The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 38, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 18, 1928 Page: 3 of 8
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THE CASS COUNTY SUN
Catalina Island Yields
Many Ancient Treasures
Avulon, Simla (Uiiulina lsmnd, Cal.
— Ad atteJiipt to follow undent trulls
to the long-loKt Islnnd temple of
ClilnlRchliitCh, the Sutl God, litis re-
sulted Instead In the discovery of the
burlu) pi*ee of a sirinll Indlun prin-
cess of 3,000 years ago unit evidence
Indicating that child sacrifices were
inude in wholesale fashion by tribes
of the ChanneJ, Islands, off the const
of California.
Within u stone urn weighing 131
pounds uml fashioned skillfully us
though by modern tools was found
the skeleton of un Indlun girl be-
tween live and seven years, ller
luyids apparently had clutched the
rim of un urn, whose rich ornamenta-
tion of wampum bespeaks her royal
linenge.
In a circle with the urn as a cen-
ter were counted by I'rof. Ralph Gild-
den, curator of the Catalina museum
of Channel Island Indians, the skele-
tons o£ 64 children bnrled in tiers
four deep with small heads touching
each other.
Beneath them was the skeleton of
a seven-foot man. A spear blade still
was fixed in the ribs.
The sand within the funeral urn
had the appearance of ground crystal
—apparently, according to the discov-
erer, a sacred sand used in the burial
of Indian royalty—and was fur dif-
ferent from that which hud sifted
over the graves of the other children.
These linds us well us a weulth of
obsidian knives, spenr points and ar-
row heads and hundreds of other ar-
ticles of wampum-Inlaid stone and
bone have provided material over
which Glldden has puzzled since he
discovered them.
One thin piece of slate he believes
to be a stone map, holes having been
drilled to indicate trails to the four
main burying grounds on Santa Cata-
lina island.
"It is plausible," Glldden said, "that
the strange child burial within the
urn und those surrounding it were
the result of a natural death of a
little girl of high rank and the slay-
ing of 64 attendants und playmates
with her. Or they all may have been
killed In some religious ceremonial
rite.
"It Is even possible the princess may
have been given some potion und bur-
ied nlive. The way the small hands
clutched the outer rim of the bowl
makes this a possibility."
Wampum inlaid in four broken
circles on the rim of the urn with
"gates" leading to the four points of
the compass lead Olidden to believe
t he burial place may he near the site
of the temple of Chlnlgclilnlcb.
Butter Stored for Winter
The Department of Agriculture says
that for butter, to be stored for win-
ter use, pasteurized sweet cream
should be used, churned nt n low tem-
perature and the butter washed so
that it will be firm and waxy. Holls
or prints of butter should be wrapped
In parchment butter paper, placed In n
stone crock, and covered with strong
brine. Butler should be stored In as
cool a place as Is available and in a
place free from odors likely to be ab-
sorbed by the butter.
Popular trLo—three meals n day.
WhenFood
Sours
T.ots of folks who think they hart
"Indigestion" have only an acid condi-
tion which could be corrected In five
or ten minutes. An effective nntl-acld
like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon
restores digestion to normal.
Phillips does away with all that
sourness and gas right after meals. It
prevents the distress so apt to occur
two hours ufler eating. What a pleas-
ant preparation to take! And how
good it Is for the system! Unlike a
burning dose of soda—-which Is but
temporary relief lit best—Phillips
Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many
times Its volume in acid.
Next time a hearty meat, or too rich
n diet has brought on the least dls
comfort, try— i
Milk .
of Magnesia
Improved Uniform International
Sunday School
T Lesson*
(By RBV. H. FITZWATKH, D.W.. Dean
Moody nth!* Inxlltuloof Chlcsro.)
((E). 192H. Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for September 16
PAUL WRITES TO HIS FRIENDS
IN CORINTH
T.KSSON TEXT—I Cor. 1:10-13:3:5-11,
41-23.
OOLDEN TEXT—Behold how (rood
and how pleasant It Is for brethren to
dwell together In unity.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Paul Writes a
Letter to His Friends.
JUNIOR TOPIC—Paul Writes a Good
Letter to His Friends.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP-
IC—Paul Urges Team Work.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP-
IC—Paul Pleads for Christian Unity.
Concerning Contention In the
Church (1:10-13).
1. Exhortation (v. 10). "That ye
all speak the same tiling."
In view of the fact that he besought
them In the name of Jesus Christ, the
one thing which he desired them to
speak was the Lord's name. The name
of the Lord stands for all that the
Lord is and does. "That there be no
divisions among you," that Is, no fac-
tions, no alienation of affection. "That
ye be perfectly Joined together In
the same mind and In the same Judg-
ment."
2. The reason for this exhortation,
(v. 11).
Word had been brought to Paul by
members of the household of Cliloe
that wrangling was going on among
the members of the Corinthian church,
lie assured them that he had suffi-
cient evidence of the strife which was
going on among them.
3. Nature of the contentions (v. 12).
Their disputes were about their
teachers. Their interests were cen-
tering in their favorite ministers.
Some were for Paul, perhaps attract-
ed by his logic; some were for Apol-
los, doubtless nievsri by h's stirring
eloquence; others were for Peter.
Doubtless these were Jewish converts
who looked to Peter as their author-
ity. There were still others who hod
us their cry "back to Christ," repudi-
ating all human teachers.
4. The grounds of allegiance to
Christ (v. 13).
(1) He Is Iltwd of the whole church.
The unifying power of the body Is
the head. He raised the question, "Is
Christ divided?" The mere raising of
the question gave the answer.
(2) Redemption accomplished.
By his atoning death He has su-
preme Lordship over nil.
(3) Allegiance to Christ acknowl-
edged In baptism. By one Spirit are
we nil baptized Into one body (I Cor.
12:13).
II. Concerning Christian Ministers
(3:1-4:5).
Since the dissensions In the church
gathered around the ministers, Paul
proceeded to cure the evil by exhibit-
ing the ministerial office In Its true
light To conceive of ministers as
party leaders or teachers of philoso-
phy tends to divisions. Divisions in
the church occur when men are oc-
cupied with the messenger rather than
with the message. The cure in such a
case Is to get a right conception and
proper estimate of human teachers.
Ministers really are:
1. Servants ot God (vv. 5, 0.
They are Instruments In His hands
for the execution of His will. They
are men sent to deliver a message,
to do a definite work.
2. Ministers are equal In rank (vv.
8, '.)).
They are called by the same spirit
to teach the same truth, and there-
fore stand In the same relationship.
Official hierarchy in the church has
no foundation In the Scriptures.
3. Every minister must give nn ac-
count to God for h' work (vv. 10-21).
If he lay other foundation than
Christ he Is not a Christian minister
nt all. If he build sound doctrine on
the foundation he will receive a re-
ward. If he build false doctrine on n
true foundation he will suffer los3 und
receive punishment Sorrow und an-
guish will he to him who builds good
material upon a wrong foundation,
and likewise to him who builds poor
material upon a right foundation.
Human wisdom hns no place In the
solemn work of bulldlx.,? the church
of God,
4. Ministers are the property of the
church (vv. 22, 23).
Frequently the assumption Is that
the church Is owned by the ministers.
Ministers should be followed only as
far as they follow Christ
5. Ministers are God's stewards
(4 :l-5).
Their business Is to dispense His
truth. They do not originate the mes-
sage. God demands fidelity on their
part and He will enter into Judgment
with them as to their faithfulness.
The Cay Old Trader
Trader Horn, the aged litterateur,
was congratulated by a New York
girl reporter on the zest with which
he went the rounds of New York din-
ner parties, teas and receptions.
"Well, you see, I enjoy it all, my
girl," said the old trader. "I'm not
like the scientist.
"A lady reproached the scientist
for refusing to go out Into society.
"'It must bore you dreadfully,' she
said. 'Work, work, nothing but work
all the time.'
" Tin only bored, ma'am,' the
scientist answered, 'when being en-
tertained.' "
There is nothing more satisfactory
after a day of hard work than a line
full of snowy-white clothes. For such
results use Bed Cross Ball Blue.—Adv.
Church's Great Periods
With much diversity of opinion on
minor points, there is a general agree-
ment in dividing the history of the
church into three great periods. The
first, from the birth of Christ to the
time of Constantlne; the second, from
that epoch to the Reformation; and
third, from the Reformation to the
present time.
/
ounces
full-size
biscuits
Keeps mother out of the kitchen
Fills up hungry children/
Pleases everyone * Good for all,
TRISCUIT* The between meal wheat wafer
VISITORS WELCOME. TO ALL FACTORIES
Her Testimony Doubted
"What Is your age?"
"Twenty-two, Judge."
"I forgot to remind you, mndam,
I that you are under oath."
PEXEL is the last word
in jelly making
PEXEL always makes jelly jell. Abso-
lutely colorless, tasteless, odorless.
Unlike other products, Pexel is a pure-
fruit product—100%. Doesn't change
taste or color of most delicately fla-
vored fruit.
Pexel saves time and fuel. More
than repays 30c it costs. More jelly-
fruit, sugar and flavor aren't boiled
off because, with Pexel, the jelly is
ready for glasses as soon as it comes
to full boil. It jells by the time it is
cool. Get Pexel at your grocer's. Rec-
ipe booklet in each package. 30c«
"the Pexel Company, Chicago, III,
insures this
FOR SO tears
prevents this
fffiKS* BuSsYcuUp
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Malaria-Chills and Fever-DenGue
Censored
Mrs. Swift—This new bathing suit
of mine is a poem.
Husband—Well, it's unfit for pub-
lication.—.Sydney Bulletin.
Qualifying
"Can I rent a Hat? I have three
fretful children."
"That part will be all right. How
loud Is your loud speaker?"
MEDITERRANEAN
•a "Transylvania" sailing Jan. 30
Clark'i ~ " . " ' ' ' ~
Canary Islands, <
Morocco, Spain* Algtn...
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guides, motors, etc.
Norway-Madltarranean, Jun«29,1929; f0OO up
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KO-I'A CORPORATION. Ft. Worth,
Rt AlllCIIB, VOII-
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Includes hotel*.
CATTLE FEEDERS
Wanting Better Feed, for less money, writ®
8. A. Walden, Bo* 487, Ft. Worth, Texas.
Balesmen, Saleswomen, sell standardized busl-
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cut service. Inquiry brinKH sample outfit free.
Tho Mall Serv. Printing Co., Omaha, Nebr.
IX'MB ICR FOR SALE DIRECT TO consumer
in carloads at wholesale price. Grades guar-
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Astrology—Individual readings. Thorough,
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THE CHAMPION RAT TRAP
Tho only trap that has out-smarted t.ho rat.
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Send lfic extra for postage.
CHAMPION TRAP COMPANY
607 Gnmbel Ilnildtng - Kansas City, Mo.
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 37-1928.
Perambulating
"What lias become of the auto-
graph album?" asked Alfred.
"It is now worn as a slicker," an-
swered Klolse.
Of course you're
going to hear
Hoover and Smith
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 38, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 18, 1928, newspaper, September 18, 1928; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341246/m1/3/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Atlanta Public Library.