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OREGON EXCHANGES
January, 1922

Sam H. Wilderman, newest member of the Oregonian sporting department, assumed the role of editor and publisher

spending Christmas and New Year in the

in December with a revival of the Hustler, a monthly magazine of general interest

homeland. Neal’s last evening in Port land before he started the trip southward

devoted particularly to the interests of the newsboys of Portland. Wilder

was spent in enacting the leading male

man was one of the founders of the Hustler several years ago. When publi

play he wrote for the Portland Drama League a year ago. The presentation was

cation was suspended in 1918 because

under the directors of The Players, Inc., and O’Neal is credited with a finished -performance in an interesting one-act

many of the older newsboys went into war service, the paper was the largest newsboys’ periodical in the world. The

Christmas issue of the Hustler features contributions from Portland newspaper

George O’Neal. “the gentleman from Alabama” on the Oregon Journal staff, is

role in “Charcoal,” the prize winning

play. Earl Goodwin, called away from the sports department for the present, is doing day police in the absence of O’Neal.

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men, including Ben Hur Lampman, De Witt Harry, Will H. Warren, Horace E. Thomas, George Cowne and Don Skene of the Oregonian; Linton Davies and

Earl R. Goodwin of the Journal; Dean Collins of the Telegram, and E. W. Jor genson of the News. -M-oi

Stevenson wrote of his travels with a donkey, and established a precedent for delightful literary rambling. Why, then,

After having been without an East

Portland correspondent for more than six years, the Oregonian has again estab lished a bureau “across the river,” and Lewis Havermale is in charge. Mr. Havermale is a newspaperman of wide experience. He came to Portland from the Los Angeles Times and for a long

time worked for the Journal, covering the city hall.

Later he became editor of the

should not Henrietta McKaughan, of the

Winged M Bulletin for Multnomah Club.

Oregon Journal, write of her peregrine tions with a burro? No reason at all, and,

He gave up this position to spend all his

in fact, she is.

gonian.

Miss McKaughan, who

time with the new bureau of the Ore

spends her vacations wandering through the Cascades, alone but far from lonely, is even now writing the final chapters of

ago joined the Oregonian staff,

a delightful book of the Oregon wonder land. It hasn’t bothered her the least

having worked as a police reporter on the New York Journal, has developed into a

bit to write the book, any more than it did to take the trail without a companion,

horse enthusiast. Haller’5 most serious misdemeanor is usually occasioned when.

other than Kate the burro. What per plexes Henrietta is the title. A good title is heaven-sent, and Miss McKaughan is still petitioning heaven.

bespattered with mud, he dashes into the local room to place his initials on the assignment book. He covered the horse

-i¢o¢‘-‘

Hubbard Nye, formerly with the Boise Statesman, is now touring Oregon and other Northwestern states as press agent for the Mabel Owen theatrical company. Mr. Nye was for a time with the L. S. Gilliam, Inc. advertising company in Los Angeles and has advanced such attrac tion" as Morosco’s “The Brat” and Dil 1‘ 3’s “Watch Your Step.”

lo“ m

K.

—-Moi

Richard V. Haller, who several months

clothed in

.-

full riding equipment, and

show held recently in Portland, and his good work commanded attention through out the Northwest. ¢-__oi_

During the special session of the state legislature Elbert Bede, editor of the Cot tage Grove Sentinel and president of the Oregon State Editorial Association, held

down his old position of reading clerk of the house.

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