"What a Woman of Forty-five Ought to Know"
PRAISED BY THE PRESS
"Will dispel apprehensions aroused by groundless forebodings."—Reformed Church Messenger.
"If the hygienic advice in this book is followed it will lengthen the lives of women and make their closing years the happiest and most useful of all,"—Herald and Presbyter.
"In no line of literature, perhaps, is such a book so much needed."—New Haven Leader.
"Those who peruse the book only from prurient curiosity will be disappointed."—Cleveland World.
"Should be read by every woman nearing and passing middle life."—Pittsburg Gazette.
"Written in that wholesome sympathetic manner characteristic of all the books in the Self and Sex Series."—Cleveland Daily World.
"Full of most admirable practical advice, and it is written in a sympathetic manner which is the outcome of oneness of sex between the author and those whom she addresses."—Syracuse Herald.
"There are some things that a woman of forty-five does not know—things which she regards with more or less terror in the expectation—which terror it is the object of Mrs. Drake to dispel."—Rochester Herald.
"There is nothing in the book that could not be proclaimed from the house-tops, and there is everything in it that intelligent and thoughtful women should read and keep for their daughters to read when the proper time comes."—Newark Daily Advertiser.