See the early birth control
pill Enovid-e,
contraceptive sponges,
and Little Doozee, a
contraceptive douche.
|
Testamp
fertility test tampon and
Menstro-Rhythm guide
"approved rhythm methods,"
1959
M-R Guide Co., Box
457, Detroit 31, Michigan,
U.S.A.
What a disappointment!
What I thought I acquired was a
menstrual tampon I'd never heard of
turned out to be a way to avoid
pregnancy by the famous rhythm method -
birth control. But
there's room for every kind in the
museum.
So,
what IS a tampon, anyway?
Look at some medical tampons, those
usually used to insert medicine
into body cavities :
But see a list of
the kind of tampons you're
familiar with, for menstruation.
By the way, I found neither
Metro-Rhythm nor Testamp
registered in the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office.
Finally, a well-known adviser to
the Tampax company wrote
in 1945, "
The tampon
used to pay the [gynecologist's]
office rent." He probably
meant the medical tampon since
menstrual 'pons played only a
small part in the female world
before 1945.
See the
early birth control pill Enovid-e,
contraceptive sponges,
and Little
Doozee, a
contraceptive douche.
|
Below:
The plastic
container holding the
Testamp(on) and instructions (here)
measures from blue design end to end
6 1/4" (15.8 cm).
|
|
Below:
Back
of the plastic casket-like
container, which is 1/2" (1.3 cm)
deep.
|
|
Below:
Pulling
(arrow) on the plastic cover reveals
the paper
guide (instructions)
and tip of the Testamp.
|
|
Below:
Take out the instructions and
Testamp and you see the top
piece (plastic)
resting on the bottom.
The second object is of course the
sliding top .
Due to different light
sources the colors
of the Testam set vary.
That's my fault.
|
|
Below:
Two views of the plastic Testamp
tampon,
which stretches 5 3/4" (14.5 cm).
Due to different light
sources the colors
of the Testam vary.
|
Below:
Enlargement of the right end
underside.
|
|
Below:
An enlargement of the test end shows
the test
paper, discolored by
50+ years but, loyal to the
end, ready for
action.
There's a lesson
in this for us all.
|
|
Below:
Push the
covering on the
underside to the right (green
arrows) and the user could load
a piece of test paper (red
arrows).
|
|
NEXT:
The instructions (Menstro-Rhythm
guide)
See
the early birth control pill Enovid-e,
contraceptive sponges,
and Little
Doozee, a contraceptive
douche.
|
© 2013 Harry Finley. It is illegal to
reproduce or distribute any of the work on
this Web site in any manner or medium
without written permission of the author.
Please report suspected violations to hfinley@mum.org
|