Meds, 1940s-1950s?
Meds (U.S.A. and elsewhere, box and
tampon, 1967, Personal Products Company) - pamphlet
introducing Meds to the world (1930s) - 1941 ad - Personal Digest
leaflets, which sometimes have information
about Meds (1966-67) - 1967 ad - undated
instructions here
and here. - Australian ad,
1950s
"Educational Portfolio
on Menstrual Hygiene" (1968)
U.S.A. Teacher's kit for Modess sanitary napkins,
menstrual tampons and panties
(mostly complete)
"A Teaching Guide for Menstrual Hygiene" (cover, 1962,
Personal Products Corp. [Modess], U.S.A.)
"A Teacher's Guide to
Feminine Hygiene" (cover, 1973,
Personal Products Corp. [Modess], U.S.A.)
"Your Image is Your
Fortune!,"
Modess sales-hints booklet for stores
similar to the one below, 1967 (U.S.A.)
Modess (Johnson & Johnson,
U.S.A.) 1927 Gilbreth
report to Johnson & Johnson about Modess
- newspaper ads 1927-28
- "Silent Purchase"
ad, June 1928 - ad, 1928
- "Modernizing Mother" ads: #1, February
1929 ("Mother . . .
don't be quaint"); #3 April 1929 ("Don't weaken, Mother");
#5, June 1929 ("Never
mind, Mother, you'll learn") - ad about concealing
pad, 1930 - ad
compared with Kotex ad, 1931 - ad, 1931 - wrapped Modess pad
for dispenser, 1930s? - Ad, U.K., 1936 - True or False? ad
in The American Girl magazine, January 1947
- Australian ad,
1957 - ad (1956)
with "Modess . . . . because" ad
incorporated into it - ad for "Growing Up
and Liking It" booklet (1963, Modess) -
actress Carol Lynley
in "How shall I tell my daughter?" booklet
ad (1955) - Modess . .
. . because ads (many dates) - French ad, 1970s?
- ad, French,
1972, photo by David Hamilton - Personal Digest
leaflets (6), 1966-67: describe Modess
products - How Modess
Sanitary Napkins Began: excerpts
from"A Company That Cares: One Hundred Year
Illustrated History of Johnson and Johnson"
MUCH MORE MODESS INFORMATION AND PRODUCTS
The first Tampax
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MUSEUM OF MENSTRUATION AND WOMEN'S
HEALTH
Meds menstrual
tampons, super absorbency
The Modess tampon
(1970, Johnson & Johnson, New Zealand)
This Meds, from New Zealand,
represents a late incarnation of
the doomed
brand (along with its
sister Modess).
Dating
this box is easy: someone
at Tambrands affixed a label
(below) with "Nov 13, 70" on it.
See what might be the first "super"
tampon by this name - from
Tampax.
I thank
the former Tambrands, which made
Tampax before Procter &
Gamble bought the company, for
donating the box!
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Below:
The cardboard
box measures 3 3/8 x 2
1/8 x 1 3/8" (8.5 x 5.5 x 3.5 cm).
The back side is identical to
this front view.
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|
Below:
I enlarged the top of the box to
make what somebody from Tambrands
wrote
easier to
read. NYO might
mean New
York Office.
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Below:
The bottom
of the box.
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Below:
The ends are identical.
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Below:
Open the box
and this is what peeks out.
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Meds, 1940s-1950s?
- Meds
(U.S.A. and elsewhere, box and
tampon, 1967, Personal Products
Company) - pamphlet
introducing Meds to the world
(1930s) - 1941
ad - Personal
Digest leaflets, which
sometimes have information about
Meds (1966-67) - 1967 ad -
undated instructions here and
here. -
Australian
ad, 1950s
"Educational
Portfolio on Menstrual Hygiene"
(1968) U.S.A. Teacher's kit for Modess sanitary
napkins, menstrual tampons
and panties (mostly complete)
"A Teaching Guide for Menstrual
Hygiene" (cover,
1962, Personal Products Corp.,
U.S.A.)
"A Teacher's
Guide to Feminine Hygiene" (cover,
1973, Personal Products Corp.,
U.S.A.)
"Your Image is
Your Fortune!," Modess
sales-hints booklet for stores
similar to the one below, 1967
(U.S.A.)
MUCH MORE MODESS INFORMATION AND
PRODUCTS
Early commercial
tampons - Rely tampon
- Meds
tampon (Modess)
The first Tampax
- Tampon
directory.
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© 2009 Harry Finley. It is illegal to
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in any manner or medium without written
permission of the author. Please report
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