LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S MEDICINES
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
The original Pinkham medicine and best known of all.
It has been on the market for nearly fifty years and
is put up in the
following forms:
Liquid.
Dose—One tablespoonful every four hours
through the day.
Dry (Tablets).
Dose—One tablet every four hours through
the day.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash. For leucorrhoea and inflammation Liquid, a concentrated extract, ready to dilute and use at once, the most convenient form. Use daily as a vaginal injection. Add one teaspoonful (in severe cases two teaspoonfuls) of the Sanative Wash to one pint of warm water, mix thoroughly and it is ready for use. (Can be had, if preferred, in dry form, to steep.)
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Blood Medicine. For poor blood We recommend this as a good blood medicine for either men or women. Dose—One tablespoonful three times a day, half an hour before eating.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills. For constipation Dose—Take three the first night, two the second, and one the third; and unless there is a regular and healthy movement of the bowels continue taking one every night.
FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS GENERALLY
Send for Lydia E. Pinkham’s private
text book upon ailments Peculiar
to
women, mailed free on application to the
Lydia E. Pinkham medicine Co.
Lynn, Mass.,
Public Inspection of our Laboratories Cordially Invited.
Hints for mealtime How often do we hear women exclaim, “Oh dear, what shall I have for the next meal?”
This little book will aid you in answering that troublesome question. The recipes are carefully selected and we hope you will find them helpful.
More important to you than the question of food is that of health. Therefore, in this book we show you many letters from women who have received great benefit by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. You have heard of this splendid medicine, for it has been used by women for nearly fifty years. It is a Woman’s Medicine for Women’s Ailments. It is prepared from medicinal plants that are especially adapted for the treatment of the troubles women so often have.
As you read these letters remember these women are stating for the benefit of other women who are sick just how they felt and just how the Vegetable Compound restored them to health.
You know it is bad enough to worry over the various duties of life when you are well and strong. It is a serious matter when you are half sick and all tired out most of the time.
So in the following pages you will find suggestions for the next meal that may help you, but more important by far are the letters recommending Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound as the splendid medicine for the ailments of women.