Bemorna atc “Bellefonte, Pa, April 15, 1927. Venice and the Venitians. AUTOBIOGRAPHY. By Rev. L. M. Colfelt D. D. VENICE. The Greek story of Eos or Aurora, goddess of the morning, falling in love with Tithonous has been told by Tenny- son in one of his stateliest poems. Tithonous asked for immortality and Aurora, in preferring the request of Jupiter, omitted to add eternal youth as well and so the beautiful dream of love and happiness was dissipated as wrinkles and gray hairs came on apace. Tothonous became sick of cruel immortality and longed that the gift should be recalled. Men came and tilled the fields and slept beneath them. The swan died after many a summer and while Tithonous, no long- er glorious in his beauty went roam- ing about the silent places of the East like a shadow of a dream. The condi- tion of Venice approximates to that of Tithonous. The Doges celebrated the espousal of the city with the Ad- riatic in gondolas covered with bro- cade and moved by golden oars and Venice was endowed with immortal- ity but she forgot to ask for ever- lasting youth and prosperity. Al- ready she is gray-haired. Her very Doges have long since disappeared and if they ever return in spirit, it is to haunt the deserted marts and mourn the absence of all the former glory. The pearly crowns, the robes of velvet, the gilded barges,—those lions of bronze with their eyes of diamonds, those crocodiles of emer- :alds and rubies, those splendid ban- quets immortalized by Paul Veronese, are all departed and the city sits desolate upon her islets with a double crown of rushes and sea-weed upon her brow. The marble palaces remain but like brilliant apparel on a hideous woman, they only render the decad- ence of her citizens more apparent. In these self-same palaces, the stint and beggary of “Wolfs Crag” is almost universally prevalent. There are max- ble floors and tables with rich mosaics but empty dishes. The representation of the Merovinis, the Falieros, the Contarines and many other families whose names appear in Iibra D Ora still live in their old family palaces but their incomes are wholly drawn from small estates on the mainland. Others iike the Da Mulas who were once so rich that a law was passed in the days of the Republic, forbidding them to buy more houses and palaces are next door to paupers now. Their country homes are almost unfurnished and in their town palaces they have one or two rooms finely adorned where they receive visitors. Their food they manage to wring out of their peasants on the Metager sys- tem. Their main expenditure is a gondolier, who is the man of all work when not rowing. No matter how small the income a small portion of it is hoarded. To such an extent is this old, gentlemanly parsimony carried that when they receive their friends on their weekly reception days the lady of the house rings the bell and orders the gondolier to bring in the coffee. He appears with the coffce- pot and cups. The hostess waves her hand and says, “No one will take cof- fee” on which the guests bow for they know from their own experience at home that this coffee is but a compli- mentary myth, there being neither coffee in the pot nor sugar in the bowl. Beyond this the hospitality of a Venetian patrican never goes. But if an English visitor establishes himself in the city and invites these nobles to dinner we have been assured that they have the capacity of a eamel gorging himself for a voyage across the des. ert of Sahara. From this degradation of her noblest citizens let us turn to historic Venice, to these noble children of her ancient household who conquer- -ed fatality, and saving themselves in the lagunes from the irruptions of Attila and his ferocious Huns, pre- served the liberties of the race through the whole of the middle ages. who struggled with the waves and awakened the energies of commerce when: society was uselessly hiding in eloisters, who terrified the Turks with their standards and drove back fatal- ism with its devouring career, who had the Imperial Crown of Byzantium 30 often in their hands but repelled by the Phryian cap of the older Re- public, who chiselled palaces of mar- vellous sculpture, painted pictures with palettes to which the rainbow had lent its colors, who decorated monu- ments of singular beauty and majesty —in fine, who built a city which mod- ern: Venetians are incompetent even to inhabit—a city on whose bronze and marble are preserved the finest re- mains of the three ancient civiliza- -fions, the Asiatic, the Greek and the Roman, lost everywhere else in a complicate series of shipwrecks. With such a grand past and ignoble present we often think it had been better if Venice had not been endowed with im- mortality but had in the beginning of her decay flung herself like Ophelia into her lagunes and disappeared un- « der her own waters forever. A tragic ending with a curse upon her lips had “been noble far than this life of a men- «dicant shewing contentedly to the “world the bones of her former pros- perity which are covered with naught but the tatters of pride! The production of mesaics employs a large number of the people of Ven- ice. This art was discovered by an artist whose industry Pliny qualifies with the term of importunum ingen- um. The invention is probably due to the Persians from whom it passed to the Greeks and thence to Rome in the latter years of the Republic. It was patronized by the various Popes until the 14th century when Venice became the school of the art. St. Sophia at Constantinople and St. Peter at Rome present famous specimens of mosaic painting. But it was Titian who per- fected the art when he had the direc- tion of the mosaic decoration of St. Marc and caused the imitations of his own immortal paintings to be execut- ed. The mechanical part of the art | consists in uniting small pieces of var- iously colored marble so that the sur- faces may have the effect of a paint- ing. The fragments of marble, col- ored glass, or stones which are made use of, vary in size. They take every angular form which will suit the art- ist’s purposes in working out the con- tour of the design and at the same time enable him to join them without the least interval. - The artist prepares a ground of plaster, formed of chalk and marble-powder mixed with gum. The stucco thus prepared is spread upon the surface intended whether it be a church wall or a piece of jewel- ry. On this plaster the artist sketches the outline of the design and then with infinite pains inserts the small bits of marble in the stucco, arranging them so as to give the light and shade and the various tints. The process ends with polishing the whole surface with very fine sand and water and the artist’s labor is complete. Venice is a series of monuments, a wonder of wonders in the variety and richness of its architecture. Everywhere there is prodigality and freedom of method and over every style is flung the rich jewels of the East. If you examine the Venetian palaces with a square and compass, demanding of them obedience to a rigid mathematical harmony, then you will be shocked by the sight of a gallery supported by iron and a heavy column placed upon a slender one as if denying the general principle of gravity; you will be indignant at the spectacle of a mass of marble weighing like a mountain and riding a light, aerial gallery with its delicate bracing; but then if you can fling mathematics into the lagune and laugh at laws of proportion and re- member that Venice was born of peculiar historical circumstances and was a transition city between the civ- ilization of the East and the West, you will recognize that this archi- tecture is not only suitable but is un- matchable in the wealth of its ex- pression, the richness of its hyper- bole and the variety of its effect. The Church of St. Mark resembles nothing else in the world. The broad and low front is divided into five arcades not unlike the arches of a bridge and the entrances are formed by five gates of bronze. Stretching across the whole front is a ballustrad- ed gallery and in this are placed the four famous bronze horses which were foundered at Corinth, removed to Athens, served to adorn the trium- phal arches of Nero and Trojan at Rome, accompanied Constantine to Byzantium, transported in the 18th century from Constantinople to Ven- ice, and lastly under the government of the first Napoleon, placed in the Carrousel in Paris only to be return- ed to their present position in 1815. Language has no wods with which to paint so rich and unique a picture as this Basilica, covered with pyramids, statues and gildings, a mixture of all orders of architecture: Oriental, Goth- ic, Greek, Byzantium, Moorish—an epitome of all epochs, its blue arches sown. with stars, its columns of vari- colored jasper, its mosaics in the re- cesses, its cupolas above copics of St. Sophia, like apparitions of Asia, and its grand altar brought with the bronze horses from Constantinople. Next in interest is the massive palace of the Doges in Moorish style, resting its mass of red and white marble in a double gallery of arches interlaced with capricious orioles which harmonize with the diadem of sharp triangles and the airy belfry above. Around the balcony are col- lossal statues of the Doges and the men who epitomize Venetian history. Here is a library of 150,000 volumes and thousands of manuscripts. Ven- ice is the miother of Titian and in these galleries and on the ceilings and walls are the masterpieces of Titian, Paul Veronese, Corregio, and Alberti. Further on is the great ban- queting hall adorned with battle scenes, where, in cups of crystal in bacchanalian feasts and songs and coral garlands and sea- flowers the Doges and Patricians cele- brated the glories of the Republic in the richest fashion of the Renaissance. Still deeper in the heart of the Palace is the room of Justice, where sat the Council of Ten, with its traditions of traitors and dungeons, of the Bridge of Sighs and tragic stories to excite the imagination, half legendary nn doubt, but in many instances only too historically true. The Palace of the Doges, like the Seraglio of Constant- inople, has been more than once stain- ed with the heads of victims exposed on the outer balustrades and proves that an aristocracy armed with Re- publican laws can be as sangiunary as a despotism armed with the Ottoman scimeter. The fine portal of St. Mary of Nazareth, the Peristyle of St. Simon, the noble architecture of St. Roche, Santa Maria della Salute with its graceful tower and great globe of gilded bronze, the palace of Sanso- vino, like a work of Cellini, San Giorgio with its red and white marble, the Gudeccia in all the colors of the rainbow, San Lorenzo with its Armen- . ian convent and oriental towers like the curled sail of a large vessel, all are worthy of examination by the strang- er. At the eventide we took our last view of peculiar, beautiful Venice. The | heavens were of turquoise blue, the banks of sand were tinged with gold, the houses on the islets were bright and many colored and the sun, sink- ing behind the lagunes, gilded with his last splendors the spires of the churches and the great domes. The sombre gondolas skimmed the waters like fantastic creatures born of the night and in the distance were the islands and between their foliage, glimpses of stately buildings enamell- ed by the arts and anchored in a sea of eternal poetry. Now arose the first stars of the evening and now the first lights appeared in the win- dows of the city. The songs of the gondoliers sounded on the sweet air and mingled with the vesper hymns of the cloister, the serenade to earth blending with prayer to the heavens! ~——The “Watchman” is the most readable paper published. Try it. Sensuous | UTILITY EXECUTIVE DIES. Mr. Albert M. Lynn, president of The West Penn Electric Company and !a director of the American Water Works and Electric Company died at the Roosevelt Hospital, New York City, April 8, 1927, at 1:00 P. M. in | the fifty-second year of his age after a long illness. For over thirty years he had been identified in important executive ca- pacities with the public utility proper- ties of the American Water Works | and Electric Company. | Mr. Lynn was born in Indianapolis, | Indiana, on October 12, 1875, moving with his family to Pittsburgh in 1889, where he attended public schools. On February 1, 1893, he entered the em- ploy of the American Water Works and Guarantee Company, the pedeces- sor of the American Water Works and Electric Company, serving for some years in the general offices at Pitts- burgh. He then became manager of the Company’s water works plant at Chattanooga, Tennessee, and later of that at Birmingham, Alabama. For many years thereafter he was in charge of a large proportion of the Company’s water works properties. In 1917 he was elected president of The West Penn Company and upon the organization of The West Penn Electric Company he became its Presi- dent in which capacity he was serv- ing at the time of his death. Among his associates and through- out the large territory served by the propeties of which he was the head, Mr. Lynn was noted for the great en- ergy and attention which he devoted to his work. Mr. Lynn, who resided in the city of Pittsburgh is survived by his wid- ow, nee Miss Ethel Sharpe, of Birm- inghani, Alabama, and one son, Henry | Sharpe Lynn, now a senior at Prince- ton University; also by his mother, Mrs. P. A. Lynn, a sister Miss Clara Lynn and four brothers, William H., H. Ross, Arthur M., and Lawrence. { APPROPRIATION COMMITTEE STRONG FOR STATE COLLEGE During the past two weeks the sub committee of the House Appropria- tions committee made an inspection trip throughout the State, visiting all of the State-aid institutions, and in , their report submitted on Tuesday had the following strong recommendations ! in favor of adequate appropriations for both State College and the Rock- ! view penitentiary: i “There is no place that need of new , buildings is more apparent than at i State College. The Commonwealth, : through its Legislature and the Exec- ! utive, have neglected this institution for many years to the benefit of other . colleges and universities, and at the present time many of the buildings in ; which the young men and the young | women are being educated at State | College, are inadequate and unsafe. “The possibilities for the young men and the young women at State Col- lege are almost inconceivable, but they are being hampered year after vear because the Commonwealth has neglected to peform its duty to the college. FARM IMPROVEMENT URGED. Most of the State institutions have quite a large acreage and most of the { Institutions have a dairy farm and raise their own pork and poultry. We believe that all of the farms, however, jcan be greatly improved if the plan were systematized and had some one in close touch with the different insti- tutions who could advise on this sub- ject, and in this respect your commit- tee, is eonvinced that the farm at Rockview can be so operated that suf- ficient foods could be raised and canned at this institution to take care of many of the other State institu- tions. “There are 6300 acres connect- ed with this institution. Your commit- | tee further believes that a great : amount of the beef could be fed upon | this acreage and furnished to the dif- ferent State institutions. “In addition to the above your com- : mittee recommends that the main cell , building at Rockview should be com- pleted at as early a date as possible. This would take care of 500 more pris- oners, and that as soon as possible another cell building be erected which would take care of a thousand more prisoners, making a total of 1500 pris- | oners. “This would entirely relieve the con- gestion at the Eastern and Western Penitentiaries and would also relieve the necessity of a new Eastern Peni- tentiary. This would also give the warden at Rockview 1500 more men, out of which he could select a sufficient number to operate the farm and raise sufficient food of different kinds, much "of which could be canned and furnish- ed to the other State institutions. —“Is the motor-car an asset to the LUELElEl El El ELEUElLEUSu. church ?” inquires a religious paper. Well, of course, it brings a good deal of business to the churchyard.—The Western Christian Advocate. —-Subscribe for the Watchman. What Is a Diuretic? People Are Learni ing the Value of Occa- sional Use. VERYONE knows that a lax- ative stimulates the bowels. A diuretic performs a similar function to the kidneys. Under the strain of our modern life, our organs are apt to become sluggish and require assist- ance. More and more people are learning to use Doan’s Pills, oc- casionally, to insure good elimina- tion which is so essential to good health. More than 50,000 grateful users have given Doan’s signed rec- ommendations. Scarcely a commu- nity but has its representation. Ask your neighbor! ——— ashington 16--Day Excursion Friday, April 15 $12.60 Round Trip from BELLEFONTE Proportionate Fares from Other Points leaving time of trains, fares in parlor or sleeping cars, stop-over privileges, or other in- formation, or David Todd, Division Passenger Agent, Williamsport, Pa. Similar Excursions June 24, October 14. Pennsylvania Railroad For details as to consult Ticket Agents, DOAN’S Fits Stimalant Diuretic to the Kidneys SFoster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. Y. — FIRE INSURANCE At a Reduced Rate 20% 71-2¢6m J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent IRA D. 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Offices—No. 5, East High street. 67-44 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. Consultation in English and Gep- man. Office in Criders Exchan Bellefonte, Pa. oa PHYSICIANS R. BR. L. CAPERS, ee. OSTEOPATH. Bellefonte State College Crider’s Ex. 66-11 Holmes Bldg. _ 8. GLENN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon, State College, Centre county, Pa. Office at his resi- 35-41 D dence. D. CASEBEER, Optometrist, Regls- tered and Hcensed by the State, Hyes examined, glasses fitted, Sat- isfactlon guaranteed. Frames repaired and lenses matched. Casebeer Bldg, High St., Bellefonte, Pa. 71-22-t¢ 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. 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Plumbing and Heating Vapor....Steam By Hot Water Pipeless Furnaces NAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAS 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 4 SPECIALTY at the WATCHMAN OFFICE There is no style of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK 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