i THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28. ID08. GREAT QUARTBR-QFP SALE Of Mens Shirts, Neckwear, Underwear, Hosiery, Fancy Vests, Suitcases, Bags, Umbrellas, Handkerchiefs, Suspenders and Sweaters My last quarter-off sale was such a success that it was withdrawn after one week, so it will pay you to take advantage AT ONCE. Make your purchases for CHRISTMAS NOW and SAVE V4 on above articles MEN'S SHIRTS dsFSW Men's $300 Q9 Shirts' now Men's $2-50 C1 fl7 SP'W Shirts, now OliOl &ifMjm Men's $200 1 Rfl MiWl Shirts, now OI.OU HMpiaf Men's $1.50 01 10 AO Men's $1.00 7Cp O'' Shirts, nov.r. , I Ju CHRISTMAS NECKWEAR $3.00 Ties, 00 OC now uZiZJ $2.50 Ties, CI Q7 now OliOl $2.00 Ties, 01 Crt now O li JU $1.50 Ties, 01 10 now Oil XL $1.00 Ties, now 75c 50c Ties, now. ....... .38c HANDKERCHIEFS Initial or Plain. At rr TT Jl mm p ai.VAi xxa.iiujs.ei- uft chiefs, now .. .1 uu l-v ntkn t-t o ti h it-qt . r- n U2 chiefs, now JUu fll 1 SJsVX w xxauuxvci- jun B55 chiefs, now JUU 'zoc xianaKer- Tun .chiefs, now lOu tOrn TTonVcr. ft chiefs, nowJtl.......UU FANCY VESTS & to W m I v Men's Vests, Men's Vests, Men's Vests, Men's Vests, Men's Vests, Men's Vests, $8.00 now. ...... . $6.00 now. . $4.00 now. ... ... $3.00 now..... $2.00 now...:.. $1.50 now.,.. S6.00 S4.50 S3.00 S2.25 S1.50 $1.12 MEN'S MUFFLERS $4.00 Muffler, JJ $3.00 Muffler, CO OR now OZiZJ $2.50 Muffler, 01 0 now u liDZ $2.00 Muffler, 01 rfl now 0 I UU mwrnik 'III SUSPENDERS $4.00 Suspenders, QQ flfl now UuiUU $3.00 Suspenders, 00 OC now. uZiZ J $2.00 Suscenders. 01 CO. ,? v z ' a i nil now wiiuu $1.00 Sustienders. 7C ' i n ' now i uu 50c Suspenders, QQp now. ., . . ..... uOu UMBRELLAS $10.00 Umbrellas, 07 Cfl now ,.01 iJU co rut HmtM-nllin rflft Aft t5 nn TTmhrfillaa. Ol "7C & now UUi0 ItM $3 m TTmhrfillas. OO OC f n m- now M $1.50 Umbrellas. 01 10 'ft : iii.! uu w . . . . -mr ALL SUITCASES AND BAGS, '- ONE-QUARTER OFF. Leading Clothier BEN SELLING Leading Clothier FLEET MINUS GOAL Inadequate Number of Colliers During Recent Voyage. COWLES MAKES REPORT Ktar-Admiral Show How KntMy Squadron Coulil Hare Tkcu n .icrd n a n Kin b rra WASHINGTON. Nnv. 27. Had for irn on.pI. cation arisen or had a com li nation been effertPrt between for eipn shipowners, our fleet mi grit t have I i t ri-main 1 Injj helpless in nme for Is n nn. is rh. observation made t-v Hear-Admiral William S. Cowles, ililef of th KuuJpment Bureau of the Navy. li. his annual report in rilf rifulnc tiu- lark of colliers to supply 1hf int !eMp f l.vt w itb coal on it a t-rnise aounii the world. The tpt.il number of Amertottn vw f ei that i.iiiut have been obtained v purrhaae or other wipe would not have hern -ijablt' of carry In a: a suffi rirnt amount of mal to supply the fleet n its voyas:i' and it was necessary to charter fort-inn vessels for this pur Iose. He reritmrnends that steps bo 1 akn immediately to supply an ade quate number ci colliers for the Navy. Admiral t'nvW report says that during the last year marked progress has been made In wireless telegraphy. Ite.-ent vrlopmnt.- warrant the es tablishment of hisi-power, lonp-dis-tanre st xtlons. H lde tiie erection of jurh a stat Ion at Wanhlnjrton in the tuar future, tiie hureau contemplates e vent ually their construction on the I'aeifir Coast, at Hawaii, Guam, Samoa and the Philippine Islands, so that the f'.ect wi'l at all times he in direct com. ammlratUin with Washington, whor rver it may he. WOMAN HCRSETHIEF DEAD Plrs at Walla Walla in Giving Blrlh to Twin. WAI.I.A WAIJ.A. Wh.. Nov 27. (Special. V-Th. Iwdy of Mn. Carl Mejvr. formerly Myrtle Tipton. ag-d V) yran. t'n. notorious tromn-ln-man'j flolhtr.R r.'thirf. rx-convlrt and well-known rBTArtr In lv-al wlic rirc!r. lie In 3nnf?iy's undertiikinj: parlors in tills fttv annltlnr burial tomorrow. "h;.'1 In either ami are her twin bbs. born with th Ut breath of ihir mother. The thr will be placed b.-neth the sod tomorrow, all occpy lntf the same srave. Myrtle Tipton was several years afro employed on a wheat ranch near Pren--ott. ll'.iji county. For more than a year she wore mens ctothinjr and did the work of a man on the farm with no ;i-pu-ion as to her sex. She was enabled tli:ji to steal horses at various times, iraklr a "haul' in the business. Clear With Lumber Cargoes. ASTOIilA. Or, Nov. C tSpec!al.V-The Wmninc intc XmLac ctera4 i Ji Custom House today for Monterey, with a cargo of 4W,ono feet of lumber, loaded at Prescott. The steamer J. Marhoffer cleared for San Francisco with lan.000 feet of lumber loaded at Portland, feet loaded at Rainier. 125.000 feet loaded at ITescott and SS.OOrt feet loaded at War renton. The steamer tSeorae W. Kenwick cleared today for San Francisco witn 1,0..HX feet of lumber loaded at the Hammond Lumber Company's plant. EACH SAYS OTHER DID IT Jfight at midnight Italian Colony in California Has Bloody Battle. Captains of rinanee and Gcorgic Discuss Collision. NEW YORK. Nov. 27. Wreckers were at work today In the submerged hull of the Tanaina Railroad steamer Finance, which was sunk off Sandy Hook yesterday In collision with the Gcorgic. The after cabin of the Finance has been loosened by the sea and was washed about today. The hull of the sreamer was completely submerged. Oovernmcnt inspectors bepan today an Investigation of the cause of the collision. Captain Bowhray. of the Finance, hns been quoted as saying that he the Geoiulc when she was nearly a mile distant and that the collision would have been avoided if that vessel had backed her engines and put her helm to port. Cm the other hand. Captain Clarke, of the GeorRlc. says that the Finance did not observe the signals to pass on the uort siiie of the Georglc. WASHINGTON. Nov. 27. The Isthmian Canal Communion is duplicating- All of i'n mail forwarded on the steamer Finance, which sank In the lower part of New York Hay. It Is estimated nere that the miscellaneous carg-o of the Finance, intended for use in connection with the Canal, is worth about Jliirno. C.KOIK.F. GOl LD'ft DU SHTEB HAKU DEllir. -Cop'yrlght. 1909. by Marceau, N T Miu Marjorle Gould. NEW YORK. Nov. 27. (Spe cial.) Marjorie Gould U one of the prettiest of the season's dbutantea. She Is the oldest dauKhter of Georjfe Gould and Kdith Kingdon Gould. She hat been brouirht up at her father's country Jiume in Uakewood and, though not the Iea?t hit mannish, she is the up-to-date American Sir I. with a thorough knowledge of out-door sports. TWO MEN ARE WOUNDED Wonld-Be Dynamiters Driven Oil When About 'to Blow Up Cabin. Then Pistols, Ilifles and Knives Are Used. OAKLAND. Nov. 27. As the outcome of a desperate and bloody battle fought in the little settlement of Bayvlew, Con tra Costa County, two miles north of the county line, early this morning, two men were terribly wounded, one of whom will die. The wounded men and their assail ants are Italians. The weapons used were dynamite, shotguns, revolvers and knives. Over 50 shots were fired during the fight. The injured are; Joe Taubaudo. who will die, and his brother, Antone Tau baudo, shot in a half dozen places. Throe Men In Jail. Three men are In the jail at Richmond. but they are only a few of the gang which participated In the fight. Officers are . now searching for the other man. Those in Jail are Manuel Lopex, Peter Taubaudo and Domingo Basqucz. It was after midnight that the rest dents of Bayview were terrified by the shooting. It was not. however, until day light that any Information regarding the tragedy was conveyed to the officers. Then Constable Murray, of Richmond, and Deputy Sheriff Jemcitoza. of San Pablo, went to the scene. Taubaudo could not give any Intelligible explana tion of the trouble leading up to the battle. Dynamite Followed by Bullets. The Italians concerned work In the San Pablo rock quarry. Soon after mid night, according to Taubaudo. a gang surrounded the cabin in which the Tau baudo brothers lived and began shower ing it with rocks. Taubaudo was re turning home and saw two men creep up to place a charge of dynamite under the cabin. Desperate with fear, the man rushed through the crowd and Into the cabin to warn his brother. Then he started out again to fight off the assailants. As lie came out of the house a full charge of buckshot struck him and he fell, mortally wounded. The other brother opened fire from the cabin and a general fight with knives and pistols followed and the intruders were driven back. FINDS THREE NEW RIVERS Lerringwell Keturns Krom Two years' Exploration of Alaska. CHICAGO. Nov. 27. F.rnest D. Lef fingwell. geoli'gist and explorer, returned to Chicago yesterday from a two years sojourn in the barren wastes on the northern shore of Alaska. Div Leffing irail. bad ec hi ftrlmarj tb tuk of ascertaining whether or not there was any land north of Alaska. Despite the fact that the party was unsuccessful in finding any land in the vast expanse of uncharted country, there will be placed to the credit of Dr. Lef fingwell and his party by the geological societies of the world the exploring and mapping of three rivers in the frozen North. On May IS. 1906, Dr. Lefflngwell. ac companied by Captain Einar Mikkelsen, Dr. George Howe, Ejnar Dltlarsen, a Danish naturalist, and a crew of four sailors, set sail from Vancouver, B. C, In a sealer called the Duchess of Bed ford, with Banksland as a destination. Ijist night Dr. Leffingwell said: "Aided by the . Royal Geographical So ciety of London and the American Geo graphical Society of New York, I pur chased a sealing vessel of 65 tons. 'After we passed Point Barrow the ice was so heavy that we were unable to go on until Captain Cottle, of the steam ship Belvldere, towed us 100 miles through the broken ice. We finally reached the Flaxman Islands. 'In March, 1907, we started on a two months' sled trip over the ice In search of land. Everywhere we sounded we obtained such great depths that we did not consider it advisable to search fur ther in that direction. "The crew left at the end of the first year and returned to civilization. Later Captain Mikkelsen left. He made a mar velous Journey of 3000 miles over the dreary wilderness of Alaska, from the Klaxman Islands, to Valdez. "Captain Mikkelsen's departure left me alone of all who had come North In the Duchess of Bedford. I decided to remain during the Winter and do geo logical work and surveying. Most of the time I worked alone, but was occasion ally helped by an Eskimo boy. "I shall return next year to Flaxman and othe regions of the Beaufort Sea and the Arctic, and probably will remain there for three or four years. FAVORS CHANGE IN RULES Gardiner Uncertain .Regarding Vote for Speakership in House. WASHINGTON. Nov. 27. Representa tive Gardiner, of Massachusetts, was a caller on the President today and as he was leaving the White House, gave out the following as to his stand on the Speakership situation. "I shall not decide how to vote on the Speakership until I know the names of the candidates. "Personally I am more interested in a charwre in the rules than In a change In the Speakership. If we members or the House continue to adopt rules abandoning our power and shifting our responsibility on to the Speaker's shoulders, we must not go back to our constituent and cry because he exercises that power, while we cheerfully leave him to bear all the responsibility. 'Heretofore the rules nave Been pre scribed by the majority caucus; in other words, by a majority of the majority and the motive power has been supplied by a still smaller subdivision of the House. The time has now come when those of us who are dissatisfied must do one of three things either carry the party caucus, refuse to caucus on rules or shut up. I believe that our best chance lies in the second line of procedure.'' MEN'S W00L COATS $1. Vests of pure wool cloth J0.50 Youths' Suits, sizes to 35 J 3.50 Men's Pants, splendid goods jl.00 Boys' Knee Pants, ages 6 to 15 25 Mens All-Wool Suits 15.00 Men's fine All-Wool Overcoats. . J1J.D0 At the cl03ing-out sale of the whole sale stork. Front and Oak streets, in the wholesale district. Pave 25 per cent on everything at Jietiffaj'a, (H XFaabLofioa street. STORM KEEPS MEN ASHORE 4 Qem Man SALLORS FROM FLEET STAY IX MANILA ALL XIGHT. Taken tq Ships In Coast Guard Ves sels Early in Morning Officers Miss Reception. MANILA, Nov. 28. The storm last night kept the liberty men from the At latic fleet ashore all night. The waters of the bay were exceedingly rough and Rear-Admiral Sperry sent a wireless message ashore to the effect that they should not attempt to return to their ships until weather conditions were more favorable, and directed them to go to the halls of the local Y. M. C. A. and the Knights of Columbus, where provision was made to take care of them. All of the stranded sailors were taken to their respective ships at 7 o'clock this morning in three large coast guard ves sels. The storm kept a majority of the officers of the fleet from attending the reception given b Governor-General Smith, it being too rough for the launches to make the passage to the shore. All but a dozen officers, who were ashore before the storm broke, attended today's entertainment features, which included a military hippodrome, football and basketball games and free theatrical performances and concluded with a ban quet to the officers by the Army and Navy Club tonight. 25 per cent off 'on hand-painted china A. D. S. Cold and Grippe Cure 25c, at Kyssell s. 2.SS Morrison 4tn ann .ttn. IF II DISAPPEARS, IT'S ECZEMA How to Tell Whether a Skin Affec ilon la an Inherited Blood Disease or Not. Sometimes It is hard to determine whether a skin affection Is a sign of a blood disorder or simply a form of eczema. Even physicians are often puzzled in their diagnosis. .The best way for" any one afflicted is to go to the Skldmore Drug Co., or any good druggist who. handles pure drugs and obtain 50 cents' wtorth of poslam. Ap ply this, and if the itching stops at once and the trouble Is cured in a few days it may be set down as having been eczema, as this is the way poslam acts in the worst cases of eczema, and In curing acne, herpes, blotches, tetter, piles, salt rheum, rash, barber's and other forms of Itch, scaly scalp, and all surface skin affections. Those who will write to the Emer gency Laboratories, No. 32 West Twenty-fifth Street. New York, can secure, by mail free of charge, a supply suffi cient to cure a small eczema surface or clear a complexion overnight and remove pimples in twenty-four hours. r'".' j PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cluiea uh1 btiuttfie the h&lx. Promojef ft loxumnt rrowth. Never Fall to Betrtore Gray, tLMir to its xoamrui uoior. Caret nip diwwae. t hair falling. Outside cleanliness is less than half the battle. A man may scrub himself a dozen times a day, and still he unclean. Good health means cleanliness not only outside, but inside. It means a clean stomach, clean bowels, clean Mood, a clean liver, and new, clean, healthy tissues. The man who is clean in this way will look it and act it. He will work with energy and think clean, clear, healthy thoughts. He will never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood disorders. Dyspepsia end indigestion originate in unclean stom achs. Blood diseases are found where there is unclean blood. Consumption and bronchitis mean unclean lungs. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery prevents these diseases. It makes a man's insides clean and healthy. It cleans the digestive organs, makes pure, clean blood, aad clean, healthy flesh. It restores tone to the nervous system, and cures nervous exhaustion and prostration. It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs. Constipation is the most unclean uncleanliness. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pel lets cure it. They never gripe. Easy to take as candy. Out to-day V December list of New Victor Records The complete list for December will be found in the December number of Century, Everybody's, McClure's, Munsey's, .Scrib ner's ; and January Cosmopolitan. Every Victor Record is a record of quality a work of art. Hear the new Victor Records at your dealer's. He will gladly play them for you. A Victor for every purse $10 to $300. Easy payments if desired. Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, NjJ. To get best results, use only Victor Needles on Victor Records