EDITOR - Terms oF SuBsCRIPTION.—Until further notice this paper will be furnished to subscribers at the following rates : Paid strictly in advance - $1.00 Paid before expiration of year - 1.50 Paid after expiration of year - 2.00 For Governor, WEBSTER GRIM, of Bucks County. For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS H. GREEVY, of Altoona. For Secretary of Intemal Affairs, JAMES I. BLAKESLEE, of Carbon County, For State Treasurer, SAMUEL B. PHILSON, of Somerset County. Democratic Congressional Ticket. For Congress, WILLIAM C. HEINLE, of Bellefonte. Democratic Senatorial Ticket. For State Senator, ‘SAMUEL C. STEWART, of Clearfield. Democratic County Ticket. For the Legislature, J. CALVIN MEYER. of Bellefonte. The Charges Against Tener. The charges against JOHN K. TENER have assumed such an aspect as to de- mand public attention. It is alleged, on the authority of a Republican newspa-. per, that he was for a time president of a corporation which had been organized for the purpose of swindling innocent in- vestors by the sale of its shares. It has been shown that this swindling corpora- tion was formed by taking over the debts and titles of four other bankrupt corpora- tions and capitalizing their debts and worthless franchises as assets of the new corporation. It is asserted that Mr. TENER invested no money in the bogus corporation but was presented with $50, 000 worth of the stock and allowed a salary of $5000 a year for the use of his name and influence in duping the public. Mr. TENER has not undertaken to de- ny his connection with the corporation in question or questioned the accuracy of the statement of the manner in which he got into it. He says he entered the corporation and became its executive head in “the ordinary course of business.” Any intelligent man knows that is not true. The ordinary method of getting into corporations in Pennsylvania is to purchase shares at the market price. He did not purchase shares at any price for they were presented to him and this cor- poration was not organized in the ordina- ry way for no money was paid into the treasury by anybody for any purpose. It had no assets, no capital and no property other than a railroad franchise in Ore- gon which cost less than $300 and was listed at $2,000,000. The only answer that can be made to the charges is that Mr. TENER was either a fool or a knave. If he associated him- self with professional swindlers, and the charge is that those connected with him in the management of the enterprise were such, for the purpose of swindling the public he is a knave. If he connect- ed himself with this bogus corporation without understanding its character and purpose he is a fool. In either event he is unfit for the office of Governor of Penn- sylvania, and no voter can support him for that office without self-stultification. The office of Governor of Pennsylvania is an important trust the discharge of which requires moral and mental equip- ment. His connection with a swindling corporation shows that JOHN K. TENER has neither. The corporation laws of Pennsylvania are exacting so that every Pennsylvanian who associates himself with a corpora- tion understands that he is assuming ob- ligations which must be met. Itis true that the National Utilities Corporation was not created under the laws of Penn- sylvania, but Pennsylvanians who con- nect themselves with foreign corporations are under moral obligations to meet the conditions prescribed by the Pennsylva- nia laws. Therefore Mr. TENER is the more culpable because understanding the Pennsylvania laws he associated himself with an enterprise which was obviously incorporated in another State in order to evade the obligations imposed by the laws of this State and intended to prey upon the unsuspecting people of this State. All in all this is a bad business. It re- veals the Republican candidate for Gov- ernor in a bad light and clearly proves his unfitness for the office to which he aspires. The truth is, as a prominent and scrupulously careful citizen of West- ern Pennsylvania puts it, “GRIM is real- ly the only candidate for Governor that a reputable business man can afford to vote for." ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS. ~The old court house clock which was purchased from the county by the citizens of Philipsburg and presented to that borough, will not be put up on the public building of the town until some time next spring. ————— ——-William McFarlane this week re- signed his position as lineman for the Bellefonte Electric company and with Nevin Wetzel yesterday left Bellefonte for Parksville, Tenn. where they have accepted a more lucrative position with the J. G. White Co., contractors of New York. "oo r = Sia ' ' i i i f Senator Grim’s Visit to Centre County | Accompanied by Thos. H. Greevy, Demo- cratic Nominee for Lieutenant Gover-, nor, Our Candidate for Governor Tra- versed the Entire County, Visited Eight Towns and Made Five Speeches. ' No doubt remains in the minds of those who saw or heard Senator Webster Grim on Monday that he is the cultured, clean, strong man that reports from other points | | have heralded him as being. Accompa- nied by Thomas H. Greevy,our nominee for Lieutenant Governor, Dr. Samuel C. Stew- art nominee for Senator, Mr. Praig, of the | | Philadelphia Record staff, county chair- man A. B. Kimport, Hon. John Noll, L J. | | Dreese, Col. H. S. Taylor, S. D. Gettig, | W. D. Zerby, John J. Bower, J. M. Cun- | ningham and several others an automo- bile visit to some of the towns of Centre | county was begun at Coburn early Mon- | day morning. Most of the party assembled here and | went to Coburn where Senator Grim join- ' ed them from the morning train from Lewisburg. At Coburn a nice crowd had gathered ! to greet the standard bearers of the Dem- ocracy and an informal reception was held before the party left for Millheim where they had breakfast. Immediately afterwards an open air meeting was held and brief speeches made by the candi. dates. There was a fine crowd present at Millheim and the people were impress- ed most favorably with Senator Grim. At Rebersburg, the next stop, twenty minutes were spent and there another to see the party racing past. At Spring Mills there was another large turn out of citizens and school children and the meeting in front of Wood's hotel was enthusiastic as well as full of pleas- ing feeling; for there school master Ti- tus Gramley arose to heckle speaker Greevy on some tariff questions and we understand that the answers were entire- ly satisfactory to the inquisitor. At Centre Hall there was an undenia- ble frost. Not a dozen of her citizens availed themselves of the opportunity to greet the visitors. Of course it is known that there is considerable Berry senti- ment in Centre Hall, but we have been informed that there were other reasons why so few turned out. After leaving Centre Hall the party! came to Bellefonte for dinner. at the Brockerhoff house. But no attempt at a | meeting or reception was made here for ! the reason that Senator Grim had been apprised of the movement to have him | and Mr. Berry withdraw and was almost continuously in telephone connection with ' the state executive committe then in ses- sion in Philadelphia. However, there was | time for the hundred or more persons ! who had the time to wait, to meet him | personally and every one of them was | impressed with the open, frank, dignified manner in which he greeted them and MRS. ELIZABETH EVANS REESE. REESE.—Mrs. Elizabeth Evans Reese, Centre county's oldest woman and only real Daughter of the American Revolu- tion, died at her home on Muncy moun- tain at two o'clock on Sunday afternoon at the advanced age of 97 years, 7 months and 13 days. See had enjoyed good health all summer for a woman of her years until the Monday prior to her death when she had a nervous chill which was the beginning of a decline that was gradual until her death on Sunday, when she calmly slept away. Her last illness and death were without pain or suffering. Mrs. Reese was a daughter of Eleazer Evans who came to this country from Wales and settled in Chester county. He enlisted as a private in Capt. Hallman's company in 1781 and served until the close of the Revolutionary war. After that he with his family came to Centre county and located at Centre Furnace where Mr. Evans followed his trade as a Millright. Later he moved to Ferguson township, near Pine Grove Mills, and it was there the subject of this sketch was born on March 3rd, 1803. When Mrs. Reese was a girl not yet out of her teensshe was married to Christian Reese, of Worth township, and shortly thereafter the latter purchased a tract of land on Muncy mountain, in Patton town. ship, originally one of the Gratz surveys, and there he built a little home and clear- ed off the farm which has been in posses- sion of the family ever since and which has been the home of Mrs. Reese for over three quarters of a century. Though living thus apparently isolated to a great extent, she kept in close touch with the outside world through her fondness for reading the newspapers and naturally she witnessed many changes in the valleys contiguous to her home in the almost one century of her existence. She was the last surviving link between the Evans and Reese families and while she has seen generations come and go she had the comfort and happiness of having around her at one time or another seven of her family of nine children, that number yet living although the eldest is almost sev- enty-eight years of age. Upon the application of some of her | est, able and with a character thatiscon- briefly discussed the questions propound- | ; .4 ) ci Whe re be calc hor of S.-J the Centre Democrat, the Berry organ of : ary 5th, 1910, voted upon by the gov the county, and a moment later found ' erning board of the National Chapter, himself the center of a quartet composed D. ny and passed as a real Daughter of of W. Miles Walker, the Berry leader ;,, American Revolutionand given a gold here; F. Potts Green, permanent Prohi-, oon and a pension of eight dollars a bitionist and Hon. JouN NoLL. Personal- =. At that time she was the twenty- ly it was an engaging little party and | ¢, 4p, req) daughter living in the United passed off most pleasantly, but we shud | gia00s and the second real daughter be. der at the thought of what the conse-|o,0ing to the Bellefonte Chapter. quences might have been had anyone | nfry Reese's husband has been dead started an argument. | many years and of late she has been At3 o'clock the party left here for| .,rq for by her two daughters, Mrs. State College, where Senator Grim ad- | x01. Burket, a widow, and Mrs. Alice dressed the Civic Club of that institution Hoover, whose husband has of the from the steps of the auditorium. Many | 11 Reese homestead Tuas charge other of the residents of State College, profes { chiidren living are Dr. O. P. Reese, of sors, students and country-folk had as- | go iortown; Aaron W., of Port Matilda; sembled. In fact the crowd was estimat- | joie "EE Sn YL orge W, ed at fifteen hundred and the speaker | poitmire, of Wilmington, Del., and Miss charmed everyone with his able address. | pa at home. An interesting fact in In truth the impression he made at State | "0 ion with the children is that they College was akin to a sensation. His ad- | yore a) in their early life school teach dress, as compared with that of Mr. Ten- | and were considered the | ers, among most er who had been there before him, was a | o\, cessful in Centre county. For a num- classic and his manner, his engaging pres- | wh uss ftself of the claim | 2.0] Y2ATS past it has been the custom 9 : _ | of the children to celebrate their mother’s EE ew NE oorw . to The touring party broke up at the Col- | a sn enjoyed these lege and only the candidates and I a herself. county chairman where whirled away ; 1 across tio Barrens to Stormetown, whore Lo. TC haeclopsd Rerayes 10 @ ast find] ! and others Mr. Grim took advantage of the stop to d= i ere oy light the lamps, to make a call on that’, jie well spent. old war horse of Democracy J. Hile Grif-| The funeral was held from her late fin. From there they hurried over the ' ome at eleven o'clock on Wednesday mountains to Philipsburg where a band ' morning, and was very largely attended. and the famous boy's brigade met and The Bellefonte Chapter D. A. R. contrib- conducted them along streets crowded uted some beautiful flowers and a delega- with cheering people to a stand in front tion was present at the funeral. Burial of the Passmore house, where more; made in Meyer's cemetery. speeches were made and the most re | i : 0 markable political tour Centre county ha ever known was concluded. yan. 38 Altogether it was a most successful visitation. There was nothing of the evening after several month's illness with brass band, redfire shouting to it. It tuberculosis. He was born near Cumber- was just a pleasant short visit here and | land, Md, December 20th, 1865. When there over the county and it carried con- | he Was a boy his parents moved to Get- viction to many minds that Senator Grim is the right man; that he is earnest, hon- trolled by no one. ~The new A. M. E. church was dedicated last Sunday with very fitting services. The total collections during the day aggregated a little over two hun- dred dollars, leaving a balance of about eight hundred dollars yet to be liquidated. ' sisted at the funeral services which were held at his late home at ten o'clock on Tuesday morning, burial being made in the Centre Hall cemetery. i i JosepH.—Emil Joseph, senior member of the firm of Joseph Bros. & Co., died at his home on the corner of Howard and Spring streets at 7.35 o'clock on Sunday cvening. Just one week before almost to the hour he had a severe attack of acute indigestion. Through prompt and effective measures the physicians suc- ceeded in saving his life at that time but | the shock to his nervous system was so great that a physical collapse followed and from the middle of the week it was necessary to use oxygen continually to stimulate the heart action. Notwith- standing this fact he was conscious most of the time and talked rationally even up to within three hours of his death when he fell asleep and calmly slept away. Deceased was born in Bechtein, near Worms, Germany, on May 26th, 1844, hence was past sixty-six years old. His parents were Mr. and Mrs. Gottschall Joseph. They were in fair circumstances and gave their children a good education and when Emil was less than twenty years old he left his home and came to Bellefonte and making his headquarters here started out with a pack on his shoulders and peddled through Centre and adjoining counties. He peddled some four or five years and about forty-two years ago he with his brother Sigismund opened a small notion and jewelry store in the building on the corner where Brandman'’s store is now located. Sever- al years later they moved into a room located where Miller's stove store is now and there they were until the spring of 1877 when the present firm of Joseph Bros. & Co. was organized, and buying the old building on the corner from the David Wagner estate erected the present commodious store building they now oc- cupy. The present firm is the strongest financially in the mercantile business in Centre county and while of late years Mr. Joseph did not devote his entire atten- tion to the business yet it is the monu- ment of his energy and business ability when a younger man. Mr. Joseph was a man who read a great deal and kept in touch with all the leading questions of the day. He was a unique character, always affable and pleasant and was perhaps as well known as any man in Centre county. He enjoyed life to the very fullest, even up until the hour of his last illness, and his familiar figure will be missed as much as any man in Bellefonte. On February 22nd, 1891, he was united in marriage to Miss Birdie Gutman, of New York, who survives with two sons, Edmund G. and Emanuel. He also leaves one brother, und, and a sister,Mrs. Herman Holz. Rabbi Schulman,of Altoona, officiated at the funeral which was at two o'clock on Wednesday afternoon, burial being made in the Jewish ceme- = I I WOODWARD. — Mrs. Annie Packer Woodward, wife of Col. John A. Wood ward, of Howard, died at five o'clock last Thursday evening. She had been a suf- ferer with a complication of diseases for months but her condition did not become critical until a day or two before her death. Deceased was the youngest daughter of ex-Governor and Mrs. William F. Packer and was born in Williamsport March 16th, 1847. She was given a liberal edu- cation and on June 8th, 1868, she was united in marriage to John A. Woodward. The first few years of her married life were spent in Williamsport but in the early seventies she with her husband and family moved onto the old Packer homestead farm in Howard township where they lived until a few years ago when they retired from the farm and moved into a comfortable home in How- ard. Mrs. Woodward was a woman who stood very high in the estimation of all erty has since followed and He is survived by his wife, three and one sister. was made at Springs on Saturday i I MAITLAND. —Allie A. Maitland, young- est son of Mr. W. B. Maitland, one time residents of Bellefonte but now of Wil. liamsport, died quite suddenly in that place on Monday. For a number of years past he had been connected with the E. Keeler Co., of that city, incharge of their automobile department. He leaves a was held | collapsed. Dr. Bright, of Rebersburg, | re —— OPENING OF HUNTING SEASON.~The! SPECIAL TO PHILADELPHIA FOR THE opening of the hunting season for squir- | STATE-PENN GAME.—The Pennsylvania rel, quail, pheasant and wild turkey last | R. R. Co. has decided not to start the Saturday was characterized with the ! special train that will carry the State Col- | poorest luck for Bellefonte and Centre | lege rooters to Philadelphia today from { county hunters that they have had in | Bellefonte. Upon semi-official authority years. But this is not evidence that game | we announced in our last issue that it is unusually scarce as the conditions on | would. The orders yesterday were to the Saturday, and ever since for that matter, effect that the train will start from Le- have been very unfavorable for good | mont at 12:150'clock today and run right hunting. The woods are very dry and | through to Philadelphia. Returning it with the heavy covering of leaves it is | will leave Philadelphia at midnight Sun- almost impossible to get within gunshot | day. The round trip fare will be $6.75. distance of any kind of game. Wild | Parties from here desiring to take ad- turkeys and pheasants are reported fairly | vantage of the excursion will have to plentiful but so far squirrel are scarce. | drive to Lemont to take the train. The The fortunate Bellefonterson Saturday | Cadet band is going with the students. | were Alfred H. Klepfer, with the Lauder- | Te | bach—Barber company, who got a wild | ——The wedding of Charles Thompson, ! turkey and two squirrels; David Wash. | son of John I. Thompson, of Lemont, and | burne, chemist at the Bellefonte furnace, | Miss Martha Goodhart, daughter of Mr. has for several years been seen on the | inG, October 27th. John Curtin, of this mountain near McCoy's works. It was a | Place, will go over and officiate as best monster and weighed thirty-two pounds. | Man A number of turkeys were killed on the mountains enclosing the Bald new state road are now arriving in Belle- Eagle valley, but so far as the | fonte every day and a good supply will writer is informed very few pheasants | be on hand by the time the contractors were bagged. Quite a number of birds | expect to have the street all graded and were seen but on account of the dryness ready to begin laying the brick, which in the woods hunters could not get with- | will be about the first of November. in shooting distance of them. . When this work is once begun it will not Between Howard and Jacksonville, on | take over ten daysor two weeks to put the first day of the hunting season, six- [the brick down. === teen wild turkeys were killed. Someone | ~The Curtis Publishing company, of residing in that vicinity counted slightly | philadelphia, is offering a Shetland pony over one hundred and eighty shots that | and cart or one hundred dollars in cash were fired within the hearing of one | to the boy who makes the greatest gain location. {in selling the Saturday Eveming Post up until November 26th, in their tenth divis- ion, which includes Bellefonte, and the boy in the division who stands at the head of the list is Cecil Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Mlies Walker, of this ——— wn mama—— ——Brick for the paved portion of the Two HUNTING ACCIDENTS.—Two hunt- ' ing accidents occurred in Brush valley on | the opening day of the hunting season and one man is in a serious condition | from the wounds he received. It was | quite early on Saturday morning when | $68 mmmmreane Harry H. Miller, of Tylersville, went out | ~The WATCHMAN and the writer to the foot of the mountain to hunt came in for considerable ridicule last squirrel. He saw a gray one and suc- Week overour report and comments on ceeded in shooting it but the carcass | the meeting of the Centre county medical { landed in a forked limb and Miller climb- | Society, notably the paper of Dr. P. Hof- | ed the tree to get it. While up in the | fer Dale, of State College, on auto-intoxi- tree some man, presumably another hunt- | cation. The report was voluntarily giv- er, happened along and perceiving amov- | €0 US over the telephone by Dr. Feidt ing object in the tree, and without ascer- | and When he mentioned the paper of Dr. taining it was Miller, took aim and fired. Dale we remarked that it was a peculiar Miller received the full load of shot in ' Subject for a doctor to discuss and asked his head, neck and back but fortunately | if it had reference to machines and auto- was not rendered unconscious and was (iSts: and received an affirmative reply. able to retain his hold on the tree and | Lhe Writer was credible enough to take crawl to the ground. In the meantime | the matter without any further inquiry, his cries apprised the man who fired the | Which accounts for our report and com- shot that he had hit a man and, without | ments thereon, but the next time Dr. stopping to ascertain how badly Miller | Feidt or any person else tries to spring was wounded, he made his escape. Miller | an old disease on the writer for a new managed to reach the home of Jerry Shafi. | fangled craze he will have to present the er a quarter of a mile distant where he documents to prove it. : A Of ——Tomorrow afternoon at three was summoned and dressed the man's o'clock sharp the Indiana State Normal wounds after which he was taken home. | football team will lock horns with the The same morning Lynn Miller, a cous- | Bellefonte Academy eleven on Hughes in of the above unfortunate man, was | field, and while the contest may not ex- also shot in the legs but his injuries were | cite the world-wide interest that the only slight. On Monday Titus Gingery, | world's series of baseball games is doing, of Tylersville, aged fifteen years, was ar- | jt will be a game the people of Bellefonte rested on suspicion of having shot Harry | ought to witness. The Academy team has Miller. played two games so far and won both by THE PANTHERS ORGANIZE.—The Pan- ther hunting club held their first meeting this year at the Haag house on Tuesday evening and organized for the deer hunt- ing season by electing J. M. Cunningham president, W. C. Cassidy secretary, and Harry Gerberich treasurer. There was considerable discussion as to where they would go into camp this year but a set- tlement of the matter was left over for a —— A wo —— ASSESSOR'S MEETING.—The assessors throughout Centre county held a meet- that they could call a meeting of the as- sessors, have them all come to Bellefonte and get their supplies and pay them for the day and that the cost thereof would not be over half what it was under old way. Consequently yesterday the day set for them to come here when they were all together a meeting was held and the commissioner's attorney made an address to the assessors explain- ing their duty under the law, etc. ——Last Friday evening Wallace Ker- stetter and George Reed hired a horse and buggy from Albert Thompson, livery- man, to drive to State College for the Bi their fast, snappy playing. The Indiana | Normal team last Saturday defeated the DuBois High school eleven by a decisive | score. They are reported as being un- | usually strong this year and well coach- ! ed in the new style of play. From all re- | ports the teams are about of equal strength and tomorrow’s game will un- doubtedly be an exciting one. At all | events go out and see it and encourage jthe Academy with your presence and patronage. a —Tuesday was an ill-fated day for the Cenrral Railroad of Pennsylvania. On the trip to Mill Hall in the morning, in the vicinity of Lamar a bolt came loose and dropped out of one of the driv- ing shafts of the engine with the result that the cylinder heads were knocked out and the engine otherwise damaged. Word was telegraphed to the head office in this place of the accident and it just ' happened that one of the company’s other engines was in the roundhouse without any fire in it and the other two : were out on the road somewhere between Bellefonte and Hecla, and it was almost a half hour before they reached the lat ter place and one of them could b® sent to the relief of the passenger train. But this was not all. When local freight was one its way to Bellefonte, about six or eight miles out of Mill Hall, the draw purpose of attending a party at Mr. Ker- | stetter’s home. For some reason they never reached there and just where they | thirty-four freight cars until another didgo has not yet been divulged but engine wassent to the rescue. when they returned home late at night TE, last week. Wss—— PR —————— ——Fred B. Smith, of New York, will | The Ladies’ Auxiliary will serve a ban- Houserville U. B. congregation, Sunday evening. | quet at 630 o'clock in the gymnasium. | The following officers of Lemont i Mr. Smith has just completed a tour of . O.F., wereinstalled by P. G., J. C. the world, addressing vast audiences in | {Prune tern vie: N. Go all the large cities. In Japan he spoke to |, acu . fifteen thousand people. Mr. Smith is one of the greatest American orators and it is to be hoped that no man will fail to hear him in the churches and at Petri- - ‘W. E. Grove;