50 THE BIGHT TO BE WELL BOEN 



only. They are, so far as eugenics are 

 concerned, simply drones in the human bee- 

 hive. 



EDUCATION AND HEEEDITY. 



Another important observation can be 

 made by the horse breeder. Training, edu- 

 cation and feeding can add nothing to a 

 horse which he can pass on to his offspring. 

 The school, the college and the university 

 do not give anything to the boy which he 

 can hand on to his own sons. We train and 

 race horses to find out if they are fit to 

 breed, and I, in addition, examine their life 

 germs under the microscope to find out 

 whether they are worthy or unworthy to 

 stand in the harem. ' * Many come, but few 

 are chosen" to my Stallion Court, and the 

 horse who has not the right kind and num- 

 ber of life germs and right kind of ancestry 

 and with it the vitality, bone, muscle, ten- 

 don, stamina, lung power and intelligence 

 to be trained and raced, lacks something 

 which we need in the race horse. We refuse 

 to breed him. Often do we hear an old 

 breeder say, "I shall not breed my good 



