HOMEPAGE
Marjorie May booklets for girls:
Complete booklet, 1935, Canada
Cover, mid-1930s, U.S.A.
Complete booklet, 1938, U.S.A.
Health Facts on Menstruation, by Lloyd Arnold, M.D. (here, 1933, Kotex, U.S.A.)
Later Kotex Wonderform belts here
A slightly late Kotex booklet for girls:
As One Girl to Another (complete booklet, 1940, Kotex, U.S.A.)
More 1930s Kotex stuff:
1932, Phantom Kotex - leaflet ad for Wondersoft pads, belt, Marjorie May's Twelfth Birthday, 1933 - 1933, Phantom Kotex - box and pads, 1930s? - wrapped Kotex pad for West Disinfecting Company dispenser (mid 1930s) - Two ads on a sewing pattern for women's sports trousers, 1930s - "Cooperation," publication for Kimberly-Clark employees, 1931-34, jokes, sports, gossip, etc.
CONTRIBUTE to Humor, Words and expressions about menstruation and Would you stop menstruating if you could?
Some MUM site links:
HOMEPAGE |
MUM address & What does MUM mean? |
Email the museum |
Privacy on this site |
Who runs this museum?? |
Amazing women! |
Art of menstruation (and awesome ancient art of menstruation) |
Artists (non-menstrual) |
Asbestos |
Belts |
Bidets |
Birth control and religion |
Birth control drugs, old |
Birth control douche & sponges |
Founder bio |
Bly, Nellie |
MUM board |
Books: menstruation & menopause (& reviews) |
Cats |
Company booklets for girls (mostly) directory |
Contraception and religion |
Contraceptive drugs, old |
Contraceptive douche & sponges |
Costumes |
Menstrual cups |
Cup usage |
Dispensers |
Douches, pain, sprays |
Essay directory |
Examination, gynecological (pelvic) (short history) |
Extraction |
Facts-of-life booklets for girls |
Famous women in menstrual hygiene ads |
FAQ |
Feminine napkin, towel, pad directory |
Founder/director biography |
Gynecological topics by Dr. Soucasaux |
Humor |
Huts |
Links |
Masturbation |
Media coverage of MUM |
Menarche booklets for girls and parents |
Miscellaneous |
Museum future |
Norwegian menstruation exhibit |
Odor |
Olor |
Pad, towel, napkin directory |
Patent medicine |
Poetry directory |
Products, some current |
Puberty booklets for girls and parents|
Religion |
Religi�n y menstruaci�n |
Your remedies for menstrual discomfort |
Menstrual products safety |
Sanitary napkin, towel, pad directory |
Seguridad de productos para la menstruaci�n |
Science |
Shame |
Slapping, menstrual |
Sponges |
Synchrony |
Tampon directory |
Early tampons |
Teen ads directory |
Tour of the former museum (video) |
Towel, pad, sanitary napkin directory |
Underpants & panties directory |
Videos, films directory |
Words and expressions about menstruation |
Would you stop menstruating if you could? |
What did women do about menstruation in the past? |
Washable pads |
Read 10 years (1996-2006) of articles and Letters to Your MUM on this site.
Leer la versi�n en espa�ol de los siguientes temas: Anticoncepci�n y religi�n, Breve rese�a - Olor - Religi�n y menstruaci�n - Seguridad de productos para la menstruaci�n.


MUSEUM OF MENSTRUATION AND WOMEN'S HEALTH

Cartoon ad
Kotex, 1935, (U.S.A.)


Introduction.

Looking at American women's faces from 1920s-1930s illustrations I've noticed that many have a prominent chin and receding lower teeth but with a prominent jaw, which might be a stylized WASP profile: white Anglo Saxon Protestant, the  traditional ruling class in America. The look is striking. (I like to look at faces. So who doesn't?)

A proponent of the look was John Held, Jr., the great jazz age illustrator, some of whose faces you see below.

Compare his women with one of his typical men, at bottom. They're a different species. They often show a hapless male in the presence of an American female, a continuing trait in comedy.

This has basis in reality. "But [Cleopatra's] avatar lives on, an inexhaustible source of fascination about the first and greatest mystery to man: the sexual power of women." Judith Thurman wrote that reviewing Stacy Schiff's biography of Cleopatra in the New York Times (Nov 15, 2010).

Ah, yes.

I thank the contributor of this and many other items!
Below: One of the women from our ad, 1935.
The red OVAL touches the nose, lips and chin.
Below: From a 1927 ad called "A Frock for Campus Days."
   
Below: "Misty Summer Things," a full-page Kotex ad from 1927.
Below: John Held, Jr.: from "It's all right Santa--you can come in. My parents still believe in you." The artist drew the essence.
See another Christmas theme at the bottom of this page.
   
 Right: Part of Held's cover of "Life" magazine, 1926 (not today's Life; this was a humor magazine)
 
See another Life cover showing a similar Held face.
 

Below: From Held's 1929 "They want to fix your tie."
The guy's face is more cartoonish than the woman's.
Below: Finally, Can you resist absorbing this cover? Look at the title right above the
words THE HURRICANE at the bottom. Oh, and look at the woman's
face, a late (1935) example of the WASP profile. And her shoulder, locking
the male gaze.
I swiped this jpg from
http://www.spiegel.de/fotostrecke/magazin-cover-zeitschriften-titelblaetter-zu-weihnachten-fotostrecke-121722-8.htm
the site that once swiped a jpg from me.


End | First page
Marjorie May booklets for girls: Complete booklet, 1935, Canada - Health Facts on Menstruation, 1933
Wrapped Kotex pad for West Disinfecting Company dispenser (mid 1930s)
"Cooperation," publication for Kimberly-Clark employees, 1931-34, jokes, sports, gossip, etc.
� 2011 Harry Finley. It is illegal to reproduce or distribute any of the work on this Web site
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