THE CITIZEN, FRIDAY MAY 12, 1011. AMUSEMENTS. Ilapiiy Homo Better 'I'liim Art. Helen Bertram had Just left tho stage. The applause for her songs had been vociferous and was still ringing through the corridors hack of the stage when she entered her dressing room. It was the time of all times to llnd an actress in tho humor to talk. "But let's don't talk about art," she said. "I get so weary of twad dle about art and the stage. Let's talk about doughnuts. I could talk from now till midnight about doughnuts, or cookies." "What's the trouble between you and tho stage and art?" "Oh, none, none In the world. Till f T Hlfo fnrtrn. nmv nnil fliori - - - - ...... .v, ' " n w.v.'. . thnt T nm n clnrror nml nn nntrnec I'm a woman and 1 llko to think like ono and talk like one. That's why I want to drop thoughts of art and the stage and talk about sho will never havo to undergo any of the battles with life I have had. My dream Is to see her by tho side of a man sho loves and who loves her, with two or threo Httlo kiddles playing on the floor. Doughnuts! Doughnuts and cooklesl If ever sho has to work, I hope It Is on the stage, where tho remuneration Is bo liberal; but my dream for her is home. "You know that little song, "I.ove Mo nnd the World is Mine." It's true. And what hnvo been tho victories of art compared to those of doughnuts? Doughnuts tho overwhelming winner! The only way to boss a man Is through love. Give him doughnuts, not art. MADAME HELEN ItERTItAM. doughnuts not doughnuts literally, but doughnuts figuratively dough uts as the emblem of love and a kappy home; for home, after all, is the place for woman If she would be a success in life. I wish I could say it like Dr. Parkhurst or some other preacher and I'd tell you how I believe woman's greatest achieve ment and greatest happiness Is in motherhood and home. "Why, what's art to this?" And she placed her hand on tho head of her pretty little girl. "That ap plause is mine to-day. To-morrow it goes to somebody else. Nature gave my voice to me. Next week she may take it away. But this Is mine mine forever," and sho put her arm around her girl. "God gave ler to me for my own. I may lose her for a minute, then she is mine .for eternity. "Why am I working?" For her, Jiot for fun. I am working so that ICvtracls From "Homo O.vnline," My Elbert llubbaril. He wno Imagines that modern ad vertising Is the exploitation of the public Is a bicuspldatl dlplidocus, and would do well to come out of his comatose state and currycomb his convulsions. Advertising Is the education of the public as to who you are, where you are, and what you have to offer in way of skill, talent or commodity. Life, now. Is human service. To deceive is to beckon for the Com missioner In Bankruptcy. Nothing goes but truth. We know' this because for over two thousand years we have been trying everything else. Academic education Is the act of memorizing things read In' books, and things told by college profes sors who got their education mostly by memorizing things read in books and told by oollego professors. It is easier to be taught than to at tain. it is easier to accept than to investi gate. It is easier to follow than to lead usually. Yet we are all heir to peculiar, unique and individual talents, and a few men are not content to follow. These havo usually been killed, and suddenly. Now, our cry is, "Make room for individuality!" "Truth," says Dr. Charles V, Eliot, Is tho new virtue. Let tho truth be known about your business. The only man who should not ad vertise is the one "who has nothing to offer in way of service, or one who can not make good. All such should seek the friendly shelter of oblivion, where dwell those who, shrouded In Stygian shades, foregather gloom, and are out of the game. Not to advertise is to be nominat ed for membership in tho Down-nnd-Out Club. The Adscripts and the Adcrafts are opposition societies to the Mummy Trust, symboled by tho Philadelphia Club that hoary, hoarson, senile and babbling bunch of oarnacles who, 'having lost their capacity to sin, alternately blab of a Goodyear virtue and boast of the days that are gone. About the best wo can say of tho days that aro gone, Is that they aro gone. The Adscripts and tho Adcrafts look to tho East. They worship the rising sun. Tho oleo of authority does not much Interest them. They want the Kosmlc Kerosene that sup-, plies the caloric. A good Adcraftscrlpter Is never either a phllophras,ter nor a theolo gaster he Is n pragmatlst. Ho seeks tho good for himself, for his clients, nnd for the whole human race. The science of advertising Is . the science of psychology. And psy chology is tho splence of the human heart. The ndvortlser works to supply a human want; and often ho has to arouse the desire for his goods. He educates tho public as to what It needs, and what It wants, and shows where and how to get It. Tho fact that you have all tho busi ness you can well manage Is no ex cuse now for not advertising. To stand still is to retreat. To worship tho god Terminus is to havo the Goths and Vandals that skirt the borders of every successful venture, pick up your Termlnli and carry them inland, long miles, between the setting of tho sun and his rising. To hold the old customers you must get out after tho new. When you think you aro big enough, there Is lime In the bones of the boss, and a noise like a buc caneer is heard in tho oiling. The reputation that endures, or the institution that lasts, is the one that is properly advortised. Tho only names lu Greek History that we know are those which Hero dotus and Thucydldes graved with deathless styll. The men of Home who live and tread the boardwalk are those Plu tarch took up and writ their names large on human hearts. All that Plutarch knew of Greek heroes was what he read In Herodotus. All that Shakespeare know of Clas sic Greece and Rome, and the heroes of that far-off time. Is what he dug out of Plutarch's Lives. And about all that most people now know of Greece and Rome they got from Shakespeare. Plutarch boomed his Roman friends .and matched each favorite with some Greek, written of by Herodotus. Plutarch wrote of the men ho liked, some of whom we know put up good mazuma to cover expenses. But of all the Plenipotentiaries of Publicity, Aaibassadors of Advertis ing, and Bosses of Press Bureaus, none equals Moses, who lived fifteen centuries heforo Christ. Moses ap pointed himself ad-writer for Deity, and gave us an account of creation, from personal Interviews. And al though some say these Interviews were faked, this account has been accepted for thirty-five centuries. Moses wrote tho first five books of the Bible, -and tills account includes a record of the author's romantic birth and of his serene and dignified death. Moses is the central figure, after Yahwetfi, In tho whole write-up. Egyptian history makes not a sin gle mention of Moses or of tho Exo dus, and no record Is found of the flight from Egypt save what MoBes wrote. At best, It was only a few hundred people who hiked, but tho account makes tho whole thing seem colos Bal and magnificent. And best of all, t'he high standard set has been nn inspiration to millions to live up to tho dope. The phrase, "The Chosen People of God," was a catch-phrase unrival ed. Slogans abound in Moses that have been taken up by millions on millions. When Moses took over tho, Judaic account, Jehovah was only a tutelary or tribal god. Ho was simply one of ninny. Ho 'had at least forty strong competitors. Tho Egyptians had various gods; the Mldianites, HIttltes, Philistines, Aniorltes, Am monites hud at least one god each. Moses made his god suprdme, and nil other gods. were driven from the skies. What turned the trick? I'll tell you the writings of Moses, and nothing else. So able, convincing, direct and inclusive were the claims of Moses that the world, absolutely, was won by them. In the Mosaic Code was enough of tho saving salt of commonsense to keep it alive. It was a religion for the now and here. Tho Mosaic laws are sanitary laws and work for the positive, present good of those who abide by them. It Is not deeds nor acts that last It Is the written record of those deeds nnd acts. It was not the life and death of Jesus that fixed Ills place as the central figure of His time and perhaps of all time it was what Paul and certain unknown writers who never even saw Him claimed and had to say in written words. Horatlus still stands at the bridge, because a poet placed him there. Paul Revere rides a-down t'he night giving his warning cry, he cause Longfellow sot the metres In a gallop. Across the waste of waters the enemy calls upon Paul Jones to sur render, and the voice of Paul Jones echoes back, "Goddam your souls to hell we have not yet begun to flghtV And the sound of the fear less voice has given courage to countless thousands to snatch vic tory from tho jaws of defeat. In Brussels there is yet to "be heard a sound of revelry by night, only be cause Byron told of it. Commodore Perry, that rash and Impulsive youth of twenty-six, never sent that message, "We have met the enemy and they are ours," but a good reporter did, and the reporter's words live, v,hile Perry's died on tiie empty air. Lord Douglas never said, "The hand of Douglas Is his owa, And never shall In friendship grasp, The hand of such as Marmlon clasp." Sir Walter Scott made that remark on white paper with an eagle's quill, and schoolboys' hearts will beat high as they scorn tho offered hand on Friday afterngons, for centuries to come. Vlrginus lives in heroic mould, not for what he said or did, but for the words put Into his mouth by a man who pushed what you call a virile pen and wrote such an ad for Vir ginius as ho could never have writ ten for himself. Andrew J. Rownn carried the Mes sage to Garcia, all right, but tho deed would hnve been lost In the dust-btn of time, and quickly too, wore it not for. George H. Daniels, who etched tho act Into the memory of tho race, and llxed the deed In history, sending It down the corri dors of time with the rumble of the Empire State Express, so that to-day it Is a part of the current coin of tho mental realm, a legal tender wher ever English she is spoke. All literature is advertising. And all genuine advertisements are liter ature. The author advertises men, times, places, deeds, events and things. His appeal Is to the univer sal human soul. If he does not know the heart-throbs or men and women, their hopes, joys, ambitions, tastes, needs nnd desires, his work will In terest no one but himself nnd his admiring friends. Advertising is fast becoming a line art. Its theme Is Human Wants, and where, when and how they may bo gratified. It interests, inspires, educates sometimes amuses Informs and thereby uplifts and benefits, lubri cating existence and helping tho old world on Its way to the Celestial City of Flno Minds. NOTICE 01" ADMINISTRATION, ESTATE OF LEE CALVIN SMITH. Lnto of Lake Township, All persons Indebted to 9ald cstnto are n o ti ded to make liiimcUlnlo payment to theun (lerslL'necl ; ahd those having claims ugalnst the said estato are notllled to present them duly attested, for settlement. MINNIIC TO VJCSKND. Kxcctitrlx. Ariel. ln.. April 8. 1911. .7)eol6 W. C. SPRY AUCTIONEER HOLDS SALES ANYWHERE IN STATE. A. O. BLAKE AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALER YOU WILL MAKE MONEY BY HAVING ME Bell Phone 9-U BETHANY, PA. I titmim:um::i:;ims::t8:ttm 1 WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS in your family you of course call a reliable physician. Don't stop at that; have his prescriptions put up at a reliable pharmacy, even il it is a little farther from your home than some other store. You enn And no more i enable store than ours. It would be im possible for more care to be taken in the selection of drugs, etc., or in the compounding. Prescript tions brought here, either night or day, will bo promptly and accurately compounded by a competent registered pharmacist and the prices will be most rea sonable. O. T. CHAMBERS, PHARMACIST, Opp. D. & II. Station, Ho.nesdali. Pa. Wo print pamphlets, Wo print catalogues, Wo print letter heads, AVo print postal enrds, Do you need some printing done? Como to us. If you need some en velopes "struck off" come to us. We use plenty of ink on our Jobs. mmmm vt : i 1 tfy till i KRAFT & CONGER HONESDALE, PA. Reoresent Reliable Companies ONLY . 4- -f -f 4 4- f f f -f f -f -f f . The Correspondence 01 WHAT WE TEACH Adverising Man Show-Card Writing Window Trimming Bookkeeper Stenographer Civil Service Exams Commercial Law Banking English Branches High-School Math. Teacher Commercial Illus. Electrical Engineer Electric Lighting Electric Railways Heavy Electric Traction Electric Wireman Electric Machine Designer Telegraph Construction Telephone Expert Architecture Contracting and Building Building Inspector Concrete Construction. Carpet Designing Architectural Draftsman Wallpaper Designing Monumental Draftsman Bookcover Designing Bridge Engineer Ornamental Design'g Structural Draftsman Linoleum Designing Structural Engineer Perspective Drawing Plumbing & Steam Fitting Lettering Heating and Ventilation Stationary Engineer Plumbing Inspector Marine Engineer Foreman Plumber Ga3 Engineer Sheet-Metal Worker Automobile Running Civil Engineer Refrigeration Engin'r Surveying and Mapping Mechanical Engineer R. R. Constructing Mechanical Draftsman Municipal Engineer Machine Designer Mining Engineer Boiler Designer Mine Surveyor Patternraaking Coal Mining Toolmaklng Metal Mining Foundry Work Metallurgist Blacksmlthing Assayer Navigation Chemist Ocean and Lake Pilot Cotton Manufacturing. Poultry Farming, and Languages: Italian, French, German and Spanish. THE I. C. S. WORK 1. We teach unemployed people the theory of the work in which they want to engage. RESULTS: Positions easily secured, days of drudgery shortened, and sometimes 'avoided al together; quick promotions. 2. We teach employed people to do their work better. RESULTS : More responsible positions; better pay. 3. 'We teach dissatisfied people how to do what is more congenial. RESULTS: Prepara tion for new work before leaving the old ; rapid progress in the new field. HOW WE DO IT 1. We furnish all necessary preparatory instruction. 2. We explain facts, principles and processes so clearly that the student quickly compre hends and easily remembers. 3. We illustrate our text-books thoroughly. 4. We give concise rules and practical examples. 5. We grade our instructions. 6. We criticize and correct our students' written recitations and send him special advice regarding his course whenever necessary. OUR LOCATION FOR DOING IT We occupy three buildings in Scranton, having a floor space of over seven acres. We employ 2,700 people at Scranton. . ' V. ;,ff . 1 We spend $250,000 each year in improving and revising our instruction papers. '' I - We handle about 30.000 pieces of mail daily and our daily postage bill is about Sisoo. We ; issued about 63 million pages of instruction last year. We received and corrected 849,168 reci- 4 , , attions and positively know that 1,180 students have their wages increased. -rt -r -r-r -f t -r- -f- -f f -f f -f