FRIDAY The San Francisco Call \u25a0 . ' »\u25a0 , i \u25a0 , \u25a0•' * / JOHN D. SPRECKELS. Proprietor CHARLES W. H0RN1CK ...............:.. General Manager ERNEST S. SIMPSON Managing Editor Address All Communication* to THfc SAN FRANCISCO CALL Telephone, "Temporary 86" — A«lt for The Call. The Operator "Will Connect You With the Department Ton W*«h., BUSINESS OFFICE Market' and Third Streets, San Francisco Open Until 11 O'clock EverjMttght In the Tear. EDITORIAL ROOMS • .Market and Third Streets MAIS' CITY BRANCH 1651 Flllmore Street, Near Post OAKLAND OFFICE — 1016 Broadway ......Telephone Oakland 1083 ALAMEDA OFFICE^ — 1435 Park Street. Telephone Alameda 589 BERKELEY OFFICE^ — SW. Cor. Center and Oxford.. Telephone Berkeley IT CHICAGO OFFICE — Marquette Bldff...C. George Krogrness. Representative " NEW TORK OFFICE — 30 Tribune Bldg. . .Stephen B. Smith, Representative WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT : ..Ira B. 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Mall subscribers in ordering change of address should be particular to give both NEW AND OLD ADDRESS in order to insure a prompt and correct compliance with their request FORAKER'S COUNTERBLAST JOSEPH BENSON FORAKER of Ohio is what Alan Breck would have called "a bonny fighter," but it seems from the force of circumstances over which he has little control that he "has got in wrong. It is hard to say whether he is chiefly a candidate for President or merely wants to succeed himself as Senator from Ohio. In this condition of divided aspiration he may share the fate of him who falls between two stools. If the forth coming struggle in Ohio is to be waged without compromise and on logical lines he may find the State delegation aligned behind Taft, for President, while, at the same time, the primary election vote ma} r designate Representative Barton for Senator to succeed Foraker. These two contingencies would be the natural and logical result of war to the knife between the Foraker and Taft factions. It is either Foraker's misfortune or his fault that he finds himself arrayed against Theodore^ Roosevelt. That is a serious handicap for any political aspirant to caYry. Foraker's differences with the President over the Brownsville episode are not likely to injure him materially, because the question was one on which an honest division of sentiment was quite possible ; but the Senator from Ohio did not make friends for himself by his opposition to Roosevelt on the bill providing for the regulation of railrdfed rates. Apparently he is still wrong on this question, and the overwhelming sentiment of the whole people is against him. He puts his opposition chiefly on legal and constitutional grounds, but his .utterances are neither clear nor convincing. In his Canton speech on Wednesday night the Senator said: I was unable also to agree with the President as to conferring the rate making power upon the Interstate Commerce* Commission, as provided in the Hepburn law, passed at the first session of the "Fifty-ninth Congress. I was not opposed to that proposition, however, because I did not want gov ernmental control and supervision of railroads engaged in interstate com merce, for I tvas among the first to advocate such a measure, but because I thought the Hepburn law in that particular was both unconstitutional and unnecessary, and that it was a long and serious step in the wrong direction as a matter of public policy. I did not believe either that if Congress had the power to make. rates it had the right to delegate that power to an administrative body. Whether I was right in entertaining this opinion will be determined when the, Supreme Court of the United States passes on'the question, as sooner or later it must. It is quite clear that public sentiment does not believe that the delegation to the Interstate Commerce Commission of power to regulate rates was a step in the wrong direction. It is obviously a step in the right direction, because Congress has neither the time nor the knowledge to handle a matter so complicated. Whether the measure is constitutional or not no man can tell until the Supreme Court answers the question, but Mr. Foraker's explanation of his opposition has the misfortune to coincide with the customary line of objection taken by apologists for the great monopolies in the upper house of Congress. Giving Senator Foraker credit for sincerity in his opposition, he is still unfortunate in the company he keeps. He scouts the idea that any $5,000,000 conspiracy exists to destroy Roosevelt, and quite possibly he is right. But the great 'public of the United States cannot fail to be aware that an alliance, explicit or implicit, and including such men as Harriman, Rockefeller and Hearst, is actively engaged in a^ campaign to destroy Roosevelt. Senator Foraker is probably innocent of any part in this combination, but the whole outfit will be lined up behind him in the forthcoming fight. Senator Foraker will do well to dissociate himself from these dubious allies, notwithstanding his belief, announced at Canton, that they need "no moral regeneration." v. . THE WEATHER PROPHET'S RAMPAGE _. \u25a0 - . \u25a0 . \u25a0 THE superior enterprise of the New York press as compared with the crude, unfinished style of Western journalism is illustrated by the notable discovery of a double-barreled prefix for a great California advocate, where the unsophisticated taste of San Francisco had been content with undistinguished initials. New York is so obviously proud of this discovery that the orotund name of Delphin Michael Delmas has almost assumed a sacramental solemnity, but we are .nevertheless left with an doubt whether an old friend was named after a fish or decorated with an adjective of royalist significance hitherto unsuspected by the wild and woolly West. Modestly the suggestion is offered to the editors of New York, in the hope that they will resolve all doubts. They have exhausted every other feature of •the Thaw case. . . To characterize the monumental oration of Delphin Michael Delmas only the language of meteorology meets the requirements of,. Mr. Hearst's young man. We read from his facile pen that "all through the day the storm had raged, thunderpeals of rhetoric following the lightning flashes of his logic, rippling zephyrs df tender pleading succeeding angry blasts of /denunciation." It seems as if Mr. Hearst had hired a weather prophet to meet the occasion. lie would drown the stage with tears and cleave the general ear with horrid speech. Yet we_iseem to be jammed *up against a dis heartening anticlimax by Mr. Hearst's young; man, ; for he tells "us, with a face of clay, that after Delmas had concluded his obligatd| on the thunder barrel "the twelve jurors sat: gazing at him with' •mute admiration." They might at least have had the decency, to 4 put up an umbrella. Possibly, Mr.. Delmas tried the wrongkindof weather. He * might have proved more \ effective in the product of stormy emotions had he tried a little of the San Francisco ' climate, I which for the mojmentisa mixture of brick' dust and' profanity. Mr. Delmas did himself proud. That is not as . fine language ; as the loud alarums and excursions of the weather prophet, but it; is ? the best we have in the box. Besides, Mr. Delmas invented a new | EDITORIAL PAGE disease — dementia Americana — and is, therefore, a benefactor of his speciesA It is the single rayof light that illuminates this gloomy cavern for dead men's bones, and Mr. Delmas! will be promoted to a pedestal in the hall of < fame, alongside the man who devised the machine to extract sunshine from cucumbers. v r\ OLONEL JOHN P. IRISH would consign the „ whole press I of California to deep damnation. "If," he cries, ."the press ol could be bundled together and sunk for' ten f years in — -y it would he a good thing for ,the State and- r -~'V Mr. Irish's language offends the modesty; of the printer and drives him to the dash box. Nay, more ; the chairman of the board {which ; hie was addressing cut short the 'brainstorm with his gavel. It was language more becoming an officer than a statesman. Colonel Irish's immediate grievance is that' the State press published details of some recent floods which the Ploa/d of Trade believes to have been exaggerated and, therefore, damaging to Cali fornia. On this „ point our information is incomplete, although our means of knowledge is quite equal to any enjoyed by"; Colonel Irish or the Board of Trade. , But, perhaps, the injury is not irreparable and may not demand that fiery perdition towhich; the offenders are consigned by Colonel Irish with the bluntness of a soldier who fights in a Falstaff's army. , , Therefore, when Colonel Irish begins to rain fire and j brim stone he confounds himself AyithJProvidence^'and the chairman very properly reminds him !- that convulsions of nature are not permitted under parliamentary law. It is a "wise chairman who takes refuge in the placid bosom of Senator Perkins, in whom the wisdom: of the fox teaches that denial, is akin" to '-confession. • The process of reasoning is not clear, but it is good enough for the State Board of Trade, whose business" is not to reason why. OME curious misconceptions in regard to the Chinese boy cott of American goods are still prevalent in the Orient, and although the movement is extinct and never had .much force it is still made to; do duty by way of explanation. Thus the Yokohama; Gazette attributes the export of Australian \; : flour for China to the alleged fact of the boycott on American goods. The truth is that the demand in Northern China is so great; owing to the famine,; that i every available source of supply is taxed to the utmost; Space in; all the' steamships plying :betweeri the Pacific Coast of America : and China has been engaged toYthe limit for many months ? ahead. These reservations are outside of the 3000 tons "of flour which people: of this country are sending for the relief of famine sufferers. . ;. c j . ' ,'The Yokahama paper: adds that '"there are signs that ; Australia welcomes Japanese laborers consequence of ; the anti-Japanese question in America." If this is true it would \ mean} a most extra^ ordinary . and radical reversal of public opinion : in - ; Australia,^wHich has bfeen^ steadily opposed to any kind of Asiatic immigration; We do j not believe ;that anything of "the ] kind ; is true; The Japanese will not findrthemselvcsVwclco V Gossip in Railway Circles t i j J - '\u25a0BXRTKETT of the Western 7% A // Pacific will have; shortly one V V '"'\u25a0" °' the; most* beautiful > homes -'*-:• in. the ' State. (He i has Vought Sylva : Island ,; on : the ' Marln shore, on J which he Is building! \u25a0 a hand: some house. He' intends to plant this • Island to rare trees and shrubbery and. within, a. few years' ..will have the most f unique i[ place Zln';': California^ 'At present ; access ; can 'be ; had "only: by,boat," and ; It ;I« -, understood 'lthat* he \ does 'i not intend', to, connect ttheTmainlarid^with'a 1 bridge. - There;' is f|a*' trestle}? running. out to it -for : a . shortTdlstahce] f rbmUhe end'ofiWhich'a boat "has -to- betaken.*?; : A; G.'/Wells. . general "manager of i the Santa Fe; I. L.' l Hlbbard, general fsuper intendent; H. C. % Phillips,^{chlef- en gineer,'- arid \ \u25a0':\u25a0 W.V; G.':; Barnwell; >' gen eral iagent^ are '\ all ' in the city^f rom^tosv* Angeles/^ and.'/ ye'steri' day visited i Chlnajßasinland r othe'riter- ; The Blocker Blocked A COLONEL'S WRATH AUSTRALIA AND JAPAN minals. The: offrclals : will make a toui of •\u25a0 the lines 7as v far as \u25a0 Albuquerque will be % some atirii( yet 5 before! the ; Franklin - tunnel iwill* b< opened,?; Thel flre> is J still | raglngi inj th« tunnel^ahd '-.the f men? are * unable * v to Vge 1 near^enough\ to \the-*Bcene ".: of : the^ con flagratibn : to V check? the '; flames; liThn tunnel took flfe ' on 'January; 17,^ and ; Hai been^ut of ever 'since: !— 3; J. A. Reeves, 'general'.freight.agen' of - the v Oregon 5 ? Short i Line. ; and - his :as sistant^F.fH.* Plalsted.jarefin, the^cltj to;. .discuss tra.tß.ci matterslwith -Frelgh Traffic ; Manager ; Jones fof 'the ; Southen Pacific. • .^^saJJaatwaiatesgßQßßagßse ; j Jay jAdams f oft the |Nlckel#Plate'Jlef yesterday,; for Jan i extended « trip^ througt the : northwest j and v i s *: expected ? back v ai the;end;of 'theimonth^; •-: :*: * ; :::\- '; :P t^R.,i Lund; {chief i train 'agent j of ith< Harriman' system," left Wednesday, n/ghi ;for/El]Paso.- r ' ~ ; '' ' - THE SMART SET. MRS. SELBY HANNA entertained ten ; of ; Mrs. Marguerite' Han ford's closer friends yesterday \u0084 - afternoon, who were-: asked in for tea and to bid farewell to Mrs. Hanf ord, as -; that most' attractive little matron will leave at 11 o'clock this: morning for her former home, Montreal, j for .a , visit of six ' months' duration. Mrs. Hanf ord . has been spending the winter with Mrs.- E. Walton Hedges, but . for the past week has been Uhe guest of Mrs. Hanna at the latter's pretty apartment at the Lafayette. "\u25a0'.'-. '. 'Vt, * * ' Mrs. Henry Clarence BreeTlen will en tertain at an : informal box party and supper; this evening, in honor of her sister, Mrs. E. Walton Hedges. V :.. \u25a0 \u25a0'• \u25a0 ,• J • Many. San \u0084 Franciscans Journeyed across the bay last night to attend the wedding of -Miss Haael Marston and Frederick : Winslow Read of Stockton, which Lwas celebrated at .Christ Church, Alameda, .at < 8:30 , o'clock- In * the pres ence of a large number of friends. The ceremony.; was : performed- by : the Rev. Mr/Guthrie. 'The church was decorated attractively , in .white :, and * green, lilies, roses, : palms ' and ferns being : used in profusion. The ibr.ide,' who was given away^by her father, Charles A. Marston,. was charming in a' gown of white"lib erty satin, trimejed in Irish point lace, and having medallions of silk rosea ap pliqued. She wore a jtulle veil and her bouquet , was of I lillea 'of the valley. Miss ..Jean Read,' J the groom's sister, was : the maid, of and her gown iwasof- white. liberty silk.'- She carried Easter, lilies, i : The ; bridesmaids, ;Mlsa Florence Cornell ; and Miss ' Belle 'O'Con nor; were gowned In pale yellow, liberty silk, .'trimmed = with Valenciennes lace, and :\ carried shower bouquets of jon quils and I ferns. ' r Bert .Young :,was best man -: and * the iushers -were Ray i Cornell, Frederick Gllmore and; George McDou gall. After theiCeremony; there was a reception at, the -home of the bride, which was idecorated prettily, in -white, yellow,"and''pale ; green. - : Mrs^L. V. ; Read, mother 'of j the '•' groom, v was ; gowned fin black : Chan tilly lace over white satin. Mrs. • H.« H. 1 ; Hewlett ; of ; Stockton, sister of •; the : groom, ;.wore\ a^ gown \u25a0of yhlte embroidered. lace over,; white sllk.^ Mrs. , 'AdrianJSpllvalb; a.cousin of the^brlde, .was ' gowned lin "white '\u25a0- chiffon, embroid- I ered and^.trimmed; with , lace with a garniture ..o f \u25a0 pearls. •- Mrs." Frank Shoe maker's ; gown^was white net* embroid ered \u25a0 in \ pearls.', ; Mrs. £ Raymond ; Splfvalo N wore spangled ' Chantilly ! net i over - pink trimmediwlth pink, chiffon roses. Jtlrs.^: -\u25a0 Mead ', Hamilton tworeVplnk?- and whl te I, flowered t chiffon, ,' trimmed > wi th plnk% chiffon / rosebuds j and - rose point lace.'. , ;•\u25a0•; -";-\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0-V-"-. '-' : After their, wedding Journey Mr. Read and his bride will live in Stockton. It has'been announced that the ladies ofFort McDdwelli" Angel Island, will be at | home Y the; second [and I fourth i.Thurs-, days {'of; each! month, and on the fourth Thursday; they;,will '\u25a0 receive \u25a0; In , the hop room '?; and J> thereV,will Jbe . dancing. A Government : boat uwill f leave " the ,Wash lngton-street^wharfjQn^ the i reception days • f or^'Angel^ Island J at ;j 2 o'clock .' in the i afternoon" and > will :; return T at 5 o'clock.*!; Thla i will prove a pleasant'tea ture^ofithe'army^entertainlng,, of .which" soy much 'L has vbeen ;fdone*,: of : : late and jWhlchS has \u25a0ibeen^so', enjoyable., r^The^e 'are f aYnumberFof 1 popular^ army; folk! at McDowell, and! these': afternoons .prom ise i. tot, be ;. quite \u25a0 large and . popular'oo casions;" . .; " ': .--?; Mr. and '\u25a0, Mrs. A. . S. i Lllley, -.who * have I been \ in i San': Rafael /during' the 'winter, ! expecfito^leave teafrly in \u25a0 June for; an ' Eastern ', trip. ;\u25a0;\u25a0 " ' :\u25a0''\u25a0/\u25a0 ;•:: TBMwnriWffiv *' * • \u25a0 * : Mrs. , Henry;- T.'. Scott is \among ; those \u25a0 who) will t leave sin ~. the ;; near /future - for Europe, where she will spend the sum mer. ; 'i ; .-. ; ,\'""";~'-. ;\u25a0•..'\u25a0\u25a0- : \u25a0;.,':.; '\u25a0'-\u25a0\u25a0 £VV .\u25a0 •!*.' • .-^ V • CJ ; . •\u25a0 - \u25a0. i'-.- '? <\u25a0 " .\u25a0 Miss Marjorie Ide. ;who :1s : a . favorite \ here.^arid ?.wbo i has i'been f spending "*\u25a0 the i winter,; in D: : C, . left ; New .TorkJ recently/ 1 for % Porto* Rico. s i accom panying f MrsrjTaft.Jwife ; of ? Secretary Taf V'whomTthey are : to > meet : there. ;:.\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0;-\u25a0;;:.:\u25a0-";•-\u25a0\u25a0.-»:\u25a0>-\u25a0•/\u25a0\u25a0-./ .\u25a0 -• " v^Miss'; Jessie who /went" East THE INSIDER. Writes of society in San Francisco twenty years ago, the notables- who figured in the smart set and those' who '"are now leaders ' -~ \u25a0'\u25a0. . ;.'_ ' . r-_r -_- tT is said that the society in new communi- Ureat Social Change t i es changes every twenty years or so, . Undergone by City \u25a0*\u25a0 an d this is particularly true of San Fran cisco. Society twenty years -ago was entirely, different from what it is now. The, people who were then the great entertainers and at whose houses it was a privilege to call are unheard of and unwritten of now. Many of them , have 'died, but their, descendants are unknown in the social world. - There -were the McAllisters. Mrs. Hall McAllister ruled in her little circle with a rod of iron. Mrs. McAllister was the Maecenas vof her time for helping the poor and the struggling artist.- Mrs. Carr became known in San Francisco through Mrs. Hall McAllister, and that brilliant woman soon became the pet of society. Jt was about the same time that Mr.. McGavin, who was then, a raw slip of a boy, brought to this city his bride from Paris. Mrs. McAllister heard that Mrs. McGavin 'sang and played well and the voting woman's social future was assured. Another social musical genius was Mr. Guthrie of Balfour, Guthrie & Co., who played the violin?. Among those who. smiled their disapproval of Guthrie's performances upon the violin was F. Waldemar Ludovici, who was a frequent visitor at the McAllisters'. D . \u25a0 n - < It may appear strange, bat how many But Few Remember peQple recollect R Waldemar Ludovid, and Waldemar Ludovici yet he should be well remembered- If it had .not been for Ludovici the Cosmos Club would not have been brought into existence. One evening at Mrs. McAllister's Ludovici was talking of club life in Calcutta, Vienna and Constantinople!, when he said he would organize a, club which shouM be open to men of the world — men who had seen something of the world— and, I think, Mrs. "McAllister, or Mrs. Johns that is now, suggested the name Cosmos. Ludovici seized upon the name eagerly and started the club, his cousin, I think, being the first secretary or manager., It had its headquarters on Powell street, next to old Calvary Church"; and in after years the club building housed millinery stores and a restaurant, and now the site is occupied by the St. Francis Hotel. >, t »» o*. t. One of the most extraordinary and mdi Dr. Campbell ShOTb characters in socia f San Frandsco Character Of Note during this time was Dr. Campbell Shorb. The doctor was a bizarre dresser. He wore yellow corduroy trousers, a red waistcoat, black velvet coat and scarlet necktie. He was a great shot, a good talker and Something of a politician. The' great shooting tournament used to be in those days over at San Rafael, and the Hofxmans and Pages and Griffiths would participate, and . afterward there" were jovial lunches under the trees. E. M. Greenway, was then an obscure clerk In the Anglo-Californian Bank and could be seen any" afternoon escaping from the bank to buy a bag of fruit. He was already becoming famous, being in the rather aristocratic Company Gof the militia, which gave dances. Greenway, as a Baltimorean, was a favorite with the Southern set and was alternately scolded and petted by the leaders. •„ jj \» A 111 f Hall McAllister was the terror of his time. nail mCAUISZer He had a knack of saying^ things which cut ' Terror Of His Time to the quick, and yet he could speedily allay wounded feelings. There was a good story told of him and Judge Hoge. It seems that Judge Hoge had annoyed McAllister, who referred to him as^'a d-r-d old fooL" Some friend carried the story to Judge Hoge, who sought McAllister. McAllister was in the rooms of the Pacific-Union Club, playing .poker, when Hoge said to him^l "McAllister, I hear you called me a"d — d old fool." Me Allisten never looked up from the cards, and replied suavely. "I take back the word .'d-d.' " Union Was Swell V -Union years ago was n v -f ru *rt ~ a low > white building on the northwest - C/UO 01 lbat Uav cor ner of California and Montgomery streets, and among the jeunesse doree of that organization was Ward McAllister— "Wardy," he was called. The club was aristocratic and exclusive and prided itself on its service. It was rumored that Ward McAllister was always get ting waiters from the East to attend to the wants^of people. Southern Set Was ] I ? ere w " ™ ot^ r *?> w * c * *£ .. , „ _ tcred around the home of Mrs. J. C. Fall, Under TWO Banners on V an Ness avenue. The Southern sei was dividedrin those days, the major portion following the banner of Mrs. McAllister and the other enlisting under the colors of the Thorntons, Judges and Falls. The army was then much to the fore .in the matter of entertaining, and General' McDowell, who resided at Black Poirft, was. a leader. The city has reason" to remember (general McDowell with gratitude. It was he who planted the bare slopes of the Presidio to trees and b«antified the place generally. Leaders Of Today ' In v those **** there wa* no Burlingama Were Unknown Then s set. et and the members of the present exdu yvere unknown men sive get were u^^ lodally . Mfs Eleanor Martin had not come to the front. x The Tobihs occupied their big house on Nob Hill, but wtra not promi nent socially. The Carolans, too, were obscure as far as society went— "nous avons change tout cela"— and twenty years from now there will be another change> If a person does not believe that # the chango is already perceptible, ask the hack owners and the goldsmiths. Personal Mention ;. C. C t Offarman- of Chicago Is at;the Majestic' . - . TJT J > A. V. McCotter of New York Is at the Majestic- ' ; W. D. McLoyd of Portland, Or., Is at the Palace. < ."'\u25a0«' . _Henry .: L. Reeve of New York Is .at the "St.. Francis. W. D. Johnson *of Tacoma, Wash., Is at "the St.. Francis. Charles J.\ Keppler of -Washington, D.;C., Is at the Dorchester., ;W. W. Burnett arid family o? Palo Alto: are at : the St. "Francis. . I John* R. - Dltmars and '\u25a0\u25a0 Sherly .. Onder dank;of; New -York ; are ; atj the Palace. J.Vj. Horan of . St.,: Louis i and, C. C. Kendall of Omaha are at the Dorches ter. •/;\u25a0; '. : : \u25a0;- <.. : . \u25a0 : Chief * Justice ; Beatty departed ~ 'by steamer \ for. Los Angeles yesterday, and theYother' members of -the ;. Supreme Court will-follow-by train. The court last, month, for .a-. series of visits ;\u25a0 in different ' cities,' ; is ;at • jjr esent •in * Balti more, 1 where V she Is ; the ' guest" of 'rela tives. She : has! be^ri . with " Mrs. Thomas Jaggar I (formerly Helen Kline of this city) since her. arrival in the East. \u25a0 J; ;>'" \u25a0"- :,*t- :.'•••. ..\u25a0\u25a0•;\u25a0•>: .. •:- Lieutenant John Burk Murphy; TJ. S. -A-.:who has ': been seriously- ill ; during the i entire * winter. 1 In the Army ; General Hospital at Washington; D/C; is better but • is ; still", in the hospital. V As soon" as he* is: able }to^ travel he jwill be -granted sick C leave and \u0084he r and \u25a0 Mrs.*. Murphy will , come ; to '; San '; Francisco to spend several - months V as ; the guests' of ; Mrs Murphy's X ; grandparents. Captain and M rs. "A. F. ; RoagersjaSßfAH \u25a0!ii* ." '•:»'*!' '-•\u25a0-" \u25a0."—-»\u25a0 12 Mr. "; and \ Mrs. v .William \ Letts Oliver have ; sent'ouqeards; f or j the wedding of their ' daughter. a Miss Anita : Louise Oli yer," and: George > Jensen -at v ß :3o o'clock on s Saturday : evening. April 27, in the APRIL 12, 1907 Ti"« ?^ Ten * Ia th * 80 «th«rn city on about eight days. ;..E. -TAJ, Reeves and F. H. PlaJatad of .H. A. Dams, a well-known Napa hS™» oSr f? ber ' la ln town on his*w£y ar S ?° r £ ar !? Vala at the Baltimore Gullet h T! aub - H- Wyunt. W. R. re£ S*t J^ n « Rheln w ° f "** well-known , LnrS fl /° Whlch bears hi* name* h. P wi?i 5 f ° r * trlp to Europe, where he will undergo treatment of his eyes. trTn-l'^nt ol^* \u2666* °«™«» Product, are SSS rtV b ? =ot transparent. *i>* nroof . * # »dvanta«e of being acla germs. • ° harbortn * no disease £X? Th^ g^ ° nil Church .in Oak wjrd S W^ be >. reception after- H«f*hf *?? Ollver horn« on Vernon f™™ lv, A , number ofrguests will go Jrom A h v, ?lde Of tlie ba y. "well as from Oakland and Berkeley. • • • - iJZ T l" Alexand er. Garceau returned a nil*,* /" o S nee fTOm ? a Btay o* » *«»« night In' Santa Barbara-^ dvS 111IamI> - i Morgan, who re turned recently from Santa Barbara, has gone to San Rafael for a visit with inenas there."/ ' m™^"^ Corbusler ~wlll~ wlll *° south next month for a. brief visit to the family of ms Oancee.-Mlss'Grac* Mellus. In Lo« Angeles. .The wedding ; o « Miss Mellus. ™?°.- la . Popular in!; this city, and Mr. £^4 5te w was! to have been celebrated »SHrf c winter, but was ; postponed until later In the year*