Football lawmakers, coaches and i gridiron rules to some extent at thelr Interpretative meeting, held the other day in Chicago. The authorities of | the “Big Eight” and the Missouri Val ley conferences translated the difficult passages in the new statutes in a way that will make the coming games less on the parlor order than was ex- pected by the more conservative of the western experts Ihe all-day session resulted in some what more freedom fo the forward pass exploiters and a sof:ening of the effects of the rigid laws in regard to the fiving tackle. Coach Stagg of the University of Chicago presided at the | morning session, and Coach Williams of Minnesota had the chair in the | afternoon. These were the only two western members of the national body | present. and both contributed much | to the discussion Important readings of the meeting | were those providing that the new forward pass, which cannot be sent more than twenty yards beyond the line of scrimmage, and that the fly. ing tack shall not include those plays where defensive players throw themselves into an offensive play without grasping the runner. Other leading interpretations concerned crawling with ball and interfer ence Following were the chief results of | the two sessions, as listed by the ex yerts: le the nn CHESTY PLAYERS MAKE GOOD | dtu Cobb, Latham and Kelly Among Those | of Swell-Headed Kind That Made Good. Ty Cobb has been reviled more than | any other player 1 know of, writes a | well-known New York baseball author ity. He Is called chesty, a swell head, | a grand stand player, a murdering base runner, and other names enough | for a stranger to the game of baseball | to think the greatest ball player who | ever lived to be a dyed-in-the-wool ruf. flan of the worst stripe. Now, Ty Is chesty, cocky and fresh, but those are the qualities that make the best ball players Cobb was the freshest kid who ever broke into big league class, Is what every Detroit player says who was with the Tigers when Cobb first joined them But it | was that chestiness and nothing else | that enabled him to climb to the top | of his profession where he stands pre. eminently now, and there will be no one to push him off that high pinnacle until he himself says so. p And what is chestiness but the feel ing one has that one is just as good if not better than any one else in the line of business one follows i Cotb felt it in his youthful bones that be was as good a player as any one on the Detroit team and made | good the feeling imbued in him that | caused the expansion of chest he ia accused of. Chestiness is one of the most promising traits a youngster can show, and he does not want to lose it, either, as he gets older Ty Cobb newer wore a No. 4 cap { will warrant There is only one player that | remember of who ever did and was a good ball player, and that was Jack Glasscock. Cobb's brain expands with his chest and for the same reason. He knew at the start and knows now that he Is as good as they make ‘em, and, therefore, why wouldu't he expand, mentally and paysically? All this knocking of Cobb, too, comes from nothing else than pure and unadulterated jealousy. It is a case of sour grapes every time, i never knew of a crackerback ball play- af who was not pounded and roast ed from Hellopolis to breakfast, any- Give me those “chesty,” “cocky” youngsters every time and I will gam- ble they will make good. There was Arlie Latham, for instance, who when he broke into the big league was in danger of getting mobbed by his fel. low players of the Buffalo club in 1880, when he turned flip flaps from third base to the home plate after he made the winning hit and tally in a 1 to 0 game against the Worcesters. Fresh! Latham was the freshest kid 1 ever saw, but In two years he was a big league star and for ten years after e Cobbs and Lathams made ball players and they are of the chesty kind that should be encouraged. how. ’ EH —— ——. CHICAGO OX One of Greatest Players Game Has Ever known Had Hard Time Get: ting Into Fast Company. BY “TY” COBB. It took me a long dime to convince anyone that I was a good ball player. I think the first one who ever thought I was a great player was Cobb him self, and because others refused to be lieve it he felt bad. I was born down in Georgia and be- gan playing the game while at school. As 1 recall it, I always played the same way, took all the chances there were, and ran all the time. Lots of people now think that is good base- ball, but the fellows with whom I played refused for a long time to think 80. In fact at the finish of the game, our team usually was divided into two factions, with Cobb on one sidé and all the others on the other. 1 had ideas regarding how to play the game but none of us ever had seen much baseball, and we had to think {t out for ourselves. One of the big me is that 1 as a boy, made plays the same way, and for the that wonders to same reasons Midway. The rule regarding crawling with | the runner with the ball who is | grasp of an opponent shall not be permitted to stretch out his arms | ball after the ball is dead t will be called crawling The regarding the amount of time taken shall be interpreled that the time shall be charged up to a team matter for what time is taken It is player the Such an ac rule out no ieason out temporarily agreed that the carrying the ball shall lowed to grasp or hold on to another | player of his side, provided sald player has no special devices him for the purpose of aiding the ball 1 be al about be regarded as in session of either team unlass it is in pos No penalties shall be inflicted forward pass until the ball ac tually leaves the hands of the passer The authorities disagreed over the for and the following brief statement was decided upon giving the western interpretation rules: The forward pass must be made from a point five yards back and is not allowed to go more than twenty yards line of scrimmage, but the cross the line of scrim pass rule, of past the mage DAHLEN IS LEAGUE VETERAN Has Seen Longer Continuous Service | in National Organization Than Any Other Player. To Bill Dahlen, manager of the | Brooklyn club, belongs the distinction of being the veteran of the National | says the New York Post. Dahlen was had heard older 1 COM professional league play and | After 1 got to watch the the Southern never team in sons why | shouldn't have left home, I longed to professional player, was not for the or become a It money the and loved to be in the midst of it every time there was a game Now, it is my advice to all young fell CHOW game 8 not to go into baseball or into “Ty” Cobb. Is in the work and you love it, and to die out. I left home to show up the league, and a few weeks later Jack The club | was with the car fare home I had been doing the same and my osition i price of hotel bill thing again, cost me the § go way down into the bushes and per have stayed there and but for the fact that a string So i aoverteslousnoss never come out had some sort to of Pitcher in Peculiar Play unsual assist in a recent at bat. The batter missed the Myers lost track of it. Matty lying on the ground runner out at first It iI8 not often that a pitcher can get an assist on a Billi Dahlen. signed by the Chicago club in the fall | of 1880, and In 1891 played his first | game in a Chicago uniform. He played ! with Chicago until 1899, when he was | traded to Brooklyn for Gene De Mon treville. After playing with Brooklyn for five seasons Dahlen was traded | to the Giants for Charles Babb and Jack Cronin. In 1908 and 1909 he was with Boston, and this year was ap pointed manager of the Brooklyn club. | MACKAY TO MOVE TO FRANCE Racing Laws, Found to Be Too Strin. gent, impels Him to Join Other Millionaires. Clarence H. Mackay who, several Years ago, secured a ten years’ lease on the Kingston farm of R. L. Baker of Lexington, Ky., at the big figure of $10,000 a year, has decided to remove bis entire breeding establishment from Kentucky to France. He has notified Mr. C. F. Hill, man. ager of the farm, to have all the horses, about twenty-seven brood mares and the imported stallion Med. dler, ready to ship by October 1. Mr. HU will go with the horses and as sume charge of the new breeding plant. It is belleved here that Mr. Mack. ay's order is because of the stringent laws In New York. W. K. Vanderbilt, Frank Gould, Harry Payne Whitney, Herman B. Dwyer ” SSIP & ov Y ————— George Btovall of the Naps is evi and President Somers have been rial for next year Rube Benton, left-hander the new ing youngster, as well as a puzzling pitcher, with a strange delivery un. like that of any other twirler in the league, Rumors of a threecornered deal with the Brooklyn, Cincinnati and St Louls clubs as parties to It are going the rounds again. This is a little early for those rumors to be taken very seriously, for it may be a long hard winter, Kid Elberfeld is given credit by Bd Grillo of the Washington Star for bolstering up the Senators this year so that they could break all records for them. The veteran third baseman has been a great ald to the former tall-enders, Although the Millers appear to have the American association flag, Co i { i HAPPENINGS ms on in Norristown When Miss Izabel Finley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W A. Finley, of this borough, sails for will be the culminating start in Messina, Italy, at the time of great earthquake Miss Finley her mother were then sojourn- services to hospital nurse, It was at time she met George A jell, 18 connected with a steamship ompany in Naples A case of Government as this love Miss ijpple * engaged Eleven miles twenty days at for carfare is i Henry E has Pittshurg hundred Dy trolley of just $32 ora Juergens of ti returned {0 the New Englar 5 A student of tr he took Bgures of distances a4 cost ed DOr Just COPIoUs notes the cost o The he te He compu { 1,183 trips af direct, side Trolley Trolley, iis and with ive short breaks he cuit by trolles interurban Gra: vaughiters of America officers at tl Bi state councilor, #® & i Kate NO Associate augherts Sinte ouncilor, Virginia State No b ’ » “tate NO bl; Sinte 8! delegates, Nellie gherty, No i. arristown . artinent af Marshall, from orning sonfined to the basem shaft T house ks and Elston, Dr n Smit buil y ra the first Ear nies Dusy the other ovator +1 pened but two wes families of HL E Krusen and Willi sons in all, were imiths, who jiscovered the fire he been eight per in the GIDE The are on I and extent of determined BVWRKened the 1 4» y » the damage has not Scranton Going suddenly insane, Mrs Nettie at crept . te Geta, the Home for the Friendless, one of the inmate known among the the Walker the insane partment at the Hillside Home victim AK ser intended intendent, Mrs by super de- The in the MeNedl, of Windber, near here, discovered their new and costly mansion to ‘be The lawn is broken open in huge fissures and the Johnstown —Upon arising wodse, of the old colonial pattern, It was erected at t cost of $50,000 by the owner, who 's one of the foreviost lumbermen of western Pennsylvania Norristown. —When Mrs. Richard I. 8. Hallowell was confronted by “alvin Adams, of Gulf Mills, arrest. ner and stealing $16 in cash from Ser home the woman was unable to sositively identify Adams as her as wilant Adams was subsequently released from the Norristown jall by Justice Arthur McFarland, of Upper Merjon Township, where the assaul: ind robbery occurred. Reading.~August Obenstober, 45 rears of age, German, is in a critical ondition at the Reading Hospital, the result of injuries received in an tcgident. Obenstober had the night- nare and walked out of a window an the shird floor of his boarding place, falling to the sidewalk, frac- uring his skull and injuring himseit internally. Pedestrians found him tying unconscious in a gutter, York.—A typhoid epidemic at len Rock has attracted the atten. don of Chief Sanitary Engineer Dr. Herbert Snow, of the State Depart- ment of Health, and Dr. J. H. Ben- aett, chairman of the itary Com- mittee, of York. An indpection of ithe water and other sources from which the typhoid germs may have tad thelr origin will be made. Chester. Charles Plennieck, eight years old, In jumping from the rear of & wagon in which he and several rompanions were taking a ride, land. od in front of an automobile, which struck him, fracturing his skull. He #as taken to the Crozer Hospital The automobile is owned by J. H. Holman, of Washington. Stony Creek.-—Ambrose A. Miller, 23 years old, and single, committed tulcide by shooting himself near the heart with shot ® vy in the woods roar his home. body lay out all ti=ht and vas discovered by his brother in the morning. There Is no known cause. BA SHAWYER, Prop Fini olden accommodations for She travels Good table board and sleeping & partment The shotomss Liquom at the bas, Biable as emmodations Ror horses is the best te b Lewisburg and Tyrone Ralirosd, at Osbum Ee a, Jno. F. Gray 8 Son (SeRrroty; FEITTITRST ER TIF AFSTIIINTITYT TY Y™T THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST . .. . No Mutual No Assessments Before {newring r life seo the contrect of B HOMB which in esse of desth between the tenth and twentieth rs te. turns all premiums paid | ad. dition to the face of the policy. to Loam om Fires Mortgage Office tn Crider's Stone Bullding BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection Tr rr rrr rr rr Yr re rerili il Money Strange Hobby. William James, probate court dep about that office a middle-aged, heavy who « has of a pre wpnent wants to og she COMes woman, is a owled person omes around hostly after she read in the paper of the And she comes because she read the dead man's will it is pro bated. She has no hopes of receiving t wills She over Head- Cleveland death man BR BROT 88 BOOHL as any of the 00k them har a i eQues Hikes will Dealer Just ing Plain hobby interesting People. The interesting people do mot pose. They do not rave They do not strut They walk normally and talk unexcitedly. They do not become soul ul seconds after you They do not talk shop or listinguishipg labels and craft. They are dodge behind pillars front of cameras, nor end with the other player in in fow the parade earmarks more likels do they cont +13 4 EY folk on the ar leading Hmelight the lady's share in the A SP A 0 The “Toothbrush Plant™ One of the curious plants in we world Is what is called the tooth brush plant of Jamaica. It is a species of creeper, and has nothing striking its appearance. By cutting pieces of it to a suitable length and fraying the ends, the natives convert it into a tooth-brush; and a tooth pow der to accompany the use of the f is also prepared by pulverizing the gles most about heya h Artal arieg Petroleum in Venezuela. There are five known petroleum de its In Venezuela, Oozings of pe troleum, covering a considerable ter ritory, found in the district Mars, near the River lake. Oil has been located at Bella Vista, near the city of Maracaibo, and wells are to be sunk by the near future Os Are the {we ih Custom Based on Reason, On the approach of a thunderstorm French peasants often make up a very smoky fire, in the belief that safety from lightning is thus assured By some this is deemed superstition, but the custom is based on reason, inas much as the smoke acts as a good tricity Leading to Marital Failure. A young woman brought up to think that nothing ought to stand in the way of the gratification of her ca prices is pretty sure to find it irksome to have to consult the wishes of a husband. -— Exchange Origin of “Spencer” Overcoat, Words have been added to the Eng lish language as the result of wagers. The third Lord Spencer bet that by cutting off the tall part of his over coat he could bring into fashion over coats so short that the skirts of the undercoat would show beneath. He won his wager and “spencer” became the name both of that garment and of the feminine one afterward construct ed in its likeness, - a Spoiled It for Him, Mr. Clarke's butler had asked for a night off, for the purpose, as he ex. plained, of attending a ball in the vil lage. The next day Mr. Clarke asked him how he had enjoyed himself. “Oh, pretty good, oir, thank you” was the response. “It would have been better if it hadnt s-been for the women. 1 can't abide women at a ball” Italy Deports. Italy retains a special form of ban ishment Introduced under the Roman emperors, known as coerced domicile. This punishment corresponds to the Roman deportation to an island, and like It consists in criminals being con. fined to an island for a definite time and enjoying within its limits per sonal freedom. dhows for Itselt, FIFI TIlI FETT IT YTYTY ATTORNEYS. 4 D. Gawrio Iwo. J. Bowes CH RITIO BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW Esous Buooa BELLEFONTE. PA. Auooessors to Orvis, Bowzs & Oxvis Consultation to English and German CLEMENT DALR ATTORKEY-AT-LAW Ofios XB. W. corner Dlamond, two doses from First Nationa) Bank. ire Ww. 6. RUNKXLE ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTE, PA All ¥inds of legal business sitended to promply Bpecial attention given to collections. Ofos, oor Crider's Exchangs. yd HK B. SPANGLER ATTORNEY -AT LAW BELLEFORTR.PA Practioss fn ull the courts Consulistion 8 English and German. Ofios, Orider's Rrchangy Building ytd EDWARD BOYER, : loocstion : One mile South of Centre Asvommedations first-class Good bes. wishing to enjoy su evening given attention. Meals for such oon ong pared on short notice. Alwege for the transient trade. RATES : $1.00 PER DAY. ANZ LEIS LIVERY «2 Special Effort made to Accommodate Com mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a RR 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Traoe Mans Desicns CoryriGuTs &cC. Anvone sending s sketch and deseription may Fulckly ascertain our opinion free whether ap uvention is probably patentable. Commotion tions strictly nonBdentinl. Handbook on Patents set! free. Videst agency for seonring palenis, Patents taken through Munn & Co. vecsiry & vial notice, without charge, in Lhe Scientific American, A handeconely fllnstrated weekly, Larrest ow mu inls f any scientific journal, Terme $5 8 your. Tour months, $l. 850M by all newsdeniers, MUNN & Co, swaeee. gw York Reranch Ofos 425 FF SL. Waahirr™as 5. OC Peo’ Valley Banting Company CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Ceashiq Receives Deposits . . H. GQ. STROHIEIER, PEMN. Manufacturer of and Dealerin HIOH GRADE ... MONUMENTAL WORK in all kinds of Marble ae Granite, Dent fall 0 pot my price SWE We HW he Wag * LARGEST |wsumact ¢ i ) LHgency ’ IN CENTRE COUNTY ¢ ba Cr rENCON