Word: controller
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...example of what I mean is the printing in your last issue of a statement about birth control by the doctor who attends the British Royal Family.* If he "can find no evidence of physical or moral harm from the practice of birth control," then I have indeed been misinformed, and I intend to seek out the facts. I had thought that even a knowledge of this subject was in the nature of a "taint," but as a loyal citizen of the British Empire I have confidence that the example of the Royal Family is ever uplifting, never the reverse...
...major portion of his annual report to the state of the Philippine Islands, which the War Department governs. So thoroughly did Secretary Davis cover this subject that it seemed he must long have been girding himself to defend "General Wood's most fitting monument" from being transferred to control of the Department of the Interior-a transfer which has long been proposed and often postponed. Secretary Davis said: "Never has the government of the Philippine Islands been in so satisfactory and promising condition as today." And Secretary Davis said: "Had each of the departments of the United States government...
David Lloyd George replied, last week, to the hundreds of articles ground out against him, year after year, because he is thought to control a secret political fund (TIME, Jan. 31) often charged to total more than...
...they become to excited to do their work well", Mr. Russell continued, "but if they were permitted to enter in a companionate marriage the whole problem would be solved, and both boy and girl would be able to do a great deal better work." Contending that birth control was an integral part of companionate marriage. Mr. Russell stated that. "In England there is no such silly talk about the illegallity of Birth Control. People are quite at liberty to adopt the practice, and there are many places where information and literature on the subject may be had, and there...
...Birth control," M. Russell went on to say, "is not only a desirable institution, but also an economical necessity, and especially is it needed in the crowded tenement districts. In China the rapid birth rate is offset by pestilence and famine, but here in America where there is no immediate danger of such conditions, there ought to be some means of enabling a man and woman to enjoy the companionship of married life without the fear of the expenses that children would cause...