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L] TH E SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 190V, b VAST SUM 1 ASKED FOR THE ARMIY AND HAVY SOLDIERS SENT 10 REINFORCE GENERAL YOUNG | Insurgents Grow More Ac- tive in North and South Tlocos. | Estimates for the Coming Year Made by Bureau Chiefs. ———— Assume as a Basis for Their Calcula- tions That the Army Will Rebels Becoming Quite Skillful in Field Tactics, Following the Compriss 100,000 Examples of the Amer- Men. icans. _— Four troops of cav- and two companies of Infantry have reinforced General Young in by thern Luzon, where the insurgents are con rating in the mountains of North and South Ilocos provinces under tha leadership of Aglipay c and renegad General Tino and Gs who had been quiet w showing sign: the end of aches. al for some time, are of becoming active the rainy season ap- pas y cor Of late there has been considerable estimates bureaus of scouting and skirmishing in the provinces partment ever )] bra and } though without | =ible tc vious here that | sharpe are more will be Department to his desk ¢ at the fleld | cans are being fol- of the founder of the Americans last December ed by t and lodged | rated. As he had always persistently refused to ta h my of 100,000 men. It if McKinley Is re- will incorporate in mmendat < vernment reputation as a resolute patriot. that he has reach ding with the which ' h he had among the They now a private un- nerican authori- release and | some of his still considered revolutionary ugh he , al or of the dormant ts for the eek the commission will begin the eginning next montk & the tariff, making use of | | it 1s proposed 1o f the investigations of the | es immediately in this direction It is the | men will | intention of the commission to give use of the | American trade a better chance than it | > reduce | has heretofore enjoyed, owing to the | rts Sumner and Venus island of Marinduque Luzon, carrying d. alions d there. force the Twen fantry, now in Marinduque. o i e ready for nsported to 1°1 NATIVES USE AMERICAN GUNS. Arms Smuggled Inrto Luzon Insur-| gents by Filibusters. ! NEW YORK, Oct. .—The Sun has the | »wing from Manila, October 7: South- | ern Luzon continues to be a center of trouble for Americans, and the rebels constantly attacking the garrisor gt Northern Luzon army patrols are 4 fully watching for filibu who Continued From First Page. | the 1 rgents with arms and ammuni- - il { tion. Nevertheless a small number of | rifles have recently been smuggied in for Agulnaldo’s followers. Some of the guns which have been seized are of American | make of 1899 | fie et “BEYOND PARDON” THE LAST MESSAGE OF A SUICIDE Sad End of a Young Woman Who Once Sued the Estate of a Wealthy Man. NEW YORK, Oct. 7.—The body of a young woman who committed suicide Sat- urday night in the Grand Hotel In this | on the b at the City The lette papers found in_her clothing, wita s written Ly her on the hotel | before she drank the deadly her death, appear Mariida Neisen, th wedleh girl who attained notori- g the estate of Austin n ihe basis of alleged Mr. Cor- mail, ¥on arching obe night fully | Rail- t at a momer near by Among the papers found on the body of pt for $100 paid to 1duct! the case ate, several letters wspaper clippings | e MAY DELAY A SETTLEMENT. Doubt as to What Is Meant by a Ten i Per Cent Increase. {TON, P: 7 e the had writ. | heet of paper on | rawled—"beyond her farewells w a h two words were sci - _ | FAVORS ENLISTMENT OF 1 | SAMOANS AS SOLDIERS | +| Commander Tilley Believes the Isl- anders Would Make Excellent Ao e Artillerists. laborers’ | Special Dispatch to The Call WASHINGTON, Oct, 7.—Having found 4 the natives of Tutuila fit to serve as S er a8 about | olicemen and able to maintain peace and cents extra per | ¢ der, Commander Tilley believes they his 10 per cent, | would make excellent soldiers to man equence the | the fortific 1s to be erected for the de- 4 cents or | fense of the harbor of Pago Pago. | ances a miner Commander Tilley has not, so far as can h cans that 36 | be learned, recommended that a regiment £ hix € cents and | ¢ e organized, but in private elf enjoying an ad-|1 ers on duty here he has in- per cent they would make effective rs want this offer n. Several months ago he 1own here. The lo- an official recommendation that a that the men who v of eight and six inch guns be in- framed 1 er did not_have in ed at strategetic points at Pago mind t . Ays the laborer, or | Pago, and declares that with their aid else, having Y figured the laborer | and the proper location of mine felds the e harbor will be rendered absolutely im- | pregnable ! To enlist a regiment of natives it would De from C | acting mander T necessary to obtain special authority ngress. The native liceme vho are now | ed by Com- | were enli landsmer TROUBLE AMONG FISHERMEN. Spanish Government Will Attempt | to Stamp It Out. | - QUIET DAY AT SHAMOKIN. Union Men Fe:l That the Strike Will Soon Pass Into History. MADRID, Oct, 7.—The Spanish Govern- SHAMOKIN, Pa.. Oct. 7—This has bees | et IS devoting serious consideration to | the quictest d T 1as been | tpe rivalry among the fishermen along | - the Galician coast, which culminated yes- etrike begar it in firing on the Spanish gunboat | { Vasco Nunez de Ralboa as she was leav- ing the port of Vigo. There {8 apparen no means of removing the bitter feeli between those who use out-of-date fish- ing apparatus and those who employ the . | latest_contrivances. A dispatch from Vigo says the com- | ndant of the port, who was attacked | yesterday, took refuge on a German war- | ship, and a strong escort was needed to | protect him against the populace on go- ing ashore. Mitchell ¢ nounced at Mount C would. H r we th ——— CORNERSTONE LAID FOR | CHURCH ON MOUNT ZION | Is on the Site Presented to Emperor Williem by Abdul Hamid. JERUSALEM, Oct. 7.—To-day the Bish- | op of Jerusalem, in the name of the Pope | and in the presence of the German Con- | sul and 500 German pllgrims, laid the cor- | ner-stone of the church which is to be | erected on Mount Zion, on the site Abdul | | Hamid presented to Emperor William on | | the occasion of the latter's visit to the | the second vietim of | Holy Land. r 1, who died to-day, BY A WO 1 TROOPS NO General Gobin Says They Will Ordered Home at Once. H, .a., Oct. 7.—General | iight that if the weather | favorable to-forrow Bat- | break camp and leave -r dition in this district, the is such as 10 requi ard he intends to away as soon as LONGER NEEDED. Be the p order all the to-morrow. All the locai | SHOT BY A WOMAN, 2d the funeral. ! — : . I'{arrls sald 1o-day that he W. J. McCauley, an Actor, Meets a 14 go to the Panther Creek Valley to- Tragic Dea ist in organizing the mlne’ Vory gic o HUNTINGTON, W. Va., Oct. 7.—W. J.| i ‘Mr(‘ax}l;}«‘ R! ahlladelpihla. h‘n (Ql‘!or play- ng wit oman in the Case Com- | _ Buying Cereal Shares. | pany, was killed to-day by Pearl New- | LONDON, Oct, 8~The Daily Express|man’ McCauley and three friends had makes the following announcement this | entered a restaurant and were talking to morning: The British syndicate which re- ’ Miss Dorsey Brown when Miss Newman ing: - opened fire, killing McCauley instantly e T L e o hnne Camp | Miss Newman escaped to ‘Ohio. ] now seeking to ac- uire control Stops the Cough morrow to workers there. ass! e the ex-communi- Villanuave, | Government, who was cap- | jail in Manila, has been lib- | ath of allegiance to | + | | so- | | WHERE BRYAN STANDS. MWL HAYOE WROUGHT BY THE TORNADD Lives in Minnesota Storm. Train Overturned by the Wind, the Engineer and Fireman Be- ing Scalded by Steam. SRR BIWABIK, Minn., Oct. 7.—The tornado that raged in this vicihity last evening was most violent. The storm cut a path- way 150 feet in width through the north- western corner of the town, compl Y wrecking several buildings. The properiy loss is estimated at $100,000 and the known fatalities number nine, with a scorc or | more injured, some severely. The storm swept in a northwesterly di- rection after leaving here and struck a little Finnish settlement near Pike Lake wherg a number of buildings were wrecked, in one of which an entire family | consisting of husband, wife and four chil- dren were instantly killed. names have not been obtained. ! lleved when the more remote districts are heard from further casualties may be re- ported. List of casualtles so far & iearned: Killed: ¥ MR. AND MRS. MAROWITZ. wiLLIAM HILSTROM. Family of six, near Pike Lake, names not known. Neverely injured: Andrew Anderson, 3 locomotive fireman, severely scalded; will recover. ?. Murray, engineer, severely scaMed; will recover. Andrew Debb laborer. severe scalp wounds; will recov- er. John Morriston, foot badiy crushed. Aoout twenty-five others were more or less severely cut and bruised. The house in which the Marowitz fam- fly lived was compietely wrecked and body of Mrs. Marowitz was found 4% away, every bone in her body being broken and her clothing completely | stripped off. The body of her husband was founda amid the debris of their home hor- “DOWN WITH ALL TRUSTS!” THEATRICALLY | DESPICABLE TRUST IN THE U DECLARES BRYAN, FROM THE VERY JAWS OF THE MOST INITED STATES. ribly mutilated. William Hilsirom was struck on the |head by a falling tree and his skull ished. He afterward died at the hos- al. ne engine —Philadelphia Inquirer. of the Duluth, Mis- “ BANK-WRECKER DARE Years Ago Is a Railway Magnate of A'exandria. ‘ CHEYENNE, Wyo,, Oct. 7.-Word ha$, been received here that D. D. Dare, the | man who wrecked the California National Bank of San Diego, California, @ the Cheyenne National Bank, and for whom United States officers have bcen searching | since his flight to Europe in 1881, has been seen in Alexandria, Egypt, where he is president and principal stockholder of the street raflway system. He has been living in Alexandria under an assumed name for geveral vears, and, beside wearing a full beard, he has otherwise disguised him-| self. | A German traveler who saw and talked | with Dare less than six months ago says | no one would recognize in the leading citi- | zen of Alexandria the bank-wrecker and fugitive from justice. e story of Dare’'s meteoric and check- career would cast into the shade | ered | some of the most noted works of fiction | belonging to the depositors. of the day. Coming to Wyoming during the boom days of the cattle business, he made money rapidly and soon became stockholder 2 vice president of the | Cheyen nal Bank and president of | Special Dispatch to The Call. the National Bank of San Diego, which was organized by Dare and J. M.’ Collins in 1888. Dare dabbled in stocks and real estate and squandered several fortunes loaned him by wealthy relatives in Penn- sylvania. In arried Miss Em Croakelton, a beautiful woman of Crest Butte, Colorado, and before going to C fornia he lived in lavish style here. He was prominent in society and church cir- cles and was regarded as one of the lead ing men of the State. While it was known that he lost money in real estate, no on= suspected that he was spending the funds of the banks In 1861, the C San D! for over $300,000, and a few days later the Cheyenne bank followed suit, the Habili- tles of the local institution amounting to $250,600. When an investigation was made, it was found that Dare had not enly un- loaded his real estate deals on the banks, but, it is alleged, had appropriated money Just before the crash came, Dare, accompan:ed by his fe, who knew nothing of his business took passage on a steamer bound na "Bare returned to this country in a lifornia National Bank ol Allkmic: | ‘Man Who Caused the Collapse of a San Diego Institution Nine| o closed its doors, having faited | Which he, with John rn Raflway was com- a number of locomo- cars were shifted from the nded into scrap iron. e on which when the ‘s he deson | Llown from the track en were pinned beneath it and horribly burned by th scaping steam. sveral cars blown from the Duluth, Mississippi and North- ern tracks were found in the Duiuth mi pit, hundreds of feet away. Many of t buildings destroyed were by | maining company and | . dl'he shafthou reduced to and build e mines were | wood. | ~The tornado, which lasted less than five minutes, was preceded by an unusually | severe thunder and rain storm. The ra has flooded of the open pit mincs and they ca be operated for somc | time. | MRS. TRELLA TOLAND WEDS AT NEW YORK few months and now resides in Colorads Springs, Colorado. Depositors of the Cheyenne bank re- ceived 60 per cent, but it is said that the | California inetitution paid only about half | of this amount. Marries a Son of Rear Admiral . White. \al Dispatch to The Cal EW YORK, Oct. 8. i the following: Friends of George Em- | mons White, son of Rear dmiral Edwin | White, U. S retired, were greatly sur- pri | | B | | DARE'S SAN DIEGO CAREER. he World prints He Deserted. Special Disp: to The Call. SAN DIEGO, Oct. 7.—D. D. Dare was president of the California National Bank, W. Collins and | ty-irst street and Foufth avenue, others, established in 1888, In 1881 Dare 7Thursday last. ELoier left and did not return. He is supposed | The bride was Mrs, Trella Eyelvn Too to have taken the funds of the bank, leav- land, w.dow of Dr. Charles 2 H Y clsc Rev. Alexander Bost- ing Collins to settle with creditors. The San Fr_nn.. co. ! S0t bank soon went to the wall and Collins | Wick, Princeton, associate of Mr. White, was placed under arrest. He was under | performed the ceremony, Mr. and s rd of United States Marshal George | White are ucw in the Berkshires speuding Gard at the Hotel Brewster, and when | thelr nopeymoon at the 3 orders came to bring him to Los Angeles | COUNIT/ FLICE - he stepped into a bath-room and shot | Thel as well known in the Amer of London and Paris a: an ol | New York She is reputed to be wea Her first husband was killed by | thrown from his horse in himself. - Dare was seen a yvear ago in Athens, Greece, where he dealt in rugs. 4 ENGINES FOR THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC. Cooke Works at Paterson, X, J., Se- cures Contract and Will Em- ploy Men Night and Day. ——— NEW Special Dispatch to The Call. NEW YORK, Oct. The announce- ment that the Cooke Locomotive Works in Paterson, N. J., had received an nrder: for fifty-eight engines to be built for the Southern Pacific Railroad Company has caused universal re,oicing among locomo- | tive workers in Paterson, as since the | closing of the Rogers works the outlc'ok‘ for engine building has been rather dis- s ing. e locomotives are to be built in a a night and day force will be or- ganized. Work Is to begin at once, and the men have been promised steady em-| ployment for six months. i) Already 200 men who were formerly in | the Rogcrs works have secured employ- | ment. Each cf the locomotives to be built will weigh i tons, and the cost is estimated | at _$10,%0 each. There are about 1000 men in Paterson who were employed in the Rogers Loco- motive Works. Three weeks "ago Mr. | Rogers announced that he would close the works and quit the business. The city has since been making efforts to save the industry. ———— FOREIGN " MISSIONS BOARD. Important Meeting of the Organiza- tion to Be Held. ST. LOUIS, Oct. 7.—Next Wednesday the American board of commissioners for foreign missions will begin its nineteenth nual meeting at Pilgr:m Congregational Chureh in this city. The meeting will be in session three days and President Capen of_Boston will preside. This will be the most important of any meeting ever held by the board since itz organization in 1810, owing (o the famine | in India and the crisis in China, where | many workers have been killed and much property belonging to the missions under their control destroyed. Matters relating to the work of those and other fields wiii come up for discussion and action and officers for the ensuing year will be elected. —— EVIDENTLY LEFT A WIDOW IN SAN FRANCISCO Relatives of C. H. Henkel in Cincin- nati Receive a Telegram From Woman Unknown to Them. CINCINNATI, Oct. 7.—Word has been received here of the death in San Fran- cisco of C. H. Henkel, a prominent busi- ness man of Cincinnati, who went to San Francisco with a_ considerable sum of money seven months ago. Since Mr. Hen- kel's death his relatives here were sur- prised upon receiving from San Francisco a telegram signed “Mrs. C. H. Henkel” and requesting a member of the hally en] of the American Cereal Compeny, and has nmhn;l:;‘d )gr. Ba:b 3 president of the Diamon tch combine, | And works off the cold. Laxative Bromo-Qui- 1o deposit £700,000 with a Chicago bank to | nine Tablets cure @ coid in one day. No cufe, ‘mo pay. Price 2 cents. buy Cercal shares at £ each, ¢ |investigate Mr. Henkel's to come to Ban Francisco. Mr. H s sisters and relatives here did not know that he had been married. They have sent representatives to Francisco to FROM PILGRIN'S REST It Is Now iflmm{.d That Lord’s‘- Paul Woman Finds Mining Prop‘ Roberts Will Leave South Africa During the Last Part of October. LSS *'SUDDENLY DISCOVERS i | | | | LONDON, Oct. 8.—TIt is estimated, ac-, cording to the Pietermaritzburg corre- | spondent of the Dally Mail that from 4000 | to 5000 Boers have retreated from Pil- grim's Rest, northeast of Lydenburg, with four Long Toms and twenty-two other guns. The correspondent under- stands that their Long ‘lom ammuniuci is almost exhausted. Lord Roberts, 1t is announced, wi'l leave South Africa during the last week of Octo- ber. The authorities have decided (o Emit the number of colonial troops whe are to be the Queen’s guests in London to 500. LYDENBURG, Tuesday, Oct. 2.—Gen- eral Buller's force has been pursuing the Boers through Pilgrim's Rest and Krug- erspost. He is now near Ohrigstadt and is still marching northward. The Boers nowhere have made a stand. CAPL TOWN, Oct. 7.—The City of Lot- don Volunteers sailed for England to-day. their departure being attended by scene of tremendous enthusiasm, Sir Alired Milner, in the course of an add: 3, thanked them for their services to the crarire, and told them that a still greater 1« cognition awaited them at home. NEW YORK, Oct. 7.—The Journal has this from Cape Town: A proclamation of peace in South Africa is expected to be igsued by Field Marshal Roberts on Thursday next, that being the anniver- sary of the declaration of war. ————— DID NOT GO AGROUND. Captain of Steamer Deutschland De- nies Erroneous Report. LONDON, Oct. 7.—The Hamburg-Ameri- can steamer Deutschland, which left Ham- burg yesterday for New York and was reported as having grounded in the Eibe, salled from Southampton this afternoon. | Captain Albers, in the course of an interview at Southampton, denicd that the Deutschland went ashore. He explained that her bow just grazed a shoal In the Elbe, owing to the easterly wind and the | receding water. The vessel, therefore, was backed into deep water where she anchored for a couple of hours to awalt the rising of the tide. -~ Collier Emir Raised. SUEZ, Oct. 7.—The American steam col- lier Emir, which recently sank in the Suez canal while on her way to Manila with coal for the American fleet but was successfully floated yesterday, has arriv- ed at Suez roads. She is unable, however, to enter the port, as she draws too much water. Her cargo is being discharged and divers will examine her bottom to ascer- tain the extent of her injuries. —_———— Papeete the Beautiful. Those who are fond of traveling (and who is not) will hatl with delight the news of a direct steamship route to Tahiti. This charming land has until now been accessible only by slow sailing vessels, but on November 1st the popu- lar p Australla will sail direct, mak- ing the trip in 10% days. A reduced round- trip rate has been made for the first trip. Call at 643 Market street for salling llst. . | to-day at once took steps to identify her. | San Francisco, about three years ago. | —— CHINAMAN SHOOTS BOY. Oriental’s House. SALT LAKE, Oct SHE IS AN HEIRESS to their homes in the suburbs a Chinese. Charles Holmes. Poy is under arrest. erty Deeded to Her Years Ago Nine Persons Lose Their| Widow of San Francisco Physician | ed at his sudden and unexpected mar- riage at Calvary Episcopal Church, Twen- on s in thy eing the Presidio, | He Had Been Throwing Rocks at the —About 3 o'clock this orning th boys going from the city morning three L hrowing rocks at the house of Chin Poy, - 5 v fired at the trio, killing | REPORTS UPON CONDITION O -~ YOSEMITE PARKS {Captain West, Sixth Cav- alry, Makes Important Suggestions. | ¥ | Declares That Game Is in Danger of | Extermination by Hunters After the Troops Leave. s WASHINGTON, Oct. 7.—Captain Frank West of the Sixth Cavalr intendent of the Sequofa and Grant national parks, in Califor . has submitted his annual report to the Sec retary of the Interior. The first of these is the larger, containing, it is esti- _ from 1600 to 3000 of the mammoth sequoia trees for wh California is noted. Captain West sa the beneflt of the lic, as the best r for & giant forest Is genera ,wn, that the proper pc at whic lare Coun- ve the railway is Visalia Thence there is a goc ad through the parklike country to the Kewaeh Riv- er, leading thence through the Ash Moun- tains into the park. The park itself is on a high tableland from 6300 to 7500 feet in altitude, and commands a view of some of the most magnificent mountain scenery in the Sterras. He recommends In some detail the extension of the park bounda- ries to take in a portion of this mountain tract, eastward to Mount Whitney and the main Sierra divide and northward to 1g_River Canyon. This sec- tion, Captain West says, exceeds in beauty and grandeur anything to be found in Switzerland and is a part of the public domain unfit for agriculture, but of importance a game preserve and to conserve the water supply on which the immense cigrus frult interests of Tulare County depe 'he General "Grant Park is only t d is in very bad condition, rubbish, which away immediately. It contains large sequoias, includ- ing the famous General Grant tree, and a little work would make it a marvelously beautitul sp danger which threatens the is the presence of sawmills lands included within the It is sald thers The mills are sequoia on par private them in » most criminally taking only the clear immense tops to a menace by , using wasteful of the park. mends that these speedily and pur- re has trespas by sheep and ca park this season, but e slaug leave minate of $21,000 for carry lines of work nex VESSEL CUT IN TWO BY BIG OCEAN LINER Schooner A. A. Shaw Sunk Off Scot- land Lightship, but the Crew Is Saved. W ¥ORK 7T st much them to pro The Old Do broug and ilton. The Hamilton was running at knots speed at the time and struck the Shaw in the dense fog, cut g h mq in two. S ACCEPT THE CUT WAGES. Employes of the Danville Mills Go Back to Work. DANVILLE, Va., Oct. 7—The employes | of the Danville Rolling Mill held a meet- | ing last night and decided to accept the per cent cut in their wages. agai which they struck last week. The pu | dlers will now be paid $3 for their work, instead of $4 formerly paid, and a pro- porticnate cut In wages willi be made in other departments. The reduction affects several hundred men. The fires were arted to-day and work will be resumed { to-morrow. Is Worth a Respectable Fortune. — ST. PAUL, Oct. 7.—Through the publi- | cation of a dispatch in to-day's Pioneer Press Mrs. H. E. Butterfield of this city has discovered that she is $200.000 wealth- ier than she imagined. In 18%, while on an excursion to the Facific Coast, she became acquainted with Thomas P. Har- | kin of Boston, also a member of the party. They became engaged and the| wedding date was fixed. Shortly after- | ward Harkin took sick and died. Before his death he exccuted for his afflanced a quitclaim deed to a mining property in ‘ Honduras. Communication with the Honduran | Government officials led to the belief that ' the property was not worth the trouble of filing formal transfer. Last,winter, | however, the property greatly increased in value and the syndicate that had it in charge offered Harkins' attorney $200,000 | for a quitclaim deed from Miss Griffin, | In some manner, however, all trace of | that young lady had been lost and not | even the names of her paretns could be | found. Mrs. Butterfield on reading the dispatch seif and will shortly receive the snug sum | which comes to her in so romantic a man- ner. Her husband is a clerk in the Great | Northern Railway freight office. ——— PAYS GLOWING TRIBUTE | TO JOSEPH mxnnmE Lord High Commissioner of Dominign | of Canada Speaks of the Eng- lish Elcctions. NEW YORK. Oct, 7.—Lord Strathcona, the Lord High Commissioner of the Do- minion of Canada, arrived on the Etruria to-day. He ecuipved a mountain regi- ment and sent it at his own expense from Canada to fight the Boers. The regiment | was commanded by Colonel Steele. The ! The Present Seems to Be an Era of Good Things at Small Prices ERE'S another one of our popular small ai- Lord High Commissioner left for Montreal | fairs. A handsome Roman Steok—in Flem- to-night, and when asked what he thought ish oak, in golden oak, or in imitation ma; . v r ) t g %3t wouid nat be proper in. the Tord | hogany. Upholstered in velour or in tapes- High Commissioner of Canada to permit | try. The designer has combined to make this himself to discuss English ‘politics, but I | say there is a wave of Imperialism sweep- | r ing_Irresistibly over Eurcpe. As for Jo- seph Chamberlain, I have known him for forty years back: have 'known him out- | side of political life, and very intimately indeed, and a more upright, honest man I have never in my life met.” 2 BOUNDARIES ARE FIXED. Commissioners of Nicaragua and Honduras Are Agreed. MANAGUA, Nicaragua (via Galveston), Oct. 7.—The special commussioners ap- pointed by the Governments of Nicaragua and Honduras to fix the boundary be- tween the two States, have concluded their work amicably, the result being isfactory to both Governments. President Zelaya, the Cabinet and the Congress are about to return to Managua 3:052- a two weeks' visit to the city of Indianapolis 1 both pretty and substantial $1.00 Our Furniture Department Has Only Ones Rival—Our Carpet Department, We sell it for It's a regular value with us— one of the num- berless good ones we show. Furniture Co. 780 Mission Street, San Francisco.