CREATION BY EVOLUTION 



meets this call so surely as evolution does. Among these 

 natural occurrences nothing is so difficult to understand, 

 except from the evolutionary standpoint, as vestigial organs. 

 These organs are really signs of the past; they afford as 

 indisputable a proof of the correctness of the evolutionary 

 view as can reasonably be expected. 



REFERENCES 



Darwin, C. The Origin of Species. 1859. Many subsequent edi- 

 tions. 

 Geddes, p., and Thomson, J. A. Evolution. New York, 191 1. 

 Holmes, S. J. Life and Evolution. New York, 1926. 

 Lull, R. S., Ferris, H. B. and others. The Evolution of Man. 1922. 

 Parker, G. H. What Evolution Is. 1926. 

 Plate, L. Die Absiammungslehre. Jena, 1925. 

 Romanes, G. J. Darwin and After Darwin. Chicago, 1892-1897. 

 Weismann, a. The Evolution Theory. London, 1904. 

 WiEDERSHEiM, R. The Structure of Man. 1895. 

 Wilder, H. H. History of the Human Body. 1909. 



"Darwin himself would have turned his back on that theory (Evolution) 

 if one single fact could have been produced in favor of the hypothesis of 

 immutability, special creation, or supernatural agency. No such fact was 

 forthcoming in his time, nor has any such fact been brought to light 

 since." — Dorsey. 



Many kinds of animals and plants exist to-day that show no records, and 

 many kinds that do not exist to-day have left their records, in the rocks. 

 If the rocks tell a true story, the story they tell is Evolution. — Editor. 



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