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Show THE DAILY STATE JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER j Rockefeller and Standard Oil. of Ib Founder - the Big Trust and Kis p6or'mans LAWYER. Dn rockefeller and d. Standard Oil company have the theme of hundred and of article In newsps-nand may cine and hare been in not a few booka From Ida If. Tarbell and Lincoln Steffens to Gar-I,.stomas W. Lawson and Secretary vith hia re)ort on the operations af the trnsL the verdict has generally updnat Ur. Rockefeller and the tnstltntion which he founded. Formerof the oil company ly TU the policy In reply to attacks upon to say nothing of operations. This or methods plan Id been departed has silence of policy from to a considerable extent recently, ond John D. Archbold, the active bead of the Institution at present, has often John m dls-rua- THE Lewis Stuyvssant Chanls- -, Democratic Nominee For Governor of Now York. I The Democratic candidate fur of New York, Lewis Stuyveeant Chanler, was talked of aa a possible candidate for the presidency last winter. He la the preseut lieutenant governor of the Empire State end was chosen to that office two years ago In spite of the defeat of the head of the ticket William R. Uearst Ur. Chattn ier la a of the original John Jacob Astor and tlelouga to a family noted for Us wealth and social standing. He waa born in Newport It I. in IMS. The Chanters are related. besides the A store, to such faiu- gov-jtro- Magazine of fensa to Its Methods. taken the public Into confidence -- WAS calle Some Random Many Football Elevens Developing This Mode of Attack. A - RELIABLE TRICK PLAY. The Yale Team Haa Used It In PreWill Figure Largely liminary (am In Games This Season Hew It la Executed. Reminisc- STUTVXSAMT CBAXLXH. the Wards, Livingstons, Wiu-tliro- and Armstrongs. The candidate for governor belongs to many exclusive clubs and la at home among the smart set yet his leanings are democratic, and hla pursuits of late years have been those connected with study for the amelioration of the condition of the poorer classes. Ur. Chanler studied at Columbia university and at Cambridge university, England, and was admitted to the bar In 1891. ne practiced law for some years in New York city, where he was often called "the poor man's lawyer on account of hla frequently taking the cases of persons without money to pay an attor- There need be no surprise this season if some big championship football game is won by means of s cleverly executed ouside kick. Uany coaches snd players, not to mention spectators, appear to be ignorant of the existence of this particular mode of offense. But Tale is developing It and has already made good use of It In the preliminary game to date. This particular play, while hardly oicn to as many possibilities aa the forward possesses more value as a trick play than the other and when used at tbe right moment la likely to turn the tide of battle in more than one big match. There Is hardly a play In tbe whole repertory whk-can change tbe face of things so quickly and demoralize an opposing team as the successful operation of the ouside kick. Tbe oroide kick Is one of the best plays in the game today. It Is similar to tbe forward pass, except that It requires even greater skill to be able to kick It where you want to than It now requires to throw or toes 1L Tbe ouside kick can be made end over end if the object la to have It roll forward or kicked, with a spiral motion if the aim la to place it Borne kick the ball so that lla middle portion fits the Instep and the long axle la perpendicular to the foot Title Is an excellent method to apply for abort distances, and for placing It la the most accurate of them all. It is most effective In the opponents section of the field or Just beyond the center field. Of course It can be used unexpectedly In a team's own territory, but In the opponents field It gives the required distance and the opportunity of recovery without loss of distance which a regular punt would secure. Instead of keeping the ball In tbe air It should be kicked to the ney. At one period of his career Ur. Chan- ground as soon as the case will permit, ler lived In Ireland and waa prominent- since the moment It touches the whole The longer the kicker ly Identified with the cause of Irish team Is liome rule. He married In l&K) Miss can delay kicking the farther down Alice Chamberlain of Red Hook, N. Y.. the team can get to either recover tbe the town where hla country estate Is situated, and baa two aons and a daughter. It waa while Ur. Chanler waa engaged In looking after clients without expectation of fee that he waa one day pointed oat by a denizen of the Bowery, who In doing so remarked "Hat's old A tors If ye get pinched dat rooster 11 defen' yer fer notin'. He's dead easy. Te see, he's got de dough t'lrty t'ousand a year net an' hes Jus stuck on workln an doin' good fer de poor." Ur. Chanler once explained to persona who Inquired hla motive In taking rases on this plan that It waa not altogether philanthropic. "I'm dolug said, "for practice and education. It's the quickest and I think the beat on-sid- great-grandso- n. e It,-h- and most practical way of getting them, and I can afford to do It" fon n. mocxxrzLLn, ou, HERMAN waluxo axd at fiwly connected with It "For fourteen years I have been out of he says, "end in eight or ten yeare have gone only once to the company's office." On this account he thinks he can .without egotism praise the enterprise and system and for its employees which re been characteristic of the company, for Its progress In recent years ms been chiefly the result of the efforts buai-ess- ," con-Menti- BIDDER. Sueeessor ef Govemer Haskell as Treasurer ef Demeeratie Cemmitts. Herman Rlddcr of New York, who succeeded Governor Haskell of Oklahoma aa treasurer of the Democratic national committee, la a leading figure In Germs Journalism and has been connected with the New Yorker Staata-Zeltnn- g, which he now others. In speaking of Ur. Rockefeller Mturafiy thinks of golf," as the ga end the man have been so much ai elated In the public prints In rec Jean, "On a rainy morning like thl M says In beginning hla story, "wl U out of the question, I mnpted to become a garrulous n and tell some stories of men i Inge which have happened In an I sard to the advtoat of taking the public Into hla co y he remarks that It baa not b custom to press his affairs forwi Public gaxe, but he has come that If his family and friends wi jeme record of things which ml; light on matters that have h omewhat discussed It is right that TIB BOTT, FBIXCIWWB OBXAT Jd rkid to their sdvlce. 8Undrd hM often been chan nn adopting ruthless methods In "toying competition. Its titulary pt takes up this charge. I hi wondered," he says, If the cr a which centered upon us did : from the fact that we w the first If not the first, to w me problems of direct selling to i 7 elr brood scale. This was d spirit and with due conaldc " every ones rights. We did i 7 tfter tte I f t0 ,nd exempt to ruin It enttu "t - w tam,ww5P or Instituting a spy s lav ufpoiiente of the Standard wo Wu jMt what tbe bust iff .Perhapa anticipating such t0 hla statement, Ur. Roc feller continues: It was new ntm to Interfere with e dealer cnlMT"ted hla field of w a new 0I Ptoce for extendlm Md off" tadl " B OTr business to theta pro NlbTw HXBMAX BXDDZB. controls, for nearly twenty years. Ur. Rldder was born in New York of German parents In 1851, and what book learning he got as a boy was obtained In tbe public achoola, but he began business life at eleven as an errand boy. For a time be waa an insurance agent; then he became associated with newspapers In the German language s and In 1878 established the Volkablatt In 1880 he foundKatho-Uache- ed the Catholic New. In 1S90 RULES, K'G'JISE LAST OF OLD TIMERS. Wa he be; came treasurer and manager of the and la now president g of the company which publishes this Hs has been Influential JouraaL known aa an Independent Democratn and has been active In the Reform union and In numerous philanthropic movements. Staata-Zeltnn- German-America- On of th Hist Old School Bcfor Wore B13 Mitt. "IVaivu Jim" McGuire Football This Season Will Be ha retired from bxrelidll Py Young i left to bear the a the player More Open Than Last Year. One Thousand Words a Minute. with the most year of active service the big leagues to his credit. McKc 1 RjpU Automatic Trkgraph System A PENALTY FOR HURDLING. Guire the last of the old school play-er- a to pass from the big leagues. Young Mjy Mori Iftokifloa b Is regarded as an old timer, but be I Business. Alteration Have Boon Mado In For- almost a uovice compared to the former Itustou American mauager. ward Pass, Making It Mor Danger-u- s I p to this season McGuire ws able Intermission Between Halve ANOTHER revolution appears to to hit and catch tehlnd the tot. but a Punishment Fer Undue Delay. be imminent In methods of a manager he found young player tc communication by use of the In tbe new football rule, recently do this laUir. and so be gradually curreut. electric Business Issued, there are several chaugci pMed from the game. Now that he seems likely to to affected very advanwhich win have a tendency to make haa lieen summarily dlstnlxm-by the Hutton club tiecauae be kuew more tageously by tbe Introduction In tbe the game mure open this season. The chungt-- in the regulations ere about lui hc ha II and more a lmut base- telegraphic service of the Ivlsuy rapid automatic system of Bending and renot as Important as In many year ball plnvcr than the owner and hud ceiving mewuiges controlled by the past, yet they have a decided effect on TeleHst couqtany. When till comvarious phases of the game. pany recently acquired control of ihe It was determined that all pcnnltlcf Atluutlc Telegraph cumpuny, with for funis exeept penalties uuder for lines from Boston to Port laud. Me a ward pas may be declined by the ofnew era In telegraphy was Inauguratfended side. This, however, in cases ed. Portland Is the starling point of where the tensity Includes disquallfl the eomiiany'a transcontinental lines, cation dues not save the player from and a number of sections in the eastbelug put out of tbe game. ern division will to connected and In The fur battlug the ball forcommercial use In quick succession, ward is made loss of ball to tbe ofilea sages can to sent aud receittd by fended side eud the ruling placed unthe new system at tbe rate of 1,000 der the jurisdiction of the umpire and words per minute, end the charge to field Judge. The field Judge is also the general public will be 25 cents for made tlmekeeiwr. words on telegrams betwenty-fiv- e The score of a forfeited game Is tween all points, delivered by messenIn order to distinguish it made ger in the usual way, and 25 cents for from any other possible scores. fifty word .IrlrpoetijJtilvnvd Tbe rule regarding forward pass Is destination through the mall. Tele-posaltered in the following manner: n, are practically telegraphed When the forward pass la legally and It la believed that this form touched, only the man of the passer's of business will reach enormous proside who thus first legally touched II portions. To newspapers and large should lie entitled to recover the toll business houses which lustall seclal until It lias lieen touched by an oppoequipment atlll lower rates on mesnent; also If a forward pass U thus sages will to made than tboae menlegally touched, fumbled and touched tioned. Offices equipped with auto by auothcr player of the passer's able ins tic sending and receiving apparatus before the toll haa touched au oppowill require only connection with a nent the toll shall go to the opponents on the side where it wei first Illegally touched. While the toll la In the air for a for ward pass players of the defensive slds may not use their bands er arms ou VlTJUUX IIS M'oriHB. WHO BAS SBTIMKU raoH has shall. UplHHieiits except to push them out of the way In order to get the toll them- the nerve to tell the latter eo the vetselves. Ilsyers of the side making the eran aayd that he la through with the pans who are eligible to receive the game. pass may use (lie hands and arms as McGuire has been a toll player for a In cuse of players going don n tbe field quarter of a century, lie admits that amlcr a kick. Neither side uiny, how- be liaa put in tweuty-sl- x seasons on ever. "hold" nor "tackle an opiHineut the diamond, all but three of them In who has not the (mil. the big leagues. The veteran la about Finally 1u case a forward pass Is Il- forty-tw- o years of age. He waa a legally touched outside of these provi- catcher away toek In 1N8U, sion named alstve the ienalty shall uiuny of the present generation of to that the hall shall go to tbe oiqto-neut- s fans was born, aud a few yean later at the ait from which the pans lie entered the big arena. McGuire was made. Bill retire to hia homo and business In Tbe committee strongly advises the Albion, Mich. 11s has lieen making use of nil four officials as provided for. good years, so inoucy for twenty-fiv- e Time 1 to he taken out during he Isn't worrying. of penally for Incoinpleled According to McGuire, his resignaforward pans. tion was aiiked for when Frank Regarding hurdling and roughness was traded for Niles. the rules nre changed to read. "Loss of fifteeu yard, point to to gained and AbMnce ef Tad Jonse Keenly Felt number of downs to remain unchangYale's foottoll candidates will nqiort ed." Penalties for fonls except those for practice on Kept 15. Coaches L. II. under the forward pass may be deRlglow, captain of last years team; clined by the offended side. However. Tad Jones, All American quarterback, In cose where the penalty Includes disand Captain Robert B. Burch of Cinqualification 'the player la not saved cinnati will be In charge of tbe work. from being pnt out of the game. From last year's team Yale loeea Quar-tertoc- k The ten mlnnte Intermission hae been Jones, Tackles Blglow and Increased to fifteen, the referee to noti- Paige, Eud Alcott and Jones, Momur, fy the teams three minutes before its right halfback; Dines, substitute quarFive minutes after this expiration. terback, and E. C. Congdon, center. notification If either team haa failed to The regular player remaining are W. aa aiqiear the toll shall be put In play A. Goebel and Carroll Cooney, guards; first down by tbe offended aide on the Fred Murphy and Arthur E. Brides, offending aide's thirty yard line. K. II. Coy, fullback. Tbe halfbacks; If a ball on a forward pass or a greatest work will be to train a quar- rAnm a. rxLAitv watcbini THAKsifrn TXB BAX WHO I.U00 WOB1M A If IH OTIC AKD kicked ball except try at goal strike terback to take Jonee TOITHO LADV rXBFOKATtXO A TJtLXFUHT place, and tbe the nprights or crossbars tbe toll shall candidates will to Kilpatrick, fullback lira. be considered aa having crossed the and of last fall's freshman central office to enable them to send captain goal line. team; Fred Daley, the Andover cap- and receive their own wire messages. In case of the ball accidentally strik- tain two yenrs ago; Steve rhliblu, subThe fundamental feature of tbe eya-leing an official the play shall to played stitute halfback last year, and II. kl. of sending messages Invented by over again. Wheaton, also a substitute. Andrus Patrick B. Delany la the overcoming Tbe other alterations are practically and Ilobbs, relegated to the second of the etatle force stored in the teleonly change In tbe wording. team last year on account of . their graphic wire, a force which hae herestudies, will probably take tbe places tofore largely nullified tbe success of Catcher Street's Unique Feat at Blglow and Paige. Captain Burch automatic telegraphy. The macblnea Charley Street catcher of the Wash- will take Alcott's piece at right end, Invented by Mr. Delany consist of a ington American league club, recently and Logan or Haines, formerly of Anapparatus with punches perforating accomplished a feat that only one man. dover, will be on left end. Coy will to operating magnetically on a tape. Bill Shriver of Top Ansone old Chiback at fnlltock, and Murphy will to These poaches respond to a key or cago team, la credited with doing. Ills one of the halves, with Bride at the keyboard similar to a typewriter board unlqne stunt was the catching of a reg- other If he does not go back to guard. and when made are fed through a ulation baseball thrown from the top will leave the position of left transmitter to the wire. Mr.. Delany of the Washington monument from a Cooneyto started life as a telegraph oiierator go to center again. guard height of 550 feet almost the top of thirty-fiv- e yean ago and was at on the monument Tbe toll wee tossed New Handball Champion. Tbe a asocial ed with Edison. time Carney he twelve limes, and Street failed, but who has won the Franklin institute of Philadelphia reMartin J. Carney, held It firmly In hla regulation catchhandball title by hla decisive defeat of cently awarded him tbe Elllott-Cres-ao- n er's mitt on the thirteenth try. It waa Oliver Drew at the Cliamtora courts. gold medal, and be revived simno easy task to bold the ball, and followers said is from two expositions. ilar awards by recently, Street's hands showed It Traveling at Chicago, to be one of the fastest of vast ImporInnovations the of game Many the rate of a boat 188.7 feet per second men at the sport seen In many years. tance In the handling of telegraphic when it dropped, it had sufficient force Both Drew and Carney were born In news matter will to Introduced. Borne to knock a man over or to kill him If Drew hailing from Cork, while Idea of the saving In money as well R struck him on the head. It took the Ireland, was formerly a resident of as In time to newspapers can be bad Carney ball only 1L85 seconds to fall the 530 Ills first handball work from the fact that It will to possible County feet Street waa considerably Jarred In this Maya was In Philadelphia to tend a fall page newspaper story of country neverby the Impact of the sphere, bnt cities. He has long 9,000 word 1 from New York to Chieastern other and theless canght In the afternoon game. of held the title champion of Philadel- cago In ten minutes over one wire. baa been In this country IIo For smaller, out of the way stations, phia. Pittsburg Buys Pitcher Brandon. la will- where electrical power la not availafourteen about Carney yean. associaThe Kansas City American to meet any man for 1 aide bet and ble. the engineers of tbe company hav tion team haa sold Pitcher C. M. Bran- ing tbe world's title. lie can be perfected a portable sending and refor for to don tha Plttaburg Nationals at 125 East Huron street Chi- ceiving apparatus combined. reached 15.000, and he Is expected to report to From the newspaper point of view cs ga baa Brandon Manager Clarke shortly. most Important Innovation In th the been the rival of JIarqaard all season Maskstte a Great Filly. method of handling a long mesnew and haa beaten the man bought by tbe la the fastest and the biggest sage coming continuously along th "She New York Nationals In two close games filly I ever owned." said James 1L wire Is that the wire can always to recently, which Is ssld to have attract- Keene after Maakette bad won the kept clear by the simple process of reed the attention of Barney Dreyfus. race at Bay. Bbeepabead Futurity ceiving mechanically on a tape which New York, recently. Mr. Keene hna can subsequently to either transcribed Cebb Always a Ball Player. won the Futurity with Domino, directly from the Morse character Ty Cobb's relatlvea say that he waa Colin and Masketta on the tape or Into perforated printed always a ball player. From Infancy tapes which can be given oat In small ball and tot were hla plaything!. Many Nsw 2s 10 Trotters. "takes" of a few hundred words each. new Tbe wire can to kept in continuous there are twenty-thre- e Thus far Ganetl and Hia Recruits. 2:10 trotter. At th asm tlm last service, for the machines can receive as Manager John Ganzel will this fall there were bnt ten. fast as they can send, and there la no tty his recruits one by one and not by year need for holding back matter to tbe wholesale. Weltheur Hae Wen Every Race. limit of the human receiver's ability to Bobby Walthonr has thus far won transcribe One In the office th mesNsw Race Track In Empire, O.' every bicycle race he entered In Ger- sage can to cut up and transcribed by A new racing plant ta being con-- many. , structed in Empire, O. any number ef operator. In iis, UVn 111 Catcher great-grandso- files aa CIBES Now regard-tu- g ences of Men and Events," the World's Work being the medium the ell magnate has selected for making his confidences to the public. The flnt Installment of these reminiscences Is rn.iniy a defense by Ur. Rockefeller of standard Oil method! of operation and an effort to place the character of the celebrated corporation and Its ways In a favorable light It Is notable especially because It comet at a time when the Standard is much In tha public eye in consequence of the Incident In the presidential campaign, and It la the statement ef the man who created the oil trust but for many years has not been ae- KICK, PAGE NINE or standard affairs and policy. And now cornea John D. Rockefeller himself with a public utterance which he ONSIDE 28. 190S. HALFBACK. Tlbbett ei Princeton was one of the heel backs developed last Mason. He i a trong, heady player, with excellent ground gaining qualities, especially in end runs on tbs offense. ball themselves or form Interference fur the player who Is supposed to re cover. Should a team have a very fast player or players and an accurate punter tbe ball can ba kicked In tbe air to one side, and tha fast players by being stationed back of tbe ball when kicked can recover before It touches the ground. This play can be worked quite often owing to tbe fact that the opponents will be led to believe that tbe ball cannot be recovered until It touches Uie ground. Another good play and usually effective for a score when properly executed Is the quick, short punt over tbe head of the safety man or to one aide of him. Sometimes when within the or thirty-fiv- e opponents' twenty-fiv- e that goes only yard line a high punt ten or fifteen yards Is worth while. Often the opponents will miss the ball, due to the numbers attempting to catch It. and this consequently leaves a free for all play In which any one la apt to recover It A free catch la tha only way to prevent this play. n d s 10 at, ts let-ter- e La-por- ts -- Cba-corna- c, |