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Conception Control and Its Effects on the Individual and the Nation by Florence E. Barrett
page 3 of 31 (09%)
arguments based on moral and religious principle you add the weight of
ripe experience and of technical scientific knowledge. Your words will
gain access to the commonsense of many who would perhaps regard the
opinions of clergy as likely to be prejudiced or uninformed. I am of
course not qualified to express an independent judgment upon the
medical or physiological aspects of this delicate problem, but I
desire on moral and religious as well as on social and national
grounds to support your general conclusions, and to express the hope
that your paper may have wide circulation among those who are giving
attention to what is becoming an urgent question in thousands of
English homes.

I am,
Yours very truly,
RANDALL CANTUAR.

LAMBETH PALACE, S.E.
3rd August, 1922.




CONTENTS


CHAPTER I
THE PROBLEM OF TO-DAY

CHAPTER II
THE DEMAND FOR KNOWLEDGE AND FROM WHOM TO OBTAIN IT
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