What the Future May Develop 



ment at the present time is the creation of a creature endowed 

 with the power of understanding the processes of his own 

 creation. Its highest purpose is to make all of these crea- 

 tures happy, healthy and helpful and to blend their Hves 

 with the harmony of the Infinite Life in order that they may 

 each become co-creators with the Creator. 



The first life cell from which all life has developed con- 

 tained all the latent powers of all succeeding life. Each 

 human life cell contains not only the history of the past but 

 the eternity of the future. Man has only recently begun to 

 learn something of the Laws of Heredity and the knowledge 

 gained from this branch of Evolution, will, when crystal- 

 lized, probably determine the destiny of the human race. 

 Based on the increase of the span of human life during the 

 past seventy-five years, some medical authorities whose opin- 

 ions are worthy of our consideration, assert that the span of 

 human life may be extended to a period of two hundred 

 years or more. 



Civilization is fast approaching a Chemical Age when 

 synthetic foods and other articles will be the rule instead of 

 the exception. The chemical processes of Nature that trans- 

 forms the grasses and weeds of the fields into milk and 

 muscle, fats, hides, horns, hair and wool will, doubtless, be 

 understood and through the processes of chemistry, life 

 sustaining human foods may be extracted from these same 

 grasses and weeds. The future generations will be eating 

 foods and wearing clothing made from substances concern- 

 ing which we now know little or nothing. They will look 

 upon our generations as generations of wasters. The human 

 race will continue to change its habits and customs in the 



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