SCIENCE KNOWS NO NATIONAL BOUNDARIES 
“gy believe in the work of your organization. I do not see how any 
sane man or woman can fail to be impressed with the truths you are 
presenting. The time is very near when you can preach these facts to a 
wide audience.” —from Arizona. 
‘*& copy of the Journal of Heredity has just been called to my atten- 
tion. What must I do to become a member of your Association?” 
—from Michigan. 
“‘T am out on the ranch a great deal, away from my business, but— 
keep the Journal coming.” —from Wyoming. 
“T was greatly pleased that I had been made a member of your 
Association.” —from New York. 
“T am the wife of a seedsman who is interested in pure stock of all 
’ growing things—and the mother of three sons who need all the varied 
information your Journal gives.” —from Ohio. 
“As an administrative and supervisory school official, a teacher of 
sociology and a father, I am naturally very much interested in the 
subject-matter of investigation of your Association.” 
—from Pennsylvania. 
‘‘The Society desires to become a member of your Association and 
to receive the Journal of Heredity. The Director is greatly interested 
and finds the publication issued by you most useful.” 
—from Queensland, Australia. 
“J shall take pleasure in handing out nomination blanks with the 
reprints to my co-workers, and shall feel happy if thus I can assist you in 
your work.” —from Svaléf, Sweden. 
‘Please send, fully postpaid and registered, your issues from 1913 
to 1918.” —lTrbrarie, Warsaw, Poland. 
“T intend to continue the Journal of Heredity as long asI live. . . . 
I must thank you for all the trouble you have taken, and congratulate 
you on the sustained high quality of the Journal, especially the illustra- 
tions.” . —from Canterbury, New Zealand. 
“T would like you to know how heartily I appreciate the Journal.” 
—from Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands. 
‘‘T have to thank you for the Journal of Heredity for December to 
teplace the one sent previously and which arrived here in a ruined 
condition. I am of course arranging to have all the Journals bound in 
volumes and I shall be indeed sorry to lose any one number. I can 
assure you that as long as I live I shall always continue to be a member.” 
—from Calcutta, India. 
“The College Library here subscribes to the Journal of Heredity 
which I read regularly and think very interesting and useful.” 
—from Royal College, Dublin, Ireland. 
“Being a student, a rancher, and a breeder-to-be, I am very inter- 
ested in your Association and its work. I have had access to but a few 
copies of your Journal. They were intensely interesting; it was these 
that instilled the desire in me for more. The field you cover has long 
been my ideal of life’s research and effort. It was a surprise to me to 
find a large organization of intelligent men already dedicated to this 
cause. I would like you to consider me a candidate for membership.’ 
—from Idaho. 
