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Show Travelogue Skit Pleases Crowd In the year's work set out for the Junior girls of the Y. L. M. I. A., a clever and interesting program was given by the Junior girls at a novel travelogue party at the Centerfield ward meeting house Tuesday evening j of last week. The affair was arranged i and carried out under the direction of Mrs. Jack Salmon, who is visiting j here from Oakland. Many nations were represented by members giving a song, recitation or some act depicting depict-ing the nation they represented. At the opening, two Swedish solos were given, one by C. X. Peterson and one by E. L. Swalberg. Other numbers on the program follow: Scotland, Scotch dance by Junior' girls; England, solo by Miss Eula Fjeldsted; Japan, song by children of Mr. and Mrs. Suey Kimura; Hawaii, song by Junior girls in native costumes; cos-tumes; Hawaiian stringed trio, Henry Christiansen, Merrill Allred and Far-rdl Far-rdl Anderson; Mexico, Spanish dance, Phyllis Jensen; France, French dialogue dia-logue by Malissa Newton, Minona Salmon, Sal-mon, Jean Fjeldsted and Joyce Sanders; San-ders; Ireland, solo by Mrs. Eva Jensen, Jen-sen, and instrumental trio by Bert Felt, Sterling Haws and'Niel Buchan-j an; Russia, Russian piano solo, Mrs.! Gilbert Fjeldsted; Germany, talk and songs in German language, J. Clayton Watts; Africa, talk by Byron Peterson, recently returned from a mission in that country; Holland, dance by Letha Hansen and Louise Rosenberg; Indian song by Glen Myrup and pantomime by Mama Jensen and Barbara Salmon Sal-mon ( America, song, "Carry On," by Vanguards and Junior girls. An impressive number on the closing clos-ing program was the raising of the flag by Boy Scouts, under the direction direc-tion of Mel Anderson and Alvin Barlow. Bar-low. The concluding number was the singing of "Star Spangled Banner," in which all attending joined. |