ord for Mrs. August Anderson of Osterâ€" man avenue has been visiting her sister in Duluth, Minn. $ Mr. and Mrs. George Sticken Jr. and daughter, Lavina, Mts. Russell Batt and children were Sunday dinâ€" ner guests at the Elmer Roll home in ‘Chicago. , + Dr. W._F. Weir organized a class in church administration at the Ciâ€" cero Presbyterian church last eveâ€" ning and will be instructor of the class, a ten hour course, for five sueâ€" cessive Wednesday evenings. Miss Lois Fehr, a former Deerâ€" field resident, was one of the soloists on the Sack‘s Amateur Hour on Sunâ€" day on the radio. â€" She is a ‘niece of Mrs. Chester Wessling and Mrs. Isaac Rapp. â€" t An Outdoor Cafeteria You Should Like To Operate THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1988 of ‘the death of an uncle. Mrs. Glenn Greenwood was called to LaFayette, Ind. Jast week because Holding your bird feeding station clientele will depend on the menu and the service ~rendered. Many birds spending the winter in our région will find food that you may place in feeders for them. SVA â€".Juncos, tree sparrows, cardinals and jays will be most common visiâ€" tants. These birds are seed caters Put a large tin flange around the feeding box base and it will hold off many. squirrels who might devour the food. Attach your ‘wire suet container to a limb, hang it about eight feet above the ground. Squirâ€" rels will not disturb food placed in that manner. ¢ Aids to Amateur Photographers Amateur photographers can beneâ€" fit and get good pictures with a novel feeding station that has proâ€" ven to get birds close to windows. Suspend a heavy wire from a tree, a 100 feet from your honso: to your window,. level, and about eight feet above the ground. At the far end of the wire suspend a feeding shelf or box on a pulley. * Attach;>a fine wire to the feeder which \mg extend back to your window. Placing a wire suet container on this feeder and my suggested bird feed in the shelter will attract birds, When you ‘have a good number visiting it each day you are ready by the deception to secure your photographs. â€" Each day. draw the feeder two or three feet closer to your window. The birds will not be so shy of the house due to this gradual change in locaâ€" tion. â€" Soon the birds will be feeding so close portrait pictures can be taken. f Surnflower pads intact always add to a feeding station. Try half orâ€" anges on your feeding shelf, cardinâ€" als relish them. . Students w :Boy and Girl scouts can begin bird study with fine results by operâ€" ating a good feeding shelf. You will get close up views of the more than twenty kinds of birds living here during the winter months. £] Protection Against Squirrels Hecketsweiler Studio 7 S. St. Johng Avenue Phone Highland Park 435 Read The Wantâ€"Ads It‘s time to think about Christmas and the friends on your gift list. Your piaoto- graph is the most personal, the most apâ€" preciated of all gifts. a by Jim. Mooney MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TODAY Avoid the worries of late shopâ€" ping for distinctive gifts by sitting now for yourâ€"portrait. Photographers «_ ___â€"_ Book Notes $s BENJAMIN | FraNkiin, by Cafl Doren. A: Van Doren has deâ€" voted about ten years to the writing of this life of the boy who walked the ‘streets of Philadelphia munchâ€" ing on a loaf of bread, who rose from printer‘s devil to the New World‘s first great publishér, who invented stoves for his compatriots‘ warmth and designed lightning rods for their safety. Later this same boy turned out to be the executive who gathered supplies for Bradâ€" dock‘s «march into the wilderness, the sage who signed himself Poor Richard, the â€"diplomat who raised a loan in France to gain his country‘s freedom, the patriot who shared in farming the Declaration of Indeâ€" pendence, the Constitution, and the Treaties with Britain and France. Much of the material used in the book has never been told before and older well known stories eoncerning Franklin are here given a new inâ€" terpretation. STARCRAFT, by William Barton and Joseph M. Joseph, â€" Starcraft difâ€" fers from other books on amateur astronomy in that it not only gives a detailed guide to the study of the stars, but tells how the reader can build his own instruments for makâ€" ing observations. Instructions are includéd for making that most useâ€" ful andâ€"to the amateurâ€"most covâ€" eted of all astronomical aids, a simâ€" ple reflecting telescope. It is not necessary actually to construct the various devices suggested in order to enjoy the book, for it offers and exceptionally cléar and interesting general discussion of the stars for the naked eye to observe. : Lir® IN aAn Aig CaSTLE, by Frank M. Chapmn. Dr. Chapman‘s air castle is a tiny cabin in the Panama Canal Zone where nature can be obâ€" served in all its most fascinating forms. . In this book he has set down in intriguing fashion some of the strange and marvelous things he has observed in the plant and aniâ€" mal life of Barro Colorado, during the many years he has been visiting the island. a PatcuEs or S$ZnuicHt, by Lord Dunsany. Even among Irishmen, Dunsany is something of a legend. The tales and plays for whigh he is loved and famous have revealed alâ€" most nothing of the man and his life. Now at long last the legend comes to lifeâ€"in a delightful and intimate autobiography which brings one down through the war years. Here are the memoirs of a roving spirit, a poet‘s account of a poet‘s imagination, told in the terms of the reality which has fed and fired it. ‘â€" Missionary Society Meets . The Womans Missionary Society of the â€"First United Evangelical church will meet Thursday afterâ€" noon, December 8, at the home of Mrs. Nels Dahl, 877 Ridgewood Your Typewriter Man LIBRARY Larson‘s Stationery . _ Store Highland Park 567 E. K. CATTON Tells of Progress Made By Deerfield Recreation Project A survey of the work of the Play school at the Deerfield Grammar school has just been completed by the recreation officials of the Works Progress Administration. At the present time 47 youngsters are enâ€" rolled, 27 coming during the mornâ€" ing session, and 20 during the aftâ€" ernoon. The program is carried on as part of the Recreation Project and the school, and is sponsored by the Grammar school. . This program is supported firanâ€" cially by the Recreation Project, all salaries being paid from their funds. A director, assistant, and a partâ€" time janitor are used in connection with the work. : Arts and crafts exâ€" periences aré given the children by the crafts experts of the project, and the educational direction, testing, and health care are under the direcâ€" tion of the school officials. A wide range of experiences is offered the children of the Pltï¬ school. Weather : pornlttin& first part of the period of four péâ€" riods of the daily session is !'l'g over to outside play, supervised by director and Assistant, and nm: and construction activities mhol This is in ‘m‘mm&ï¬ st eduâ€" cational practice, w holds that beginning children should be introâ€" duced slowly into organized school situations. From a health standâ€" point, this procedure is widely recâ€" ommended. After the first period, children come into thd; room for a period of rest and quiet, which is followed by a midâ€"morning lunch. Here, and at.several times during the day, the children are brought together for digeussions, planning, stories or songs. These periods serve to prepare the child for the kind of group work he will experiâ€" ence in the regular school situation. On some days children work at arts and crafts with the wide variety of materials available in the room. Clay, water «olors, crayons, pn¢ils, EBE PR E88 eutâ€"outs, and simple tools are availâ€" able for the child‘s use. On Other occasions, the children go into the school gym for music, or for rythms, which are worked out under the diâ€" rection of the school music superâ€" . Simple plays and games are ned by the children, and later in he school year these will be fn- sented to the rest of the school in the lower grade assembly. Also on hand for the children are a wide range of books, about 35 to 50: Preâ€" readers, picture books, and color books, suitable for their afe, are in the play school room. â€"Through these materials, an interest and readiness for reading is developed in the child. At each session, a story or part of a story is read to the children, and this is discussed by the children, and after~acted out. Music experiences are given through o:m musical games, rythms, piano tunes, and records. Each child is urged to join in the fun of singing. The session is usually closed with a group discussion or story, the acâ€" tivities of the day are talked over, ;m;eplam for the following day are made. t# ‘â€" The play !eh})oi has as its main purpose that of giving a child soâ€" } h‘ï¬rmneez.vnfli athg dren, I &n interest in the kind of things done in school, and acclimatâ€" the child to the school. A high e play school and kindergarten provide all of the above trainâ€" luz and in addition the the ideal kindergarteri, under the direction of a trained supervisor, would offer cerâ€" tain educational services not possiâ€" ble in a play school, such as psycholâ€" ogictal> adjustment, the learning of beginning reading techniques, and social adjustments of children who have personal peculiar problems. However, to try to approach, as far @s possible the complete program the school does offer the play school educational supervision and provides a testing program to diagnose needs and abilities of play school children. Also monthly classes and discussions are held for the directors of play schools to present new techniques and methods for their consideration. HAPPY DAYS AHEAD #or "James Alvin Cobb, unless I have something n@v to eook on pretty soon, you won‘t have a Christmas dinger !" "I know, Anne, you do deserve a new gas range . A; I‘d like to get you one for Christmas . . . but cag we afford it?" * | 5 "Well, Myrna and Joe just picked out a modery gas range last Thursday . . . they‘re still bragging the money they saved during that factory coâ€"operative sale at the North Shore Gas Company . . . and the is North Shore Ja4 "S.â€"aâ€"aâ€"y, those prices and terms sound mighty in .. . guess I‘ll take you up on it! We‘ll be down t« and pick out our Christmas gas range." > j Let‘s call now and get the dope on that sale, FOR THE BIGGEST CHRISTMAS IN YOUR FAMILY ‘%s"ron. SELECT A MODERN GAS RANGE, NOW, DURING OUR MONEYâ€"SAVING FACTORY COâ€"OPERATIVE SALE T. P. Clark, District Supt. To a large extent, the Juccess of iis; project depends up@h the coâ€" 0 :0f parents. ($here are %‘ ny Activities in which the further help of parents would by appreciâ€" ated. The Play school Sisks that those who would like t work in some way with the childien notify the school, and arrangeigents will be made. Further, visitd‘s are inâ€" vited to all sessions, and aanferences with the director may be nged through the school office, [ is hoped that patrons will ‘visit, Mand give suggestions that will aid Th the full development of the progr{%n LOCALLY MAN If need of more t_h’;;lmzo::-i'-?-!z HOUSEHMOLD FINANCE 4tm rporatson lower at Hbusehold Finance hne: Ontario 7110 M A N ED OFFICES IN.PRINCIPAL CHTIES Hear A. GUEST Wednesdays, CBS Also the Reveille 6:45 a. m. daily WBBMH Bank Building, Second Floor _‘ Runs Her Own Fire Department! How to Live Two Lifetimes in One! Two of the Many Interesting Artiâ€" cles in The American Weekly, the Magazine / Distributed with the SsUNDAY CHICAGO HERALD AND EXAMINER. RELIABLE LAUNDRY DRY CLEANING CO. Phone K. P. 178 PAGE ELEVEN