EYENINGEDITKJN DMLYEVUIIBEDiTB IE DAILY Eastern Oregon Weather 1 bo delirored mt your residence placo oi Dimness ojr earner ki J 5c A WEEK. Tonight and Wednesday, fair; cooior tonlghL L 15. PESTDLETOK, inSIATILIiA COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY lo, 1902. NO. 448 ITSH GENERAL WHEATON RETIRES NEW FEATURE IN TRACY HUNT RAILROAD TO SOMMERVJLLE WHEAT IS DAMAGED AGE LIMIT ENDS CAREER OF A BRAVE SOLDIER. TALK OF A LINE IS BEING REVIVED. i fajesty Will Take a Sea ige to Recuperate His tered Health. kS TAKEN TO PORTS- MOUTH THIS MORNING. Hosed Ambulance He Went to fcepot, the Queen Riding in, the ble With Her Husband. Dn, July 15. The king left station for Portsmouth he will he placed aboard the acht. thlB moraine. kins -was taken to the dnnnt Irge, closed ambulance. dy except the doctors and lm- attendants saw his malestv. ?was carried on a flat couch railway carrlace. the dannt sheen cleared. the king was safelv aboard ttn immndlarplv rirpur nut Tho Erode in the ambulance Tvlth 1AMBERLAIN IMPROVES. found Is Healing Rapidly But He Still Must Rest Ion, July 15. Chamberlain's sis healing well, but the doc- 11 lenjoin absolute rest. political clubs last night var- Ihions were extFesflI retrard- rd Salisbury's retirement and four's accession. .liberals and' Nationalists gen- expressed relief to find that Ifour not Mr. Chamberlain, was premier, but a email section of anservatlves and Liberals were ray reconciled to the idea of jrpetuation of the "Hotel- Ce- fcltthe change from Ix)rd Salis m Mr. Balfour is called, and :,Tegretted that Mr. Chamber ed not been appointed or a com ic found in the appointment of ike of Devonshire, lord presl it the council. ng the bulk of his party, as i the morning papers, satisfac i" expressed upon learning that ilfour is to be the new premier ie concensus of opinion Is that is no longer anything in Great i's foreign relations to cause Kghtest anxiety at Lord Salis- dropping the reigns of power. Held for Murder. and, July 15. Evidence is be- cumulated against the two ne- ninrilRnn nnrl .Tnhnsnn who are r held fpr the murder of Louis a, a chinaman who. was killed ntnnrlfi sime time since and it as though the crime would be fcht to their doors. are Is no doubt but What te eolian was murdered with the atlon of robbing him as he was rn to have considerable sums or ey about him. He was killed by struck In the head with a sand Humphreys Resigns. onolulu, July 15. A. S. Humph i has announced his resigna as circuit judge, having sent his gnation to the president Bome aun it in said. Humphreys was first judge appointed to the ch In Hawaii after annexation l complete, his work having be when Hawaii became a territory. Iers Monument at South Bend. louth Bend, Ind., July 15. Bids re onened bv the county commis- ners today for the magnincem iiers monument to he erectea The monument will cost up- rds of $25,000, and -will he orna- inted with bronze figures. Gambling .Closed. Portland. .Tnlv IB. Chinese gam fng houses along Second street, nere fan tan games have been in era t inn nnrl nnknr eamea .earned at tlin ronr nf. rnrtnln f!(?n.r stores different sections of the "city, have en stopped "by the police; FUlHInn lualti Trial. I.PnrtlfinJ T..l- 1t ' HI,.. trtAint fents have been filed against .A. L. Bimng, me man who coraraiuea xne WtMl trlnln tnnrdnr hara tm Satur- y, and he ;now languishes In the 111 awaltinc trial' TTn n.n tint- came PP for, a hearing -before .September. Was Relieved Prom Duty on Reach ing the Age of Sixty-four Years- Received Many Kind Words. Washington, July 15. With the re tirement of Major General Wheaton, who reached the age limit of G4 years today, the government loses one of Its ablest and most honorable and useful servants. General Wheaton retires after 41 years of military ser vicefirst in 18G1 with the Eighth Illinois infantry in the civil war, af terwards on the Indian frontier, then In the Spanish-American war and lastly In the Philippines, where he distinguished himself by gallant ser vice. General Wheaton entered upon his military career April 29, 1861, as first sergeant of the Eighth Illinois infan try. In the civil war he was promi nent in many engagements and ad vanced rapidly. Three months after his enlistment he was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant of the same regiment. In the following year he became captain, major and lieutenant-colonel of the Eighth Illinois and at the close of the war was made brevet colonel. He was honorably mustered out May 4, 18G5. The fol lowing year General Wheaton was made captain in the Thirty-fourth regular infantry and from that stage of his army life he advanced until March 30, 1901, when he was made major general. The work of General Wheaton in the Philippine campaign is considered the most brilliant of his military career. He arrived at Ma nila February 23, 1899, and was soon given command of the department of the north Philippines. It was he h originated the idea of "zones of protection," which greatly facilitated the work of Suuuing the insurgent forces. Chaffee's Kindly Words. Accompanying the order from eral Wheaton of his command was General Chaffee which released Gen the following tribute Jn recognition of his long years of excellent ser vice: "As an instance of military service where heart and mind have united in joyous endeavor for more than 41 years to serve his country honestly, faithfully, faultlessly to the end of his allotted time the division commander invites the attention of all officers and soldiers of the com mand to the splendid record of Gen eral Wheaton." General Wheaton is now in Chica go, in which city, it is understood, he is to make his future home. The vacancy caused by the retire ment of Major General Wheaton is to be filled by the promotion of Brig dler General John C. Bates. General Bates was born in Missouri and en tered the army as first lieutenant of infantry, May 14, 1861, rising by regular promotion to the grade of colonel. He was brevetted major and lieutenant colonel for meritori ous services in the field leading up to the fall of Richmond, rising to the grade of colonel, At the outbreak of the Spanish war he was made Brigadier General of Volunteers. La ter hewent to the Philippines, nego tiated for the extension of American sovereignty to ths Jo'ltf "group of Isl ands and brought about the surrender of Triae, the 6hly lieutenant general of the ihBurgent army, tie was pro moted to Brigadier General in 1901. General Bates will retire for age in 190G. SHIPPING STOCK Finding of Merrill's Body Puts Officers at a Loss and Spoils Stories of Assistance Being Rendered. Seattle, July 16. The latest sensational development in tho search for Tracy is the finding of the body of Merrill, his compalnon, whom tho fugitive killed on account of getting weak-kneed. Tho discovery of Mer rill's body proves that Tracy told tho truth. The corpse was found today near tho poor farm at Chehalis, Just where Tracy said tho killing occurred. All the officers had belioved for several days that Merrill was alive and assisting Tracy. Tho bullet found in Merrill's body was a 30-40 calibre, tho same as Tracy's gun. Tracy is now believed to be somowhero on the Mucklcshute Indian reservation, near Auburn. SeatUe, July 15. It looks this morning as though Tracy had suc ceeded in eluding, for the time being, at least, his pursuers. It was reported hero yesterday that the convict had succeeded in boarding a freight train near Buck ley, on a steep grade, and doubled back toward Palmer, and also that shots had been exchanged between he and the posse as he was leaving the train near Palmer, but no confir mation of this report has been obtained. The scattered position of the posse makes It extremely hard to follow up reports of sighting the outlaw, though Tracy's attempt to board a freight train to carry him over tho Cascades is true. The convict has been trying to cross the mountains for several days, and the posse is scattered along the track in the vicinity of the Bteep grade, where it was hope" & would next show up. However, the USUS! bad luck must have attended the ef forts of the posse this morning in not taking advantage of his attempt to get farther away. Tracy Not Lame. It is established by the evidence of responsible parties that the "re ports of Tracy being wounded by the posse and so lame that he can hard ly travel are incorrect and that the outlaw Is as spry as he has been ever since his escape. When last seen, since the report of his crippled condition, he was apparently perfect In wind and limb and seemed re freshed from having slept well in the swamps during the past few days. . No Sign of Merrill. It is also certain that at no time during .tho past week has Morrill been .with Tracy, and that all re ports. to this effect havo been the product of oxtremcly vivid imagina tions.' Morrill has not boon seen by anyone who could Idontify him pos itively since tho last time he was seen with Trafcy near Olympla and it Is assured that the outlaw has been killed by his desperate com panion or has been keeping very dark while working to arrange for the ultimate escape of his compat riot. Tale of Outlaw's Band Revived. Merrill's non-appearance lends col or to the story that ho and Tracy are gathering an outlaw band with which they expect to sweep across the stato into Eastern Oregon and perhaps to tho Holo-ln-the-Wall coun try of Montana, whero they would terrorize tho district. If such a band. is being organized it is only natural that Morrill should desiro to keop quiet and that Tracy should remain In the vicinity of Seattle until the band Is com pleted. Bloodhounds All Right. It is fast becoming ovldont that tho tales of the bloodhounds being unable to follow tho trail are being sent out merely to cover the lnof flciency or lack of courage of the . . . . f T"l 1 snenn ana ihb posaea. r;uiJio wuu claim to know say that tho hounds have never failed to find the trail and trace the escape into thick tim ber whero they are Immediately call ed off and tho posse sits down to wait for Tracy to show up again. The fault of not getting Tracy Hob with the posse, but is being laid ontc the hounds as they havo no official reputation to lose. TO CONSIDER STRIKE. Delegates to Miners Convention Have Commenced to Arrive. Indianapolis, July 15. Delegates lo the national convention of miners to consider the advisability of calling a general strike of bituminous miners, are beginning to arrive. President Mitchell was among this morning's arrivals. The general opinion is that a strike will be considered. HEAVY SHIPMENT8 ARE NOW BEING SENT OUT W. A C. R. Railroad Is Sending Out Heavy Train Loads Every few Days Much Stock Goes East The W. & C. R. and N. P. railroad lines are doing a land office business shipping stock. Monday evening eight carloads left the W. ,& C E. stock yards for Seattle. .These were going to Cars ton Bros., at Seattle, wholesale and t....i.a Thfiv were nurcbas- reiu.ii uu.uv.. - el of Joe Coombs and came from the John Day country. Eight cars will go from the same yards 'this evening, destined for Ta 1 j atia Thrfie cars are being shipped by J. O. Lonergan tp the Pacific Meat Company, at Taco ml, and the rest are going io Cars Toi BrW. of Seattle. Both of these shipments were mostly cows from the range. Very few Bteers are go ing on the market at present. People Homeless. KarisflB Cltv. July 15. At Argen tine, Kan., yesterday, water from the Kaw River broke through an lmpro- viaaA Avto ini flooded a large, tract Of land, rendering 45 families home less. The Missouri and tne mw rivers here are both higher today than at any time since the present flood began. GRAND LODGE A. O. U. W, Is Being Held at Portland With Many In Attendance. Portland, July 15. Tho annual convention of tho A. O. U. W. Is commencing in this city today, and large, numbers of members ol tho or der are gathering hero. The grand lodge was called to or der this morning In Elks' hall, and delegates are hero from nearly every lodge of tho order in the stato, Tki Degree of Honor will hold meetings simultaneously. Many high dignatarles of tho order are' pr&sent and will add to the In terest of the proceedings by timely addresses. Steamer 8ank In the Ohio. Warsaw, Ind., July 15. A river steamer Bank near hero today and 30 persons were drowned. COMICi' TRACY DID MURDER HIS COMPANION, MERRILL Portland, July 15. A, telegraphic dispatch has been received here which sates that the body of Dave Merrill, the Oregon convict who es caped from the Salem penitentiary at the same time as Desperado Har. ry Tracy has been found near Che balls, Wash. The discovery has been kept secret until the body .could be Identified by Warden Janes, of Salem, who went to South Bend to identify the mar captured there and supposed to be Merrill. - This proves that Tracy's story about the murder of his companion was veritable truth and that be is re ceiving no . 4 assistance, from , his friends arid associates under -the di rection of Merrill. It also punctures tho stories which have been publish ed recording the proposed .organisa tion of an outlaw band by the escap ed convicts, Th Bodv Identified. Chehalis, Wsh July 15. Warden Janes, of Salem.arrlved atnoon and proceeded to the woods to Identify Merrill's body. Coroner Greea lso went, and wllj bring the body to town tnis anernoou. Merrill's body was found by a small boy named jioDerca yew5rujr near the main road below Chehalis, and ftv too piace aecruuu wj The boy saw a hand and foot pro truding from between two logs and advised Superintendent of the Re form School Westendorif. Deputy Sheriff Brlnker and a news paper man watched the body all night. . . Everything confirms Tracy's story as the body appeared the same 'as last seen, when he and Merrill were together. Surveyors Are Now Working Along Walla Walla River and Great In terest Is Felt. Residents along tho south fork of tho Wnlla Wnlla River aro greatly interested In tho movements of a party of surveyors who aro at work running a lino up tho river bank. There aro said to bo four In tho party and they commenced opera tions near Dorrlty'8 farm and aro still continuing their work past tho Roborts placo. Tho residents aro wondering if tho old idea of building a railroad ncross tho mountains to Sumniorvlllo, uslnp, tho canyons cut by tho Wnlla Wnlla as tho easiest route, is In tho air again. Tho party Is working vory rapidly nnd showing a doclded Inclination not to discloso any Information as to what they aro surveying for. A routo was surveyed up tho rivor a fow years ngo by W. G. Sayles for a party of capitalists, but that wns nil that was ovor dono toward building a road by this routo. NEW YORK MARKET. Reported by I. L. Ray A Co., Pendle ton, Chicago Board of Trado and New York Stock Exchange Brokers. Now York. Julv 15. Tho wheat market opened this morning at 17, M lower. Throughout ho day it waB weak, gradually going lowor, and closed at 77, 1 lower than Mon day. Liverpool Is lowor, closing at 62. Corn also lowor, closing at G3, lc below ycstorday'B clos ing. Wheat closed Monday 78vi. Opened today, 7778. Range today, 77 78 to 11. Closed today, 11 bid. Stocks ononed strong and during tho foronoon woro mnrkod by sharp turns upward. St. Paul, 182. Union Pacific, 107. Steel, 39. Wheat In San Francisco. San Francisco. July ID. Wheat $1.1514 1.M Tfil per contal . Wheat In Chicago, Chicago, July 15. Wheat 74 73 , MORE WARSHIPS NEEDED. American Residents of V6nezuela Not Sufficiently Protected. Nnw York. Julv 15. Foreigners aro fleeing hero from Venezuela, ca bles tho Port of Spain, Triniuau, cor roHimnilonfc of tho Herald. There Is Hiimrlsn at the HmallncBs of tho Unit ed States naval forces in Venezuelan waters, especially at La uuayra, where tho government officials aro said to havo roportod to President Castro that they cannot control tho revolution. Puerto caneiio, uampano and Barcolona aro without Unitod States warships and tho rosldonts. ar6 6xl)6scd io great dangers. More Men In Mine, Tnhnntnwn. July 15. It Is still In sisted that there aro at least 20 in im rolllntr mill mlno, Tho iiastor of the church that most of tho miners altonuea, Huy a number of members of his congrega tion aro missing and ho Is Biiro their bodies aro In the mine. POOR WITION THE CUBAN GOVERNMENT FAIL8 IN THI8 RESPECT. Sewers Are Choking Up and the Death Date is Increasing to a Tru ly Alarming Extant t. i ,,,i, Tntv IK Tho sanitary ri'i iniiiHut") y - - condition of Havana Is bocomlng what It was before tne comiu ui Americans. The streets are being neglected, plumbing work is no longer being dono and tho sowers are choking up. Tho death rate during the first month of government by the Cubans showB an enormous increase; Jessie Morrison In Prison. Leavenworth, Kan., July 15. Miss Jesslb Morrison arrived at the state penitentiary at Lansing at 11 o'clock yesterday to begin her 26-year sen tpn for the murder of Mrs. Olln Castle at Eldorado. She is yery much downcast. It Is not known what work wjll be iBslgned to her. Wind of Yesterday Did Mix Damago to Grain in Uma tilla County. REPORTS ARE- SOMEWHAT CONFLICTING, HOWEVER. Some Say Thousands of DoMm Worth of Damage Waa Done WMte Others Declare That Nothing Was Hurt. To what oxtont did tho wind (ta ngo tho grain? is tho question bds askod today on ovory hand. Quito a number of fnrmors are ha town from different parts of Mw county, who stato that whoro (ft wheat wns rlpo It Is shattoro conslderablo oxtont. rinrlnv hnm . so Buirorod. ono man from tho ervntlon sava tho damnirn In sovoro In sonio nlnccB. attlmneh most oi it is to barloy, as tho wheat Is not rlpo onough to shnttor. From tho south comes rntinrta M tno grcatost dnnmgo. In that os try tho wheat Is earner than In north nnd oast country. From -m lnnuirloR pmiiPH rminrtn nf whnnt lng blown down. This, howovor. ht oniy in row places and tho araoM is sninll. Had tho wind that Rwrmt ovnr tfctfi vnlloy Monday ovonlng, boon tw wee kb later tno damago would nwsi boon vory groat. Conflicting Stories. During tho day many confllcUac storlos havo boon heard about flS amount of dnmago dono tho grata ly tho winds of Monday ovonlng. - Davo Nelson a ranchor living nwfht who la in town, says tho damage to groat. Ho said If ho got half wheat ho would havo harvested It not boon for tho wind, he think ho Is In luck, Ho also staMt that tho wheat on tho Porklns plaesfc north, whoro ninny had gucsood a yield of 40 bushels per aero, waaM bo harvested, would do woll slnco Uw wind to yield 10 to 15 bushels. In Juniper Country. Word from tho Junlpor country, W miles north, 1b to tho samo effeet Much of tho wheat In that couafs Ih almost ripe, and whoro It waa aag whoro near rlpo tho damago is beaqc Spring wheat ia not Bhattored, Ms much of tli to Is broken off and (to hoadB lying on tho ground. IJarley lias also BUffored In country, according to Mr. Nols who Bays: "Tho wind Just whlppaK tho heads from tho straw and maav Holds, both wheat and barloy, wbAA lookod flno boforo tho wind, now a somblo stubble, fields." Tho greatest damage hoard of ono placo comoB from tho resorp tion. Mr. Cathorman has a field B 100 acroB of barloy and several ws have looked at tho field thla mom Inif doclaro $1000 Is not too osre an estimate at which to place tfc damago. Contrary Report. In onnosltlon to tho abovo reports or damage, many deolaro little Injurt haB been dona. Joseph McCabo, gonoral manager of tho W. & O. IL railroad, arrhwt In town this foronoon. Ho casar through tho country from the river along the high line, and Bays thews is no damago In that direction. Ke talked to many farmers along ta lino, who absolutely declared taaft wheat shattered from the wind woahl not amount to anything. Yacht Capsized. New York, July 16. The yacht t nnrl flfillarl bv J. IL CU oron, cashlor of the National Baa of the Ropublic, capBizea in int nlcrhr. and two nassengers WSB drowned. Cameron and the rest wss saved by a tugboat. , Another Explosion. Johnstown, Pa., July 15, An nlrmion at mlno 32. of the Cerwfci White company, at Flndber. 10 mtom south, is roported. The, oclala fuse to give details but It is belMB ed to be serious, At Nice, But Not Nl. Nice, France, July 16, Six blosto warn rindtraved bv flro here ' t4SBi the loss being over ISM fit 'v.-m. T