Southall's ads
from the United Kingdom, 1888-1913
Lister's
[Sanitary] Towels (U.S.A.,
1890s-1920s?) 4 ads for the first American
disposable pad, by Johnson & Johnson
Read the main Hartmann
page and see similar early U.K. towels
(menstrual pads) by Mosana.

|
MUSEUM OF MENSTRUATION AND
WOMEN'S HEALTH
Early disposable menstrual
napkin (towel) for traveling
women: Southalls'
(U.K.)
Small box with single pad (1930s?)
See Southall's
ads from the United Kingdom,
1888-1913. Lister's
[Sanitary] Towels (U.S.A.,
1890s-1920s?) 4 ads for the first
American disposable pad, by
Johnson & Johnson
Read the main
Hartmann page and see
similar early U.K. towels
(menstrual pads) by Mosana.
I thank
Andrew Smith, Wales, United
Kingdom, for this generous
gift as well as two others!
|
Below:
The pad, expanding, after a
many-decades sleep.
|
 |
Below:
The pad. The text on the
box recommended heating it
but I didn't. The interior
cotton, the filler,
measures about the same
length as the larger
pad (8") but is
narrower, 2.5" wide (about
6.5 cm).
|
Below:
The loops for buttons or a
belt appear the same as on
the larger
pad.
|
|
 |
|
|