New this week: The sniping of the cartoon ads, Kotex and Modess, from the October 1949 Seventeen magazine - Growing Up and Liking It menarche booklet (Modess, 1944) - Meds tampons - Kotex stick tampons

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Letters to Your MUM

The Onion's menstrual ad

I recently read a review of The Onion, a parody of a mall-customer's free newspaper, in The New Yorker. Both the Onion and the review are fabulous. Apparently the writers of The Onion have made a number-one New York Times bestseller. A woman writes:

A few years ago, when I worked on a research paper, MUM proved to be a significant source of information, particularly for the abundance of feminine hygiene advertisements.

Anyhow, yesterday, I bought a book made by the writers of The Onion called "Our Dumb Century" with fake newspaper front pages from the past 100 years. I was flipping through it today when I saw a front page for a date in 1925 with this fake ad down at the bottom.

The image shows a dainty young woman sitting on a hill, one arm wrapped about a lamb, clouds puffy behind her (in the drawing style popular in 1920s ads)

The text:

Leaking?

Permit our new "Unspeakables" disposable hygienic underbandage to gently absorb Milady's foul drippings during her less dainty time of the month. Far less cumbersome than the wire-constructed strap-on "secretion cages." "Unspeakables" will leave ladies as free as a soap bubble wafting ever heavenward.

Available at most pharmacies in discreet, featureless gray boxes [women often bought the boxes already wrapped in paper], for your privacy.

As a connoisseur of old feminine hygiene ads (a title my family is not particularly proud of, even if I am), I must say that The Onion's send-up was extremely good (even if there were no such thing as secretion cages). I knew you'd definitely see the humor in it, too.

Take care.

What did women use in times past?

There is very little information about what women used for menstruation in the past, even among the pioneer women in America during the nineteenth century. It's been suggested that at least some of the latter used nothing at all, bleeding into their clothes. This is a good topic for the future museum - if we can find information.

One of my friends just forwarded me the article that was written about your museum. I forwarded it along to several other friends. I think that it is great that you took the time to put this together. I always wondered what women did about these things in ages past.


Tell Your Congressperson You Support the Tampon Safety and Research Act of 1999! Here's How and Why


The BBC wants to hear from you if your cycle is a blessing, makes you creative, if you have experience with menstrual seclusion, or know about current research !

Here's your chance to say how you feel about menstruation!

Please, may I post a letter on your letter page?

I'm researching a documentary for the BBC [British Broadcasting Corporation] about menstruation - myths and facts and blessing or curse.

I have much information about the curse and prejudice but I am finding scant information about the blessing! I was thrilled to find medical information linking surgery for breast cancer and the menstrual cycle and the New Scientist report about differing medication levels required during the 28-day cycle, and the research about eating requirements differing during the cycle etc., but I want to hear from women who have evidence of the cycle as a blessing, for example, artists, writers, etc., who are at their most creative whilst menstruating.

I also want to meet women who practice menstrual seclusion, as with menstrual huts of the past [and of the present; women still use menstrual huts].

And anything and everything to do with research into menstruation.

Next week I am interviewing Mr Peter Redgrove and Penelope Shuttle who wrote the first book on menstruation that offered positive information, The Wise Wound, 1978. I am very excited about asking many questions resulting from the book. If you have any questions for them pertaining to the book or their second book, Alchemy for Women, about the dream cycle corresponding to the menstrual cycle, I would be delighted to forward them to them on your behalf. They are not on the net so any questions would have to have addresses!

Thank you so much for this glorious Web site [many thanks to you for saying that!] and I look forward to hearing from visitors to your site.

Ali Kedge.

[email protected] or [email protected]


Help Wanted: This Museum Needs a Public Official For Its Board of Directors

Your MUM is doing the paper work necessary to become eligible to receive support from foundations as a 501(c)3 nonprofit corporation. To achieve this status, it helps to have a American public official - an elected or appointed official of the government, federal, state or local - on its board of directors.

What public official out there will support a museum for the worldwide culture of women's health and menstruation?

Read about my ideas for the museum. What are yours?

Eventually I would also like to entice people experienced in the law, finances and fund raising to the board.

Any suggestions?


Do You Have Irregular Menses?

If so, you may have polycystic ovary syndrome [and here's a support association for it].

Jane Newman, Clinical Research Coordinator at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard University School of Medicine, asked me to tell you that

Irregular menses identify women at high risk for polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), which exists in 6-10% of women of reproductive age. PCOS is a major cause of infertility and is linked to diabetes.

Learn more about current research on PCOS at Brigham and Women's Hospital, the University of Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania State University - or contact Jane Newman.

If you have fewer than six periods a year, you may be eligible to participate in the study!

See more medical and scientific information about menstruation.


New this week: The sniping of the cartoon ads, Kotex and Modess, from the October 1949 Seventeen magazine - Growing Up and Liking It menarche booklet (Modess, 1944) - Meds tampons - Kotex stick tampons

 

PREVIOUS NEWS | news | first page | contact the museum | art of menstruation | artists (non-menstrual) | belts | bidets | Bly, Nellie | MUM board | books (and reviews) | cats | company booklets directory | costumes | cups | cup usage | dispensers | douches, pain, sprays | essay directory | extraction | famous people | FAQ | humor | huts | links | media | miscellaneous | museum future | Norwegian menstruation exhibit | odor | pad directory | patent medicine | poetry directory | products, current | religion | menstrual products safety | science | shame | sponges | synchrony | tampon directory | early tampons | teen ads directory | tour (video) | underpants directory | videos, films directory | washable pads | LIST OF ALL TOPICS

Take a short tour of MUM! (and on Web video!) - FAQ - Future of this museum - Tampon Safety Act - Contact the actual museum - Board of Directors - Norwegian menstruation exhibit - The media and the MUM - Menstrual odor - Prof. Mack C. Padd: Fat Cat - The science and medicine of menstruation - Early tampons - Books about menstruation - Menstrual cups: history, comments - Religion and menstruation: A discussion - Safety of menstrual products (asbestos, dioxin, toxic shock syndrome, viscose rayon) - A Note from Germany/Neues aus Deutschland und Europa - Letters - Links

© 1999 Harry Finley. It is illegal to reproduce or distribute work on this Web site in any manner or medium without written permission of the author. Please report suspected violations to [email protected]