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Show A ALTERATION Commencing Thursday Morning, October 22 ON ACCOUNT OF MAKE EXTENSIVE THE STEADY INCREASE IN WE ARE COMPELLED OUR CLOTHING BUSINESS WE HAVE, T WILL THE HISTORY OF OGDEN. TO GIVE MORE ROOM TO THIS DEPARTMENT, ALTERATIONS CONCLUDED TO MAKE THIS SALE TflE GREATEST IN TO THERE-FOR- E, BE THE GRANDEST OPPORTUNITY FOR THE SWELL DRESSER TO SECURE HIS FALL SUIT AT THE AND OVERCOAT AT SUCH BIG REDUCTIONS THAT HAS NEVER BEFORE BEEN ATTEMPTED COMMENCEMENT OF THE SEASON. ALL THE NEW STYLES WHICH HAVE JUST ARRIVED ARE INCLUDED IN THIS SALE, WHICH CONHAVE SISTS OF THE HIGHEST GRADE CLOTHING NOW ON THE MARKET. THESE NEW ARRIVALS THE ATTENTION OF THE MOST PARTICULAR DRESSERS THIS SEASON, WHICH THE IS THE HANDSOMEST AND MOST EXCLUSIVE IN POINT OF STYLE WITHOUT BEING EXTREME. EVERY BY DESIRED FABRICS, COLORS AND PATTERNS CONTAIN THAT TOUCH OF INDIVIDUALITY ALREADY ATTRACTED WELL GROOMED MAN. NOTICE OUR PRICE REDUCTIONS QUALITY OF THE TOGS WE CARRY HERE BELOW, THEN VISIT OUR STORE AND EXAMINE THE AND YOU WILL COME TO THE CONCLUSION THAT THIS IS NO FAKE SALE OCCASION. Positively No Charg'es, Approvals or Exchanges During the Sale SUITS 915.00 SUITS FOR 925.00 SUITS FOR ... ... ... ... 930.00 SUITS FOR ... 918.00 SUITS FOR 920.00 SUITS FOR 922.50 SUITS FOR 236 25 St. 915.00 VALUES FOR $ 12.00 S 10.00 917.50 VALUES FOR 12.50 13.50 15.00 920.00 VALUES FOR 6.65 20.00 930.00 VALUES FOR 13.05 15.05 18.85 20.45 21.50 23.05 1 925.00 VALUES FOR 927.50 VALUES FOR 935.00 VALUES FOR 1-8- (2.50 PANTS FOR 915.00 COATS FOR .. $ 10.00 918.00 COATS FOR ... ... 12.50 ... 13.50 5 .... 2.25 (3.00 PANTS FOR 93.50 PANTS FOR 2.G0 920.00 COATS FOR 94.00 PANTS FOR 94.50 PANTS FOR .3.00 3.35 3.75 .4.50 925.00 COATS FOR 95.00 PANTS FOR 95.00 PANTS FOR G O. N. OVERCOATS Odd Pants CraveneLLes 930.00 COATS FOR ... ... ... .... 935.00 COATS FOR ... 927.50 COATS FOR 940.00 COATS FOR -- .20.00 .... 23.30 ... 26.65 C O. ID IE BJ 16.75 18,35 Both Phones CLOTHIERS TO MEN WHO CARE HI TEM UP Many Big Colleges. QUARTER, YALES PROBLEM. Princeton Hat Goad NboIouo Opti- mism at Harvard Chicago Strong Outlook Dubioua at Pennsylvania, Camall. Minnoaota and Wisconsin. Tba football Besson of 1008 for tha Mf colleges of tl rant and wretTiaa bow begun, and from now on until tha anow die, or later perhaps the ebaaera will be Id the llmellgbt Thla seaaon waa uabered In with eon. dltiona leas chaotic than have prevailed at anj time ainee the adoption of the mw rules, and tha coaches of tha big elevens bava something mors definite ta work on. The possibilities of tba mw game art thoroughly appreciated, and definite campaign, can he napped wot at the start of the season. As waa to be expected. the Carlisle Indiana opened the season for the big team.. These players are the chief advertising medium of the government school at Carlisle, fa., and aa they have little else to do besides play football they are always In good form weeks before any other prominent la eleven. While It la difficult to predict the strength of football at thla early stage of the year, the reporta of conditions at the various big universities should I rore of considerable help. At Yale the main problem Is In developing a quarter to fill the place of Tad Jones. The ends will be weak, j but the main work will be picking a quarter. Hopkins of tha freshmen team. Bingham, second substitute on the varsity, and Kilpatrick, former Andover halfback, seem to be the strongest men at present Captain Burch will play right end. Haines, atar ad and drop kicker of the freshmen; Merserean. tackle on the aarne, and Logan. a sab" on tbs varsity, ara tba most valuable candidates for left and. For tackles Andrus and Hobbs ara the best material. Both of these men played on tha second team all seaaon last year. For guard. Graenongb of the freshmen and Cooney and Goebel, laat year's vanity regulars, will fight It out for the two positions. It la not unlikely that Cooney will be shifted lo renter. If be Is not Hyd of tba 1011 team Is the strongest nun out for the position. Harvard followers are Jubilant over men they bare the large number of li E il e Reports of Football Conditions at from wliom to pick their team lucm-lien- . There are fearer candidates for the line than any other department. The chok-- of a lint team should uot be very difficult to far aa the line la concerned. Then le Nourse for center. Burr for oue guard and McKay for the other. The return of Fish, tackle on laut year's team, will provide for the other aide of the Une. (Trowley aud Cmiiett, laat year's freshmen ends, with Houston, a substitute In 1007, are tlie likeliest looking ends, Brown and Cutler and ftpragu aland aa tba most promising material for quarterback. At Princeton they an mors confident now than at this early period for several seasons back. Enough veterans have returned to form a strong nucleus. The Tlgen an better fixed aa regards quarterback than any other team. Paptaln Dillon la a field geueral par excellence, and bis experience will prove of deckled IwneOt to Ibe team. Princeton will have a bard time Hud-Ina man wlw can make a drop kick as well aa Harlan did. Penn'a football prospects received a aad blow receutly wbea Coach Sol Metxgar announced that Dexter Draper would not play football this fall. The loss of this All Amerk-atackle leaves an already weakened linn in a rather lad shape. The coaches are doing their best to develop a strong line, and every man who has any else, regardless of expert-enre- , has been given a careful tryout, but the prospects are rattier dubious. The outlook at Cornell la somewhat discouraging. Of laat year's team only four men have reported (lard ucr and Caldwell. I oth candidates for quarter-lack- ; Harris, candidate for left end, and Tydcuian. right half. The Chicago eleven is Just now the most feared aggregation In the middle west The early signs are that Cbira- go will round iuto championship form a sooner than any of her rival. eight members of laat year's team bavlug returned. The eight veterans are Captain Steffen, Page, Iddings, Falk. Kelly, Worthwlue. 8cbooinier and Hof-ma- Minnesota, according to present prospects, will have a bard task getting ready a football team op to the standard of paat seasons. Only four of last year' regulars are left, the rest having ben graduated la June, among them being Captain Sbukoecbt The four old timers who remain are Baden-uiacbean end; Young, a tickle; Mobl-tad-t a guard, and Coughlin, who has played at quarter. Coughlin probably will be shifted to the back field thla season. Illinois, with nine veterans on hand, looks good for a footlAH revival, and the orange and blna students ara pulling hard for a clear string or victories, with a win over Chicago aa a reminder of changed condition! to Coach Stage. . Wisconsin Is regarded aa g "dark r. New Belasco Production Is a Success. BLANCHE BATES AS HEROINE Emetipnal Drama Written by William J Hwrlbur, Weak at fttart, but Later Dsvtiopi Dramatis Strength Tails sf Woman s Efforts ts Provo Innocont a Criminal Husband Whom 8ho Dost Not Know to Bo Guilty. From Our Now York Dramatic Correspondent. "Tha Fighting Hope." with Blanrhe Bates in the leading role, la the latest Belasco success at tha Stuyvesaat theater. Although the opening part of the play proved amateurish. It later gained dramatic headway that carried it Into however, was not hers. Ae Mis Dal she waa there to discover evidence of Granger's Innocence and Temple's guilt, and as evidence of any sort was a long time In turning up she could only wait and dick out her emotions ou tha typewriter. Sympathetic though yon .were, yon could scarcely share her heartfelt Interest in her children. Your Imagination soon tired of the children. It was a relief to forget tha mother and stud; the secretary, who came to work In hlplesa brown satin and- moved about with a kimono walk that recalled The Darling of the Gods." The play wai as slender as herself, but it was by no means so clear rnt, so high strung Miss Bates' face twitched with emotions that weren't ready for delivery. Usually a Belasco heroine pounds door when worst comes to worst, bn' thla one pounded her husband. And Robert Granger deserved a beating U ever a atage cur did. Mias Bates saved her strength for this moment Only s small part of it waa exhausted when the woman found a letter In which bet husband revealed the fact that It wat ba who had overcertified a check that brought about the failure of the Gotham Trust company. Lika the brash young woman In "The Lion and tha blouse," she bad entered the employ ol the rich man of Influence to spy upon him. And after she knew he loved bet the discovery came that he was.lnuo rent and that her husband was guilty. The letter would clear away the cloud of iccusatloa. over Temple' bead and save him from prison, but It would put the everlasting brand on her hue band, the father of her children. Thli last Miss Bates told by a broken cry In ibe throat that was more effective than her first heroics. And so the wo man took from the safe the letter ovei which Temple was already hysterical with Joy and burned It. Then entered the husband, wrapped In an overcoat and tba lie that be had been pardoned. The coward's over when be learned that fares to she knew of his guilt and might testify against him were bad enough, bnt the charge that aba waa living with Temple and that he would bring thla out at the trial was almost beyond human endurance. even with the footllgbte te keep off the mob. U waa a relief to set Misa Bates clinched fists deicend upon - the list of stag falta. Tbo first act offered nothing but a aeries of tedious explanations that betrayed the amateurish band or the author. William J. Hurlburt. and It stretched the long arm of coincidence until every muscle ached. Even Burton Temples home at Ossining was In sight of the prison where Robert Granger was serving "time" for a crime which Temple waa supposed to have rommltel The simple geography of drama was arranged with a view to what nght be said and thought when the leading characters happeni-- to walk to the window. And Granger's wife, who came to thla home or the president of the Gotham Trust company In the guise of Miss Dale, secretary, wasn't altogether a stranger. The Irritating old housekeeper welcomed her as a dear friend of other days. Temple, trm, waa sure be had seen her somewhere, while she recognised him as the Meal man of her office building past This Is Indeed a small world when there are only five characters la a three act play. And what la borne without a thief In these stage days? We hare only to recall Bernstein's parlor melodrama. "The Thief," to realize what a thief la worth him. to tba playwright Bnt that was not all. Through an Just as the play seemed to be constructed from wltbont to Miss Blanche other letter that was dictated to tht Bates' acting of the true wife aad un- secretary tbfr learned that he had itol-enot for her, but for another womao truthful secretary waa purely external he had been supporting But whom a for large part of the play. This fault police whistle put atop to any fnrthei revelations, and after the wife had enhorse." but It la said that the Ba abled the fugitive to escape through will come np strong with the window pistol shot announced that team lo years. For this reasoi an end had been put to him. game, which Miss Bates flashed out brilliantly In the western season, Is regarded a the lasract, and Howell Uaneel played of the big contests. Granger ao well that you could forgive d hM-wif- him only arter leaving the theater upon certain policies with respect ts Charles Rlchman made Temple entire Morocco at the Algerine conference, ly trustworthy. As Temple's boqse and, Mulal having come along and takkeeper Misa Loretta Welle also did en the throne away from his brother, well. ROBERT BUTLER. the situation la somewhat "cumfud-dled.- " ao to speak, in consequence Newfangled Pitching Delivery. France baa eyes on Morocco, and GerTha knuckle ball already la a back has many eyes on France. The kaiser aumber. One of the big league manta Jealous of French interference in tha who declines agers, tojrilow his nami to ba need, ts said to have a pltchei affairs of Morocco, aud It was this la under cover who can throw tha elbow part that made It difficult for the powban. The pitcher haa an elbow la ers aa represented lu the Algednt prove It conference to agree on a policy which would assure their respective commercial Interests In tha empire of the MULAI HAFID. Moore and keep Its principal ports for business with the world wltbNow Moorish Ruler Who Is a Bona af Open ont giving the French too much to say Contention In Europe. The agreeSince Malal Hafld of Morocco canoed a boat ruling the domain. reached was supposed ment was which a note of discord In the concert of the to have adjusted the matter satisfacpowers In his efforts to upset the but now that Mulal baa defeattorily, throne of his brother. Abdul Asia, the ed hta brother In aeveral buttle and personality of thla aspiring young man practically established himself in power the peace of Europe ta again threatened by tha question of how, when and where the recognition of the more for powerful of the two contestants the throne should be accomplished. Abdul Aziz, who of course ought now to czll himself Abdul Aswaa, having served about sixteen years aa la loath to give up the Jolc which In spite of Its attendant dangers Lu afforded him considerable sport Re has ainuked himself a good deal with othbicycles, cameras, automobiles and er novelties of the age, and hla brother orthodox Mulal, who claims to be more In the Mohammedan faith, proclaims all such things Christian deviltries. his Mu 1st haa succeeded In replacing Moors the of brother in the affections In part by representing that Abaui Aziz baa fallen from grace. Howe; even Mala! fell once, when he altowro himself to be photographed, a processof t ing contrary to the teachings Koran. He only permitted of himself to be taken on the aul-ta- n, anaer-standin- that no copy of the g Plct be made imbllc In Morocca J which goes to show that, like ui other iieople. be thinks It not so W sin If only yon are uot found out should Journal want ads deliver the goods KrUl WATW AWV TBO BOTOABCB TO OKI or BUiiTAx'a uuen has assumed leading International Interest It la not that the world In general cares so much whether Morocco le ruled by one brother or the other. 11 !s bound to be ruled badly In elthei case. Rut the powers of Europe agreed $2.00 HATS Arc Perfection |