THE CENTRE _REPORTE R. msm In ee dhe sonra THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1911 DEATHS, Thursday afternoon of last week, Abraham P, Luse, one of Centre Hall's substantial citizens and business men, passed away after an illness of five weeks, at the age of seventy years, ten months and four days. Interment was made at Centre Hall, Monday morning, the funeral services having been conducted by Rev. F. W, Barry, pastor of the Lutheran church, of which denomination the deceased was 8 member for many years. He was assisted by Rev, 8. A. Bnyder, pastor of the United Evangelical church. In 1888 Mr. Luse moved from near Penns Cave to Centre Hall, where the firm of A. P. Luse & Son was formed, the son being Clement Luss. They have continued conducting the Centre Hall planing mill ever since, and in a financial way were successful, In conpection with the planing mill they also built a number of houses in Cen- tre Hall, and thus the firm materially aided in building up the town, The family of the deceased consists of a wife and these children : Clement, W. Milford, and John M., all of Cen- tre Hall ; and Emma, wife of John D. Neese, of Auburn, New York. Ope brother, D. F. Luse, of Centre Hall, and two sisters, namely, Mrs. J. W, Shook, of Spring Mille, and Mrs. Mary Ruttgers, of Lorain, Ohio, also sur. vive. The surviving half-brothers are Perry H., Centre Hall ; Lloyd M. Rebersburg ; Malcolm A., Johnstown. Some months ago Mr, Luse fell from a wagon, brulsing the fl:sh on his hip, and just hefore he took his bed for the last time he contracted a severe cold. About that time the bruise became an open sore, and it gradually grew worse, causing him great pain at all times, and finally his death, Mrs, Sarah E Hartswick, senior member of the well known grocery firm of 8B. E. and M. M. Hartswick, of 1525 Tenth street, Altoona, died at her home at seven o'clock, Baturday, September 30th. She had been suffer- ing for several months with ailments of a complicated nature and a few weeks previous to her death she was taken to the hospital in Altoona, where she was operated on for gall stones, eighty-four gall stones being removed from her, Mrs. Hartswick was a daughter of Daniel and Eleanor Mothersbaugh, sud was born in Holi- daysburg, Javuary 20, 1845 ; later the family moved to Harris township, this county, where she was married to Adam Hartawick, in November, 1866, where they were engaged in farming. In April, 15887, they moved to Altoona, where they siarted =» grocery store. After the death of her husband, which occurred about four teen years ago, she with her youngest gon kept up the grocery business, She was the mother of six children, one of whom, Mrs. Elizabeth Davis, died in 1895 ; those who survive are : Mrz, 8S. F, Keosinger, John G., Mrs, Oliver Layson, Mac. M., and Mise Edith, all residing in Altoons, the last two at home. Eight grandchild. ren and one great-grandehlild also sur- vive, : The brothers and sisters who survive are Mrs, Busan Leoker, of Green Is land, New York ; Dr. H. H. Mothers- baugh, of Beech Creek; L. Mothers- baugh, of Boalsburg ; Mrs. Bamuel Glenn, Btate College, and Miss Aman- ds Mothersbaugh, of Allegheny. Mrs. Hartswick was a cousistent member of the Third Presbyterian church, Funeral services were held at her home on Bunday afternoon, con- ducted by ber pastor, Rev, Irvine, aa- pisted by Rev, Barolby of the First Presbyterian church. On Monday the remains were taken to Lemont, where the funeral cortege was met by a number of relatives and friends from that vicinity and Boals- burg, and conveyed to the cemetery at the Branch, where she was laid to rest by the side of her husband. The funeral rites were performed by Rev. W. K. Harnish of the Presbyterian church, at Lemont, Mrs. Frank Smith, whose maiden name was Martha Hoover, a daughter of John and Anna Hoover, was born in Harris township, ino December, 1842, Bhe was married to Frank Smith some time during the sixties, and moved to Clearfield, Her husband died in Feb- ruary, 1910, they had no children, but her niece, Miss Bertha Hoover, had her home with them for quite a num- bear of years. Mrs, Bmith suffered for some time with cancer of the stomach, On the 14th of Heptember she was taken to the hospital at Clearfield for an opera tion, and never r:gained conscious. ness, but passed away at the midnight bour. Bhe is survived by one brother, William Hoover, of Bhingletown, who was with her at the time of her death. Funeral services were held at her home on Monday afternoon the 18th, conducted by the present minister of the Presbyterian church, of which de nomination she had been a falthfal member. Interment was Mads the cemetery at Clearfield, THE ANTIQUES. { Concluded Yom last week. ) The exhibits in this department were varied and interesting. The names of the exhibitors are . Mrs. Clyde Bradford. Centre Hall L. Rhone, Centre Hall W. H. Baird, Centre Hall Mrs. Belle Lytle, State College Mrs. M. J, Donachy, Spring Mills B. A. Donachy, Spring Mills J. C. Glenn, Lemont Mrs, W, E. Tate, Centre Hall 8S. E. Sham, Linden Hall C. L. Amspacker, McClure Roxanna Brisbin, Centre Hall Edgar Miller Anna Durst, Centre Hall Freda Bailey, Centre Hall Mrs. D. L. Kerr, Centre Hall Ida Sweet wood, Centre Hall Velma T. Simpkins, Centre Hall Mrs. Kate Conley, Centre Hall Mrs. W. H. Stiver, Centre Hall b Mrs. G. L. Goodhart, Centre Hall Emma McCoy, Centre Hall Mrs. John Luse, Centre Hall F. K. Carter, Centre Hall Minnie and Grace Sham M. R. Brown, Spring Mills Mrs. Magdalena Pardoe, Bellefonte Mrs, Mary Eby, Zion Mrs. Thomas Grove, Centre Hall Anna Grove, Centre Hall Virgie Bilger, Pleasant Gap Mamie Brooks, Linden Hall Twila Hile, Pleasant Gap Roy Uhl, Pleasant Gap Mrs, J. Sharer, Centre Hall Mrs, A. H. Weaver, Centre Hall 8. B. Weaver, Lemont John Lloyd, Spring Mills Mrs. Henry Shultz Malcolm Musser, Bellefonte Irvin Walker, Spring Mills Mrs. Isaac Smith, Centre Hall Résella Sylvas, Centre Hall Amelia P. King, Centre Hall Mrs. Alexander, Belleville Grace Armbruster, Spring Mills Mrs. Alice Bartges, Centre Hall Margaret Emery, Centre Hall William Bailey, Centre Hall Grace Smith, Centre Hall W, A. Krise, Centre Hall Mrs. C. R. Neff, Ceatre Hall Mrs. 8. A. Krape, Centre Hall Mrs. Rose Dewoodie, Centre Hall Adaline McClenahan, Centre Hall Cora Brungart, Centre Hall Mrs. Julia Shuey, Lemont Mrs. Sara Etters, Lemont Mrs. Carolyn Dale, Lemont a ——— > Aaronsburg, to Bellefonte last Friday. the home of Zwiongli Halley, ser. Miss Mabelle Crouse has just retarn- of ladies hats. or THE BOILING WATER POINT. On the Scale This Is Marked at 212 Degrees, but Under Certain Condi- tions It May Bs Several Hundred Dogrees—The Critical Temperature. On an ordinary Fahrenheit thermom eter there Is writteu opposite 212 de grees “Bolling point of water” and op posite 82 degrees “Freezing point of water.” Nelther of these ls correct ex cept for a certain condition of the at mosphere, and that Is when it gives on the barometer about thirty inches, or fifteen pounds pressure to the square inch. This is the ordinary pressure at what is known as sen level, and to this all thermometers are calibrated. In a mountainous region the pressure is burdiy ever so much as fifteen pounds, und water bolls at sometimes as low us 200 degrees, If water is bolled In a diving bell, where the pressure Is forty or fifty pounds a square inch, its temperature will be several hundred degrees in- stead of 212. If water is bolling In a near vacuum the temperature is so small that the hand thrust into the water would actually feel cold What has been sald about the bolling point applies to some extent to the freezing point, but here it differs for different materials, whereas the re- marks about the bolling point of water apply to the bolling points of all Hq 1: ad 5. Son ie substances when they freeze become larcer while others become smaller On thi 5 Cepends the freezing point nt : nt pre waures of atmos- phere ‘ater expands on freezing; so nd some other things All other subsinuces become smaller on freezing. Water pipes burst when the water freezes. Colns of gold and sliver are stamped instead of being molded. for the metals prow smaller on freezing or solidifying. and consequent Iy the colin would be wabbly It has been found that the things that expand on solidifying. as water, freeze at a lower temperature when the pressure Is increased. while the others freeze at a higher. When a substance that expands freezes ander higher pressure than usual it has to exert more force to shove the pressure do type mein ay. and consequently has to use up nt energy. thus losing ning colder contracts s will ¢ or solidify at a smperature, which uge most sub ordinary at ous advanced r of the earth nis that the tances that Mre. Grace Zebring, of Columbus, J. Deshler. days Isst week. Messrs Thomas Weaver, Warren Bower and Clarence Eisenhour have | gone to South Fork where they will | be employed. The funeral of Mra. Milton Btover was held in the Reformed church Monday forenoon. Mr. and Mm. Sto. ver lived in Asronsburg from the time they went to housekeeping until =» year ago when they moved on a farm west of Milibhelmu,. Her sorrowiog hus- band has the sympathy of the entire community. Ed —— HEALS OLD SORES New Remady for Eczema that Cares Most Stubborn Osecs in Short Time, Even if you have tried all other remedies for eczema, from the old- fashioned salves to the new drugs without benefit, do not lose hope. Try the latest discovery, the antisep- tic Renovo, on the offer from the Iabratory that if it does not care, your money will be refunded. Eczema, pimples, saltrheum and other skin diseases readily yield to the healing, antiseptic qualities of Renovo, while even old sores soon begin to heal when Renovo is applied. A three inch tube of Renovo costs only 50 cents, and if it does not do your skin trouble more good than any other remedy you have used, the loos! agents Murray & Bitoer, will refand your money, Use it for sny skin trouble, and see how soon the itching and soreness disappear, and the skin becomes clesr, soft and free from blemish, I — Mf SAP AA—— Anxious to know how Centre coun ty people were living in Chester coun- ty, Mr. and Mra, John A. Mariz went to Phoenixville last week, and while there for the greater part of the time were guests of the latter's sister, Mrs, Jerome Auman, snd also visited other Uentre county people iu that locality, as well ae the Allentown fair, Mr. Martz Is very favorably Impressed with farming conditions there, A MA MP FAA The best plaster. A plecs of flan. nel dampened with Chamberlain's Liniment and bound on over the af. fected parts is superior to a plaster and costs only one tenth as much. For i i i i 3 i if It is at a tom i critical It will cl of this point r of Hau off one rion Aloxide, erimenters tried rdinnry tempera pressures, whereas ved the gases be stuperatures before r } uefaction peued immediately, method employed todas The air i= com then allowed to a small orifice. thus ex pandinzs and cooling, Ix then pumped bark and compressed by the putap allowed to po throuzh the orifice again. thas coating #tiil more. until at inst it i« below the critical tempera ture. when the egmpression caused by the pump [lqueties It. — Lawrence lodges fn Chleago Record Herald. in Trouble. Yea” ho ald regretfully, “I'm In a tieht corner. My sweetheart (s wild on the sublet of germs and microbes and she Inclata that | must choose be tween her and oy mustache. I'm to loge one or tie other” “Lowe the mustache, my boy.” “That's just the trouble. If you ever anw me without it yon'd pity my Laonting fear that when it's gone I'll lose the girl too.” Tha Simple Answer. A goctely man at a luncheon said of mn woll known stiffrmplist: “She arocoruplishes a great deal, but some of her wethods are uot quite fair A man once inquired of her husband: “Do yon give your wife an pllow- ance, or does she ask for money when she wants 17 “Moth. wus the simple answer.” in Doubt. “Were you ever up before me? asked a magistrate, “Shore. 1 don’t know, yor anner What tice does your anner get yp?'- Leadon Aunwers. Par what you owe, and you'll know what yon owo~ Franklin. Don't trifis with a cold Is good ad- vice for prudent men aad women, It may be vital in case of a child, There Is nothing better than Chamber. Inin's Cough Remedy for coughs and oolds in children. It is safe and sure. For sale by all dealers. » A AP ATTN Centre Reporter §1 per year In advance, : DROWNED WITH HER FIANCE. Story of a Pathetic Episode That Was Intertwined With the Tragic Loss With All en Board of the French Torpedo oat Pluviese. Underlying the tragedy of the loss of the French s Pluviose with thimarine torpedo boat twenty-seven lives wien she was sunk in the bottom of the English channel by a collision with a surface steamship on May 25, 1010, was a plteous episode, involving the death of a beautiful and brilliant young Frenchwoman, The French government suppressed the story so thoroughly not known save to those in paramount authority in the navy, but American naval officers say the fact of the hap- pening has become known to other naval men all over the world. The Pluvieose and a sister submarine had gone out from the navy vard at y disporting in a series of dives and ris fngs to the surface. The feat known as “porpoising” plished with great skill, the submari being entirely respousive to every tu wns being accom The act of Eporpel sing” Is an imitation of the action of ti ance immediately afterward ing brought toward the surfa clently for its periscope to protr of water, when the officer below abled to make a gen vey of the water a boat dives out of sigh ghe would have sighte be enabled to tieship or crul pedoes direct] In the act o face the Ploy der the channel steamshi fata, The keet o he (al suhmari: upper casement, a long and two feet wide water rushed. The gered along wi above the surf . } abled, her crew unable to check the inrus) went down RBhe had a crew of twenty Commandant Pras was the « cer. There were tw Which one of these thn sweetheart was aboard is not de ly known to the American naval cere, but they declare of the fact One of the three of the pleadMgs of hi allowed to make marine with him and the peril that his du him to brave. He consultation with and got thelr consent for the regulations « strictly fort trips In the that nd tore a hug her, jut, whatever the cond . broug vio She wore a long oliskin coat and sou'wester hat belonging to ber sweet: heart, which sufficlently disguised her sex to admit of her going aboard with. gut belng challenged by any of the seniries patrolling the quay where the Pluriose lay tethered on the day that she was to make her fatal trip. And the girl, smiling over her triumph: climbed down the ladder inta the little gasoline filled room and beasd the or ders given for the battening down of all the batches, the firm screwing into pinces of these coverings and then, perhaps fascipatedly, watched the dial indicator as it told how the Pluviose wis ‘sinking deeper and deeper inte tho sea Divers who went down after the Pluviose was sunk, earrying below #teel cables with which ineffectual at- tempts were made with huge derticks above to bring the Pluvioze to the sur face, reported that they heard mappings in the interior of the submarine In any event, when, days later, the Plu viose was raised and tugged into shal low water, none that had been aboard of her was alive. She had filled com- pletely with water. As she was raised the water poured from the great gash that had been cut in her steel case ment by the Channel steamship, Once in shallow water it was the work of only a little while to remove the covering of the conning tower. In that tower they found the young offi cor. Aud dead in his arms, with her own arms tightly clasped around his neck and her young face resting against his breast, they found the young woman.—New York World, Diplomatie, fhe (coldiy)—T hardly know how to receive your proposal, You know I am worth a million, of course! Jack (dip lomatically)— Yes—wworth a million oth. or giris. Bhe (rapturously)—Oh, Jack! It is a miserable thing to live in sus pense; it is the life of a spider. «Swift SA SAMY BIN, Billousness ls due to a dicordered condition of the stomach, Chamber Inin’s Tablets are essentially a stomach medicine, intended espeelally to act on that organ ; to cleanse it, strengthen it, tone and invigorate it, to regulate the liver and to banish billousnes bya dea and effectually, For sale ond ie gir. Emery's CENTRE HALL, - - LADIES’ SHOES SOLD ONLY AT BELLEFONTE ( ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ : ¢ ¢ ’ ¢ / ¢ ( ¢ ¢ / # ¢ f “TDD DBD ODD e RVD DR ] A J. Q. A. KENNEDY Centre Hall Pa. THE Proprietor a a Sd - TTD 0OT HLH HD DONO N DNDN