And of Cell Life 53 



position force as three dynamic atoms, and the female collection 

 as four static atoms. As these four static atoms are products of 

 radiating forces, they must be equal to the helium atom, for they 

 represent the weight of that atom. That atom is formed while 

 radium is undergoing decomposition, or changing the positions of 

 the fields of male and female groups of ether that enter into the 

 atomic construction of radium. 



Each group in the male field would bring forth a different form 

 of life, and the number and kinds of life were determined when 

 the difference in fields of rotating ether was accomplished, in the 

 continuous production of light. 



The fixed system of 3-4, with its mass of ether, would appear to 

 be unequal as a male and female, but the fourth value of an atom 

 is held as the ether, in the attendant mass. There must be a condi- 

 tion of ether, of electrons, of electric charges, and of equal number 

 of charges making up the neutral atom. So there are actually 

 four atoms in the dynamic part of the system. 



The meaning of involution-forms as a colonial form of life, which 

 is shown so well in the animal forms called hydra, proves their 

 presence to be a fixed stage in the process of "life building," and 

 not a result of degeneracy. 



If we compare the pictures of involution- forms, and of certain 

 species of the Foraminifera, we find the same numbers in grouping, 

 and the same shape in form. Each stage in the ascension of life 

 must possess individual species that will resemble those of a lower 

 form, because of the primal groups making up the beginning and 

 the end of the readjustment of position in primal fields of ether 

 occupying space. 



As the principles of organic chemistry have been traced to their 

 origin as rotating fields of ether within a circumscribed position, 

 we must ever look to the action of gaseous electricity, as centres 

 of force, for an explanation of internal oxidation as a principle 

 involved in the production of vital processes or the creation of life. 



In explanation of the remaining illustrations of living things, 

 we show on Figure (3) the manner in which spores form and the 

 position in the parent cell. There are the polar germination and 

 the equatorial germination, or the vertical and horizontal lines of 

 force in evidence. 



On Figure (5) we show bacterial growths as a long, twisted fila- 

 ment, which looks like the twistings seen in the picture of the sudq;-i- 

 parous gland. This filament breaks down into rods, and finally into 

 spherical cells. On the same figure we show a picture of Bathyibius 

 Haeckelii (Huxley), a Moneron, one of a class from which Haeckel 

 traces the descent of man. He describes this animal form as 

 homogeneous in all its parts, but if we notice the different sizes of 

 the vacuoles we will see a difference in the expansion of gases as 

 its breath of life. These Monera perform all the activities known 

 as nutrition, sensation, reproduction and movement, so that they 

 are creatures as colonies made up of all the different kinds of 

 groups which could arise through the continuous production of 



