Show r Fireside Science Ransome III By Sutton Button I Copyright 1923 1823 New York E World Pre Press Publishing Co IANS IAN'S PEDIGREE X In order that readers reader may under stand how evolutionists account fo tOr fo foman's mans man's rise this brief briet genealogical list of ancestors is given When Whet the temperature of ot earth cooled down the th to about l no de i. i F F. above grees zero proton protoplasm 1 was formed in like manner a as ter had been previously formed fore wa Ii was a much more complex than water for tor sUbstance only y Water contains two elements proto J contains at least seven 1 ele ments menta Water Vater was also used ingredient in the creation oi as an or of proto The human race originated I th there i- i fore Just as each new born 1 ual nal now originates in a single j ce Celled organism composed of ot protoPlasm I These primordial 1 organisms o. o pied a pitiable place In nature t was nothing for them ti to eat ther i but ocean dust nothing to Tem remember and every everything thin to learn They i.- i. j bacteria Wert I having havIn neither an a I Inor animal nor a plant nature im i iThe I IThe The second great step was w Wh hen 1 animal and plant organisms differ Ii the animal organisms organism v Ing those that acquired beIng be- be habits and took to feeding UPon other organisms These alone alona to be considered since th the need or organisms belonging belonging- noncan the vegetable kingdom have to 11 place in mans man's pedigree fl ni no The third step I occurred When single celled animal organisms iT began be be- P gan clustering clustering- together to for tor Ph to tha making of body was then under tinder i way The resulting bodies bOOles however ow 1 were senseless shapeless nine 3 masses maRses of flesh When among these slimy J 3 of ot the shallow Cambrian n seas worms ascidians appeared low Iy T f fourth Ih Hn great step was taken for lor forth t the f line of or cells extending end to eM 5 H t along the upper surface ot of the bod lofy marked the beginning of ot the thA baCk baa if bone With worms living substance began to acquire shape shape 1 symmetry let Jet us say p- p creatures had neither p upper nor low 2 f er surfaces surface neither front nor r rUl ends neither right nor left lett sides yr cr Lancelets which were litti m mou j than fingers of ot flesh developed I and gave rise to fishes be ba Ing Ing- the tho fifth In line of ot human cia t.- jl scent ns Sixthly came caine the swamp n tl h hu i which surviving many changed air bladders Into lungs g produced a a. progeny of ot Seventhly t the h a 6 changed fins Into feet s scales ales isle skin and perfected or a WI gans then emerged upon the land lant li Amphibians Amphibians did not lift tift life lite entirely b i upon the the- theland land however for toe tin I had to be he hatched In water like th te Iha tu frogs of this day The ancestral am am- J are ara represented today m ty newts I The eighthly advance was nu by reptiles which holding their e eggs ens i 1 d half halt ha hatched ched produced pouched animals m like I ant nt eaters eater opossums I I IT and kangaroos g s i iThen Then ninthly cam came th the mammal little Jungle rats at first which J brought forth their young alive liy alve an and 1 them on milk mik From the mammals the lI emerged lemurs first then Ut to J gj monkeys apes anthropoids and Jt x Iii like ape ape men Skeletal remains o ot or u II one of ot the like ape ape men perhaps I itt he should be called a man like net apt Id were discovered a few ar ago aja In II Java the Java the Pithecanthropus I Many transitional forms occupIed Important places In the line Une of ot human hu hI a I man descent but the greatest stepi tepi forward forwar were taken as believe beleve to by the bizarre creatures r ro |