THE MORXIXG OKEGONIAX, 3IOXDAT, MAT 12, 1919. NOF- 3 FORECAST Leaders Attempt to Win Last Vote Needed in Senate. FOUR VOTES YET DOUBTFUL Euffrafflsts Count on Georgia and Mississippi Senators, AYhorn "Wilson Supported. OREGOXIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, May 11. How to get the last vote lacking for suffrage in the sen ate is the problem faced now by suf frage leaders. Of the four votes still doubtful, three ere democratic and one republican. President Wilson actively campaigned for the election of two of the demo crats. Senator Harris of Georgia and Senator Harrison of Mississippi. They ran and were elected on a platform of support of the president. Their vote on suffrage, regardless of whether they keep in line, will be the acid test, the suffragists say, of the president's sin cerity. The southern suffragists are work ing for the vote of Senator Dial of South Carolina in order to relieve, by that much, the bad record of the south en this measure. Quick Action Forecast. For the vote of the republican, Sena tor Keyes, an active campaign is be ing conducted by the woman's party in bis home state, New Hampshire. Republican leaders of both the house and senate have announced that the vote will be taken and the amendment rassed soon after the opening of the extra session. ' According to the present poll of the National Woman's party, a suffrage vote is assured in the coming congress from the congressional delegations of 3 8 western and one eastern state in hoth house and senate. Only one state, Alabama, will, according to the present poll, vote eolidly against the amend ment. In addition, 19 states will send dele gations in which a majority favors fed eral suffrage, making 37 states giving a. majority vote; while seven, all from the southern democratic group, have elected majorities against, and four are equally divided or uncertain. Senator Borah alone by his opposi tion to the amendment prevents Idaho from giving a unanimous vote for the amendment. Senator Hitchcock creates the same situation in Nebraska, while in Delaware and Maine, which will send complete suffrage delegations to the house of representatives, Senators Wolcott and Halo prevent clear records In favor of the amendment. Many States to Vote for Measure. Iowa and Michigan delegations win lie solid in both houses except for one representative in each case. West Vir ginia, already unanimous in the sen ate, may also give a solid vote in the house. Connecticut, Tennessee, Kentucky, New York, Wisconsin, Missouri, Penn sylvania and Ohio all have large ma jorities in the lower house, with both senators opposed in Connecticut and Pennsylvania, both in favor in New Jersey and Wisconsin and one senator in favor in each of the other states. North Carolina, South Carolina, Vir ginia. Georgia ajid Mississippi house delegations will, according to the state ments of their representatives, cast majority opposition votes. In Georgia and South Carolina and Mississippi one senator is still uncommitted, while in Louisiana one is favorable and one hopeful. Massachusetts, which gave a majority against in the last congress, it is expected, will give a majority in favor, while the senatorial vote will this time be divided instead of both op posed. Alabama. Louisiana Opposed. Alabama and Louisiana are the only two of the five states which voted unanimously against the amendment last year in the house, which will again give a solid opposition vote in the lower house. The greatest change since the last vote in any delegation is in Ohio, which Jn the last house cast a two-to-one vote against the amendment. In Mary land and Vermont the vote is half and half in both houses. In Florida, with both senators opposed, the house dele gation is three to one in favor. In Texas both senators are supporting the amendment and a majority in the house is expected. Pennsylvania, whose dele gation voted the last time 22 to 12 in favor, is counted on for a majority in the house. Both senators are opposed, but there is a ray of hope on Senator Pen rose since he once made the cryptic statement that "There is more joy over one sinner that repenteth than over nine and 90 that have never gone astray. Though suffrage polls show one vote still lacking in the senate, leaders are convinced that the enormous gain in sentiment throughout the country in favor of the amendment will make it impossible for the senate to defeat the measure. REALTY MEN TO GATHER CONVENTION WILL, BE HELD AT VICTORIA, B. C, IN JULY. Preliminaries Arranged at Meeting ot Executive Committee of In ! terstate Realty Body. The executive committee meeting of the Inter-State Realty association held at Vancouver, B. C. recently, was at tended by between 30 and 40 members of the executive committee represent ing Montana, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, British Columbia and Alberta. Among matters of importance to the association that were discussed was the completion of plans for the con vention of the Inter-State Realty asso ciation in Victoria, B. C, July 17, 18 and 19. The programme is in the hands of F.. S. Goodwin of Seattle, president of the association, and will be devoted to reconstruction matters. Speakers will discuss the city zoning system, taxation, own your own home move ment, and the development of north west lands. The entertainment fea tures will be elaborate, the city of Victoria looking after the matter of finances for the convention. Among important changes to be recommended to the convention is that of admitting all property owners as active members, with a view to secur ing a sufficient income to enable the association to employ taxation experts In each district. Seattle, Tacoma. Everett and Belling ham. as well as the smaller cities on the sound, have practically completed plans to lake their d"leeates to the convention by boat. An attendance of at least 2500 is expected. Victoria people are anxious that this convention, bm known as the victoi y E y ADDPTID UFFRAGE convention. It is expected that it will be the largest convention held on Van couver island this year, and the entire population Intends to join with the realty men in one grand celebration. Among the entertainment features planned will be a trip to Vancouver island. Following the convention, the Victoria and Vancouver people expect to join in a special boat trip to visit the city of Vancouver. A general advertising campaign will immediately be inaugurated by the Vic toria real estate men, sending out some 30,000 letters of invitation to attend the convention. Among those who attended the executive committee meeting from Oregon were: F. E. Taylor, first president of the Inter-State association; Paul A. Cow gill, secretary-treasurer; Fred W. Ger man, director, Portland; Owen Beam, director, Albany; and A. C. Everson, director, Tillamook. ENGINEERS DUE TOMORROW DINNERS AND DANCE AWAIT OREGON SOLDIERS. Members of 18 th Regiment to Go to Camp Lewis Wednesday for Demobilization. Companies E and F. 18th engineers, recruited chiefly from Portland, and company D of Seattle men, will arrive in Portland between 9 and 10 o'clock Tuesday morning, according to latest advices received in. Portland yesterday. Accompanying the engineers will be 13 casuals. Equipped with scores of messages of love and greeting, 300 copies of the Oregonian and 9500 cigarettes. Colonel L. P. Campbell of the reception commit tee left for Huntington, Or., last night. If the men arrive early enough for breakfast, they will be fed at the Port land hotel. Luncheon is planned for the Benson and dinner at the Multno mah hotel. In the afternoon many will make a sightseeing trip out the high way and others will visit their relatives. Following the dinner, a dance will be given n the ball room of the Mult nomah hotel in honor tf the engineers. All overseas men have been extended invitations to this dance, which will begin at 8:15. The entire contingent to arrive Tues day is composed of 433 men, com manded by Major Kenneth B. Hauser. They will remain in Portland until 1 o'clock Wedneseday morning when they will continue their trip to Camp Lewis for demobilization. Definite dates are not yet known for other troop arrivals of the near future, en route to Camp Lewis. One hundred and sixty men, 162d infantry, old 3d Oregon, are scheduld to leave Camp Dix on May 13. One hundred men, units not named, left Ayer, Mass., on May 8. Fifty-six men. units not named, left Yaphank, N. Y., on May 10. The 167th ambulance company, recruited a La Grande, "of the 117th sanitary train, left on May 9, and will stop over at La Grande. ALASKA TO GET LUMBER Bridges to Be Rebuilt on Govern ment Railroad. SEATTLE, Wash., May 11. (Special.) One million feet of lumber, which will be used in rebuilding bridges on the government railroad between Sew, ard and Anchorage, Cook Inlet, Alas ka, will be shipped to the north next month, as a result of arrangements completed yesterday by officers of the Alaskan railroad commission. The lumber, which will be furnished by J. M. Farrell & Son of Seattle, prob ably will be loaded in Seattle and Everett. It will be discharged in Sew ard and sent over the government railroad from that city as needed. The bridges to be rebuilt are on the old Alaska Northern Railroad, now a part of the government line between Sew ard and Anchorage. ROOSEVELT ROAD BOOMED Coos County Business Men Are Boosting Project. MARSHJTE LD, Or.. May 11. (Spe cial.) The Coos County Businessmen's association has contributed 1300 to the campaign fund, for the Roosevelt high way and will assist the campaign in personal appeals to electors for pas sage of the measure on June 3. The association sees the necessity of .re ciprocity in various sections of the state in voting for such measures, and so will recommend support of all. The campaign has received consid erable publicity in this section of the state and one of the aids now under way is a special crusade for registering voters. WHISKY SEIZED; TWO FINED Captain of Vessel at Kalama Pays Assessments for Men. KELSO, Wash.. May 11. (Special.) Bootlegging has been costly in Cowlitz county in the oast few months, and G. Anderson and A. Mortenson. of the crew of the steamer Daisy Freeman, were fined $100 each and costs in the Cow litz superior court this week for boot legging at the dock at Kalama, where the boat was docked. Sheriffs Hog gatt and Taylor arrested the men end seized 27 quarts of whisky. The men did not have the money to pay the fine, and the total fines and costs of $210 were paid by the cap tain of the boat, who could not spare the men from the crew. Man Knocked Down by Auto. F. M. Marsh of the Edelbrau hotel, suffered body bruises and a severe injury to his leg last night when he was knocked down by an automobile at Fourth and Morrison streets as he was crossing the street intersection. L. G. Hiatt, driver of the machine, of 3920 Sixty-second street Southeast, re ported to the police that Marsh sud denly stepped from the curbing in front of his machine. The injured man was taken to the emergency hospital for first aid treatment and later sent to his home. Klamath Lets Paving Contract. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., May 11. (Special.) Contracts have been award ed to the Warren Construction company for bithulitic paving of Pine street from Paine alley through to Eighth street. Crescent avenue, Canby and East streets. Spring street, from a point near the Southern Pacific depot, to the intersection with Sixth street, is to be improved with oil mac-dam. Dry si an wood ana inside wood, green, stamps, for cash. Holmar Fuel Co, Main 363. A 33E3 Adv. HUNDRED-HOUR HILL TRIES SOULS OF MEN Four-Day Period Holding the Line Wearisome and Deadly. SHELL FIRE MOST SEVERE American Advance Alons Line From IJauIny Woods to Tronsol Farm Stubbornly Contested. BY COLIN V. DTMEST. American Red Cross Searcher with the 91st Division. THIRTT-FOl HTU ARTICLE. The remainder of the numerous deaths in the 181st brigade in the charge on Gesnes on September 29 will now be' left hntil a later casualty summary, so that the action of the division as a whole may be proceeded with. By daybreak of September 30 all the 181st brigade, except the thousand dead and wounded and except a small number still scattered in hiding around Gesnes. was dug in again on the reverse slope of Miller Hill, or in the woods just behind it. There it began that exceed ingly wearisome and more or less deadly four-day period of holding the line without offense or defense, a period that gave Miller Hill' the nickname of Hundred-Hour Hill. Meanwhile on Sunday, the 29th, the 182d brigade was attempting to ad vance at the left of the 181st and was not having so much success. The line of the 182d at 3:40 o'clock ran just north of the Baulny woods and west onto Tronsol farm and during the day had been occupied principally by the 364th infantry. The 364th and the 363d infantry regiments, the 316th engineers and the 348th machine gun battalion had had a tough morning of it from shellfire and from some machine-gun fire on front and left. So severe was the German treatment, in fact, that not much advance was made by the infan try beyond the line of 3:40. Some of the brigade moved as far north as the road running in front of the Bois de la Mo rine, but were checked there. Engineers Do Yeoman Service. As the 182d brigade did not attempt to march into and through the Bois de la Morine as the lSlst marched into and beyond Gesnes, its casualties on this Sunday were only a fraction of those of the sister brigade, and most of them came from shellfire. The 316th engineers did yeoman serv ice on this afternoon. Companies A and C were put in as infantry, an ex perience that fell often enough to en gineer units all through the American army. The engineers of the 91st made excellent doughboys. They showed their stuff on the 29th and again on the 1st and still again on hill 269 on the 9th of October. In Belgium, at Aude narde, they demonstrated again that the engineer is a good man under fire, whether he is building a bridge or car rying a rifle and bayonet. While fighting with the engineers on the 29th, another University of Wash ington graduate was wounded, dying afterward In a base hospital from pneu monia following flu. This was Lieuten ant Lester B. Pickering, son of A. C. Pickering, formerly of Ohesaw, but now of Monroe. Wash. "Pick." as his associates called him, was an engineer ing graduate. He married Just before entering service, and at Camp Lewis he helped survey much of the site. Miss Florence Pickering, a teacher at Oro- ville. Wash., and Mrs. Will Turner of Chesaw are sisters still living in east ern Washington. Pickering's Woond Slight. There was something of a gap on the left flank of the 91st, on the far edge of Tronsol farm, and companies A and C of the engineers were sent over to guard against counter-attacks from f three German companies that were threatening. A and C advanced nearly a mile in the afternoon, driving the Germans back, and during this ad vance Lieutenant Pickering was struck Just below the right knee by a ma chine gun off at the left. It was not a serious wound and Pickering stayed with the company in the advance; in fact, he Btuck with the company till Lieutenant-Colonel Powell, command ing the engineer regiment, ordered him to the hospital. Death came October 15 at Vittel. A hard-fighting engineer sergeant, who died on the 29th. was Richard L. Luey of San Gabriel, Cai.. in company A. At 4:30 P. M. company A and units of the 182d infantry were trying to get forward amid machine gun bullets from positions 700 yards ahead. A burst struck Luey's legs and he went down. He rose to his knees and was struck in the body. Corporal John Shannon of Butte and Corporal Dennis finally got over to him and he was breathing his last. Sniper Gets A Company's Pride. Sergeants Thomas J. Lake of Los Angeles was known as "the pride of company A." He was a fine big fel low, and was the company's represen tative in boxing and wrestling: and besides he was a first-class soldier and sergeant: yet it was as easy tor a bul let to kill Lake as to kill the puniest man in the division. He and Frank Wilder of company A, another Los An gelan, got separated late on the 29th. and while hunting the company went to TODAY AND TOMORROW Stops Tuesday Midnight to Let In "The SHk-Lined Burglar" f - A ' -VV J ? -s 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 These figures are interesting, showing how the lesson of thrift has been learned by Americans. But there are adults who have not yet learned to save, and thousands of children who must be taught the lesson. One of our home savings banks will aid in saving loose change that might otherwise be trifled away. It holds all sorts of coins, also bills, is convenient in size, and good looking. Start the family on the thrift road. It leads to success and independence. LADD rTillllllllllllllllllllllltllllllinHlllHIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlllIIIIllIlllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllirilllllllllllllllllllllllllllll the top of a knoll where there was a round rustic bench built by the Ger mans. Lake had a can of roast beef and Wilder had water. Lake asked Wilder if he was hungry! so they opened the can and began to eat. They were glad they had the water, one of them re marking on how dry they would be if they ate the beef. Lake had taken one bite when a sniper shot him in the right side near the back, the bullet emerging at the left Jaw. He fell on his face, saying, 'They got me. Wilder." Wilder said, "Where?" He said, "in the back. I'm gone." Wilder said what always is said to those who are going west: "I don't think so, Tom," but the pride of com pany A was gasping and dying then. Fatalism Prevailing Illustrated. The case of a company A private named William Pierce of Mellville, Cal., although Pierce had been killed two days before on the 27th, will be de scribed here because it illustrates tfi fatalism that grew up in the 91st be fore the men had been in battle more than two or three days. Men got to feeling that death was an accidental sort of thing in most of the cases. If a man was a foot to the right he es caped: if a foot to the left he got it; but there was no way of knowing whether to be at the right or the left. If he left his pit for a match, a shell might fall there during his absence; if he stayed where he was, it might fall where the match was; and so on; he had no way of knowing and he speedily gave up trying to figure it out. He got to eaying, "Well, if they get me, they get me." He was fond of remark ing about shells that fell close that they did not eeem to carry his number. Pierce was riding an engineer wagon in Very Canyon and was Just at the fork of the road north of Very. The canyon, as usual, was being shelled. He was smoking a cigarette and was so little afraid of shellfire that he de clined to get off the wagon to Join a dozen other A men at the side of the road under some cover. "If any of these shells have my number, they'll get me anyway," he remarked. Then one fell into the wagon ahead. It killed seven horses, injured a number of men and it also killed the fatalist Pierce, fragments riddling his Flicker and hit ting his head and stomach. He fell down on the seat without speaking and the boys climbed up and lifted him off. Private Sam Port Killed Instantly. It was on the night of the 29th that Private Sam Port of company A was killed. Port was on guard while 40 or 50 machine gunners, engineers and doughboys, all mixed after the hard 29th, were sleeping along a 60-yard stretch behind brush and trees on a hillside. They were in the line of an enfilade fire, however, and about 10 P. M. a shell came in, killed Port in stantly and added to the number of in jured already there. The boys got up to attend the new wounded and .more shells came, after which two company A men were missing. About 50 men were killed or fatally wounded in the 316th engineers in Ar gonne and Belgium. A number of them died in the great air raid on Very canyon on October 2. ' The next installment will deal with the four days of holding the line after the 29th. DOROTHY DALT0N in "The Home Breaker" Mult and Jeff Cartoon Pictograph Wild Geese in Ontario'1 Plenty for .Twenty 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 The Country Over savings deposits have in creased per capita 27.3 per cent during the four -year war period. The Pacific States have increased 46.9 per cent. & TILTON Washington and Third KLAMATH OBJECTS TP 01 IXTXDATIOX OF LARGE AREA OF LAND FEARED. Protests Sent Secretary Lane; Pro posed Project to Raise Water of Upper Lake. OREGOXIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington. May 11. Protests are pouring in upon Secretary of Interior Lane against the project of the California Oregon Light & Power company to build a dam at the head of the Link river In the Klamath irrigation project and thereby raise the water of Upper Klamath lake. A contract for this purpose appar ently has been closed between the United States reclamation service and the light and power company. The protests set forth that such a dam would cause to be Inundated many thousands of acres of the most fertile land, the greater part of which Is patented. Much of this land, it is said, is sus ceptible of reclamation and that the farmers already have gone to great expense in diking and drainage. Be sides the large area which would be flooded it is declared that the drain age of other extensive areas would be impaired by holding back the flow of water of William river. Wood river. Seven Mile, Four Mile and Crystal creeks. The settlers say that the desired re sult can be obtained Just as satisfac torily without impairing the present irrigation system by deepening the channel at the outlet of the lake from eight to ten feet and placing a dam so as to maintain the present water level at the intake of the canal. Tombstone Stolen From Salesroom. EUGENE, Or.. May 11. (Special.) For many years E. C. Lake, a Eugene marble worker, has had no door to his salesroom, as he thought no one would steal tombstones. Yesterday he re ported to the police that a headstone had been stolen. It was a stone with out marking, and Mr. Lake said he be lieved the person who took it is pre paring for the future decoration of his own grave. Records These Are RED SEAT Instrumental. Marie (Violin) 7453 fAve I 745SS Jascha Heifetz Waltx Etude (Piano) .- Alfred Cortot Quartet In A Minor Klman String Quartet SOXGS. My Wild Irish Rose ..John McCormack La Caplnera. 44S I 4792 I Amenta Galli-Curcl M7S5fDcar Old Pal of Mine ( John McCormack 647:2 Thou Art Near Me. Margarita.. L - Emilio de tiorgorza POPULAR SOXGS. How Ta Gonna Keep 'Em Down on the Farm? 1S537 Arthur Fields How Are Ton Coin" to Wet Your Whistle?. Billy Murray 'Don't Cry, Frenchv; Don't Crv 1S53S Hart and Shaw I Know What It Means to Be Lonesome Henrv Purr 18522 f Ja Da Arthur Fields Alcoholic p.lus Billy Murray 'A Good Man Is Hard to Find.. 1S535 Marian Harris For Johnny and Me Marian Harris DAXCC ItKCORD. fChone (Medley Fox Trot) S5eS4 I Smith's Orchestra Sometime (Medley Fox Trot).. Smith's Orchestra I'm Always Chasms- Rainbows 35S2 Smith's Orchestra Head Over Heels (Fox Trot)... Smith's Orchestra Kentucky Dream Walts 18538 ...Nicholas Orlando's Orchestra Velvet Lady (Medley Waltz) ..Nicholas Orlando's Orchestra Sand Dunes (One-Step) 1S536 I Waldorf-Astoria DanceOrchestra Arabian Mghta (One-btep) . . . . ..Nicholas Orlando's Orchestra YVK HAVE A FEW NF.W CANDI ISAMt.V RECORDS. G.F.JomisoHPiAKoCo. HO Mth, flet. AMfT ! MiT-,ot. 1C 1 UOL A MLCUUD3 1'IAA US, if J,Vm VI Jr 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 BANK BOAT SERVICE TO EXPAND Vessels to Operate Between Portland and JjCw iston, Idaho. LEWISTON. Idaho, May 1. A tele gram received Saturday from Captain C. Raabe, of the Oregon City Transpor tation company, announced that on June 1 that company would establish a steamboat line between Portland and Lewiston, the steamer Grahamona to make the initial trio. The river run is 500 miles, one of the longest in Amer ica, and the Celilo canal, constructed by the federal government at a cost of t4.000.000, is traversed. Prior to the war a boat line was in service and. in connection with sea craft passing through the Panama canal, freight was delivered direct by all-water route to Lewiston from Xew York and other eastern points. Lewiston is the farthest point inland on navigable waters west of the Rocky mountains. DAYLIGHT SAVING TARGET Repeal Law Urged by Council of Mothers and Teachers. OLYMPIA. Wash., May 11. Repeal of the "daylight saving" law at the next session of congress was demanded in a resolution adopted yesterday at the con cluding sessions here of the ninth an nual convention of the Washington branch of the National Council of Moth ers and Parent-Teachers. A J16 weekly minimum wage for womon and restoration of. Immune edu- UNION DENTISTS INC. PLATES $10 WE GUARANTEE OUR. WORK. Porcelain Crowns...... S.5.0O Porerlaln Killings. . ............. .1.00 32-K Gold Crowns. .............. .s..00 Gold Bridge .VOO Extracting. . ..SOc A complete set of teeth makes one look natural. It is astonishing how good teeth will change a person make old look young, the young look more at tractive. Then, too, not only aro good teeth essential to masticate food, but they aid in the proper articulation of words, xsow, isn t that worth investi gating. 231 Vz Morrison, Cor. Second Flatlr Comer. -LOOK FOH BIO t .MOV SIOX. NORTHWEST HEADQUARTERS SAN FRANCESCO tiLLLhVUh MITEL Rooms With Bath $2 Per Day Upward Under management of AL LUNDBORG (Formerly Manager of Hotel Benson, Portland. Oregon) BROADWAY DYE WORKS MASTER niKHS A N I n,LAms. lL ssaSYSTIMsl m TODAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY A 31ile of S Giggles A Ton of Fun Thot.H.Ince ptnu CHARLES' Greased m Mnrtagh and Our YVurlitzer Mack Sennett's "When Love Is Blind" A Comedy W ith a Kick to IU ration in the public school"' curriculum were among other resolutions adopted. Flour Mill to Open in Eugene. EUGENE. Or.. May 11. (Special.! A new fiour mill will begin operation in Eugene early this week. Oharles W. Starr, for -0 years head millor for the EuKone Mill & Elevator company, and Charles Warrock of this city have es tablished a &0-barrel plant and hav it about ready for operation. COMMUNITY spirit is a great builder. The sup port which Oregon's indus tries get at home strengthens them in their fight for busi ness abroad. And the home people bene fit, in turn, by the growth of these industries bringing money from distant markets to be distributed in our own state in GREATER PAY ROLLS. USE HOME PRODUCTS' Home Industry Iafae of Oregon AFTER SUFFERING A WHOLE YEAR Mrs. King Was Made Well by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. Iola. Kansas. ' I was a constant suf ferer from femnle; trouble for about a year. I had pains in bark and stomach, in fact all over me. andws8 all rundown. A friend of mine was cured of the Earns trouble by I.vdia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. I took it and it gnr me health and strength and made a new woman of me. I cannot praise Your Vegetable Compound toohighly, and you may publish my testimonial as it may be the means of helping some other suffering woman." Mrs. Irenk King, 105 West Campbell Street, Iola, Kansas. The great number of unsolicited tes timonials on file at the Pinkham Lab oratory, many of which are from time to time published by permission, are proof of the value of LydiaE. Pinkham Vegetable Compound, in the treatment of female ills. Every ailing woman In the United States is cordially invited to write to he Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. onfiderti!), T.7nn. Mass.. for special -ir. Tt is free, rea jj' o hri-.t you -HL odJ irj- save ; cur life. i i Hit :1 lUV.v i -w . $v