Deworeaic alc, Bellefonte, Pa., April 1, 1927. Sm The Milan Cathedral. AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By Rev. L. M. Colfelt D. D. MILAN. How many lovely cities there are in Italy, each one containing a marvel and each marvel having its particular character. Iach of them has pro- duced a genius which it unfolds in ex- change for the gift of existence and the aspiration of immortality. The divinest monument of Milan, the civil city of Italy and its especial kind of architecture is: THE CATHEDRAL. Of all the arts the most impressive is that of Architecture. Stones shap- ed by design and expressive of beauty and harmony give pure and intellec- tual pleasure. The great lines, the broad spaces, the ambitious arches, the aerial cupolas, the columns with their adornments, the galleries with their perspectives, the court yards and their cloisters, force upon the mind profound meditations and always ex- press the genius of the age with its symbolical character. Without a doubt the best architecture to resist the tooth of time and the more de- structive age of man is the Grecian with its strength and stability. But the Grecian, though complete in its subjection to the laws of harmony and proportion is distinguished by small power of expression. It it too severe and rigid to appeal powerfully to the imagination. In fine, we come to architecture as we come io every- thing else, looking through the dom- inant element of our nature—as through a glass. To those in whom reason and conscience preponderate the simplicity of the Grecian with its truth to nature will always be pret- erable. The imagination, however, demands something more bold and striking. Art is a magician and im- presses her kiss of fire on very dif- ferent foreheads, the high and narrow as well as the broad and square. In obedience to her behests, the art- ists of the ages conceived the Gothic method. Not a line of Roman sever- ity is to be seen in the Cathedral of Milan. Truly it is imagination run wild and the florid Gothic expanded in such profuse open work as to con- stitute forever the richest flower of the Renaissance. Begun in 1386 by Duke John Galeas Visconti, it is not yet completed, though 500 years and over 100 millions of dollars have been expended on its erection, this vast sum being for labor alone, the marble hav- ing been a free gift. This tale of years and expense would sound im- probable but for the vision of the Cathedral itself. No gallery in Eu- rope contains nearly so much sculp- ture. The building is four hundred and fifty feet in length, two hundred and seventy in breadth and the arch- ed ‘roof is two hundred and thirty-two in height. foundation stone, the material is of fine, white marble from the quarries of Gangdoglio. The whole external surface is loaded with ornament. The friezes of the monuments, the cusps of -the turrets, the roof itself, are crowned with chiselings, white marble statues carved by the best sculptors of Italy appear in every niche, in every angle, on every steeple, around every spire. Their total number has béen estimated at more than 4000 but many of them have been carved for immortality alone as they are so con- cealed that they are visible only to the birds of the air that perch orn them. Within the Cathedral, fifty-two marble pillars, each eighty-four feet in heizht and twenty-four feet in cir- cumference and adorned with many statues and pediments, enriched with a prodigious number of arabesques, support the vast edifice. The marble floor, the red-polished columns, the singularly painted ceiling of the vault, a perfect imitation of sculpture, the rich colored glass of the windows, the various altars, the oaken confession- als, the different chapels, the paint- ings worth a province, the basso-re- lievos, the forest of statues, all by men of rank, would require a vast leisure for careful examination. We can but ascend to the roof of the tem- ple for a final view. Whoever has a feeling for the beautiful could not help admiring the prospect from the plat- form of the great cupola. From every angle of the temple beauty leaps, the endless array of ornamented pyramids being set in order with such a sym- metry that amid all this madness of architectural display of creeping arch- es, magnificent galleries, astonishing ogres on the parapets, one cannot es- cape the impression of a consonant method withal: Turning the bewild- ered eye from the immense roof a most imposing view of the whole city and plain is presented; surrounded by the chains of snow-capped mountains which girdle the horizon. To attempt to describe the sublimity of the Cath- edral of Milan is useless. Better to see, feel, admire—and be silent. It is unequalled in the world. In the Dominican Convent is the famous painting of “The Last Sup- per” by Leonardi Da Vinci. It is not a fresco but an oil painting on the wall of the Refectory, occupying a whole side of the low hall and about thirty feet in length by fifteen in height. It has been so much disfigur- ed by time and vandalism that it is difficult to trace. Sorrowful is it that the two-greatest paintings in the world “The Last Supper,” by Da Vinci and “The Last Judgment” by Angelo in the vault of the Sistine Chapel are so injured as to be almost incapable of restoration. This in the Dominican Convent has had an outrageous his- tory. It could hardly be credited that the Milanese authorities at the begin- ning of the 19th century, turned the convent into a prison where French soldiers guarded their prisoners of war. French soldiers used as a target the painting which had been the great- est ornament of Milan for three hun- dred vears. An old woman who lived near the Refectory has related that a soldier of the French Hussars told From highest turret to her that he himself had fired at the picture when guarding the prisoners in the hall, not knowmg what the pic- ture was and the prisoners, alike ig- norant, threw stones against it by way of amusement. Bonaparte, who had a genius for art amid his mighty schemes, on coming to Milan visited the picture and finding the hall used as a place of confinement “he shrug- ged his shoulders and stamped with his foot,” according to the relation of the aged woman and ordering the pri- soners away, had a door walled up and a balustrade extended the length of the hall in front of it. Milan has always held a high rank in the useful arts, being the greatest commercial and manufacturing city of Italy. The National Exposition, still open at the time of our visit, bore abundant witness to the practical en- ergy of the Milanese. From May un- til November 1st, more than a million persons had passed through the turn- stiles. Was the Exposition worth see- ing? Well, perhaps not worth com- ing from America expressly to see but by no means uninstructive when one was actually in Milan. Of the Exposition the Italians were proud as well they might be, seeing that it be- tokened for the first time that Italy was about to awake from the apathet- ic industrial sloth that had so long pervaded the peninsula. The ox and the ass were about to be relegated to the rear and the era of steam emerge. The Exposition did prove that Italian industry was full of probabilities. The machinery was not better than our own but prettier externally. Their carriages were light but strong and in finish surpassed the world. In silks they were running the Lyons manufactures closely and building up an export trade with England and America. Always great crowds thronged the exhibition of the proc- esses by which the silk was manufac- tured, exhibiting all the stages from the glass cases in which the silk worms feed on the mulberry leaves, the cocoons steeped in hot water, the delicate threads disengaged and reeled with as delicate machinery, clear to the loom with its finished product of brilliant and complicate pattern, all these processes passed successively under the eye of the specator. The cocoons and the ma- chines were manipulated by Milanese girls, in ancient costumes with hair folded in tresses and bound together with a number of silver bodkins, mak- ing a sort of shield at the back of the head and presenting a peculiar and unique appearance. Cotton could also be traced from the raw material to the manufactured article. This was an element of popular interest that was wanting in our Centennial Exposi- tion which might have been anticipat- ed on a larger scale with greater to- kens of popular approval. But the jewelry exhibit, with its pfofusion of cameos, mosaics, corals, chased and beaten gold and silver work, in which the Italians surpass the world beside attracted throngs. One booth espec- ially we noticed filled with products of Neapolitan skill was crowded about with humanity many ranks deep from morning till night. Drawn by cur- josity, we joined the spectators to find it was not the fine jewels that were causing so much excitement but the most exquisite piece of young woman- hood it was our lot to see in all Eu- rope, a perfect Greek type, narrow forehead, brilliant eyes, olive complex- jon that blushed with crimson embar- rassment under the gaze of hundreds of starers, a Venus indeed with the body of Hebe. Horace Walpole tells of beauties practically mobbed in the streets of London by those eager to behold them but here was a spontaan- eous tribute of a mob of sightseers paid not a famous court beauty but a plebian girl of about 18 summers presiding over a Neapolitan jewelry case, that certainly testified to the ir- resistible attraction physical beauty has for all classes. Even the French child that happened to be standing by my side could not restrain its admir- ation but cried out “La Belle Made- moiselle! La Belle Mademoiselle!” " Last but not least among the ex- hibits which attracted attention was the celebrated Majolica ware that fill- ed the dome ir the center of the buiid- ing. For centuries this has been an Italian product. The forms of the vases are in many instances exquisite in beauty, a few of them being mod- ern in design but for the most part models of the antique. The dismal weather somewhat dampened our en- thusiam for the future exploration of this massively built city in which mean looking homes are as rare as palaces in other towns. But with rain falling fast and the tempest moaning sadly through the trees we traversed the great squares leading to our hotel oblivious to all but the gloom and tempted to substitute for Milan Mag- nificent—Milan Muddy. Milan seemed to be devoid of any respect for foot passengers, the pave- ment and the street maintaining the same level without any line of demar- cation and both sufficiently dirty. But the general architecture of the city is massive and imposing in the extreme, the foundations of first stories being rugged as bridges and railroad abut- ments in our country as if built with an eye single to strength and endur- ance. The Duomo, a vast arcade, glass covered, furnishes the Milanese with a rendezvous, to which thousands resort at night, with its music, its ta- bles for refections and its social en- joyment. This is something unique and not to be seen in any other Euro- pean city. While the Milanese seem to be more solid and sombre than the gayer and more volatile Neapolitans, they are just as addicted to music but, be it said, of a more classical type. The world beside does not present such a sight as the La Scala Opera House with its tier on tier of magni- ficent boxes filled to the roof, and the pit jammed and even the vestibule crowded with half a thousand stand- ing, 6000 of them enjoying, on the night of our visit, the rendition of Semiranides by Patti, suppo~ted by the greatest Divas in Italy and the famous La Scala chorus. I am too much of a Philistine in respect of music to be fitted to convey any ade- quate conception of the grandeur, the glitter, the beauty, the perfection of the performance. PINE GROVE MENTION. Mrs. Anna Gray is visiting friends in Berwick this week. David Porter has recovered from an attack of scarlet fever. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Corl spent Friday with friends in Altoona. _ C. L. Goodling and wife are spend- ing the week in Philadelphia. _ Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Miller are visit- ing relatives at New Oxford. Fred Corl, of Juniata, was an over Sunday visitor with his mother. Rev. W. W. Moyer made pastoral calls in this section last Tuesday. John Meyers, of Somerset, was registered at the St. Elmo on Friday. Miss Helen Young spent several days last week with friends in Belle- fonte. Forty names are on the roster for the organization of a P. 0. A. lodge in our town. Melvin Barto has resigned as teacher of the Baileyville school owing to ill health. Charles Goss, of Harrisburg, spent several days last week with his mother in this place. ’ Russell O’Bryan was taken to the Centre County hspital, on Friday, as a medical patient. Jacob DeHaas, of Mt. Union, spent the latter end of the week at the M. C. Wieland home. Miss Grace Smith, of Centre Hall, was a Thursday visitor at the Mrs. Viola Smith home. Mrs. Laura Lytle and Mrs. George Glenn spent Wednesday in Bellefonte on a tour of the shops. A kitchen shower was given Mrs. John A. Neidigh, on Monday evening, at her home on White Hall. Russell Foster, of Mgahanoy City, spent last week on a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Foster. George Bell, of Spruce Creek, was here on Tuesday to see that his mother got properly fixed up in the Goss apartments on west Main street. Fred Randolph and wife and Fay Randolph, of Huntingdon, were guests at the R. R. Randolph home over Sun- day. James Keller, farmer and lumber- man, of Charter Oak, was here dur- ing the week in quest of farm stock but was not very successful in finding much. Our new barber, Mr. Springer, has leased the J. W. Miller building and mechanics are now at work beautifying |: the interior. Rumor says he intends opening up a beauty parlor. After a two months stay at Camden, S. C., Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Aikens and daughter Mary Ann, and Mrs. Maurice Baum and daughter Catherine return- ed to State College on Friday. Harry W. Frantz, Republican czn- didate for county commissioner, was hereabouts during the week and seem- ed surprised to find so many Demo- crats in this section of the county. W. A. Collins has given up the agency for the Atlantic and Pacific Tea company and gone back to his anvil and tongs. Rumor has it that George Burwell will take the tea route. Last Friday evening the I. W. T. band invaded the James Pfoust heme, at Baileyville, and tendered a kitchen and linen shower tc the newlyweds, who have located on the Mrs. Reish farm. It proved a very enjoyable event for all. $ ww E. Rearick, of Milroy, was a visitor here last Thursday. Forty years ago he lived at Centre Hall and manufactured corn planters and re- called many of the incidents of those days to old friends. He is now in the grain and lumber business and quite successful. A double birthday celebration was held at the Joseph Curtis Meyers home, on the Branch, on Sunday, in honor of Mr. Meyers and daughter Evelyn. Mrs. Meyers prepared an elaborate dinner of roast chicken, etc., which the guests enjoyed very much. Both Mr. Meyers and Miss Evelyn re- ceived many nice gifts. George A. Goss quietly celebrated his 57th birthday anniversary, on Monday, at his home near Charter Oak. He is the eldest son of the late Cyrus Goss and was born in Pine Grove Mills. As a young man he lo- cated in Pittsburgh where he learned the plumbing trade, but.is now en- gaged in farming. A few friends were invited in on Monday to help dispose of Je chicken dinner prepared by his wife. It is estimated that five thousand people attended the Will Kline sale, on the Dr. Kidder farm, last Satur- day, it being the last of the season in this section. The sale amounted to more than six thousand dollars. The Ed Kocher sale, at Graysville, proved the banner sale of the season, total- ing $8,100. His five horses brought $1,000; his herd of cows $3,000; hogs $500; chickens $350. One brood sow brought $130. The movings in this section included John Hess to his father’s farm at Shingletown. C. B. Lohr from Al- toona to the James E. Watt farm in the Glades. W. A. Reish to Williams- burg. James Pfoust to the Jacob Reish farm at Baileyville. Ed Harp- ster to the J. D. Dreiblebis farm at Fairbrook, Mr. Dreiblebis moving to his new home at Struble. John Parker moved into a house in Lytle’s Addition, George Brown succeeding him on the Charles Snyder farm at White Hall. C. M. Powley sold his farm to Charles Simpson and retired to a home in Baileyville. Elmer Rider moved from the James McCool farm to that of J. G. Strayer, at Gatesburg. Ira M. Corl has retired to a cosy home in State College and his farm will be tenanted by Charles Rudy. After a five years rest Jacob Cramer has again taken possession of his own farm and will resume tilling the soil. John Horner has moved onto the old Horner place near Centre Hall. S. E. Fleming has taken charge of his new farm near Boalsburg, H. E. Harpster moving into the Fleming home, on east Main street, which he recently bought. R. E. Musser moved into the W. E. McWilliams apartments, at Rock Springs, the Ault family moving fo Mooresville. LeRoy Trostle has taken charge of the Clement Dale farm at Harrisonville, and Elmer Spicher the J. E. McWilliams farm near Pine Grove Mills. N. O. Dreiblebis has retired from the farm and moved to his new home at Struble, while his son Walter will farm the old homestead, at White Hall. Joseph Markle has moved to the McCoy farm at Potter’s Mills. Kyle Alexander has returned to his farm at Julian. Vare Gearhart moved into the Fry place on east Main street, and Ephriam Dodd to the H. S. Illingworth place at White Hall. Guy Kocher and bride have located in Altoona. Mrs. Maria Reed will in the future make her home with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Reed, on east Main street. John Klinger purchased the J. M. Goheen farm, in Harris township, and has taken possession of same. Frank Powell is a new beginner on the David Wagner farm, at Houserville. Samuel Reed moved from Mooresville to the Daniel Irvin farm, at Baileyville. A. C. Rockey has quit the farm and moved to Bellefonte, Mr. Rudy suc- ceeding him on the A. O. Johnson farm, at Pine Hall. Leonard Griffin has moved onto the Strunk farm. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Krebs, of State Col- lege, have taken rooms in the Mrs. Susan Goss home in this place. Robert Bloom has moved into the Dunlap apartments. John A. Neidigh is a be- ginner on his father’s farm at White Hall. B. C. Smeltzer has moved onfo his father’s farm, in Buffalo Run valley, Charles Leosch succeeding him as tenant on the Hon. John T. McCormick farm, at Pine Hall. Ed Kocher quit the farm and moved to Warriorsmark, Daniel Fish- er taking charge of his farm. Will Kline and family have moved into a home at Shingletown. Mrs. Harry Glenn has gone back to her parental homa on the Branch. Miss Edith Sankey has taken rooms in the Mrs. Viola Smith home. Elmer Rider has moved onto the F. X. Rider farm, at Gatesburg, and J. B. Kessler to the G. E. Harper farm, at White Hall. —Little Majorie came to tell her Sabbath school teacher that she would have to give up her part in the Christ- mas exercises. “Oh, Majorie!” lamented the teach- er, “don’t say that. Have you lost your Christmas spirit so soon, my dear?” Majorie shook her head. “Not my Chrithmath thpirit,” she lisped “It’th my front teeth.” —R. C. T. B. tells us that a Bishop in England was watching a small boy playing in the gutter. “What are you doing, my little man?” he asked. “Making a kerfedral.” And where is the bishop?” “Oh, I ain’t got enough mud to make a bishop.” e——————————e—— BOALSBURG. John Dernar is convalescing from his recent operation. : N. E. Hess, of State College, was a visitor in town on Tuesday. Edwin Benner, of State College, was a visitor in twon on Sunday. Henry Reitz Jr. went to Oak Hall, on Monday, to assist L. K. Dale on the farm. John Klinger purchased the Goheen farm, vacated by Mr. Cole, and will occupy it April 1st. Mrs. Miranda McIntyre and baby are visiting Mrs. MecIntyre’s parents, Mr. and Mis. David Bohn. Mrs. E. E. Stuart returned home on Thursday after spending the winter with her sons, in Pittsburgh. Phil D. Foster, of State College, and son, Harold Foster, of Chicago, were business visitors in town on Fri- day. Mrs. E. R. Tussey and daughter, Mary Helen, and Miss Mary Segner have been victims of tonsilitis the past week. Mrs. O. F. Smith, who was called to her former home in Maine on account of the death of her brother, is suffer- ing a nervous breakdown. William Cole sold his farm machin- ery and stock at public sale on Tues- day and will move into the John Kim- port residence, on west Main street. George Mothersbhaugh purchased the Wm. Stuart farm, east of town, and will take possession on Tuesday. The Stuart family will occupy the Mothersbaugh residence on Main street. OAK HALL. Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Dale and family spent Sunday at the John Lambert home, at Bellefonte. Mr. Levi Roan, of Williamsport, spent the week-end with his father, Mr. George Roan, at the N. B. Martz home. Mr. and Mrs. James Searson and daughter, of Centre Hall, were callers, Sunday, with Mrs. Searson’s parents, at this place. ; Mrs. Philip Shoemaker, of near State College, is spending several days at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mus. Frank Ishler. Misses Emma Eliza and Nanny Bell Stuart, and Rosella Meyer, of Boals- burg, were entertained at dinner Sun- day, at the home of their friend, Miss Anne Williams. ‘THREE to FIVE MINUTES (ERR 3 rss nia Much Py Sv VO, [ tr. ave] ing oe by women AT 109-113 WEST 4580 ST. — . i - Rooms $3 so JL MthBathi300f, — : Vg ¥ Send Postal For Rates A » and Booklet W. JOHNSON QUINN, Pes, (0 4, R— on stroppe Save Your Face Onec-over with a keen blade gives a comfort shave and prevents skin irritation. Valet Auto-Strop Razor —Sharpens Itself d, super- to 5285 ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW KLINE WOODRING. — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Practices im Office, room 18 Crider all courts. Exchange, KENNEDY JOHNSTON — Attorney-at Law, Bellefonte, Pa. Prompt at- tention given all legal business em~ trusted to his care. Offices—No. 5, Hast High street. M. KEICHLINE. — Attorney-at-Law and Justice of the Peace. All pro- fessional business will receive prompt attention. Offices on second floor of Temple Court. 49-5-1y G. RUNKLE. — Attorney-at-Law. Consulistion Bo Zaglish Sud Ger- man. ce riders Exchan Bellefonte, Pa. 55.8 PHYSICIANS D R. R. L. CAPERS, OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte State College Crider’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. 8S. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his resi- dence. 35-41 CASEBEER, Optometrist, Regis D. C tered and licensed by the State. Eyes examined, glasses fitted. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. Frames repaired and lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg., High 8t., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-22-tf VA B. ROAN, Optometrist. Licensed by the State Board. State College, every day except Saturday. Belle- fonte, in the Garbrick building opposite the Court House, Wednesday afternoons from 2 to 8 p. m. and Saturdays 9 a. m. to 4.30 p. m. Bell Phone. 68-40 Feeds We keep a full stock of Feeds on hand all the time COW CHOW 24% DAIRY FEED $50.00 per Ton Try our 22% Dairy Feed $45.00 per Ton We can make you a 30 to 32% Dairy Feed, to use with your corn and oats chop, made of Cotton Seed Meal, Oil Meal, Gluten and Bran at $47.00 per Ton Why pay more for something not so good ? We Have Taken on the 32 per cent Wayne : at $54.00 per ton Dairy F $ pe Our Poultry Feeds Can’t be Better Scratch grains........... $2.40 per H. Wagner’s poultry Mash.. 2.90 per H. Cotton seed meal 43%......... $45.00 per ton Oil meal 84%....cc0000vvvenn, 56.00 per ton Gluten feed 23% ..c00vvvinnnes 42.00 per ton Alfalfa fine grade......... 45.00 per ton Bram. .co esecin viii. 36.00 per ton Middlings .......c00000ne 38.00 per ton Mixed Chop....c.covvvnee 38.00 per ton (These Prices are at the Mill) $2.00 per Ton Extra for Delivery. G.Y. Wagner & Go., Inc 66-11-1yr. BELLEFONTE, PA. Caldwell & Son Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces DANIEL AAAS AN SS Full Line of Pipe and Fit- tings and Mill Supplies All Sizes of Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings ESTIMATES Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished 66-15-tf. Fine Job Printing at the WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK 2 that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Call on or communicate with this office Employers This Interests You The Workman's Compensation Law went into effect Jan. 1, 1916. It makes insurance compul- sory. We specialize in placing such insurance. We inspect Plants and recommend Accident Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates. It will be to your interest to consult us before placing your Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON. Bellefonte 43-18-1yr. State College -