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Pinkham - Treatise on the Diseases of Women

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Pinkham Treatise on the Diseases of Women
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Project Gutenberg's Treatise on the Diseases of Women, by Lydia E. Pinkham
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: Treatise on the Diseases of Women
Author: Lydia E. Pinkham
Release Date: August 5, 2009 [EBook #29612]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREATISE ON THE DISEASES OF WOMEN ***
Produced by Bryan Ness, Stephanie Eason, and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
Tabe of Contents Chapter I A WOMAN BEST UNDERSTANDS A WOMAN Chapter II - photo 1
Tabe of Contents
Chapter I.A WOMAN BEST UNDERSTANDS A WOMAN.
Chapter II.WHAT SHALL THE FUTURE GENERATION BE?
Chapter III.REPRODUCTION.
Chapter IV.THE REMEDY THAT CURES.
Chapter V.THE FEMALE PELVIS AND ITS CONTENTS.
Chapter VI.MENSTRUATION.
Chapter VII.DISORDERS OF MENSTRUATION.
Chapter VIII.DISEASES OF THE UTERUS AND OVARIES.
Chapter IX.DISEASES OF UTERUS AND OVARIES (Continued).
Chapter X.PREGNANCY, ITS SYMPTOMS, DISEASES, ETC.
Chapter XI.PROBLEMS IN NURSING.
Chapter XII.TO PREVENT CONVULSIONS AT CHILDBIRTH.
Chapter XIII.DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, GENERAL DEBILITY, SLEEPLESSNESS.
Foreign Languages
Testimonials
This entire book copyrighted in 1901 and 1904 by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., of Lynn, Mass., U. S. A. All rights reserved and will be protected by law.
List of Lydia E. Pinkham's Remedies.
LYDIA E PINKHAMS VEGETABLE COMPOUND Put up in three forms Liquid - photo 2
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
Put up in three forms: Liquid, Lozenge, and PillsPrice,$1.00
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S LIVER PILLS, per Box".25
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S BLOOD PURIFIER"1.00
LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S SANATIVE WASH, per Packet".25

ALL THE ABOVE, EXCEPTING THE LIQUIDS, CAN BE SENT BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF PRICE. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL MRS. PINKHAM'S REMEDIES.

CHAPTER I.
A WOMAN BEST UNDERSTANDS A WOMAN.

Experience a Perfect Teacher.Do you know what it is to suffer pain? Have you had your body racked and torn with intense suffering? Have you ever experienced that indescribable agony which comes from overworked nerves?

Have you ever felt the sharp, stinging pain, the dull, heavy pain, the throbbing, jumping pain, the cramping, tearing pain, the sickening, nauseating pain? Then you know all about them. Nobody can tell you anything more. Experience is a perfect teacher.

Book-Learning Alone Not Sufficient.Suppose you had never experienced pain, but had just read about it in a book, do you think you would have any kind of an idea of what genuine suffering was? Most certainly not.

Book knowledge is valuable. It teaches the location of countries, the use of figures, and the history of nations; but there are some things books cannot do, and the greatest of these is, they cannot describe physical and mental suffering. These are things that must be experienced.

Personal Experience Necessary.After you have once suffered, how ready you are to sympathize with those who are going through the same severe trials. If a member of your own home or a friend is passing through the trying ordeal of motherhood, and you have suffered the same, how you can advise, suggest, comfort, guide! If you have had a personal experience of intense agony once every month, do you not think you are in a far better position to talk with one who is suffering in the same way than you would be if you had never gone through all this?

You Best Understand Yourself.But let us go a little farther in this study. When you listen to an eminent orator, you have but little idea whether he is nervous or not, but little idea whether he is undergoing a severe strain or not; for you have never been in his place, cannot understand just that condition.

Men become greatly interested in political matters; perhaps it often seems to you that they become too much disturbed; and yet how can you judge, for you have never been in their place? And so we might go on, giving illustration after illustration as additional proof to this one great fact.

IT TAKES A WOMAN TO UNDERSTAND A WOMAN.

Man Cannot Know Woman's Suffering.What does a man know about the thousand and one aches and pains peculiar to a woman? He may have seen manifestations of suffering, he may have read something about these things in books, but that is all. Even though he might be exceedingly learned in the medical profession, yet what more can he know aside from that which the books teach? Did a man ever have a backache like the dragging, pulling, tearing ache of a woman? No. It is impossible.

Even Medical Men Cannot Understand These Things.To a man, all pain must be of his kind; it must be a man-pain, not a woman-pain. Take, for instance, the long list of diseases and discomforts which come directly from some derangement of the female generative organs; as, for instance, the bearing-down pains, excessive flowing, uterine cramps, and leucorrha. Do you think it possible for a man to understand these things? Granting that he may be the most learned man in the medical profession, how can he know anything about them only in a general way? You know, we know, everybody knows that he cannot.

A WOMAN CAN BEST PRESCRIBE FOR A WOMAN.

Relief First Offered in 1873.Away back in '73 these thoughts came to Lydia E. Pinkham. She saw the most intense suffering about her on every hand, and yet no one seemed able to give relief. Her thorough education enabled her to understand that nearly all the suffering of womankind was due to diseases and affections peculiar to her sex.

The whole question resolved itself into just this: If a remedy could be made that would relieve all inflammations and congestions of the ovaries, Fallopian tubes, uterus, and other female organs, the days of suffering for women would be largely over.

First Made on a Kitchen Stove.Could this be done? Mrs. Pinkham believed with all her heart that it was possible. So on a kitchen stove she began the great work which has made her name a household word wherever civilization exists. Without money, but with a hopeful heart, she made up little batches of this remedy to give to neighbors and friends whom she felt could be relieved by it.

The story soon spread from house to house, from village to village, from city to city. Now it looked as if a business might be established upon a permanent basis, a basis resting upon the wonderful curative properties of the medicine itself.

"We Can Trust Her."By judicious advertising the merits of this remarkable remedy were set forth; and before she was hardly aware of it, she found herself at the head of one of the largest enterprises ever established in this country.

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