The evening world. Newspaper, August 8, 1918, Page 11

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- HOME PAGE Thursday, August 8, 1918 = ar ea aaa 9 e Evening World's _ Imagination and Reason | Th g World's By the Rev. Thomas B. Gregory “nu By, the Rev. Thomas B. Gregory And Thus They Met_ Kiddie Klub Korner , SaeaN TE Preoe Pecaine @ eater Conducted by Eleanor Schorer AB it Coleridge Ise who said, “All are elthor on by Platonists oF Arlstotellans?” tas { ALRIGHT, SWEETIE DON'T oat DAWGONIT ¢ = (T's Conetiaht, U8, ty Sie TSS Fatating rp Ph Sthadedetbhalacd In other worda, all people, in attempting to reach thelr con- FORGET! -— MEET ME AT THAT'LL BE LOVELY, 8:20 AN ‘AT “WHAT E VERY KIDDIE KLUB MEMBER SHOULD AN- clusions about the meaning of life and the world, work either along the “SNICKS ST. AN' GT! AVE — RIGHT HARRY — DON'T FORGET, BABY HASN'T SWER—b¥ Amilcart Acconc line laid down by Plato the idealist or along that given by Aristotle the BY TH SOAKMORE HOTEL AT DEAR, AT EIGHT. SHARP! SHOWN UP reasoner. - ‘ : i : bie There is no middle ground. We must stand either with the academy Elont = Wet Have SUL Ee ) Lave or the porch, unless we are content to fall down and forego all attempts at a working hypothesis regarding the mighty mazo of which we are a Dart. Imagination and reason. Without going into the fog banks of scholastic definition, reason may be sald to be the faculty that probes and analyzes, that investigates and compares and that aims to draw from the facts before it their logical Meaning, while imagination may be defined as the faculty that deals with ideas, as reason does with facts, and that goes on to its conclusions with- out paying any particular attention to the thing called logic. ‘To the question, “Which {s the greater?” the answer must be “Both are great and both are essential.” The two supplement each other and together they make the perfect whole, the one supplying what the other lacks. | Reason lays the foundation while imagination rears the beautiful structure that at one and the same time serves our uses and delights our eves. CAN YOU BEAT | | Reason {s the mathematician, the engineer, the bullder, the naviga- THAT !— HERE eee HE, MENTIONED THE tor, the trader, the artisan, while imagination is the artist, the poet, the RUN MY Se hee "SOAKMORE” — NOW singer and the seer, | a OF IMT MAY "BE HE SAID IN — Reason is the hard, cold granite rock, which imagination covers with ns OOK" “the velvety moss and the dancing sunbeams, TH HOTEL — TLL GO L Reason supplies the solid support for our feet, so that we shall know where to stand when the winds blow and the flood comes; but it is imagi- nation which spreads out the prospect that cheers us midst the storm and | gives us courage. With reason alone we would have light but !t would be like moon- | light on an ice fleld—brilliant enough but cold and benumbing. | It is the power of imagination that warns us, that transforms the | ice field into the sun-kissed meadow, that calls forth the birds and flowers | @nd laughing children which fill the world with music and gladness, | It I were obliged to declare myself, my verdict would have to be some- | thing like this—a sort of toast, as it were: “Here's to Reason; long may | she wave; and may she ever keep arm in erm with her divine adv: bright-eyed Imagination!” l r { Cousin Eleanor’s Klub Kolumn iser, | ptt WITT | D. Cc ins the streets. They have capabilities of We cannot get along without mathematics and logic and those sorts = toed bee ane ent to me from on lett adc 1 ott a of things; but something tells us that the dreamers and their dreams have | (anGeani: 4a ann pc ppt al A WETTER wae sont to me from | Tie, men on board sbip often quand done more for us than all the problems of all the mathematicians and all) ‘ 'T AT HOME! Lt ' x an hi ice eae a th ae £ : di aa ry tee the syllogisms of all the logic choppers. aeokes se: ate pnd Men A FOUND !- JUST WAIT 1 THOUGHT T've JUST BEEN Tars, Who came to tie Klub n and sometimes send As Novalis puts it, “Philosophy (the higher fancy) bakes no bread, | T ly 24, especially to see our Kiddie) a souvenir he youthful authors. Sahieedtine lom and immortality.” FEW “THINGS — TUL-=TUL — WELL LL HE SHOWS HIS TD NEVER PASSING AWAY ‘but she ¢! God, freed: t é lub show = the die Klub furtl SHE WON'T STAND ME UP AGaIN'/|/FACE TO ME !~T'LL NEVER mnp yout) ( WITH ANXIETY! | State meodutiuia:Yeceee Uf atitlae| puamat am eadiaity ee And without these sense-transcending ideas what would our life be mut| OH! JUST WAIT'LE IT SEE HER! SPEAK TO - proof that all eyes are upon us and JEROME BRODERICK, & last year’s bird's nest from which the bird has flown—dried leaves and d HIM AGAIN! : Ss that they look approvingly upon our) MM. U. 8 Navy. twigs with no music in it ‘ | Klub, We return Mate Broderick’s kind It's a long time since @ letter] wishes for our future success ten ased me as much as this one has,| fold. We wish that be and the big ; terprise o: ch he is @ ind knowing that you would be| American enterprise of whic ted | {I score the greatest success in equally interested tn ee delighted ye uistory ie the eer with what the note says, Tam . : lng it here for you to read: Cousin Eleanor, Cousin Eleanos, Evening World Kid- one die Klub, No. 63 Park Row, New| JULY CONTEST AWARD WINNER, York City: THE FU (ST THING THAT You are doing a great service tn APP D AT SCHOOL, the way of encouraging the talents of Flag day 1 was to be on the oungsters. [ had the good fortune stage as a naval officer, and when f meeting and speaking to several |! went to school L was late. All the Kiddie Klub membors, They are not | D8 Mehl i aa serosa When like the majority of cbiidren seen on Be not afraid, then, of the Imagination. By all means keep the head | level and duly respect the facts; but don't despise the beautiful dream | simply because you cannot weigh it on the scales or prove it iby the “| logism. Musings of a Matrimonial Slacker By William V. Pollard | 1.—How Love's Young Dream Grew Cold. OES any man ever really want| but spends the evening humbly apolo- | D to marry? Certainly not! A|si4iny and drying her tears man instinctively shies at tho] ,,\ynat 1 I do if 1 were married ‘an| {0 Pansy! What an escape ahe had connubial harness just as a woman! from met! | cranes toward it. But what chance i | comes Gen. Summ » late.” All 4 —~——. the boys iaughed. | was on the stage in aeeoraceener re nara eee rer es in the afternoon. The curtain went has the average man of escaping the ae superior wiles of the fair sex? None|1~)" = . is down, leaving four of us outside of it. Everybody laughed when we had / to crawl under it [ By JOUN SUMMERVILLE, aged eight, Brooklyn, N. Y. GOOD-BY FRANCE. whatever! A single man ts lom of the unt verse and any chap who is fortunrte enough to have avoided the shack of matrimony invariably prides him self on bis luck. I know of what 1 Help our boys in camps and France i pA 2 By buying Thrift and War Saving: { speak, for having reached the mature Wo ‘wy th em: t) Stamps, } h 7 ingle. ¢ e 8 ou really wish. 1 ul meet you at sa Well, its this you nt dan iharesi aan a age of thirty-five I am still si Hi M W: snug little home, a ch and his He still you reauy wint, | shall hice a rag And if you do there'll come a day | ar adopt az 1 at dodéing tne tio(420U0 @& Man 0 Wanted to Marry °:; degen vette ery ean a diver the Na fiat which binds that if I watch my step} ar he 2.3 Phe cafh of “his is so sudden” bas When our boys will hear the General ., Y remain at an age hot exceeding nine ved hi 7 he said to ‘ir, Brown be to fee hat life pasa way; hence it was not li see BY , , ‘ Til continue to be the envy of every Decided on a Way to Choose His dreams, with their usuat pervers ihe Maid to. Air Brawn bewein ita. feel tial lle paaaed Raat Nenee Je RARER MIS PAL) a: swag cineito alae husband in captivity. sity, had not been r , wlized, though on His Future Wife Tonstolars petuci cries} at the announcement. §'6 For victory’s won and we're on our The Evening World published bout choosing @ on Sunday, and they had a decor. surpri fieant @ ous but wholly ‘fying prom vas conventional enough to turn ber) way 8 i in He would sade ini the park head for a moment and appear to db. We're off across the deep blue foam, > Matrimonial Chances,” in which the een, for instanc ter of a ® BS aliiy A thinking deeply, She aso obeyed the in Voukes 1s again we'll . yught and jesire himney-sweep, and ¢ y TER V, rules by observing presently, "But; We made Beene ay only, —saeneby bes Deen (Cooyriant. 1 AIGA Ore tira ee Chere tant peenie CHAPTER VI. : were to get married. My own experi- | srKotne oe ts : that is foolish.” wn went abou oy! N a night in June Mr. Brown, his So say gc n erystalliaing into @ sensible ef-| by HENIIETTA PAY, 4 j ! { | f the fort to win her, forgot his shyness |New York “a | / } } : { ' t policeman's niece, whose boast it was ences loomed up before me. How net Mortuuer finds himaelf unable, to vn that she could “slip the bracel different from that girl's! To her an thod i} first instanc ka bef eve if her own expres on a rete i , s in {her fOrKOL ha anys ° te 1it and an appropriate tie chapter, Henry Brown reid on the ples } Reeee ial cian icees Tage taier, nate Reaenn cae pipes aa being ¥ to differ,” he said steadily, | » YOUR DUTY, a tragedy. While to me an escape | from matrimony has always been a) the m t have been seen seated three-penny cigars aA ace ubited, if the expre quite a number o though his heart was beating (ast| Support the Ked ‘Ul you are dead, n 4 cheap and the roof of hia mouth was eur-| opposite bis friend mo he White by da an it. Nagasanin add 19 restaurant had Just jously parehed. “I don’t consider it! ¥Pbeld the White ny 00d Oi dis Wed, ne would tee nished per both were f I have loved you for aj Aid te Blue be ever trus new jease of life. jn tory. I hehe er office aie at i, Mr. Brown & and I want You to be ir banner bright, But even if I have cherished my i don the tre fe ternoon, F NATROL aiEAB Et errr iays wife, Lam fot a boy? miss, oa{Defend ever with your mix freedom, I have ardently loved my °. ae should mont hie fubure Ce tae he | er dared to you know, Uma sericde nuh Clin ee eee attractive? xe hing for any girl to Wontnaak) F ‘ Safes eran rear Kn, bi facing wood WOKS Mut what L wonder is, when’ they keep us bott in comfort: aang y| NOTICE TO CONTRIBUTORS. lose her heart over’ ave D HE object of Lfonel’'s fon t n some ent alwa i ee . marry do they take to a pip 1 ready love you vy ” 1 {ter no Kiddie Klub member gee : s and waited in son 1 who ‘booked the order y ‘ ! y much. Hereat ho Ki ui much money? Not nearly as much as thoughts returned soon after Mizzi were to ex 88 of her sex A mae Rtg nical bo: hee aad Jon ah Sho was looking at him with an ex-| will receive full c for contribu- I ought to have ! 11 that night, a little tired, but relating the t o'pride of minoo, SPrearance. He was not ao absurd iHned as he looked nyuln wy Di omtarencset of MAG And 68 Bl tions published | Kiddie Klub 4 oye cole 1 irt nad been a partner ne Ho Of plac tll in love at first sig Pe ee tO) Weer ey te ey aerraane . > Maga lege and in my first position with a “Oh!" she cried, as she en- Age ie dito marry, Girls would “walk the cautious routine of yours und “L thank you very muh. * Oca real estate firm, when I bad MY/toreq the room, “I hope you haven't re ee Lh Diane. Whey ee as igh ape Wai d that you liked me, but is original; 4 Ria! on trieenihl nanan Whisa euneen (CR cer i would Bive bim every encourage a se 3 aha cE v came at aim not duito ure of you.” Me owledge i ; Pansy was twenty, violet-eyed| vust be ravenous" — became known. than a business interest in his cus- On th ' + IL awear that T love |! 3 | aweet, soft and lovely as a flower. “Ot course 1 waited,” said Lionel, immediate supply uN piti rs. Het ; j pauscu What are you not sure of? My | Rig I 4 th 4 over 1 t WOMEN v3 ‘ (Exeu Prone | Had I hunted the world ove hall I ring?” s- th I ae in havea 2xCuse me for mentivnits , : e nm acre and de pu " aa aa en, miss.) You can too! | es rarest treasure among women. We), W104 eatrice, pausing in the act of sible for > 1 ou aan y home for c tho helghbors would speak. for)" Ma loved at sight. Long before I mot} Pic ten am ring up a family, but it was ay A tale thelr o Ane glunced Ut me" | tu ; t 8 " an a me of e fate In t ¥ 1 not t + « ast ited bhe vec e | ut rs oo Raney, 1 bad vowed tint 2 Anowel “ur gon't know," seid, Glonel vores must make sure—per- Verse fat A witon , with “For this once, juat ° bo waved her hand impatienuy. | rEN BY" or “DRAWN BY | never att) But faltag a MA liaacive Its ie chia Wa Mad Kal pa gts: sn ‘4 ver, 1 thy ca proprie rat i Hae perks that you love Homey eh. Bm Hot sure | ang So | truly in love altered my decisi aittarenca: Gut purelvfaess retetul ¢ ne le ns. It had & and Tm AY T Like t her He started | I . erence, but sure at a loss for the mean. piratior und hor dress waa nico, though ; | G AND WRIT- i We became engagod and Pansy ee eae ee hig WF A ite rsa eH aaee ie, pe cecnin Che. grove of oap:driving LOT; ane, len dries tam alice, though Trove ut ani ociance! I dunno, . » nel AUGUST A awiNveorn” i owned mo heart and soul. Lord, how f lth gay guote tl one WAS Ould concelve ne other ceiling at & husband Into debt.” Ho was pain ; ue tome? Rhow Pane the aymb: | (sy What Would You Like Seca she. aid) twine and. cling. Bar devotion 1 cursed his stupidity in on which he might succeed fu nt enough, but Romance Leal You row Up and Wikgas ; no § ineifortninnt later (on ; $1 each will fairly stifled me. And then, wan " ords had stip no Of course t have tried to Lege bor gh Mie ater on riak It and ask Exactly, I do not know. 1 Ten Pts ) members—ages } ing to evade marriago became an ob- rom his i it win a wife wit Ne, Ye Hy ond oe) a ret {x vhi very much indeed, § ad cle Stn? Oe session with me. I was a villain and dd dumt es: but he made on ft * 1 He s 1 think T love you, but then a! the besl Urawinks OF witinee } hated myself. Then a guardian angel What was } rence About ny a ae n oe wen ' i Ah th Rouitt Suppose, I say, be abe the b wha y would lke nt {asked Beatrice Nd you ; | h nEreed W ' he Ment ees Se has Y came to the rescue, My firm sent {asked Heat F and labeled : aren , Be ue nae Tomonatrated, tie [tv be when they grow up and Why New Orleans, Uncle Ned, a & an ud th and mwors nu other. “You ought ton k ; Drawings must be done in blael me to } sto & ware ' ‘ hi t D, ROW be k \yon penell. bachelor of forty, who had devoted | 1 hin Brown’ had saved enous ; ; ? in that. Why, that's pee India ink oF Kk y 5 his life and income to his nephews the lady in home. Sho waited six. w 1 F : atheism! ‘I go to church must not exceed three Rum= " o . tes it 8 sty AP then, in a fit of romance or madauss, ' is r ; It is not that kind of soul," aed words, Contestants must and nieces, promised to cheer my) 1% us Bit She has married a scavenger , : mipenge i explained. “mean, @ tense it ot |e NAME, ADD , AGB sweeth While [ was away, At first |} eae ar aT ” iar ‘a commercial sense, bad _ _biut Thave a reason, Venturerof exeiterioit ene, of ad cir NAME, ADDI i T wrote regularly and Pansy poured |! tried to kiss uc ere t Her wn r roman © marry a man ‘without _ cous “Rleanor,, Bvening One meee Hoe eee rere ‘unaat, | te feat had been successfully aceon ght at least have * nee had : ‘an underatnon T2M&ANC® Would be Insupportabin lite fie Kiub, No. 63 Pari « ally Sie Were UMPREs | ciishad y tf Ww Steins wae Undorstoot would be too dull, If only Toad v w York C eee w Orleans. ks Ho you baked: reproneds Thritt her in’a tea Ms , that you had romance, I o I was few Orleans six woeks | «1? Lent nent your back Ren vink nh in a te See i SE eTETTETOTI.S |. and Uncle Ne i, faithful t¢ r mn | was turned I sfer my wor t rid : f Whe Try me, id the practical Heary OBTAIN YOUR PIN. se, made a good ) oft 1 » Gay te t r 1 1 RR Es I must say, miss, I don tent, J uF PINs ae ay ateae Tata k eta coved | fi i r som h = lt na see what you mean, Rut td do aiy ? oth sure whether L was pleased ove : pace 1 carefu age ; thing to please you. ‘Tell me how (0 to reeeiv wn announ t of}, CHAPTER V, ne a 1 ie Brown. rey Sil {his romance idea and I'l! glen’ a march on ine. 1 felt wulty | ¥ RGN oe ene rmined werd 5 af eed You mean that?" she asked, CEN Ten inant toanther:| cal he rea & ine ade Anak all, ease 1 Wa V } ee alowed y mone anaralitge : BOONE CR ee ean Samra at | AOR cused me of folly tn 8 SUpp bo the prime start in business as a cab proprict From : Eng a8 ea. he replied stoutly, “Any- Be ee shsated And tries that your words werm not would prefer to be ten years younger, taxis at first and learned the bus ness t nto the winda, hal rasta pins . ee as in the days of their honey-| Wholly to be relied on, Tat onze led Henry Brown was unlucky enough thoroughly, driving one himsel f r id not u , Ne Wvacy Of bis ofine moon, when Uncle Ned gently and her from the room.’ to be a bachelor, This was through oyperience, Gradually he extended fer, But on parting, @ casual whisp ne and prepared effective orations, politely ary jg oversalied, “And he, ‘I’ held her at arm's length,” said no fault of hia own, for as young hit vps and by the end of four cr thrilled hie receptive ear: ““l al- hewinging Miss” “Honored Ma'am: seeaatnustadil does not strangle her, Lione! proudly, man he had dreamed his dreams of a he had twenty ‘axicabs under ways promenade on a Sunday, If selle,” and “My dear 4." be merely anion’ : : vee

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