Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 18 Jul 1929, p. 32

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,1. . “1.4.2! A to start reading the new serial beginning August 1 Why CADILLAC can, and Does Render a better Sam '64 Silent Shift Clllf'aiuainnaawtuvston th, tho foundation stone of Cadillac Nation-will. Service are placed the fund-menu! lad exclusiv- Minnie-l advantage: of 1929 Cadillac. India " "on. And the” are surmounmd by. distinct beautyof “no and color that wmpletel the Cadillac program for tho harm nontuthfsctionof Cadillac and hSallo owgen. Evanston Branch 1810 Ridge Ave. CADILLAC MOTOR cAkcoMPAiii? SOULS for SALE DONT FAIL ADILLAC and La Salle again leap ahead of other C cars with a marvelous deveiopmrnt--the Silent Shift Transmission. You will find this so far ahead of stone age transmissions that you’ll enjoy a new pleasure in driving your Cadillac or La Salle . . . a new convenience andsafety in all tratrie and hill- climbing. -Byt, thrte if itttliipip_rw, to learn. The Silent Shift operates exactly the same as the old style transmission. "V Permits Unalloyed A Driving Pleasure 10 Nation-wide "srviee-cadiu, Service. 8 Phehmgtic control principle applied to‘Fishcr bodies assures quietness. " Chromium plated exterior nickel parts provide permanent sheen. " WondeiTurr'r ~(:asyl'sgeering. _ " T Adjustable front miat places brake and T (oily-itch pedals withig easyfcach of any river. _ ’ T -r. . a Security-Flaw Glass in all windows. I Silent Shift Transmission permits n..-_ -L_AA~A __ I _ - - gear changes at any if); GiiiiTi ' clashing. Highland Park Branch _ T 108 No. First St. Dujgzx Four-Wheel Brakeo-a touch of t pedal stops Your car. , An even more powerful and smoother- gunning Cadilla'c - built, 90 - degree, means Safety. Smut-traces and style, inside and ma. THE (3888' a . " A) we Lis Temple is even today' _.fre- quented as a shrine by the sick. "The: patients shae a receptacle filled with" bamboo rods, each numbered, until one drops out of the container. The number of this rod corresponds to a printed prescription which the priest in attendance hands to the supplicant, who takes it to an apothecary to be filled. There are a hundred prescrip- tions for men, a hundred for women and a hundred for women and chil- dren, displayed on the wall of the temple, and they are supposed to tn. elude remedied for all diseases. A hunter; in New Jersey the-other day was indicted for taking a pot shot at the Los Angeles with his shot gun. Maybelle thought she was a flying squirrel. ' ‘We know many a fellow who would be Utisfted with his job if he tonld get somebody else to work'it for him. or Lu. Tung-pin, a historical person- age of the eighth century A.D., farm. ed ‘as a sage, recluse and performer of miracles/declares Dr. Luster. Exalted as Immortal pr After his deatthu was worshipped by many people,Dut according to cus- tom his deifidatitin required official recognition' by an emperor. This did not come until seVeral centuries later, when a- emperor who had Suffered much at the hands of careless. har- bers. was visited by the_shade of Lu and given a painless shave accord- ing to a legend related, by Dr. Lau- fer. In gratitude-the emperor ex- tended recognition cf Lu as a god, and he became one of the "Eight Immort- als" of Taoist religion, and the pa; iron-of the Chinese tomiorial profess, sion. The robe which the museum now posseses was’use‘d to drape his statue for his birthday festivals- in the temple erected for him at Peking. The lining is stamped with four characters which translate into "made for thepalace of Lu Tsu.y Lu Tsu is the god for whom the robe wus made, who became a sort of patron saint iif_ Chinese barbers,. actors and others, according to Dr. Berthold Laufer, curator of anthropology, Who is one mf, the foremost scholars in,_0rienf,ql sagbjects.~ This god is 1tiev%upt of the 1ieiticatlorl ofthe Patriarch Lu‘ Ctiir.iiyire, 'iiiiittrrhiCfimij'iV." _ 'TTri'r"iiti'r"iiTi; is decorated with an ornamental form of the character "shou," meaning ‘flong -ttttrtitr- -taitieiiTiy Timid 96, "rd, peated about a thousand times. - -The robe is made of the finest Silk woven exélusively for the emperors of old China. It is purple in color, with a black border, ,ptClirinirv2t This unique and treasurered gar- ment was presented to the .museum jointly by .Hertry M. Wolf and-Martin C. Schwab of Chicago. An Imperial silk robe used to drape the image of the ancient Chinese god of barbers, actors, jugglers and ma- gicians during periodic ceremonies, and believed to be the only robe of its kind ever brought from China. to the United States, has been pieced on exhibition at Field Museum of Natur. al History, if was announced by Ste.. phen C. 'Simms. director. ANCIENT CHINESE ROBE IN MUSEUM Was Imperial Wrap for Image of God Is Belief; History of Use and Origin . Thursday/July Mi, 1929 'rhe_qualifs ior Members gate Golf ch and theist day. The se JtiTy 22, the s 24, and the fit li.trn M. Gear Inge of Deer! for the winr club also Iriw ner. Indieatr will be an it cut. m"' In "Plantg Metcalf begar '0rds'of healin oned by his hippocratic o? ival, student b required by m fraternities as told of the with the heal that failed' e, stition. "The carry. myths; silent speech beauty, rest, t exemplified it of the hostes sunshine and after the met Mrs.Frederi president of 1 nois, tcld of Central West April cf nex vices of the I in the Stadil n'rar Paulina viously .thto teen held in New femur exposition, st playground ec, The _ outsta ure of the af fer Bradford] per on “The lad its inspir, Orthodox chur land, last yea intense 15d M; for. the. ingn saeees2t?ry to Junior Me at B "‘Kn0w1edge Vhen it is us ch new ideas case was a p ful paper for A guest fr, the garden I" Pickford’s. Thursday, J ut Ravinia G The Ravini: Mrs. C. C. Bt Deerfield, is held' the, July ful garden C the tallést , this locality, i the interesti: while, ‘airpla Fifty-five gu Wilmette, Hi and Bannoekt clubs were p1 'quate space an opportuni for the-Gard

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