Professional Documents
Culture Documents
REVIEW
M u Lnwr L D ~ u n u . u
C C L m u , D Sc M u RICHBULIIIM
Dirrctorr h w r S ~ o n mPHD , M u Asnra G P o l n m Mu. GEOM. H DAY,S e Mna D I Buoorn ~ Jona C V A ~ ~ H A N , MD B E N J A ~I~ N TILTON, D M Batwd C d
ohm Par,ll M D Ill btlltam I FnddaacNNYY M R Smmn Ford Rev William H G a d N Y Larreace Lttchfidd M D Pa Owen R Lovcj N Y MI ~ o b r n %vet. 111 M Mrr Stan1 M&rmck N Y Pmfntor $M~DoosallM a u Mn Wm A h4ffir.r Mnch RL+, ours L ~ a n n III Dr Henry 0 Mamy Mael MI .mn H Mavru P. Adol/Me er M D Md ~ b ~ ~ h M D ~ Mas* b ~ K .mu G N d h a P h D N Y imfusor ~ r F n burn N Y Raymond P=.rl ~ h Md b ProIw8or Walter B P ~ t k m Y N Horntto M Pollack Ph D N Y Mn E-h R.u Pa Aamn J M D C.1
Vws-Prsrdsntr
Anx; K E N X ~ Y , Bscrstary Funcla B ACXI~~ANN, Trsorursr J NOAHH S ~ ESI., Artutanl Trsorursr , Mu F R o a r a ~ r - J o ~ u Maa THON H I ~ N
MIDDLE WESTERN STATES COMMITIZE Chcurmm Dr John F a d , Clueago, 1 U Lalam B n u r c ~ n hmtarT Mn Walter L Beuson. WmotL. I L A m o n m r Corn-, PA Vws-Prsrdent Mrs G Oakley, Philadelphla NEWYmn STAW, hwum C o a a r r n x a Rxm~xa Prsndsnt, Rev L Griswold Wllllams, Reading, Pa NEWYOIX Cm Chasrmam, Mm Rlchard Billings O~~o--Cnrcrnn~n Prsndsnt, Dr Ralph Reed, Ind~anapolla smcrm. Chmrman, Mrs 0 H Cobh INDIANA Prsrdsnt D r Amelia R Kellar, Indianapolis ~c~~~~~~~~ Chaiwnan, Rev Philip Prick W A ~Conltn K Prsrrdsnt, Mrs W F Spanglcr, Richmond, Ind R~~~~~~ Cha~rman,Mrs Thomas J Swanton MICHXOAN Prsrdsnt Mrs Wlll~amA McGraw, Detrolt B~~~ Chamman, Mrs S Merrlll Clement, J r M~lassacnnann Temporary Chatrman Mrs W E Canno% Cambridge KEWG-ENB Chasrman, Mrs J Bishop Vandever ~nnsrncm P r s ~ d s n fMrs Gmrge H Day, S r , Hartford s~~~~~~ Chairman Mrs Frank M Leavltt Cowpdw s e ~ r s t a r Ruth VlnCent, Denver, ~ CrmanaChairman Mrs John Scott Browning. J r BUTKBH Cornlrau Prsridsnt, Mr A M Stephen, Vancouver P . ~ ~ Chairman, Mrs Fenley Hunter ~ ~
Mn EraaR Adr N Y Mrr Oatw Ama, M a u Dean Th,na W Amos, Pa Joseph L B8.r M D 1U M n Robert Pcrtmns Bass N H Ma, I Bmslor M D 6 1 A I Stone B I ~ C L W ~ Ih ~ u ~ I Mr Grorse Blvmenthal N Y Mr. John Wnnters Bramoan. N Y Lorcll Brcntrno N Y Al~ce Butler M D 0 Mr and Mrs Thomas L Chrdbouroe N Y Wollaam Hamlsn Chlids N Y M n Stephen Clark N Y Mrs Frank I Cobh N Y Rabba Rudolph I G S a . Ph D G I Lmn J G l c D Sc WII H e r b n Cmlr N Y M n Belle de Revera N J W o r e Drezur G I
Mn Kate Crane G u y G I
fi and Mr. ~ r o G rxu e n w N Y Allcc Ham~ltooM D Mass MIS L a r o d Hand N Y Frodonck C Horkcl M D N Y Florence Ba ard Hnllw Dcl ~ o o a l d kmker M D ~ a r y l a n d R Dr Ronrdl H Johnaan. Pa M n Otto H Knhn N Y S Adolphu, Knopf M D N Y M n Arthur L Larreacs N Y MI .ad M n Loclam L m n N Y Pmfuror E C Lxodmnn. N C J u d m Bcn L m d w Col
MnCCRn-NY M n Ho- St Gamdons, N H h E l t u W Smrs N Y hGw S h s r N Y Rnnold A %.ah Pb D Md M n Willard Strm ht, N Y ~cnnctb a r l o r D N Y ~ Mn Charla Tt6.n~ N Y
Ed
RoIand
M n Shelley Tolhunt, G I Florence G u m m Tutrl N Y ~ (? S t~ n ~ T~~ m n J I.~ u L Jehn B W.w% N Y M n N o r u n d R Whntrhoue N Y . Prof Walter F Wallmx, N Y M" Mary Wnoror Pa Pcofamr A B Wolk Obro Mrr P m Yutman P a
B I R T H CONTROL REVIEW
104 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YOBK, Y N
VOL V I I I
SEPTEMBER, 1924
No 9
CONTENTS
Enmon~~r.
The Intcrnatrand Bznh Control CanferenctDmfficulues of the Brmt~rh Government-French B~rth and Death Rate-An Appeal for ~ d p e r s
243
246
ha' shown
2k9 WAEA N D B ~ T cox no^, by John C Duvall H Cod's Call to Blrth Control Eupenles, by Ralph H Bsvan 260
show~ngthe ~ m m o r r ~ ~ t yrefu.,ng to uw ~ ~ r ~ pwcn ~ y of n r rcawn to wold orhcrw~u~ncv~table ~ r y m
OSSPPOPULATION, by Bernard B(l~ihb,M D 262 GL~ANINOS, n m K s n ~ d y by A 253 P E I N C ~ P~ ~ SAura OF TAE AIIEIICAXBPTA C ~ N W O L Lx n 264 Lr~one I &rth Control a Man's Problem? . 266
Letters from Hunbands and Fathen who share the lamaly problrms
?mx REVIEWS NIOHT,by H B Horrsy-E Ralph Chsnsy 262 I, A MINOR Porn, by Ralph Chswy-A M Btephan 262 NINETEENTH Cexrnnr E v o ~ m o xAND A m n , hy Marrhall Dawro-E H knd 262 Cnncrares OP CUXE by Jorsph Fuhman, and C ~ n s ~ s AND Cones or Clurz, by Thomor Bpssd Y o r b y A N Holcombs 263 M ~ m c l a x , l a n o l a ~ r s rAND S c r ~ s n n c e m ~ o w a ~ , F P by K n ~ g h tDunlap--Robert H Oault 263 S S ~ ~ KPnoarsmq bg Ezra Thaysr T m s - A AI 0 Pomll 263 PE~IODICA~~ a64 BWK~ RECEIVED News Nans New York-Massachusetts-New Hampshire-Illinois Ursconsie-Iowa Colorad+Utah-Cal~forn~e-Cnnada England-Austr~a
264 266 266 267
261
268
Matter, March 11, 1818. at the pot1 ob(u at NW Ymlc, N Y ,under the Act of March 3. 1879 .
-b t a h o n , Educahon, Org-hon,
-
Legulahon
VOL V I I I
S E P T E M B E R , 1924
No 9
00 much importance cannot be attributed to the Internatlonal Blrth Control Conference whlch 1s to meet m New York, March 19-24, 1925 There have been five of such Conferences m the past, the Fifth havmg been held m London m 1922 But the Sixth 1s the first to be held on this slde of the ocean, and it 1s now the first time that the United States can claim to be the logical center for such a gathermg A t prevlous conferences, the delegates came from the countries of Europe, from the Umted States, m t h a few mterested mdlviduals from the Orlent Next year great and flounshmg Birth Control Leagues whlch m 1922 were only just commg Into existence-largely as the result of Margaret Sanger's world tour m the precedmg spr~ng-wll send delegates from Japan, Chlna and Indla Such leagues were essential, for Birth Control must be world-mde and not confined to merely the Occidental countries, ~f it IS to confer ~ t promised blessmgs on humanlty It 1s true that s for very many centuries the populatlon of Chlna and Japan were stationary But Western civlhatlon has now mtroduced death-control Into these is countries, and if thls mnovat~on not followed by Blrth Control, it may prove to the world a curse and not a blesslng Japan can no longer contaln ~ t mllllons India, wlth ever more mouths to fill, finds ltself on the brink of recurring famlnes Chlna is s learning to keep ~ t bables allve, Instead of balanclng ~ t hlgh birth-rate wlth an equally hlgh deaths rate The world stands m constant fear of overpopulation, and the only remedy consistent wlth our new morahty IS preventive Blrth Control-the subject of the SIXTH I N T E R N A T I O N A L B I R T H CONTROL A N D N E O - M A L T H U SIAN CONFERENCE
HE Mlddle West and the Pacific Coast wlll both be well represented at the International Conference Thls is the glst of the reports recelved from Mrs Anne Kennedy, who has undertaken a trlp across the Continent to arouse Interest m the
commg event The Mlddle Western States were greatly stmed by the Conference a t Chlcago in October of last year A Birth Control Commlttee of the Mlddle Western States, headed by Dr John Favill of Chlcago, then came into existence T h ~ s Commlttee serves as laason for the group of elglit States, and Mrs Kennedy reports activities looklng towards the estabhshment of Blrth Control Clinlcs in a t least three of them I n Milwaukee the group mterested has reached the polnt of plannlng for the openlng of a chmc m the fall, when Mrs Sanger wll be mvlted to be present a t its inauguration I n Callforma, mterest m Blrth Control has been contlnuous slnce Mrs Sanger's vislts to that State, and over the border m Brltlsh Columbia, the Vancouver group, led by M r A M Stephen, has kept up an actlve agitat~onIn close touch wlth headquarters m New York All these States wlll send delegates to the Conference who wlll make thelr contrlbutlon to the papers and discussions
HE callmg of an Internatlonal Blrth Control Conference 1s a reminder that Blrth Control 1s not only a medical problem There are problems that belong chlefly ~f not entirely to the doctors s Such is cancer control, in regard to whlch there is no controversy of an economic, philosophical or ethlcal nature, and no question except such as cons cern the orlgln of the d~sease,~ t prophylaxis and the methods of ~ t cure Birth Control, on the other s hand, 1s a medical questlon only so far as regards methods of contraception It 1s not a medical problem when approached from the standyolnt of economics, polltics or ethics A t a Birth Control Conference, economists, statlstlclans, advocates of peace, students of all soclal questions which concern poverty, the prevalence of sickness, dependency, delinquency and mental and physlcal deficiency, psycholog~stsand philosophers, and students and teachers of ethlcs have all a contrlbut~on make to to the subject I n fact there is scarcely a reform put forward in these days of reform movements whlch
244
and that the frantic efforts touches l ~ f e lntlmately or on so many s~des I t hale to thew b~rth-rate so IS because of the uncertainty that st111 surrounds to encourage people to have mole ch~ldren are really the subject In the mlnds of many who have not yet expenditures of strength and resources at the wrong glven ~t careful attent~on, and because of the need end of the scale The figures referred to show that, of educat~onand lnstructlon of even professors, whlle the populatlon of France 1s approximately educators and theolog~ans, that the Amencan Blrth equal to that of England and Wales, France In Control League 1s sponsoring the Slxth I n t e ~ n a - 1923 had 761,861 b~rths, ~olnpared ~ t h as w 758,386 for England and Wales But the French deaths tlonal Blrth Control Conference numbered 666,990, while In England only 444,869 most d~fficultproblems face the B ~ l t ~ s h persons dled Thls difference In the death-rate gale Government at the present tlme These are England a n a t u ~ alncrease of 313,517 for the year, l T W O unemployment and the housing questlon Both arc wh~le France the populatlon was augmented only In the results of an lncreaslng populat~on, greater than b j 94,871 I n the first quarter of thls year, the the country 1s prepared to support Yet the B r ~ t ~ s h lecord was even worse, for whlle the blrths st111 Government In the person of I-Ion James Wheat- exceeded those of the Engllsh, there were 24,039 lej, M~nlsterof Health, obstinately refuses to re- more deaths than blrths Last year, In its efforts s a n d the order agalnst glvlng Blrth Control In- to lncrease the numbel of bnths, the government f o r ~ n a t ~ oat the Pubhc Health Centers, or even d~str~buted mlll~onsof francs In bonuses and n 763 telling where such ~nforinatlonmay be obtalned bount~es I n the l ~ g hof the figures we have quoted, t Instead Rlr Wheatley has just pushed through ~t would seem as though t h ~ s money would have Parl~amenta hous~ng b~ll,whlch ~t 1s hoped, m'Ly been better spent In health campalgns for the salbrmg about the bu~ldlng perhaps 50,000 houses, Ing of chlldren already born, rather than In enof w~thln next two or three years I n the mean- couraglng reckless reproduct~on, the wh~ch scarcely can tlnle, accord~ngto Rlr Wheatley's own est~mate, fall to lncrease the already hlgh rates of lnfantlle England IS addlng 400,000 people yearly to her and maternal mortahty populat~on Thls means that each year 200,000 E A D Q U A R T E R S of the Amerlcan B ~ r t h young men and 200,000 young women reach the marr~ageable age Already the overcrowdmg Control League occuples a s u ~ t e offices In a of classes 1s excesslve twenty-story bulldlng a t 104 F ~ f t hAvenue, beamong the working and m~ddle and lt would take several years of actlve house tween F ~ f t e e n t h S~xteenth and Streets It IS almost b u ~ l d ~ n g catch up w ~ t h to arrears, even ~f no new lmposs~blefor anyone, who has not been In close famlhes were estabhshed What IS the outlook for touch w ~ t hour actlvltles, to form any concept~on all these young people? On the one hand, ever) of the amount and range of work carried on from avenue to employment o~ercrowded,and onlv a these offices The League therefore extends a of government dole offered for subs~stence On the cordla1 lnvltat~onto all fr~ends Blrth Control, as other, no houses-no home for a newly rnarrled who are In New York e~ther residents or v~s~tors, couple There IS s specla1 provlslon In the bill that to come to Headquarters and to get better acpreference In allotlng the houses shall be glven to qualnted wlth our work Along w ~ t ht h ~ s n v ~ t a ~ large famlhes, a proviso that excludes from the tlon we also make an appeal for volunteers who benefits of the act the thrlftv and respons~ble people will glve them serlrlces elther for 7, regular number who have not lentured to brlng ch~ldrenInto a of hours a week, or occas~onally,when they can world whlch offered them ne~thera home nor a spare the tune There 1s always much to do In con11v1ng What hope can there be of a Labor Govern- nection wlth our campalgns of education Many ment that penal~zesthrlft and foresight, putr a women find ~t easy to fold letters and leaflets, to premlum on reckless reprnductron, and blocks the fill envelopes and to do slm~lartasks Such help 1s of much value to us. and enables us areatlv to ax enue to savlne knowledgel extend our usefulness' Telephone us 2 ch;lsea HE theory of RLr C E Pel1 that the birth- 8901-2-3-4 and let us know when you can come rate falls automat~callywlth the fall of the Our New York readers are urged to keep In death-rate, and thrt dellberate contracept~onhas l ~ t t l e dn w ~ t h m ~ t t e r tn the recelves a severe shock mlnd the Birth Control booth at the Wornen's E t, from figures recently published In France That Act~v~tlesx h ~ b ~Hotel Commodore, September contracept~on several 22-27 Mrs J B~shop for Vanderer and Rlrs George the French have pract~sed generat~ons past 1s well known, as 1s also the fact H Day, S r , are In charge of the booth They wlll that thelr rate of Increase IS extremely low But ~t be glad of offers of help from volunteers Please has not been equallv recognized that the French telephone Headquarters lf you can spare any have glven less thought to them death-rate than they tlme
September, 19W
HE long and b~tterly fought war aga~nst Blrth Control was descr~bed by Margaret Sanger In the July Issue of the Amerzcan Mercury I n the opemng paragraphs she co~nmentson the wh~ch ideas of love and procreathe difficulty w ~ t h tlon are d~ssoc~ated the human rn~nd One reason In for the d~fficulty suggested in the quotat~on 1s from I V ~ l l ~ a Blake w ~ t hwh~chshe heads the art~cle m
I1
ously morbld conception of human funchons The only lawful justification of love, he beheved, was ~ ~ the procreation of chlldren Except for t h avowed purpose, all intercourse should be made pwshable by fine and lmprlsonment Unless men and women could prove the vlrtuous motlve of then cohabltatlon, they should be-and Indeed I am Informed that in certaln sections of the Unlted States they often are-thrown into jall The Comstocklan leglslatlon agalnst contraception was thus aimed at those who held that, Independent of prospective parenthood, sexual relations had a leptunate excuse and value of thelr own Anthony Comtock "Comstock, though he IS dead, remalns the archtype of the successful moral censor HIS fanatlclsm generated a ternfic energy G a l v a m d mto Incessant and frenzled actlvlty by the mtensity of his obsession, he dlsco~eredobscemty everywhere H e came to be a national pontiff of prurlence Congress quaded before h ~ spasslon H e conmced sheep-hke legislators that unless IS last-mute measures were enacted Into law, Amencan society would be hurled over the chff mto the abyss of eternal damnation H e gamed greater and greater authority H e swayed Congress and the state leeslatures, he became the moral censor of the Postoffice, and finally he controlled even the port of New York "Havelock Ellis has told us that anythmg that sexually excltes a prurlent rmnd IS obscene to that mlnd Obscenity d o m a t e d Comstock's m d 'Men thmk they know,' some one has m t t e n , 'because they feel, and are firmly convinced because they are strongly agitated ' There was never any doubt In Anthony's breast and h a certamty was always translated Into actlon H e hounded men and women, regardless of them & p t y and good Intentions Because, at the age of 75, Moses Harmon published an artlcle d~scussmgrnatrunorllal relations mthout evaslon, he was sentenced to hard labor at Leavenworth Through the force of h s fanatla1 zeal and the mexhaustibIe resources of IS energy Comstock was able for years to terrorize ~~~d mth and anaesthetlze the hencan d his newly legal forged weapons, his tyramybecame complete Always he was able to work 'mthin the law '
movement the object of them particular enmty are totally Ignorant of what may be termed the classical tactics of suppression They are hke schoolboys playmg mth chemcals Where they have hoped to enforce sdence, they have been surprised and shocked by the force and repercussive effect of unexpected detonations They themselves are often compelled to run to cover Instead of sllenclng an idea or a book, they merely dramatize it Over and over agam they have worked rmracles of publ~c~ty that would have been unposslble to a regiment of press-agents "The Blrth Control movement In Amerlca has had the good luck to lncur the wrath of two distmct schools of censors A t first the Comstock~ansfocused them attention on us But mth the passlng of that patriarch any experienced observer must have noted the rapld d e c h e of the Comstocklan school I t has now become almost semle No longer 1s ~t actuated by the stupendous frenzy of ~ t s founder The grandlose gestures of the Golden Age are now thlngs of the past The neo-Comstocks are makmg, ~t1s true, occasional spurts of actinty, successful malnly because of the feebleness of the hterary challenges to Mr John S Sumner But I venture to pred~ct that, In a future not too dlstant, there w~ll a gradual dlsmtegratlon of the be whole school Times are changmg W e are no longer m the Vlctorlan era Desplte ~tself, Amencan soclety cannot agaln bring to fruit so perfect a specimen of dynamic psychosexual hyperaesthesia as Anthony Comstock presented And mthout the unpelhg force of an overwhelrmng pathological prurlence, no nrtuoso of h a cahber can arise among us Roman Catholic Opposrtron ''Today the chef warfare against Birth Control a waged by the Roman Catholic clergy and allies From the psy~hologcalpomt of new the fact not mthout its s l d c a n c e For at least fifteen hundred Years the church has occupied Itself with the problem of lmposmg abstinence upon Its ~rlesthood-an mte&gent and tramed body of men who have been taught to look upon complete I C I S ~ the hghest ideal-and as it IS not surprising that such a class of professional cellbates should be P S Y C ~ ~ C~ensltlve the ~m~hcatlons the Idea ~ ~ ~ Y to of of contraception Taught to look upon all expresslons of physlcal love as smful, lt is but natural that thcsc mcn should combat a school of thought so dlametrlcally opposed to their own Thus the opposltlon of the Roman Catholic Church and ~ t s representatives, hlgh and low, 1s logcal and to be expected The phlosophy of Blrth Control Insists upon the maxlmum of personal llberty in every sphere of human behanor that is compatible mth
September, 19.94
217
of Dmeen, secretary the maximum of personal respons~b~l~ty~ g h t l y on the ~nstruct~ons Mons~gnor R Hayes! When I attempted to speak, or wrongly, ~tthrows back upon the ~ n d ~ v ~ dfulll to Archb~shop ua and wlth me r e s p o n s ~ b ~ l for h ~ s ~ty behav~or It requlres hlm to I was dragged off to a pohce stat~on, illegal and act upon the basis of reason, experlence and pru- went those who protested against t h ~ s dence True morality, we cla~m, the outgrowth unwarranted abuse of authority The case was IS of experlence and of the exerclse of rat~onal ~ntelll- promptly d~smssed the m a ~ s t r a t e following by the morrllng The eccles~ast~cal ~nst~gators the supof gence upon that experience presslon d ~ d appear aga~nst not me But the InCatholzc Ethzcs vest~gat~on wh~ch followed ~ n d ~ c a t e d the pol~ce that "The Cathohc scheme of ethlcs, on the contrary, who broke up the meet~ng recelved thew orders, had demands s t r ~ c t obedience to the laws and prohlbl- not from pol~ce headquarters, but from the clergy' t ~ o n sthat have been cod~fiedby authority That "The boomerang effect of t h ~ s performance was a u t h o r ~ declares In no uncertain terms that 'all indicated by the reverberat~onsIn the press The t~ poslt~ve methods of thls nature (contraception) are ~ d e a B ~ r t h of Control was advert~sed,dramatized, ~mmoral and forb~dden I n a Chr~stmaspastoral made the reclplent of column upon column of pub' Archb~shop (now Cardmal) Patrlck J Hayes ven- l ~ c ~ t Only an ~nfinltes~mal y sectlon of the public tured so far as to assert that had been aware of the first Amer~can ~ r t h B Control even though some llttle angels In the flesh, through Conference, even fewer persons knew of the prothe moral or physical deformltles of their parents1 posed meet~ng the Town Hall The clumsy and m may appear to human eyes hideous, misshapen* a illegal tact~csof our opponents made the whole blot on clvlhzed soc~ety,we must not lose sight of country aware of what we were d o ~ n g Even the this ~ h r l s t l a n thought that under and wlthln such most conservative of American newspapers were vlslble malformations hves an immortal soul to be placed In the p o s ~ t ~ oof defend~ngour doctr~ne n saved and glorified for all eternity among the blessed Letters showered m upon us Many new members ~nHeaven jolned the League A t a later date, In a much crowded to the doors, the meet"From exponents of the ph~losophyrepresented larger aud~tonum, by t h ~ utterance the early advocates of B ~ r t h s Con- lng was held Thus our first nat~onalconference opposltlon As was crowned w ~ t h trol were prepared for the b~tterest trlumph Indeed, the momentum we by s a matter of fact, we welcomed such opposltlon, of the publlc~ty obta~ned t b ~ unlawful interh o p ~ n gonly that the battle m ~ g h tbe carried on ference carr~ed over many months Instead of us accord~ngto the rules of decency and honesty cutting off the publ~c d~scussionof B ~ r t h Control, Ne~ther theory nor the pract~ce Birth Con- the ep~sodemade the whole country talk about the of trol has ever been thrust upon women unwllhng to Blrth Control There were svmposlums, ed~tor~als, accept ~ tleast of all upon Cathol~cs W e have con- letters from 'constant readers'-all , of whlch had sought by us, of keeplng our ceded to Cathollc and all other clergymen the full the effect del~berately rlght t o preach then own doctrmes, both of theology Idea mterestmg to the pubhc a t large and of morals When, howel er, the Cathohc clergy Other Tactzcs attempt to force t h e ~ r Ideas upon non-Cathobc sec"Other tactics were Invoked by the avowed aletlons of the American public and transform them Into lealslatlve act?, we helleve we are well w~thln "'eS of Bllth Control In a more recent attempt a t our r ~ g h t s American c ~ t ~ z e n s as when we volce our censorshl~ When a state conference was arranged protest The unsportsmanlike tact~cs and strategy In our opponents brought Presof these opponents ~ ~ control tmay be Illus- sure to bear upon the Co~nmon to ~ h Counc~l that c ~ t v of trated by two examples of attempted suppression -the members of which, unless I am llllstlken had all taken an oath to uphold the Const~tut~on the of A Frontal Attack Un~ted States and that of the State of New York "Three years ago, as a fitt~ng conclusion to the A n ord~nancewas ~ntroduced ~naklng~t a mlsControl Flrst Amer~can Blrth Control Conference, a publlc demeanor to dlscuss the subject of B ~ r t h of but a single dislneet~ng was arranged a t the Town Hall In New In the c ~ t y Syracuse, and w ~ t h York C ~ t y The subject chosen for d~scuss~on was sent~ngvolce ~t was passed T o beconle a law ~t of the eth~cs B ~ r t h of Control It was our alm to use needed only the s~gnature the lnayor A ..lolent this occasion, not for a g ~ t a t ~ o but to determine protest now arose Rlanv who had not h~therto n, In Control s p a n g to the the oplnlons of representatme men and women of shown any ~nterest B ~ r t h guarantees of free were to defense of the const~tut~onal all professions Opponents of the doctr~ne assembly The mayor, finallv, be glven a f a ~opportunity to state them objections speech and pe~ceable r But the meet~ngwas summar~lyclosed by the letoed the ordinance and the state conference was ep~sodethe ~ n h a b ~ t ~ n t s police, acting, as subsequent ~ n v e s t ~ g a t ~ o n proved, snccessfi~llv held B v t h ~ s
September, 19Y
AR is not pr~marlly n human machination trol which is immeasurably more horrible than even a
the most hrdeous of barbaric methods I n thrs case the system 1s not concerned wlth the exposure of Infants to the elements, but rather with the exposure of expensrvely reared adults to shrapnel fire and mustard gas Surplus babies are not thrown into a Ganges river, but the best of young manhood 1s drowned in a river of blood Also the dispatching of the aged IS obvrated by the mass slaughter of the battlefield whereby the same results are accornplished But in any event it matters lrttle whether the method employed is that of the barbarran or the terrifying system of the crvrlized man, the results are the same in their ultlmate effect, as they anse from the same underlying causes Population 1s kept withrn the confines of available resources by the application of erther of these systems, whether as a result of natural consequence or human applrcatron thereof The various agencles of famme, disease, pestrlence, infantlclde, homrcrde, or war anse from the same rtatq~ralcondrtion and untrl that cond~tionis understood and modified, one or more of these agencles must operate to accompl~sli its terr~ble inevitable and necessary purpose but I t should, therefore, be clearly evrdent that programs such as Leagues of Nations, drsarmament conferences, world courts, and rehgious fanatrcisms, belng based solely upon such superficial consrderatlons as polrtlcal, economic, or emotronally sentrmental apparrtions, can a t best operate only to delay war rather than result rn rts absolute prevention Although such programs may be des~gned to approach the polrtrcal, economic, or relrg~ous ideal, unless the fundame~~tal of war IS undercause stood and removed, unless overpopulatron IS prevented, the inevitable result will be a destruct~on of the surplus W a r IS a means of accomplishing thls result
Amongst the better class, brrth control has long been an establtshed practtce, and at as rapidly growang amongst the better educated workzng class citizens T h e ouer-populataon of thas country as becom:ng a most serrous problem If the popfclntaon goes on ancrcastng at ~ t present rate there as nothtng can save the country from s anarchy U d e s s birth control becomes more general we rhaU neuer catch u p unth the hourmg rhortage-NEWCAETLE
SUN
September, 19.24
As surely as the earth's surface is lim~ted,the ultunate check~ng the birth rate was from the of first ordalned by God The problem of the phys~cally, nervously, and morally healthlest methods of birth control must mev~tablybe faced The mtended relgn of reason over the blind lnstlncts is unequ~voc?lly~ntlmated Shall stubborn superstlt~on as to the supposedly purposed supremacy of bllnd feehng lnv~te further wars and aggravated poverty? Shall dllatory obed~enceto Dlvlne command be punlshed by the lnfinlte agonies of tardy, preclpltate, bllnd and disastrous modes of controhng b~rthst O r shall prompt obcd~encem~nimlzethe r ~ s k other wars and worsened poverty and wm of the lll~m~table benefits of cautiously and scient~fically instituted blrth control? of the doctors seems the greatest slngle cause of but human suffermng There is, then, no alternat~ve The to express a reasonable conv~ct~on encouragement of overpopulat~onIS unnecessary Unhealthy can be suppression of the most impenous ~mpulse avo~ded T h ~ IS not the place for lengthy proof or s argument W e may, however, express a confident behef-and one founded on weighty author~ty-as to the p r e v a i h g oplnlon ainong the most enl~ghtened experts When all the ev~denceIn favor of an open-m~ndedand exhaustive lnqulry IS in, ~t mll be found that there are sure methods of prevent~ngb~rthsmthout foregong the leg~tuinate pleasures of marrlage These modes, even ~f not entirely healthy or harmless, are a t least lnfin~tely to be preferred to the colossal traged~es-wars, disease, countless burdensome hves-more or less Referable to War directly resultmg from the indiscrimnate favoring 1t is unanswerably demonstrable that no efforts of blrths of human geruus a t enlarged production, however Reason h v m e m h g m strenuous, can conceivably make posslble the I s blrth control m contravent~onof divlne mpresent rate of the mce's multiplication for "any supreme law of race preservat~onl " The growth even of the most stmct-the lengthy per~od productive, t h r ~ f t y useful classes w n be accom- Q u ~ t ethe contrary Control of births would be and pamed by a more r a p ~ d advance m food supphes practised under exceptional circumstances In the mterest of that same human welfare whlch the mtime " for "only a very lim~ted stmct of race presemat~on exists to promote The Yet sc~entific birth control by circumspect eduwtion of medcal and relig~ous advlsors may requlre purpose and essence of the law 1s happiness, that the generations to Institute Even now it may be too preponderates in the l ~ f e instinct exists to mullate to avert war for some nations, and aggravated tiply I n peculiar circumstances ~tis proposed to the poverty, serlous and prolonged, for most Further v~olate law's letter as the only means of obsems have dlvine delay means not only the multiplicat~onof mcal- ing ~ t spirit The instmctlve feel~ngs culable hereditary traged~es,but increased risks of authority Yet they are but general guides to the another world war and of agonlzmg economlc good of lndlv~dualand race Reason IS no less pressure, world-mde and protracted D r 0 E divlne m its orign And the latter IS the later Baker, Economist in the U S Department of development of evolut~on-the h~gherelement of Agnculture, warns t h s nat~on that its greatest pro- man It is intended to regulate, guide, and control duction per person is probably near, and possibly the bllnd mstmcts-in unusual cases to prel ent past, and that every Increase of its populat~onis their defeating the very welfare which is the only hkely to aggravate the high cost of llvlng3 And justification of their existence according to Professor Pearl,' Amerlcan grandControl Entrusted to Man children must face a much lower standard of livlng Closely allied to the above IS the objection that "even a t the best" I f , then, an author~ty h~gli so of predlcts such grave consequences, desp~te immedi- hm~tation births is an implous interference w ~ t h divine prerogative The mystenous has always Inof ate regulat~on b~rths,what ever-worse wars and evlls may not reasonably be ex- spired awe It would be strange, mdeed, if the most other ~lhrn~table pected from any considerable postponement of miraculous of mysteries had not been a fruitful source of superstlt~on birth control eugenlcs 1 Only the most progressive medlcal experts w ~ l l True, the actual processes of blrth are In God's s concede the ex~stence a sure and harmless mode hands alone But H e preferred to govern ~ t ~nitiaof t~on through man Else why did H e entrust the of controlling b ~ r t h s The writer has learned the H not practical ~ m p o s s ~ b ~oft v h ohtwning such an adm~s- latter to human control? Adm~ttedly, e d ~ d or~glnallyglve man wisdom In thls matter But sion from others Thls undiscriminating attitude w H e endowed h ~ m ~ t hthe means of knowledge The case is but part of the general order Man was I Appendtx A, Vol 1, Census of Australla, pp SS, 454 2 Appendu A Vol 1, Census of Australla, pp UM started m ignorance and consequent mlsery Thus 1 Anisman Rnmw of Rsclamr Aprd, 1923, p 440 only could he enjoy the satisfaction of learning, 4 New Pork Tcmm October 8, 1922
'
252
uthzmg, and controlhg div~ne laws and instincts for the overcoming of human suffering Usually we assume that we are to take advantage of any access~bleknowledge for the promotion of human welfare W e think thus to make use of a divme g f t IS to execute the wdl of a benevoleat God The mstance in question is pecuhar only m the sacredness of the respons~b~l~ty mvolved I s this not a d~stinctlon demanding especially the grateful exerclse of far-slghted reason for the guidance of blind mstinct to prevent the aggravation of human pain7 W e grant that birth should be controlled by God The point 1s that ~tought not to he governed by God's lower nature revealed in man's sexual unpulse It IS infln~tely preferable that so sacred a respons~bllity the creation of hfe be regulated by as God's hlgher belng That 1s manifested in human lntell~gence aiming a t the greatest average welfare But a more searching object~on may be ra~sed The fundamental positlon that pain is an evllthat ~tex~sts only for the satisfactions of minimlzing it-may be attacked And ~f ~tcan be successfulIy contended that suffermg is good in ~tself, then doubt IS thrown on the just~fiabilityof b ~ r t h control Except only, nevertheless, where control of birth or death IS necessary, pain 1s axlomatically regarded as God's sign that His law IS being violated-as a dlvine signal to do whatever is necessary permanently to remove the suffering-to promote that human welfare which 1s God's supreme end for man Yet where voluntary death or prevention of birth appears the only escape from great tragedy, ne~ther these is treated as obedience to of div~necommand Inconsistently, on the ground that paln 1s a good-ln-itself to be gratefully per-
Overpopulation
HE present populatlon of the earth 1s 1,650,This number sprang from the o r ~ g ~ ntwo, Adam and al Eve, or maybe we came from a couple of Bolshev~k monkeys Notw~thstanding the hurricanes, such as the all glaclal period, earthquakes, volcan~ceruptions, in spite of all the wars, religious persecutions, pestilences, epidemics and diseases, the human race kept on mult~ply~ng lncreaslng and Now that human thought tends to eradicate wars, science teaches the prevention of epldem~cs and diseases, prenatal care and the care of infants preventing the enormous waste of human hfe, and
000,000 and is increasing all the tlme
every baby born to be born to hve, we can easily surmise that in the near future population would increase in a st111 greater ratio, the earth mll bccome overcrowded to such an extent that we mll become packed u p llke the sardines m the subway Even now in Chlna, people lire all the vear round on boats because there IS no room for them on land Even now in England they are confronted m t h a problem of about 2,000,000surplus populatlon, and Australla does not want them because they need the room for themselves Considering that the Polar and A r c t ~ creglons
(Cont~nundon pagr 870)
September, 1 9 U
Gleanings
seat compamon proved to be a young mechan~c sparklmg personality, and she had equally galvane hbrary "Yes, I am the on h ~ s way to the "City of Oppoltunity " W e lzed her l ~ f mto the e n t ~ r e s talked of L a Follette, the present prosper~tyof ploneer m t h ~ work These 6,500 volumes are sent W~scons~n, to the enormous dairy business of on request to any doctor m the State-a travelmg due that state, and finally a young man's opportun~ty, liblary, a t a cost of the postage only This keeps under the present economic system, for a happy and the doctors up-to-date I send them a list of new books W ~ t h ~ n past two years, the business has the successful marriage "Marnage isn't what ~t used to be There are grown to such an extent that I now need an ass~stno homes to rent for $15 00 per month Look how ant When I came here, I found only a few Des making use of this library Then much ~t costs to get from your home to your job Molnes physic~ans and back every day Sixteen cents carfare and this Idea came to me of reaching the country doctors extra for transfers I t takes all I can earn for the too N o other State employs this method Yes, I'd I D ,board, room, a clean shirt and bed Now how hke to Install this system in all medical l~bralies e can I ask a girl to t ~ herself to me on any such Books on Birth Control? Certainly I'll order them REpropos~t~onSay, aren't the girls ~ndependent- 1'11 send right away for your BIRTHCONTROL all of them hunting jobs, and keep~ngthen too VIEW and the Conference Reports and your clmical They wear up-to-date clothes and make a fellow data I'd better order two of each It wlll be popufeel he's got to make good Now how can marriage lar Doctors are waking up to the quest~on I w~sh Conand happ~nessfor both part~esbe worked out? I they would send me on to your Internat~onal know lots of fellows who cut and run from the wife ference as a delegate I beheve so thoroughly In you1 cause I'll help you to educate the phys~cians s and k ~ d because they can't manage the rent-and is all fine fellows too Marr~age a httle buslness all -they certainly need it I'm kery glad you came ~ t own, and a fellow falls to make good in it because in " s * * * * * * he hasn't studled h ~ equ~pment make ~tgo HIS s to HE woman who sat at my r ~ g h a t a committee t expenses increase and his salary stays where it was luncheon said "Yes, I'm for progressive movein the beg~nnmg H e doesn't think of that-the k~ds comlng and all Does his boss and landlord ments I'm a Quaker, fought for suffrage for 25 p o ~ n t h ~ out to him? No, they want marr~ed s men, years and stuck by the W C T U all that t ~ m e but don't help h,m to meet the problems that often They are more progressive than they used to be l break his home up Now there's a g ~ r right here A t the Convention In Ph~ladelphia,they d~scussed All In Ch~cagoearnlng $18 00 a week, but we can't your resolution on Birth Control in Com~n~ttee marry on what comes in my pay envelope, so I'm nat~onalwomen's organizations should be behind going to Milwaukee to see ~f I can land a b~gger thls cause This IS a cause to help AlOTHERS a job Hate to leave-she's a fine kid-but I get dis- Why do the women hang back?" W ~ t h merry couraged when I think of what I want to do and twmkle in her eye "We have a hard t ~ m ewlth speakers from the East Your women come out don't see any way to do ~t!" and that and ask a h ~ g h I reached down In mv bag and handed him our West to lecture on t h ~ s us Some of the lecturers are pamphlet, "Can You Afford a Large Famlly " H e prlce for educat~ng read ~t through and m t h enthuslast~cgratitude, poor speakers and only use a lot of words They "Gee, this is the first light I have offer no help In solving any of our real problems turned and sa~d, Yes, I'll go on your comm~ttee " had on the subject "
N the dignified and beaut~ful H~storical Budding In Des Molnes is housed the Medical L ~ b r a r y for the State of Iowa It vas quiet and cool, and I wandered around the build~nguntil I found the door labeled Medical L ~ b r a r y Upon entering I found, peering at me from a table stacked hlgh mth books, a l ~ t t l e brown-wren of a woman w ~ t h sparkhg eyes and quick decisive movements
HE telephone rang In my room "Are you from the Birth Control League In New Yorkt The Denver Juven~le Court sent me over to get A some of your literature Can I get ~ t ? " tall, fine looking chap met me In the lobby, and asked for all of our pam~hletsand leaflets to send to the president of a Woman's Club m Tucson, Arizona,
( C m M w d o r gage 880)
254
Threatened Wreckage
North Dakota Havlng read your wonderful book 'Woman and the New Race," I am wrltlng you as a last hope of avolhng a separat~on myself and w~fe We have been marned of 25 years, and durlng that t~me,my mfe has had nure chlldren and no less than ten abort~ons,even though we used all k ~ n d sof preventatives we could hear of When my w~fe In that cond~t~on, of course, IS nervous and 1s she, lrntable, and has told me she hates me-when ~n that c o n d ~ t ~ o n present we are not h n n g together, but ~f At we onlv knew of some harmless preventatwe, there 1s no happy and contented together, doubt but we would l~ve as man and w~feshould, after our struggle of 25 years you Therefore I am w r ~ t ~ n g to beg of you to advlse me for how to prevent concept~on If you mll only do t h ~ s us, you mll, no doubt, be the mcans of prevent~nganother wrecked home, and thereby, a t least, have two more fnends for l ~ f e I have spent lots of money and many nights of worry trylng to find a way to avo~d days ~ n d concept~on,or hmng a doctor to cause an abort~on-t r y ~ n g protect my darhng mfe from a fam~ly to that no woman on earth could properly provlde for, and behevlng all the t ~ m e that ~twas wrong to cause an abort~on The last one I paid a doctor $100 for performing, and gave she a nurse $25 to care for her u n t ~ l was out of danger Now won't you please do us this one great blessed favor, and I am sure God m11 reward you
news makes me the happ~estof men, espec~allybecause ~twas so hard to obtaln I myself am ~nt h ~ country slnce s five months After three weeks looklng for work, I found a job, $24 00 a week, and restr~ctlng myself to the utmost (cook~ng wash~ng myself) I could save $15 a week and for whch I sent her to buy s h ~ p t~ckets My mfe's and my own highest msh would be t o know about means to stop g e t t ~ n g chlldren for a couple of years T h ~ 1s for us the only way to get ahead We are marned s slnce 1920 I am 29, and she 21 years old I don't need to descr~beto you the livlng cond~t~ons the workmg of classes In Germany, ~t1s mdely known I dare to say that, although hard work~ng,both of us, we form a happy, hfe-worthy famlly But lncreaslng of the famlly would mean down-go~ngand both of us have been outlook~ngfor the last year for means to prevent pregnancy In my search I found here In the Pubhc L~brary your book "The P ~ v o tof Clv~llzat~on I beheve " I am now on the nght way In my search I trust t o you to Instruct me--I bcg you for our happmess-~n nght and safe methods of B ~ r t h Control I promlse you, I won't , be selfish and content In knomng ~ tbut WIU become and contlnue a Lttle laborer In your great soc~al work I myself am the second of 14 chlldren, all ahve, less my elder brother who d ~ e d my s ~ d a t the war front When by e In 1917, I went home for ten days hohday, I was made acquainted mth a newly-arnved s~ster-baby I took courage and asked my mother would ~t be the last one Mama repl~edme "My boy, since long myself had mshed a stop, but I don't know how, and pour father every t ~ m e Starting Right z the n Country s a ~ d'In God's name ~tWIII grow up mth the others, and , W~sconsln better so than comm~ta sin' My dear boy, learn you This mornlng I rece~veda letter from my mfe In Ger- from the suffenngs of vour mother, when vou're golng to manv, In wh~chshe wntes me that the passages for her- marry, and procure for your own ch~ldrena happ~er self and our two children are bought and vlsa obta~ned, youth than vou had vourse1f"--and mama turned away and she mll arrlve here w ~ t h ~ n months, and I should and wept b~tterly I had to return to France after a few two keep my savlngs from now for our new home here T h ~ s days, but those words I could not forget u n t ~ l now
New
September, 1924
but that was as far a s they got They &d not e v e her anythlng t o protect herself m t h And she gave blrth t o a g r l four months ago She happened to be strong enough to pull through, but I am a f r a ~ d~f she takes another chance ~twlll be one too many for her, and the same thing mll happen to her that happened to my brother's wlfe Of course, after two or three years ~tmlght agaln be safe, but now, no We are the happ~estcouple In the world, but ~f somethlng happens to my w~fe,I don't know what will become of me and the chlldren You certainly can make us very happy and save us lots of restless n~ghts,and I do hope that you mll be able to convlnce thls Government to put up Blrth Control chnlcs
New York Some weeks ago I was waklng up Broadway I notlced a woman holdtng somethlng hke magazines, and as I came REVIEW AS closer, I read m large type BIRTHCONTROL soon a s I saw that, I became Interested and bought one of the coples After readlng ~t through, I found lt very mterestlng, and I agree m t h every polnt brought out by Two Stories the Blrth Control orgamzat~on &ssoun My brother lost h ~ mfe five years ago She was very s I saw some letters repnnted, wntten by mothers, but I energetic She gave blrth to the first chlld ln nlne months, was surpnsed at not seelng any from husbands, because, the second In the following eleven months and the thlrd In my oplmon, ~t 1s just as much busmess of a father to In the follomng twelve months She got very 111 ln g m n g know how many chlldren he can brlng u p as ~t1s of h ~ s blrth to the thud chlld, and stayed sickly and gave blrth mfe H e 1s the one that IS brlnglng In the dally bread, to the fourth m the follomng twelve months She con- and should know how much he can brlng In, and should tracted tubercutos~s,and st111 she gave blrth to the fifth see that the stop 1s made a t the proper t~me, helping by child to make ~t a law, so that advlce can be had when needed The fourth child &ed four months ago from some I am 45 and father of eleven chlldren, e ~ g h tof whlch throat trouble anthln 48 hours The fifth c h l d 1s just are hving T h a t 1s m twenty years of marned hfe My hvlng and that 1s all, the three older ones are not what w~fe1s much younger She was gettlng weaker all the you would call healthy chlldren as they dld not have a t ~ m eand was warned by doctors that she was havlng mother's care too many bables, but only warned, whlch &d not do any I have been marr~edfor four years and have three good Finally when she gave blrth to the last one, two chlldren, the oldest IS three years and three months, and years ago, she became very slck She was hangng between the youngest four months old hfe and death for seven months, and was In bed a whole When we were marr~ed,my mfe was elghteen and I year She 1s not well now It would mean sure death ~f was twenty-seven She gave blrth to the first ~ h l l dx1 nlne she would have to g v e another blrth, where, ~f she could 1 months, the second in s~xteen months later She suffered have been advlsed seven years ago, thls could have been the very much w ~ t h second She came near loslng her hfe all prevented to and the child also She t r ~ e d nurse the chlld, but he When the prohlbltlon law went Into effect, ~t was the was always crytng, and kept falhng off untll he turned best thlng that ever happened ~n thls or any other yellow So I called mp old famlly doctor, fr,n my home country But when the Blrth Control mll become the town, and he examned the baby and found he had a cleft law, ~t wlll be better than proh~blt~on, I happen to for palate He was not strong enough to nurse, and we had be ln the ne~ghborhoodof large famll~es,and I know of to feed hlm ntth a dropper untll he got older some famllles of seven to twelve chlldren, where one would After the blrth of thls baby my mfe was In a condlt~on be too many, and every here and there a chanty has to of mlsery for five days She was as near a corpse as I come to the rescue Therefore Blrtll Control should not ever saw anyone When I put my hand on her face ~t only become a law to advlse, but ~t should be a law to was hke a lump of Ice She remalned qulte 111 for three compel such famlhes from bearlng chlldren I promse months to do what l ~ t t l e can to put ~tthrough, and I msh you I she The doctors got together and s a ~ d should not have and the comm~ttee success to make ~ta law a t an early the any more chlldren for a few years, until she grew stronger, date
Brothers'
What We Str
H E C O M P L E X P R O B L E M S now c o n f r o n t ~ n gAmerlca as the re. sult of the practlce of reckless procreatlon are fast threatening to grom beyond human control Everywhere we see poverty and large f a m l l ~ e s golng hand In hand Those least fit to carry on the race are lncreaslng most r a p ~ d l y People who cannot support thelr own offspr~ng encouraged by Church and are State to produce large f a m ~ l l e s M a n y of the chlldren thus begotter are dlseased or feeble-mlnded, many become c r ~ m l n a l s T h e burder of supporting these unwanted types has to be borne by the healthy elements of the natlon Funds that should be used to ralse the standard of our clvllizat~onare d ~ v e r t e dto tht maintenance of those who should never have been born to I n a d d ~ t ~ o n thls great evll w e wltness the a p p a l l ~ n gwaste of women's health and women's l ~ v e s too frequent pregnancles These unwanted pregnancles often provoke the by crlme of abortion, or alternat~velym u l t ~ p l ythe number of chlld workers and lower the standard of l ~ v l n g T o create a race of well-born chlldren ~t IS essent~al that the f u n c t ~ o n motherhood of as should be elevated to a posltlon of d ~ g n l t y ,and thls IS lmposs~ble long as conceptlon remains a matter of chance W e hold that chlldren should be 1 Conce~ved love, In 2 Born of the mother's consclous deslre, 3 And only begotten under cond~tlonsw h ~ c h render posslble the herltage of health Therefore we hold that every woman must possess the power and freedom to prevent conception except when these cond~tlonscan be sat~sfied Every mother must r e a l ~ z e b a s ~ c her posltlon In human soclety She must be consclous of her r e s p o n s ~ b ~ l ~ t y race In b r l n g ~ n g to the chlldren Into the world Instead of b e ~ n g b l ~ n d a and haphazard consequence of uncontrolled lnstlnct, motherhood must be made the responsible and self-dlrected means of human evpresslon and regeneration
These purposes, w h ~ c h of fundamental Importance to the whole of our natlon and are to the future of m a n k ~ n d ,can only be attalned ~f women first receive practical sc~entlfic e d u c a t ~ o nIn the means of Blrth Control T h a t , therefore, IS the first object to w h ~ c h the efforts of thls League will be dlrected
Aims
T H E A M E R I C A N B I R T H C O N T R O L L E A G U E , I n c , alms to e n l ~ g h t e nand educate all sectlons of the A m e r ~ c a np u b l ~ cIn the varlous aspects of the dangers of uncontrolled procreatlon and the lrnperatlve nececslty of a world program of Blrth Control T h e League alms to correlate the findlngs of sclentlsts, statisticians, lnvestlgators and
September, 1964
257
1
For
socral agencles In all fields T o make thrs possible, ~t 1s necessary to organrze varlous departments R E S E A R C H T o collect the findlngs of sc~entrsts, concerning the relation of reck less breedrng to the evils of dellnquency, defect and dependence INVESTIGATION T o derrve from these screntlfically ascertarned facts and figures, conclusrons whrch may ard all publrc health and socral agencres rn the study of problems of maternal and rnfant mortalrty, child-labor, mental and physrcal defects and dellnquency rn r e l a t ~ o n the practlce of reckless parentage to H Y G I E N I C A N D P H Y S I O L O G I C A L instructron by the Medrcal Professron to mothers and potentral mothers In harmless and relrable methods of Brrth Control rn answer to thelr requests for such knowledge S T E R I L I Z A T I O N of the Insane and feeble-m~nded and the encouragement of thrs operatron upon those afflicted wrth l n h e r ~ t e do r transmlssrble drseases, w ~ t hthe understandrng that sterrlrzat~ondoes not d e p r ~ v e the l n d l v ~ d u a lof hrs or her sex expression, but merely renders one rncapable of producing chrldren E D U C A T I O N A L T h e program of educatron includes T h e enlrghtenrnent of the publrc-at-large, marnly through the educatron of leaders of thought and oprn~on-the teachers, mlnlsters and wrrters-to the moral and screntlfic soundness of the pr~ncrplesof and racial Birth Control and the rmperatlve necessrty of rts adoptron as the basls of nat~onal progress P O L I T I C A L A N D L E G I S L A T I V E TOenlrst the support and co operation of statesmen and leg~slatorsrn effectrng the removal of state and federal statutes legal adv~sors, whlch encourage dysgen~cbreedrng, Increase the sum total of d~sease,mlsery and poverty and prevent the establishment of a polrcy of n a t ~ o n a l health and strength O R G A N I Z A T I O N T o send Into the varlous States of the Unron field workers to e n l ~ s t support and arouse the Interest of the masses to the Importance of Brrth Control the so that laws may be changed and the establrshment of cllnlcs made possrble rn every State I N T E R N A T I O N A L Thrs department arms to co-operate wrth slmllar organrzatlons In other countries to study Brrth Control In rts relations to the world populat~onproblem, food supplres, natronal and racral conflrcts, and to urge upon all lnternat~onalbodres organrzed to promote world peace, the cons~deratron these aspects of rnternat~onal of amlty T H E AMERICAN BIRTH CONTROL LEAGUE, Inc, proposes to p u b l ~ s hIn rts officral organ the BIRTH CONTROL REVIEW, reports and s t u d ~ e s the relatronsh~pof con on trolled and uncontrolled populat~onsto natronal and world problems T h e Amerrcan Brrth Control League, I n c , also proposes to hold annual conferences, to bring together from all parts of the country those Interested in the varlous phases of the sublect, thus promoting the organrzatlon In every State of branches of the League whrch shall carry on the work of e d u c a t ~ n g p u b l ~ c pushrngsuch l e g ~ s l a t ~ o n I S necessary the and as to permlt proper medlcal rnstructron rn Brrth Control
A Y I be allowed at the outset of t h ~ s dlscusslon to refer to the fact that ~twas at a meetlng of thls branch In October, 1902, twentyone years ago, that I ventured to make mv first publlc utterance In favor of Birth Control It was In the course of an address whlch I was glv~ng as President of the Branch, under the t ~ t l eof the "Role of the ant^' A n A p o l o , ~ and an Appeal," and I wrote "There IS another 'Antl' whose specla1 subject 1s the populat~on questlon H e holds that large f a m lles amongst the poor are a f r u ~ t f ucause of poverty l s and ~ t attendant evlls, and he teaches that human belngs are not bound, l ~ k e the lower anlmals, by the law of nature under whlch they must, once they are marned, reproduce them specles to the utmost extent of then phys~ologlcalcapac~ty,regardless of thew abll~tyto nour~shand support thelr offsprlng One IS compelled to admlt that such a doctrlne has much to commend ~t on the grounds of prudence, foresight and sollc~tudefor the welfare of such offsprlng as may already ex~st, and certainly, ~f ~t were generally adopted and acted upon, ~twould greatly d~mlnlshour terrlbly high lnfant mortahty Yet the doctrlne has been recelved w ~ t h lntolerance so b ~ t t e r that few care to d~scuss~ t and, as a consequence, many people , arrlve at conclusions on the subject on one-s~ded ev~dence alone " A Sample of Intolerance It wlll be observed that the term 'Blrth Control' was not mentioned, the reason, of course, belng that I of a t the t ~ m e am speak~ng this term, whlch IS a comparatively modern one, had not been Introduced Into thls country A s a sample of the lntolerance w t h whlch the subject was regarded, even as re"Rac~al cently as 1911, we may clte a book ent~tled Decay," by 0 C Beale, published In that year Thls IS an exhaustive work, running to over 400 closely-pr~nted pages, In fierce condemnation of B~rth Control and the use of contraceptives, and ~t abounds In such expresslons as these, many of them quoted wlth approval from other sources "Filthy practices," ''bestla1 corruptions," abominations," "~mmoralfilth " "Malthuslan apostasy " "pure and unadulterated selfishness," revolting and terrible," "Satanlc gospel," "filthy merchand~se," "lncon*This address of Dr Millard was made to the Med~calOfficers of Health of the M~dlands England It was puhllrhed In Pub1:c Hsolth the official organ of the Soc~etjof Medlcal Officers of Health The concluding part wlll appear In our October Issue
celvable blasphemy," "eternal curse," "damnably wrong " It refers to Blrth Control as a "cancerous growth growng towards our utter destruct~on"and speaks of "children belng shut out from the ban" quet of l ~ f e Yet a man of the callber of Theodore Roosevelt, referring to t h ~ s book, sald he bel~eved~t to be than better worth the study of every slncere patr~ot for any other book that had been wr~tten years! W e may observe that the new, clearly lndlcated by the above quoted expresslons, that there was something Inherently "unclean" In the practlce of contracept~on, was formerly very w~dely held T h ~ s has been one of the great obstacles ralsed by prejudlce to the lmpart~al cons~derat~on the subject of whlch the earl~er advocates had to combat It was doctrlne no doubt a survlval of the old eccleslast~cal that anythlng connected wlth sex--even sex Itselfwas "unclean" and only tolerated by the D e ~ t y for the necessary and express purpose of procreat~on
A Welcome Change It IS pleasant to reflect on the remarkable change whch has taken place In the attitude of thlnklng men and women today Neo-Malthuslan~sm,rechristened B ~ r t hControl, IS no longer a tabooed subject, as ~t used to be, not to be ment~onedIn pollte soc~ety On the contrarv, ~thas become dlstlnctly fash~onableand 1s openly discussed around dlnner tables and over the tea cups In the most irreproachable clrcles Blshops and other d~gnlt a r ~ e s the Church, em~nent of physlclans and surgeons, dlstlngulshed authors, gallant admirals, leaders of soclety, pol~tlc~ans, soclal workers, all find ~tnecessary nowadays to be qulte au fazt w ~ t h the subject of Blrth Control and many have glven ~tthen cordla1 blesslng The most reputable papers and magazines, lncludlng progresswe Church papers, whlch a few >ears ago would not have artlcles on ~tand looked a t the subject, now publ~sh s open thew columns freely for ~ t dlscusslon, whllst books on the subject, especlnlly by women writers, deallng w t h the practical slde of the quest~onIn the most lntlmate possible way-the authors and vendors of whlch would almost certainly have heen prosecuted a few years ago-are now sold openly at every bookstall Of course, ~t 1s not suggested that all controversy 1s a t an end There 1s st111 a sharp conflict of opmlon, and there are ~ n d ]duals here and there n to whom the whole subject 1s st111 anathema, but
September, 1924
250
whether Birth Control would be beneficial or othermse to our country, lrrespectlve of ~ t effect upon s the rest of the world There are many people who would be qulte content to see the populat~onof stationary provlded that the popuother countr~es l a t ~ o n our own country and colonies continued of to lncrease Such people are Influenced by so-called patrlotlc motives whlch make them deslre that then own country should grow greater relatively to other and r n a l countr~es B u t ~f thls sentiment is one laudable w ~ t h country, ~t1s laudable also w ~ t h others Closely allled to t h ~ sent~ment that whlch s 1s regards men i s potentla] sold~ers and plns ~ t f a ~ t h s to b ~ battahons Before the Great W a r there was g~ ~ d a very real fear ~n the m ~ n d sof many that any falllng off In the rate of Increase of the populat~on ~n this country would be dlszstrous ln the elent of a war wlth Germany S ~ m ~ l fears were felt m ar France, and were, of course, rec~procatedbv GerWe propose here with the many, wlth the result that there was a ver~table personal or the Ethical Aspect compet~t~on blrth-rates comp~mble the com~n to 1 T e Cosmopohtan or World-wde Aspect h petit~on In armaments W e have to conslder Here we are faced m t h the question Is lt deslr- whether such a competltion IS healthy or otherwise, able that the human race all over the world should and whether can be endorsed by those who put continue to mcrease and rnultlply to the utmost the cause of lnternat~onalpeace above that of naextent of wh~ch, under the condlt~ons exlstlng, ~t 1s tlonal aggrandlsement I n c 1 d e n t ~ l l ~ , may be capnble7 The answer to this question ln\~olvesa observed that even In war quahtv counts for more and that wls the high blrth-rate considerat~onof the princ~pleassociated wlth the than cluantlt~, name of Malthus that populat~on tends to lncrease nations Russia and the Balkans, which first g a l e faster than the food supply, w ~ t hthe result that out ~n the Grelt W a r populat~onever tends to press upon the means of Overpopulnt~onnnd Enlzgratron subs~stence W e hale further to conslder that As regards Britnm, the feeling has certainly of more and mole of the older countr~es the world been growing slnce the war that thls country IS natlve food resources lnsufficlent over-populated By t h ~ s meant that we should are findmg t h e ~ r IS to feed ever-grolvlng populat~ons, consequently find the cond~t~ons life less d~fficultfor the and of are having to draw upon the food resources of dls- masses of the people ~f our populat~on were tant parts of the world to an ever-lncreaslng ex- smaller, or at l e ~ s t wele lncreaslng less rap~dly the tent, and that s~mult~neouslv undeveloped fer- P ~ o h a h l v housing shortage, and the obv~ous the lmtile areas of the world are rapldly d~mlnlshlng I n poss~bll~ty oxert?k~ng~t so long as populat~on of vlew of these lnd~sputable facts we h ~ v to face the continues to grow fzster thzn new houses %rebullt, e prospect that should the population of the globe partly accounts for thls feellng l l o r e o ~ e r .the contlnue to lncrease at the same rate In the future Izrpe number of unelnployed h ~ brought home to s as has been the case durlng, szy, the past century, us the fact that we are dependent upon the markets there would be a rezl dnnger a t some not xerv of the world for tbe szle of those inannfactured d~stnnttime of a world-shortage of food Anv articles bv lv111chalone we czn obtnln the necessary such shortage would lnev~tzbly lower the s t a n d ~ r d supplies of food and rqw inzterlals fzoln abroad to of I~fe, lncrease the competltion between the tliffer- support our tee~nlngnlllllons ent natlons, w ~ t h resultant Increased danger of the T o meet thls oxer-populat~on, orgnnlzed and war, dlsease and fzrn~ne The fact that ~trn?\. be stzte-a~dedem~grqtlonto our colonles on a lzrge poss~ble,by llnnrox ed methods of agr~culture to scale IS 11e1nq w.umlr ad\ ocated in certaln quz~ters lncrezse the weld of the land czn onlv postpone the Unfortr~nztelv oui colon~es qle onlv nllling to dav when the lnevlt~ble shortaye wlll occur for we recell e c~refnllv selected 111 ther hal e no use for es, Law of D ~ ~ n ~ n ~ s lthe n g the welklr or the thriftless, so that elnlgmi ~ old are up agzlnst the ine~orzble Returns tlon however beneficr~l~t rnqv be to the colon~es, 2 The Nat~onalor Imperial Aspect 1s ~ z t h e r expensne and e~hausting an process for From t h ~ spolnt of ~ l e w e ha1 e to cons~der the old c o u n t n ~ illoreover ~thzs never been carn
~t1s poss~ble now to dlscuss the questlon freely and openly, w~thoutapology and w~thoutnecessarily ralsmg hot passions and storms of moral lndlgnat~on Blrth Control, as the telm 1s usually understood the of today, ~ m p l ~ e s voluntary restr~ct~on the slze of the famlly The term IS not strlctly sc~entlfic, and a better one IS "concept~oncontrol," but as the term Blrth Control has now become fiimly rooted language ~twlll not be easy to alter in the Engl~sh ~t The subject may be approached from many d~fferent polnts of view we to touch briefly upon the following 1 ~h~ ~~~~~~~l~~~~ ~ ~ ~ l ~~~~~t ~ or d 2 The Nat~onal Imper~al or Aspect 3 The Publlc Health Aspect 4 The Eugenic Aspect 5 The Phys~ologlcal Aspect
September, 1924
Remedy
ME
N everywhere tend t o m u l t ~ p l y t o the l i m ~ t of sustenance, and, slnce t h a t h m ~ t1s a fluctuating one, a season of crop failure exposes them t o famlne Increase, crop failure and famlne, thls 1s the normal cycle of hfe f o r a n incontinent people T h e m a j o r ~ t yof mankind has always been and st111 1s In t h a t class T h e con1s stant background of h ~ s t o r y a succession of these cycles Where relations between n a t ~ o n sa r e complex and confused, a s In Europe, the sequence 1s obscured, and famlne and pestilence a r e more o r less systematically commuted for thew more merc~ful l t e r n a t e w a r B u t in the record a country, such a s was J a p a n for two centur~es of a h e r m ~ t and a half, where war was excluded by organlzat~onand ~ s o l a t ~ o the cycle was repeated with monotonous regun, l a r ~ t y Men thought of famine a s we do of death, a s a thlng sure t o come though you could not tell just when Thls equlllbnum whlch we may falrly characterize a s In the normal lot of rnanklnd has long been the cond~tion I n d ~ aand Clilna, aliere the efforts of ph~lanthropyand sclence advance the fighting line but galn no permanent advantage I t was the condit~onIn Europe throughout the Middle Ages, though here famlne was more often commuted t o war than ln the E a s t I t IS true In R u s s ~ atoday a But for the last two o r t h e e centur~es favored polt ~ o n h u n ~ a n ~has been grantcd a suspension of senof tj tence, a suspcnslon so long t h a t I+ 1s mlstaken for a pelmancnt reprleve Durlng all these centuries of crowdlng and intermittent famine half tlie world was unknoan and >~rtually unoccup~cd Suddcnly this emptv norld was dlscovered and appropnated by the more favorably s ~ t u a t e d of the old world peoples T h e j were slow t o realize the advantage, and but a p a r t avalled themselxes of ~t U T t o t h a t Lmited p a r t these d~scover~es brought an o p p o r t u n ~ t y ,ast t h a t ~t changed f o r a time the so fundamental lans of their belng As the barriers t o occupancy were slowly broken donn, and the Inertia of the s~tuat~on olercome, all the pcnt u p energles of the race were released and expansion proceeded unchecked If the potato crop faded In Ireland, half Ireland moved overseas If there was revolut~onIn Germany the defeated p a r t y came t o America If R u s s ~ apersecuted her dlssenters, from the orthodox f a ~ t h ,they found asylum In the new lands E a c h year the movement became easier and the swelling tide increased T h e new Ianda not onlj recelved tlie lmm~grants but sent back food t o those who remalned Thus, whlle Europe was peophng a new world, she doubled her population a t home And still famlne remalned a f a r , the ban upon lncrease seemed lifted Nature seemed even t o have put a premlum upon ~t Colncidlng, as the movement d ~ d with a vast series of acientlfic dls, coverles and mechamcal lnvent~ons, and favored of necesa t y for a t ~ m e the law of lncreaslng returns, lncrease bv
of populat~onhas for a century connoted a n Increase In well-be~ng Superfic~althlnklng has been qulck t o tnrow the time honored ph~losophyInto the dlscard and g r a s p the proffered optlln~sm Nature IS not n ~ g a r d l v but bount~ful,famine is not necessary and therefore it 1s dlsgraceful, a concom~tantof s a \ a g e r j and sloth Thua a c o n t r ~ b u t o r o tlie Boston Tianscrzpt makes the confident t assert~on that, when our populat~onreaches the f i g u ~ e of f two blll~ons,there n d l be more food per caplta than non and we shall just be beglnnlng to be colnfo~tablt comfortable optimlsln leads t o inanj ngreeahlc conclus~ons The n o t ~ o nt h a t there IS pressure of n population In Europe IS a myth If B e l g ~ u ~Imports four-fifths of her food n h y can't the rest of them do ~ t l W h y can't they house a s many a s they h a l e s t a n d ~ n g room f o r ? T h e sufficlent safeguard agalnst f a m ~ n eIS enterpr~se,t h r ~ f t ,c ~ t l l l z a t ~ o n h e numerous populat~on T of Europe IS not a source of hardslnp or d n n g c ~ I t I S a n advantage-a source of strength T h ~ r a j sound a m l~ttle extreme as IS nont t o be thc case, uhcn a e formulate Into dcfinlte propositions those \ague assumpt~ons t o whlch we comm~t oursel\es under the lend of lntcrest and predllect~on B u t left In their usual haz) and unconscious form they form one of the major prennses of our modern H PO\$ " 'Gla\ c Consequences,' " ERS, p s chologv -H ~ Atlantzc Monthly, J u l ) , 1025 0 you know that Birth Control 1s the most monlcntous fact In the h ~ b t o r jof n~anhlnd,t h a t ~f n ~ s c l pused t o lncrease tlie b ~ r t h - r a t eof the supcrlors ~t l a the most effcctlve instrument for race lmprox ement a ithln the poner of man, but ~f nrongl) used t o dec~ensethe superlors, nhlle tlie lnfcnors contlnue t o brced n ~ t hund~mlrnshed - . it nil1 wreck the race t h a t tries ~ t ? vlaor. D o you knoa t h a t ~f l o u r p o l ~ t ~ c etluczt~onnland ~l, economlc c o n d ~ t ~ o n s permit ~ t Blrth Control sill cause , ~ the p a t r i o t ~ c , the p ~ u d c n t , the f a t h e ~ l and m o t h e r l ~ , those endowed b, naturc n ~ t h riel1 unselfish instincts, t o beget tlie m a j o r l t j of the nat~on's clilldrcn, causing an and increase of morals, intcll~gcncc, beaut^, un~clfisl~ncss all t h a t makes a sound foundat~onfor a great human breed, but t h a t so f a r your soclnl and economlc forces have pushed these most prcclous of all r a c ~ a ls t r u n s t o the biolog~caln all D o you know that notlnng can pobs~blr improle the c o n t l ~ t ~ o n the poor 11ke dec~cnsing t l ~ c i r number* of through a n extcns~onamong them of h l ~ t l il i r ~ i i t a t i o n ~ A E WIGG\\I, The h'cw Dccalog~reof Scrcnce
T "IS
Some sort of nzcdal ofcglit to bc gtven to J f r Leandcr Colbert Gentle of Atlanta, rcko has ~ ~ 1 prodrrc~d111s st twenty-e~ghthehzld and hasn't czen worn out his second Wife Only eleven of the httla flock l~avedred -NEW Yo~h orn W
Book Reviews
A Revzew by & Ralph Cheyney
A Revzew by A M Stephen
I, A MINOR P O E T , by Ralph Cheyney N I G H T , by Harold Bramerd Hcrscy, profusely ~llusE are passtng through a t r a n s ~ t ~ o n p l r ~ o dIn our ae trated by Elhott Dold Privately prlnted for subscr~bersonly by E u g e n ~ c s Pubhsli~ng o , Inc , New C raclal Illstory Therefore, we must expect the slgns York of t r a n s ~ t ~ o o be reflected through the plastic mediums tn of a r t and l ~ t e r a t u r e M y entlrc sympathy 1s w ~ t h those OVE has long been the favorlte theme of poets But ~ h ao e rcachlng out t o a n undefined future and who a r e r sex, the fundamental fact of love a s ~t1s of llfc ~tsclf, sadly lacks adequate ~nterpretersamong the poets M r bravely strivlng t o express the tumultuous, Inner urge of Hersey's poems collected In "hlght," a r e revclat~onsof forces whrch a r e modelhng a new age I n the sllm l ~ t t l e of "I, the sacrament of sex H e speaks of them a s the fruit collect~on verse ent~tled, A Minor Poet," M r Ralph ~ s Chcyncy records h ~ s m p r e s s ~ o nof hfe In thls c h a o t ~ c of four jears' work spent In the "golden hght" of the Ell18 and bea~lderlngmaelstrom of thought and emotton inpresent's greatest ploneer and seer-Havelock t Here 1s one poet alive t o beauty, a v ~ d t r u t h Psycl~olo- c ~ d c n t a l o the birth of the New Order of s There 1s here, In h ~ booklet, "flower and fruit of the glsts, b ~ o l o g ~ s and other s c ~ e n t ~ shave f a r outstr~pped ts ts flesh," somctlmes tlnted by the sunllght of dlvlnity and those of us who are poets In t h a t very provlnce whereln the explorat~onof sex, the sometimes colored only by the dusky browns and muddy hes our chlef respons~bll~ty seed-bed of our emot~ons,~magn~ngs-all t h a t makes us reds of Adam, the dust-born A t tlmes, a fine, r h y t h m c what we a r e a n d the expresslon of the radiant t r u t h s hne, a brt of d a n n g Imagery g r a n t s t o us a glimpse of poetlc strength and beauty Agaln, the impulse slnks such explorat~onreveals Command of Imagery, power of concentrat~on, keen earth-bound by a m a t e n a h s t ~ creal~smclothed In words poet~c vlsion character~ze the f o r t y "Nocturnes" in free whlch have no place In the hlgh regons of pure poesy verse and the one poem In conlent~onalform t h a t con- One would wllllngly forget the phrase whlch descr~besa stltute this rolume S e n t ~ m c n t a l ~ t y cymclsm never mar woman's breasts a s "empty, shrunken, wrlnkled bags." or t them beauty A t once cerebral and sensuous, they will when6In the next b ~ of verse she 1s l~kenedt o a naked flame t h a t dances hlgh before be read wlth d e l ~ g h tand t o advantage by every loler t o the anarch w ~ n d whom poetry 1s not a closed boob and who l o \ ~ a\rrtlt T h a t blows the unlverse along lmaglnat~on,l n t u l t ~ o nand lnslght She 1s a fragrant summer dawn, the hollcst of M r Hersev w r ~ t e s hol~estshr~ned, Of "Dawn-A s p ~ d e r neavlng a neb of ghtterlng A soul transfused m t h hght and song" l1eht " I cannot help feeling t h a t thls Mlnor Poet, a s he Of a drowsy blrd, "Wlnklng folded m n g s " Of a memory " L ~ k e a love letter h ~ d d e nIn a nun's modestly terms h~mself,has become lntrospectlve by reathe of son of contact w ~ t h art~ficlal l ~ f e a large c ~ t y HIS stocklng " gift of Inclave thought, h ~ eplgrammat~cstyle, h ~ capas s Of a girl "Appeanng hke another o r c h ~ d tossed upon c ~ t yf o r rhythmlc expresslon would, ~f developed In a n the ground after a thunderstorm" Of a woman "Smooth a s a candle the flame of her s p l r ~ t atmosphere of w~de-open, sun-l~tspaces, slnglng waters and mountam wlnds, be productive of blossoms of the burnlng ever downward Into her lolns " a Of another "Trcmbhng now because you have klssed s p r r ~ t s well a s flowers of the flesh Those who are Inwaysby whlch her breasts and run your hands qulctly, quletly over her terestcd In studylng the strange and d~fficult we a r e dlscoverlng the esscntlal ~ d e n t ~ of soul and flesh, ty th~gh" s Some readers may consider t h a t he over-celebrates those who love t o find one capable of expressing deftly hands, espcc~ally "Shm hands t h a t gently praised the and strlklngly the moods whlch a r e usually dumb, those flesh o r fought a hundred scnsuous wars" B u t countless who w ~ s ht o know more of the fasclnatlng dream-world poems could well be w r ~ t t e n t o g l o r ~ f yeach, however lylng wlthln the realm of the subconsc~ouswill want t o possess a copy of M r Cheyne\'s collected verse humble, p a r t of the human body (hollest of holles) T h e drawlngs and decorations by Elhott Dold a r e equally soph~stlcated,yet slncerc In tlicmt alrd L L L ~ I I I I ~ ~ ~ C , N I N E T E E U T H C E U T U R Y EVOLUTION A N D A F T E R By Marshall Dalvson Macmlllan Company, and represent a n equally noteworthy c o n t r ~ b u t ~ o n MassNew york P r ~ c e $150 , lng h ~ blacks and w h ~ t e s much a s d ~ d Aubrey Beardsle,, H E keynote t o t h ~ s work 1s sounded In the openlng Dold draws a llne t h a t 1s voli~ptuous ~ t h o u belng VICIOUS w t chapter, where the author dssolves the generally There 1s one droll, fasclnatlng figure appearing In all of accepted Idea t h a t the evolutionary account of man's the dramngs that-well, get the book I
September, lf)94
knowledge t h a t cannot be demonstrated, cannot be esplalned, and t h a t g r o a s out of so~nethlngbeyond sense One feels t h a t a proposlt~on1s true and 1s sat~sfiedthercw ~ t h Then one 1s a m y s t ~ c explain T h e chapters following present In a clear and forceful There a r e many forms of pseudo-myst~c~sm One of by laws governlng evolut~onand theology, the most recent 1s t h a t t h a t has been fo~sted D r Freud manner the b a s ~ c convlnclngly demonstrating t h a t In the l ~ g h t Twent~eth and hls followers, the psycho-analjsts Psjcho-analjsls, of a Century evolut~on,l l ~ b l er e l ~ g ~ o1s not discordant w ~ t h according t o Professor Dunlap, defies all e f f o ~ t t sclcnn sclent~fic evolut~on, but rather, the two should, and must, t ~ f i cstatement There 1s no method of control t h a t the psycho-analysts, themselves, can suggest I t IS, therefore, join hands In the task of human rcconstruct~on to B ~ o l o g yand cugcnlcs have been duly acknowledged In ~mposs~ble rcpeat a psycho-analyt~ctest, and conse the laws governlng human evolut~on It IS regrettable quently psjcho-analys~shas no place In the literature of t h a t D r Dauson falls t o rccognlze, even for a moment, sclence the influence t h a t wlscly apphed prlnc~plesof Blrth ConT h e volume c o n t a ~ n sbut three chapters, the first on Century evolut~on trol will h a l e on Twcnt~eth "Mystlc~sm," the second on "Freud and the P s ~ c h o of T h e author's g ~ f for humanlzlng his work makes thls Analysts " I n the thlrd, on "The Foundat~ons Sc~entlt volume of especlal Interest t o the layman, and one whlch fic Psychology," the author lays donn very clearly tllt In ought t o p r o \ e a powcrful peace-maher ~n endlng the c o n d ~ t ~ o n s whlch psjchologj a s a sclence may gron I t 1s a more than usually useful l ~ t t l e book for the general latest warfare of rel~glonagalnst sclence E H LUND reader who honestly wants t o knon u h a t are the bachgrounds and the surroundings of thls psycho-nnaljs~s t h a t 1s upon everybody's hps CRUCIBLES O F CHIME By Joseph F F~shman, ROBEET GAULT H Cosmopohs Press, New York CAUSES A N D C U R E S O F C R I M E B y Thomas Speed Mosby, C F Mosby SOCIAL PROBLEMS-A S t u d j of Present D a v Soclal Co , S t LOUIS, Mo C o n d ~ t ~ o n B y E z r a Thaycr Towne, New York, T h e s R FISHMAN, the author of the first of these two Macmlllan Company volumcs, was for many years a federal inspector of prlsons, and wrltes from personal observatron In all p a r t s revlscd edltlon of Professor Towne's "Soclal of the U n ~ t e dStates T h e "cruc~blesof cnme," of whlch Problems" forms a n e\ccllcnt, ~f somcaliat colorless he wntes, prove t o be the prlsons themselves Of the compllat~onfor thc use of h ~ g h school o r collcge students federnl and state prlsons and penltentlanes he generallj I n ~ t ,he discusses populat~on, ~ r n m ~ g m t ~ ovarlous n, speaks well, but the county and local jails leave much t o aspects of defectlreness, crlme and punrshmcnt, p o \ c r t j , be deslrcd T h e bulk of the volume 1s devoted t o a descnp- and conservation of resources and of l ~ f e There a r e t n o t ~ o n tlielr filtlilness and VICIOUS Influence upon prisoners polnts In whlch the rcvlslon hns farlcd t o b ~ i n g book of the Hence the sub-t~tle thc book-"The of Shocklng S t o r y of u p t o modern c o n d ~ t ~ o n s h e scct~onon proli~blt~on, T the Amcrrcan J a l l " M r F ~ s h m a nconcludes w t h some although the passage of the E~ghtccnth Anlcndment 1s admirable suggcstlons for the lmpro\emcnt of our local noted, Ignores entlrcll tlie many problcn~sslilch the ensystem of temporary llnprlsonment forcemcnt o r non-enforcement of n a t ~ o n a lp r o l i t b ~ t ~ o n hns n T h e second volume 1s of a very dtffcrent character It created Also slnce the first p u b l ~ c a t ~ oof the book In n the 1s a ph~losopli~cal dlscuss~onof the psychology of crlme 1916, the qucstlon of kccplng aorld populat~on ~ t l i l n has and pun~shmcnt W r ~ t t e n ~ t h o u knowledge of the more menns of subs~stcncc assumed nLa lmpo1 tancc and has a t recent developments In the sclcnce of Psychology and become a real problem evcn In the G n ~ t c dS t l t c s ProSoclal Psychology, ~t scrlcs rather a s a convenient sum- fessor T o a n e d~scusscs marllagc and d ~ \ o r c cn ~ t l ~ o o t v mary of the best thought In the ficlds of c r ~ m ~ n o l o gand alludlng t o the demand of women for the r ~ g l i tt o control pcnologv a decade ago, than a s a construct~vecontnbu- them own poners of rcproduct~on, lust as Iic d~scusses population wlthout rcgard t o the d~ffcrcntlnlb ~ t n c c nthe t ~ o no the contemporary study of these s u h ~ c c t s t blrth and dcath mtcs, and the Inc\~tablc conscqucnces of A N HOLCOMBE such a d~ffcrcntlal I n fact, he n ~ l t c s s ~f IIC had ncler a heard of tlie movemcnt for Blrth Control, e ~ t h e ron ~ t s MYSTICISM, FREUDIAhTIShf A N D S C I E N T I F I C cconornrc o r ~ t v ~ t a l ~ d c A fcw \cars licncc ~t all1 be a s s C PSYCHOLOGY BI K n ~ g h tDunlap, S t LOUIS, V matter of astonlshmcnt t h a t a hook on Soclal Problcms Alosby Companj, 1920 could be publlshcd In the year 1024, with the complete N Chapter I of thls llttle book, Professor Dunlap omlsslon of one of the greatest, ~f not the greatest of these presents a very clear statement of M y s t ~ c ~ s m , Freud- problems lanlsm and Sctent~fic Psychologv a thlrd klnd of \GI' orlgtn confl~ctsw ~ t h the Blbllcal account "God created man (Genesls I, 27) , however, no method of creatlng man " 1s stated, and thls method has been left f o r evolut~ont o
THE
264
extra work f o r a woman a s on a f a r m ? And when a our b a b ~ e s r e born ~tIS rarely posslble t o get help We Chrld Health (New York), In ~ t J u l y Issue, e v e s a a r e lucky ~f we can get anyone t o stay two weeks Then s bnef account of the N a t ~ o n a l Conference of S o c ~ a Work we must take u p the work agaln w ~ t h addltlonal meml the whlch was held a t Toronto, J u n e 25th t o J u l y 2nd It 18 ber t o care f o r I s ~t strange t h a t we compla~nof large difficult t o feel much Interest o r confidence In a Conference famllles? I am agalnst the m a t e r n ~ t ybill Better spcnd whlch delrberately Ignores the prlmary cause of so much the money t o e v e B ~ r t h Control lnformat~onso t h a t these of the s~ckness,poverty, h ~ g h Infant mortaltty, and pre- poor unwanted b a b ~ e sneed never be born Among my valence of phys~cal,mental and moral defectiveness It acquaintances I have yet t o find the first one who IS 1s a fact, however, t h a t Blrth Control found no place ~n opposed t o Blrth Control for herself" the Conference Programme T h e Modern Reutew (Calcutta) for July, contams an T h e campalgn agalnst a b o r t ~ o nIn Germany 1s de- lnterestlng account of the change tn the famllv In Indla, scribed by F W Stella Browne In The New Generatcon a s seen by R K Mukerjee New Ideals a r e contending (London) for J u l y She tells of the prosecution of 600 wlth the older morahty, but the author IS hopeful of the women who had a p p l ~ e d o r rel~eft o a quack named Hem- outcome "The a s c e t ~ c f frenzy has passcd," he wntes, "but zer Thls quack, after taking them money, betrayed the the new tradltlon of a healthy abundant sex-hfe has not campatgn was car- yet evolved I n d ~ a bulk u p a rlch t r a d ~ t ~ o n s a n ~ t y women t o the government A s ~ m l l a r has of rled on In Wurtenburg last year, but out of 2,000 cases In sex, and t h ~ must now be marshalled for lndlvlduals of s ~nxestlgated by the p o l ~ c e only SIX were brought Into every degree of educat~onand s o c ~ a llevel, so t h a t the court Saxony, more enl~ghtened than the other pronnces, present phase of degeneration of famlly and marrlage Issued a n amnesty for all women who under the stress of may qulckly glve place t o a new type of famlly and poverty and hunger had been gullty of a b o r t ~ o n marnage " Today's Housewtfe (New York), 1s p v l n g a serles of I n the J u l y Issue of the Eugentcs Revtew (London), p ~ c t u r e sof large famllles Whether these a r e Intended as M a j o r Leonard Darwln discusses "The Future of the o honorable ment~on r dreadful examples 1s not stated, but Race" H e lays stress on the danger attending the profew fathers o r mothers would be spurred t o emulat~on by posal t o l ~ g h t e nthe burden of rearlng a large famlly the s ~ g h tof these over-grown f a m l ~ e s Two results. he uredlcts, would follow "In the first place there would ensue a great Increase In the populaT h e Vegetarian Magazcne (Jullaetta, Idaho), e v e s a t ~ o n together n ~ t h n lnev~tablc , a lowerlng of the standard fr~endly send-off t o the BIRTHCONTROL REVIEW ~ t Jsu l y In for llV1"g In the second place there are good d Issue W e are grateful f o r the a ~ ~t 1s glvlng t o the cause anticipating that trns increase In Occur of Birth Control ~n the wide territory through which ~t t o the greatest extent amongst the lnferlor types" circulates T h e S t r a t f o r d Monthly (Boston) f o r August, p n n t s a n artlcle on "Germany from D a y t o Day," by Barrett H Clark There a r e many gllmpses of life-fine and sord ~ d and lnc~dentallywe a r e shown how low p a y and lack , of houslng operate t o encourage Blrth Control We are shown H e r r B , a gove~nmentemploye, trylng for three years t o "find two rooms a t the rate he now pays for one, In order t h a t h ~ s ~ f emay have a baby" Lacklng the w necessary room, they do m t h o u t the chlld T h e Nataonal Leader of Mlnneapohs has been opemng ~ t columns t o a dlscuss~onof Blrth Control T h e dlss cusaon aroused wlde Interest among the farm women of t the M ~ d d l eand F a r West, through whlch w ~ d e e r r ~ t o r y the Leader c~rculates T h e Edltor was scrupulously falr In prlntlng letters represent~ngboth s ~ d e s But ~t 1s clear t h a t the demand for Blrth Control among the farm the n r ~ t e r s women 1s almost universal, whatever a t t ~ t u d e may take on the a d v ~ s a b l l ~ t y pubhc dlscuss~onof the of subject Here IS a reprsentatlve letter from South Dakota "As f a r as I can tell, farm women are not dlvlded on the subject-they are all In favor of ~ t and , they have good reason t o be Where 1s there so much BOOKS R E C E I V E D From Longmans, Green & C o , New York Au ILTERCHILDCAREA N D PROTECTIO\, of complled by E d Fuller T h e P r o c e e d ~ n ~ s C 0 P E C From S Ganesan, Tnphcane, Madras, I n d ~ a A GUIDE TO HEALTH, Mahatma G a n d h ~ by
N A T I O ~ A L YEARBoox OF
I f care of our descent perplex ua most, Whach must be born t o certam woe, devour'd B y Death a t last, and mrserable rt $8, T o be to others cause of mrsery, Our o m begotten, and of our lozns to brzng I n t o thcs curoed world a woeful race, T h a t after wretched lrfe must be a t last Food f o r so foul a monster, m thy power I t lees, yet ere conceptron, to prevent The race unbleot, to bezng yet unbegot Chrldless thou a r t , ch8ldless remorn so Death us Shall be decoved hrr glut, and w ~ t h two B forced to aatrafy h u ravenous maw 6 -hh~ow--Eve t o Adam-"Parahse Lost
"
September, 1924
265
News Notes
UNITED STATES New York
BOOKS
BY
THEcourse
on Sex Education a t Teachers College, Columbia University, was gipen this summer by educators who are recog~uzedauthorit~es on each phase of the subject Effect~ve methods for the teaching of sex hygiene In the public schools were discussed by a representative of the Public w the aid of a motion picture Health Serv~ce, ~ t h film There is a growing feellng that teachers should understand the psychology of the adolescent their sex and be able to help then puplls in solv~ng problems
- -
$1 50
- - $2 00
T h e most wldely rcad book on B ~ r t hControl In the world Every one tntercated In Sociology Economlca o r I n a happlcr future f o r the world should read t h ~ r book BIRTH CONTROL REVIEW
Massachusetts
The populat~on question recelved much attention of at the I n s t ~ t u t e Polltlcs, held at W~lliamsCollege ln August Professor Henry Falrchild of New York was leader of the Round Table on Population and Related Problems Taking Issue w ~ t h H Tawney of the Brltish Labor Party, he R maintamed that the Alalthusian Theory was a permanent factor In the llfe of the world The outstanding feature the dlscusslon was the stand taken by Rear-Admlral W L Rodgers, who boldly declared that the tlme would come when because of its ~ncreaslngpopulation the Unlted States would be obllged to undertake aggressive war to secure "what they uant a t the expense of others " "I do not suppose," he said, "that the United States w111 ever deslre to make war against continental population any country before c but passes 200,000, after that, ~f there remains any manhood In our mixed race of descendants, they mll assuredly do so " So long as populat~oncontlnues to Increase a t its present rate, all expedients for preventing war seemed to hlm hopelessly ineffectlve
6 Wast 24th Street New York Cltj, N Y T e l e p h o n d r a m e r c y 3469 RHEUMATOL-A remedy that has proved succes.ful In thc most *ever= case. of rheumatrsm 8 Ounce Box $2 00 DR BRLJNNENCRAEBERs HAY OR ROSE FEVER TOXINE-Elght ~ n ~ e c t l o n s month. before roae o r two Whole Treatment $5 00 hay fever season LEUCORRHOGSupertor to auppoeltorle.--r~ , . efflctent and dependable antlseptrc Tube $2 00 Appl~cator50e Extra SPATON-Easily ~ o l u b l e effectwe d t a t n f e c t ~ ntablet. ~ $1 SO a Dozen RECTANOGAn pile S2 O0 per Tube 'nformat'on hfod ordsrr filled
FREE LEAFLETS
And pass them on to your frtends and neaghbors, to your pastor your doctor, your pvhlze library
New Hampsh~re
A t the Conference of the Young People's Union, held a t Star Island in July, the inaugural address was delivered by Rev Edgar S Weirs, Pastor of Unity Church, Montclair, N J The conference was for an intensive study of ways and means to s relieve humanity of ~ t present social ills, and Mr Welrs po~ntedout that the first necessity was the improvement of the race through Birth Control or and through the segregat~on sterilization of those manifestly unfit for parentage
lll~no~s
Active work for Blrth Control 1s being done In
266
C A R B O Z I N E
A N T I S I P T I C TaBLBTS
Alwuyr ready for w e Douchr not nrcrraary A rnnriary necrrrriy for women
CARBOZINE TABLETS are a pleasant, agreeable d bamlesa antlacpuc of excellent mctrr Leucorrbea, pnmd mcnaca and all ofinrrve Lacharges bemmc dean and odorless at once Insert one half tablet a day a insure sanrtary menstruahoe Wrlte ua rcgardlng your health problemr All lettcra comident~al Infonnahoa free
ICENTS WANTED
CARBOZIWE LABORATORY
3121 S Broadway
St Lou& Mo
-
Chicago by the Illinois Birth Control League Thls was the report sent by Anne Kennedy after mtermews wlth Mrs Carpenter, D r Yarros and other workers there The C h c , for which a license was refused by D r Bundesen, Comnuss~oner Health, of has not yet been opened, m splte of the mandamus issued by Judge Harry Flsher The decislon of Judge Flsher was appealed by Comrmssioner Bundesen, and 1s now before the Appellate Court As soon as the final declslon is rendered (if favorable to B ~ r t h Control) the League w111proceed mth the chic The Birth Control Committee of the Middle Western States, headed by D r John Fav~ll, Associate Professor, Chlcago Unlverslty, is taking an actlve ~nterestm the comng International Birth Control Conference Mrs Walter L Benson, Secretary, 1s p l a m g to go through the e~ght States in the group and organize branches and secure support for the Conference The Comnuttee is also -;ngaged in a campaign of education of doctors I t wlll watch legslat~onaffect~ngBirth Control durlng the coming sessions m any of the may eight States m which such leg~slat~on be mtroduced The Commttee came mto existence as a result of the Chicago Conference of 1923
marstin
80 Fourth Avenue
PRlWIOIIST0111OBlPlsCOlCCWL~
The question of the estabhshment of a Blrth Control clinlc was under consideration m Milwaukee last wlnter A committee was formed there after the Chicago Birth Control Conference whlch was held at the end of October, and the American Birth Control League lent its aid to the plan I n spite of the fact that the Wisconsin laws allow the carrvme on of such a chmc, there were obstacles to . its mauguration When - ~ r s Anne Kennedy, Execubve Secretarv of the Amencan Birth Control League, Inc, reached Milwaukee at the end of June, she held conferences mth several of the women mterested m the project She found that Mrs Wdham Polacheck, mfe of the President of the Polly Manufacturmg Company, was ready to take charge of the work, and to head a group of nlen and women favoring Birth Control Mrs Polacheck hopes to Interest the char~table organlzahons of the State and C ~ t y It 1s planned to open a free B ~ r t h Control Clinc In the Fall, and to have s Mrs Sanger present for ~ t maugurabon
The estabhshment of a B ~ r t h Control C h c m Des Moines was the subject of several conferences, whde Mrs Anne Kennedy was m that city on her trip acras the Centmont For thlr purpose an
September, 19P4
amendment to the law s bemg sought The group of women mterested are under the leadersh~pof Harnsm D~ckey, and ~t1s planned to Mrs Carr~e secure Mrs Sanger as speaker at the City Federat~on meetmg on January 27th Colorado At Denver, Mrs Kennedy met with the Blrth Control Comrmttee at luncheon MISSRuth Vmcent, Cha~rman, a ~ d s that the Comrmttee was plannmg for a mass meetmg m November at whch they deslred to have Mrs Sanger as speaker They would also arrange for her to speak before County and State Medical Societ~es The f e e h g towards Blrth Control m Denver seemed very favorable
Utah
Mrs Anne Kennedy called m Salt Lake C ~ t y on July 26th, on her way across the contment She met there a number of pronunent club women and l a ~ before them the proposal that a pubhc meetmg, d mth Margaret Sanger as speaker, should be held m the City m the fall CaLforma After many stops on her way across the contlnent, Mrs Kennedy reached San Franc~scoon July 28th On July 30th she was entertamed at luncheon by the Alameda County Soc~alSemce Club She has received requests to present the cause of Blrth Control before various women's clubs and men's orgamzabons m San Franc~sco,Oakland, Berkeley, and other cibes m Cahfoma Everywhere she 1s awakerllng much luterest m the Internabonal Blrth Control Conference whch s to be held m New York March 19- , 1925 On August lst, she met wrth a group of 15 heads of clubs m Oakland, at the res~dence Mrs Frank of Law Here a temporary orgmmabon was formed, mth Mw Danforth as Chavman On August 21st she spoke at a luncheon of the Busmess and Profess~onalWoman's Club She reported that she had also been mnted to speak at a luncheon of the of Exchange Club--an o r p z a t ~ o n busmess men
Are you watclung for our monthly offers to complete your Bid Control Lbrary?
1)
II
- - -
$2 SO
By HAROLD COX
- - -
$2 OO
By MARGARET SANCER
CANADA
t ~ o n the Advancement of Sc~ence, Toronto, for at of on August 7th, the Pres~dent the Assoc~ation, AIajor-Gen Sir Dand Bruce, spoke on the Future of Med~c~ne e emphas~zedthe unportance of H preventwe work and s a ~ d the tlme had gone by that when the ch~effunct~onof the medlcal profess~on was the treatment of the v~ctlmsof d~sease T h s new regard for prevent~onencourages the hope WIU more and more be that the Rledlcnl Profess~on ~mlnessed w~th ~mportance B ~ r t h the of Control
---- ------------BIRTH CONTROL REVIEW 104 Fiith Avenue New York Cdy
I enclose $4 00 for your specla1 September offer
268
ENGLAND
aroused by the refusal of M r , James W h e a t l e ~ Mimster of Health in the Labor Cabinet, to withdraw the prohibition against the giving of Birth Control information a t Health Centers does not die down The women of the Labor Party, who were largely responsible for the majonty of the party at the last election, are in arms against a decision which practically restricts the knowledge of Birth Control to the wealthy and demes it to the poor The advocates of Birth Control emphasize the fact that they are not asking for compulsory legislation All they ask is liberty and free access to knowledge which is now denied them The fear of an increase of immorality among young people is still put forward by some of the opponents, but there is a gromng sense of the injustice of penalizing a girl for a sexual slip by the "awfulness of nine months hard labor and tried for your llfe a t the end," whlle the man, equally guiltv, gets off scot free By means of public meetings, newspaper correspondence, and the circulation of pamphlets and leaflets, the subject is being brought home to every Englishman and woman Mrs Bertrand Russell is taking an active part in the agitation Among the women members of Parliament, Miss Dorothy Jewson is taking the lead in the advocacy of Birth Control Miss F W Srella Browne is continuing the courses of lectures to working women which she has been giving during the past year I n speaking to the Women's Sections of the Socialist and Labor Party, she gives full practical instruction H e r lectures are crowded, and the subject is well received A tribute to Mrs Annle Besant was paid on July 25th at a great public meeting held in London on the fiftieth annwersary of her entrance a t the age 0," 27 into public work The speakers included Miss Margaret Bondfield and five other Labor Members of Parliament It was recalled that Mrs Besant had almost gone to prison for spreading the knowledge of Birth Control, which "deans in fat cathedral stalls" could now preach freely to respectable church-goers H e r work for the workers of the world was emphasized and the audience warmly seconded the tributes of the speakers A t the close Mrs Besant rose and expressed her gratitude not only to those now l~ving, to the early colleagues but SO long passed away
THEagitation
FUNDAMENTAL
or the Begmning of Thlngs
An interesting radical and sc~entific pamphlet by that real~stic writer, Dr P A Kane, modern vlew on the subject, twenty-five cents Or~g~nally published in THE CRUCIBLE, an agnostlc weekly, one dollar per year
Bend 10 centr for rampla copter
- -
Seattle, Wash
PRICE-$2
25, Poatpald
AUSTRIA
imprisonment of two eminent Vienna surgeons for having procured abortions mthout absolute ~ustlficationhas brought a large proportion of the doctors into the fight for Birth Control The Union of Socialistic Physicians, which comprises
THE
many marr~ed coup~cs yearn for children that thousands of c a p ~ e sof a new book by Dr H Will Elders are b e ~ n gd~stnbutedw~thoutcost to ch~ldle,, women Any famtly ~nterested rn ovcrcomlng c o n d ~ t ~ o n ~ of nature that hlnder the g ~ f tof chrldron should wrlte far this free book today It descrrber a slmple home treat meet based on tbe use of Ster~ltone, a wonderful suen tlfic ton~cthat has had marvelous success all over the country ~n reltevlng const~tut~onal weakness Every woman who wants to l ~ v c normal, happy l ~ f e a wlth llttle ones around her .hould conudcr ~t her first duty to know what Ster~ltone13 and why tt ahsuld be so wonderful an ald to her Read t h : ~l~ttlebook w h ~ c h s rent witboat charge or obl~gatronlo a plalo envelepe It unfolds facu that mast women never have had erpla~ned
September, 19.24 about half of the profession, organized a mass meetm g of protest, at which various physicians emphasized the need of blrth restriction I t was asserted by Professor Bum that social, medical and eugenic reasons combine to folm a categorical imperatlve to restrlct the birth rate The law was scored by D r Goldschied as "brutal, harsh and useless,'' and the rlght of parents to declde for themselves when or whether they would brlng chlldren Into the world was upheld, especially slnce the "state does not care whether the new-born Infant 1s fit to live" and "does not point out where ~t may find food, clothing and fuel " I n the resolutions passed by the meeting and sent to the authorities ~twas emphasized that "of the two possible means to restrlct the birth-rate, contraceptive measures are t o he preferred, as they are less harmful than the artificial mterrupt~on of pregnancy, whlch is always fraught wlth a certaln degree of rlsk " The meetlng was reported in the Journal of the Amerzcan Medzcal Assoczatzon GLEANINGS
(Contmued from page 258)
269
Charitable Organization
It offers a substztute for charities It asks that people be enabled to help themselves It works for happy homes and self-supporting familles It wants to do away with the causes of slckness and poverty It would go to the root of the worlds mlseries
who wanted to study the subject of Birth Control But it was his indlvldual problem of a tubercular wlfe that he wished solved H a d he asked hls physlclanv Yes, but the physician wasn't interested W e soon has the physician on the telephone-a doctor of prominence ~nthe City of Denver-and made an appomtment The young man went away from that Interview happy, but ~twas the physician who interested me "You know, we, as a profession, are not tnterested In sociological problems-what is the cause of a condition? Unless it IS medical, it does not tnterest us Yes, you are knockmg pretty hard on the door of the profession As a member of the program committee of the Count) Medlcal Soc~ety, I suggest you have Mrs Sanger come out here and present the educational slde, and then give us a report on the cllnlcal work The younger doctors will fall In llne qulcker than the deans It would be interesting to have an experimental cllnic m connectlon wlth the New Hospital and Medlcal School estabhqhed by the Rockefeller donation, ~n connection with the University " T H K F I G H T AGAINST B I R T H CONTROL (Contmued from page W ) tlonal disease I f the American pubhc 1s ever to be brought safely out of the mental coma Into which it has fallen, someth~ng more than persistent crltlclsm of the professional meddler is imperatlve A n ounce of courage 1s worth a ton of crlticlsm "
Nat~onalHeadquarters 104 Flfth Avenue, New 'lork Clty ~aaomm AN~FB, S Prestdent Fn~vces Acneax~vx, B Trea8urer
AS A DOCTOR SEES I T
By D. B -h r 0 t
$.0 20
A new and u q u e book Powerful, intmeting Illustrated anth 64 p e d sketches by the author 173 storzes. Reee~vedas a revdatlon by the prrss everywhere Glanas into the mbmate Me of all lunds of 3z people. Part two, " P a r m d Pkutw#,' deals anth i 6 f i f e and Brrtb C o d d 208 pages.
B L&er-CIotb$a50,
Paper $1.50
Ssond enlarged &on. Moat modem rdurs on the bringmg up of chndrea Common Ermm-Pmcticd Ad-Instances from Life--Sex, Health and Food Pmblans 320 pages.
RATIOINAL LlVING
tio on $ . 0 20
to W t h conservation and aposrng ~IsIIOU~~~~ in all healmg professions B Libcr, MD, Dr P H, Editor-August Iawe out (A Vacation, Labor and Health, W d Cam, N o d Sex Life, Cawcr. N N) ,
Subscnpbon to
Sees It.
$3 50.
R L and copy of As A
Doctor
Subscnphon to R L and wpy of The Chlld and the Home Qoth $4.00; Paper $ . 0 30. Subscnphon to R L and w p ~ e s both books, of $550 or $450
Addre
PULVOSAN Vaginal Antiseptic and Deodorant Easily Prepared Pleasant to Use PULVOSAN
removes all unpunhes, corrects Leucorrhea. Vagnuhs. Prunhs, and other vagtal dmturban-
T m w COMPmY
3S6EutlsethSaeet
New Yo*
N Y. .
M A L ORDEUS FIUED
are d a b ~ t a b l e that the tops of the Himalayan , Mountams, the Alps, the Roches, etc ,are not very pleasant to hve on, and cons~denng that a great area of land must always be resewed for f a m n g , ralsmg cattle, etc, to provide us mth food (now that Stelnmetz IS dead and there IS no one to mvent some kmd of electrical or mcroblc food), we can see that this globe of ours 1s a very small place after all. If ~twere not for wars and flu's and earthquakes, we would have been m trouble mth the landlord long ago Now that we don't eat the ehddren any more, we don't throw them mto the rlvers, we don't burn them as sacrlfic~al brlbes to the gods, 4n order that we may get n d of the surplus that IS constantly accumulatmg, I offer for your approval the followmg remedm 1 Leave thmgs alone Nature mll take care of lt somehow Lead a contented vegetat~ve, an~mal Me We the anyhow, and after us the deluge I t IS the easler way Th&g implies a certsm exert ~ o n the bram, you d~sturb even tenor of your of the way, the h g IS unpopular-you may be branded as a r d c a l or an undesuable c ~ t ~ z eyou may even n, go to p m o n 2 a We may sohclt the a ~ d God by prayer of and droppmg corn mto the contnbut~onbox-to hurry along a glsclal per~od Meanwhile we can beg h m to send down some great pestdence as the Black Death, or a few earthquakes, or a couple of flu epldemcs b We can always start a war c We must get n d of the mfer~or colored races -the Blacks, the Yellow and the Red races must be extermmated-of course you must convert them first to rehgon because them souls are very valuable d The whte raee then may proceed as follows Let the Chnstmu extermmate all Jews and Moslems, then the Protestants lull all Cathohcs, then let the Ku-Klux-Klan kdl everybody except the one-hundred-percent ,then let the Nordc race mth blond hau and blue eyes kdl off all the dark complexloned e As a last resort the Norhcs may cult~vate large colo~lles Typho~d, of Flu or other bac~ll~ and h t n b u t e them, as occas~on reqmres, by means of aeroplanes, and manufacture cheaply on a large scale, polson gases and smoke the surplus populatlon to hades sc~ent~fic Blrth Control 3 Teach and pract~ce
-BIRTH
CONTROL-
No other per~od~cal the world grvea what you find here m The full history of the movement from month to month s All arguments In ~ t favor A full record of all books and art~cles the subject on Subscnpt~on-for one year
Bound volumes for preslous years-two years In each volume
$2 00
5 00 5 00 6 50 11 00
1920-1921 1922-1923
Subscnpt~on one year with one bound volume for Or w~th both bound volumes
_ _ I -
-----------------, for
-----
- * - - - -
--------
which ~1ea.e cntar my name for one year's suhscript~onto the BIRTH
CONTROL REVIEW In ad&taon send me Bound Volume for 1920 1921, 1922-1923
Name
Torn
Street
Shta