What did women do
about menstruation
in the past?
|
Special Book for
Women
Booklet (complete) by Gilbert
Thayer
(20 pages, Lafayette, Indiana,
U.S.A., 1920s?)
Below:
Pp. 4-5
"Bodily
purity always
means bodily
health. . . . Nearly
all female troubles
are fought and cured
by the Syringe alone."
|
|
Below:
I enlarged the label
on the bag; the
large word looks like -
in fine commercial
spelling -
KANTLEEK
and SEAMLESS
but the rest to me is
illegible. That looks
like a fleur
de lis in the
design above.
|
|
NEXT
| cover
- introduction
(p.1) - 2-3
(Female trouble, corsets) - 4-5
(Vaginal douche) - 6-7
(Pelvic troubles in females,
The generative organs of females)
- 8-9
(Treatment) - 10-11
(About the difficulties of
maternity) - 12-13 -
14-15 -
16-17
(Nervousness) - 18-19
(Headache, Acid stomach, Cancer
can be prevented, Childbirth) - 20
See
an American
douche set from the 1920s -
Fresca douche
powder from the 1920s -
SIMILAR
BOOKS: Lydia Pinkham's Private
Text-Book Upon Ailments Peculiar
to Women
(1905-1910?)
- The
Happy Baby (Pinkham Co.,
1920s-30s?) - The Intimate
Side of a Woman's Life
by Leona W. Chalmers (1937) - Woman's
Physical Freedom (1923)
by Clelia Duel Mosher, M.D.
ODOR page
|