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Show MONDAY EVENING, MAY 2, 1921 MAY DAY TO BE OBSERVED Postponed Assembly at the High School Set for Tomorrow The May day assembly scheduled I for today at the Ogden High school H was postponed until Tuesday accord- ing to announsement made today by Principal A. M. Merrill of the high school. Ballet dances and other nov- I elty features will be listed on the I program tomorrow morning and will ! be presented by girls of the physical education classes. Seniors of the school will journey to I Logan Friday afternoon where they will be entertained by students of the I Utah Agricultural college. BANQUET WEDNESDAY The domestic science department of j 'he high school will entertain the 1 members of the board of education at I ;t banquet in the school cafeteria Wednesday evening. Supt. W. Karl Hopkins and Mrs. Hopkins, President and Hill's. Wade Johnson and members of the board of education will'be in at- tcndance. Principal and Mrs. A. M. .Merrill, Mrs. Parley Norseth, Mrs. Gertrude Coolidge, Miss Grace Atkinson, Viola Clancy and Miss Bertha Wolf will also attend. TO PICK CANDIDATES The primaries for the student body election Will be held at the high H school Tuesday. The candidates for president are: Ralph Nye, Vernon Mattson, George Whipple and Kenneth Hess. For vice president Kate Fenton and Herbert Adams are the Vai'flidates. Phillip Ring and Charlotte Terry are the candidates for see- vetary. The finals \uil- be held Wednesday. Today's Horoscope Sept 6th You who are born this day have a joyous nature, and a calm, obliging character wnich, while it may not be forceful, is nevertheless of much influence in a very effective way. The life is fortunate and the ideas lofty, with a turn toward music and, poetry. There is some danger of a loss of heritage through no fault of your own. Walter ' Today's Horoscope Sept 12th This nature is rather abrupt, but intensely genuine. "There may be a ack of suavity and the mind may >e severely critical, but there is an jlement of sincerity which will command the respect of all acquaintances. There is much love of co'untry: 'life and sports, and the native will probably do better there than Wfcen confined between citv walls. ' v 1 FEARFUL CRASH OF TWO AUTOS INJURES THREE George Whipple In Hospital After Collision At Intersection As the result of an automobile collision at the intersection of Quincy avenue and Twenty-fifth street Wednesday at midnight, George Whipple, 27, of 548 Twenty- fourth street, was in a semi-conscious condition in the Dee hospital today. He suffered a fractured skull and other injuries. Others who figured in the accident and were injured were J. C. Hoskins, 26, of 2017 Washington avenue, cuts on arms and shoulders, not of a serious nature, and Eddie Salt, 23, of Huntsville, arms and legs bruised. The accident was investigated by Detectives C. E. Noble and C. K. Keeter and Chauffer D. E. Shaw, who reported that Salt was riding in the Hoskins car, Whipple being alone in his car. They said the machines were being driven rapidly. Mr. Whipple was driving his car east on Twenty-fifth street, the officers said, and Hoskins was driving south on Quincy avenue, the two cars coming together with terrific force at the intersection. Mr. Whipple was thrown out but his machine doubled back, went through a hedge and landed on the Sacred Heart academy property. The Hoskins car turned completely over in the street, struck a tree and practically wound itself around the trunk. The j Whipple car was damaged to considerable extent. All four tires blew out, it was said. The collision is reported to have occurred at 12:10 a. m. |