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« Up All Night \ / v \ / \ This getting up every night with the baby, or some of the older children, is all wrong. Not that the children are to , blame. If he’s the baby, prob ably his food is wrong. Vinol will help his mother stand the strain of nursing. We have often seen whole families of older children who keep the parents awake o’, nights. First one, then the other is ailing. These children seem well enough at times; but they are white, hollow-eyed, often list less, with irregular appetites, peevish and fretful, wakeful at night and constantly taking cold. The use of Vinol, in conjunc tion with Vinlax to regulate the bowels, will benefit these child ren almost in a day. There is nothing in Vinol that can nurt them. It is pleasant to take. If it doesn’t do the work, we will give you the money back. , CHEROKEE DRUG CO DKUttOlSTS. Mail Orders Supplied, K!..V!> r . Express Paid. Tax Retorns for tha Year 1903. office:of county auditor. Notice is hereby given that this office will be open from January ist, 1903 to February 20th, 1903, for the purpose of receiving returns of property for taxa tion. I will be at the following places at the times herein after mentioned for teceiv- ing returns: At Draytonville, Monday, January 5th. At Wilkinsville, Tuesday, January bth. At Sarratt's Store, Wednesday, Jan uary 7th. At T. D. Littlejohn’s (Asbury) Thurs day, January <Sth. At Ravenna, (Brown’s Store) Friday, Januarv 9th. At Timber Ridge, (M. M. Tate) Sat urday. January 10th. At White Plains, Monday, January 12th. At Thickety, Tuesday, January 13th. At Macedonia, Wednesday, January 14th. At Ezells, Thursday, January 15th. At Maud. (Linders’s Store) Friday January 16th. At Grassy Pond, Saturday, January 17th. At Cherokee Falls, Monday, January 19th. At Kings Creek, Tuesday, January 20th. At Antioch, (Church) Wednesday, January 21st. At Blacksburg, Thursday and Friday, January 22nd and 23rd. At Buffalo, (School House) Saturday, January 24th. At Allens, (James Allen) Monday, January 26th. G. W. Speer will be in the office (lur ing my absence. * All "persons are required to shite in what school district they live. Those having property in School Districts Nos. 9 and 10, must "state in their return how much lies in these Districts and how much outside, and all new buildings erected since last return and their value. All persons are required to make out and return a statement of all personal property, moneys, credits, investment in bonds, "joint stock companies, notes, mortgages, or otherwise in your posses sion or under your control as husband, parent, guardian, trustee, executor, ad ministrator, agent, or attorney, on the ist day of January 1903, and fix a value thereto. Any person or persons who have sold real" estate since last return must state to whom, the number of acres and value, ail persons who have bought real estate since last return must state how much, the value and who from. If you fail to make return as above stated on or before February 20th the law requires me to add 50 per cent, as a penalty, on the return of 1902. All returns mu..t be made and signed before me or my clerk. If made before anvone else they must be sworn to. All persons liable for the income tax under Section 335 of the Acts of 1^97, are required to make return of same. POLL TAX. All able-bodied males between the ages of 21 and 60 years are liable for a poll tax, except Confederate soldiers over 50 years of age. W. I). Camp, County Auditor. Nov. 28-iawk-till Feb. 20, 1903. BANNER SALVE the most hsallng salve In the world. OneMlnuteCoughCure For Coughs, Colds and Croup. final Discharge. * Notice is hereby given that I will apply to Hon. J. K. Webster, Probate Judge for Cherokee County, S. C., at his office at the court house, on Monday, the 29th Dec. next, 1902, for a final settlement and discharge as guardian for Katie Deal, minor. All persons holding claims against said minor will present them on or before said date or forever lie barred. A. M. DEAL, Guardian for Katie Deal, Minor. Pub. in Ledger, Nov. 28, December 5, 12, 19, 1902. TALMAGE SERMON •t By Rev. FRANK DE WITT TALMAGE. D.D.. Pastor of Jofferaon Park Presby terian Cnurch, Chicago l> ■ * ' Chicago, Dec. 7. — Assurances and suggestions that will help to console many mourning souls are given by Rev. Frank De Witt Talmage in this discourse on the text Isaiah xl, 11, “He shf il gather the lambs with his arm and carry them in his bosom and shall gently lend those that are with young.” What does the “empty cradle” of this morning's theme mean? Does it mean that the babies who once played in our nurseries have grown up Into big boys and girls, who rush away every morn ing from the breakfast table to be in time to answer the cull of the school hell? Does it mean that our children have become young men and women and left the old homestead to go forth into the great battle of life? Ob, no. This morning I am going to preach up on the little white cradle which has been emptied in order to till up the lit tle white casket. I am going to tell why Jesus, as the Good Shepherd, of ten comes into the homes and gathers the little lambs into his arms and car ries them into the green pastures of heaven. We know he has always cared for them, as my text asserts, while they still remained with us upon earth, but not till they reach heaven can they realize his perfect love. Did you ever stop to think that the vast majority of the human race die in childhood and that over one-third die in infancy before the fourth year has been reached? Only the other day I preached a funeral sermon in the house of .a d<jar friend, in which lay a little white casket. As I was looking into the face of the little boy, whom I had welcomed into the world and whom I had also baptized, a sympathetic friend said: “Oh, Mr. Talmage, this is awfully hard to bear! I know what it means to have the Divine Gardener come and pluck the blossoms out of the nursery. I have had seven children during my life; six of them are dead. Only one boy is alive of them all.” As I left that home of mourning and stood upon the street waiting for the pallbearers to place their precious burden in the white hearse by conversation I found out that the two mothers who were then standing nearest to my side each had two nurseries. The one nursery was for their living children within the four walls of the home. The second nursery was for their dead children within the four sid^ of the family plot. Ilnl^ppor Sorrowing; llenrtM. Now, my friends, 'what is the mean ing of this wholesale emigration of our little ones to the heavenly shore? Are the life and the death of the majority of children a failure? Is the empty cradle so empty that it can hold for us no inspiring lesson of good cheer, or is Christ today gathering the lambs into his arms and carrying them in his bos om so that he can the more safely lead the bereaved parents along the thorny and dangerous pathways of an earthly journey to the glorious destination pre pared for them ahead? The marginal notes of my Bible affirm that this por tion of my text may mean that the Good Shepherd may be carrying the lit tle lambs in his bosom to the green pas tures of heaven so that the mother sheep, with bleat and cry, will follow more anxiously and closely after the Divine Master. So today I preach to thousands of sorrowing hearts. I want to tell them why their dead children were born and also why God does not let the vast majority of the human race grow old ami with bedimmed eyesight see the twilight of threescore years and ten. The empty cradle can be the sacred hearthstone of a purified matrimonial love. It can be the holy covouantal ark, tin* cherubim of which are made out of far more valuable material than those which were once molded out of melted gold. These new cherubim may be the spiritual bodies of our redeemed children, who are hovering over us in perpetual benediction. It may be the trysting place where tired and care worn men and women meet again to talk over the sweet memories of the past. Some people do not believe this. They skeptically assert that a cradle, full or no, is a wedge which drives fathers and mothers apart rather than a golden link of love which clasps parental heart to parental heart. Lately a very dear family friend, who had been a wife for many years, but not a mother, told me that she really believed her husband and herself were more dependent upon each other and therefore loved each other the more because they bad no children. 1 only laughed at her. “Why,” I said, “when you attempt to talk that way you are like a blind man feeling his way along the streets with a staff, going step by step, who thinks he is getting along all right and who is at tempting to prove that the sunlight is useless merely because he has never seen a sunrise or a sunset, having been horn blind.” Every true father knows that lie never loved his wife as much the day before his first baby was born as the day after. Every true father knows that the happiest moment of his ! life was not the day he held his bride’s hand at the marriage altar, but the day that lie could sit by his wife’s bedside and hold in his big hand a little tiny hand. This tiny hand he was awk wardly holding In great fear of letting it fall, lest It break into pieces, like a little cup of porcelain. And while he held his tiny band In his with happy look he would turn his loving eyes upon the smiling face of his wife, his baby’s inotl er. * i n. I'ier o? Love. After the dark clouds of a nativity have ikjr some time hovered over a homo and at last parted to let a lit tle human sunbeam drop into the cra dle, the words “husband" and “wife” ought to have for at least two human hearts a deeper, wider, holier mean ing. These words ought to have the same kind of a holy interpretation as one of them had a few years ago for the warden of the Pittsburg jail. His wife liberated the two Biddle brothers, who were about to be executed for murder, and ran away with them, and remained with them until they were shot. When the reporters came to this warden and asked what he wanted to say in reference to his wife, the recollection of the relation she sus tained to the family, deeply as she had dishonored it, seems to have surged over his soul, and he said: “I have nothing to say against my former wife. Furthermore, I will not allow any one In my presence to speak disrespectful ly of her. Remember, gentlemen, she is the mother of my children.” Now, my sorrowing friends, if a liv ing child can have such a restraining influence upon the parental heart how much more should an empty cradle purify the love which the twain pledged each other at the marriage •altar! We have often heard how old soldiers who had slept under the same blanket and fought side by side through the civil war cling to each other all through life on account of their past sufferings. If this be true, is not your marital love purer and sweeter and tru er because you have washed and cleansed it in the empty cradle, which has been filled to the highest edge with your mutual tears? After your little girl died you hunted up all her old playmates and took them to your heart because they loved Hattie or Nellie or Mabel. If that be true, tell me, O broken hearted parents,'did you not love each other with a deeper, wider and holier affection after you together nursed the little sufferer through that last long painful sickness? Do you not now love each other more after you together have arranged the little white flowers upon the little white casket? Do you not today love each other the more because when those sad anniver saries of your baby’s death come you never mention her name but give to each other a holy kiss, while your eyes and cheeks are wet with falling tears? Yes, your little dead child’s life had a distinct mission. She lived long enough to make the twain one flesh. From her casket today she reaches out one arm and puts it about her father’s neck. She reaches out the other arm and puts it about the mother’s neck. And now her dead lips part as she gives you this holy benediction, “Papa, mamma, be true to each other and love each other for your dead baby’s sake.” A Heavenly Mnanet. An empty cradle is a potent magnet for a true, consecrated, spiritual, pa rental life. It makes a great deal of difference how an average father and mother feel toward heaven, whether or no they have a little one in the spirit land. “Where your treasure is, there is your heart also” can be interpreted in more ways than one. You have a boy who has started out to earn his own living, lie lias become the owner of a little shoestore in one of the out lying districts of some large city. When you visit him and his young bride, does he take you the first day to see any of the great stores in the downtown dis tricts? Does he want you as soon as you arrive to visit the noted art gal leries or the libraries or the famous auditorium, where the mightiest ora tors of the world have spoken and the most beautiful voices of Europe and America have sung? Oh, no. The first place the boy takes you to is his own little store. Why, his face beams with pride as he says: “Mother, just look at these show windows! Are they not splendid? Those windows cost me $800. but they are worth it. Then, mother, I intend as soon as the busi ness increases enough to warrant it to build an addition on the back of the store. Then perhaps 1 may be able to hire this corner store and knock out the intervening walls. Then I shall run a line of furnishing goods as well as a shoestore. Don’t you think this Is a fine situation? And, mother, I made all this myself practically out of nothing—out of the $30 you gave me when 1 left home.” Why does your boy go on like that? Easy enough to understand. His treasure is in that store. There his heart is also. What Is true in reference to the busi ness life is true in reference to the home. You may travel all around the world. You may stand in a Louvre or a Luxembourg. You may wander through a Windsor castle or a Vatican. You may even travel for a time among the poetic beauties of India or Ceylon, hut when the evening hour comes your thoughts will leap over continents and swim over seas. They will travel past palaces and cathedrals and Loudon Towers filled with crown jewels until at last they enter some humble home and smile and laugh and cry by some cozy fireside. Why? Because your loved ones are in that home. And where your treasure is there is your heart also. Now, by the same law of reasoning, God wants to make heaven a place, a practicality; no condition, but a verita ble actuality. How is the Divine Fa ther to do this? By taking us to heaven ourselves? Oh, no! God will not do this, because our work is not yet done. But God can make us feel that heaven Is a home by coming into our homes and taking our best and dearest treasures there. What does he take? Our money? Sometimes. But gener ally someililng dearer and more pre cious than that. God as a loving Fa ther takes the dearest possession wo have. He takes a little child out of the nursery. He takes that for which • mother would give the diamond rings off her fingers, the silk dresses out of her wardrobe, tlx* house over her head; for which l; > wmid give* anything and everything if she could only get back her child. God in love takes that little child out of the parental arms. He takes it as a hostage, as the great kings of old used tb demand the sons and daughters of their defiant subjects, to be scut to the royal court as a guaran tee that those subjects would there after behave themselves. God, when he fomes into our nurseries and takes the little ones home with him to heaven, practically says to the bereft parents: “Father and mother, live purer and polder and more consecrated lives. Live as Jesus would have you live. Then some day you will come to the heavenly land where you shall be able forever and ever to dwell with your little ones.” Does not this suggestion give to you an added force to the beau tiful words, “And he shall gently lead those that are with young?” Gnthcrlng; the Lnmha. An empty cradle signifies, in a general sense, a populous heaven. Some years ago I read a mathematician’s figures in reference to the size of heaven, giv en according to the measurements of the prophetic vision. I have forgotten what those figures were and would not give them even if I could remember them. But this I do remember: The mathematician stated that if the world were to last a hundred thousand years, and if the human race could keep on doubling itself every few years, accord ing to the Malthusian ratio, and if all children born would grow to maturity and all those grown men and women would be ultimately saved, there would still be room enough in heaven for ev ery immortal soul to have an immense palace all to himself and have immense grounds around that palace. Now, if heaven be such an immense place, how would it he possible for God to popu late It, in any true sense of the wo’d, unless he every year had a wholes, le emigration to heaven of the little chil dren? He surely could not depend en tirely upon populating heaven from the old folks. God Knows, and we also know, that all men and women can be saved who wish to be saved through the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ. But the trouble with the grownup folks is that a vast percentage of us do not want to he saved. We firmly set our teeth and face toward sin. So I believe that God. in order to make sure of a populated heaven, has sent again and again and again the angel of eternal life, whicli some of us gloom ily call the death angel, to call our babies into the heavenly land. That the Good Shepherd, both in this world and the next, gathers all the lit tle lambs into uis bosom there is no doubt. Some year5 ago in a Newark church an aged statesman applied to the session for permission to join. One of the elders immediately arose and said, “Governor, we were just about to examine two little girls for member ship. but we know they will be willing to wait, so we can first begin with you.” “No,” answered the famous statesman. “I do not want them to wait. 1 would like to be examined along with them, if you, brethren, are willing. Jesus said that if I will come to him in the spirit of a little child I can be saved. So today I would like to come with one of the children upon one side of me and the other upon the other sale of me. for I know Christ is willing to receive them, and perhaps lie will also look upon me as a child.” Ah, yes, there is no doubt that all the children who die go to swell up Hie population of heaven, and so, O sorrowing par ents, you should not only be ready to let your little babies climb into the Saviour's arms because you know that they are all saved, hut you should also be willing to let them precede you be cause you know they will be there to welcome you. ('liilUrcn In Heaven. An empty cradle signifies that heaven is to be a place filled with children. This heading is entirely distinct from that which we have discussed—namely, that our children who die immediately go into glory. It is distinct, because many people, even some good profess ing Christians, seem to have a very hazy and bewildered idea of heaven. They think heaven is to be a kind of a tenement house district or they sup pose it to be a place where everybody goes through a kind of metamorphosis and becomes so changed in looks and speech in a little while that his very best friends would not know him if they should meet him when walking on one of the golden boulevards near to the beautiful gate. But, tliank God, we will know our loved ones in heaven. Moses and Elias, after having spent a thousand years in heaven, talked upon the Mount of Transfiguration just the same as they talked to their friends when upon earth. We shall know Jesus in heaven by the scare upon Ids •resurrected body which he received upon the cross in his earthly body. I believe our redeemed friends are to be just the same in heaven, in one sense, as they were when upon earth. I be lieve they are just the same, except that in the heavenly land they have no pain, no sickness, no sin, no parting, no death, no tears. If there are no children in heaven, why did St. John in the apocalypse cry out in rapture, “And I saw the dead, small and great, stand before God!” Some of the most reliable of commentators have translated that pas sage, “And I saw the Infants and adults stand before God.” If there are no children in Leaven, why did Jesus say that “in my Father’s house are many mansions,” or many homes? Did you ever see a place where there was a col lection of many homes and no children? Heaven must be full of little ones. I once heard of a thief who was trying to escape from the offleers of the law by running through a public school yard. But the little children crowded around him and got under his feet and tripped him up until he was captured. 8u, 1 believe, som** of us will have hard itcst lO.'S r f. v mi brightest. .. man- work to get into heaven. Why? Our dep uted and rodiomed children, with the .• heats of little friends, will come down to the pearly gates to greet us. They will crowd 11 bout us in such num bers that we will have hard work to press toward the white throne. We shall greet them as children. We will kiss the same lips and run our fingers through the same curls; we shall there have a celestial nursery; we shall also have a fragrant playground in which our little Iambs can frisk and frolic, in which our little departed children can gather for us the wild flowers and gar land our white robes with the red roses of Sharon and with the lilies of the val ley, blooming upon the banks of the river of Life. God's Favorites. An empty cradle signifies that God has his favorites, if I might reverently use that term. Oh, that I had more time in which to develop this inspiring and tremendous thought! By his favor ites I mean this: God has selected our redeemed children out of all the hu man race as the ones he wishes to save from suffering, us the ones who by his tender love are to win all the joys of heaven without any of the tears of Gethsemane. Perhaps I can illustrate this idea in a very simple way. Supposing you were a maji of great wealth. As you gp up and down the world your heart aches for the little bootblacks and newsboys whom you meet in the street and who seemingly have no show in life. You were ouee a waif of the street, and you know what their temptations and strug gles are. You endow a great institution, where these hoys can have educational advantages and the comforts of a home. You cannot send all th * boys there, because you have not money enough, but you can send some. So you go up and down the Urge oi ies. s -lect- ing here and there i'n l r . you can find The, a ' o bootblacks. You select the the most p; ; ..! * • lr. Well, in the saim way I think God has his favorites, and th y are children who are dead and translated When < hrist thinks of all "the temptations he hail to meet on earth and all the sor rows he endured, he resolve ; to relieve many of the burdens, and he takes away cuicfly those of whom he said, “Of such are the kingdom of heaven.” So Christ comes into the world, and he selects the best and brightest of our children. Have you not noticed that the handsomest and the best boys and girls are, as a rule, the first to be called away? Well, Christ comes in and takes our best and purest and lifts them up into his arms and says, “Ah, this lamb has too frail and beautiful a soul to be subjected to the buffetings of this world.” Thus Christ took for awhile some of our little ones out of our sight. Ah, my dear friends, are you not glad that your dead babies are among God’s favorites? Are you not glad that they do not have to suffer as you have to suffer and weep as you weep, stumble over the open graves as you stumble, sin as perhaps you have sinned? Are you not thankful that your little chil dren in heaven are to be numbered among God’ specially honored ones? Thus my text today has a most prac tical and inspiringly helpful message for all men and women who have sa cred little graves in their family plots. I want you all to set your faces toward the heavenly land, where your beloved children are waiting for you. I want you truly to feel that Jesus, the Good Shepherd, has lifted the little lambs into bis arms and is carrying them in his bosom. Remember, the parting will not he long. Believe me, if you have faith in Jesus Christ the reunion will surely come. And so I will close this sermon with the sweet consolation a little Philadelphia girl once gave to her aged grandmother, Mrs. William Harper, the widow of the noted pastor of the Broad Street Presbyterian church. One day, sitting at the feet of her grandmother, this little girl looked up and said: “Grandmamma, do you miss granddaddy? Well, never mind. I know be misses you. We will not be separated long, grandma. Perhaps you will go next; perhaps I. But it will not be long. And then, grandmamma, won’t ‘daddy’ be glad to see us both?” No, bereaved parents, your separation from your little ones will not be long, if you only place your faith in Christ and live for him. It will not be long. Perhaps you will be the next to go; perhaps I. But when we are all to gether in heaven will not your little ones be happy to greet us? But the parting will not be long. Sad hearts, it will not be long. (Copyright. 1902, by Louis Klopsch.] Local Cotton Market. The following prices prevail on the I Gaffney market today : Good middling 7:8. r > : Middling 7:75 A Good Cough Medicine. | From the Gazette, Moowoomtai, Australia.! I find Chamberlain’s Cough Re medy is an excellent medicine. I have been suffering from a severe cough for the last two months, and it has effected a cure. I have great I pleasure in recommending it.—W. C. 1 Wockner. This is* the ooinion of one of our oldest and most respected residents, and bus been voluntarily given in good faith. Others may try the remedy and be benefited, as was Mr. Wockner. This remedy is sold by Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffn**yund L. A. Allison. Cowp-ns. He who gains time gains a good friend. The reason why Hancock’s Liquid Sulphur should be in every house, it is indorsed and prescribed by the leading physicians, for such diseases as Eczema, Pimples, Ringworm, Halt Rheum, Dandruff, Diphtheria, Sore Throat, Cuts, Burns, Open Sores, and all blood and skin troubles. No home should be without it. For sale by the Cherokee Drug Co. I Coughed “ I had a most stubborn cough for many years. It deprived me of sleep and I grew very thin. I then tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured.’* R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it’s the greatest cough remedy ever made. You will say so, too, after you try it. Three ilzcs: 25c.. 50c., $1.00. Consult your doctor. If he says take It, then do as he says. If he tells you not to take it, then dou’t take it. He Knows. You will like Ayer’s Pills also, purely vegetable, gently laxative. Keep the bowels regular. J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Ctetn.PB and tx-fiucfics the hair. Promote, a luxuriant growth. Never Fail* to Bestorc Gray Hair to its YoWhful Color. Cures scalp di-eases at hair tailing. 50c, and 11.01 at Druggists HIGH-CLASS PHOTOGRAPHY. Our work is the resul t of close study, long experi ence and artistic skill. We have learned how to treat each individual so that the best points in form and feature will be brought out in the picture with out sacrificing fi delity to the orig inal. Our pictures are beautiful in tone and finish. J§ From $1.25 to #10.00 per dozen. 0 June H. Carr. aT\Yr.' >12 LIMESTONE ST. ’Phone 170. .HiiiHESTER’S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS Always reliable. L'tslit**. ask Druggist for - S’M'IIKKTLK * in Ketl and -•1 metallic fxtxes. sealed >v h blue ribbon. *• -, (looHis-e. K<*J•■»«•<>.in reroiiH aubsitl- - '«on*ami initfntiou*. 1 ;u\ >1 your Druggist, •end l«-. m Miunps tor I*-.rti *i.l»r«. Tei.ll- ban.Hlw and "Keller fin- in It iter, ■: •e.ni-u .*1*11. IO.now Testimonials. .->0111 by O l-llgelstS. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. *<-<•0 .tladiMon Square, IMIILA.. PA. Mention tVM r-i ur- Fjnal Discharge. Notice is hereby given that I will ap ply to Hon. J. K. Webster, Probate Judge, for Cherokee County, S. C., at his office at the Court House Monday, December 15th next at 11 o’clock a. m., for a final settlement and discharge as Administrator of the estate of L. K. Brown deceased. All persons holding claims against said estate will present them on or be fore said date or forever be barred. J. F!n Jefferies, Administrator, Estate of L. K. Brown, deceased. Published in Gaffney (S. C.) Ledger Nov 21, 28, Dec. 5 and 12, 1902. Final Discharge. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to lion..I. E. Webster, Probate Judge, for Cher okee County, 8. C., at bis office at the Court House Saturday December, lith next at 11 o’clock a. m.. for a final settlement and dis charge as Administrator of the estate of Franklin S. Northey. deceased. All persons holding claims against said estate will present them on or before said date or forever be barred. Kobt. M. Northey, Admr. Estate of Franklin >1. Northey, deceased. Published In Gaffney (S. C.) Ledger Nov. 14, 21, 28, and Dec, 5th, l!Krj. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat* Things We Like^ Best Often Disagree With lie Because we overeat of them. Indl* ges’ on follows. But there’s a way to escape such consequences. A dose of a good digestant like Kodol will relive you at once. Your stomach Is simply too weak to digest what you eat. That’s all indigestion Is. Kodol digests the food without the stomach’s aid. Thus the stomach rests while the body is strength ened by wholesome food. Dieting Is un necessary. Kodol digests any kind of good food. Strengthens and invigorates. Kodol Makes Rich Rod Blood. Preparadonlvby E. C. DiWitt&Co, Chlcsfo. Xoe S bottle contains 2 times tbe 60o. T Foley’s Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right