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OREGON EXCHANGES
January, 1922

Shad O. Krantz, former financial and

political reporter for the Oregonian and later a member of the faculty of the School of Commerce of the University, has just returned from a three months’ trip through the principal states of the East. He traveled through New York and New England by automobile and stopped in New York City long enough to take in the World’s series and then proceeded to Washington and other cities in the South, returning via New Orleans,

Texas and California.

Mr. Krantz now

The Silverton Tribune, of which Ed ward B. Kottek is editor and publisher, has just installed a large press and folder and has placed an order for a Ludlow Typecaster. A casting box and saw trim

mer are to be added to the equipment as a further testimonial to Mr. Koettek’s confidence in Silverton. He expects soon to have for sale a good bit of printing material, displaced by the new equipment, and he now offers a two

revolution Cottrell pony press 25 x 30 with two sets of rollers.

is the Pacific Coast manager for an east

ern lumber journal. Wliile maintaining headquarters in Portland he spends most

i_—0—i

S. P. Shutt and son, who for a num

ber of years have published papers at

of his time on the road, as his territory

various cities in the Northwest, have pur

takes in everything from Vancouver, B.

chased the Jacksonville Post and are now publishing a weekly newspaper in the pioneer town of southern Oregon. T. W.

C.. to Los Angeles. _~

Miss Louise H. Allen, a graduate of

the University of Oregon in the class of 1917, will start the new year as a mem

ber of the advertising staff of the Los Angeles Examiner. She bade good-by to her host of Portland friends December 13, a-d spent the holidays with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Allen, in En

Fulton, former editor of the Post, is look ing for a new location. He would be glad to hear from anyone having a small newspaper for sale or lease or would con sider a reportorial or mechanical posi

tion. ___,,__ The Oregon Voter staff, with five as

gene. Miss Allen’s first newspaper experience was on the Tacoma Ledger.

sistants, covered the recent special ses sinn of the state legislature. C. C. Chap

She was on the Oregonian as reporter

man and his seven co-workers were able

and motion-picture editor for about two

to get everything that was done, in ex

years and then accepted a position as publicity writer for the Jensen & Von

haustive detail, for interpretative pre sentation in the columns of the Voter and

Herberg theatres in Portland.

as a background for the discussion of candidates in the next political campaign.

In this

capacity, she also wrote feature articles for Screenland, a weekly publication for

Zo___ The Roseburg News-Review has just installed a Goss-Comet press, made nec

Portland film fans. i-mo-i

Ralph E. Morrison, who recently took over the railroad and financial beat for the Oregonian, liked Portland so well

after a brief residence that he decided to make his home here. Mrs. Morrison and two little daughters arrived from Kansas

City, Mo., to take care of the home part of it. moi

Isaac W. Pouttu, formerly reporter for the Astoria Budget, is now assisting

Jesse R. Hinman in the publishing of the Times at Brownsville.

essary by its large and growing circula tion. The new machine, weighing 20,000 pounds and requiring a special heavy ce ment fonndation, has a speed of 3500 copies an hour, delivering either a 4-, 6 or 8-page paper folded and ready for de livery. moi

W. E. Hassler has closed out his inter est in the Clackamas County News and will devote his time to his other two papers, the Gladstone Reporter and the Western Clackamas Review,

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