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/ PAM SIX BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA ■ m .s £ msniNGTOA mPKovcD uinroiN uttematiofiai Lesion —; . , .« And That, If You Please, Is True Patriotism W -t f r • r <3'« /AKHlNGTON.—She stood In flu*' Liberty hum lin«*. / And when Jut turn cuim* to subscribe to ft flftyoloUur biirid tin- bit of papet* I bribed her with personal JuhbatioifT^he was helping to win the war. Kin* was no slacker, to stand hack and defend. her own ln- * tcrests with her drawn salary In her •handi—Blw* wit’trTrTaqffiar Yank, shed ding lu*r dollars as the hoys were shedding their blood. That money ■* meant a whole lot—a yroninn can find so many uses for $.”() these days— but. tliapk goodness, she ^hud made the sacrifice And the pride of It fairly bubbled through brain find body, tintll-*-the voice-of an aged colored matf \\lio was next In line stuck a pin in her soul. _ ~ “I want a thousimd-dolhir bond, sir.” . The seller of bonds beatified humorous kindness: “You never in the world coujd raise all that mopey—you mean a Imndred-dollar bond, don’t you?” . . * y. For contradiction, the aged colored loan opened ,8, hand that held a chunk of hills thafcUbed for a thoijsniid-dobar bond. * The woman recogidzed ‘rent.sncritn e.; when sin 1 ' saw It—sacrifice that had griddled a ifian’s face and stooped his hack and oabou-sed his hands into human clu\vs—and in the seeing her Own childish prid»;__fcll from her like the rags from that "splendid princess fin t'he fairy tale and made her understand the big thing that Liberty bonds stand for. And that, if you please, is true put riot ism. (by. REV l Tuaohi-r- of Bible Institute' (Copyright, 1918,^ Western Newspaper B. ITT/WATEK, i >. B., English Biblt; ,in the Moody* ute^-oT Chii ago.) . , ! Union,) T —Faith, The- "Title Deed” By REV. E. J, PACE Acting Director Missionary Course, Moody ,, Bible Institute; Chicago /LESSON FOR DECEMBER 15 TEXT—Faith is tbo sbbstance of things hoped for.—Heb. 11:1. JOSEPH FORGIVES HIS BR£TH BEJWL -4' I liberty BONOS Pleasant , - j Sights Above Capitol LUIVK the green lieichls of Capitol hill there an* greets Hint trail beyond , the jirea of fmc ouiiJdoiices until they reach a section of unpretent ions homes. If you laid walked out that / w: y^ a Sunday morning recently you unuUMiuve seen, among other pleas ant sights: A man -in overalls coating his roof with brown paint. There is nothing glamorous about overall 1 ;, and brown • LESSON TEXT—Genesis 45:l-lfi. GOLDEN TEXT—If ye forgive men their trespass* s. your heavenly father will DEVOTtONAL RE A DING—Genesis 44: 18-34 ADDITIONAL MATERIAL—Genesis 42: 1-44; Ephesians 4:31, 32. a • ■ I.'Joseph Discloses His Identity to His Brethren (vv. 1-3). * lie trouted his brethren harshly at first, his purpose beinj? to ascertain as to whether the#’ were the same caiel. t heartless men as before, amt"”-to produce penitence in their hearts. They keenly felt their guilt and heartily re pented of their folly.- Judah’s pathetic appeal overcame ids apparent harsh ness, causing him to disclose his iden tity. Being unable to restrain ids pent- up ( etnot!ons he orders every one from Ids presence. This act on the imrt of Joseph troubled them'; It ought to have Trade- them glad. Their sins prevented It being a time of joy for them. This most beautifully illustrates Christ’s -dealing with his brethren, the Jews. Just ;>s they who had rejected.him and sold him were compelled to come to him for aid, so wh.en the great trihula-: tion comes, Christ’s brethren, the Jews, will cry unto him for aid (Daniel 9:27; 1.2:1 ; Matthew *24 :21; Zechuriah 12:10- 14). • Joseph dealt severely with his brethren to test them and bring them Think ~of f crocodiles shedding light <nr Holy Writ!- The-story*Comes from Egypt how a par-* ■/ **»:• -ja&w n & m I»aTnt Ts execedingiy etTrydnyish, hill ftir rt-t.i*>)iari« »r'yoT7uWWT11 do with 22:19- l'ntiii Raphael to date no drtist ever ilaubed canvas more rapiurously fhan i lie tying art a leafless yim* against that overall’ man daubed tin. Down another street" a man was tacking weather strips on windows, while his family looked on. Around a. conn r a woman was a fei.ee. Ami at tla*—next crossing, where ' there stood a white frame homo* with green shutters set in a garden rimmed around with red dahlias you would have recogiri/.pd tin* old man who takes ...y*u+r umbrella—when■ a.eu-a*»—iu+a—h—goMTiitm nt luiililitv: 111if‘" In'U-me*- woli- der.ful tilings. Naturally, you would have smile 1 i ceo-oil ion—as one passer by did—and just as naturally thejnid ir.Au would ha\e ofiefed you a 'dahlia, which you would refuse for a certain v l4| aky reason that lie would indorse. “Thut’s just the way wife and I feel about posies. We cut them to give pleasure to others, hut. for ourselves, we. fe<! that after a flower has had to wait a whole year to bloom, it likes to stay on its bosh. I always take Sun days after early church to pmti-r mound tin* house ami garden. The change fronPoffice work rests me more than anytiling else. You know flu* doctors tell us that change Is rest, and I don’t know what we laboring men and women would do without our IT]essed Sundays. The Divine Father was thoughtful of our needs when la* declarf-d that tin* Sabbath was made for man ami not man for the Sabbath." * , • He said It with a reverence that would have kept any passer-by silent regardless of personal views—and as you turned homeward—by tin* woman who was tying up vines and the man who was tacking weather strips and the overall man bn the roof, It would have coihe to you—somehow;—that the Scripture Mae had suddenly taken on tile realism of a voice, and that the voice'was saying: Jews (IInsea 9:15; Ezekiel 22: As. Joseph’s love was behind Jus* harsh exacting*, so back of Christ’s realm cur of the. Jews will he his great love for them. II. Joseph’s Efforts to Assuage th© Grief cf His Brethren (vv. 4-8). \Ylu n Joseph revealed himself to his brethren, the remembrance oQ their sins nb-yeed t||»*ni tlmnn-Ai, -Ipso-ib* llitst «iui stlon was about ids father. Thy* shows that, his desire w as to put their thoughts far away from their crime.. ’ He invited tiiem to come near unto him. and assured them God had overruled their crime in sending him for their salvation. They meant it for -t*vlL-imt It was part of (iod's"plan.for ‘The Sahhatli was made for man. V V* vtv Should Midshipmen Serve a Year’s Enlistment? I T IS 1hc belief of many officials of the navy department tlmt.every mid shipman should serve an enlistment of one year. In fact.'it was the purpose, if the war had not lnter\ened, of navy department officials to recom mend that no niidshipmarmttppointisl to the naval acudeiny should receive his commission under five years, and tliatTafter passing the. entrance ex- good. This .docs not excuse them from the guilt of the sin. In some future time Christ will become reconciled to his brethren, the Jews, nnd.be their Savior and benefactor (Isaiah 11:10*’ 16). Peter, off the day of Pentecost, showed that the Jews’ treatment of Christ was such, and that God’s over ruling providence _Jhnd turned it out for good. Just e*. Egypt was obliged tb come to Joseph for sustenance-and become servants for Pharaoh through him (Genesis 47 :13-20) V so will all the world yet come to Christ for his blcss- A-- r jy nmlnation, every appointee should go to sea as n regularly enlisted man and serve one year in the ranks before en tering Annapolis. It has been suggested as a better plan to uflford future officers experi ence as scamcrd that the course at Annapolis should Hi* divided. Tin* first two years’ Instruction would be given ashore at the academy, tin tlie duties and having the snnq* discipline as v— ing, and i»e reconciled to God through firm (Isialnli 2:2-4; 11:10; Psalms 72:7-17; Ze<*hnrlali 14:16).^ III. Joseph Sent His Brethren With Good News to his Father (W. 0-15). ''’tabular depredations. Is the state oi As soon ns Joseph’s' brethren, kaeve Chtlrnahua solvent? And if so. .will it- him and were reconciled to him, they continue-to-be so in cu^a* Pwant to re- ty of scientists were excavating the ruins of an ancient village, buried for centu ries —under the dr'fting sands of thef Sahara. They were searching for manuscripts but found nothing but crocodiles— mummified cioco-- Jiles. Half in dis- ■ A gust one of the younger members of the party seiz ed a baby croco dile b/ the tail and dashed it against a stone, bursting it open. To his aston ishment out ^rolled bundles of manu scripts of every descrii»tion; legal doc uments, court records, bills of ex change, receipts for taxes and house rents, private letter* of all sorts, and even a schoolboy’s examination pa pers! The other crocodiles were also made to yield up the treasures \\Mth which they were stuffed. Imagine the excitement when they discovered that marry of these’ "papyri” were written in the age of the Caesars and in the identical Greek of tne New Testament. iifaqt- fl.xMls .of, light have -been thrown by these manuscripts on the meaning of New Testament words, many* of them standing forth with a picturesque vividness never before seen. From the “papyri” we now know that the word In common use in the apostolic (age for "title .deed” is tie* word In our text above given’translat ed “substam e.” "Faith is the title deed of things hoped for.’.’ What a nKirr “ An old saying has it, "Seeing is be lieving.” Should It not read, "Believ ing is seeing?” Here lies'before me a crumpled, dirty five-doilar bill. It wns Issued a dozen years ago and has been handled by innumerable -fingers, but the stamp of the United States -gWcftir- meht on It Is still plainly visible. Which one its possible holders ever saw the five silver dollars it claims Jo represent? No one cares to see them: the promise of the government 1> enough. Here, “believing is seeing." M.v five-dollar bill is only a promise and yet my faith in it is my title deed for things I hope for: potatoes, flour butter und what not. But faith, to he valid, must rest upon the trustworthiness of the word of an other. The support of faith is always outside of one. A flve-Dcso pote issued by the state of Chihuanua, Mex.. may be worth five pesos, and again it may n<»t. That is where the bandit, 'Villa, lives, and the scene of his most spee^ 0/ *Ewry Picture JetkaStory _ mr flj nf ^ / & G OLDS and influenza leave thousands with weak kidneys and aching backs. The kidneys have to do most of the work of fighting off a cold or a contagious disease. They weaken—slow up. Then you feel dull and draggy. irritable or nervous, and have headaches, dizzy spells, lame back, backache, sore joints and irregular kidney action. Give the kidneys quick help and avoid serious kidney troubles. Doan $ Kidney Pills are always in unusual demand after grip epidemics as so many people have learned their reliability. Doan's are used the world over. They are recommended by your own friends and neighbors. Personal Reports of Real Cases i A NO&TH CAROLINA CASF. Mrs. I. L. Straughn, lfx>S W. T.ee St.. GrPPnsHorgj X. CL, gave the following statement in Janu ary, 1911: "About every month or so for three years ,1 had an at tack of backache utliat would lay me' up for several days. I finally took Doan’s Kidney Tills an*T two boxes fixed me. up so that I haven’t tad any sign of the trou ble since. I am' glad that- I used Doan’s for they a re"'the rmty-kid ney remc me.’ tody that has'ever hc'lne A SOUTH—CAROLINA CASE. W. R Waetor, 1805 Rnntpter St.; Columbia, S. C.,f says "My trouble was caused by the jar .and jolt of the car. 'My bacx ached and 1 hail pain* aetoss civ loins llea-laohes an*i dizzy sp« 11* both-- creil me and my *ight became jifnii-*»tl My L-'- , ] of ten and colds made my condition, even or*,* I saw Doar.’* Ki iney Pills recommended so I 'ised soiue. It didn’t take D all’s 1* ng to put my kidneys in good shape/ I be lieve Dun’* hive cured me of kil- ne> tryuWe,” / FILLS 60c a Box at All Stores. Foster-Milbum Co., Buffalo, N.Y. Mfg Chem. --- 1 ■ Ftrnr ' .- "King Solomon was dictating to me today," said tin*. oAurt stenographer, "ajnd in* surely .had a grouch. He said for me to get his Words down just ex actly as in* spoke iln*.m: There is no new thing.• under tie* sun-, no, not one.’ "What got him in tlait'ip I? the court .chamberlain “He bad been to four*'mm ing piH siiows ;i 11;i\ for tin* |»:; — • WecLc also laid secji «si\ nn:*icjil cyiuedUX :ti file of Sunday comic suppiefneiTtai asked.^ Of Grcartcr Difficulty. —_ (’atlierinc was learning to read in her primer. She had great, ditfieulty in remembering the word "have,” but could remember rr.u* , li longer words. I said to her when she cairn* asking again for me to toll her. "Why. 1’nth- erine. you, can remember 'ifinmmu,' •school.’ ami ‘kitty,’ why can't you re- IIU*llllH*r J ’*ll:C.a»)‘ " •Ut._ tn-'J /.s--harder . F "have is *t, -acquaintud STOMACH UPSET? PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN AT ONCE ENDS were sent with The glad tidings to their father. He assured them that he would a* • ish them and tiiat they should be near him. They were direbt- ed to tell of his glory 1 .. Jacob would not have mourned the death of Joseph had he’known of his glory. He now guve thern^ the kiss of reconciliation and they were permitted to talk with \ third being spent at sea. doing all other enlisted men, and mid- hlm. Rectmciliution uiunion, precedes com- shipmen the« turret urn to the naval academy for -two years- prior to grad uation. - There may be some discussion us to wfiich suggestion is best, but many officials of the department are fully convinced that no man should be coin- 'missioned an officer in the American, navy'until lie has spent at least one year "before the mast,” not as an officer, but as an enlisted man. v This exj erienee, it Is believed, 'would insure practical knowledg Faith Mu8t Show Itself. If the church is salt, then the church must be different from the world around it. If the church is light, then thexchurrh must lie unlike those who huve^nwt committed themselves to. the which leadership of (’lirist. When Chrls- would give the officer the viewpoint of the enlisted sejumun which h«\*ould [‘ aris sa >’ s,un< ‘ tilings which un obtain In no other way. . believers say. and do the 8ame tilings The American ideal is that men should obtain high station by beginning 'Giich scofiers do. they cease. Jo be a at the lowest rung in the* ladder.- They should Obtain place und position by ‘ e, * v * ?n ' n S force in society. If faith 1 first mastering the primary duties'. X_ - * * il lht * s to b’uve. any meaning, it This is- the Idea that Hie . navy officials have in\mind, .and it seems must show itself in the cieatujti of a prolmlile that after the—present war some such method Will be adopted for * ,u ‘" ol “Win. A < hristian sliould , ♦he future. v - * ' bav Q sonmthlng in him not to tie found - - ~— x \ '.ip--any other liuman being. J U.niess lie i*r ittttto in disposition, aim and con duct than those around him^he is not giving tin* world the impulse or guid ance which humanity is in need of.— Broadway Tabernacle Tiding^. -What Is a Prune? How About This Definition? |(| HAD to come all the way to Washington to find out what a pruuo was,” deem this promissory note? My faith In a promissory note Is the measure of my confidence In the proniissor. The very essence of faith is strik ingly illustrated In our word “amen.” We use.this ancient word every time we pray, but do we Mmderstand its meaning? It is really a Greek way of pronouncing an old Hebrew word. Je sus used It each time our version reads "verily, verily I say unto you." The old Hebrew word dates back to Abraham’s time, and earlier, only he culled It “aman.” Anything is “araan” that is solid, firm, secure and abso lutely dependable. Abrnhqm and his wife Sarah were old and stricken in trs, but childless. God promised them a son in their old age in spite of the fact that,'humanly speaking, such a thing was impossible'. -Romans 4:19- 21 describes how this startling promise affected Abraham: "Being not weak in faith, he considered not his own body now dead When he was about an hun dred years old, neither yet the dead- ness of Sarah’s ‘womb; he staggered not art the proTnise of God through un belief, but was strong in faith, giving glory to God ; and being fully persuad ed that what he had promised he was abled^ 0 to perform.”-. That is to say. DYSPEPSIA. ACIDITY, GAS, INDIGESTION. \ Your meals hit back ! Your stomach Is sour, acid, gassy and you feci bloat ed after eating or you have heavy lumps of indigestion pain or headache, but never mind. Here is instant relief. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they eannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a loval disease, greatR lntlu- **n*‘ed by constitutional condition*. HALL'S CATARRH MEim-INK will cure Ta'arrh It is taken internally and acts through the Blood on tin* Mu< ous Surfaces of the System. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is composed of spme of the best tonics known, combined with some of the. best blood purirt»*rs. The perfect combination of the ingredients in HALL’S CATARRH — MEDICINE Is what produces such won derful results In catarrhal conditions Druggists 75c Testimonials free. K. J. Cheney & Co.; Props , Toledo, O. —t ,He l<hew Her. Mr*. I’igu I i.*ally omrlit to go to that yht * jiii'o'mg thi* afternoon, but 1 can't g**: up jnmgTi energy to.start. '•Fjgg- Won't it help you along if I tell v*111 not to fo?—Boston Transcript.' X One bottle of Dr. Peerv's "Dead Shot" will save you money, time, anxiety and health. One dose sufficient, without Castor Ott dn addition. Adv. — ' ~v - : £* -You'caWi flatter nnJioinVst man l>y\ telling him li«* is Imnest. . * v Don’t stay upset: F.at a tablet of Pape's Dlapepsih and immediately the lndigestflin, gases, acidity and all stom ach distress ends. Pape’s Diapepsin tnlilets ar** the sur est, quickest stomach relievers in the world. They cost vary little at drug" stores, Adv. Grove s Tastelesa chill Tonic restores vitality and energy-by parlfvlnii and en- rtcbotK the blood. Too can soon feel its Streofth- ejping. lnvIgorattnK Uffnct. Price 00c. A blind beggar’depends altogether on bis sense of touch. GUARANTEED TO INSTANTLY RELIEVE ASTHMA *| sanl one pretty war Worker to another the other afh*rnoon, as thev rode homeward on the street car. “Now', uiy dear,” protested the other, "for ^ .-J heaven's Sake don’t begin to tell me , about - boarding-house prunes. That COME TO l/WT \ au joke is as*old as the bills.""' mft - — Ob, I don’t mean that, s^id thi 1 7t> FiNO oof / V RmO War worker. “I really mean it. iVHftr A / ZWT You see, L am from t’ajifornla. out vie? to make hard labotv light. And P/jyHE I MgK? Ql where we have ail kinds of fruit, you m ‘‘ n ^Penk of the yoke of Christ know. Of course, I lived in the city, as if it won* a slavery, and look upon but I thought I knew all about things thosti who "ear it us objects of com- tiiat grow\ "Prunes I accepted as a matter of fact, and never thought about them cne way nr the other. If you had asked me'TwoOId have said, they grew, on aprunefree, or on hushes, or some thing. I ? Just never thought,: that’s alt V ✓ "To think that I.should have,bad to come to the national capital to Arid kindness tltHt he~wiUs the soul by ef- outl lJfe is n funny proposition, all rlglit, and knowledge, sometimes, almost fort ,to grow capacious of .receiving t A smali bov- llki*s to liear himself as curious. I had to travel clear across, the continent^Jto find orn the life history of the prune. “When I go home I can tell the folks alAmt nhi^v things—crowded street cars, and the boarding houses, and the beautlfurstre^s, and that lovely baby hippopotamus aj the. zoo. uml that time I'saw* tin* president- und .many oiiu*r things—and, -also, what a^pfuru* is! - “I Just happened to be Im.king tiuuugti a dlctlonarj’, and there I «aw it “ ‘Prune—the dried fruit of the plum.’ “Honest, I never knew a prune was c dried plum before. Did you?” • i How about ltf - - ^ \ Abraham recognize^ The fulfillment of this promise ^ entirely a miracle of | God’s power.-^What he said to God Relief Not Burden. r was, "Thou prt ‘amnn.’” 1 ' In other A jolee ia not an instrument of tor- wor( j s - “TIiou canst be depended upon! turn; - h is an instrument of mercy. T hy woM is firm, secure, absolutely re- It isjnot a malicious contrivance fpr ( liahle.-'-AlmfhwnVrest 'k faith was in-T making work hard; Jfjs .a gentle do- , the a i mlKh tj ness of God and tlm faith fulness of his word," just as. my confi-(- deuce in a five-dollar note rests in the firmness and the security cf the United x v States government. \ P 08 ** 5 on * ^ - -God in his Word has offered to us _ - “ j eternal life in Christ Jesus. He tells _ , 0 * Deman 8 * me this is a gift bestowed miraculously It Is not from severity tin, fiod de- j ff „ nl above .| )y , he Hol Splrtt . How | ronnds .iiroelrfr..* ^ r ..„eh,s ,,m for this -tatf, kuowledw of himself; it is of his tt|hJr|ng ^ He 0 „ 0rs this t o “wno- soevi r^w ill.” That includes me. I be lieve* and it is mine. Faith‘Is the “tjtle deed” to things hoped for. My whistle almost as. wgll as a big__man_ likes to bear himself talk. t **4 OR MONEY REFUNDED—ASK ANY DRUGGIST GOOD-BYE BACKACHE, KIDNEY AND BLADDER TROUBLES .rroch that he may give much.—Mels- ter Eckhnrt. ^ r-r Abiding in God's Will. The pea7l^r-freedom, and h!es.<#dness if all soufs consists In their abiding n God's will. Towards this union with jlod for which tt W cfeatPdJtho sf<ul drives perpetually.—Meistcr’ Kckhart faifh makes God real and his wonder ful salvation a blessed fact here and now*; and "being fully persuaded that wjiat he hasr pfuinistui he is able also to perform." "Frejoice in hope of ’ttye glory of God.” Washington Is . now called to noon victory piayers by an electrio siren For centuries all over the world GOLD' MEDAL Haarlem'Oif has af forded relief hi thousands up ui tiiou- sauds ol" cases of lame hack, lumbago, sciatica, rheumatism, gallstones, grav el and all other, affections of the kid neys, liver, stomach, bladder and al lied organs. It acts quickly. It does ~fTTe ■“ffijOr’fc: It "rtegnses your icrdtteys and purifies the blood.^ It makes a new man. a new woman, of you. It frequently wards, off attacks of_tbe dread and fatal diseases of the kid neys. It often cpmpjetely cures the distressing diseases of the organs of the hotly allied with the bladder and’ kidneys. Btdedy or clomly- urine, sed- ^jp»»wt*-hr -"hri^k-Anst" indicate an ./Un healthy ssmUitiottv Bo no’ delay a minute if your back eacs or yon are sore -across the loins •r have ditfieulty when hrinating. Go • Vour druggin at once and get -a "\ box of„, Imported -GOLD MEDAL Haar- lein Oil Cai>.sules. They are pleasant and easy to take. ‘Each capsule con tains about one dose of five drops. Take them just like you would any pill. Take a small swallow of water if you • want to: They dissolve in the-. stoiiwicji, and the kidneys soak Up the'- oil like a* sftonge -does «wator. —They thoroughly eleanse'and" wash out the "bladder and kidneys and throw off the inflammation whieli Is tin* <*ause of the trouble. They will quickly relieve thoseUtiffened joints, tiiat backache, ■rheumatism, , lumbago, sciatica; gall stones, gravel, "briekdtisf,” etc. They are an effective remedy:,for all dis eases of the bladder, kidney, livers i stom^idi and allied. ofgan«« Your druggiAt will cheerfully refund your .money if y«»ti apy, mff. satisfied after a few' davs* u*o. \ccopt only" the pure, orjginni GOLD MEDAL Haarlem OH Capwlea. None other, genuine.—^Adr. «■ * "U. • * *\ -.t-i —.