Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 3 Oct 1929, p. 30

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ho I Ne N HNRHET oi e mt agee > Electric Auto Heaters gasoline can be poured over the heating surface without danger of ignition. Paper and dead leaves will smoke and burn brown but will not fire. It is the safest and best Auto Heater on the _ BR S. UDELL ORDER YOURS TODAY AND BE ALL SET FOR COLD WEATHER ‘The 350 Watt Heater will take care of all other cars. excea} twin sixes and the larger trucks, and the 500 Watt Heaters will take care of them. This Heater is operated from the lamp socket in the garage. It is placed either under the car or under the hood. It will preventâ€" freezing, the motor and grease and make starting easy. NO FIRE HAZARD You‘ll be glad to have one of these heaters when your thermometer goes down aroundâ€"the zero s se : s ____ _ J| solve one of the most serious aspects oTR 2 > i i * â€"_â€"â€" || of rural education, that of supplying B % proper teaching. At present much ‘ is j of therural instruction is given by _ * j one teacher for all grades who usually ; se e n ‘‘has had no more than a high school . education, and often has not comâ€" ~K pleted primary school education. 540 WOODLAWN AVYENUE â€"â€" GLINQOE.,ILLINOIS â€"FTelephone Glencoe 1691 250 wgtt Andeloo Auto Heaters. 350 watt Andelco Auto Heaters. 500 watt Andelco Auto Heaters (We will re}:lme Free any heater that proves â€"â€"defective within two years) ____â€" _ maximum heat of the Andelco G.E. Strip â€"â€" ANDEL & COMPANY 1680â€"86 N. LA MON AYVENUE~â€" â€" CHICAGO UNRESERVEDLY GUARANTEED oxpser 250 Watt for Fords and Chevrolets ZERO WEATHER ANDEL CO mew e te ons ECONOMICAL ...908.00 ..$6.75 ..8$7.50 THEâ€"PRESâ€"8 sic and art, the storyâ€"telling proâ€" grams, and everything they are missâ€" ing under the oneâ€"teacher system. ~â€" Wide Subject Range â€" "There is almost nothing in geoâ€" x:ltphy., history, travel 'Ed other fields thatâ€"we cannot give â€"them Over the radio. The teacher would not be reduced to a mere dialâ€"turner.> She wouldâ€"simply coâ€"ordinate the work of the class room with the radio proâ€" grams. % *"*Much of _ the waste and inefficiâ€" ency which is inherent in the oneâ€" teacher system would be eliminated." A ‘poet once said that a little learnâ€" ing is a dangerous thing, but it isn‘t any more dangerous than a lot of Mabel Carney, professor of â€"rural education . at Teachers â€" college, â€"Colâ€" umbia university, New York City, radio experimentation at ‘the college, are â€"interested in theâ€"movement.==>=> f Offers Opportunity â€" â€"â€" _ â€"â€" portunity for teaching a wide range of subjects is the statement of Proâ€" fessor Carney. She said: ag "The ~programs â€"must be â€"definite. There must be lots of emphasis, as I see it, on appreciation. Farm chilâ€" dren are the most needy of all school children, and they are the most negâ€" letted. Radio will bring them the things that will enrich their lives. Test Lessons to Be Sent Over Air This Winter; Experiâ€" ment Outline "Only one in four farm children goes on to high school, while 44 per cent of city children continue their education. We must bring these PLAN TO BROADCAST _ FOR RURAL SCHOOLS fitted for their work, when they should ‘be the most efficient. Arrangements have been made for LX NN OU NGING â€"NEWâ€"â€"LURBKREâ€"B ULEDENGâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"~â€" TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8th, 1929 "~â€"~LUNCHEON AND DINNER _ â€" 1545 South St. Johns Avenue . . Ravinia, Illinois® â€" the opening of the omeâ€"1 C2a oom in the Anovine s ared mereeneP owners in the hereafter.~~The collécâ€" tion has just been placed on exhibiâ€" tion in the Egyptian hall at Field Muâ€" seum of Natural History. at the museum are examples made of painted wood, clay, fayence, painted limestone, terra cotta and costly blueâ€" glazed ware. Shown also are tiny coffins in which â€"the ushebtis were placed, and a mold in which the clay ones were made. . Most of the muâ€" seum‘s ushebtis were collected by the late Edward E. Ayer, and many were presented to the institution by him andâ€"Mrs. < Ayer.. Others are: gifts from Stanley Field, president of the museum, Henry J. Patten, and Charâ€" les B. Pike. They are displayed in a new type of exhibition case with specially designed concealed ‘lighting. read in essence, ~°U thou ushebtl, if Osiris X ‘(name of owner) is assigned to do any work that is done in the other world, â€"‘Lo, here am I,‘ shalt thou sa&y." â€" :. © s t & It is getting so if you still are alive on Monday you are suspected of havyâ€" ing gone to church on Sunday.â€" Cinâ€" â€"The occupants of the Nile valley have since paleolithicâ€"times been deâ€" pendent chiefly upon agriculturé, and henceâ€"the hereafter was early visualâ€" ized as a farmer‘s paradise where grain raised by the dead would grow twelve feet tall, according to anthro= pologists at the museum. But as Egypt‘s power and wealth increased, theâ€"thoughtâ€"ofâ€"even â€"such â€"wellâ€"reâ€" distasteful. > Kn * _..~=___(Provide Extra Bodies _ _ Priestly magic inspired the use of portraitâ€" statues : to . provide â€"extra bodies that the soul might never lack a â€"home,â€" and â€"byâ€"2000â€"â€"B.C., the â€"idea had developed that these little figures, made of wood, clay, wax andâ€" other materials, placed in theâ€"tombsâ€"of the dead, would act as magic substitute works. The figures bore the name and titles of the deceased, and often The ancient Egyptians looked forâ€" ward to a "lazy man‘s Paradise" in their conception of life beyond the grave. How they hoped to avoid. any form of toil for their souls is illuâ€" strated in a cllection of "ushebtis" or Egyptians Hoped to ~â€"â€" Loaf in Hereafter; â€" Made Mummy "Slaves" In the large collection of ushebtis MARION FORNALK Thursday, October 3, 1929 omm aroth 430 e ies se nmart tz k en ailfecs s y renonce n neâ€"nsl

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