HEAT AND COLD. 



life, he being a product of long periods of temperature 

 of constant, and a feeder on aerial properties for many 

 years during the developing period. He would be the 

 most likely form of life under the circumstances. There 

 not being mineral enough to produce the other greater 

 forms of life or means of sustenance. 



It would be well to note that the conditions that 

 made all hairy life was such as would render the pores 

 practically always channels of excretion. The same can 

 be said of all the fowls of the air which have feathery 

 coverings. Their period of incubation or method of 

 feeding reveals necessity for their coming into being in 

 portions of surface of changing temperatures. The 

 same can be said of the ox and the horse, they being 

 vegetarians, and it being necessary for them to seek the 

 coldest portion of earthly surface in order to get moss 

 or other vegetable diet at the heated period in which 

 they came into being. 



In the case of the man, he changed the channels 

 very often from exaction to excretion, owing to his 

 method of deriving food from the mists by their means. 

 And the temperature was constant in his locality for 

 many years. In the case of the portions of his body 

 which are covered by hair he nearly always used like 

 portions of his body as avenues of excretion. The same 

 will be found to be the truth until to-day. As like por- 

 tions of his system seldom exact from without. They 

 generally act as drainage avenues for the human body. 



212 



