Illinois News Index

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 4 Jan 1934, p. 41

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*4 R0OM FU1RN. APTý., REAL FIRE- place. Electric refrlgeratlon. Reason- able. 2 mnonths from Jan. 1 or 15. . Near sehools and transpor. Wiinetka 3456. -- 9.;L1735 q).p 17 FOR RICNT-HOU8ES FOR SALE OR FOR RE N'I* 640 'ABBOTSFORD ROAD EAST KENILWORTH Outstariding renitai only 1% blks. to Sears school and New Trier High. 3 farnily bedrms., sewing rmn., and 1 bath, oil heat, stove, electric refrig. Can he :rented. as of Feb., lst for (>fly $65. Kenilworth Realty Co. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS SHERIDAN RÉ). "NO MAN'S LAND" 97LTN35ltc 5 RM. BUNGALOW WITH CLOSED- in *back. porch and sun parlor. Hot _________ air hit. Gtood location. 1011 Willow, -W--%innetka. Key at 1004 Ash. Win- netka 1953. 97LTN35-ltp) 98 FOR RENT--FURr4IUHED HOUSES 6 RMS.,f 2 BATHS, LAV, ATTACHED garage, sleeping porch,. for 3.or 4 moiiths. tReasonable. Ph. wiin. 153î. 98LTN35-ltli ROM,3 BEDRO0MS, 2BTS Near Hubbard Woods schools and transportation. 011 burner. After Jan. 1, 6 months or year. Write B-133,, Box 4é, Wilmette, 111. 9iLTN32-itp s WANTED TO RENT-HOUSES' LIST YOUR HOMES NOWFOR AlAY 1ST REXTAI, ANN MORELAND. 66:ý Vernbn Ave. Glencoe :ý05 104 FOR RENT--sToRIES AND OFFICES LARGE OFFICE WITH STORAG1], roorn in rear. Alain Street location in Willnette. -Write B- 139, Box 40, WVilmette. 104=T35-1t]) 11 FOR SALE-HOUSES WITH SPRING COMING THIS BEAUTIFU HALF-CE F fruit trees, IIIacs and tulips wvilt appeal to ail loyers of lowers. 7 rooin house, one. block to lake, it North Shore town. Quetsreet. Aral bargain at >$16,000. NORTH WESTER'N REALTY A-NI) BUILIIN(t' 528 Davis St., Evaso Uni. ý500 W IJIt X~~IioeKnwort Li "O. 129LTN35-Ite FLtRNISHINGIS 0F 7 ROOM HOUSE. to close an estate. Reaqonable. Phone WlVlmette 1644. 19T3-t BARAINS - 2 each. 1 Italiane urns $50 eacli. Pl me 1 * IaIL'rN.3o1tp 1-026 -CHEVROLET COUP I.-, GoOD MO- tor and tirei. Detroit Jéel stove, 4 burner, oven regulator, f'air coni- dition. Gl.eoe 1339. 131I.TN35-Itp WHEEL. CHAIR VÉRY REASONABLE PHONE WILMETTE 1491 131LTN33-tfp TNNO YELLOW SILK QUILTED BED- slreads in the rnaking, one haîf done, iay, be seen by a ppointment. One sniail white-marbie mantlepiece. Two brass fenders., One regulation Morse ba by scales, taking weight to 50 flàs. Sîiall collection of old mnechanical banks* Tel. Glencoe 1324. _________ _________ 131LTýN35-.lte FOR SALE-ENCLISÏÎ COACH BAIBY carniage, wicker go-cart, baby's play yard and baby scale. Phone Glencoe 690.1S1LT2N35-1tc ma3, wTD. TO UUY-MInCEULANErOUS Seil Your Used Clothes!1 H-ighest prices -pald for ail klnds of men's used ciotiles and shoes. ALso wonien's fur coats. Cali anywhere. No order too small or too large. A. Martin Uni. 0347 132LTN35-ltîi OLD GOLD WANTED) PROPER CASH- VALUE A LWMAYS îaid for old gold, silver, platinutu, dental crown's. L. S. Smielting -Works (Thie Old Reliable> 39 S. State *St., corne' Moroe,4th floor. 132Ll'N3â-lte .-1p for Sehools I i Present Crisisi rhe federal government ivill beý asked to appropriate înoney for tlie aid of schools in the presenit educà- tio nal crisis, according.to*woird re- ceived this week by ýMrs. B. F., Lang- worthy of Winnetka, a consultant of the Joint *Commission on the Emer- gency in Education, appointed by the National Educati .on association and the Department of Superinten- dants. Following close upon the an- nouncement-s-lIhat more than 2,000 rural schoocls hadý shut their doors, and that, thé schools of some large cities will 6e forced*to close by March 1, a- nationwide campaign for emer- gency relief to public education was launched in. Washington at a con- ference of educators at which bot h the joint Commission :on the Emer- gency in Education and the legislia- tive commission of'the National Ed- uicatlQfl association were represented.' Relief wlll be sought either through congressional or administrative action at the eanliest pisýhJeomîent. Particl- pating in the effort to prevent the corn- plete collapse of the Amierican public' schools, are forty-eight etate education associations with a total tnembership of 600,000 teachers and school officers. Reports placed before the recent Washington conference showed a gradu- ai, decline in educational opportunity throughout the entire nation, and in- cluded accounts of pitiful sacrifices' ot teachers and ret to provide their -'Qu of every four cities has al- ready shortened its school terni this yen r. The ternis lu. practlcally every great Amerîcan city, are today. one or two mronths shorter tkan- they were seventy to one hundred ' years ago.. The nation is llterally stepping back into the educational opportunities of the early nineteenth century. Onue out of -every, four teachers lis no*. belnig paid a rate less.than, that estab- Ilshed for factory hands. under the Blanket Code of the Federal adminis- tration. Chlldren are being herded Into schoolroomhs.under conditions lu whlch individual instruction lis, Impossible' The recent ban' on chlld labor, by the. New Deal liais freed many addltlonal chlldren who expect a chance to continue their schoollng, and lu mnany etates are re-. qulred by law to do so. Twenty-five thousand teachers have: been dropped from the sehools, whlle .a. million more p>upils have corne Into- theni. The action taken by the Washlng ton conference follows the endorenient of the fundamiental principlesof Federal -Re- lief to echools as an Integral part of the ecovery programi, by leaders of such civic groups as the National Coni- gress of Parnts andi Teachers antheUi Amierican Federation of Labor. Wlth the assistance of ail organlzed groups intereeted in the welfare of chlldren, the educators hope to secure action by Con- gress before the echools of the nation are closed and e'ducational efficiency le Wreeked-- .Draftlng of, detaile of Congresejorual legislation le now under way. The pro- Posais considered follow the recornmen- dations-of National Conference on the Finlancing of Education which met lu New York City last sunimer, the Na- tional Advisory Comimittee on Educa- d1on, and other national groupe. OQie.item inuthe rÔnosed pnramii of delinquent. taxes and sehool funds frozen ln closed banke. Resolutions were paesed commending efforts whlch have already been made to aid the echools by, Federal Relief Administrator Harry L. Hopkiýns and Secretary Harold L.-Ickes through the Civil Works, Public Works * and Federal Relief administrations.. The conference concluded, however, that recent data on the current edtmcatlonial situation Indi- cato further .need for emergency relief rroni federal sources. In order more adequately to meet the emergency. the cne neonaàri WILMBTTe 3Z UNiVHSJTy 7317 SHOP through'.the cla!àsifie WHETHER you're shopping for materials or services, you'11 find whai- voïi want iniWrî MF1TFP ASK FOR AN AD-TAKER

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