4 ' 'A f r ij. if if 4 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. -PORTLAND, 5UNDAY MORNING. AUGUST 17. J9I3. .nwnAV MnnNTMrt Atir.IKT 17. IQH. 1 ' morrtcttt, ivii. y e BUur company. 77ie fea o the Vanderbilt House Returns to Newport with His New Wife to Find His Family Fled, All His Old Friends " Not at Home," and His First Wife the Leader in His Social Ostracism Newport, August 7. rHATSOEVER a man soweth, that shall he reap," says the Bible, which also tells In another book en excellent story of a. man who cold a birthright for a mess of pottage. These remarks are apropos to the fact . that Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt ftnd Mrs. Alfred Vanderbilt Number Two (who was Mrs. Margaret Emerson McKlm. of Bal timore) have returned to Newport from England bringing with them their youth ful son and heir.. ' .And, returning, Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt have found themselves effectually frozen ' out of that society of which, had Alfred Vanderbilt been content with defying; only halt Its conventions, he might and yrob ably would be leader to-day. Society has , put the ban on the Vanderbllts, and they are as lonely in Newport as beachcombers , on a Pacific slel ; In the twelve years since his marriage with Elsie French, Alfred Vanderbilt, has run the gamut of human Indiscretions. Hie return to Newport forced society to answer the question wnetner u could possibly condone bo many breaches of standards as Alfred Vanderbilt has been guilty of. Also it' was forced to choose be tween the first wife of Alfred, who lfl head of the Newport col ony, end the second wife of Al fred, who was Mrs. McKim. Al most unanimously It was decid ed that It would not condone, and that It would stand by the . first wile Mrs. Alfred No. 2 (Formerly Mr. Therefore when the Alfreds arrived In Newport recently they found none of the Vanderbilt family In residence except the Reginald Vanderbllts, and of course they, do not count In glvlnV social or family recognition. Reginald Vanderbilt, it will , be remembered, is Alfred's brother and the sharer In many a scrape and escapade. "Where is your mother?" asked the new wife of Alfred when she arrived. "Gone to England," replied Reginald. "Where are your sisterB twain?" "Gladys la in England and Gertrude is In Scotland,' answered Reggie, a bit em- "And where are your cousins and your aunts?" thus the new Mrs. Vanderbilt anxiously. "Just left' for a trip around the world," stammered Reggie. "But didn't they know we were coming with baby?" asked poor Mrs. Vanderbilt Number Two. "Oh, yes, they knew all right That's wny . Reggie did not finish the answer. Margaret Emerson . McKim 1 ' - Who Meet Thi Year at New port Her Her . Bitterest III! I I r ,1(1 11 1 ryZl. -w. t ?-J 1 r-v- J : 1 1 ; i . -h X W '$ Av7. W-A" 1 1 1 ! . " I , . v t In ! V. A1 - In silence the little party made Its way to Oakland Farms, the splendid mansion of the Alfred Vander bllts. "Aren't there any of the family here ex cept you, Reggie?" at last asked Alfred. "Oh, yes," replied the untactful Reggie. "There's Elsie. Elsie's the whole show up here now" - He stopped at a look from his brother. "Elsie?" said the second Mrs. Vander bilt. "Elsie?'L Then she realized that Reg gie meant the first Mrs. Alfred, and her (heart must have rrown very heavy, for even . the most optimistic person would recognize that abandoned by his powerful family and with his first wife commanding the field there was little chance for her husband to regain his lost social position. Newport knew this before the Alfreds arrived. In fact, the newB that they were coming disturbed that frivolous colony as It has never perhaps been disturbed. "Is It bravado op their part?" asked the matrons. "Surely Alfred at least must know that he has put himself beyond the pale." "It Isn't bravado," said others, who still held a kindly feeling for the holder of the most of old Commodore Vanderbllts millions. "He is anxious to realize his wife's ambitions, and he feels no doubt that the baby will reconcile him with the family." "Well, whatever it Is that makes them come they're going to make it very awk ward for everybody," was the general verdict. This was only too true. Early in the Spring the Vanderbilt family had planned a brilliant season. Mrs. Vanderbilt was to open The Breakers and have the Laso Szechenyis with her for the Summer. The Harry Payne Whltneys were to open their house on Bellevue avenue, the "Neely's1 to open Beaulieu, and Mrs. McKay Twombly was to open her handsome place on the cliffs Then, like a bolt from the blue, came word that Alfred intended to come to Newport. Oh, what a scurry there wets Mrs. Vanderbilt ordered the' shutters nut back on The Breakers ana neu 10 Sussex to stay with the Szechenyis, the Harry Payne Whltneys took refuse in Scotland, and the day after the Alfreds arrived Mrs. Twombly and her daughter. Kuin, ciuaeu iucii uuuio, picked up their petticoats and started for a trip around the world. Only the Reggies were left. And why do not the Reggies count? Why is their influence not suffi cient to place the Alfreds back in eociety? Reggie, the youngest of the family, has been on the verge of being kicked out himself;' be la received only be cause his wife continues to. live with him; he has figured in too many esca pades to attempt to foist his brother on Newport. Of what use is it for the blind to lead the blind? It, is a new thing for a Vanderbilt to be ostra cised by Society, in which the family has moved for two generations- It is hard "upon Alfred Van derbilt, for he might save been a leader in the colony which now will have none of him. When his father, the late Cornelius, in a great error of Judgment, disinherited -Cornelius, hl3 eldest son, because of his marriage, and made Alfred his chief heir, he was given an opportunity to become a social and financial leader. Instead of doing so, he kicked away the golden platter on which the birthright was given. But if it is hard upon Alfred, there Is much more to be pitied in the position of bis second wife. She has striven very hard for the social acknowledgment which Is now irrevocably withheld from her. The story of how Emerson, "the headache ' cure king," and his wife chartered a yacht and Jpok Vjth Mm. only, young gj, . Oratt Britain Rights Rsrv, , t . ' . ' ' ' ;nn.iiii m ffiirnii; fjn Aw bit :7 to Uw T my - l ... .. , ,., I I 'iiJpXUiW v. V 3f jT i t f X- W I .y) 'Sll1fl IAt MM if ' . ( li nsilf,H'J ft - !- JT ' " ZjLt 1 ' I iT iHU J FT ' W 47 McKim and their daughter, Margaret, Is an old one. That trip was planned solely tor the purpose of letting propinquity work its way until Dr. McKim would fall a captive to the charms of Miss Margaret and ask her to be his wife. Dr. McKlm at that time represented to the Emersons the highest point of social attainment that could be looked forward to. It is on record that the moment Dr. McKlm pro posed to Miss Emerson and the glad news was given to her parents, the yacht was turned around and made back for Balti more. But Mrs. McKim soon saw that thera were heights far beyond her husband's po sition. She cast her eyes upon Newport and Alfred, Vanderbilt. Alfred was di vorced from Elsie French, and Mrs. Mc Klm was divorced from her husband after the, payment to him of a large amount of money for his complaisance. Then they went to England. No doubt her reception at Newport has been an enormous shock to the second wife. Of course one season she was there before and was ignored by society, 'because society resented her friendship for young Vanderbilt. He was not then divorced; the divorce followed that season. And yet Mrs. Alfred Number Two displays astonishment to find that her husband's first wife is chosen over her head; that she has not married into the Newport set by marrying Alfred. 1 "You cannot enter here," says Mrs. Robert Goelet, as she orders the gates of Eastbourne closed to the Alfred Vander bllts. "Nor here, either," says Mrs. El bridge Gerry, as she tells her butler to say, "Not at hbme," should the Alfreds call. There are degrees of ostracism. The Vanderbllts will be put through them all. They felt their first great pang when they were not invited to Mrs. Fish's fairy tale ball, to which three hundred of Alfred's former friends were asked. Thse same three hundred sat "jthemselves down to dine In Mrs. Hermann Oelrichs's superb dining room before going on to the ball, but Alfred and his wife were not among those present. . Oakland Farms was left to Alfred by his father. It Is one of the most luxuri ous places about Newport. ;lt holds to-day two of the unhappiest of mortals. , What means their great wealth if they have no friends to lavish it on? They are ma rooned amid its luxurious contents. Does he blame himself or does be . blame the' young woman he married, for there is no doubt that his family at least would re ceive him If he had not remarried. When he drives, along Bellevue avenue and comes face to face with his former wife, what happens? Mrs. Vandarbilt looks at him but does not see him. looks at the woman by his side and does not see her. When he meets the women he used to be friendly with, what happens? If he is alone there are some women who will stop and chat a few moments with him, but the spirit of cordiality is gone. Mrs- .Joe Harrimah, meeting him in front of the Casino the other day, said: "Why, hello, Alfred, where did you drop from? Pleasant weather we are having, aren't we?" In the early days she would have wrung his hand and begged him to "Coma, home and fhave a bite of luncheon with us.' If his new wife Is with him, the women turn to look the .other way;: If brought face to face, they.. speak tQ her in the most casual manner. Being a man, Alfred does not see all the many slights ad ministered to bis wife by the women who "FORGOTTEN" '(With apologies to the old familiar elatslo picture of that name.) Here are Alfred and his new wife (who has struggled so hard for social recognition) out in the cold. Newport is frozen to them and they can only peer from the outside at the inside and mourn. What a position for the man who ..-. might have led Newport . fashion!" iff W Wl . iW ' . Mr.. Elsie tt French trbilt. Alfred' Fir.t Wife. his first' wife. He feels the greater slights, however, and writhes under them. Mrs. Payne Thompson, Mrs. Ned Berwind, Mrs. "Normie" Whltehouse, have neither called on his new wife nor allowed her to be presented to them. Mrs. Ava Astor, recently installed at Beech wood, gave them both$he cut direct the day she arrived, They live in splendid isolation, unhon ored and unsung, Invited nowhere. "The Alfred Vanderbllts?" asked some one the other day at the Casino. "Have they returned?" Dear me, how can they have the courage?" "No, indeed, I have not called; npr do r Intend to." Contrast their fate with that of the first Mrs. Alfred. She is,, the most popular hostess in the colony. Harborvlew, her magnificent estate, Is . the scene of one dance after another, one dinner after an other. Her Invitations are never refused. She is the guest of honor at Mrs. Fish's, Mrs. Goelet'a, Mrs. Astor'B, Mrs. Gerry's. These matrons are at her back in her fight to keep her former husband and his wue out of society. Alfred Gywnne Vanderbilt in - Coaching Costume. It not for his wealth. He presented. CO Newport a splendidly equipped Y. M. 0. 'A. building; he has bought interests In newspapers and magazines, but nothing has won for him, the birthright he sold for the mess of pottage. Where has this social outcast differed from many others who have trod the same primrose path? Why have others been forgiven and Alfred Vanderbilt sent into, exile? Perhaps because he has not played the game. The man who plays the game, even a losing game, re ceives the respect of his kind if he is a BportBman. Society would have come to the forgiveness stage had Alfred not made a second marriage; given the marriage, it might have forgiven in time if he had remained In England. But bis frequent returns to New York and his efforts to rehabilitate himself and his present wife at the expense of his first wife and Bon have turned society to- adamant. So ciety may not have a sense of decency, but it has a certain amount of pride, and it refuses to accept this man who wilfully outraged Its conventions. Society assumes that Alfred Vanderbilt counted onhis wealth and family to force society to take him back, and society kicks him out After all, the most interesting lesson taught by this chapter of American family history Is the foollshnesa of dictating youxv vu.iueu o urn i wftoo. 4, up utia UOrUBHUB She is flehtln not only for herself, but for her son. 'All this time Alfred has Knot stood Vanderbilt disinherited hta tamely by and made no effort to regain " simply because he married a perfectly! his birthrtght. He has spent money like estimable girl, whose family position did ,ir Hrl U ,ba? K tha norBe low not suit the father. Alfred got the resi- o?,? Jhtf madd 5Ii.nan2e -flwoosV.- duary estate that Cornelius lost. Ever out England because of his cW.hin n. .in !,, rw.n.,., v v : . . . uuuwvugu iu WilW ujr mt women wno tArnr1nA mnA hla . v.iwM,)jb, uam a moaei were his friends, and who are friends of Ho?8ri S55r whieSd tiS?f,0 ,tUtn d hPP bnd Vnile AUrel i9Iaft P0Wg wwca .would not exist wers, hs become a horrible example. . V