196 THE RIGHT TO BE WELL BORN 



Thence is likely to come an enlightened 

 popular system of human breeding that 

 "will correct these social errors and show 

 the people of the East and South the need 

 of teaching the young, before marriage, the 

 value of eugenics and the fatal ' unhappy 

 results these unhallowed crosses produce. 



To illustrate the laws of nature, in, per- 

 haps, a clearer way, in Honolulu, there has 

 been an almost indiscriminate mixing of 

 such races as the Japanese, Germans, 

 Chinese, Scotch, American, English and 

 other nations. The awful result of the 

 mixing of opposite and antagonistic racial 

 qualities is that there is no certainty as to 

 the character or looks of the children. For 

 instance, a man and his wife, both giving 

 indication of being pure Anglo-Saxon, will 

 produce one child that favors a Chinaman, 

 another like a German, another like a na- 

 tive Honoluluian, and still another that re- 

 sembles a Japanese. 



The Eugenic Eecord Office had a study 

 made of the results from mulatto mar- 

 riages, in certain of the Islands in the 

 Atlantic Ocean, where there is no jace 



