-Vf-i f TiM!)'5pBfl The Commoner i VOL. 22, NO. 2 -x. s 6 xr 1 f Darwinism in the Schools When Mr. Bryan spoke at Lexington, Ken tuck, recently, ho quoted from some of the text books to show what was being taught in the public schools. Somo of the evolutionists denied that Darwinism was being taught. Rev. J. W. Porter, who arranged the Bryan meeting,' an swered the ovolutionists by presenting the fol- IrtYiriti r firt ni I A tic f tfiYi linnlfCf llHOfl i ) aj vr aus uuvtuviuviij a j m mv vuu iwv 1 1 "In the early part of the last half of , the cen tury lfilnO-T-occurred what may bo fairly called the most Important event in the history of bi ological, science, the publication of. Charles Dar win,'s Origin of Species. Up to this time the ideas of ovolut'on advanced by Buff on, Lamarck, St. Hilairo and Erasmus Darwin had not re ceived recognition among zoologists, to say noth ing of the great mass of teachers, writers and scholars. But with the Origin of Species began a stcrm of discussion and debate out of which there has arisen a calm and sane acceptance of the gradual development of the various f6rms of plant and animal life tiy a process of evolution, Darwin' gathered such a mass of facts and mar shaled his proofs in such a clear, logical man--ner that the, world could not deny the' force, of hid arguments or escape the convincing power of his conclusions." Toxt-boplc in General ZooU ogy, by I-Xorrick, pp. 378, 37d. (Public schools, of Lexington). : ' l The fallowing is the Family Tr.ee; given .by the same author: ' ' "' '' "Order Primates. . "Types ;of Order. "Lemur.' , "Baboon. . "Orang-outang. "Chimpanzee. "Gorilla. "Man." . J. r v i ! t ' i X -or il'.i II. i. General Zoology, by Herrick, p. 340.- The Primates, the .group that includes man, oem to have descended from primitive Insec tivora The line of descent within the group la probably somewhat as follows: r i'.. . 1. Egg-laying Mammals. , . . - v. ' - 2. Marsupials. ?;. $ 3. Insectivores. 'i ?'. 4. Lemurs. " . '. . f 5. Old World Monkoys with Tails. 6. Anthropoid Apes. ' i 7. .Pithecanthropus An Extinct "ape-man."- 8. The Extinct Neanderthal Man. 9. Modern Man. College Zoology, Hegner, p. 69G. (Kentucky State University.) "Somo fossil remains of a primate that were found in the upper Pliocene on the island of Java have been designated by Haeckel as 'the last link' between the apes and man, and the animal to which they belonged has been given the name 'Pithecanthropus erecutus." Hegner's Zoology, p. 666. "No one knows when and where life origi nated on the earth. Many of the ancients be liever that animals were created by divine provi dence, but this theory of special creation is not accepted by present day zoologists." Hegner's College Zoology, p. 12. ( "This process of developing rew species is called evolution by variation and natural selec tion. The ancestovs of the three-toed horses were f onr-toed animals whose' remains are found In the layeis of rock beneath those containing the threetoed ones. By this process of variation and natural selection the four-toed forms de rived from a five-toed mammal with such a gen eralized structure that other of its progeny de veloped into sheep, cows and deer in accordance with the various foods" and changing factors in nature to which they were subjected. Thus, by variation and natural selection numerous and widely different kinds of animals arose." Prac tical Zoology, Alvin Davison, p. 349, 350. (Lex ington Public Schools.) "These facts, cited in the preceding para graphs together with much other information discovered by the zoologists and geologists, lead to the conclusion that at first there existod on earth only a few forms of simple life similar to the amoeba-, and from these acted on by the rapid changes of climate, soil, water and food, hav.e arisen all the varied forms of animal life " Practical Zoology, Alvin Davison, p. 354. , "The loss of man's hairy covering is evidence of his origin in a, temperate or cold temperate climato, where vhe found clothing necessary to protect himself from the inclemencies of the weather." Geology-Physical and Historical Cleland, page 686. Kentucky State Univer oity ) "Eoliths, the crudest of flint implements. Be lieved to have been made by ape-man. . . . The discovery, near Heidelberg, Germany, of a low- , or Jaw of a very low type in early Pleistocene deposits said to contain eoliths, is important, since it gives a clue to the makers of these flints. This lower jaw is 'massive, with an es sentially human set of teeth, its most noticeable feature being the absence of a chin projection. In other words, it is the jaw of an tfnthropcld (manlike) ape with the dentition of a man. As compared with the oldest Paleolithic skulls. . . . A creature (Pithecanthropus erecutus) whose fragmentary remains have been found in the -Pleistocene deposits of Java, associated with the' bones of extinct animals may have also been a member of a race which made eoliths. These remains consist of a skull cap, two molar teeth and a diseased thigh bone and are remarkable for their combination of ape and human char acters. ... the teeth are human with certain apelike characters, and the thigh bone is con sidered to be intermediate." Geology, Physical and Historical, pp. 675, 676. "Darwin's theory was, in short, that species Y did not endure unchanged, but, owing to con stant variations, those best fitted to survive es caped destruction in the constant struggle for existence, and transmitted their advantageous characteristics to their offspring. The idea that all plants and animals, and even man himself, had developed instead of being created in. their present form, and that man belonged, physical ly, to the primates' the group of animals which includes the apes, shocked a great number of people, and the subject began to be discussed with no little heat and some times with much indignation by men of science, theologians, and the cultivated public in general A great part of those who have received a scientific training, accept the general theory of evolution as confldentaly as that of universal gravitation. . . . The cells are composed of a gelatinous substance, to which the name of protoplasm was given by the botanist Mohl in 1846. All life was shown to have its beginning in this proto plasm." Outlines of European History, Part II, Robinson & Beard, pp. 665-667. (Public Schools of Lexington.) " "My reply to Dr. Porter's question as to how I Stand on the Genesis accounts of the Creation and the Flood, is that of course, I do not accept those accounts as descriptive of actual events. No biologist or geologist today with the least regard for his scientific reputation accepts those accounts as fact. . . . The conclusion is irre sistible that no modern geologic catastrophic event, such as a universal deluge would have been, has intervened to disturb 'the orderly de velonment and distribution of life upon the earth." Professor of Geology, State University, Lexinerton Herald, August 8, 1920. "And finally we come to the question 'what about the soul?' when does it enter in the pro cess of evolution? This is invariably the last' bolt of the theological objector. Darwin's ob servation q.n this sunposed objection to evolu tion if? appropriate here: " 'Few people, feel any anxiety from the im possibility of determining at what precise neriod in the development of the individual from the -first trace of the minute germinal vesicle, man becomes an immortal be'ng; and there is no greater cause for anxiety because the per'od can not possibly be determined in the gradually as cending organic scale. "In the case of the origin of the soul, how ever, we may define' the soul, and whatever properties we assign to it, 'we have as in the case of the orierin of any power of the bodv ar faculties of the mind- as will, reason: coni scienceevidently to do with the nhenomena of growth .... in embrvoloerical development as nroved 'emnirionllv,' that is as the result of experiment and observation, each power of the mind arises so gradually, that at no time can It be said that just .before a certain moment the power or facultv did not exist. Th's is the mvstery of creation creation by evolution if you Plpase. but none the less creation. It is the principle of the 'coming in of something new, gradually"--Professor of Geolotry, State VM versity, in'Lexineton Herald, August 8th, 1920. Anyone who is interested in pursuing the sub ject can find ample .evidence in nearly all the zoologies and biologies used in the public schools and universities. While no one is defending Darwinism, today, all the evolutionists rush to the defense of Darwin whenever he is attacked because most of them accept his hypothesis while they reject the reasons that he gives No one else has attempted to explain how lower or ders of life produced man. Every evolutionist who applies the evolutionary hypothecs to man believes, that man, instead of being critm x. the Almighty, has in him. the blood of thohr.it or the blood of a lower form of life somo ? Sieving that man branched off from the tree i low the point at which animals appeared Som would make the ape a collateral relative instu of an ancestor a cousin instead of a rrandtn The important question just now is whetw teachers, paid by taxation, shall be permitted tn substitute an unsupported hypothesis for th! Bible account of creation. Shall teachers be ner mitted to compliment your little boy by calline him the son of an ape, or a descendent of anv other anamil, bird, reptile, or fish? Why not let him believe that ho is "the child of a Kinc" created by the Heavenly Father? J W. J. BRYAN. AN EARNEST ENFORCEMENT OFFICER Mr. James E. Mercer, law enforcement officer for the -southeastern states has headquarters at Atlanta. As evidence of his earnestness he pub lishes an appeal to the people of his part of the country. As the matter is of nation-wide Importance The Commoner publishes the appeal for the benefit of. lawabiding citizens every, where. Mr. Mercer's suggestions are as fol lows: "Justice delayed is often Justice defeated. "Every child of Liberty submits to the yoke of the Law. "Liberty exists in proportion of wholesome restraint. ' ' . "The boot-legger and the bolshevik are in the same cla3s. "The only sound view of government is tbat of law enforcement. "If there were fewer bad lawyers there would not be so many lynchings. "He Who would undermine respect for the law is an enemy of law and of orderly govern ment. "It is the duty of faithful officials to enforce and the part of good citizens to obey the law. "Those charged with law enforcement must enforce all the laws. They cannot exercise any right of choice. "The argument of undue abridgment of per sonal liberty advanced today has in the past been advanced" by every CHAMPION OF LAWLESS NESS. "To ask or to expect laxity of law enforce ment is to contribute to' lawlessness and destroy the basis upon Which YOUR SECURITY RESTS. "If our civilization ever yields to the false doctrine of personal .liberty, it will go the way of the nations long since passed into history. "Lawyers who resort to sharp practices to de lay justice discredit the judicial system of our country. Some ethical remedy for the aggravat ing evil should be applied. "Reverence for the law, respect for the courts, and support of the officers of the law, depend largely upon those who occupy the vantage ground of life in business and in society. "The people of the United States by solemn con stitutional and statutory enactment have under taken to suppress the age-long evil of the liquor traffic. The absolute success of the undertaking is purely a matter of time. "When, lawyers, bankers,-- merchants, manu facturers, business and social leaders, both men and women, violate the prohibition or any other law, they are aiding the rule of anarchy and pro moting mob violence) robbery, homicide; they are sowing the dragon's teeth and need not be surprised when they find that no judicial or police authority can save' the country or human ity from reaping the harvest." WHY NOT TAX EXCESS PROFITS Louisville Courier-Journal. Apropos of Secre tary Mellon's opposition to the bonus, Hanfora MacNider remarked the other day that the Sec retary would do well to stop arguging and fig ure out some way to1 raise the money to pay for it. . , Mr. Mellon, who is no doubt grateful for this definition of his duty, has done so. , He estimates that $300,000,000 can be raised by (1) taxing each automobile owner fifty cents per -horsepower; ' (2) increasing thecost of first-class postage from two cents to three; . (3) putting a two-cent tax on each oani check; , (4) causing the tax on tobacco to be increased two cents a pound -and the tax on cigarettes fifty cents per thousand; .ov (5) inaugurating a documentary stamp tax and increasing second-class postage. Since Mr. Mellon figures the bonus would cost $425,000,000 annually for the first two years, Btill other taxable sources would have to be un covered to make uj the deficit. , . 'V & v T1 &.J srf.vyJfc'.- v.. I