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Show left awing that caught hla SAN KUAN Cl SCO. Nov. 17. Stanley Ketchel of Grand Kapida, Mich., re- opponent flush on the chin. The end gained the middleweight championship came tn the eleventh round. Prior to thla Ketchel had demonstrated ciearly that he waa master of his opponent at any kind of fighting. Round by round Ketchel choae his opportunities and when opportunity afforded planted his right to head or (body, generally escaping without a damaging return Belying his appear nut and forcing the fight throughout every minute, Ketchel was stronger up to the moment of the knockout Once blow than waa his opponent. during an aggreaslve moment they fell in the ringside and toppled through the ropes, wrapped in a dose embrace. It waa a left to the stomach that sent Papke to the rope at thla Juncture. In falling, Papke seised hla opponent, and the force of hla rush them clear oil the platform and over the heads of the spectators. A hundred willing hands assisted them to the center, and In a moment they were grapplelng In a clinch. Ketchel was a victor throughout Ilia appearance during the early rounds did not tend to encourage those who had backed him at odds of 10 to 7 and 10 to 0. but his awkward delivery of blows, deceptively fast, seemed to lull Papke Into a false sense of security. Stanley Katchal, tha Plucky e Whe Regained Hie Leat Easy to Answer. Yeaterday Afternoon by DefeatNiece Uncle, they aay there are ing Billie Papke, Farmer Champion. more marriages of blondea than of Why la It, 1 wondar? of the world yeaterday and revoraed brunettes. Uncle hla defeat of last September, when he Singleton (a confirmed bachrent Hilly Papke, the lllinola thunder- elor) H'm! Naturally, the bolt, crashing to the floor before a ed ones go first Stray Stories. well-directe- d car-ri.-- Middle-weig- ht, Lau-rel- light-hea- d House Grand Opera 28th SaturdayMatinee and Night November d Civil War Among Great Defensive Bodies Over Pig- skin. Friendly But Greatest Fight & Clifford Amusement Co. Offer a Famous Novel . JANE EYRE? The Denver Republican says: Jane Eyre" best attraction seen at the Ilaker Theater since its erection. Bargain Matinee 25c .a,,,,,! Granite had stood in the front rank teats. Balt Lake can really not rivhtf.jiy lay claim to the state championship inaamuch aa it has refused to pii(y Wit'i Granite, when a game with tln.t s. hool was contested on god grounds for first place until yesterday, when ah played the "Baby" act and reufsed to play here because there waa a little snow on the ground. Ogden would have hod a alight advantage in the contest Fwr Rptwppn Thppp Rivals ANNAPOLIS, kid., Nov. 27. The game of naval warfare as compared with the pigskin game, isn't today at Uncle Barn's big academy for training embryo officers The call of the seaa isnt half as loud as the call of the gridiron. Today the middles are not thirsting for the gore of foreign foes. Bloodshed and carnage on the high seas are not longer attractive. All eves are turned toward Franklin field. Phllade'phla, where on tomorrow afternoon the elevena of the Annapolis naval acaoemy and the West Point military academy will meet In battU royal for the gridiron honors of the year. Already the exodus of middies baa commenced, and by tomorrow morning the academy will be practically deserted. save for a few lone sentries and Impecunious middles, who Will watt In fearsome anxiety for the first news of the battle. Many Washington naval officials and acorea of Annapolis rltlsens will accompany the midshipmen to the Quaker City. Hope la beating high In the breasts of the middles today, and assertions of certain victory are filling the clamorous air. Nor la this altogether a whistling to keep up courage. The navy men re laUse that defeating the army eleven will be no easy task, but they feel able ito turn the trick. Few expect that the middles will roll up a big score, but it la hoped that the defeat will be aa as last year, when the game soldiers went down to defeat before the aellora, the final score being I to 0. Borne experts predict a tie game. First Game 1890. The first game between the institutions took place In 1890 and waa played at Went Point. Football had been paved at the naval academy for a number of years, and there was a strong team at the academy. The game waa In its Infancy at West Point and the navy had no trouble In winning, the score being 24 to 0. The next year the game was played In Annapolis, and the army surprised the navy by winning by a score of 22 to It. The nary had not the slightest de-del- Miss Dorothy Turner In Dramatization of Charlotte Rrontes Pride and Ambition Enter to Make Liveliest Battle I Rowland Since Granite High School forfeited to Ogden yesterday by refusing to play me gruunos. out tnis does liot l ,ufv. deliberately calling ,q," her regular scheduled game, Okden .them in ,game without the consent of the takes second place In the championship management This la u especial! of Utah among the secondary schools , since the local association had gone to of the state. The comparative stand- great deal of expense In advert If the Granite people could see the ing of the teams is aa follows: Won Lost Tied P.C. of such failure to appeui ;,t ,1... 1 .900 scheduled time and the effect Salt Lake i 9 1 8 .800 athletic contests in this Ogden tily city 2 2 ,888 would certainly be more consider,,!- - J. Granite, S 1 .000 fore caling oft such Important All Hallows ....0 A Intimation that the army had Improved so much In a year, and was taken entirely by surprise. Both teams were strong, hut the army had a resistless attack and greater staying qualities, and towards the last the navy players were carried away. The third game was at West Point and the navy bad decidedly the better of the game, winning by a score of 1! to 4. On the navy team were such stara aa Bagley. Isard. Johnson, Reeves and Kavanaugh. In 1892, the last game played at the location of one of the contestants, was won to 4, the by the navy by a score of margin renreeentlng the difference between a kicked and a missed goal. The army team was very strong and gained double the amount of ground by rushing than the navy did in the first half. However, a score was saved by the splendid punting of Bagley, who later lost hla life off Cardenas, Cuba, and the remarkable tackling of Reeves, wko r in the la now a UTAH FAILS SIX-DA- CYCLE RACE TO Book-waite- r, . Slipping and aliding through a field a foot deep, Utah and Idaho battled for an hour on Cummings field Thursday afternoon to a to-0 score, while 1,500 spectators stood on the bleachers and in the grand stand and made heroic efforts to keep warm. The annual Thanksgiving football game, the climax of the gridiron season. could hardly have been played under worse conditions. There waa almost a fcot of snow covering the field, and nearly as much had been scraped iff before the game. There was a general Impression that the Idaho team would be eaay money for the Utah boya. following the great victory over Boulder, but Coach Joe Maddock'a men were played off their feet by the Gem state's eleven, and escaped from a defeat by several rlnae of margins. More than the play waa In Utah territory, and not once waa the Idaho goal seriously of snow -- lieutenant-commande- navy. In the second half Bagley made a touchdown after a ' kick had been blocked and kicked a difficult soal. Shortly after Stacy made a touchdown tor the army, but Carson missed the easiest possible goal, and with hla failure the game waa lost. Resumed in 99. Thla waa the last game played here or at West Point. The game had rmwn In Interest until It waa Impossible to handle the crowds at either place, and the authorities of the army and navy began to believe that the annual contest waa bad for discipline and studies. The playing of the game on neutral grounds had not been suggested. In 1899 the contests were resumed. The two Institutions availed them-selve- s of the courteous offer of the University of Pennsylvania and played the game on Franklin field, Ita athletic grounds. The army won by a score of 17 to 5. In 1900 the navy won the only game In which It had come out ahead since the games were resumed. The Again International in Character and Will Be as Hotly ed as Heretofore. six-da- y three-fourth-s six-da- y . OPERA Bee. NOTE IN Matinee, NEW AMERICAS GREAT BUT COMIC THE NAME OPERA FARCEURS. Murray and MacR IN THE SECOND ACTION OF THEIR GREAT SUCCESS. The Sunny Side of Broadway THE EXTRA FEATURE, ORIGINAL WONDERFUL INVENTION. SHEATH-GOW- FACEOGRAPH, LATEST ' . GIRL, 40 PEOPLE 40. 402-mt- le 14.8-mll- GREATEST SONG HITS IN MUSICAL COMEDY. BY BOYLE WOOLFOLK. ORIGINAL NEW YORK PRODUCTION LYRICS AND AND BEAUTY MU-1- BRIGADE. Prices 25c, 5 Oc, 75c and $1.00 Seat (Sale FridayJMorning and 47 seconds, averaging 64 miles per hour. Gats Fourth Place, Rene Hanrot, In a German Bens car. Just managed to roll over the line In fourth place, with a record of 888 minutes and 18 seconds, averaging 82.4 miles per hour. Lucian Hautvast. In a French Clement car. was fifth, cover lng th course in 894 minutes and 8 seconds. Louis Strang, In a French car, was sixth. Rigal, in a Clement, was seventh. Fournier. In an Italian, was eighth, and De Palma, in a Flat, ninth. It looked like Naxarro's race until the very finish, but, always unlucky In America, the Italian had tire trouble In the very last lap. This made Hem-crsecond. Wagner, who was third at the beginning of the last lap, came with a flash and won the greatest race ever won in this country by the narrow margin of 54 seconds, with Nar xarro In third place. Of the American cars, Seymour, In a Simplex, who finished eleventh, made the best showing, covering 14 laps, wnile the National, driven Harding, finished twelfth, covering 12 laps, and i th Lozier 11 laps. The race waa held e bn a circuit, 18 times around, or a total distance of 402.08 miles, the longest auto race ever held in the history of the sport In this country. Dec. 9 During the Ben Hur season the curtain will rise evenings precisely at 8 o'clock. Matinee at 2 o'clock. No one seated during the opening prelude, "The Star of Bethlehem." KLAVV & ERLANGEFTC (By Duncan Curry.) SAVANNAH, Ga., Nov. 28 All American auto records were smashed to stoma today, when Louis Wagner, tn an Italian Flat car, won the 85,000 of gold cup offered by the Auto America, and Incidentally capturing the grand prize representing the International championahip of the auto. The winner covered the course In 370 minutes and 81 seconds, or at the astonishing rate of 6S.1 miles mile an hour per hour, or nearly e record made faster than the by George Robertson on a locomobile car In the Vanderbilt cup race this year. . Victor Hennery, In a German Bens car, waa second, 5 seconds behind the winner, covering the course In 371 minutes and 27 seconds, or at the rate of 84.1 miles an hour. Felice Nazar ro, driving another Italian Flat car, was third In 878 minutes Wednesday, 7, 8, 9 Night, November 29th EVERYTHING HOUSE OGDEN Three Evening Performances NIGHT PRICES 23c, 50c, 75c SEAT SALE THURSDAY Contest- NEW YORK. Nov. 27. Entries conIn for the tinue to com bicycle race at Madison Square Garden, which will have Its premiere a week from tomorrow night. The usual preliminary and short distance races will be run off that night, and on the following Sunday evening. Nov. I, the doors of the garden will awing open to admit tne spectators who will ses grind. The the send-of- f in the minstarting gun will be fired at tenmornutes after midnight on Monday ing, December 7. The best bicycle racers from' all over the world will be seen In the Present In action at the coming meet, and the And before I accepted hlm,M Mias management promisee that the features Paseay was saying, I asked him if he which have tended to bring past nose into dlarepute will be abolished. would love me when I was old." The Idea! exclaimed Mist Bright For envelope, letterheads business why. If he proposed to you he bad al- card dodgers, etc call up The Journal hadn't he? ready proven that, lob rooms. Both phones 884. (Continued on Page 8.) House Grand Opera Sunday Y Eight Horses in the Thrilling NEW & GREATER Chariot Raoo, Act. V. y I 25.13-mil- Jus! Made Just Made Just Made 1000 Pairs Burt and Packard Shoes for Men 2000Pairs ofE. P, Readj& Co. Shoes for Ladies 5000 Cheap and Everlasting Shoes for Girls and Boys RUBBERS FOR EVERYBODY I PREPARING -- FOR BIG WESTERN AUTO SHOWS A,Migphty Play STAGED ON A SCALE OF UNPARALLELED SPLENDOR. 300 People in Production-3- SEATS ON SALE THURSDAY, CHICAGO, Nov. 27. Two automobile shows of the first class will be held In .the West this winter, the Chicago show, running from February I to 18, ' and to be followed directly by the St Louis show, February 15 to 20. Both exhibitions wilt be of a magnitude to compare favorably with the New York shows. The West la rapidly becoming addicted to the motoring sport, and the manufacturers will enter exhibits quite up to the starboard of Eastern shows. 00 DECEMBER A Firo Fivo Rows ' Balcony, $1,50. Remands' Gallery Admission 60 Cento, NO SEATS LAID ASIDE. NO TELEPHONE ORDERS TAKEN. PRICES! Lower Floor, $200. $100. Mail orders accompanied by remittance and self addressed stamped ,nV lope filled In the order of receipt on the opening day of sale. Addrese a correspondence to Mr. R. A. Grant, Manager. Grand Opera House. Ogden- - |