Show at Sow an act reap hatilt tow a habit ' J wu We first make our hablta and then they make ua reap character SALT LAKE CITY SUNDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 4 I 5 1932 CLEVER DANCE DRAMA GIVEN DY SUGARHOUSE CHILDREN ' nv y vc Among the closing programs given by the va rtous playgrounds at tlie end of the summer season the one at Sugarhouse was unique and interesting Based upon all the old familiar nursery rhymes and fairy tnles it offered the children plenty of opportunity for clever costumes pretty songs and both group and solo dances Every child who had attended tlie dancing classes regularly during tha summer had a pait “Tlie Old Woman Who Lived In a Shoe" furnished the motif for one scene In the gioup pictured are (left to right) front row: Margery Cornwall Evelyn Olson Marion Heywood Manlvn Steed Virginia Jolley Maxine Pearson LnRue McCarry Virginia Jongsma Fiances Olson Donna Hampshire Lorraine Johnson: back row Naomi Anderson Shirley Steed Phyllis Lund Dorothy Olaivtl 'o’v-- riA Now School Days Offer Splendid Chance for Club With the beginning of school the meeting of old and new friends the adopting of a regular schedule of life once more we are apt to look about ui for something with which we can bind our dearest friends more closely to us some war to provide regular entertainment during the long winter days and some method of getting done the things we like to do outside of school There is one answer to all these The Knighthood of requirements Youth circle Look about you and pick out a few boys and girls who already belong to the club or choose two or three congenial youngsters and get them to (Continued on Put Two) Read Book About Holland — Holland aa a land of quaint little houses and curious people in wooden shoes or on silver skates is well known to our boys and git Is But the modern Holland with boys and girls dressed much as we are with airplanes in the sky with young men studying to be pilots and with all the business and bustle of ambitious cities is less familiar Anne Merriman Peck and Enid Johnson have tried in “Wings Over Holland” to present a true picture of Holland as it is today Its cities are more or less like ours its childien are not strangers at all But of corn se to be a true picture there must be included the quaint villages the traditional festivals and the strange costumes that are so much a part of this unusual country “Wings Over Holland" then Is a fine book for boys and girls of 9 or 10 ckildi en of tha same age as Hendrik the little hero of tlie story Buzzin’ Round With Buzz — a These little people will love Henduk and Welhelmma and the old grandfather who brings such splendid presents from Java They will enjoy Hendrik's adventures And all the time they will get a true idea of the strangely fascinating country where wooden shoes are still worn sometimes even though wonderful airplanes swoop above the wearers “Wings Over Holland” is a Macmillan book and is recommended for children of the third and fouitli grades TRIOLET Vacation days are past Which were filled with fun and joy Now school days are here at last Vacation days are past Oh they went so very fast Being enjoved by each girl and boy Vacation davs are past Which were filled with fun and joy AMY NAKAS1UMA Salt Lake Play Centers Help Children Sew for School! Getting ready for school is not quit the problem to mothers that It used to be before the Salt Lake plays grounds undertook the task of teaching the girls how to make their own clothes during the summer vacation period Now the days that were spent In grumbling because there was nothing to do are devoted to happy profitable hours with a needle and scissors and sewing machine At the fashion show given toward the end of the summer season at Lib eity park such a variety of school dresses was shown that visitors wera astounded There were neat tailored stiles for the junior high school girl with pai ty frocks and pajamas to add (Contlnufd an Pa Two) By Arval Groven |