AILING WOMEN. Keep the Kidneys Well and the Kid neys Will Keep Yon Well. Sick, suffering, languid women are learning the true cause of bad backs and how to cure them. Mrs. W. G. Davis, of Groesbeck, Texas, says: "Back aches hurt me so I could hardly stand. Spells of dizziness and sick headache were frequent and the action or the * kidneys was irreg ular. Soon after I began taking Doan’s Kidney Pills I passed several gravel stones. I got well and the trouble has not returned. My back 'is good and Btrong and my general health better.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. SCINTILLATIONS. Double dealing ends in divided divi dends. Our seeking always secures His sending. As soon as a nation becomes heart less its case is hopeless. Codfish culture is never complete un til conscience is killed. Every time you put out any new life some old leaves drop off. Slander is bad breath; its evidence applies only to its source.—Rams Horn. Willing to Oblige. “Give me the city hall, please.” said the lady to the conductor of the street car. "I should be glad to do so. madam,” replied the conductor, who was a new man and had been greatly impressed by the rules of the company, which insisted upon employes being courte ous and obliging. “I should, indeed, be glad to do so, but the lady over there with the green feather in her hat asked for the city hall before you got on the car. Is there any other building that would suit you just as well?”—Detroit Free Press. Just What You Want. The most complete Lithographic Map (Size 32x35) of that part of the Wind River or Shoshone Indian Reser vation in Wyoming to be opened for settlement. Compiled under direction of John T. Wertz, Former United States Special Allotting Agent for this Reservation—from U. S. Gov’t Surveys showing Townships. Fractional Town ships. Sections, Lots, Mountains, Rivers, Creeks and Streams, Allot ments to Indians, Proposed Railroads, Proposed Irrigation Ditches, Wagon Roads. Trails. Fords, Ferries, Bridges, Big Horn. Hot Springs, Military Post, Agency, and principal towns near Reservation. Every Homeseeker, Prospector and Engineer should have this map. as with it he can make his own selection of land, and know just where he is at. The above maps can be secured of S. D. Childs & Company, 200 Clark Street, Chicago, 111., at rate of ? 1.00 each. NOTE.—For information as to char acter of land apply to John T. Wertz, Lander or Shoshone, Wyoming. Ethics. “Do you think we will ever be able to communicate with Mars?" “My dear sir.” answered the astron omer, “you surely do not think I would spoil pages of magazine articles yet to be written by endeavoring to •prove the contrary. It would be very unprofessional.”—Washington Star. When Your Grocer Says he does not have Defiance Starch, you may be sure he is afraid to keep it un til his stock of 12 oz. packages are sold. Defiance Starch is not only bet ter than any other Cold Water Starch, bur, contains 16 oz. to the package and sells for same money as 12 oz. brands. Time to Get Busy. Her Husband—I thought you were going to visit your mother. . His Wife—And so I am. “Well, you had better begin to pack your trunk at once. The train leaves in 48 hours.”—Chicago Daily News. Real Merit. Mrs. Skimkins—How do you like your new boarding house? Mr. Jobkins—Oh! the rooms are fair, the table is only tolerable, but the gossip is excellent.—Hotel Life. ■When all of the pretty little home ornaments go into the daughter's room the son is very apt to look for his pleasant things down town. FAINTING SPELLS Cured by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, the Remedy Which Actually Makes New Blood. Anaemia makes the patient short of breath so that there is often a sense of suffocation, sometimes there is a cough and the sufferer seems to be going into consumption, at others there is a mur mur of the heart and heart disease is feared. In the following case severe fainting spells were an alarming symp tom resulting from “ too little blood.” Mrs. George Forrester, of 7 Curtis street, Watertown, N.Y., says: “Some time ago I took a heavy cold and it left me in a very weak condition. I be came worse and worse until finally I had anaemia. I lost flesh and appetite, had no color and was subject to fainting spells. Sometimes they would at rack me suddenly and I would fall to the floor with hardly any warning. “I had one of our best physicians, but- after he had been attending me about a mouth without any improve ment in my condition, I decided to see what Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills would do. “The pills were well known to me for, about two years before, members of my family had taken them with the best results. I soon found that the pills were just what I needed for I soon be gan to notice an improvement. After I had taken them a while longer I was en tirely cured, and we all believe in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and recommend them highly.” Dr .Williams’ Pink Pills actually make new blood. They do that one thing and they do it well. Impoverished blood is deficient in red corpuscles. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills increase the number of these red corpnscles and in this way send health and strength to every tissue. All druggists sell Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills or they will be sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Wil liams Medicine Do., Schenectady, N. Y. NICE ASPARAGUS DISHES. This Delicate Vegetable Kay Be Used for Soup and Salad, Creamed and with Eggs. The Ladies' World has an inter esting article by Mary Foster Snider giving direction on how to cook aspar agus in different ways and make sav ory dishes. Attention is called to the fact that difficulty is often experienced in properly cooking this vegetable. It is suggested by this writer that if the stalks are cut into equal length and then stood upright in the sauce pan after being immersed in water to 'wo thirds of the way to the tips so that the latter is cooked by the steam only, there is less danger of over cooking the tips while the butts are not un derdone. A half hour- cooking is sala to be enough by this method, unless the butts are unusually tough. Of course the coarse butts should always be removed. ■tiopuragus aoup. — vvasn a large bunch of asparagus, cut off the tips, cover the stalks with cold water, and boil five minutes, then drain. Then cover with three pints of soup stock and add a third of the reserved tips. Cook until the asparagus is soft enough to press through a sieve or colander, and leave only the fiber be hind; then return the soup and pulp to the fire, season to taste and bring It to a boil; drop in the remainder of the tips, which have been cooked gently in another saucepan until ten der. Heat one cupful of cream or rich milk In another boiler, and thick ?n with two level tablespoonfuls each 3f flour and butter rubbed smoothly together; add to the soup and let boil i few minutes longer, then serve at once with croutons. Cream of Asparagus Soup.—Cool; one bunch of asparagus in one quart of wa ter with a sprig of onions. When the asparagus is tender, rub all through a sieve, mashing and rubbing through all tut the fiber. Beturn the pulp and soup to the fire, season with salt, white pepper and celery salt, and add one pint of milk. Let it come to a boil thicken with one level tablespoonful each of flour and butter rubbed smooth ly together, and simmer ten minutes longer. Escalloped Asparagus—Boil aspara gus until tender, then drain, and olace a layer in a buttered baking dish which has teen well spripkled with bread-crumbs. Sprinkle the asparagus with chopped hard-boiled eggs, pepper salt and grated cheese, and proceed In this way until a pan is full, having the top layer of asparagus. Pour over it a cupful of thin white sauce, sprinkle with buttered crumbs, and brown deli cately in a hot oven. Asparagus in Baskets.—Make good baking powder biscuits, hollow ihen out, and fill with creamed asparagus Serve very hot with cream sauce passed in a sauce boat. Asparagus with Eggs.—Boil aspara eus until tender, then place in a but tered baking-dish; season delicately with salt, pepper, and a pinch of nut meg. Beat the yolks of four eggs un til light, add two tablespoonfuls of cream, two level teaspoonfuls of but ter, a little more seasoning, and the whites of the eggs beaten to a froth Pour over the asparagus, set in a hot jven, and bake until the eggs are set. Asparagus Salad.—Ice cooked aspar agus tips and mix them lightly with finely-minced young onion. Serve ice cold in little nests of tender lettuce, leaves with a little French dressing poured over. A cream mayonnaise is also a delightful accompaniment, and especially if the iced asparagus tips are mixed with an equal amount oi Iced green i»eas. Chicken Asparagus Cases.—Mash one cupful of cold cooked asparagus with Dne cupful of hot mashed potatoes, add one-half cupful of fine dry bread crumbs, salt and pepper to taste, and two well-beaten eggs. Form into little boxes or baskets, brush with soft but ter, sprinkle well with fine bread crumbs, and set in a hot oven until heated through. Fill with diced creamed chicken or veal, which has been kept hot on the top of the stove, and serve at once. Careful handling is neces sary with these pretty and delicious little cases.—Prairie Farmer. To Save Table Cloths. A friend with a large family used to be much disturbed over the fre quency with which she had to renew her table linen, and especially the tablecloths. At last she hit this plan: When she buys her linen, she sees to it that it is wider than necessary, and also a few inches longer. Then when the edges show the slightest indication of wear, she immediately takes off a strip from one side, four or six inches wide, and a strip from the end. This of course throws the wear upon a dif ferent place, and her cloth lasts just as long again. Isn’t it well worth try ing? Boiled Sponge Cake. Beat the yolks of three eggs with one cup sugar and two tablespoons sweet milk. Beat the whites stiff and thoroughly mix with the yolks and sugar. Sift one cup flcnr with one heaping teaspoon baking powder and add to the other ingredients. Flavor to taste. Put in an oblong pan and bake at once in a moderate oven. Bake it light, to avoid cracking in roll ing. While hot remove from the pan, lay on a towel wet in cold water and spread with currant jelly. Roll at once and sprinkle wita powdered sugar. Luncheon Bolls. Make a good biscuit dough and roll It rather thinner than for biscuit. Cut into pieces about three inches square. Wet the edges with cold water and in the center of each square put a heap ing tablespoonful of cooked meat, well seasoned and chopped flne. Fold the opposite corners together; pinching the edges so that they will not come apart in baking and bake for about 15 min utes in a hot oven. Children’s Everyday Clothes. For everyday wear, children are wearing linen dresses, and linen of the most durable nature. The mate rial comes this season in practically a never-wear-out grade, and some of the prettiest of everyday dresses are made out of it Embroidered bands are ever so fashionable this season and the embroidery Is done in white or in colors, both being fashionable. BUYING PAINT. Springtime—after the weather has become well settled—is painting time. There is no dust flying, no in sects are in the air at that time ready to commit suicide by suffocation in the coat of fresh paint. The atmos pheric conditions are also favorable at that season for proper drying and increased life of the paint. it should be a habit with every property owner every spring to look over his buildings, etc., and see if they need repainting; not merely to see if they “will go another year,” but whether the time has not comt' for putting in the proverbial “stitch in time” which shall eventually “save nine.” For one coat of paint applied just a little before it is actually need ed will often save most of the pafnt on the building by preventing it from letting go and causing endless trou Die ana expense. Paint lets go because linseed oil, which is the “cement" that holds all good paint together, gradually decays or oxidizes, just as iron exposed to air and dampness will slowly decay or oxidize. The water and oxygen in the air are the cause of the trouble in both cases, and the only reason, outside of its beautifying effect, that we apply paint to wood or iron is be cause we want to keep water and air away from them. Live paint, that is paint in which the linseed oil is still oily, does this very effectual ly; but dead paint, that is paint in which the oil is no longer oily, is no more impervious to air and water than a single thickness of cheese cloth would be. If then we apply a fresh coat ot oily paint before the old paint is dead, the oil from the new eoat will penetrate the old ccat, and the whole coating will once more become alive; and this method of ren ovation may go on indefinitely. This explains why it is better econ omy to repaint a little before it be comes absolutely necessary than a little after. When the paint is once dead the fresh coat will pull the whole coating off. In the days when repainting meant a general turning of things upside down, a two-weeks’ “cluttering up” of the place with kegs, cans and pails, a lot of inflammable and ill smelling materials standing around, etc., the dread of painting time was natural. So was the dread of soap making time, of shirt-making time, of candle-moulding time and the like. But we live in an age when soap comes from the store better and cheaper than we can make it, wheD shirts are sold ready made for less than we can buy the materials, when we can burn coal oil or gas cheaper than we can make tallow candles, and when all we have to do when we want to repaint is to pick out our colors from the card at the store and pay the painter for putting on the paint. When it comes to picking out the paint it is not necessary that one should be a paint chemist, any more than one should be an oil chemist when buying kerosene, or a depart ment store buyer when selecting shirts, or a soap chemist when buy ing soap. All that is necessary to Insure a fair show- is some knowl edge of the character of our paint dealer and the reputation and stand ing of the maker of the paint offered. Nor must one expect to buy a pure linseed oil paint for the price of lin seed oil alone. It can be taken for granted when anyone offers to sell dollar bills at a discount, he is bait ing a hook for “suckers.” So it can be taken for granted when anyone— whether mail order house, paint manufacturer or dealer—offers paint too cheap, he is bidding for the trade of "suckers,” no matter what his promises. But paints sold in responsible stores under the brands of reputable manufacturers are all good products, differing from one another in the less important matter of the solid pig ments contained, but practically alike in having their liquid portions com posed essentially of pure linseed oil. The competition of the better class of paints has driven inferior goods practically out of the market, and no manufacturer of standing now puts out a poor paint, under his own name at least. As to guarantees on paint, they can be taken for what they are worth. Any reputable manufacturer will make good any defect actually trace able to the paint itself and not to im proper use or treatment of it. The really important guarantee which the paint buyer should exact from his dealer is that the paint is made by a manufacturer that knows his busi ness and that the paint itself has a record. If he secures this guarantee he can afford to chance the rest of It—the paint will undoubtedly give good service if properly appliec ac cording to directions. Only Wanted a Square Deal. “Prisoner,” said the judge, “stand up. Have yon anything to say why judgment of the court should not be pronounced against you?” "I’d like to say, your honor,” an swered the prisoner, “that I hope you will not allow your mind to be pre judiced against me by the poor de fense my lawyer put up for me. I’ll take it as a great favor if your honor will just give me the sentence I’d have got if I had pleaded guilty in the first place.”—Chicago Tribune. One Question Settled. Ketchum A. Cummin—Have you de cided where you will spend the sum mer months? Hedzi Wynne—Yes; I have decided to spend them at any darned place my wife and daughters can agree upon. Saves me a heap of trouble.—Chicago Tribune. Pointer for Percy. Nell—Percy Vere was telling me that he still hopes to have the luck to win you. Belle—Well, Percy will find that It takes more than luck to win me. I’m no raffle.—Philadelphia Ledger. Even though a man can not lift him self by his bootstraps, it is within rea son and experience that he may ele vate himself to enviable nights with his own hot air. Prosperity has ruined many a man, but if a fellow is going to be rained at all that is the pleasantest way. . - ■ - ,-simsu&mitf,- - .iiiiwann.ilmi'll» COOKING APRICOTS. A New Dish Accidentally Evolved Which Proved Very Pleasing and Also Economical. A cook the other day accidentally tvolved a new dish. In stewing apri :ots, she found that she had more juice—which was. really a thick sirup, jo much sugar had been used—than she wished to send to the table with :he fruit. She therefore soaked a lit tle gelatine, and poured over it the rot apricot juice, to which she had added a very little—half a teaspoonful —bitter almond extract When the gelatine was thoroughly dissolved and nixed with the juice, she poured the nixture in a mold, using for the pur pose one of the cake tins that have luted sides and a hole in the mid dle. The next day she carefully re noved the jelly to a rich dark-blue clatter, where it looked very pretty with its orange coloring. The hole In the center was filled with whipped :ream. and a dessert sent to the fam ily that cost almost nothing of either noney or labor. Of course a ring nold could be used to even better ad yantage. a * ci y guuu suui u.aac rnauv uvui :he best quality of canned apricots Drain the juice away from the fruit, and cut it in small pieces. Set in a warm place, and proceed to mix the cake. This calls for one cupful ol flour, four teasponfuls of baking pow der, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, and half a teaspoonful of salt sifted to gether. Into this work four table spoonfuls of butter, add three-fourths Df a cupful of milk, and stir into a tight dough. Roll in a floured bowl, and when one-fourth of an inch thick cut into generous squares. Brush the squares with melted butter, lay one on top of the other, and bake in a hot oven. When done, separate the pieces, spread the fruit between the layers and on top. and pile whipped cream over all. A sweet sauce which may be served with the shortcake is made by adding to a cupful of the fruit juice one tablespoonful of cornstarch wet in a little water and boiled for a few minutes. A tablespoonful of but ter is melted into the sauce and a ta blespoonful of lemon juice Is added just before serving.—N. Y. Post. EASILY CROWN VINES. Boston Ivy and Virginia Creeper Two Stand-Bys—Some Beautiful Blossoming Vines. Not alone may the veranda be beautified with vines. The wall of a brick or stone house may be given a living coat of green, which will be a joy to the lovers of nature. The Bos ton ivy and the Virginia creeper, two vines known through America, cling to walls without support, and so are especially useful for this purpose. The former is not as hardy as the latter, but in the middle and south ern latitudes it succeeds well and forms a beautiful mass against a wall. The Virginia creeper is perfectly hardy. It will hide ugly stone fences, outbuildings and dead trees, trans forming them into things of beauty. The rapid growing Virgin’s Bowei is an excellent vine for a veranda, giving a dense shade. It presents a snowy bank of star-shaped white flow ers of delightful fragrance, which last for several weeks. A companion va riety, Clematis coccinea, has rose-col ored flowers, which resemble half closed rose beds from a distance. The wistaria is a good vine for a trellis, but is somewhat coarse for most verandas, being better suited for the rustic bouse or pergola, where its delightful purple flowers hang iD graceful profusion. The Crimson Rambler rose vine is perhaps one ol the surest, hardiest and most sn’isfac tory of vines, admirably suited for the veranda or almost any other place It grows rapidly and blooms in great abundance. Bitter sweet is an excel lent vine of rich foliage, which be comes highly colored in the autumx and is often followed by a mass ol scarlet fruit, which hangs for a long time.—Brooklyn Eagle. AQUARIUM HATCHERY WORK Nearly a Million Young Fry Turned Out This Season in New York Hatchery. Very nearly 100,000 little fishes—their number computed at 998,000, to be ex act—have been hatched out in the Aquarium's model hatchery thus far in the present season, the last to be turned out to date being a big lot of yellow perch, some of these from eggs of speci mens in the Aquarium, and some from eggs received from the state fish hatch ery at Cold Spring Harbor, says the New York Sun. These yellow perch will be used for restocking with this species the waters in the city parks, and many have al ready been placed in the lake in Pros pect Park. Next before the yellow perch hatched out here in the present season, were a large lot of salt -water smelts, these alsc from eggs received from the Cold Spring hatchery. The salt water smelt goes up into inlets in the spawning sea son, and like the shad, for instance, up streams to spawn. The young smelts hatched out in the Aquarium’s hatch ery were put over the Battery sea wall immediately back of the building into the Hudson. Before the liberation of the young smelts there had been sent out from here for planting in various state waters, all hatched in the Aquarium’s hatchery, young whitefish, rainbow trout, lake trout and hump-backed salmon. Among eggs yet to be placed in the hatchery in the present season are pike perch eggs from Vermont, black spotted trout eggs from South Dakota, and the eggs of grayling trout from Montana. The Aquarium's hatchery, with its eggs seen in hatching troughs and jars, and its hatched out young fishes in various stages of development in troughs and banks, is an object of un failing interest to visitors. For Sore Throa. Take a lump of resin as large as a walnut, put it in an old teapot, pour boiling water on it, put the lid on, put the spout to your mouth, and the steam will cure the inflammation. DISFIGURING SKIN HUMOR. Impossible to Get Employment, as face and Body Were Covered with Sores—Cured by Cuticura. “Since the year 1894 I have been troubled with a very bad case of ec tema which I have spent hundreds of iollars trying to cure, and I went to he hospital, but they failed to cure ne, and it was getting worse all the time. Five weeks ago my wife bought i box of Cuticura Ointment and one :ake of Cuticura Soap, and 1 am pleased to say that I am now com pletely cured and well. It was im possible for me to get employment, is my face, head and body were cov •red with it The eczema first ap peared on the top of my head, and it Pad worked all the way around down he back of my neck and around to my hroat, down my body and around the lips. It itched so I would be obliged jo scratch it, and the flesh was raw. I am now all well, and I will be pleased to recommend the Cuticura Remedies to all persons who wish a tpeedy and permanent cure of skin liseases.” Thomas M. Rossiter, 290 Prospect Street, East Orange, N. J. Mar. 30, 1905. Troubles of Spring Days. These are the days when the old hen gets in her work assisting the rad ishes to come up; when the house dog begins a system of excavating in the flower beds and when the neighbor's old cow walks leisurely across the freshly prepared lawn. — Chapman (Kan.) Outlook. Disappointed. “So Mrs. Nurich was held up and robbed. How did she feel about it?” “Oh, she’s fearfully mad. Only had five cents in her pocket book at the time, you know, and she's afraid peo ple will think she hasn't any money.” —Detroit Free Press Pat’s Idea of an Isand. Teacher—Patrick, describe an island. Patrick—Shure, ma'am, it’s a place fe can't lave widout a boat.—Pilgrim. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing: Syrup. For children teething, soften* the gums, reduce* in lammatlon. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Nothing comes so near to “censure” as “good advice.”—Judge. PERHAPS IT CURED HIM. Maybe the Wife Had Been Out, May be Hot, the Effect Was the Same. Capt. Mark Casto was being congrat ulated on hie gift of $1,500 from the Carnegie here fund for bravery in the wreck of the Cherokee, relates the New York Tribune. “The gift was unexpected,” said Capt. Casto with a modest smile. “It was as unexpected, though by no means as unpleasant, as the retort mat a wife made to her husband when he came home at three o'clock in the morning. “The man came home very quietly. In fact, he took off his shoes on the front doorstep. Then he unlocked the door and went cautiously and slowly upstairs on hiB tiptoe, holding his breath. “But light was streaming through the kephole of the door of the bed room. With a sigh he paused. Then he opened the door and entered. “His wife stood by the bureau fully dressed. "1 didn’t expect you'd be sitting up for me, my dear,’ he said. “ ’I haven’t been,’ she said. 'I just came in myself.’ ” Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the Heat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or consti tutional disease. and In order to cure It you must take Internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken in ternally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medi cine It was prescribed by one of the best physicians In this country for years and Is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics'known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two .ngredients Is what produces such wonderful re : suite in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., PropB., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, price 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. The Limit. K nicker—Was it a miscarriage of | justice? Bocker—Worse; it was a misauto.— I N Y. Sun. — Ingenuity of the Lazy Genius. There is no doubt that the average loafer displays considerable genius in keeping out of a job.—Brookfield (Mo.) I Gazette. Lewis’ Single Binder — the famous straight 5c Vigar, always best quality. | Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. A man who sticks to the truth sel I dom talks about himself. A CRITICAL PERIOD INTELLI6ENTW0MEN PREPARE Dangers and Pain of This Critical Period Avoided by the Dse of Lydia E. Pink, ham’s Vegetable Compound. ■ How many wo W men realize that, the most critical period in a wo man's existence is the change of life, and that the anxiety felt by women as this time draws nea Vv'TWAt b ffy/an rf is not. Wlinou; ” reason ? If her system is in a deranged condi tion. or she is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is at this time likely to become active and. with a host of nervous irritations, make life A burden. At this time, also cancers and tumors are more liable to begin their destruc tive work. Such warning symptoms as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, diz ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, pal pitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, varia ble appetite, weakness and inquietude are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period of life when woman's great change may be expected. uciwvc uyaia xu. riDHn&m s v etable Compound is the world's great est remedy for women at this trying period. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up the weakened nervous system as no other medicine can. Mrs. A. E. G. Hyland, of Chester town, Md., in a letter to Mrs. Pink ham, says: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— “ I had been suffering with a displacement for years and was passing through the change of life. 1 had a good deal of soreness, dizzy spells, headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote you for advice and commenced treat ment with Lydia E. Pinkhareis Vegetable Compound as you directed, aud I am happy to say that all those distressing symptoms left me, and I have passed safely through the change of life a well woman.”" For special advice regarding this im portant period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham. Lynn, Mass She is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Her advice is free and always helpful to ailing women. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of — and has been made under his per , Sonal supervision since its infancy. /■ec