e# S got the Vanderbilts into society, strange as that .seem to the s _ M'm'wfi&mhmd\/flb&m- u<% mv'lhpnfiuiwlum j e Comnelins Vanderbilt, who ran a ferry boat New York to * 'Staten Island, and was augmented by his son, William H. Vander-- --# bilt, who took up another mode of transportation, railroad lines. In Ts 1883 the head of the family was Cornelins Vanderbilt, namesake 4 m&*v&flflhfim&m = _ Ti W. K.'s Wife from Alabama > . Gae He Fany Dres Ball in 1883 ~ _ And Crashed the Gates to Swelldem: * ho > Th We # y # '--"--'W"" '.--_TI---V o Aak o "--'. i'l" ln.lld-l mwmm-dmmw Consuelo, A matriage resulted in 1878. | When Lady visited New York in 1883, she was entertained 'Lllnhu = So, on the night of March 26, the W. K. Vandecbilt man-- sion was thrown for the first time, society, which had discussed wmm%hmm..mm :'hmz :'dMn.Vnhfl.a:ilbm " event, and more columns followed it. "and y Guests --lnud.\eod-uw expenses specu-- lmdmdelh'MMthka&i. lated upon. Bdi-rcfl-fi'" icircumstance of the whole thing ' was the self--evident fact that the Vanderbilts were in society at last, _ CS and that Mrs. W. K. had got them there! . k § (WELVE HUNDRED invitations had been issued just before =AM=#*46 Lent. Fw@w&h'hlymubflm By on what to wear. -- ' All Fifth avenue seemed aware of the great event on Monday, JOE March 26th. : Though the ball began at 11. by seven o'clock _ kINC .m"dnw'.uld"dnqd'byMuVMwundd hudbu&nfl.yythYmmof Antonio Y znaga, who a ion in Euba, and Ellen Mary Clmll:.p:aalm" , Miss Yznaga, like Miss Smith, was pretty attractive, VM.M. E:i W. her parents to the north, settled in a cottage in Orange, Jersevy. M&qm":"ulhlndM out announcements and invitations, first astutely securing of honor a lady much in the public eye at that time, Lady m %MfiuMWbfih&aflb M&Vadu&i%wad rself, among the was transformed. In New York a palatial residence was built for :'u.ggo'l:fi&Av--:.flmof&::nfidhfi.tM C r decided to ow with x bail: Eurthermere, s fanty drem bell. And, Anolly. such a bail as New York had never known before! P to that time the best society in the metropolis was controlled by descendants of the original Knickerbocker notables, the Astors, Stuyvessints, Schermerhorns, Schuylers, Rhinelanders, Van Cortlandts, Van Rensselaers, and so forth. Of these,¢the Astors were by far the richest, but mere wealth was not the test, ancestry being a chief requisite. And these survivors of Dutch governors, great landowners and established worthies, rather looked down upon "flnfirm-"u-lfi C Alva Smi hWbMJMMb U social even e ---- March : been surpassed. & e Aince s wane 9n Aobims mn darciyheas uht"" of Murray Forbes Smith, of Alabama, and thereby hangs a tale! Although Miss Smith was of a good family, her face was her for-- tune, and, as Mrs. Vanderbilt, wife of a multimillionaire, her life By HAROLD SETON < . -- *®eO social event of the 50 created comment t | a Amatea thik the Vanderbilt_feney: dress . bullof ] O Mach 26, 1883.U5 to that ume this was the mort entertainment given in this country and, hx Mim'hnficehaqubd.ihsm Its setting splendid, i:c" superb. -- Furthermore, it fl'hvfihfl-mufi%yx!}-b* wut 66 ie Draclnee U Marcheiter (Canniicla Y mds is survined by her spttm, Eaily" Yineen: of Parn: ..L%:x}u.x.,e. * J * ; . '(Copyright, 1928, NE «sHIH ILICNCNNIIAIRRnnIIn NE Nt n earinemnio en ced t £ t 4. -- lght, 1928, NEA Magazine) K MA rs. James Brown Potter, mother of Mrs. James A. illmén, as she arrayed herself for. the V .anderbilt ball. h Bin +@"; ¥ i ae D2 e «n ENT U.Ir ENC EAH N NU ho h n nc ermen n Oe en o i en n «ut EAC ECCE CEX O AnCorrenn e en o e e e e on 1 § .i' fla' F e 6x .. © i