HEAT AND COLD. 



The period in worldly cooling and the portions 

 conforming to man's place in relation to other forms 

 of life, by the entry into existence, admit of no water 

 on the face of the earth at that period in like parts of 

 its surface adaptable to man's entry. In consequence, 

 his development, to admit of his form of life within 

 like conditions, and his slow development accordingly. 



Man has a skin bare of any hair. It is of a chemi- 

 cal composition capable of carrying a temperature far 

 below the temperature of surroundings aerial or other- 

 wise. The conditions that brought man into being 

 were in an early period of worldly history. The long 

 plains were not cool enough to admit of the precipi- 

 tation of water so as to detain same on surface. The 

 earth was always secluded from direct action of the 

 sun in like locations, owing to the great amount of 

 matter and mists of the aerial order. In consequence 

 always about the same in temperature. The sameness 

 of temperature would render the precipitation of suf- 

 ficient water on the face of the earth for detention an 

 impossibility. The dark and heavy mists, enwrapping 

 mists encircling like abodes, owing to temperature 

 necessary in the conditions, rendered the water exac- 

 tions as a maintenance of life a matter of exaction from 

 the mists through the pores of the body. Instead of 

 taking in gulps of water through the mouth. 



Owing to the foregoing conditions which con- 

 clusively brought man into being, he developed as we 

 know him, with a skin chemically capable of lowering 

 the temperature below the surroundings. He having 



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