Page:Amazing Stories Volume 01 Number 12.djvu/33

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THE GREEN SPLOTCHES
1111

their skins. No doubt the young Jovians are green in color. It would also explain why Mr. Three was entirely without anger when attacked and without pity for Pablo's pleadings, or for Standifer when he was burned, or for Ruano when he was murdered.

Anger, pity, love and hatred are the emotional traits of the mammalia. They have been developed through epochs of maternal protection. It is not developed in plants.

Mr. Three was a plant.

It would also explain why Mr. Three took only one animal of each species, instead of a male and a female. Sex is perhaps unknown on Jupiter. Mr. Three was perhaps expecting his animals to bud or sprout.


The last question to be broached is, How is it possible for plant life to possess mobility?

I wish to recall to the inquirer that here on our own globe the spores of the algae and other plants of that order have the power of swimming freely in the sea. Still, they are plants—plants just as mobile as fishes. They become stationary only at a later stage of their development.

Now, if for some reason these algae spores could retain their mobility, the result would be a walking, swimming or crawling plant.

The line between animal and plant life has never been so clearly drawn. It seems mere fortuity that the first forebear of animal life swam about and caught its sustenance by enveloping it in its gelatinous droplet, rather than by adhering to a reef and drawing its energy directly from the sun.

If that far-off protozoa had clung to the reef, the reader of this paragraph might have been a sycamore or a tamarind—he would not have been a man.

Now Mr. Three's forefather evidently crawled out of the sea into the sunshine but found nothing to envelop; therefore he followed the lip of the Jovian tide up and down, drawing his energy from the sun's rays. The result was a walking vegetable—in short, Mr. Three.

However, gentlemen of the Nobel Prize Foundation, it is not to press the views of the writer that this note was written, but to offer for your consideration as candidates for the fifty thousand dollar Nobel Prize for the year 1920 the names of:

Demetrios Z. Demetriovich, Herbert M. Pethwick and James B. Standifer.

One of the five prizes for 1920 will be awarded to the man or group who have done the greatest service for the advancement of human knowledge during the twelvemonth.

These men, by their observations, taken at the peril of their lives, have blazed new avenues for the use of radium. Their journal suggests the feasibility of the universal use of telepathy, a development now confined to a few adepts and belittled by the unthinking. Their discoveries reveal the possibility of interplanetary travel and the vast commercial emoluments such a trade would possess. Their journal suggests to the ambitious soul of man a step beyond world citizenship, and that is stellar citizenship. It is a great step and will profoundly modify human thought.

In the past, gentlemen, epoch-making discoveries have been too often rewarded by Bridewell or Bedlam; it is gratifying to know that we have reached a stage of civilization where the benefactors of their race receive instead honor and emolument.

Gilbert H. DeLong.

New York City,
May, 1920.

Note by the Transcriber: It may interest the reader to know that the Nobel Prize was awarded to Dr. Gilbert H. DeLong, for the series of brilliant inductions set forth above.—T. S.

The End.

Back Numbers of “Amazing Stories”
To doubt you will be interested to know, if you have not yet secured them, that back numbers of Amazing Stories can be secured from this office, at the rate of 25c per copy (coin or stamps) postpaid, as long as the supply lasts.
CONTENTS OF THE DECEMBER ISSUE:

“The First Men in the Moon,” (Serial in 3 parts) (Part I), by H. G. Wells.

“The Man Higher Up,” by Edwin Balmer and William B. MacHarg.

“The Time Eliminator,” by Kaw.

“Through the Crater's Rim,” by A. Hyatt Verrill.

“The Lord of the Winds,” by Hugo Bissuri.

“The Telepathic Pick-up,” by Samuel M. Sargent, Jr.

“The Educated Harmon,” by Charles S. Wolfe.

“The Diamond Lens,” by Fitz-James O'Brien.

“The Second Deluge,” (A Serial in 4 parts) (Part II), by Garrett P. Serviss.
CONTENTS OF THE DECEMBER ISSUE:

“The Red Dust,” (A Sequel to “The Mad Planet”), by Murray Leinster.

“The Man Who Could Vanish,” by A. Hyatt Verrill.

“The First Men in the Moon,” (A Serial in 3 parts) (Part II). by H. G. Wells.

“The Man With the Strange Head,” by Dr. Miles J. Breuer.

“The Second Deluge,” (A Serial in 4 parts) (Part III), by Garrett P. Serviss.
CONTENTS OF THE FEBRUARY ISSUE:

“The Land that Time Forgot,” (A Serial in 3 parts) (Part I), by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

“On the Martian Way.” by Capt. H. G. Bishop, U. S. A.

“The First Men in the Moon” (A Serial in 3 parts) (Part III), by H. G. Wells

“New Stomachs for Old.” by W. Alexander.

“The Eleventh Hour,” by Edwin Balmer and William B. MacHarg.

“The Thought Machine,” by Ammianus Marcellinus.

“The Second Deluge,” (A Serial in 4 parts) (Part IV), by Garrett P. Serviss.
We can also supply a few back numbers of the August, September, October and November issues.
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