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Bow They Live B PO oo e oy PR APARTMENTS JBacbelors Blre Who They Rre. an® What They Do. Do Yyou Know ? e @@@5@@@@ = 0. COSY CORMNER IN T HOME OF iE uNtoN CLUB. HORACE PRATT, PRES. PACIFI MART SLEEPING APARTMENTS 100 SMOKING ROOM (UETHE SO E OF Lovis SLOSD would rather face He ha; any nums the vine-cover- til last i sister 1 trav- bach- g that hap- to be free with s his wealth tn any one s never quite prompted him t gives a touch of o of Shakespeare's tests with his mc Ayior-street res headquarters since the death of Lloyd Just now, however, he has left the madding crowd and retired his Gibsonesque v ranch, and he won't play with San bleesed old iron deer on Tevis, his father. the bacheior itself over his re- it there is d up with it 8an Francisco will try wers of the Wealth has not prevented his labor in the line of a chosen profession. n who does not bother to ps . and the place sco belles would reat pleasure lies In art, and this more to him than society. spends much time and money in choosing for his home—pictures, hen Mayor Phelan grows we. the bickerings of a he takes refuge his beautiful cou Here he can ente few when the favored unto himself and the art lov House decoration is when friends are entertaining Harry Tevis is said to plead movingly to be al- some wind-sv yield gold to h stays a bachelor because he fe He is a college man and the old col- o CORNER. OF DINING HALL. OF E.M.GREENWAY .- The Martin brothers, Walter and Peter, are sought in San Francisco society = They add two more names to the list o genfus of infinlte pains, home-loving bachelors. When out of the here and there where public eye they may be found in the ¢ sense notes an effect that whi‘e house out on Broadway big ite right. Guests at the recent ial house that overlooks the sea and 1ding perhaps d1d not know that takes every fogs' drenching before tb Tevis w most of the town has heard whispe lowed to design the decorations. He never s the right flowel He works with g cl e ange: bigg the Harry Raphael W helor of another it. Mrs. Martin's exquisite taste A type. He is a cl the real thing— home worth coming to. and he makes his abode under the wings Reyben Lloyd is one of the substanti of the Bohemian owl. He is treading pachelo He lives in the substant along the path that leads to middle age failc home on Folsom street, kec now and the youngest of the smart e with his mother in a substant set do not interest at that age so much 1 attends like clock to a as did; but Mr. Weill has as genial al business. Half-pa every a I as ev nd the little dinners finds htm in offica, and his delight. His Paris trips are frequent, and does not come until work f he finds the ladies of Paris quite as tended to. This recreation » his taste as those here. His r fis blacl - nchiness naturally feels at home on was a well-known frequenter of t k for many years, and had the rep tion of being the finest saddle-horse in the State. Its best days are past now, but Mr. Lioyd may be seen in his phae- the Continent. Fred McNear is in busy business down on California street, and when the day's work 1s over he crosses on the same ferry boat that carrles less fashionable hu- tax patind ether well-beloved horses thot manity to the warmer climate over the pave talen Its place bay ¥ home in Oakland, but San . A a3 ' Jloyd's love affalrs have been more Francisco soclety clalms much of his MI- Llovd's lo I mox than Cupid could count on twice his fin- gers, and although he is past his romar lelsure time. He is popular with the yung ladies of the smart set. The owner of the famous Hastings 28 he bas not been given up entirely by Ranch, near Sierra Madre, is one of the Persistent loveliness. ,[The only young best known bachelors in the south. Mr. ladles to whom he ls attentive just now Hastings 1s fond of country life and he Are his nieces, whom he chaperones vig- makes nch his headquarters, put ilantly. v knows him well. s Santa Barbara is about to acquire a any a theater party in new millionaire in Mr. Bacheller of Chi- , and he Is the head and cago. He has been spending a number of front of southern coaching. Coaching is winters in California and he has his fad. He drives perfectly. n Santa Barbara’s summery climate He spends much of his time fn in which to make his home. He is not a York, which was once his home. It was society man in the strict sense, but he there that his father acquired the great likes a few good friends. He likes the wealth that has now passed on to the sight-seeing of our State and ne likes fish the He s; hotel to be bullt in Banta Barbara before son and daughters. Mr. Hastings brings strong whiff of New Yorkness to Cali- fornia. dinners of our seaside resc s that he is walting for an ideal perfect for is a wonderfu f the little ac A woman's white nue wait for whensoever windy elty. mother it s he s He the ave- return: turn to our with his ma in n tile Library claims raveling N some of his nd he is a world a numt charities. The Doctor's Daughters R Gaa B y 1 organization that can tell tales never says a good heart and open purse. A man must have something to look after 1 if a young lady finds him not wealthy enousa for the demands of her taste then chari- of the fam- Mr. Sloss h but as always ties may benefit thereby. William 1k Goad Jr. is the Frank Goad of so His worst fault is youth and he promises to outgrow that He is r brother of the popular sisters me has merged into three others, d 1s another favorite of the la- lly the younger ones probably no more famous club one of the ablest nt man in town than wiry Horace Platt. He probably the we has. been a great power in the Bohemian college men bot Club—he was one of its best-known presi- dents. He has his apartments in the Pa- cific Union Club now, and that his life cente He is not only spirit but a man of education a pendent thought too. He has don lecturing. The woman's clubs hav joyed what he has to say, although ew ¢ is wher slacks up for a Mr. Searles’ him make a record 10 o'clock Mojave friends look to see in days to come. breakfast. professes terror of a body of women, say-