The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 4, 1906, Page 24

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: THE SAN nd love never will be— gince f love is unreason. e passing week has fulfilled de- rs and de to its ckley Tay- heon at.the and the Julius bride's and Miss Alyce a tea at thelir in honor of iss Alice Dunne of MONDAY : vingston Lansing, r apartments at dinner hostess of Miss Grace J Selfridge, Christine Pom- Roosevelt, Miss Gwin Coleman, Selfridge, Carl dwin and Stanley at R eption hostess the Pleasanton, bert Brien, Dr. Millicent M. Eliot of Ottawa Kent by and fugene Lee, Mr. and Mrs. 1 n, Mr. and Mrs. Gale, Mrs. o Bendix, Mre. Wenzelburger, Miss Wenzelburger, Mr. and Mrs Graupner and Charles H. TUESDAY. Joseph Anderson Chanslor, host- large bridge party at her Washington and Jones streets, Mrs. Maurice Casey, bridge hostess &t her home on Pacific avenue, Mrs. W. W. Stow, entertained at a tea in her Pine-street home. Armstrong | - AT 4 OM WAS HOSTESS AT A “R, ANOTHE AT E THIRD, WHO GOES JOIN HER HUSBAND, NT MITCHELL. > -+ Gayety Club dance in Century Hall,| Gustave Sutro, dinner host at his home Miss F e Tallant presiding as|on Broadway, entertaining Mr. and Mrs. hostess. ¢ , |Frederick Pickering, Miss Rhoda Picker- Whist section of the Sequoia Club [ing Miss Marle Pickering, Miss Edna held its first regular meeting in the | Hahnig Miss O'Sullivan, Leon Boc- b=l queraz, Roger Bocqueraz, Dr. - Richard C. Cantwell, | Broderick and Frank Jones. luncheon hos o revenue cut- ter MeCulloch in honor of Miss Cornelia Campbell, Mrs. George Forrest Richardson, hostess at a luncheon at her home on Gough street, entertaining Mxs. Leland Stanford Lathrop, Mrs. Marvin R. Hig- gins, Mrs, Has Brouck, Mrs. John D. Isaacs, Mrs. J. H. Wallace, Mrs. Charles 8. F irs. J. R. Laine, Mrs. Charles H. Williams, Mrs. 1. O. Rhoades, "Mrs. Willlam Herrmann and Mrs. E. E. Cal- vin. WEDNESDAY. Mrs. Ernest Albert Btent entertaining at a ge luncheon in honor of Mrs. { Haldimand Putvam Young. | Mrs. Gustavus A. Boyer,-a-bridge party, followed by a tea, in her home on Oc- tavia street. Presidio hop given by the officers and ladies of that post, the patronesses including Mrs. Samuel S. Sumner, Mrs. Frederick Funston, Mrs. Charles Mor- ris, Mrs, Edward T. Brown, Mrs. James M. Kennedy and Mrs. Edwin M. Sup- plee Mrs. George Phlmer, hostess at lunch- | eon. | Mrs. I W. Hellman entertained thirty | guests at a luncheon and musicale, at her home on Bacramento street. Miss Josephine Beedy, hostess at a tea at her home in Sausalito in honor | of Miss Cornelia Campbell. Mrs. Fannie Danforth entertained a dozen guests at a luncheon. Wedding of Miss Ethel Crellin and Wtipple Spear Hall at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crellin, on Alice street, Oakland. Miss Jessie Craig, hostess at an elab- orate five hundred party in her home in Piedmont in honor of Mrs. G. F. Eman- uels, | "“Weading or Frederick Disckmann of | Oakland and Miss Mary Hopps of Sa- vannah, Ga., the ceremony taking place at the Hotel de Soto in Savannah. Mrs. Walter Byron Webster, host at whist. Mrs. Charles Austin Coolidge, luncheon hostess in honor of Bishop Moreland. Mrs. Willard “Wayman, hostess at bridge in her apartments in the Em- pire, entertaining = -dozen 'players. THURSDAY, | v!\[i.«s Bessie Wilson and Miss Bernice | Wilson, hostesses at an elaborate lunch- |eon at the St. Francis, entertaining thirty-two guests. Mrs. Thomas Benton Darragh enter- | tained at a luncheon at the Hotel Co- | lonial. | Mrs. Isadore Lowenberg, hostess at a | luncheon in the Palm Garden in honor of Mrs. Dorothea Klumpke Roberts, en- | tertaining twenty guests. | Mrs, Henry T. Scott, hostess at a luncheon in her Burlingame home. Miss Helen Thomag entertained at a luncheon in honor of Miss Sdra Cunning- ham. Miss Gertrude * Palmer, hostess bridge, entertaining thirty guests. Mrs. Charles Jackson, bridge hostess at her home on Vallejo street. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hubbard enter- tained at an elaborate réception at their home in Oakland in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hubbard Jr. Mrs. Charles Austin Coolidge enter- tained at a luncheon and bridge in honor of Mrs. Sumner. FRIDAY, Mrs. Emory Winship, hostess at a bridge party at her home on California and Gough streets, Mrs. Frank H. Kerrigan, at home, Mrs. Pelham Ames, hostess at bridge. Mrs. Willlam Fawcett Perkins enter- tained at a bridge party in honor of her sister, Mrs. Jane Ewell, 7 Mrs. Vernon Waldron, hostess at a tea at her home it Piedmont in honor of Miss Lewis. Mis. bridge. Misg Carolyn Palmentéder entertained a dozen luncheon guests at her home in Oakland. Miss Estelle Kleeman entertained at her home in Oakland in honor of Miss Mary Jarvis. 3 Mrs. Louis B. Katz, hostess at a card party at her home on Clay street, . SATURDAY. Mrs, Clarence Martin Mann, hostess at dinner in her Washington-street home, followed by a musicale. Mrs. Deane and Miss Deane, hostesses at five hundred In their home on Califor- nia’ street. Reception held by the Woman's Aux- at Thomas. Morffew, hostess at PMNC/T %@ forrRArT ¥ oY LILLIE V. QRYAN — & \O'Callaghan, Mrs. \ | | iliary of the California Pioneers at{Mrs. S. W. Holladay, Mrs. H. Clay Pioneer Hall. Miller and Mrs. C. 1. Deering. Mrs. Augustus Taylor, Mrs. Willilam | The decorations were especially attrac- Hinckley Taylor Jr. and Mrs. Frederick | tive, and were the result of the combined McNear, hostesses at a large bridge party | efforts of Mrs. Luther Wagoner and Mrs. held in the Edward Hopkins home on Cal- | Bucknall-both adepts in the art. ifornia street Altogether the affair was wholly de- Mrs. William Muzzy, assisted by her | lightful, bringing out the belles of yester- daughter, Mrs. Willlam Edwin Hamburg, | year, as charming as the bonny daughters hostess at a tea at her home on Pacific | at (heir sides, avenue. Truly is California kind to her daugh- Miss Rene Kelly, hostess at a tea in her | torgy 4 home on Devisadero street. Mare Island loses one of its most charm- One of the smartest affalrs of the week was the dinner given last night by Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mdrtin Mann at their Washington-street home. Mrs. Mann never does ordinary things, nor things in ordinary ways— hence the success of her dinners, which always “go." The name cards were especially clever, cach carrying a personal note in the drawing. Mists of almond blos- soms and pink fairy lamps graced the table, which was spread with a pale pink silk cloth, strewn with tinted autumn leaves. After dinper Mr. Mann, who is quite a skilled violinist, played several se- lections upon his -Amati,’ which he picked up in Milan some years ago. Glulio Minetti, the violinist, and Carlo Gentile, the pianist, likewise contrib- uted to the musical programme. Among the guests were Mrs. Linda Bryan, Miss Mabel Toy, Miss Georgie Spieker, Miss Catherine Plover, Miss Margaret Mee, Miss Marfon Hall of Al- ameda, Miss Ida Voorman. Miss Blythe McDonald, Miss Josephine Lindlay. Miss Maud Smith, Miss Adele Martel, Miss Lalla Wenzelburger, Miss May Reis, Miss Charlotte Hall of Oakland, Miss Carmelita Brilllan of San_Carlos, Senator G. Russell Lukens, .Willlam Alford Guilio Minetti: Major Willlam Stephenson, U. 8. A.; Lieutenant Hd- ward Pearce, Seventh Infantry; Dr. James Pressley, U. S. 4.} A. Dalton Har- rison of Alameda, J. Hubert Mee, C. Norcross, Charles Hoag, Louis 8. Mar- tel, Judge Daniels and Halleck Wright. s The tea given yesterday by the Women's Auxiliary of the California Pioneers in the Ploneer building was one of the few teas that celebrate anything sane—being held to commem- orate the signing of the treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo, by which, as you know, California became American territory. 4 Receiving were Mrs. Henry Wether- bee and Mrs, J. J. Brice, who relieved the president, Mrs. George Bucknall, who is not going out since the passing away of her little grandchild, Miss Jardine. A he reception committee was com- posed of Mrs. Fernando Pfingst, Mrs. Eleanor Martin, Mrs. Milan Soule, Mrs. Mansfield Lovell, Mrs. John Gallwey, Mrs. Martel, Mrs. Joseph M. Masten, Mrs. Jerome Madden, Mrs. Margaret Deane, Mrs, Peter Tiffany, Mrs. Christian Rels, Mrs. Edward Lacy Brayton, Mrs. John M. Burnett, Mrs. Charles H, Harrison, Mrs. George W. McNeéar, Miss Margaret Louls Aldrich, Mrs. rank’ Sulllvan, Mrs. ‘Luther Wagner, INg young women in Mrs. Alexander Nee- ly Mitchell, wha left for the south last week to join her husband, Lieutenant Mitchell, at San Diego. where he was or- dered to report for duty. Mrs. Mitchell spent the week at the Potter en route. Santa Barbara was never more alluring than now. The first ralis Lave lured the grass from the brown earth and the tender green shoots from the trees. The air is soft and balmy, and is full of the unsung music of early spring. 2 . Mrs. George Palmer’s luncheon on Wed- nesday was a pretty little affair. Among the guests were Mrs. Frank Vail, Mrs. Luther Wagoner, Mrs. James Suydani, Mrs. Frank Norwood, Mrs. O. D, Baldwin, Mrs. William H. Mills, Mrs. Clarence Mar- tin Mann, Mrs. John F. Merrill, Mrs. George M. Gibbs. P Mrs. George Law Smith and Miss Maud Smith will be hostesses to-morrow at one of the largest teas of the new year, re- cetving in hénor of Miss Sue Burkhardt of Los Angeles, who is soon to wed. The Smith home on Jackson street is especially well adapted tq entertaining a large number of sunw/ ! o ¢ The Mills Club has issued cards for an at home on February 13. . s s Mrs. Gerrit Livingston Lansing’s bridge parties at St. Dunstan's last winter won her quite a bit of fame, owing to their clever manipulation and the originality of the prizes offered. Her game on Wednesday was a worthy ' survivor of last year's memory, thg fol- lowing ladies playing: Mrs. Erwid Ro- dolph, Mrs.*Charles Krauthoff, Cary Friedlander, Mrs. Milton *Latham, Mrs. Haldiman Putnam Young, Mrs. Marcus Koshland, Mrs. Frederick Spencer Pal- mer, Mrs. Louis Brechemin, Mrs. Regi- nald Knight Smith, Mrs. Willlam H. Morrow, Mrs. Henshaw, Mrs. Charles Farquharson, Mrs. Thomas Benton Dar- ragh, Mrs. Joseph Trilley, Mrs. Christian Reis, Mrs. John M. Dickenson, Mrs. Horace Davis, Mrs. Charles Austin Cool- | jdge, Mrs. James Blis Tucker, B. - W, Btone, Mrs. Youngberg, Mrs. Mrs. | Mabelle Toy, Miss Susie McNab, Miss | the alluring feature and a generous guest Florence de Long, and half a dozen |list has been made. others. | » 9 b To-day | Mrs. Horace Davis will entertain at Miss Lalla Wenzelburger will several guests at a tea in her Van Ness avenue. i . . 1 Christ Church at Sausalito will be the | scene of a pretty wedding on Tuesday, when Miss Cornelia Sarah Campbell will { be united in marriage to Harry Akin Yea- zell. The service will take place at noon | in the presence of many guests, and a | reception will follow at the home of the | bride’s mother, Mrs. Henry C. Campbell, | entertain home on {to which are bidden only the relatives | and close friends. Mrs. Emmet Rixford is to serve her sisier as matron of honor, with Miss Em- { ma Grimwood and Miss Frances Reed as bridesmaids. The groom will be attended by Rev. Donald Brookman as best man, with Covington Pringle and Dr. Shad- well Beasley as ushers. e Mrs. C. Frederick Koh! will be host at ~a dinner-dance on Tuesday even in_honor of Miss Genevieve Harvey, g the Van Ness avenue. & T g Among the events for Tuesday are the bridge party of Mrs. Bertody Wilder | Stone and the luncheon to be given by Mrs. Loran Pease in honor of Miss Ada Brown. i Mrs. Mark Requa will entertain at her home in Oakiand on Tuesday, the affair to be a reception in honor of Miss Marion Goodfellow and Miss Van Loben Sels. The preparations for an interesting evening at the Californfa Club are near- Iy complete, and Tuesday evening will see the presentation of three amusing farces given by clever talent. The ent'ractes are to be filled with mu- sic of the good, sane sort, and with so mugh in prospect the Episcopal Mission at Ocean View will be the gainer by many dollars. The most prominent women in society have lent their ald and names toward the furtherance of the cause, the list of patronesses being as follows: Mrs. Wil- liam Ford Nichols, Mrs. Cgrter, Pomroy, Mrs. W. B. Bourn, Mrs. Norman Me- Laren, Mrs. Themas P. Bishop, Mrs. George Gibbs, Miss Sophia Coleman, Mrs. Horace Hill, Mrs. James Potter Lang- horne, Mrs. Philip Lansdale, Miss Sallie Maynard, Mrs. Frederick Tallent, Mrs. Ynez Shorb White, Mrs. Laurence Poole, Mrs. H. E. Huntington, Miss Alice Grif- fith, Mrs, James L. Cunningham, Mrs. Dixwell Hewitt, Mrs. Horatio P. Liver- more. Mrs. George Newhall, Mrs. Walter MecGavin, Mrs. Joseph Sadoc Tobin, Mrs. Willlam Peyton, Mrs. Alfred Hunter Voorheis, Mrs. Sydney V. Smith, Mrs. Danie! Higbee Kane, Mrs. W. F. McNutt, Mrs~R. D Girvin, Mrs. Harry Sherman, Mrs. George Moore, Mrs. William Taylor, Mrs. Evans 8. Pillsbury, Mrs. George Pinkert, Mrs. William B. Collier, Mrs. James Ellis Tucker, Mrs. Edward Brey- fogle, Mrs. A. Chesebrough, Mrs. Henry L. Dodge. ekt Mrs. €. O. G. Miller and Mrs. Erwin G. Rodolph are both named as bridge hostesses for next Wednesday. In Alameda the wedding of Miss Alma Victoria Hand and Charles S. Thompson ) will take place at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reed Taylor on Regent street. The bride is well known in the so- clety set. Mr. Thompson being a Stan- { ford graduate and vice principal of the | Livermore High School. . Misg Newell Drown will entertain fifty of her friends at a house danee next { Thursday evening In her parents’ Jackson street. The preparations In process insure an i fortunate ones on the guest list. Noble Eaton, Mrs. Dennis Arncld, Mrs. }me‘ cards for a luncheon to take place in Edgar Peixotto, Mrs. Charles .Francis ' pher home next Thursday. when she will Jackson, Mrs. Oliver Dibble, Mrs. Gus pave for her honored Mrs. Fernando Pfingst, Mrs. ' m‘mveml Kdger, Miss ham, Mrs. Frederick Pick- K Miss Alice Dunne of Boston. Miss Mabel | Miss | Boyer, James Cunning! ering, Mrs. E. de Noon Lewis, de Noon, Ethel Harrison, Laura/ Farnsworth, Miss Gertrude Pal- mer. Miss Ardella Miils, Miss Agnes Buchanan, Miss Ethel' Beaver, Miss lda | Gibbons, Miss Florence Gibbons, Miss youthful guests. Miss Benja- lyce Sullivan and .« . A score or two sters” are going to A . smart set “young- ve a jol'y evening next Friday in- Cen Hall. when Mrs. - Austin Tubbs will entertain a lot of A masquerade Is to be affair to take place in the Kohl home on | ' home on | evening of unqualified pleasure for the ; P -xr-_umnomehofouunam.u.l bridge next Friday. and Mr. and M | Bdgar Peixotto entertain several guests at a dinner in their home on Sutter street. € eiiw The California Club will entertain Mrs. Sarah S. of the General Clubs, on February Piatt-Decker. sident Federation of Wonten's 10. . Mrs. Lester Herrick will er idge in her apartments at the pire on February the occasion® | honor Miss Francis, who is the guest | of Mrs. Herrick. The same date will see a gathering of bridge players at the home of Mrs. Timothy Hopkins. Miss Maud and Miss Lottie Woods are to be hostesses at a small dance on S | Valentine's eve in their home on Octavia {and California streets. Fifty guests | have received telephone bidding. and informality will be the guiding note of the affair. St. Valentine, the patron saint of Cupid and Hymen, will witness the ful- fillment of his handiwork this year in the wedding of Miss Jane Sandman and Barclay Henley, who have nurlii his day for their nuptials, The ceremony will be quiet, with only a few guests, though the affair s of interest to al: seciety. eie . Miss Isabel Lathrop and Norman Wright will be married on February 2. the event to be very quiet. No onme but relatives will witness the ceremony, which is to take place at noon in the apart- ments of the bride's mother, Mrs. George Ives, at the Hotel Colonial. a wedding trip Mr. Wright will with his bride In this city. | SRE e Mss Cornella Campbell was the hon- ored guest at a very delightful luncheon aboard the revenue cutter MeCulloch last Tuesday at the bidding of Mrs. J. C. | Cantwell, wife of the cutter's eaptain. The table was most prettily arranged with clusters of daffodils and violets, and these guests passed a most delightful afternoon: Miss Campbell, Miss Joseph- ine Beedy, Miss Ruth Miller, Miss Fran- ces Reed, Miss Constance Borrowe, Miss Helen Murison, Mrs. Winslow Beedy, Mrs. Clarence Carrigan, Mrs. Frank PFindley, Mrs. Charles Wright and Mrs. Hinckley. LR Miss Fannie Danforth entertained a dozen guests At luncheon last Wednesday at her Broadway home, the affair being extremely preity in the dainty deeoration of pink carnations eombined with tuile. At table were seated Mrs. Fer- nando Piingst, Mrs. Lester Herrick, Mrs. Walter Mansfield. Mrs Mpnq' Bull, Mrs. J. L. Dantorth, Mrs. E. Dan- forth, Mrs. C.-H. Wilson, Mrs. Harrom. Mrs. Metealf, Miss Josephine Lindley and Miss Tay. e Even though expectancy ran high re- garding the brilllance and beauty the HalkCrellin nuptials, the favored supposition that realization falls shoit did not hold good. The Crellin home on Alice street, in Oakland, showed cqual favor to this fair daughter as was ovi- denced at the Fitagerald-Crellin mar- riage. After reside By The alliance of the houses of Hall ani Crellin is one which satisfles many of the ldeals of soclety, among which are position and weaith, and both families are abundantly endowed with these 1.°- tors. Mr. and Mrs. Hall will reside in the Crellin hoime for a time after returning from a teur. W e Mrs. I. W. Hellman was assisted in the reception of her luncheon guests last ‘Wednesday by her daughters, Mrs. E. S. | Heiler, Mrs, Sidney Ehrmann and Mrs. L | W. Hellman Jr. Over thirty guests were bidden for the affair, which was elaborate, involving two large tables, profusely bedecked In a va- riety of blossoms. ? Following the luncheon a musical 1 noon was enjoved, those contributing t the guests’ pleasure being Mrs. J. E. Bir- mingham, Wenzel Kopta, John Carring- ton and Frederick Maurer Jr

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