THE MORNING OREGONIATT. 3IONDAY, JULY 23, 1906. 3 BRYAN HAS SCARED SOUND MONEY Free, Silver Talk in London Puts a Damper on His Presidential Boom. CONSERVATIVES ARE DUMB Delphic Utterances of the New York Sun Are Generally looked Upon as Pointing to Hearst as the Democratic Leader. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, July 22. "The next Governor of New York will be a Democrat. "The next Governor of New York will be the next President of the United States." Thus spoke the oracle of the New York Sun, Republican. "No Democrat will be elected Governor of New York this year. "No Democrat will be elected President in 1908." Thus replied the oracle of the New York World, Democratic. Eastern politicians have been guessing for a week as to what the Sun meant by Its prediction, and no one has a satis factory answer. Indeed, political observ ers, with few exceptions, believe that the World Is right, at least so far as the Governorship Is concerned, for it Is a foregone conclusion that there will be two Democratic tickets in the field in New York this Fall and only one Republican. Division Among the Democrats. William R. Hearst has announced that he will run for Governor as an Inde pendent Democrat; the regular Demo cratic organisation says it will put its own ticket in the field. But while this conflict Is brewing in the Democratic) camp. ex-Governor Odell and Tom Piatt are endeavoring once more to get to gether, at least until the close of the Fall campaign. As all signs point to a Democratic split, and a serious split, so they point to a united Republican party in the Empire State this Fall. The New York Sun apparently looks for the election of Hearst as Governor. It likewise looks for the defeat of Wil liam J. Bryan at the next Democratic National convention. Therefore, It is reasoned, the Sun looks forward to the election of Hearst as President in 1908. The New York World, on the other hand, which Is advocating a reuniting of the Democratic party on sound principles, can see nothing on the political horizon to Indicate that Hearst will be elected Governor or President. When the Bryan boom was revived the World took Interest and was Inclined to believe that the party would do well to nominate this man for a third time. But hardly had the World delivered itself of these opinions before Bryan began to talk In London, and his utterances sent a cold shiver up and down the spine of many good sound-money Democrats, the World among them. Wonders Where Bryan Stands. Blnce Bryan gave out his famous lion-" don interview the World has ceased to enthuse over his boom, and now ex presses Its willingness to wait and see just what Bryan stands for before com mitting Itself. If he will repudiate free silver and the Chicago platform and will run on sound, latter-day issues the World may support him, but If Bryan, as is now believed, continues his confidence in free silver and the other "isms'" for which he stood in 18 he will have no support from the World. Evidently the World believes Bryan is harboring the same ideas today that made him famous ten years ago. and if that be true, and he be made the party nomi nee in 1903, the World cannot figure out how he can be elected. It Is Interesting to note, in this same connection, that the Sun does not regard the Bryan boom seriously. That paper points out, and sensibly, that Bryan mads a tactical error in permitting his boom to be sprung two years in advance of the convention. Two years Is a long time; It affords his enemies adequate opportunity to pick out the weak spots in his record and in his beliefs, and a man who is a con spicuous target for two years must neces sarily suffer from the assaults that are sure to be made. , Free Silver Man at Heart. It Is commonly understood that at heart Bryan Is as much a free silver man as ever and that if elected he would If op portunity arose use his Influence to secure the enactment of a free coinage law, just as he would have done had he been elected In 1SS6. It is true that Congress might not agree with Bryan on that question and might refuse to pass such a law, but the probabilities are that if Bryan should be elected by voters who knew him to be a free sliver man, that the Congress elected by these same voters would stand by Bryan, and that a free silver law would go down on the statute books. More will be known about Bryan's po sition on the sliver and other questions when he returns to this country, but If it develops, as has been indicated in his London Interview, that he is still a silver man, the Bryan boom will arouse less enthusiasm in the future than it has In the days immediately passed. Bryan, a silver man, would be a less formidable candidate in 1908 than Bryan, a conservative with silver left out, and it may be that the boom which swept the country like a cyclone may wear itself out before the next convention meets. It all depends upon Bryan-s attitude to wards silver. APPEAL MADE TO THE VOTERS Republicans Asked to Give $1 Apiece to National Fuist. NEW YORK. July 22. Representative James S. Sherman and his associates on the National Republican Congressional Committee, have decided to appeal to Republicans to contribute $1 each to Its campaign fund. In pursuance with this policy the committee will begin mailing letters to Republicans in all sections of the country, asking them to contribute (1 each. When asked if the appeal to individual Republicans had ever been sent out be fore. Representative Sherman said he had never known of its being done before. "I don't think it has ever been neces sary to do so." he said. In addition to the mailing of notices to Republican leaders In all sections, to be posted where Individuals may see them, the notice will be sent to all Re publican papers, with a request that it be published for several days, so that all voters favoring the return of a Repub lican majority may forward their contri butions to the headquarters in this city. The appeal says: "The Congressional campaign Is based on the administrative and executive rec ord of the party, and, that being so, The odore Roosevelt's popularity must be a EVENTS OF COMING WEEK CrUia la BomIs- The' attention of the world wlU probably be centered this week in tl political situation In St. Petersburg, which appears to have reached a cri sis. The dissolution of Parliament by Imperial ukase, resulting In Goremy kln surrendering the Premiership, and the succession of Stolypln. Minister of the Interior, to the post, tBe maaelng of troops of the capital city and the general belief tiat a dictatorship la Inevitable make It appear that an armed conflict Is Impending. The effect of the address to tbe country to be issued by tbe Socialists and the Group of Toll will be awaited with interest. Tbe temper in which the masses of tbe Russian people will take the summary dismissal of tbe nation's elected representatives will be one of the most Important devel opments of the week. The views of those who support tbe autocracy are shown in an Interview given to the Associated Press corre spondent on Saturday by a Cabinet Minister,, who said: "The government, must hold on until a stable regime is assured or anarchy will be supreme." " Pan-American Congress at Bio. The Pan-American Congress, which will begin its sittings today (Monday) in Rio Janeiro may be expected to have Important results, particularly In establishing the relations of the South and Central American repub lics upon a basis of comity, which will tend to lessen the danger of war be tween those countries, delegates from most of the governments on the American continent, including Mex ico and the United States, being pres ent. Venezuela is the notable excep tion. " Interparliamentary Union. The conference of the Interparlia mentary ualon will convene in Lon don to pass upon the reports filed In June by the two committees appointed at the Brussels convention in August lost. The most important subject for discussion will be the proposal for the conversion of tbe second Hague con ference into a permanent body. Next in importance is tbe report of the commission on a model arbitration treaty, which commission is under the presidency of Ernst von Flener, ex-Commerce Minister of Austria The American delegation is beaded by Congressman Richard Bartholdt. Institutes of Mining Engineers. , A joint meeting of the American Institute of Mining Engineers and of the British Iron and Steel Institute will be held at the Institution of Civil Engineers July 24 to 24, Inclusive. Addresses are to be delivered by R. A. Hadfleld and Robert W. Hunt, re spectively presidents of the British and American Institutes. The week following the London conference Is to be devoted to a tour for tbe American visitors to Yerkes. Edinburgh. Campaign Conference at Oyster Bay. An Important meeting to discuss plans for the coming Congressional campaign will be held at Oyster Bay. President Roosevelt has Invited Speak er Cannon. Chairman Sherman, of the Republican Congressional campaign committee, and Secretary Louden slsger and Treasurer McKinley, of that committee, to luncheon at Saga more Hill Mondsy. The campaign will be outlined thoroughly at this meeting, the list of available speak ers will be taken up and the argu ments .to be put forward most prom inently will be decided upon. Good Templars Meet at Boston. . The National convention of the Or der of Good Templars will begin Its sessions in Boston Thursday, and Sat urday the delegates to the National convention of the American Federa tion of Catholic Societies will assem ble at Buffalo. central figure and his achievements a central thought in the campaign." SENATOR DUBOIS' BUGABOO. Declares Mormons Are Gaining Do minance in Western States. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, July 23. Senator Dubois, of Idaho, the recognized leader of the fight on Sen ator Reed Smoot, sees a Mormon bugaboo rising In every Western State. He says that Idaho and Wyoming, like Utah, are now dominated by the Mormons, and pre dicts that the Mormons will soon control 14 votes in the United States Senate. He figures that the Mormons will ultimately elect Senators from Utah, Idaho, Wyo ming, Oregon, Montana, Nevada and from the new State of Arizona, if the present territory of Arizona shall accept joint statehood with, New Mexico. Dubois reckons that Senator Sutherland, of Utah, is under Mormon domination; he openly charges that Heyburn, his col league, accepts dictation from the Mor mons, and says that his own successor will be a Mormon sympathizer, inasmuch as, in his opinion, the Mormons over whelmingly dominate the Republican party of Idaho. Just how Dubois can figure out Mormon domination in Oregon, Montana, Wyo ming and Nevada is hard to' say. Each of these states have their Mormon citi zens, but the Mormons as a sect have never Injected themselves or their religion into politics, and no one but Dubois has found the slightest indication that the Mormons are struggling for control. They certainly do not control either of the Oregon Senators, though both Fulton and Geaiin stood ready in the recent session to vote to seat Senator Smooth, believing that he was in every way qualified for the office. Nor is it easy to figure out how Senators Warren and Clark, of Wyo ming; Carter and Clark, of Montana, and Newlands and Nixon, are going suddenly to bow down to the Mormon Church in order to hold their jobs. It is believed, in fact known, that Sena tor Newlands will have a hard fight for re-election, and the probabilities favor a Republican Senator from Nevada, but no one except Dubois has heard that the Mormons are after that job or are trying to name a successor to Newlands. The same thing Is true of Senator Clark, of Montana. The probabilities are that a Republican will succeed him, unless Clark dumps a lot of money into the Legislature to secure another term. But there is no thought of electing a Mormon Senator to succeed Clark. The whole effect of Dubois' statement is to convey the impression that the Repub lican party of the West is dominated by the Mormon Church, and the logical in ference to be drawn is that the Demo cratic ticket in each of these states must be elected if the people hope to throw off the imaginary Mormon yoke. Senator Dubois may be perfectly sincere In all he says about the Mormons, but he certainly has visions. True, he has made Mormonism the leading issue in Idaho this year, and he has driven the Mormon voters out of the Democratic party. But Dubois is not running for re election as a Democrat; he is running as an anti-Mormon. With five Democrats in the Legislature, he realized the futility of making a race on a strict party issue, so he raised a new and an effective issue that seems to have caught hold in Idaho. This fear of Mormon domination does catch on in neighboring states. The agi tation is now confined entirely to Idaho and Utah, and nine-tenths of the talk on the subject right now emanates from Du bois' own state. COST OF SOULS IS CHICAGO Salvation by the Mormon Mis sionary Method Comes to $1500 Per Head. ' VOLUNTEERS AT $5 EACH Twenty-Five-Cent Converts in At lanta, Ga,, Look Cheap Beside . New TTniversali6t Members at Expense of $ 1 50. COST PER CONVERT. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Say Saints. - ..... ..-...$1300 . Universalist .................... 150 Baptist SO English Lutheran . . . .- 'CO Chicago Avenue (Moody's) Church . 24 Methodist 20 Salvation Army . 6 Pacific Garden Mission. ......... 6 Volunteers of America.......-. 6 CHICAGO, 111., July 22. That the cost of salvation in Chicago is higher than in Atlanta, Ga., has been revealed in figures given out by ministers and evangelists of nine different denominations. The Rev. B. H. Peacock, of the Tabernacle Baptist Church, in Atlanta, who said that It costs SI to save a soul in Chicago. While in At. lartta the expense is only 25 cents, fell far short of the mark as far as Chicago is concerned. Instead of $1, the average cost of con verting Chlcagoans amounts to more than GENIUS OF THE JAPANESE ARMY. 9 The Late General Baron Kodama. TOKIO, July 23. General Baron Kodama died here this morning. General Kodama was educated at Rutgers College, and has been called the genius of the Japanese army. Be was Field Marshal Oyama's Chlef-of-Staif during the Japanese-Russian War, and later was appointed Gov ernor of Formosa. 'After the retire ment of Field Marshal Oyama, Gen eral Kodama was made Chief of the General Staff of the Japanese army. 209 for each convert. The most expensive bouIs are those saved by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mor mons). It costs the Mormons $1500 for every Chlcagoan brought into the fold. The "Volunteers of America come near est to following the biblical injunction that salvation shall be without money and without price, because its converts cost the general treasury of the organization only 15 apiece. Twenty-Five-Centers Do Not Stick. Elder German E. Ellsworth, in charge of the Chicago Mormon mission, said he had no faith in converts who cost only 25 cents. "My experience has been that those 25 cent converts that the Rev. Mr. Peacock spoke of don't stick," said he. "We have to pay an average price of $1500 for every convert we make, and they are the kind that stay with us. Cheap converts, like everything else, are too expensive in the end." The Rev. Johnston Myers, pastor of Im manuel Baptist Church, declared that Mr. Peacock's figure of $1 for each Chicago convert was too low. "We have at least 2000 baptisms every year In Chicago," said he. "I should say that it costs our church at least $50 for every new member who comes in and is baptized." "Our converts cost the church nearly $160 each," said the Rev. Frederick C. Priest, pastor of the Universalist Church of the Redeemer. Sinners Tough In Chicago. "The reason for the high price we have to pay for converts is that we have no such evangelistic methods, revivals and public confessions of religion as have our orthodox brethren. The average expense of a Universalist church in Chicago is from $4000 to $6000 a year, and we average from 30 to 60 new members annually." Another reason for the high price of salvation in Chicago was given by the Rev. W. B. Leach, pastor of the Fulton street Methodist Church, who declared that "Chicago sinners are much tougher than elsewhere." The Chicago synod of the English Lu theran Church keeps statistics on the cost of salvation and other items of expense to the church. Every converted Lutheran has cost that church $50, according to the figures given by the Rev. Austin D. Crile, pastor of the Wicker Park Lutheran Church. Figures at Moody Church. "I know Peocock," said A. P. Fitt, of the Moody Bible Institute. "He was here at the institute several months ago. He is a good religious worker, but he evi dently isn't much of an authority on the cost of evangelistic work. Take the Moody Church here as an example. Last year about 250 people united with the church, and this has been the average during Dr. Torrey's pastorate. Our expenses for a year are about $6000. There you have it." The Salvation Army, which "battles for souls" seven days in the week, cannot re duce the cost of conversion below $6.50. "Expense isn't a thing to be considered when you are talking of saving souls," said Commissioner Kilbey, "and you can't put into figures the good we do, but there is no doubt that conversions in Chicago cost more than a dollar apiece." The expenses of a Salvation Army corps 1A " ' Vss t& tf t -' j include the salaries of two paid officers, which vary from $11 to $16 for both, the rental of a hall and incidentals, which bring the total to something over $25 a week. The various corps show an aver age of four conversions each during the month of June. Reports by the Volunteers of America show a slightly smaller cost. "One, from a post paying $26 a week for salaries, re ported eight conversions. The annual report of the old racinc Garden mission in Van Buren street, which has a warmer place in the hearts of Chicago's floating population than any other institution of its kind, shows the expenses for 1906 to have een $6059. One who is familiar with the work estimated the number of souls saved during the year at 1000. In other words, every broken man or fallen woman who asks for prayers In the little old hall costs $6. But Harry Monroe will tell you that they are cheap at that, and that the price was paid 2000 years ago. They don't worry much about money at the Pacific Garden mission. AMERICANS - DRIVEN DUT GENERAIi UPRISING IN MEXICO PLANNED FOR SEPTEMBER 16. Natives Declare That Foreigners Shall Not Rule Their Country. EL PASO, Texas, July 22. (Special.) That Americans are continuing to flee from Cananea, and that Colonel w. C Greene has been forced by the feeling of Mexicans to replace many officials in high positions with native Mexicans, is a statement which was made by Senor Y. de Martenas, confidential clerk of Es- qularez & Martenz, the largest wholesale house in Cananea. He declares further that the revolution promised for September 16, Independence Day of Mexico, is a certainty, and that while the Americans will be driven from the republic, it will not be through blood shed, but through other measures. "My countrymen," said Senor Marte nas, "are determined that they, and not foreigners, shall rule their own country. At the present time, there is reason for comparatively tranquil conditions. The very strong-headed Insist they will join in an uprising September 16. However, they allege that this shall be done In a peaceful but forceful manner, without any recourse to bloodshed. Just what these measures are Senor Martenas did not discuss, but there is every reason to believe that it will be worked by recourse to a great strike system, and that there will be gigantic walkouts on all railroads and great min ing properties of the country, of such a character that the demands of the work men that they shall be ruled by Mexican officers will have a great deal of force. The position which the government will take in the matter Is regarded as that of active suppression of strikes, in the same manner that it would meet a revolution ary uprising of armed forces against the government. Senor Martenas declared that In the mining camps tbe greatest un easiness prevails, and that it was inter fering with the smooth progress of busi ness. I EXPORTS JAPAN USED LARGE QUANTITY DURING WAR WITH RUSSIA. England Is Greatest Purchaser of Beef, hut Sales Fell Off in June. WASHINGTON, July 22. Complete fig ures of the exports of American canned meats for the past fiscal year are shown today in a statement Issued by the De partment of Commerce and Labor. The value of canned meats exported from the United States in June, 1906, was $461,100, against $797,127 in June, 1905, and in the fiscal year 1906, $9,233,410, against $9,977,045 in 1905. The figures for the fiscal year 1906 in cluded: Canned beef, $6,430,446; canned pork. $1,215,857; and other canned meats, $1,587',107. The quantity of canned beef exported in the fiscal year was 64,623,350 pounds, as against 66,688,568 pounds In 1905. The reduction in exports- occurred al most exclusively In the shipments to Japan, which country took large amounts of American beef during the war, but greatly decreased her imports on the dls bandment of the army. The exports to Japan during the fiscal year 1906 were 2.306,583 pounds, against 14,687,166 pounds in 1905, and in the month of June, 1906, were 34,412 pounds, against 3,611,388 pounds in June, 1905. The United Kingdom was the greatest buyer of canned beef, exports to that country increasing 4.758.185 pounds for the fiscal year, but decreasing for the month of June, 1906. BLUFF FAILED TO WORK Laborer Threatens to Kill Employ ment Agent and Is Arrested. What promised to be a mere tragedy simmered down to a mere bluff at the Canadian Employment Agency on Burn side street near Second last evening. Two men, undoubtedly confederates, one of whom had signed to go to Eastern Ore gon, stepped into the agency and de manded that the proprietor, H. J. Ben nett, ship him to Riparia at once. Ben nett explained that he could not ship on Sunday nights and proffered the return of the registration fees, which were re jected. The stranger exhibited a pair of brass knuckles and threatened to kill Bennett, but the lattter telephoned for an officer, and the two men were taken to police headquarters, where they gave the names of Frank Borden and Earl Keys. The knuckles had been passed to a third con federate and were not to be found. Ben nett refused to file a cmplaint of raising a public disturbance against the men and they were dismissed. BURIAL OF LADY CURZ0N Great Simplicity Marks Removal From Carlton House. - LONDON, July 22. The body of Lady Curzon was removed today to Kedleston for burial, with the simplicity which her relatives desire to mark the obsequies. When the coffin was borne from Carlton House and placed in the hearse, the blinas in the neighborhood were drawn. DEATH CAUSED BY HEAT Slight Shower Brings Relief to St. Louis in Evening. - ST. LOUIS, Mo., July 22. The hottest day of the season was recorded here to day, when the thermometer was 93 de grees in the shade. One death and three prostrations were reported. A brief shower brought relief tonight "LestYou Forget" We'd Remind You This morning of that page fall of remarkable Monday bargains, selected from a store full of extraordinary values in today's Mid-Summer Sales told of in the Sunday papers. We add an eyeful of supplementary mentions crowded out yesterday. If you can't come to the store, write or phmne; your orders will be filled promptly All Summer lines in Women's A Grand Clearance of Summer Stocks at prices drastically reduced starts this morning. The great sale of the Beck Wear at Half -Price opens today! WONDERFUL BARGAINS IN EVERY DEPART At Wash Goods Counter First Floor. 8000 YARDS DRESS LAWNS 5c YARD. Handsomely figured Dress Lawns, cool, dainty, beau tiful fabrics for the Summer frocks and pretty dresses, all in new and charming patterns ; special today at, yard ... 52 65c CUSHION TOPS 37c Art Salons Annex, 2nd Floor. White Cushion Tops and Scarfs, stamped in pretty shadow work designs; regular 65c value; spe cial at : 37 JEWELRY BARGAINS 25c Bead Neck Chains 19c Bead Neck Chains, in white, garnet, amber and pink, with 'small alter nating white crystal beads; regular value 25c; special 19 WHO WANTS A BEAUTIFUL DINNER SET? Who Wants to Save $28.2S Third Floor. Come today or send and we'll sell you among other great values, advertised yesterday a hand some 117-piece dinner set worth (and sold at) $183.75 in a regular way other stores might' say even $200 at extra special price of.. $155.00 BOLT AT BALL GAME Five Are Killed Outright by Lightning Flash. FIFTY STUNNED BY SHOCK Electric Fluid Zigzags Along the Wire Netting and Strikes Where the Crowd of Spectators Is Thickest. -MANITOWOC, Wis., July 22. Just be fore a ball game between a local team and a Plymouth, Wis., nine, a fierce electrical storm swept over the city this afternoon and a bolt of lightning struck the grandstand, where the spectators and players had sought shelter. Five persons were killed outright and 20 or more in jured. At least 50 more were stunned by the shock. The dead: ALBERT BKUHRA, 28 years. WALTER UANDL, 18 years. IRVINE WOEIiLENT, 20 years. ANTONE KARKE. 14 years. WILLIAM KNAUTSEN. 18 years. Most seriously Injured Harvey Kono. 10 years old, limbs paralyxed; Frank Boehn. IT years, splinter of wood forced Into breast; Walter Boehn. 12 years, shocked, uncon scious: Theodore Baumeister, 14 years old, cripple partially, may die. The bolt struck the roof and taking a zigzag- course followed the wires to the west end, where the crowd was thickest. Here it followed the wire netting- in front of the grandstand. Of the killed, only Knautsen and Karke were sitting in the grandstand, the others standing before the stand watching, the teams practice on the diamond. The5-shock was so strong as to lift the players on the field from the ground and several were slightly stunned. RUSSELL SAGE IS DEAD (Continued from First Page.) the decay into which the historic home of Washington had fallen and the or ganization of the Ladies' Mount Vernon Association, and the purchase and preservation of Washington's home fol lowed. While in Congress Sage reck oned among bis friends David Wilmot, of Wilmot proviso fame; Galusha A. Grow, Thaddeus Stevens, David Atchi son, the border-ruffian Governor of Kansas; Stephen A, Douglas, James Buchanan and many others famous then. When just rising to the zenith of fame as a statesman. Sage deserted the legislative halls for Wall street. In 1857 he refused a renomination on account of his business Interests. It was the year of the great panic, and only his individual attention to the mi . I i w Garments reduced. Stock of Infants' Taken from the best lines of the best manu factures. No matter what price is paid, the t shoe bought is the best to be had at that price. It's an "Oxford" season never before has the low-shoe busi ness been so brisk. We We say with all truth, we show the most complete stock of children's Shoes on the entire Coast, from Alaska to Panama. Last week eight absolutely new models came in from the best nutest details of business saved 'aim, where his neighbors were ruined. In ls6J while still a resident of Troy be was a delegate to the Republican con vention which nominated Lincoln. In 1S63 Sage disposed of his grocery business and removed to New York, where he immediately became a figure on Wall street. His first venture of any moment was the reorganization of the old Lacrosse Railroad into the Chi cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, of which he became president in 1878. His ven tures since then were for a long term mostly in connection with the Goulds, and It is said that he furnished the ready cash with which Jay Gould wrested the control of Western Union from William H. Vanderbilt. The only time Sage has ever been badly pinched was when Grant and Ward failed in 1S84. Be was credited on that memorable day with losing $8,000, 000. So great was the demand on him that he closed his office and called for police protection. At this moment Jay Gould came to his office and told htm not to be a fool, but to open his office and face the music, which he did. He is now reckoned worth from J9 3,000,000 to $100,001,000, mostly in ready cash. Sage has all his life been the target for cranks, but his life was never at tempted but once. On December 4, 1891, Henry W. Norcross, a Boston crank, tried to blow him up with dynamite be cause he refused to loan him $1,250,300 to build an elevated railway in Boston. Sage was uninjured, but the dynamiter was blown to atoms, and Sage's office at No. 71 Broadway wrecked. Russell Sage was most bucolic in ap pearance, wearing cheap "hand-me-down" clothes and was readily taken for a farm er. Time and again he has been "toted" all over town by "bunco gents," dined and treated handsomely under the im pression that he was a "Jay." When they learned who their Intended victim was the "bunco steerers", would drop him like a hot poker and quietly kick them selves in private. In benefactions to public or private charities Russell Sage was never very generous. He once gave $8000 toward clearing Dr. Hepworth'e church of debt, and tor a long time held the mortgage on Talmage's church. At the time of death Mr. Sage was an officer and director in 25 great railroad and telegraph corporations. In 1867 he originated the present method of trad ing in "puts," "calls" and "straddles," in which he dealt later on a colossal scale. When he purchased a seat on the New York Stock Exchange in 18.4 It provided that he never appear on the floor of the exchange. For many years Mr. Sage occupied dur ing the Winter an old-fashioned brown stone mansion, at 506 Fifth avenue, from which he was reluctantly compelled to move about . four years ago, owlnS to the invasion of commerce. His Sum mers were spent at his country place at Lawrence, where he died. Mr Sage was married twice; m 1M1 to Miss May Wlnne, daughter of Moses I Winne of Troy. His wife died in New York City in 1867. and two years later he married Margaret Olivia, daugh ter of Joseph Slocum, of Syracuse, N. Y. Thaw Does Not Attend Service. NEW YORK, July 22. Harry K. Thaw spent a quiet day in the Tombs today. Contrary to his previous custom he did not attend the religious service conducted by Chaplain Wade In the morning, and when asked by one of the keepers why he did not refused to make any answer. Great News From The Shoe Store HOSTS OF NEW ARRIVALS ARE "VISITING." The new Shoes will soon find new owners and go to a home of their own. Here the caller finds "PICKED" SHOES expected it planned for it, and are ready for it, A WORD OF OUR New Shoes for Children makers of children's shoes in America, All leathers are represented, both patent and dull finish. Lace and button styles, regular or "Blucher" cut, hand turned or welt soles. Styles full of "snap" and "ginger." Sturdy shoes that will stand the strain of vacation romps or quieter school wear. A plenty of the natural "foot-form" lasts. Send the chil dren 's feet trooping to this store and we '11 fit them carefully, properly, with expert judgment and we'll please the parents' purse. No matter whether it's an "A-A" or "E-E" width, the feet shall be fitted equally well. We show over 2000 pairs of women's white Ox fords to choose from today I Where else can you find an assortment like that T And the shoes are all new, dainty, cool; stylish to the last degree. 6000 packages of White Shoe Cleaner. A plenty here of- Summer Footwear and "fixm's" at little prices to please all. RUINED BYTHE FIRE Home Fire & Marine Company Will Wind Up Affairs. ALLY OF FIREMEN'S FUND Directors Will Endeavor to Reach Terms With Creditors to Avoid Being Thrown Into Receiver's Hands. BAN FRANCISCO, Cal., July 22. (Special.) The Home Fire & Marine Insurance Compaay, a well-known lo cal institution and companion of the Firemen's Fund, finds Itself unable to meet obligations and will go into liqui dation. Tbe directors will endeavor to come to some arrangement with the creditors, to the end that the company may not be thrown Into the hands of a receiver. All of the stock of the Home Fire & Marine Company is owned by the Fire men's Fund, also a local concern, which has done an enormous business In Cali fornia, Oregon and Washington. A few days after the fire the Firemen's Fund made a loan to the Home of $603,000. It was thought that this sum would be sufficient to save the smaller concern, but all the estimates were wide of the mark. x The assets of the Home Company, in cluding the $600,000, will reach only $1,400,000. Against this, the company has a liability of $2,050,000, as a result of the fire. In addition the company has more than $1,000,000 in reinsur ance, which it stands but small chance of collecting. What makes this failure so signifi cant is the close association of the concern with the Firemen's Fund. 6o far the Firemen's Fund has not been able to begin payment on any of its policies. It is making every effort to pay in full, but its losses will reach such an enormous figure that even the best friends of the company fear the worst. ' The losses of the Firemen's Fund will reach $7,000,000. In addition, there is $2,500,003 in reinsurance, the collection of which is problematical. It will be seen, therefore, that over $12,000,000 is involved in the movements of these two companies. Henry J. Dutton is the president of both companies. Rockefeller Is Coming Home. CLEVELAND, July 22. Unless his pres ent plans are changed, John D. Rocke feller Is coming to Cleveland to spend the latter part of tbe- Summer, and will arrive here Saturday, July 28, accom panied by his physician. Dr. H. F. Big-gar.