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» N e THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1895. A SPRING: OPENING - OUT AT THE PARK. THE COURT OF HONOR IS TO BE BEAUTIFIED AND MADE ATTRACTIVE. THE PROPOSED BQULEVARD. | VEnicLEs WILL Move To Music. New BICYCLE RoAD—DRIVE EXTENSIONS. There is a quiet, sturdy-shouldered, bearded man, a little under the medium height, who every day drives hither and thither through the park at a gait just under the limit as allowed by the park po- lice, and who notes with deep satisfaction the pleasure of everybody else in the park, but being very busy he says little about it. This is Superintendent McLaren, whose existence in the ®world very few people popular approval and form a strong at- traction for young men and women.”” “And about the new bandstand and the remodeled court of honor?’ ““There is little to be done with the court except to clean it up. The court was laid out with the purpose of its remaining as it {is. The boulevard around it is to be widened to sixty fcet, with a line of trees and a narrow strip of grass dividing it in the center. The bandstand will be located in the center of and interrupting the boulevard on the north side of the court, just west of the museum. Carriages will enter the boulevard at the extremities of | the oval by way of the north drive and the | south arm of the north drive. Slow drivin will be the order in the_boulevard, and al conveyances will move in the same direc- tion—moving toward the stand from the | north drive, for instance, and from it upon | entering from the south arm. Arnvmf_ at | the stand the turn is made, and the line | moves around the oval again on the inner | track. The procession thus kept moving, | every man with a rig has a chance to see | and e seen by every other man with a rig, | as the inner line is moving in one direc- | tion and the outer line in another, all to | music. This will be the loadstone, -of course, for everybody on those days that the band plays. “The center of the court will be provided with seats in plenty, while the promenades will remain “as they are. All this will | overcome the great objection to the pres- | ent arrangement, where the provision for | vehicles required that they remain at a | standstill, where a single fractious horse could disturb all the others or the people with them, and where crowds of people were compelled to remain standing while s WA R SUPERINTENDENT M'LAREN THINKING OF PLANS FOR THE PARK. (S0 modest is this energetic gentleman that the accompanying sketch, made by a ““Call” artist, is the first ever published in a San Francisco newspaper.] know about because his modesty is only exceeded by the strictness with which he attends to business, and the results that grow therefrom. John McLaren is the agent throngh whom the miracle of Golden Gate Park was wrought. “Is there anything to be done to the park this season?” he exclaimed, as a man | who had borrowed his overcoat for a brisk ride to Stow Lake and return handed it back to him. “Well, yes; some things. There’s the wreckage of the Midwinter Fair to be cleared away, for instance, and the fixing up of the court, the widening of the bouievard around it, there’s the building of the new bandstand, the build- ing of the tunnel under the drive from the D-street entrance into the court, the widen- ing of the south drive to the ocean, the construction of a bicycle way, and foot- walk and bridle road with it, the laying out of Recreation Valley, the laying of water pipes all over the park, and the Joaming of the arboreum, the extension of the ocean boulevard, the construction of a BAND STAND | listening to the music. Here all vehicles ill be kept in motion, while pedestrians will have ample room to promenade with- in good hearing and seeing distance of all | that isgoing on. Thepedestrian, as I have | explained, wili reach the court through a tunnel under the boulevard, thus being | kept out of danger from the horses. “The best authorities will be consulted {as to the construction of the bandstand. Scheel, I understand, says the present one | is faulty. The back of it will be turned to | the west wind and an embankment will be | thrown “E and trees planted to form a | wind break. “‘The level space near the present music- | stand wiil be turned into a tennis court. | Among the other irmprovements I spoke | of, probably the widening of the middle | drive to the uniform width of sixty feet, | the extension of the bridle-path and a bi- | eyele road of twenty-four feet width to the beach, and the extension of the ocean road | to a connection on the ocean front with | the old ocean and Almshouse road, are | the most interesting to the public if not | the most important. |, “Workmen even now are transforming | Recreation Valley, the grounds where the M{ sEflM SQUTH DRIVE THE BOULEVARD AROUND THE PAC COURT IS BEING WIDENED AND KED. [From a sketch made by a “Call” artist.] tennis court, the establishment of an oven air gymnasium, the —’ “Oh! hold on. Do you mean to say you are going to do all that this summer?'” “There is_just one thing that will pre- vent our doing all thdt and more. If we lack the money we can’t do it, of course, but with the money we will do it. It won’t require an extravagant sum, either.” ““An_open-air gymnasium, you say? | Isn’t thaf an innovation?” “It would be new here, to be sure, but if there is acity in the world or a park in the world where a free, open-air gymna- sium seems to be a popular demand it is his city, where it could be available ever *ay in the year and where the weather is never too hot nor too cold for its patrons. Boston has established a magniticent out- door gymnasium in its little strip of park along the Charlesbank—two in fact, one for women and another for men, and they are the most popular features of their pub- lic parks. But they are tied up by ice and snow about eight months in the year. Our Park Commission has about decided to put up a complete outfit somewhere in Recrea- tion Valley, provided, as they say, that we are provided with funds. There éan be no doubt that it would meet with instant Sy, Nl — | Midwinter Fair sports were carried on, into one of the most beautiful valleys in the park. Baseball, football and other sports | will be here given all the room and free- dom they may wish.” “What the park needs most is water and loam,” said Park Commissioner Austin, | :\ilh'o had been an interested listener to all | this. But while the men whose business it is to make the park are planning its amplifi- | cation and worrying about tfie ways and means, the public is throwing back its | shoulders, breathing the perfumed air and | thoroughly enjoying the park as made. “The children,” said Mr. Murphy, in wchlrge of the play-ground, ‘‘are just re- gs‘gm ng to us in old-fashioned crowds. | We are enjoying a spring opening. e | Midwinter Fairfiiven‘;d the ntitles sll. Tast year, and then the heavy rains of the early | winter kept the little people indoors. | These beautiful spring days have brought them out in numbers again. They are re- | alizing that this is the children’s play- | ground.” And there they were—a riot of baby freedom, among ‘the harnessed oats, bridled donkeys, wooden swings, iirds, squirrels, bear and all the rest of it. Gy THE NEW WAGON FOR CHILDREN. [Sketched by a “Call” artist.) SAILORS WILL NOW FIGHT 70 THE END. THE UNION FEELS IT MUST WIN oR GO OUT OF EXISTENCE. CALLENDER'S “SCAB” DOG. THE CyrRUus WAKEFIELD NOT ToO Go To SEA WITH A NON- UnioN CREW. The leaders of the Sailors’ Union ac- knowledge that they are now making the fight of the organization’s life, and upon the result of the present contest with the Ship-owners’ Association hangs its further existence. For months the union has been preparing to move, and the withdrawal of four or five hundred men for the whaling, fishing and canning season in the north was the signal for the beginning of hostili- ties. Having a membership on this coast of between five and six thousand, which in- cludes the better class of seafaring men, scattered along the shore from San Diego to tne Sound, the union feels itself suffi- ciently strong to settle the coast seamen’s wages now or give up the ship. The Owners’ Association relies upon the present stagnation of the labor market and the ability of shipmasters to procure crew ma- terial from the great troop of idle men drifting along the shore. Secretary Wal- thew does not anticipate a lack of sailors consequent upon the departure of the whalers and fishers, as a large number are union men, whom he cannot expect to handle while the fightis on. Secretary Furuseth of the union is pleased with the fact that vessels are lying 1dle at their anchors or going to sea with a few Japanese and ex cooks and waiters in their forecastles. He resents the statement that falling freight ratesand the unemploy- ment of coasting vessels justifies the lower- ing of wages. ‘‘There are no idle vessels,” said he. “Every schooner, bark and steamer is either at work or preparing tobeso. When times were at their best the sailor's wages were at their lowest ebb, and the argument of the association is not borne out in any articular by facts. Vessels may go to sea or a while without crews, as not a union man can be shipped, but it is a losing | game, and in the end we will win.” Early yesterday morning the association notified the Harbor Police that the schoon- ers Annie Larsen and Rebecca would tow from Mission Bay to sea, and that crews | would be taken to the vessels in the tug | Monarch. Sergeant Mahoney with ten | officers took passage on fhe boat as an escort to four white men and five Japan- ese. No demonstrations were made by the union lookouts on the wharf, but a picket boat from a safe distance watched the transfer of the men to the vessels closely. | The Annie Larsen went to sea and the | Rebecca will sail to-day. | The deck of the Palmyra, one of Pope & Talbot’s vessels, was the scene of trouble yesterday morning. Callenden, the colored boarding - master, supplied a non-union crew for the vessel and was assaulted by the union men. He was getting the poorer | portion of this war of the races when his | }uill:ful dog went into the fight and saved | his maste The animal chewed one leg | half off o an and got several mouthfuls | of union-sailor flesh out of the shoulder of | another before the strikers concluded that | a very healthy dog was a “scav’’ argu- ment not to be debated. It is thought that the bark will complete her crew to- day and go to sea. The steam schooner Alcatraz is lying at Main-street wharf waiting for a crew, and | while the association says she will be sup- vlied to-day, the union says she will not, and a lively time is expected. n that lo cality when the pickets report the appear- ance of the “scabs.” | The barkentine Charles F. Crocker, bound for Hilo, in ballast, has been lying | at Harrison street for three days, unable to get a cre She is being closely watched by the union lookouts. The ship Cyrus Wakefield is at the Mail dock distharging, and she is short two men. It igreported that a couple of non- union sailors are kept safely stowed away in hiding for her, and the strikers are de- termined that these two ‘‘scabs” shall not go in that ship, and that a sharp fight will take place when they are brought out. The union evidently feels that the Wakefield must be kept back at all hazards, or forced to complete her crew with $35-men. Her owners are as determined to_take the non- union men, and are prepared for war. Yesterday morninga boat of strikers went down to_the schooner La Gironde, lying off Black Point, to take off the vessel’s non- union crew. Mr. Furuseth’s men were making affairs interesting around the schooner’s decks when the Harbor Police boat was sighted. The union men took to their whitehall, and a warm chase took place. Sergeant Bunner and Officer Fer- gueson made their oars crack with the muscle they put on them, but the old union boatmen were too much for them and escaped. The officers hung around the vessel till she hoisted her anchor and headed for sea. The union has three boats patrolling the bay, closely watching every coaster that lies at anchor in the stream. A complete line of pickets from Meiggs wharf to Third street keep watch day and night. So thor- ough is the lookout system carried on that theslightest move along the water front is immediately known at headquarters, and a force can be dispatched without delay to any locality if needed to hold a ship to the gucfi or club the *scab’” crew from her eck. The bark Robert Lewers, loading for Honolulu at Mission-street wharf, took on board vesterda.ivI a $2000 Hotchkiss gun, shé}lr})ed to the Hawalian Islands. arles Stump, a non-union sailor from the ship Robert Lewers, was assaulted by three union men, in a saloon at the north- west corner of Kearny and Jackson streets, Thursday night, and severely beaten. TrE food, not the coat, makes the man. None 5o good as that prepared with Dr, Price’s Baking Powder. RAILWAY JOINT BRIDGE. A Policeman’s Invention That Is At- tracting Attention. Police Officer Charles C. Wells has in- vented a railway joint bridge that is fayor- ably spoken of by railway men. The invention is a bridge for railway rail joints, which is especially applicable for the meeting ends of street railway rail.. The object of the invention is to relieve the jar caused by the pounding of the wheels when the'cars cross the joints. It consists of a rectangular bridge-bar, having the upper side made convexand the lower por- tions of the ends and the edges rounded. Each end-of the rail has an elongated slot, into which the bridge-bar loosely fits, and a single bolt passing through’ each rail end the bar clasps them firmly to- gether. The result is a continuous rail, which, if employed, prevents the jolting so familiar to travelers on streetcars. PERFIDIOUS PENNINGTON. He Deserts His Wife to Marry in New York. : The divorce proceedings in the case of Mrs. Nancy G. Pennington against ‘her husband, John Hudson Pennington, have brought to light an interesting tale. Pen- nington, according to his wife's testimony, is now in New York, and is supposed to be married to another woman, and using his best endeavors to dodge legal services in a case of bigamy. He is quite a lady’s man, particularly in Guatemala, where he is president of a railroad, and a big man socially. He met the woman who has just secured a divorce from him in 1888, and married her soon afterward. She was a Miss Nancy de Martin, who belonged to a well-known family of San Jose. ~ After their marriage the couple traveled around for some time, and in the course of their travels they separated. This was some years ago, and since that time Pennington has not troubled -himself to any extent about the wife and child he left behind him. Her suit was brought upon the grounds of desertion and neglect, and on those grounds it was granted. She was allowed $150 a month alimony, and was given the custody of her little son. Her husband will probably be prosecuted for bigamy. - I~ all the culinary realm no household help equals Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder. s et HE GETS ANOTHER RESPITE. Judge Wallace Takes P. M. O’Connor’s Case Under Advisement, The case of P. M. O’Connor, convicted of feloniously refusing to sign the election re- turns from the Sixteenth Precinct of the Thirty-first District, came before Judge Wallace yesterday morning for argnment on a motion for a new trial. When 0’Con- nor was convicted Judge Wallace expressed reluctance to send the prisoner to the pen- [NDUSTRIAL ART IS FREE T0 ALL As A NEW DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY IT IS A SUCCESS. WHAT STUDENTS ARE DOING AFTER ONE YEAR'S EFFORTS THEY HavE MADE Many ORIG- INAL DESIGNS. The new department of decorative and industrial art of the University of Califor- nia has become singularly popular with students. Although the second tefm is only beginning the accommodations are not equal to the demand from all parts of California—a fact which, while proving how much this branch is appreciated, augurs well for its permanent success. | “THE WILD ROSE,” BY MISS A. LONG, A BEREKELEY STUDENT, IN THE PRELIMINARY TERM. [From a water-color sketch from nature.) itentiary for an offense which would be | Already three floors in the engineering | better punished by a fine. For that reason | building are required to accommodate the | he agreed to the suggestion of the attor- ]‘ classes of young men and young women | neys that the case go over until they could | whose intention is to learn something use- | argue a motion for a new trial, 3 ful and beautiful. Patrick Reddy ""1‘[""‘”[{ for O'Connor | " mpq department is in charge of Professor yesterday morning and was backed: by Th e a: KAsrasit 1 Garret McEnerney, who expects to be en- | Thomas Ardley, 8.A., who was formerly aged in defending a similar case before | director of the School of Applied Arts, in | ong. The point made by the attorneys in | London, and was a private student with THE WILD ROSE CONVENTIONALIZED BY E. F. DARLING IN AN ORIGINAL DESIGN FOR WALL PAPER—AN EXAMPLE OF THE SECOND YEAR'S WORK. [From a colored drawing.] their arguments was that_ no guilty intent y Richard _Rodgrave, R.A., Christopher bad been charged or proved, and that | Dresser, LL.D., John Ruskin and Owen | therefore the essence of the crime was | Jones, and after seven years in the Royal lacking. They made the additional point | Academy and South Kensington, made a | that the court erred in instructing the jury | tour of the world, studying history and art. that the fact of O'Connor’s refusal to sizn No student can enter the course of ap- was sufficient to sustain a verdict. They | plied art without a knowledge of drawing, held he should have instructed that guilty | which knowledge may also be acquired at intent was also necessary. the university, where a full set of drawin, A. P. Black, the Assistant District Atlor- | models and casts of historic ornament an 0 @ S N ) ~ i X 7 ORNAMENTAL IRON GATE DESIGNED AND WROUGHT BY A PUPIL OF PROFESSOR ARDLEY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA. [From a photograph.] ney, answered, and then Judge Wallace took the case under advisement for a week. ———————— Hobbes believed that when he had finished the “Leviathan” he had begun the revolutionizing of the world’s thought. the human figure for the study of light and shade and persgechv: are used by the students. Illustrated lectures are given on the subjects, and the instruction in drawing is individual, advancing a student as fast as personal merit will permit, re- | frescoes, wood and stone carvin, less of the work of others in the same — e England eats Australian cheese. s. This work is followed by out-of- door landscape work in black and white and water-colors. The first work in original”design is of an elementary and geometric characterand is based upon the underlying iramework of Byzantine mosaic and 3¥ore=que interlaced strapwork. Natural plant forms are then taken up— analyzed and conventionalized—and adapt- ed in color to certain geometric borders and panels. Theory and practice are combined throughout by lectures and work alter- nating. The study of ancient art here begins with lectures, but the work is of | ten times more practical value than the history of art alone would be, as prac- tical work is done in the various styles of historic ornament and illustrated essays compiled from every lecture. The knowledge thus acquired from |the study of drawing, nature, history, design, geometry, color and art is then gpplied to original and practical working ?;"awings, or designs a apted to various purposes, places and material, such as woven fabrics, prints, stained glass, mosaic inlays, painted decora'uons, wood and stone carvings, clay modeling, ornamental iron work, etc. _Practical courses at the bench will be given simultaneously in carving, modeling and other branches of industrial art work as soon as the demand justifies the neces- sary outlay. . This practical bench work is intended simply goferfecc the student’s knowledge of applied design by contrast with the actual work, and differs from manual training in the fact of being governed by art feeling and principles. . “Many of my old students are now fill- mfi positions of honor and influence in schools, colleges and factories in the East- ern States, and in Europe,” said the pro- fessor, “and the outlook here is exceed- ingly favorable, as so many students show decided ability in drawing and design, and are doing very good work, and if tenacity of purpose does not forsake them they will | meet with great success.”’ Professor Ardley’s aim is to foster origi nality of thought and individuality of ex pression in the design of practical work adapted to the highest order of decorative | construction in harmony with true es- thetic principles and the history of art. In- struction at the university: is free and special courses may be taken. . The students have finished the prelim- inary vear, and are now in their first term of elementary design. One young lady who came all the way from San Diego to study designing of tiles, carpets, wall papers, etc., has succeeded in finishing several excellent designs for tiling in colors. The majority of the students have done equally well, though left to_their own in- dividual resources and restricted by certain mechanical rules upon harmony of con- trast of straight, oblique and curved lines in relation to repetition, proportion and symmetry. It will be two or three years, however, before much in the way of industrial art work may be expected from the university classes, for proficiency has to be reached step by step. After the preliminary year’s study, Pro- fessor Ardley has a stock of pencil sketches from nature, water-color sketches and analysis of the geomeirical aspect of flow- ers plucked around the campus and_drawn from nature; also many striking evidences of ability in drawing from casts and models and still-life studies. This year all students will have to adapt their respective floral sketches to conventional forms and colors and then weave decorative designs for wall-paper or other ornaments. Meantime they are studying practical work in Egyptian, As- syrian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, Mo- resque, Gothic and Renaissance art. = With all this knowledge and the skill acquirea they are ready for the designing of orna- ments, founded upon nature and historic designs, for prints, woven fabrics, stained glass, mosaic inlays, painted decorations, E, clay modeling and ornamental iron work. These studies have been hitherto, for the most part, undeveloped in the West, al- though firmly established and richly en- dowed in Europe and in many of the Bast- | ern States. They are intended to carry the student beyond the elementary field of drawing—so essential as a foundation for | all art work—into the broader domain of Fractical art in its application to those | ) igher industries that are the naturai out- growth of the increasing demands of civili- zation. Any part of the work may be selected if the student is prepared to undertake it. A civil engineer, for instance, may desire to take landscape drawing or perspective; an architect, elementary design or historic or- nament; a teacher may select a course in drawing, etc. Qualified students with spe- cial aims will thus receive special and indi- vidual training, independently of the draw- ing prescribed for regular students in the other courses of the university. The professor points with pride to speci- mens of wood-carving in the Italian re- | naissance, Moresque, Gothic and conven- ional styles done by his students in the University of Minnesota. His former pupils won gold medals for ornamental iron work, and, while_still studying under him, sold original designs to woolen-mills, wall-paper factories and tile works. He says assuringly that in a few years Califor- nia_boys and girls will be able to compete with the East and Europe in industrial art work. “The State of California has spent many millions of dollars abroad for work in dec- orative and industrial art that might have been done at home had such a department of_instruction existed here years ago,” said he. *“When such buildings as the Mark Hopkins residence and others were | constructed all the money spent in decora- tion went abroad, as competent men could | not be obtained here. Our fine carpets, wall-paper, farniture, tiles, pottery, table | linen, tableware, {ewelryv—ever_yth:mg is brought here, while our State is rich in raw material awaiting development. This is all wrong. A “We may as well mold our clay into Greek vases ag into flower-pots and our timber into fine furniture instead of fence- rails. The best results in education must come from the combination of theory with ractice, of art and artisan, of use and genuty; where the skilled hand is taught to express what the artistic mind con- ceives. “When young people go forth into the world they are seldom asked, What do you know? but more frequently, What can you do? y ““When the mind and hand are united together they are the factors of everything useful and beautiful that we enjoy; it therefore stands to reason that we should educate them together.” 4 In the Berkeley school there is certainly abundant evidence of promise in the students’ sincere effort. It is not an ambi- tion that prompts them to be artists or to persevere as earnest pupils of the Hopkins academy are doing. To study art not alone for art’s sake but that they may apply it to handicraft is all they seek. And they are doing remarkably well. The classes of 150 students have develo; several clever designers, among whom are, Miss A. Long, E. F. Darling, E. M. Evans, Irene Muller, Laurance N.Scammon and Grace Rood. These, however, were taken at random from the great number of clever pupils, who are each and every one work- ing on an equal plane with equal chances for ultimate success. Evex the confirmed dyspeptic improves on food !Prepared with Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder. ———— It Will Be Banked. The estate of Henry McDonald, the son of Claude Lee and Captain E. 8. McDonald, has been finally disposed of to the satisfaction of all concerned. On the advice of nis counsel the boy has agreed to deposit his legacy of 5,000 in some bank, and to draw upon it only under an order of the court. He will be allowed $100 a month to su »t himself and his grandmother, and he mflpge permitted to invest in & home for her and himself. The estate will be in the bank under these circum- stances for three {em longer, or until he is 24 ears old. He will then have turned over to im, absolutely, his entire estate. Detective Seymour’s Injuries. Detective Seymour fell down a stairway in the Del Monte saloon at the corner of O'Farrell street and Grant avenue last Wednesday night. It was at first thought that he was seriously hurt, but his injuries proved to be only superficial. NEW TO-DAY. WEATHER We’re having now. But come between showers and see those new me- tallic beds that are all the { rage. Very dainty ones in white enamel, brass trimmings, for $1 0. Don’t forget your ume brella. INDIANAPOLIS FURNITURE Co. 750 Mission St. AND BEHOLD! California has shaken off her drowsiness, and is pre- | paring to make the chips fly! | With new energy of pur- | pose among her manufact | turers, | STANDARD SHIRTS | will soon cease to be the | ONLY product that can not | only compete with, but | “knock the spots off” East- | tern rivals. Thenew line of PERCALE and OUTING SHIRTS, so thoroughly up to date, so fair in price, is worth beholding. All dealers. NEUSTADTER BROS., SAN FRANCISCO. Prop'rs Standard Shirt Factory. THEY TALK ABOUT GRAY HAIR! Here Is a Restorer Which Is Sold for $2.50 PER BOTTLE. {} Use one bottle, and if o\ You don’t like it [ will N 4 4N refund your money. MME. MARCHAND—Dear M | request | have carefully yzed your | Antoinette u"d' Hair Restorer. In my judg- | ment it is an effective preparation and will not | injure the hair or the general heaith. I can | cheerfully recommend it to your patrons. Re- | spectfully submitted, W. T. WENTZELL, Chemist. o A me: At your | THIS WONDERFUL. PREPARATION, For Restoring Any Color of Gray Hair to Its Original Color, Acts on the secretions and furnishes | the natural coloring to the hair, and is NOT A DYE. It leaves the scalp WHITE and in a healthy condition. THE ANTOINETTE PREPARATIONS Have received the indorsement of the leading chemists and physicians. | Trial samples of my Complexien Specialties for 50 cents. MME. MARCHAND, Hair and Complexion Specialist, 121 POST STREET, ROOMS 32-36, Taber’s Entrance. Telephone 1349. | | TSTHEVERY BESTONETO EXAMINE YOUR | Leyes and fit them to Spectacles or Eyeglasses | with instraments of his own invention, whoss | superiority bas not been equaled. My success has Deen due to the merits of my work. Office Hours—12 to 4 . 3. GRANITE MONUMENTS mansgr<t Jones Bros. & Co. an Imported by Cor. Second and Brannan Sts., S. F. A&~ Superior to ALL OTHERS and the latest de- signs. Strictly Wholesale. Can be purchased through any Retail Dealer. POSTERS AND ALL LARGE PRINTING. STERETT PRINTING CD, 532 Clay Street. 400,000 TREES. PBUN’E‘ PLUM, PEACH, PEAR, CHERRY, Almond, for sale at 3 cents each. F.O. B. Terms to suit you. No better trees grown. Address, Sac- ramento River Nursery Company, Walnut Grove,