CUMULATIVE EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION 



Newman, H. H. The Gist of Evolution. The Macmillan Co., 



1926. 

 Newman, H. H. and others. The Nature of the World and of 



Man. The University of Chicago Press, 1926. 

 Scott, W. B. The Theory of Organic Evolution. The Macmillan 



Co., 1917. 



"The purpose of science is to develop, without prejudice or precon- 

 ception of any kind, a knowledge of the facts, the laws and the processes 

 of nature. The even more important task of religion, on the other hand, is 

 to develop the consciences, the ideals and the aspirations of mankind. Each 

 of these two activities represents a deep and vital function of the soul of 

 man, and both are necessary for the life, the progress and the happiness of 

 the human race. 



"It is a sublime conception of God which is furnished by science, and 

 one wholly consonant with the highest ideals of religion, when it represents 

 Him as reveahng Himself through countless ages in the development of the 

 earth as an abode for man and in the age-long inbreathing of life into its 

 constituent matter, culminating in man with his spiritual nature and all his 

 Godlike powers." — Dr. Robert A. Milliken, in Science. 



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