FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1009 THE ECHO REGISTER, ECHO, OREGON PAGE THREE No Man is Stronger Than His Stomach A ttroaJ it strong all ever. No nu caa be alrool who i suffering from wtak lomaib with iu consequent indigestion, or from soma other disease . oi I ha alomach and iu aaaooialad organs, which im pairs digestion and nutrition. For when the ttomach it weak or diteated there it Iota oi the nutrition contained in food, which it the eource oi all physical strength. When man "doetn't (eel juat right," when ha doetn't sleep well, hat an uncomfortable iecling in the ttomach after eating, it languid, nervous, irritable and despond nt, he it losing the nutrition needed to make strength. Sac a mam aboald use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dlacorarr. It core dlteate of to atomic aad other nana of dliettloa and nutrition. It turleaea tua blood. Inrliorate tha liter, atranithena tha kldneya, nourlibea tha nerves, and ao GIVES HEALTH AND STRENGTH TO THE WHOLE BODY. You can't afford to accept a ttrrtt nostrum as a substitute (or this non alcoholic medicine op known composition, not even though the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Ingredients printed .on wrapper. J. lt.KAYI.olt, I'n-aldcnt It. N.ST.WHKI.Ii. V.-c !'n-Uli-nt K. It. T.NHrXI.Cahicr NONA llOl'SKU. AwL-lum Cahlcr (J. R.lAYI.OK It. X. fTANr'lEI.D lMrector W. II. ItoYlt I rltANK sil.OAX U!r:i'll tl.XIIA THE BANK OF ECHO ECHO, OREGON CAPITAL STOCK $25,000 FULLY PAID UP We sell New York Exchange payable at any place in the United States. We solicit the Banking Business of this Locality. tvtstAtatvvvsvvvtt The Key to the Secret or Good Bread Lies in a Sack of Flour from tha Henrietta Milling & Grain Co. This Flour is made by the most perfect process known to this age. from selected Blue Stem Wheat, making the very whitest and most delicious bread which on ac count of its healthful and nutri tive qualities, is in reality -The Staff of Life" We roll Barley and make Alfalfa Meal, and pay the highest prices for Grain. HENRIETTA MILLING 4 GRAIN CO. ECHO, OR&CJON DORN & DORN. DEALXBS nr Drugs, Chemicals, Patent Medicines Toilet Arttolsa, PeffaaMry, latleaar FeatoJfc Block, Echo, Oregon. aMSaSstatfSaJtaelessSajSaalSla I We are now selling the THE MARVEL OF NATIONS by willard acheson Among the many nations which have established themselves in various localities on the face of the earth is one, which on ac count of its rapid growth, un pi ralelled history and bright prospects for the future has been called "The Marvel of Na tions." We as Americans are particularly interested in the progress of this nation, for this ! Smith, Hunt g Houser Ranches in Tracts to Suit Any quantities of wheat land for 160 to 2500 acres now partly in grain V I CITY PROPERTY 1 Of all kinds. Northwest Realty Co, Portland Echo Txfi 1 1 1 1 itifii nnininiimt 1 1 Commercial Printing AT THE ECHO REGISTER OFFICE marvel is the great American Republic. It is to our nation that the eyes of the world are turned in wonder and admiration. This noble young republic of the west stands out, the envy of her sister nations and the pride of hei loyal subjects. Yes, young ii. years, but old in advancement. It is but a little more than one hundred years since the birth of our nation as a republic, little more than one hundred years since those first few seeds which were to spring up and bear the great Ainercan republic were scattered on the rocky shore of our New England coast, and yet our nation has made far greater advancement during these few short years than ever Egypt could boast of during the whole three thousand years of her ex istence. When we stop to con sider this rapid progress, we can but exclaim, wonderful, mar velous, indeed has been that growth. It is not necessary to go farther back in the history of our nation than the year 020, wh n the inception of that sturdy life and genius builded, broad and deep, the foundation upon which this great nation has attained to her great glory. Small indeed were the begin nings but the growth and great ness are marvelous. Nature had prepared this land ages ago to be the home of civil and re- igious liberty. Here fountains of oil were prepared and forests planted. Over our broad land stretched level prairies and fer tile valleys. Seemingly useless mountain torrents rushing un noticed to the sea have been controlled and furnish an unlim ited water supply for irrigation which has transformed millions of acres of absolutely worthless and into beautiful orchards and fields of waving grain. Our country is rich in mines of silver and gold, lead, iron copper and coal. Whether we regard her cataracts, rivers, lakef, fc rests or plains, she is distinguished by a vastness unapproached in any other part of the globe. Stretching from regions almost arctic on the north to regions as nearly torrid on the south, from the storm washed shores of the Atlantic to the placid waters of Pacific, yea, even to the distant isles of the sea, with the Great Lakes on the north, and the Mississippi flowing through its very heart, with a coast line equal to the entire circumference of the globe, our nation has op port unities for commerce which no nation existing or that ever did exist can boast of. These opportunities hav d not been ne glected for .our nag is seen on every sea, our snips in every foreign harbor, where our pro ducts are eagerly sought by the hungry hordes of Europe. Dut perhaps in no other way has our country had a more mar velous development than along the line of inventions and im provements in the means of transportation. During the last 50 years the United States has led the world in the matter of inventions. Time will permit me to mention only a few of the most important. Benjamin Franklin invented the lightning rod before the revolution. In 1794 Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin which revolutionized the cotton growing and bad it effect on the slavery question. first of the great family of labor saving machines invented in this couhtry. The reaper, mower, threshing machine and many other agricultura' implements, al' the result of American in ventive genius have revolution ized farm work and enable one man to do the work which re quired many men much hard labor and produced at best only moderate results. The sewing machine, the telegraph, the tele phone, the phonograph and the typewriter are other inventions which have exerted a great in fluence on human life. It may seem like a rather broad state ment but it is nevertheless true that more inventions have been made by Americans during the lifetime of people now living than in all the age of the world before. Eighty years ago there were but twenty-three miles of railroad in the United States. Fifty years ago there was not a rail west of the Missouri river. It is a remarkable fact that the United States has now more miles of railroad than all the ot her nations of the world com bined or enough to completely encircle the earth more than eight times. This fact alone marks us as a marvel among the nations of ti e world. Some of the inventions along electrical lines have been among the most valuable. Edison has tamed the monarch of clouds, electricity, harnessed it to the earth, and through its agency turned night into day. The moon and the stars almost shrink from sight when this product of American genius, the electric light, bursts into view. Edison and other in vestors have utilized the power of electricity until our country is a network of wires, but these will soon be partially displaced by the most wonderfnl develop ment of all, wireless telegraphy, and the wireless telephone, when messeges are conveyed, as it were, on the wings of the wind to the distant seas, warning the befogged or storm tossed vessel of danger thus saving hundreds of lives. The American engi neer is making the streams which have tumbled over rocks and pebbles for ages bend to his will, this wasted energy is being harnessed and turned into elec trical power, turning the wheels of industry, it lights cities, runs cars and railroad trains, banish ing the oil lamp in many places, heating our homes and cooking our food. The ocean cable is another example of American genius and perseverance. Had it not been for the determina tion and indomitable will oi Cyrus W. Field, the merchant in Milwaukee or Chicago could not watch from day to day sales and prices in Bombay or Yoka homa, or read the latest war news from Turkey at his break fast table. Again there has been very marked advancement In medicine and surfrery. In the early days of our national his tory there were no regular doc tors, the use of simple medicines and some few simple branches of the art of healing were under stood by women. There were men known as bone setters but they had no surgical knowledge except that gained by experience Blood letting and tooth pulling foil to the barbers who were also surgeons in a small wav. Today there is no operation so delicate or disease so complicat tA that the American doctor is not able to successfully dea with. The use of drugs and anaesthetics to produce insensi bility to pain were discovered hv an American physician in Boston. The step from the mis erable quacks of one hundred years ago to the noble examples Of the medical profession of to day is only another marvel o American progress. The marvel ous growth of our nation is part ially due to the lack of religious disturbances. The minds of men cannot broaden along scien tiflc lines if all their time and at tention is taken np with relig hatred. Our forefathers in tended this land as the home of civil and religious liberty. They had fled from their own land to escape religious persecution. Here no law of caste binds a man down, religious disturb ances are practically unknown, every man being allowed to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience. The wisdom of the f miners of our constitution being shown by the em body men t into that docu ment of these words: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or pro hibiting the free exercise there of." The foundation of this great republic was builded upon religious principles, hence this motto: "In God wo trust." Christianity opens the doors to education. Throughout the length and breadth of the land we have the church and the school,- the great churches whose spires tower into the heavens and the great schools with their thousands of students, both do ing their part in preparing the rising generation for the great future of the nation. During the last one hundred and twenty years this nation has produced more great men than any other nation on the face of the globe. We have had our poets, our great preachers and evangelists, our statesmen, our orators, our writers, our inventors, our mar tyrs, our philanthropists, our financiers. What nation lias produced greater orators and statesmen than Daniel Webster, Kufus Choate, Abraham Lincoln, Henry Ward Beccher and Robert Ingersoll? One of the most marvelous achievements in our nation's structure is laid with as much care as was the foundation. Let us by becoming well informed, patriotic, liberty-loving citizens protect that old flag, the stars and stripes, which floats over the noblest country of the globe. We can then with manly pride claim, as the noblest title of the world: I AM AN AMERICAN' CITIZEN! 4-:hm NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. (I'lBUSIIF.K) Department of the interior. I'nltrd State l-nnd Office, 1-a limiHlp. Ori'gon, Mar ir. imw. Notice U hereby firm that fldncy B, Walton, of Kcho. orca-on. wlut. on March 311. IWO. made Hoim-Mcad entry No. ISWT Si-rial. No. (ttwv. for S! S '. X ! W5. SW5t XWi, Section II. Township 3 North, llama' ' Kat, Willamette Meridian, haa riled notice of Intention to make Klual Ave year I'niof. to catalillli claim to the land ahova dcw-rila-d. la-for A. O. Crawford, U. 8. ('onunlwloiier. al llermlMoti. Orciwn. on tin tit li day of July. I'M'. Claimant natm-a aa wltm-saca; II. H. Hurl', hurt, of Kcho Orviron. Frank P, Miller, ot KchoOn-aim. T. tJ. Smith, of Eciio Oreson. Clark Wan. of Echo Oreeon. K. C. 11UAMWELL. Register. NOTICE FOK PUBLICATION. Untied States Land Onion, Lf Grand, On con. Mar -4. HM. Notice W hereby riven that the Northern I'aclHo Hallway Company, whim pmloflt.-o aUiireo I. nu Paul. Mlnmnola. haa thia i'4iu day of May. UM. Hied In thin office iu applica tion Ut select under the iiimvIhIoim ot the Act of CoiiKnma aourovad July 1. IMH (3D Slak wr. it. Tli HE4 Section 18. T. ! ff- K. SI E. W. M.. Serial No. MMl. Any and all ocntonnelalmlnf ailrrmrly tha lamia dcacrlhed, or Uutlrina" to object bvcauoe of tha mineral character of the land, or for any other n-anon, to th dbptnal to aumlcant. aliould Miff their atthlavlu of promt In this ottice.oti or liefure the Mill day of July. IMW. Y. V. HaAHWBI.L. KeflaUir. 1 4349. CONTEST NOTICE. Department of the Interior, United States Land Office. La Grande. Oregon. April 17. WW. A mifHclent miitcl affidavit havlua- lie!t tiled In thia office by J, K. hliolwell. contest ant. atfalnt II.K.IttUtt w-rial No. iHtlll. mailn Ik-loher:V. It6. for Section HI, Townhl 3 North, limine F.al Willamette Meridian. Iiy Murry lilckliMnicoiiteiitee. In which It I allca-cd that the unlil Murry DIckliMin la not now renlillmr inm nald laud and haa never entahllHlivd or maintained a residence thereon and haa wholly ahaniioiied the name; that 1 htxalncncc from nald land haa continued for a period of more than nix montlm Immediately 'prior to the commencement of thla contest, and that ald alleircd alnciice from aald land wa not due to liia employment In tha army, navy or marine con of Ilia 1'iiiicd Htaica: nald imrtlea are hereby history was accomplished when, onicn-d t '"ar. rj-M.mii. ';,' " evidence toucliiiuf aald alienation at luocloclc after months of debate, our ""v '"' u$!r ni'tm jr ii'.iii , . ,11. ,,, ---.- -ti ami that Hnal liearlmr will he held at 10 o'clock a. in. on June 11. Itf. before the Kc-Iter ami Kit-elver at the United Statca Land OITk-o ill ramie. inwm. ratification. Marvelous wisdom ?''"' H"'1""V",,l.J,'ll,5,lnf ,,-ir-.Tl Hilavlt Hied March l. I WW. net forth fact and foresight was shown by the "';' ,m"l,lu r,',,,,','1W, n'.?:,ml! n ' acrvli-e. of thla notice cannot ha maue. It la framers of this document for imrchy ordered ami iiir.i t.si tbt..n ii notico lie mven iiy uue ui ii.i-f i"'.m w, . K. C. HKA.MW Kl.l, llca-tater. present constitution sen ted to the people was pre-, for their' today, after one hundred and twenty two years, it still stands as the supreme law of the land. That foundation laid in 17b7 has stood the test, and today tower ing over all similar structuers Ore- parAHTHXNT or Tin intbhiok. United Ntauw Land Office, La tirande, ton. April St. I WW. A aulTlclent context notice havlna lmn filed In thin office by Jacob Knch ronteatant. nm frnvammnnt is ( ha nt-iria rt aalnl II. r .o. l -iMTiai.no. wu maiia our government is me priae on Jumsi ,m rr svm section it, Townhin the world. Through the mar-1 yM'X I .il.nul il. I. II Mi'tivi never lalah. IWhed a realdcnc uiaNi Raid entry within ale month from the date of hi 111111 or any oilier time: that lie haa never cultivated aald land aa reiiuln-d by law or otherwise or improved the aame In any manner; but haa wholly ab andoned aald entry and been alm-nt for mora than aix montlm at a time and more than ale montlia laat pant and haa never actually maid ed thereon, and hia absence waa not due to military aervlca. aald partita ar hereby notified Ut appear, rmpnnd. and offer evidence touch Ilia aald allca-allon at lUo'clot'lC a.m. on June li. It), la-fore l-ouls Hcboll. Notary Public, at hie of lice In Kcbn, Orea-on. and that final hcai-ln will lie held atlOo'chrb a. m. on June 2k IUiiU. la-fore the Kef later and Receiver at the 1 1 tilled male MM UW in velous wisdom of Washicf-tcn, Iamilton, Jay, Madison and others, we have had handed down to us, not a legacy of silver or gold, but one ol far greater value, a country and a govern ment of which we may justly be proud. And have not the young men of today a far greater duty to perform than would have lVh- 7d!!..nt h.vm.. m a orm-r .Mi CONTEST NOTICE. fallen to their lot if the legacy bequeathed to them had been of ess value? Yes, we have a duty to perform which requires determination, courage, strength of character. Let us see to it that the pinnacle of this colossal affidavit tilled April 91. If aet forth facta which uluiw that after due dilute nee uerwmal eervlfe lnu notice cannot lie made. It la hereby ordered and directed that aucn not lie given by due and prota-r publication. F. C. HUAMVYKLL. Ueaiatnr. PULL TOO ETHER PULL TOGETHER, PULL TOGETHER PULL TOGETHER FOR ECHO. TOR ECHO. rOR ECHO. FOR ECHO. vMMMMMM.MMvvM.OMM0IO.MvMMM ECHO, OREGON GENERAL INFORMATION Population, moo. Ttie town has good sclioolm Including the eleventh grade. One bank under state control, capital 125,000, with depoj.lt of 1110,000. Four general mercliandlse stores, one grocery store, one hardware store, three confectionery stores, one meat market, two blacksmith shops, one paint and paper hanging establishment, three livery stables, one harness and saddle shop, two feed and cus toms mills, one second hand store, one boot and slwe repair shop, five large warehouses, three lawyers, one Jewelry store, one furniture and undertaking establishment, two billiard and pool rooms, three hot-els, two lumber yards, two barber slwps, one flour mill, one al falfa meal mill, one dairy, t wo doctors, one steam laundry, one news paper, two churches, one creamery, municipal water system, fire company, real estate and Insurance agents, carpenters, contrac tors, express and delivery companies, etc. The largest wool scouring plant In the state Is being erected In Echo, backed by the sheep men of Umatilla and Morrow counties. Echo, by Iter natural position, holds the key to all the Immense Irrigation districts and projecls of this seel Ion, every canal and Ir rigation ditch either runs through the city limits, or Is taken from the Umatilla river within two miles of town. Echo is the heaviest stock shipping point in tlte State of Oregon and exports annually over a million and a half pounds of wool. Within twelve miles of Echo there are now 40,000 acres iu wheat, 10.000 acres of summer fallow and not less than 100,000 acres of raw land that will. In tle course of a few years, be broken up and sown to wlieat, rye, barley md oats, ana there Is now some 8,000 acres In alfalfa tributary to Eclto. BUSINESS OI'EMNGS-there are many openings lere for busi ness men: farmers, dairymen, gardeners, stockmeu, etc Most needed In the town map be mentioned foundry, machine shop, bakery, res taurant, ice plant, electric lights, mercliant tailor, millinery store, cement block manufacturing plant, building and loan association, elgar factory, planing and sash and door factory. The cotton gin was almost the ious controversies and sectarian CCvMIOetMOOM 8 0 0tvevMteCIMCMtMtlMeOvi