.... M ' brary Association 'i .REGIST. VOL. IV. ECHO, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1909. NUMBER 22. ral ECHO DR COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Enttrtiinlnt Program Rendered by the Eighth Grade Class at the PI. L Church Friday Evening CLASS GRADUATES WITH HONORS Eight Young Hen and Women of the Echo High School Receive Diplo mat From This Excelent Institu tion of Learning Teachert and Pupils Receive Congratulations. The Commencement Exercises for 1909 of the Echo High School were held In the M. E. church in this city Friday evening last, and proved an event long to be cherished and remembered by the large assembly of friends and relatives of the Graduating Class present. Excellent music for the oc casion.was rendered by the Echo Symphony Orchestra. The seating and standing room capacity of the large church building was taxed to its utmost to accommodate on this occasion the enthusiastic friends of edu cation in Echo, who are justly proud at all times of the excel lent school facilities offered here and with the results of the efforts of the proficient corps of teachers employed. The program rendered by the young- people was highly cred itable and interesting, showing deep interest in the work by the pupils and proficient training on the part of the teachers. The program throughout was attent ively listened to and heartily ap plauded by the enthusiastic audience, and at the close teach ers and pupils alike were the recipients of many congratula tions. The eight young men and women to receive diplomas were: Fee Clifford Esteb, Lawrence H. Malcolm, Willard W. Atcheson, Zena Houser, Vina Houser, Ruth Jeanette Godfrey, Frank Nelson Young and Antone Cunha. At the close of the program the Class was brought forward and Supt. Frank K. Wells presented the diplomas. In a few well chosen remarks adapted to the occasion he admonished each of the Class of the grand achieve ments to be attained from higher educational work and that each should continue their labcrs in this line. Don't Forget Oar Saturday Specials 31 M Z r r o TJ I We have a full supply of No. 1 Manil la Rope at Sisal Rope Prices. Also full line of Nails and other Hard ware SPECIAL -Saturday Only --16 lbs Best Granulated Sugar $1.00 spot cash. Only One Dollar, worth to one person. M. ' Echo may well and justly feel proud of her public schools, and the proficiedt corps of teachers, who so successfully guided the educational work the past year, have been re-engaged for next They are: L. W. Keeler, O. A. Cannon, Margaret E. Winniford, Verna M. Vanander, Mayme E. Rippey and Roberta Rippey. The Board of directors are men who take a deep and en thusiastic interest in educational work; men who have been chosen to fill this important po sition from among our most pro gressive citizens, and they will use every honest endeavor to promote and further the best in terests of our schools, and as a result of their labors in the past Echo today has a school system that many towns of two or three times the population cannot boast of. The directors are: Joseph Cunha, John Dorn, E. E. Elder; clerk, Louis Scholl, Jr. The program as rendered fol lows: Overture Echo Symphony Orchestra Invocation Rev. M. A. Metcalf. Iiuet Vivian Bailey, Mrs. Croarkin. Class History Zena Houser. Recitation "How Ruby riayed" Fee Esteb Quartet Misses Peterson, Godfrey, Messrs. Hosklns, Cannon. Oration "The Marvel of Nations" Willard Atcheson. Vocal Solo Mrs. E. P. Croarkin. Class Prophecy Ruth J. Godfrey. Music Orchestra. Address Rev. W. H. Bleakney. Presentation of Diplomas Supt. Frank K. Welles. Class Son; Benediction DRIVING TEAM STOLEN. Some time during last Monday night a party unknown en tered the barn of William Slusher at Nolin and stole his fine driving team. On the discov ery of the theft the next morn ing Mr. Slusher sent out a de scription and enquiry to different posts but so far no trace of the missing animals has been found. One of the animals is a gray and the other black and both were branded 96 on the left stifle. If the partise are caught they should be given the limit and an example made of them in a way that would put a stop to further practice of this kind in Eastern Oregon. VISITING HER DAUGHTER. Mrs. William Wedkine and daughter, Anna, of The Dalles, Oregon, visited in Echo a few days with her daughter Mrs. C. L. Bandy. After a very pleas ant visit they returned home Sunday. W. tt BOYD ATTENTION FARMERS H. BOYD - - l - - - - r - BIG SALE OF L Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand Pounds of Wool Sold in Echo ii One DayOver $50,000 In Cash Change Hands. RHODE ISLAND MAN PURCHASER. The Wool Averaged in Price Paid Nearly 20 Cents per Pound Echo by Far the Best Wool Market in The State of Oregon Today. Monday last was truly a record breaker in Echo in the matter of wool sales, 250,000 pounds being disposed of to one individual. This one day's sales of wool in Echo brought the sellers $50 000 in clean cash. The purchaser of this large amount of wool, 250,000 pounds, was Mr. J. P Dufour, of Rhode Island state, and the price paid was right close to 20 cents per pounds. The sellers were: AntonoVey, 121,000, for which he received 823,000. William Slusher, 70,692 pounds for which he received $12,700. A. A. Cole, 55,000, for which he received $11,000. The sellers say they are per fectly satisfied with the price paid. Echo is by far the best wool market in the State of Oregon today, and with tbe promotion of irrigation and the develop ment of the rich agricultural and horticultural resources of this prolific section it will not be many years before Echo will stand foremost among the pros perous cities of the Northwest. FROM SCOH CITY KANSAS. Thomas Williams and wife, of Scott City, Kansas, are Echo Visitors with a view of perman ently locating in this section. They are guests at the Echo hotl, Mrs. Williams being the ao tier of Mrs. W. H. Gillette, wife of the proprietor of that popular hostelry. Mr. William owns 160 acres of land near Scott City and has a deal now pending for the sale of the same. FARMER A BANKRUPT. Harry E. Bartholomew, a farm-; er in the Echo district has filed a petition in voluntary bank ruptcy. He gives his liabilities The Old Reliable Store 3 w 2 r p O U CI) as $12,000 with no assets, Among the creditors for smaller amounts are the Bank of Echo, Union Meat Company of Port land, George Miller &. Co., of Echo. Minor & Co., of Heppner, and the heaviest creditor is the First National Dank of Heppner. He claims to have no assets. MONEY TRANSACTIONS. Tuesday was a banner day for money transactions in Echo. Before noon Tuesday $72,000 had changed hands .and passed through the proper channels of the bank of Echo. This institu tion is fast assuming its place among the stable and leading banks of the state. The trans actions Tuesday forenoon were: R. C. Speery Sheep Company, for sheep sold and delivered, $30,000. Antone Vey, for wool, $23,000. William Slusher, for wool, $12,700. A. A. Cole, for wool, $0,550. TO SUMMER RANGE. Dan P. Smyth, eone of the lead ing sheep men of Umatilla county, will this week ship 3800 head of sheep to Duncan, Ore gon, where they will be placed on summer range. A FREM SHEEP FOUR MONTHS OLD, IT HAS SEVEN FEET, FOUR FEET Of : ONE LEG. - William Barker has at- his livery stable in Echo a freak sheep whfch is certainly a wonder and a freak of nature. The little fellow is only four months old. but is hearty, well and sound in every particular, and came from the band of sheep owned by In all, the sheep has seven feet, four of the feet being on the right front leg. Mr. Barker is making arrange ments to take tbe freak to the Seattle Fair where it will be placed on exhibition. It is cer tainly a curiosity and should prove a good drawing card. WOOL SCOURING MILL NOTES. Mill running like clock work. Wool is being scoured in ele gant shape. Hoskins clip finished and now scouring on the Stan field and Speery clip. 0 ing to the railroad transit j rate not going into effect until i the first of June, buyers are! holding their wool back at dif-1 ferent points waiting for the : rate to go into effect before ship ping wool to be scoured. Many hundred thousand pounds of wool will be shipped vj iivuu iur Bwuriui;, Every Eastern buyer that has been here and visited the mill says the v col scouring mill of Echo is the best they have seen in years. HE WAS SURPRISED. Ray Smith was surprised Mon day when Archie Malcolm walked up to him and banded him his purse containing $50. Ray had lost his purse near the wool scouring mill and did not J miss it. Archie found and re-' turned it to him. Lucky it fell ; into honest hands. Steamed rolled barley, at the ; I Henrietta Mills. Farmers please ' t mm . m. W lake nouce. l nis metnoa sortens ; the glutin and retains the same, j greatly increasing tbe food value i a barley. HEAVY SHEEP SHIPMENTS EAST Speery-Stanfield Livestock Company Ship 6,000 Head to The Chicago Market Monday Last IMA DPIA A fA BABI IBh MARKET. Over One Hundred Carload of Sheep Have Been Shipped From Echo During the Current Month- Greatest Stock Shipping point on The 0. R. & N. Railroad. . Monday last the Speery, Stan- field Livestock Company shipped from Echo six thousand head of ewes to the Chicago market where the sheep have already been sold to the Nolin Sheep Commission Company. This consignment of sheep made up a train load of twenty one cars. Enroute to Chicago they will be unloaded and fed and watered at Mountain Home, Idaho. The price paid for the sheep by the Chicago Commisson firm was $3.75 per head. Also on Monday R. N. Stan field shipped 1500 head of year lings to the Union Meat Com pany at Portland. The price paid was not given out. During the current month over one hundred carloads of sheep have been shipped from Echo to different markets. As a stock shipping point Echo stands foremost among all the towns along the O. R. & N. TO ATTEND SCHOOL AT SALEM. Miss Beulah Barker, who for the past three months has been employed in the Echo Repiste- office, took her departure M day morning for Salem w' she will attend school, young lady will stop off nt lone at which place s. visit with friends for a so. The many friends young lady in Echo wish pleasant time and a sue year of learning. The Saturday Eve at the Racket Store. ymmmmmmmmmmmmm 9 GET (ft NY SPINNING PL ROOSEVELT AFRIC a OS Every hoi Njal's in it, a will give aw absolutely fre wishes to le First come fii i as they last. ! J. Fran DR Echo NY't z LISLE HARD WARE CO. Echo, Ore. Grand Removal Sale Stoves and Ranges ATA REDUCTION i Before we Move, and in Fact We will Sell EVERYTHING at a Redaction in Order to Save the Expense of Moving. com AND :r LET US FIGURE With You r Heeds in ' v V .a A-