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Show MISCELLANEOUS MULTI-MILLIONAIRE CROWN PRINCES LtLXA KING DON GOUIiD, the heir apparent to the bulk ol the fortune left by the Wizard of Wall street. Is .r ttv well know n for U boy of Is. ..wing to his basing experiences of last winter, in H, Havcmeyer Ir., hell apparent to a gn at sib of ihe millions that have been made In sugar, ihe general public knows almost nothing. August Belmont, Jr. oldest son of the reigning August Bdmont and third ol the name. Is 23. and quite as good polo plaver as his father. William Waldorf A.sior Jr now 2R, heir apparent to the larger of the two great Astor fortunes. Is practically a young englishman of English training and with acquired ac-quired English tastes. William Vincent Astor, his M-year-'old cousin son of John Jacob Astor ;ini .a wining, is more interesting. This lad is being reared with extraordinary ar- As a .liil.l ht! was not strong and R course Of outdoor life at 1'. rn. I Iff the famous up-the-H udson st it. near I'.hlne-cllff. I'.hlne-cllff. was planned for him. There he has be. 11 r ar d mostly so far, with plenty of fresh air end exercise im-hi- dally portion. Possibly he has be in to., much secluded from other boys, but th. physical results hay.- certain!) been good. His fathi-i is very chummy with the lad, and the two go to all sorts of places including tie- races, together, the man s. . ming completely wrapped jp in the boy young w llliam Henry Vanderbllt, son of Alfred, ten years younger than John JacOb Astor's heir, Is also being brought up on fresh air and plenty Of It. W ith his parents tie Is living at Ardshy Towers, the ed-roof.-d mansion built bv Barber, the asphalt man. and leased for tin- .season by Alfred Every day the child is kept outdoors out-doors for hours, a groom, a nurse, a horse, mid a two-seated two-seated runabout being devoted entirely to his service. It would be hard to lind a more popular multl-mllllonalre lu-ir apparent than this 4-year-old great-great-grandson of the Ki-lm old Commodore, who was Ihe world s llrst railroad rail-road multl-mllllonaJre All tho young folk who are chummv with his father and moth, r call the child "Bill." and, to all appearances, he is growing up as normally as if h- were not destined to be worth more millions than anv human being can possibly know what to do with At 86, E H Green the big. burly, rollicking son of Hetty Gre.-n, thi richest woman in the country, is probably prob-ably the most picturesque multl-mllllonalre heli apparent known. He's a Yale graduate, was his moth r's f, m. rifl es a child, largely- because he Is was put In the carriage busines infl he was 13. Immediately aft r hi pel In- has acquired divers other Intfreitl cal ambition, which sterns hardly HI nnd a railroad In Texas, wrier? t t manhood life. He Is often rn H.5 and other Northern and Eastern a be fully dominant over the Greta an to come, since his mother li sllu JOB posed to relinquish her throne to ase son Copyright. 1 w |