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SA JOHN D. SPRECKELS .. JOHN McNAUGHT .. N FRANCISCO CALL[GCCIDENTAL .. Proprietor - Manager EDITORIAL ROGMS AND BUSINESS OFFICE - - - - - CALL BUILDING CORNER THIRD AND MARKE T STREETS, SAN FRANCISCO. UPTOWN OFFICE—1651 FILLMORE ST.. MEMENTO MORI. No fairer day e’er dawned. The sun of morn rose from his couch of dreams And smiled upon the world that yet did sleep, And all of earth, and all of sea and sky, Gave smile ior smile unto the god of day hidden nooks wee murm’ring brooks stole forth, And in their'every ripple shone a sun; And nesting birds flew singing o'er the earth, Glad, and more glad, than nature's voice seemed heard In benisons of peace. OAKLAND OFFICE . .............. 1016 BROADWAY ..Oakland 1083 S Phone. From IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH. e of the saying, “In union there is strength,’’ is being m of all those who are directly interested in| payment of the insurance losses. Three agencies employed to see that all insurance companies settle ly and promptly, and to expose those which seek to "Twas that brief hour Between the peace of night and stress of day Wken nature wakes, but man is wooed their lesses honest efer, evade or compromise them. by dreams. < OE D s : £ 701 ihe Sap |0 homes unnumbered little children Thes ree agencies are Insurance Commissioner Wolf, the San slept, sco Chamber of Commerce and the or; ations of 117 asso-|ox smiled ‘in visions that. the: angels bring; f cigtions of policy-holders—one for each of the 117 insurance com-| g mothers wrapped in slumber lay, nies. The Cham F Cc aree \ e end reports, good or| nor dreamed panie: The Chamber u.t Commere: alone can s nvl rej ’ B n e LS bad, to 10.000 commercial bodies in the United States, so says the! thevilowed: ¥ Thi And strong men slept, assured that all se a n itself is a most formidable propagandum. | N But these agencies are those in San Francisco alone. Their pro-| witn those they held so dear. The . = . X hour ot peace, cedure will be supplemented ]}n) a similar one ‘I)‘\ the Los Angel Of ‘DETTeot piatorit sbciod e us Soith Credit Men’s Association, which, after the adjustments have been| the wolld made, will forward the result to every association of credit men|And Who could dream of fear s croon, sigh in rest, sleep’s tranquil d States. Last, but by no means least, the new: publish these lists of ““géod’ and ‘‘bad’’ companies al Ience the financial and moral standing of every in- apers will A father's dreamless slumber—nothing more, over the wo d | Sa surance company doing business in San Francisco will be placed 7o Atires shilx before the eyes of all Christendom. : : | Gront ‘bullfligs Sonasnatrans tavd He > poliey-holder has been handicapped by his unsup- rocked, and ground; 3 ported ind y. In presenting his claim to his company he could | The clash of steel ‘gainst steel, of stone | be pushed aside, rebuffed, compelled to wait and even ignored. If a|Tnc moan of earth—that awful, name weak man he conld be intimidated. If credulous or easy going, he | less sound— A reeling world, a rocking sky above; conl¢ > the wool pulled over his eyes. But all this is now being|The feeling—God! the feeling!—that | man’s might, « 3 o 3 22 { His utmost might, is less than noth- ked by his own association, in addition to | ingness! th above. He now will present himself at| ;e pl‘e‘i““ fissto fesx, TR An o the office of the company, not as a supplicant for merey, but a creditor | That God may save her babe; grim, tot- 5 t'ring walls; demand 11 issue the order. Henceforth he, not the company, will be their,, ¢ And he wi If < its obligation had better roan that dies in silence, and the 1 get his money. pray'r, Ave, half unuttered; life gone down to company seeking to shir that death, nd up its affairs, for it will have to do so later on. Ang “'l‘i“l red chaos, chaos more than ¢ : £ 2 dire— be reasonable, not too arbitrary, however, in demanding And still great nature smiled! reflect that there are thousands of losses to be ad- . He shonld 3 Oh, Nature, thou . Who art the mother of us mortals, all, paid and that they eannot all be done in a day. patier await his turn if he sees that the company is cheerfully|®ast thou no tear for these, thy chil- meeting } half way. But he should not permit himself to be cajoled | Hast thou no sigh for hqerror thou hast wrought? e shor eqn J " 3 He should equas No wrinkled grief to speak thy heart’s 11y decline the sugar plum and resent the eracking of a whip over his head. distres; . : . ) . . . We st afraid, in grief th s An instance of the tremendous force exercised by this combina- "{'::‘;‘ - grief that has no tion of interests has already ocenrred. George D. Dornin, manager | Our hands are empty, and our lips are = 2 mute; fic department of the National Fire Insurance -Company 1, resigned because that company advised him to eompro- r cent. Within twenty- reader in California knew all about it. Now comes the president of the company, Judge James Nicholls, ry 1d wheels ean bring him, seeking remedy the indiseretion (to put it mildly) of his company. Whether do so now remains to be seen. Gray anguish waits upon our steps— and thou! Naught ve that tear of woe! | Here lie our loved; our homes are not— | and thou! | Oh, not a single tear! tranquil smile; No hours every newspaper oss the eountry as fast as railr In midst of life We dream of safety We are in death. | bere | The great tod speaks and, lo! boasted might our Let this be an object lesson to both companies and poli olders. Let the former understand that they will pay their losses in full or be | Is “‘”I';i:f':”l We build our struct- 3% = i3 s high advertised out of business, and the latter that if they insist upon their | His hana he lifts, and they are of the rights they will get them. Then the losses will be paid and the work auss Man's pride is naught; on all he builds of rebuilding San Francisco rapidly progress. God writes: A e | “Thes e my own, to save them or to crush. | ANl are mine own; my will T work on THE NEW SAN FRANCISCO. | Sy - e Oh, crushed to silence, stricken in our As the various property-owners announce their building plans it| 2t BY A. J. WATERHOUSE. THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, JUNE 5, ACCIDENTALS | Half teellllln‘ that the earth doth totter still, E’en in this chaos, let us find bellef, He works no final i1, AFTER THE TRAGEDY. To stand face to face with Death; to feel that you have looked squarely Into Bis unheeding and uncaring eves and have felt the touch of his clammy hand upon you; then to have him pass you by and to stand where the evi- dence of his grim work is all about you—this has been the recent experi- ence of men, women and children in this city not by units, tens or hundreds, but by -hundreds of thousands. 1t is an experience that cannot be forgotten and only time can deaden ‘the first horror of it. I well know that I am far from the only person who even yet sometimes goes to bed only to feel it still rocking beneath him; not the only one who wakes from troubled dreams of that grinding and rending which roused us from sleep that morning. And those who did not escape, Who looked Death in the face and then took his hand for the journey into the darkness—their vacant chairs are in many homes if the homes yet remain. i |and well—how can we believe that they have gone from us forever? And how shall the mourners bhe comforted !when the voice of their lamentation is ;heard on every hand? Human words jare vain things when the awful voice lof the Almighty has been heard. Ana Ivet, even in our gratitude that we and |ours have escaped, the sympathy which we know not how to speak goes out to {the many who mourn, | THE VOICE OF RACHEL. | (A voice was heard in Ramah, la- mentation and bitter weeping; Rachel weeping for her children refused to |be comforted for her children, because %l.l!)’ were not.—Jeremiah 31:15.) God of us all, whose flat stands | _Against the voice of woe, | Who hold us in thy mighty hands, | _To lift or dash us low, We bow gur heads unbowed by year$ | At even and at dawn; Our eves are fountains for our tears, | 'With these; our loved ones, gone. lW(fi mourn today our vanished friends; ‘We weep their hapless lot, And still the olden cry ascends { Because our loved are not. | That which we built is lying low; Its ruins round us lie. One only voice our soul doth know— | A cry—and but a cry. | |Goa of us all, who know our way, | To whom our lives are bare, | We have no form of words to pray— | _Our sows are but a prayer. | WeRbow us to the very dust, | One grief the common lot, !|And still we weep, as weep we must, Thatethese, our loved, are not. qut the other day they were so strong ! And yet from all this one thing— |one splendid thing—we have learned: | | That the fine heroism of men and wo- | men needs no foundation of firm pros- | | perity on which to stand; it bids de-| |fiance to all wrack which unheeding nature may work; it is as indestruct- | ible as the spirit within this body of lclay. Our people stood where their |homes had been, and. asking no odas | |of the wanton spirit of destruction, |vowed that those homes should rise ;again. Then they went steadfastly {unto their work, refusing to be de-| |terred by poverty.or appalled by ruin. | |In all history there is mo record of a finer universary heroism. It is divine, |it sets the stamp of the God on his| vessel of clay. It thrills a man with | pride that his is a part of such an hu- | | manity, and with hope that he may be | | worthy of such an heritage. San | | Francisco never can perish, or be other | | than great, while her men and women |are what they now are proving them- | selves to be. becomes evident that the new San Francisco will be built on much the same lines as the old, but on a more generou The visitor five years hence will find Market street still the city’s principal thor- seale, EMBASSADOR FROM oughfs the great arte of its business and social life. He will find the Palace Hotel with its world-famons court restored, but in- BHAZ". llu"s THE ; stead of a seven it will be a ten story building, with advantage taken s construetion of every contrivance for achitectural effect and for the comfort of its guests which have been devised during the thirty-two yesrs sinee the old hotel was built. The St. Franeis will not be changed. There will be a new Ocei- dental on the historic site of the old and a new Russ House, each built with the intention of keeping alive the old traditions that are part of the story of the development of California and of the building of San Francisco. The banking center will be where it originally grew up, with the imposing bank buildings which gave an air of ¢ ignity and solidity to that part of the city restored. A larger and even more . sy imposing Emporium will oceupy the Emporium fitv'_ There will be, Saw Durmg VlSlf to tl—le the same newspaper center, with its well known buildings. The solidly | Paci[ic COBSL built Mint building, which withstood so admirably both earthqnake e shock and fire, will, of course, remain at the old site on Fifth street, WASHIY PN, anis "T“!v mfd Yoo and the Postoffice building at the corner of Seventh and Mission a"l‘r“:h ',‘",',:f;;"h:;’,f':, :‘:rh‘_‘l‘::']i‘:“:: streets. to the conclusion that it is a myth,” There will, of course, be many changes, but all of them for the saia Mr. Nabuco, the Brazilian Embas- better, without making radical changes in the lines and characteristics sador, in an interview today after his . , & return from a visit to the Pacific of the city. Where thousands of modern shacks and low brick build- | Coast. ings, built a third of a centure ago, stood before the fire; modern | There 12 no e fichwean dhs structures will stand; streets will in some places have been widened, could perceive. At every station where and modern pavements will have taken the place of the hideous it et Stk R cobbles that up to the time of the fire had resisted the march of East. I was astonished to find in places improvement. But those who knew and loved the old San Francisco will have no trouble in recognizing at a glance the new city, and by well-known landmarks find their way about it as easily as of old. SN FRANCISCANG Which People Have Set to Work. papers with the world. | “San Francisco showed us in its burn- ing ashes the same resolute, deter- mined people already beginning to re- {build their city and all full of the strous fire that ever swept a city to make energy vour race. ntennial earthquake effective. But one of |" “The one thing about Americans the ordinary amnual tornadoes of the Middle West would have made | Which must impress visitors mone than 4 « 5 Yok ¢ % |anything else is the xbsence of any so- as complete a job of it without fire accompaniment. | called lower strata in your society. In {this country there are no' women or imen of the sort always referred to in telegrams from all over It took the most dis San Francisco’s semi-c The price of gasol ine has been advanced 3 cents a gallon, which puts an additional $350,000 or $500,000 a month into Standard Oil coffers. Oh, well: John D. Rockefeller wanted to go to Europe. {foot of the social ladder, and if they |are there they don't look it; they ap- |pear to be at the top. There are no {visible barriers to stop the rising of |the ambitious. Ambition is your life, The Legislature organized for business and got down to real work in less than fifteen minutes. The same dispateh during the remainder S ; = Siacs " o > ! “I looked in vain f me place t of the session will improve the popular opinion of Legislatures. I would look pror‘l’nc?a”l.!o'g:ex:\slc: ‘tl:: | helghts of thie Sierra, under the snowy Y 5 e eaks, any little vill 1d_sh All that is asked of the insurance companies is a ‘‘square deal,” |that | &1t in* Gontint with ‘the automatic springs. The remind 1 alliance bhetween . |that it keeps well in contact with the and on this the people of San Franeisco are prepared to *‘stand pat.’ lines of travel, one may find himself in lks in the north that it is time again to catch up with the emlne’-t,‘,m" all is change and Interchange, all modern improvements are every- , once the leader of the Georgia Conservatives, is now |Praises the Determination With! jMuch lmpress—ed— by What He| |ale, Paris, France, with its 3,000,000 vol- | {almost unknown to the foreigners daily | and courage characteristic of | urope as the ‘people.” Men and women | here never admit that they are at the| and you seem all to be moved up by | In Europe if one stops at | 'IN ANSWER TO QUERIES PURCHASE SYSTEM—A. E., Ci The purchase s army, which s the ment for | commission, was abolished in 1871. a GREAT MAL |Great Malvern, | watering place. {tershire Count Vic @, ity an English town and is situated in Worces- England, on the east |side of thes Malvern hills, eight miles |southwest of Worcester and 120 miles | northwest by west of London. LARGEST LIBRARIES—Reader, (\'Ily. It is said that the Bibliotheque Nation- urhes, is ‘gest library in the world York public librar: with its 1 905 volumes and 240,337 pamphlets, is the largest library in the United States. FRENCH KING— City. Louis XVIII of the Bourbon line of French Kings having died without issue Sep- tember 16, 1524, Le was followed on the | throne by his brother, the Comte d'Ar- | | tois, as Charles X. He was deposed by | the revolution of 1830 July 30 and was succeeded by Louis Philippe of the | house of Orleans THE MISSION— City. Dwi- nelle in his “Colonial History of San Francisco” defines the Mission of San ! Francisco as follows: “The term mis- sion includes only the collection of stem in the British | | | | | wear and others who houses, vineyvards and orchards in the immediate vicinity of the church, in-| the priests useful and necessary in carrving on the establishments. The ‘mission lands' were: lands adjacent t the mission which were used for graz- ing purposes. They were occupied by the priests only by permission, were the property of tHe nation and at all times subject to grant under coloniza- tion laws.” PALACE HOTEL—Subscriber, City. The Palace Hotel was opened October 2, 1875. As orig- {inally built it conteined 998 rooms. 775 | of which were fdr guests. In its con- struction 31,000,000 bricks, 10,000,000 | feet of lumber, 32,000 barrels of ce- ment, 34,000 harrels of lime, 3500 bar- irels of plaster of paris and 3300 tons | of Iron were used. It contained twenty | miles of gas pipe @nd twenty-eight | miles of water pipe. The cost of the building when ready for opening was $5,000,000. FLAG AND TRADE MARK — Sub- scriber, City. The act of Congress of 1905 regulating trade marks has the following regarding the flag: “No trade | mark shall be granted which consists of or compromises the flag or coat of \arms or other insignia of the United | States..or any simulation thereof, or cluding the stock of cattle and other | personal property in_the possession. of | ;ON'Y SR IBLeTION AR Who ha make | jne, | such o| Woman is not all,clamoring to be de- | clared man’s su; In San Franclsco|, “4ols and her pets. SKYSCRAPER T0 BE ERECTED The Friedman Building the Corner of Bush | 1 i | that {crepe creation In pale blue. {G. Freeman in the receiving par to L ’ 1 and K an Will Build Stories High, on Bush and Kearny. Another skyscraper has been planned for central Kearny street. The prop- erty owners in that district knew the value of the land and can see ahead. The latest owner who announces-that he will build early and reap the har- vest that is coming to the men whose faith in the future of the city is un- shaken is W. Friedman. He will erect PEOPLE AND THINGS. BY LOUIS It is*to laugh! And also let's throw in for good measure a pooh! pooh! for you, Dr. Reich! Dr. Reicn, so the newspaper corre- spondents tell us, is an Hungarian sa- vant and his “savey” is all about wom- an, who, he declares, intgllectually the superior of man. The study of woman is®Dr. Reich's is are an insult to her. intellizence, pr vided, of course, that the ‘'woman who would listen to Dr. Reich has any in- telligence. The base things he utters are sops to his masculine’ vanity, and naturally these sops must be large and suceu- lent, for of all kinds of vanity mascu- line vanity is the worst. The discoveries Dr. Reich has made about women he retails to women at lectures at Claridge's, London. ' In his audiences mostly are duchesses and countesses, some born to the titles they have purchased hem-—and a g@n thrown in to boot— with good American money. only about these women that Dr. Reich the names of heiresses who have pur- chased husbands and titles. But the doctor, like a true philosopher, would make his deductions general. That is why 1 say Ha! likewise Pooh! Pooh! . . Ha! and . No intelligent . woman feels at all complimented when she is told that he is man's intellectual superior. She feels unclassed, and that is the mean- est thing for a woman to feel. Tell her she is man's equal intellectually, and then she will be pleased. Only an inferior man who has min- a mistake as Dr. Reich has. rior. All she ever years and years gone by to be classed as man’s inferior, just so will it arouse her animosity if today man is declared to be intellectuplly beneath her. ‘The first instihet in woman is mother love. When she 'is little she mothers As years ad- vance She mothers her vounger broth- ers and sisters. If she has not any she mothers the meighbors’ children. She mothers her swectheart, and she moth- ers her husband, and do you think for a moment she will stand for having them called “inferior”? Indeed she won’t. Woman is man's equal. That is the highest praisé any woman can ask. . - Dr. Reich claims to have mada special discoveries relative to the American woman: The most libelous of these is the assertion he makes that “the Ameri- can woman does nov care for children or the family. Men are to her but a means to an end. The American woman thinks oniy of herself. To her man is a mere writer of chegks; a getter of If it were | a ten-story class A building on the southwest corner of Bush and Kearny streets. Plans for the structure have already | been accepted. ‘They were designed by | Architect Charles Pfaff. The frame of | the Friedman building will be steel and brick. llhe outer material stone and | The cost will be over $180,000. E VEILLER. | is kind to all women. A woman in dis- tress or need. no niatter her station. | position or age, is his especial charge. |An American gentlenian is the natural | protector of an American woman. | And would there be such fine men {if the women were not noble and |grand? Could a selfish woman, who thinks only of herself, be the mother of unselfish sor Would a woman | who looks upen man as a mere money- getting machine command the respect, Y 2 the deference, the love, that all true specialty. He discovers things about an women recelve. You may | her. And then he gives lectures and a lot, Dr. Relch, but it is evi- tells her all about these “discoveries.” fdent that you'do not observe. And the pleasant things he tells her| [ am rother inclined to believe, Dr are all such gross flatteries that they Reich, that when vou say English and reiich wommen are more “domes you mean English and French wemen are more subservient. To surround her- self with pots and kettles, to give all her.spare time to mending and darn- ing, does not necessarily mean being a good wife and mother. To be a household drudge is not the besteway a woman can serve husband and_children. s Whila doubtless in that capacity she may save for them a few dollars, she deprives them of much comfort and many joys. A wife who has” spent all her day in tae kitchen is tired, out by night time... When her husband returns home. weary and cross s labor and vexations, she nd cross as he is. How had made discoveries one would have|can. she be neat and smiling when she i nothing to say. Most of us do not meéts him. if 'she has been puttering know any duchesses or countesses, over the stove all How can she neither have 'we on our visiting list!phaVe bright and pleasing cenversation {tocheer him with if she has been put- ting in her spare moments with the fainily” mending? | A delightful bit of gossip gleaned by visiting during the afterncon, a pretty | passage found in the day's reading, ! when' told to a tried husband by 2 nicely dressed wife, is worth more to him than the knowledge that a tired, frowsy wife has saved by doing the | family washing. s | American women understand this, Dr. | Reich. - They are not less domestic than {the French women or the English women. They have more understand-| [ iz o | Calaveras Big Trees. - Good trout fishing. Good table.’ Low hetel | | wanted is just recognition. -She has rates. Splendid sceners errs Rail- that now. Just as it offended her in | wav and oniy ticket from Saar i BP0 | COASTWISE LIMITS DEFINED BY RECENT ACT OF CONGRESS Senfaring Men and Shipownmers Gives | | a Year's Time to Consider | About the Change. i Customs Collector Stratton was ad- | vised yesterday by tie Secretary of the Treasury of the passage of an act of | Congress amendihg section 4348 of the ! Revised Statutes‘so as to read a§ fol- low “The seacoasts and navigible rivers of the United States and Porfo Rico {'shall be divided into five great dis- triets: * The first to inelude all the col- lection districts on the seacoasts and | navigable rivers hetween the northern | boundary of the State of Maine and the southern boundary of the State of Tex- as; the second to consist of the island | of Perto Rico: the third to include the | ollection districts on the seacoasts and | ; Joy The engagement is announced of Porter Garnett and Miss Edna Foote ot Kellogg, Sonoma County. Mr. Gll.'- nett, who is living in Berkeley, is known in this city as & writer and thinker. The wedding date is not determined. P . nd party was en- ladys Meek at her San Leandro. The Evelyn A merry week e tertained by Miss Gi country home near :ongenhl coterie inciuded Miss Jb Adams of Les Gatos. Miss e;onr; Walter Hush, Valentine Hush. B s Spires and Boyd Harrold, all of land. g Frank C. Haven of few days for their Isiand, New sumger several Mr. and Mrs. Qakland leave in & summer home on Long York. They spend every there and usually entgrmm large house partles during the season. S The Dutton reception for Mfss Mor- gan Saturday evening at the pianist's artistic studio home in Berkeley was one of the year's delightful events. Over 250 guests filled the great music- room and overflowed into the garden had been inclosed with canvas. Rugs were laid over the grass and a cheerful campfire made the tent a fa- vorite spot with all. The studla was lighted with hundreds of candles, which cast a softened and becoming glow upon bare shoulders an‘d beauti- ful gowns. It was rather unique that, although a great number of the guests were musicians, there was no musical | programme, the clever people present being permitted to enjoy an uninter- rupted “feast of reason and flow of soul.” Mr: Dutton is admirable as & host as he is as a musician, and a large receiving party assisted in mak- ing the evening a rarely pleasant sue- ce: he gowns were particularly notice- able, so many there were that seemed specially made for the occasion. The fair young guest of honor, Miss Mor- gan, wore a very pretty and becoming Mrs. Allen was | exquisitely gowned in white silk. One “stunning” gowns was Oscar Maurer, a Mrs. Far- another of the most that worn by Mrs. ruby-colored chiffon velvet. rington, in white lace, was conspicuously attractive figure. v 4 Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Morse wers recent hosts at a dimner in honor of Governor and Mrs. Pardee at the Hotel Metropole, Oakland. . . . A dinner was given at Pledmont clubhouse a few days ago by Mr. Os- born, an Eastern visitor, who included among his guests Mr. and Mrs. Wil- lard Wayman, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lac Brayton. Mr. and Mrs. George McNear Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Robert Au- gustus Bray and Mrs. G. B. Cook. Miss Edythe Adams, who has beem isiting friends in Bar Harbor, Me, has decided to remain there as the bride of Everett Hinkley. The wed- ding will take place at Blue Hills, Me., on ‘Wednesday, June 6, and is of spe- cial interest to Oaklanders. as the bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Adams of this city. YRR T The announcement of Midshipman Victor Metcalf's engagement to Miss Marie Butters was one of the surprises of the month as well as being an portant bit of social news. The hand- some young naval officer is the son of Secretary and Mrs. Metcalf and is as popular in his Oakland home as is his father, which is saying much. He is attached to the flagship Chicago, but is at present the guest of his grande- mother, Mrs. J. H. Nicholson. Miss Butters is the attractive daughe ter of Mr. and Mrs. Hensy A. Butters. The family is prominent in Oakland ciety, and as the young people en- wealth and position they seem to be favored of the gods all round. The wedding day is probably remote, as both are still very young. % " the fine old Van Dyke ast Oakland, has been'leased and Mrs® Van Dyke has gone to Los Angele Miss Caroline Van Dyke, last presi- dept of the Home Club, is with her sister, Mrs. Franklin Bangs. R Mrs. Theodore H. Minor of Arcata has been the guest of Mrs. Nellie de Pue Rickey at her Market-street home in Oakland for the last fortnight. Mrs. Minor will return home by the overland route this week, accompanied by Mrs, Rickey. who will remain part of the summer. Mr. and Mrs. George L. Fish are lo- cated in Oakland. having just returned from Europe. Mrs. Fish is a sister of Mrs. Samuel Gardner, whose wedding took place a few months ago in Mrs, Fish’s apartments at the Palace. Dr, and Mrs. Gardner, with Mr. Mrs. Fish, left San Francisco in FNebruary to visit the bride’s parents at their old home in Scotland. . . James D. Phelan has leased the Houghton home on Jackson street, . . . Miss Laymance of Oakland. who left a few months age for an Oriental tour with Mr. and Mrs. John Britton, is ex~ pected home this month. B 5 Dr. and Mrs. Charles Minor Cooper, who have been stopping at the Goodall home in Oaklangd since the fire, will re- main indefinitely on that side of the Dri Coaper leaves shortly for the East to aftend a medieal convention in New York. - . . Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Shortridge have returned from Oakland, where they spent a month, and are at thei* home in Pierce street. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Melvin will spend the summer in the Russian River region. . . . Miss Ruth Houghton is expecting an Eastern trip in company with Mrs, W. G. Henshaw. M:s. Houghton: with Miss Minnie Houghton, will leave in a few days for the East, to be the guest of Mrs. Morgan Bulkley in Hartford, Conn. - . . W. M. Crown, a prominent business man of Oakland, has just returned from Boston and other Eastern cities of im- portance. Miss ¥iva Nieholson is with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Stent at Santa Barbar . . . Haig Pattigian left yesterday morn- ing for a brief trip south. but will re- turn to this city before departing for Paris. . - . Miss Ina Coolbrith will go south to remain a few weeks. her health being greatly improved. but much better now than before the fire. Mrs. Anna von Megerinck has given outer world. la place where every essential of refined Georgian who made himself conspicuous in the last Presidential campaign ' where. This uniforsnity of your life vernor, and Watson is furious in his suppert. At first sight for {from sea to sea is amazing.” Mr. Nabueo also visited the North, i8N nation.” It also provides that no |a small station, even in the principal Hoke Smith and Tom Watson in Georgia must {life is wanting, but in this country, |railways, electric light, telephones and Populi ate whose chief mission was to help defeat Judge s iight mean taat the Populist leader had returned to the Democracy, but *t iz thut he is the same old Tom. if Hoke Smith is not nominated by > primaries, Mr. Watson may bolt into the tall grass again.— Spricghield (Mass) Republican. promizes another surprise in {he insurance probably discovered another reasen why he cannot prosecute ashington Post. District Atterncy Jerome He ha the grafters.— Pacific Coast and says he was much im- | POTtrait of a living individual may be presed by the industry and thrift there. | régistered as o trade mark except by the consent of such individual evi- | denced by an instrument in writing. Setatinidiiec Tl Del Monte as n Home Resort. | yyHotel Del Monte, by the rea, near old | Monterey. is open as usual. All outdoor Only Twenty Masoms at Work. SAN JOSE, June 4—Only about jtwenty brick masons went to work to- (@ay, chiefly members of the loeal tunion. Masons who Ifave come in from of any State or munioipality of any for- | money for her to spend. The English nayigable rivers between the southern|UP Rer large home on Fulton street ana | boundary of the State of California and ' 1MaS taken a cottage at Larkspur for and French women are more domestic; pe perthern houndary of the State of Lh€ Summer. they love their home, their husbands, yyashington; the fourth to consist of | thelr chfigrer. the Territory of Alaska; the fifth to MrS Charles Rivérs Drake ana And Dr. Reich says he spent several conatst of the Territory of Hawaii. | daughter. Miss Seeley. of Los Angeles years.in America. They must have been| “Tpa act will take eifect on JunuAry |4r€ visiting Mrs. Edward M. Hoggs at years when he went about with his | ja47. | Pieamont. eyes shut. It is universally coneceded ' that every American woman is a queen.. (ajifornin glace fruits and choice can- | MF. and Mrs. E. ¥ Tryon Likewise is it acknowledged that !here!m“_ Full )uxmk. ‘fownsend's ",m,n"]wm leave New York on the and son teamer |aitractions. Specia] terms for families ieisewhere are demanding $8 @ day. \who malke this their hotae 2 lcan man, e respects all women. He Emporium, Post st. and Van Ness ave. * 4Of six or eight mouths through is no braver gentlemaun than the Ameri- ' and factory, 1220 Valencia st. and the Amerika June 7 for an autemob tour Burope,