Page Sixteen 



EVOLUTION 



January, 1938 



POOR LITTLE MONKEY? 



They tell me man from monkeys came, 



With this I might agree. 



But, Gosh aH Friday, it's a shame, 



Or seemeth so to me, 



To class a monkey with a man. 



Here I arise to say 



It isn't fair, denounce the plan ; 



I just stand for 'fair play'. 



What has a monkey ever done 



To merit such abuse? 



He lives as Nature's loving son; 



Fashions no creeds obtuse ; 



He doesn't smoke, he doesn't chew. 



Nor drink 'white mule' or beer, 



And to his mate he's kind and true. 



Nor rules his child with fear. 



He doesn't work for any "boss", 



Out in his forest, wild. 



But shares his gains, likewise his loss, 



With kindred undefiled. 



He never built a "private" fence 



Around his cocoa tree. 



Nor put up signs "Keep off the Grass!". 



In Nature he is free. 



The monkey, far as I can see, 



Has lived life as he should. 



You say man came from monkey? — Bah! 



That theory is no good. 



At least — if it is really true. 



Get ready, pack your sack. 



For I am sure that I can show 



We really should GO BACK. 



Gtiy Lockwood. 



Please note our new address: 



29-46 Northern Blvd., Long Island Qty, N. Y. 

 where E'VOLUTION has established an office. This is at 

 Queens Plaza, near all subways. Phone: Stillwell 4-8172. 



Is your name spelled correctly 



on the wrapper in which you received this issue of 

 EVOLUTION? Please send all corrections of name and 

 address immediately, as our mailing list will soon be put on 

 stencils. With address changes give your old as well as 

 your new address. 



High school biology teachers 



find that EVOLUTION arouses student interest. Try 

 this issue. Special school rate, 20 for $1. 



We need the following back numbers 



to complete EVOLUTION sets for libraries: Vol. I, 

 numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10; Vol. II, numbers 1, 2; Vol. 

 Ill, numbers 1, 3 and 4. Please return these old numbers. 

 Write your own name and address on the package, so we 

 can credit your subscription. 



Evolution expects to publish regularly 



from now on. We shall of course extend all subscrip- 

 tions for the months that we have missed. 



Ask your friends to subscribe 



■You'll be doing them as well as EVOLUTON a favor. 

 $2. per year. Special: — three subs, for three dollars. 



FRIENDS OF SCIENCE FREEDOM 



Here are the friends who have contributed to the EVOL- 

 UTION Sustaining and Library Fund since the appearance 

 of our last issue, and thereby made the publication of this 

 journal possible. Every upholder of Science Freedom will 

 join us in appreciation for their generous support. It 

 means that they have paid for EVOLUTION to be sent 

 to six hundred and seventy public libraries for next year. 



LIBRARY FUND CONTRIBUTIONS 



Oscar Riddle 10., Perry Burgess 10., Alfred Harcourt 20., K. George 

 Falk 5., Oscar Wintersteiner 3., Eric Ponder 3., Mrs. M. Hare 50., 

 I. Greenwald 10., Helen Tee- Van 5., Marie E. Loomis 1., Gardner 

 Hopkins 10., E. R. A. Seligman 5., R. M. Yerkes 5., Wallace E. 

 Pratt 10., H. Johnston 2., W. F. Rudd 10., S. W. Narregang 3., 

 Frank Hart 2., E. A. Hooton 5., A. C. Redfield 10., E. D. Brown 5., 

 James Craig 1., C. E. Davison 2., B. Moore 1., Jos. Kalmanoff 25., 

 I. D. Singer 1., L. Sprague de Camp 25., C. B. Lastreto 1., Mrs. 

 Shapovalov 1., J. P. M. Vogelaar 2., Francis Scliofield 1., J. Shelton 

 Horsley 3., 'W. E. Lower 10., Henry G. Teigan 5., R. S. Bassler 5., 

 H. G. Ferguson 5., Mrs. M. B. Leonard 3., H. B. Baker 8., Sincere 

 Admirer 5., H. Lilienthal 1., Nahum Kavinoky 5., H. L. Wieman 

 3., Elizabeth Oilman 11., H. Sigerist 8., D. H. Rowland 3., Carl C. 

 Taylor 5., F. B. Sillsbee 5., Albert R. Merz 5., Mrs. J. O. Koepfli 5., 

 Gerald Wendt 1., Ethel Clyde 300., J. Sanders 10., Esther Richard 

 5., Fitzgerald Dunnin'? 10., Hugh Monroe, Sr. Jr., 5., Total $670. 



• 



Join This Goodly Group 



and help carry the publication load. Five thou- 

 sand dollars must be raised for the year. Every 

 dollar that you contribute will pay for one Evol- 

 ution subscription for some public library or 

 C.C.C. Reading Room. 



Over 1600 C.C.C. Reading Rooms 



form the cultural centers for three hundred 

 thousand young fellows. Many have been to High 

 School and have studied a little biology. All of 

 them are out in the open, and just the right age 

 to appreciate EVOLUTION. 'What more worth 

 while educational effort can you conceive thar 

 to help introduce them to E'VOLUTION. Sen 

 your remittance at once, so that they may ALL 

 start with this January number. 



EVOLUTION 



29-46 Northern Blvd., Long Island City, N. Y. 



a 



