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Show THE DAILY STATE JOURNAL, PAGE TWO. : : MONDAY, OCTOBER 26. 19GE of Spwttmg (Gossip Newsy PAPKE SHOULD HANG HEADS IN SHAME Clean, honorable defeat of gnoj los-r- e grounda like heroea. They backed very opening of la ofUmea aa great aa victory. tlieir team from th play with luatjr ahouta. In aplte of Uia of niemftera Ogden lie fact that they were outnumbered 8q the huaky High school football eleven ne-- d not by Ogden fane. tha vlaitora aucceeded feel badly becauaa they were defeated i in drowning out every yell of the home laat Saturday by their moat bitter ri- guard. They were organised into a vals, the Halt Lake High. In the first strong bunch of rooters. game of the aeaaon. No escuaea need Ogden waa not. Now, no one will preb offered. The game was good sume for an instant to aay that rootone. Suffice it to aay that had Og- ing wins any kind of game. But, gea den gridiron artlata played the game whls, It heips a lot Lack of enthusIn the flrat half aa they did In the iasm. lack of support from their home last, the score would have told a dif- spectators chilla the ardor of the play-er- a. had ferent atory. What enthusiasm they may hare much to do with the final reault. Og- felt was lost when tha name of Salt den expected to meet a weak-knee- d Lak:,M shouted from hundreds of pairs of healthy young lungs came Hosting aggregation of little fellowa and bumped up agalnat eleven huaky arrows the field. So It Is. that Ogpluyera who knew the game by heart. den High school studenta should hide But the one and, awful feature HJi fur shame. Those there were who tried the entire exhibition was the lack of hard to Inject genuine ginger Into tha rooting support given by the borne stu- rest of the spectators, but' their efdents on the borne grounda forts were feeble compared to those of Salt Lake came to OgdeB with two tlie visitors. Unless Ogden High school or three hundred rooters. The Og- remedies this difficulty and forma den Rapid Transit company met the some permanent organisation of the rooters at th Bamberger drpoi with student body for rooting 'purposes, the aome fifteen cars. Tha visitors look ihum team, which haa hitherto held one look at the cars and walked. They j1jle jirouj title of state champions, may trudged tlie entire distance Into thelM W( disband now. Without the city, clutching tightly the ljjMh they gUpptirt nf those it represents, no nth-ha- d brought with them from Zion ,,te organisation can prove sucresa-- w rspied up In tlie paper napkin. Until two lu the afternoon they Pp The score waa 16 to I. aded the streets, flaunting their colon g,)t Lake wasSaturday perhaps more surprised of red and black, and then they walked lhan oBden at thla result and no one to the fair grounds. After the game, really knows how It happenJJ. There they walked buck and at eleven o- were aome brilliant plays chi both aides. clock, those who had remained for Every member of the Ogden eleven the social hop, trudged the full dis- played football In the second half as tance back to the Bamberger depot-ti- red lw la wrote " and evidenced the fact were. though they that there la material for a strong Despite this display of cheapness, eleven In the same bunch of players. however, the fact remains that these The Lineup. same Halt Lnkers lined up at the Fair Balt Lake. Ogden. I.e Littlefield Northman Kirby '....It Douglass NOTICE OF INTENTION. Martlneau Smith , I.g Korns . . ..........A Lwls the HEREBY NOTICE IS GIVEN by ( Eckstein Brown r.g City Council of Ogden City, Utah, of , Yates the Intention of such council to mahenlitairi.1.'r ' the following Improvements q.b Johnson rtxpatrick To create Grant and Lincoln Avenues j0lMMlsi wed I.h Lindsey iro curbing (Wheellng f.b Oreenwell "? and guttering district. nd to build Romney r.h Murphy therein concrete curbs and gutters In Officials: Referee Harmon of All the manuer following, Hallown, first half; Bennlon, second On both aldea of Grant Avenue and half. Head linesman Horne. to Lincoln Avenue from Hat Street ZSrd Street build n concrete curb I Subscribers ef 1 ha Utan Stafe Inches thick and 16 Inches deep anj a roiirnal are rsqusstsd te road and A I inches ellew instruction printed at head a concrete gutter I feet wide thick, together with the necessary round 4ltnWsl eelumn. corners, driveways and grading for alL Tha estimated erst of ald improveSUMMONS. ments la seven thousand (17,000.00) dollars. In the District Court of Weber counThe boundaries of tha district to be benefited or affected by said Improve- ty. State of Utah. ments are llnea drawn 60 feet outward Hyrum Smith, plaintiff, va Thomas from and parallrl to tha outer bound- P. Morrissey, and unknown persona ary llnea of said streets for the whole defendants. Summons. length thereof from Slat street to 82rd The State of Utah to the said DeOwr-confiden- ce In-ate- ad I to-w- it: to-w- lt: Street For the purpose of paying the costs and expenses nf said Improvements the City Council Intends to levy and col lect special taies and asaesamenta upon the lots, blocks, parts of lota and blocks, lands and real estate bounding, ' abutting on or adjacent to the above mentioned avenues, and lying and being wilh the boundaries of tha curb and gutter district to be created to the extent of the benefits to such propery by reason of such Improve- ments. The City Cnuntil will on Monday, the Snd day of November, 1608. at I o'clock p. m., m the City Council Chamber, City Hall, Ogden, Utah, hear objections In writing from any and all persona Interested In said local and special assessment ORDERED by the City Council October 6th, 1601 E. P. BROWN. City Recorder. First publication Oct. 6, IMS. Last publication Oct, II, 1601. SUMMONS. In the District Court of Weber County, 8tale of Utah. Julia Birchfleld, Plaintiff, va. James , R. Defendant The Slate or Utah to said defend Bln-hfield- ant: MEET ON N0Y. 25. Should Be Repetition ef Their Recent Fight, aa Weight le Toe Low For the Michigan Man Papke a Cyclonic Rusher. Beut Followers of pugilism are eagerly looking forward to the third Iapks-Ketchbattle that la to Uke place In San Francisco on Thanksgiving eve at Jack Gleason's club and. while It Is the consensus of opinion among the fight fans that Papke will prove the victor lu the buttle, the friends of Ketcbel declare that the Utter will give a good account of himself. The weight agreed on. ISS pounds, ta all In Papke's favor, however, aa hia opponent b a big man aud can hardly train below 100 pounds and be stroug enough to battle with such a tough proposition as the champion middleweight has proved himself to be. Tlie match was made under practically the same conditions as those of the recent Loo Angeles fight and win be a twenty round affair. Papke's receut victory over Ketcbel gave the pugilistic world the biggest surprise It has bad lu many a day. All tbs wise ones that are supposed to be good Judges of fighters were surprised by tbs result Of course they based their Judgment mi the contest Papke and Ketchel bad at Milwaukee, lu which Ketcbel put It all over Papke. But thb b what make fighting such exciting sport So many unexpected things happen. Papks b undoubtedly one of the moat rugged youngs tera that have broken Into the Queens berry game la Ha has been fighting some years. only about three years, but In that time he has made a name that haa attracted attention all over the counyears try. lapke b only twenty-thre- e old. II b a very courageous fighter. Ilia style b of the cyclone order, and when he starts hie rush It b difficult for hla opponent to get out of hb way. He thrgshra away like a man flailing wheat and never slope till resistance haa ceased. Papke Is a larger edition of the once "Terrible Terry" McGovern at bb best He b Just as great a fighter among tho mlddlewelghts as Terry was years ago among the little men. ne fights like a fury, baring his teeth lu a grin of actual pleasure. Papke likes the game no doubt of that Ills sturdy head hardly feels tho effect of the hardest blow. Papke recently said, "The harder I fight the mors fun I get fendants: You are hereby summoned to appear out of It" within twenty days after service of this summons upon you. If served WILLIE KEELER MAY RETIRE within the county in which thla action la brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and within Veteran Outfielder Says This Is His Last Season an Diamond. thirty days from the sixteenth day of Baseball Is to lose another one of November. A. D. 1808, and defend the above entitled action; and In rase of Its old favorites. Willie Keeler, the your failure eo to do. Judgment will veteran right fielder of tho New York be rendered against you according to Americana announces that ho will re tha demand of the complaint, which tire at the end of the present season haa been filed with the Clerk of said Keeler's once great batting eye has Court. This action Is brought to recover Judgment quieting plaintiff's title to the land described In said com e plaint, namely: Lot (48) In Block two (2) In Central Park Addition to Ogden City. Utah, being a (21) In Block part of Lot twenty-ei- g ten (10) South Ogden Survey of Og den City Survey; and that.lt may be adjudged that said defendant Thomas P. Morrissey has no right, title, estate, or interest In said land, and that aald unknown persons claiming aa grantees or heirs at law of said Thomas P. Morrissey or otherwise, have no right, title, estate, or Interest In or to aald land, and that the defendants and each of them be restrained and enjoined forever from asserting or claiming any right title, or Interest therein or thereto. and from Interferring In any manner with the plaintiff's use. occulta tion and enjoyment thereof, for costs of aald action, and for general relief. forty-thre- You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days .after service of this summons upon you. If served aoee a McCracken, the above entitled action; and In case Plaintiff's Attorneys. within the County In which this acP. O. Address, Rooms 416 and 418 tion Is brought; otherwise, within National Bank Building, Ogden thirty days after serlvce. and defend First Weber County. I'tah. of your failure so to do, judgment City, IFrst publication Oct. 17, 1908. will be rendered against you accordLast publication Nov. 14, 1908. ing to tho demand of the complaint, which haa been tiled with the Clerk of said Court. This action Is brought to recover JH a Judgment dissolving the bonds of heretofore existing bematrimony tween you and the plaintiff. JOHN E. BAOLET, Plaintiff's Attorney. P. O. Address: Ogden City. Utah. First publication Oct 17, 1908. Last publication. Nor. 14, 1908. By W. W. NAUGHTON. Oct. 28. On SAN FRANCISCO. Lercari will Charles Thursday evening, make his how as a provider of fistic entertainment for the multitude. While the occasion named the Cyclone" Thompson Boer Unhols match has been exploited as the principal bout, it b wortiiy of note that the preliminary between Johnny Murphy and Lew Powell ca ls for aa many rounds as the feature contest. What adds a glimmer of class to the Thompson - Unholx go Is that both men want to box Battling N- Ison. The Boer has already enjoyed that distinction, and even Jim Jeffries, the only acrep-p- er who In the annals of pugilism doesn't know how defeat la spelled, made no bones of saying that Unhob should surely dispose of Nelson com- - fr -- STYIES-ijnio- m , SOLD THE ONLY hade-ON- E Liberals in Unbroken Power Since 1896 Must Fight as Never Before to Maintain Ascendency in Pennsylvania wUl ptay Bwarthmore at Franklin Field. The Carlisle Indians will play the navy at Annapolis. The strong aggr. gatlon from Pennsylvania State college will go to Ithaca and attempt to repeat their vlcory over Cornell. In tha west, the big game next Saturday will be that between Miimeso-t- o and Chicago, which promises to develop one of the most exciting contests ever seen on Marshall Field. Nebraska and Iowa will clash at lows City. Indiana and Illinois will meet on the gridiron of the latter, and Wisconsin will play Marquette College One of the most Important Intersecontests of the season will be de. elded next Saturday at Ann Arbor, Mich., when Vanderbilt university, ctional on the North. which, has the strongest football squad In the South, will play the university of Michigan eleven. OTTAWA, OnL, Oct 88. The fate of the settlement of the Japanese quesNEW YORK RACING. the present Liberal government of tion on the Pacific coast; closing of Canada, headed by Sir Wilfred Lauried many a labor dispute to the delight NEW YORK. Oct. 20. Preparations aa premier, depends upon the battle of the workers and the general adof ballots which b being waged In the vancement of labor's Interests by leg- have been completed for the Jamaica islation. If he U elected and Sir Wil- raoe meet, beginning tomorrow, which Dominion today. season In this Laurier la returned he will be ends the 1008 racing frid Conto Ontario promises go strongly meet was originally schedstate. The minisas Into the taken government servative. Quebec will again give the uled for nine days, but has been cut premier the strong backing It always ter of labor, and will be the leader to five. has given, with a majority of over SO of Ontario Liberals. Of the other provinces forecasts are members. The chances of the Laurier tnent of Canadian manufactures alone admlnbtratlon being defeated are re- largely a matter of speculation. Con- under Liberal rule. servatives expect to make big gains, mote. These figures are also used In supLiberals, led by Sir Alfred Laurier, particularly In Nova Beotia and Brit- port of Hie FI idlng protective tariff, have been In office since 1898, having ish Columbia, while the Liberals hope though the Conservative fling back twice in the In- -. to retain their present strength. been at the Liberals the Free Trade plank, of Wilfrid's Sir first The Conservative party seeks power which formed part of that patform though on which they rode Into power In government of fifteen members only on a broad platform which briefly g, 1808. Sir Wilfrid Laurl-- r also draw Cartwright, Hon W. 8. Fled- - eludes honest appropriations and to the fact that In 189. only Sir F. W. Bordon, Hon. Sydney pendituree of public money, appoint-Fish- er att-ntiof public officials by merit only, 26,000 Immigrants came Into Canada, and Hon William Patterson effective provisions to punish while pe a reault of his Immigration main. Three are dead, two were ap-- 1 mop In 1907. pointed to the high court, snd four re- - j bribing and fraud in elections, the policy 252,018 entered Canada of large This meant the opening up tired. That Sid Wilfrid Laurier, If hla publication of expenditures by organisations, civil bctvIc reform tracts of western land, namely is returned to power again acres, for which the govera third time, win retire four yearn or thp appointment of civil servants snd his hence voluntarily, baa been announced bF n Independent commission. Senate- nment takes credit Mr. Borden Im- followers charge graft and scandal In more of reform, Inspection rigid by himself. management connection with the placing of these In the house just dissolved the Lib--1 "'vrentx, the Pb bl,8b: lands on the market. eral government had a majority of M cold of of Conservatives claim with apparently a system thorough 216. of in a total membership commission to utilities a public grain of truth that the government Four new eeats have been created contort their corporations operating public has made serious thefts from In Saskatchewan and three In A I her- postmaat-ter-generthe and For Instance, platform. ta. making the total number of seats ""hjses. "better" announced that a system of postal facilities, the telephones, in the next house 221. mr.nu narce of Provincial or State free rural delivery to about 50 pre cent in The principal battlegrounds In to- raraI and delivery, of the rural community would be days election are Quebec and Ontario. Along wlth thU ,, a vigorous attack augu rated. Probably It la because the Premier la tha jovernmenfa alleged extrava-Frenc- h The preferential trade p'ank of the Canadian and a Roman Catho Linw the annual expenditure having opposition la claimed by the M'?"' lie, that he gets majority support In gone up from 148.000.000 In 1896 to over ment, and In Juatlflcatlon Sir Wilfrid Quebec, while Ontario, which ta strong-- ! ino, 000,000 In 1908, though the popula-l- y Laurier points out that In 1892-- 0 Great Orange and Protestant, piles up a tlon haa Increased In that time only Britain brought 16 per cent of her majority against him. Conservatives 86 per cent In 1908 the net disburse- wheat Imports from Canada. She are predicting a big Inroad Into the ments per head were (8.85, la 1800, buys 25 per cent; the 21 per cent Quebec Camp In todays election, find- 84.00; In 1900, 87.80, and this year. 88.74. meat has Increas'd to 14 ing their chief hope to thla end In The ret debt of Canada today la 8272, butter from 10 per cent 75. the breaking away of Henri Bou 000.000, of which 8147.000,000 la In ac- cheese 64 per cent, to and Armand Lacergue from' the Lib- tual loans. The government admits an Owing to the delay In posting J . eral party, and heading what la known Increase in expenditure, but In reply necessary notices, the be!a the Nationalist party said to be points out that the business of the several districts will twrt V. but these are not likely favorable to Conservatives just now, country has enormously Increased and Mr. as the submits the general result. , developfeet showing Lavergue appeared figures particularly on the platform of Mr. Borden. Conservative leader, at Quebec recently. The strength of Uourassa Is reflected In the generally admitted statement IT. RALPH E. HO AO. Caihler. E. DOOLY. President. that after 8ir Wilfrid's departure from Cwhier. I Asst. Vlce-PreA. V. MclNTOSH. politics, Bourasaas will be the owner J JOSEPH S. PEERY. of Quebec. Added to this expected Increase In rtrength In Premier Laurler'a stronghold, Conservatives expect to practiThe Liberals cally sweep Ontario. nevertheless, threw not a little cold S OGDEN water on these expectations by bring-Int- o DEPOSITARY UNITED STATES the arena as nominee for North Waterloo. W. L. MacKensle King, Interest Paid on Savinas Accounts and Time Deposits deputy minister of labor, who has figured prominently and creditably In ed ex-ln- on re-."e- nt polltl-governm- non-partis- an tore, al nJ .r,,and -- o1 The UTAH NATIONAL BANK or We carry the Finest line of Domestic and Imported Wines. Liquors and Cigars in the city forgets his FALsSTAFF CAFF. - at Madison. Government of Great Dominion In pleasure. NEW YORK. Oct. 26. This gridiron contests Includes nnuit portant gams to be decided ,.n Wed' nesday. that between the Savy and George Washington. On Satunh.y eral contests of considerable Imprest srs scheduled perhaps the most (,tabU being that between Prime tun and West Point on the field of the latter Institution. Brown will g0 t.. Cambridge for the annual contest with Harvard, and the Providence team Is exultant at the poesiblllt yof aoorlne a victory over the Crimson eleven! Yale will have aa Its opponents at New Haven the strong team of the Massachusetts Agricultural College, and the farmers" will do their best to humble the pride of the haughty The Elephant Bar PRICE loneliness the enjoyment of his meaL The food le so good, the service no prompt and courteous, he cannot help taking pleasure In hi eating. So drop In hero alone If you must, but with company If yon can. In either cnee, w warrant that youll remember the meal with portant Contest eons of Old Ell. MAN WHO EATS ALONE noon on Gridiron Contests for Next Fes Days Include Only One Im- j sr C.D. IVES at this restaurant pletely In a finish fight. Boer Will Fight Hard. The Boer's feelings at the present time are euch that he will fight like a catamount when he marts the cyclone, for he b tense wltn the desire to be in position to badger Nelson again and he knows that If he goes under with Thompson there will be nothing In sigh: but tha cold shoulder for Rudle, the Boer. Thompsons case differs from the Boer's inasmuch as he haa been making hb way t0 the front steadily, while Unhobs progress has consisted mainly of ground and lofty tumbling. Th- - Unhob-Thompebout, while It lasts, should be a display of solid slugging. The men are built on rugged lines, and with the feelings that pos-sesthem they are euro to by on with all their might and main. I IVES35 ALL Ht UIIHDIZ WILL MEET THURSDAY .......... , o ANOjETCHEL, Middleweight Pugilists to Battle For Supremacy Again. TO W wiLUg KxxLxa, aiowr fixldkb or rax xxw took auxaicaaa been missing for the past two years. Hb many glaring errors In right gar den have caused tho flekb lMelll fans to sour on him. Keeler holds the record for the greatest number of bib made In baseball. He recently Missed the MU) mark Keeler retires from tlie gsme with a fortune estimated to tie from f I2LUU0 to fl.lo.OUM. the major portion living made In real estate. Our Service Is the Best J. F. SMITH & COMPANY PROPRIETORS THE ELEPHANT Utah 308 Twenty-fift- h SL Ojden, |