With September came the opening of our Semi-
naricH and public schools. As usual we were pre-
pared to meet the demands of these schools with a
complete selection of the series of text books adopted
by the Cherokee Hoard of Kducation, and which are
now used in our schools, l'arents should consult us
before buying SCHOOL BOOKS a nd School Sup-
plies as we can save them money on every purchase.
In these lines we are well prepared
to supply the needs of all. Fancy
stationery, in boxes, 25c to 75c per
ai i« a box. Tablets, writinir pads, pen-
Stationery, * in
...Carter-Pendleton Drug Co.
THE LEADING DRUGGISTS AND STATIONERS.
BLANK BOOKS, *
<&<$>
<$> ejfr
cfrcfr
&&
FINE
PERFUMES,
TOILET
ARTICLES
AND
BATH FOOM
SUPPLIES
<$><$>
<$ <&
cfrcjfr
saw
<r
t
m
m
<r
*
*
*
J! A PUNSTER HAS SAID 1[—
That "while there's life there's SOAP'- «<•
I *<"i SOAP. We jell all kinds of SOAP-ea-
I cept the Cheap kind Come in and look at our
match less display of soaps, perfumery and toilet
(foods In enumerating the various hijfh rlasB
tlor
We
Soaps in stock We mention:
Violet de l'alm. Sweet Pea I tor, net
..I m T ' (;ol""inl Dame, Jasmin.
Oat Meal, Pink tarnation, Glycerine, Ktc
Face Motions and l-owders-Pazzoni's Swan '
X>own. Combs and Itrushes, liath sponges—every
tiling necessary to the correct toilet.
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Hudson, Waddie. The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Indian Terr.), Vol. 13, No. 6, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1899, newspaper, October 12, 1899; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc155702/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.