I will outline the steps for you and you can fill in the details:
i)Calculate $[L_1, L_{-1}]=\cdots=2L_0$.
ii) Using the fact that $L_1 L_{-1}=[L_1, L_{-1}]+L_{-1} L_{1}$ and that $L_0|h\rangle=h|h\rangle $, try to calculate $\langle h|L_1 L_{-1}|h\rangle =\cdots\stackrel{?}{=}2h$.
iii) Calculate the following quantity that will (probably) be useful later:
$$\langle h|(L_1 L_{-1})^n|h\rangle =\cdots\stackrel{?}{=}(2h)^n$$
iv) (The hard part) We have done the case for $n=1$ for the quantity $\langle h |L_1^n L_{-1}^n |h\rangle$ in i), but you will also need to do the case for $n=2$ and $n=3$ by hand, using the formulae in i) and ii) above and from that, try to deduce an inductive formula for the general case. I will have to admit though that deducing the general form (which then can be proved by induction) from a few cases might be quite hard!
Hope this helps!
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2014-03-31 16:03 (UCT), posted by SE-user Heterotic