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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1928)
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2L 1928 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL RA1.EM. OREGON PAGE fiEVEN BARRYL10RETO BE BENEDICT FOR 3RD TIME Los Angeles, Nor. .. WV-Holly wood IUm circle buzzed with ex citement today over the proposed marriage of John -Barrymore. mem ber of the famous Drew-Berrymore s'ae lamiJy. and Dot ore Oostello, youngest daughter of Maurice Cot tello. screen veteran. Barry more applied (or a license yesterday. The marriage will be Barrym ore's third venture into matrimony and Miss Costello's first. Neither would discuss plans for the wedding, but close friends intimated the pair would wed over the coming weekend. News of the romance caused a mild sensation in Hollywood as none but the closest friends of the couple were aware that anything more than friendship existed between the two a friendship begun when they appeared in the .leading roles of one OI BarrymoreH pictures. The first Inkling of the marriage came yesterday when Barrymore. unaccompanied, walked Into the marriage license bureau and signi fied his Intention to wed. He gave his name as John Blithe Barrymore. 41 and his address as sis Tower Road. Beverly HilU. He listed Miss Costello's age as 22. and her address as 1388 Schuyler Road. Beverly HiUi In 1910 Barrymore married Cathe rine Harris, daughter of a wealthy new rone ana Santa Barbara fam ily, the wife obtaining a divorce In December. 1817. . He then married Mrs. Leonard, M. Thomas, of New York who was well known as an authoress and playwright under the name of Michael Strange. Barry more has a daughter by his second wife, who also divorced the actor. Miss Costello has had leading roles in many pictures. She has a sister, Hene Costello, also a screen actress. Three days must elapse under the California law before the license will oe issued. BADGERS MEET MINNESOTANS Chicago. Nov. 31. (U Wisconsin, how the leader in the 1928 Big Ten championship race, will carry a heavy handicap in Saturday's game With Minnesota. Not only will the Badgers be meeting one of the strongest teams In the conference, but they must overcome two jinxes which have topped all other title aspirants: 1 The Badgers will enter, the game as the favorite over their op ponent. 2 The Badgers will meet an op ponent which has been especially "keyed" for the game, whereas Wisconsin was forced to "key" last Week against Iowa. Ordinarily the, first factor would Cot be especially important but rec ords show that the favorite in al most every important game this season has not won. 7me upsets can be attributed partly to over-confidence a con dition which undoubtedly will not prevail at the Wisconsin camp. The second handicap can not be guarded against. OIL BARONS GIVE BED MAKERS SCARE The lowly Oeneral Petroleum company team bowled a tie game with the Commercial Bowling league' leaders, the Capital City Bedding Company Cubs Tuesday night but on the play-off the bed makers took the contest, the oil men taking one game. The Woods Auto team made It three straight over the Chevrciet five, while the Barr's plumbers team defeated the Valley Motor company players in the same manner. Each evening after club games are out of the way, players of that particular club participate In a shoot of ten pound turkeys. Last night, the lucky bowlers were Hen ry Barr, score 496: J. Nathman, 498; T. M. Barr, 524 and W. L. Phil Hps. 527. Players outside the dubs have their chance at the birds Saturdays and Sundays. Chicago, Nov. 21 i Tlie senior national -swimming championship for women, awarded to Chicago by the national amateur athletic union, will be held in February in the Lake Shore Athletic club pool. f Quickly and Easily Convinced When you have once ex perienced what , Chiro practic can do, you say to yourself, "How Easy." If you are not enjoying health sea a competent Chiropractor whfj will easily convince you that Chiropractic is for you. Remember the Neurocal ometer locates nerve pres sure. Chiropractic Ad justments remove nerve pressure. , Dr. O. L. Scott 256 N. Hinh Street Phone 87 Former Oregon Man- Editor Of Aggressive Magazine Of Northwest Literature A copy of The Frontier." an ag gressive new northwestern publica tion has been received by the Cap ital Journal, and because its editor is not unknown to thla locality the magadne should have an Introduc tion to the community. I a. o. Merriam, the editor. Is a member of the faculty of the TJrtl- versuy oe Montana, at Missoula. Formerly he was at Whitman and later at Reed as an Instructor in literature. He was among the: earliest of American students at Oxford as beneficiaries of the Cecil Rhodes scholarship fund. A sum-1 mer or two he spent in Salem when his parents were residents here. "The Frontier" has the sub-title "A Magazine of the Northwest." It should not be confused with an eastern periodical of the same name. Since the editor of the Northwest "Frontier" is a scholar. It follows that the magacine is a scholarly publication. On the rack at the drug itore or the pool hall It wouldn't catch the eye. unless one looked for west- em literature of a substantial kind. True, the cowboy, the miner and the sheriff are there, but they are not the flaming wizards of the newstand group. - . "Portrayal of the past Is not the fundamental need," the editor writes. "The Indian, pioneer, pros pector, trappers, cowhands, traders, railroaders have meant something to the life northwest people live to day. They are inworked substance. But one would never guess that they are from what one reads of them in verse and story. They remain outside the real life of the region. They don't "belong.' One doesnt see, in most of our literature, any authentic background for them to belong to. If life in the northwest today is Individual, and unless It is there is no sense In lodkmc for a literary harvest. It Is individual be came these men and women have belonged. Our writing should re veal that they have and how." In the same editorial the editor remarks that some readers ''think it time for harvesting a crop of lit erary creatlveness in the northwest. Thea"Tiave espiessed the hope that rne Frontier' might prove to be the mellowing rays of sunlight that ripen the fruit." If that is the object of the maga zine. It has made a good start. Writ ers, of the northwest predominate among the contributors, and among the "by-lines" appear such names as uwendoiyn Haste, whose verse appears in leading periodicals: Howard McKlnley Coming, the Portland poet: James Stevens; a Mencken discovery, known nation ally, and frequently a Salem vis itor: and Frank B. Llnderman. well known writer on Indian and west- em life. There are others who are rapidly coming to the front. Stev ens, Llnderman and Lew Sarett are listed as contributing editors. Albert Richard Wetjea of Salem, will have a poem In the January number. These names are evidence that the magazine already has won na tional recognition. Further evi dence is the selection of a short story printed in "The Frontier" this year for the O'Brien collection of best short stories for lm. This was Stevens' story, "The Romantic Sailor." O'Brien has mentioned other "Frontier" stories as distinc tive. A glance at the advertising sec tion shows that the periodical has not yet reached the point where it can pay very much anyway for material, so writers like Stevens and Wet Jen must recognize its possi bilities. The poetry offerings appeal to quite a wide range of taste, from the stately measures to dialect verse. A sonnet on "The Grand Dalles HUla" by Ethel Rotnig Ful ler outstanding at least it is to an Oregonian. The fiction, com pared with the mass of fiction compared with the mass of fiction turned out these days, is refreshing, and readers must look to the quality periodicals to find its like. The magazine has a historical section that presents, in each issue. authentic bits of northwest tustoryal In the current Issue is found a re port on thei work of the Stewart commission on western history, and there are several pages of letters by Charles and Nathan Putnam, Um qua valley pioneers, written it) MM as they crossed the plains to Oregon. There are taken from the Oregon Historical Library and edited by Sheba Hargreaves. Another Interesting section is un der the caption of "The Open Range" where each Issue carries ac counts of men's personal outdoor experiences. "The Frontier", began as a student publication of the University of Montana. Later it became a re gional magazine of the northwest. and as such four Issues have ap- peared. The magazine is published .in November, January, March and May oi each year. NEW YORK HAS SNOW New York. Nov. 31. New York felt the first real touch' of winter today when snow began to fall shortly before a. m. The fall was light and the weather bureau said it would not amount to much. La Grande. Ore. Nor. 21 at rTuffy Wmc Portland, won' from Our ley Johnson. Bom, its pounds. in the third round of a scheduled ten round main event here last night en a foul Until the referee stopped the fight wing was out boxing Johnson. The zemi-finsl also ended with a fouL Bud Woodfln. Baker, was given the nod in the fourth when Cliff Terry, Walla Walla, hit trim low for a count of Is. Brick Anderson, u Grande, and Eddie Collins, salt Lake City, fought a four round draw. Eck Warden kayoed Vernon Cole man in the first round wtth a body smash. The card opened the new Jefferson avenue arena here. Phil H. Williams is promoter. . JONES WILL ATTEMPT TO TOPPLE STRAGGLER Los Angeles. Nov. 21 OPr-Paul Jones, Houston, Texas, body-scis sors exponent, will attempt to top ple Ed "strsngler" Lewis Iron his heavyweight wrestling throne here! tonight, tackling the champion In a I ITCHING AM skia in almost all cases relieved instantly with JlResinol ITS GETS 1103 0.i FOVL 8L017 best two out of (hree Taut finish match. Jones win be outweighed by mare nam a seen a( nnundi and experi ence and strength also favor the champion, but the Texan is expect ed to give Lewis a gruelling battle. Ira Dern. SOD pound SaH Lake grappler, is matched wtttt jWl Shaw of Cleveland. Ohio, in the semi-windup, a one fall, one-hour unut allair. . OREGON IS STArt OF SMALL HIGH SCHOOLS Oregon is a state OS small high schools. This was Indicated la a report prepared by State -Superta-tendent C A. Howard showing that of the 274. four year high schools filing reports with the state super intend of public instruction, 130, or nearly one-half, have lees than M students each. , Sixty of thi, schools nave enroll ments ranging from five to 24 stu dents. Only eight of the schools outside of Portland have more than &0S students each. ' The high school at Butte FJs in Jackson county was the rsost ex pensive to operate when figured on a per capita basts. The operation of this school cost S6M.77 for every student in average dairy attendance Iff v s lit ;j ? Mil Irs- f "ft 3 t VI y3 "Thi-ough with the Ring" but still 100 at GENE TUNNEY may hive pot off the gloves for good. But he's too wise a man to g.iveap the price test habits of physKal training; that stood him in such good stead ia his profession. Just before his bit fight, Tnrmcy said: "I started taking Nojoi inceraalhr ' seven fears ago. The first month Nnjol brought remarks bie "ngrt ia my physical condition. My eUmi nstioa became active arid normal. My appetite increased and a desire for intensive trainiog was created. Since chat time I have taken Nufoi about five nights a week. I have regulated myself to the amount neces sary to keep my elimination normal. I have round during my seven yean' experience with Nujol that it is not hioft-forming, or in any way un pleasant or harmful." Nujol is not a medicine. It Contains absolutely no medicine or drags, fx is simply a pure substance pqiected by the Nujol Laboratories, 26 Broad way, New. York. It not only prevents an excess of body porsoes nom fbrra mg(vreallhavemem)btaidsmthesl removal. In sealed packages Only, Buy a bottle of Nujol today. 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The Most Delictmu Food-Drink Known' New to America, jt is almost a na tional beverage m rtaitserlaadjEng land, and in much of Europe. 20,O0w doctors are advising it A supremely 1-drmk delicious food-c ; called Ovaltiue. Childrea drink it, not because they "must" but because they like to. A scientific food-concentrate widely - - different m composition, flavor ana result from the "chocolate" and ' "malt"drroksmtniaeottntry weight increases of 8 ounces to li pounds weekly are commonly credited to this 8wias eTiatioa."NervousDeos" ss often noticeabiy curbed ia a few days. It supplies highly concentrated food energy in itself. And sets to digest the starches, from other foods the child eats, into strength, aad flesh. Thus results are often little shorf of nmasing. Give as a beverage at meals; as a food-drink between meals. Dooa you notice a change ia weight, activity aad better nerve balance in yourebnd. ' Results are marked aad swlioaahin Get Ovaitine at any drug or grocery store. 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