First, since you now have it in hand, try turning it on and see if you see anything on the screen when it warms up. If you see a dot in the middle you turn knobs, the "time base" is a good one if it is flickering. The time per division, time base, will increase, allow you to see higher frequencies, as you turn it clockwise. There is a "Position" control for each channel that moves the trace up and down. And one I can't remember that spreads the trace across the screen.
If you get a green light for each channel that is a good start.
Then, where you live you might have a place that sells a BNC to two alligator clips cable. This is far less sophisticated than a real scope probe. But it will tell you if you can see a signal. Try clipping onto the AC of your heater wires. It will be AC floating on DC so AC couple the lead. There is usually a 3 position switch that is labeled AC/Gnd/DC. That is AC coupling (blocks any DC), grounded (gives a flat line across the screen) and DC coupling where you can see AC signals that float on DC.
Using the AC coupling first allows you to see the AC wave that should be centered around zero. Adjusting the "Volts Per Division" control for the channel you are looking at will make the wave larger. Since it is 60 Hz you will need to turn the time base down, CCW.