Tokology
A Book for Every Woman
By Alice B. Stockham, M. D.
“Tokology” teaches possible painless pregnancy and parturition, giving full, plain directions for the care of a woman before, during and after confinement. The ailments of pregnancy can be prevented as well as the pains and dangers of childbirth avoided without drugs or medicines. Women need not go down to death giving birth to children.
Physicians say that the chapter on Constipation is the best treatise ever written on the subject, and alone is worth the price of the book. Chapters on Menstruation and the diseases of women and children. Change of Life is handled in a plain, common-sense style.
Mrs. J. M. Davis, Sabula, Iowa, says: “I have two dear Tokology babies, and during the whole nine months, both times, had neither ache nor pain.”
Mrs. A. L. T.: “An hour after the labor-pain began the baby was delivered. If I could not get another Tokology, I would not part with mine for a thousand dollars.”
Mrs. J. B. McD.: “I followed Tokology and now, after fifteen years of childless married life, a sweet baby boy has come as a gift from God.”
The illustrations are accurate and carefully made. Nearly 400 pages.
Cloth, $2.25 Morocco, $2.75
R. F. FENNO & COMPANY
18 East 17th Street, >NEW YORK
[THE MYSTIC WILL]
By Charles G. Leland.
This book gives the methods of development and strengthening the latent powers of the mind and the hidden forces of the will by a simple, scientific process possible to any person of ordinary intelligence. The author’s first discovery was that Memory, whether mental, visual, or of any other kind, could, in connection with Art, be wonderfully improved, and to this in time came the consideration that the human Will, with all its mighty power and deep secrets, could be disciplined and directed, or controlled, with as great care as the memory or the mechanical faculty. In a certain sense the three are one, and the reader who will take the pains to master the details of this book will readily grasp it as a whole, and understand that its contents form a system of education, yet one from which the old as well as young may profit.