Bankers Mortgage Company 



KANSAS CITY, MO. 

 Capital $1,000,000.00 



The Bankers Mortgage Company offers $100,000.00 of bonds in denominations 

 of $100.00, $500.00 and $1,000.00, with interest payable semi-annually at 65^%; 

 dated March 1, 1922; due March 1, 1927, ten interest coupons attached to each 

 bond, and the entire issue secured by the deposit of $120,000.00 worth of first 

 mortgage real estate loans in Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma and Arkansas. This 

 issue affords the following features of security: 



1. The bonds are the direct obligation of the Bankers Mortgage Company. 



2. They are secured by the deposit of first mortgage loans in an amount of 20% in 

 excess of the total bond issue. These loans are the same kind we are selling to 

 our customers and are absolutelj' safe. 



3. In case of default on any of these real estate loans, the Bankers Mortgage 

 Company is under obligation to replace it with a new first mortgage loan not in 

 default. 



The Trustee holding these securities is the Columbia National Bank of Kansas 

 City, Missouri. 



Nothing more conservative or sound could possibly be offered and we 

 commend this investment to particular people who demand something more than 

 just ordinary good security. 



BANKERS MORTGAGE COMPANY, 



C. H. Kirshner, President. 



New Edition, RcYiicd and Bnlarg«d 



Genetics and Eugenics 



By WILLIAM ERNEST CASTLE 

 Professor of Zoology, Harvard University 



Thii work, go favorably known to students and research workers, is now offered in an improved 

 edition (issued November 1920), with new plates and restatements of fact that bring it abreast of 

 the latest advances in biology. Illustrated with 154 cuts and charts. In class use at more than 

 fifty American coUeg'es. 



C. D. Day, Central Wesleyan College: "I consider it an ideal book for use by the students of 

 biology." 



John H. Gerould, Dartmouth College: "It is an exceedingly clear, well-balanced, reliable, and 

 interesting textbook, well adapted to college classwork." 



C. E. Turner, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: "I am delighted with the new and much 

 improved second edition." 



Aute Richards, University of Oklahoma: "At the present time, there is no other hook so useful 

 as an introduction to the field of Genetics, so far as my information goes." 



Leonas L. Burlingame, Leland Stanford University: "1 have your letter announcing the new 

 edition of Professor Castle's Genetics and E%<gemcs. This is only another indication of 

 the well-deserved popularity of a very excellent book." 



Rollin C. Mullinex, Lawrence College: "The new edition contains a considerable amount of 

 important material that was absent from the first edition. The result is that Genetics and 

 Eugenics in if; present form impresses me as the most valuable single text available for 

 the use of students who come to the subject with adequate preparation in the fundamental 

 principles of biological science." 



John W. Scott, University of Wyoming: "I have noted with satisfaction the great improvement 

 over the first edition. Of particular importance is the new material on blending 

 inheritance, the nature of the genetic factors and their location in the germ-cells, linkage, 

 and the principles of inbreeding. 1 trust that new editions will appear as frequently as 

 the needs demand. I shall continue to recommend this text to my students as one of the 

 very best." 



viii-{ 395 pages. |3.00 



Harvard University Press 



IS Randall Hall, CAMBRIDGE, MASS. 532 Fifth Ave., NBW YORK CITY 



a«orga Btnta Publlthlng Cs., Mtnaitia. WIimriIr 



