PROTECTION OF MATERNITY.
147
The fact is that the Children’s Bureau at Washington is only to
examine and approve the plans made by the States, by whom all the
active control of what is to be done under the bill is to be exercised;
and to make.the common effort as effective as possible by collating
the experience of the various States and making the assembled
material available to all. It will work through its hygiene division
which is directed by trained physicians, who will be aided by its
social service and other experts. Its function is to render the same
valuable service constantly given to the States and to the people by-
other scientific bureaus of the Government the value of whose work
is so generally recognized.
The work of the States is of course that which will involve direct
contact with the people. It will be done by the child hygiene or
child welfare divisions of State boards of health or by similar agencies
which will be under the direction of trained and competent people.
Nothing in the bill looks to any compulsion of any sort. No State
need accept the benefits of the bill unless it so chooses. No citizen
need take advantage of the opportunities offered for advice or instruc
tion against her will. That many women need and desire such help
would, we are sure, be denied by no one. The difference of opinion on
the part of the ladies who have spoken against the measure seems to
be based upon an opinion that the matter should be made one of
sporadic charity instead of being put upon the dignified plane of
public instruction upon which other equally necessary public instruc
tion has long been placed in the United States.
Indeed if this bill is a cloak for socialism, bolshevism, or any other
of the “isms” which are so freely bandied about in these days by
those who look at things through the spectacles worn by the prin
cipal opponents of this measure, then the sooner we get rid of the
much more insidious and far-reaching.menace of the public schools,
the safer the country will be.
The talk about “free love” and “birth control” is an attack upon
the good faith not only of those supporting this bill but of Federal
and State administrative authorities which is not worth dignifying
by discussion. I may, however, call to the attention of the committee
the resolution of indorsement by the National Catholic Welfare
Council as bearing upon the inherent probability of such a charge.
That a bill whose only purpose is the saving of life should be
attacked as "destructive of the family” seems fantastic. Nothing
so certainly destroys the family as death. This bill is meant to save
the children of America, America’s mothers, to save to America her
children.
(Telegrams indorsing the Shepp ard-T own er bill were submitted
from the following persons : Mrs. Fran Sanderson, president Maryland
State Federation of Women’s Clubs; Mrs. T. Parkin Scott, president
Maryland Division, Service Star Legion War Mothers of America;
M. Lem Ellicott, president Maryland League of Women Voters;
Hortense Powdermaker, secretary Baltimore Women’s Trade Union
League; Mary R. Halsup, president Woman’s Christian Temperance
Union of Maryland; Mrs. M. A. Toy, national president Service Star
Legion; Bessie C. Cone, president Federation of Jewish Women’s
Organizations, and Mrs. Edward Shoemaker, president, and Mrs.
Benjamin W. Corkran, chairman, of the legislative committee,
Women’s Civic League.)