Pro-Fo
Lactic (U.S.A.,
1930-40s?) Either a
contraceptive or treatment
for STDs (sexually
transmitted diseases), or
both. Ointment with a bag to
contain penis.
A short
history
of contraception and
religion - Egyptian hieroglyphics from
about 1550 B.C.E. describing
a tampon used for
contraception -
Australian
douche ads (about
1900)in the "Wife's
Guide and Friend": The
Australian government
prosecuted this publication
for being obscene because it
advertised contraceptives
and contained birth control
information -
Fresca
douche powder (early
20th century, U.S.A.); the
label contains language
possibly hinting at
contraceptive use -
Selections from the first
American edition of Married
Love (first published
1918), Dr. Marie
Stopes' book that
was long banned in America.
Dr. Stopes founded the first
birth-control clinic in the
British Empire, in 1921, and
it's still running.
See
also early contraceptive sponges disguised
for other uses. Ad for Ergoapiol, treatment
for painful or missing
menstrual periods or other
irregularities of the
menstrual cycle - or for
abortion, 1904. Patent
medicine at this
museum.
Enovid
(U.S.A.) birth-control pill
package & directions
(1964) with booklet Planning
Your Family (also
1964) addressed to married
women, not single.
What did women
do about menstruation
in the past?
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Dykon
Leaflet for a contraceptive
vaginal jelly without actually
saying it
(Dykon Products Company, Inc.,
Eugene, Oregon, U.S.A., before
1936?)
Below:
The same side of the
sheet that the front and
back covers appear on (here).
Note how the writer
sneaked "PERIOD(S)"
three
times into the
third and fourth
paragraphs - not
adding menstrual
but letting that word
arise in the reader's
mind. Legally, the
company could not
advertise this as a
contraceptive.
Paragraph 4: Does SUPREME
HAPPINESS here
mean orgasm?
France
(paragraph
beginning
with "Vaginal
jellies') pops
up as the country
knowing
about such things and
lends its authority, as
it does in douche
equipment.
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End | First
page
Pro-Fo
Lactic - Doozee
douche for soda pop bottles - Lysol
douche liquid ad, 1928 (U.S.A.) -
Lysol
douche liquid ad, 1948 (U.S.A.) -
Marvel
douche liquid ad, 1928 (U.S.A.) -
Midol
ad, 1938 -
Midol
booklet (selections), 1959
(U.S.A.) - Enovid
(U.S.A.) birth-control pill
package & directions (1964)
with booklet Planning Your
Family (also 1964) addressed
to married
women, not single.
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