The JnlILLSBR VOL. VIII. IIILLHIIOUO, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEM.UA1.Y 13, 1902. NO. 48. EVENTS OF .THE DAY PROM THE FOUR QUARTERS THE WORLD. OP A Comprehensive Review of the Important oippe-Jngi of the Put Week PrtMnUd M bmaented Tom Which li Most likely lo Prova of Interest lo Our Many Ruder. Northern Pacific) iwlliiinioti Hi Mii oiila, Mont., are un strike. Yoiiiik Teddy Roosevelt l vilghtly UUr, although thi crlsl lit not ynt passed. Han Francisco chamber ( commerce favor the admission of Chinese mer chant. F.iigland ml Japan have formed mi alliance (or the preservation ol p'hliia and ("orea. J Colombia offer the t'nltl States guaranteed title to a waterway for the tuimlrut'tloii ol a 4'miihI . (inventor Tuft favor bringing soma native KiliptiKM lo this country and ed ucating them. The MarquU of Duflprln, ex-governor general of Canada ami ex-viceroy of India, In dead. Alaskan Steamer Ashore on Harold Island All On Board Meks land. , Port Townsend, Vli. , Feb. 13. Another steamship ha Umn added to the lung list of wreck along tlie AIum- mi shores. The Cottage City, arriving might, bring new of the wreck of the Alaskan 'oniiuuruittl Company' steam- er ltertha, on Harold island, near the n trance of FiUhugh nound, north of Queen Churlotta sound. The Jlortlia sailed from Seattle for Vulileii lust I rl- lay, having 41 pMWgent, among whom were 12 meinlicr of the t'uihxl Statu army signul corps, bound for Valde, while, other were hoiiml for nterior HiititM. All went well with the Bertha until Katunluy night, when the weather net In thick, mill Smiduy morning at 12:30 NO SUCCESS ITHOUT IT. No brIIIUnt success In business it on record where the value oi iw ppr advertising wu not recofniied end employed with proiit. Oihkoth Times. Fire lit Springfield, 111., did over a million dollar damage. A new geyser h lieen fount! In the Yellowstone National park. TIt strongly opoe the Importation if t hineen to the Philippine. More fighting In reimrled between the aotvrnnmiit trooi ana the rebel ol Vetieeuela. Sentiment lor reduction ol rate on Philippine Import I gaining ground In the senate. A IVtmit Irnnk wa wrecked by one of It official, who la charged, w ith taking 1,0U0,U00. The pant week In the Tranavaal waa the llvelieet, with heavy lome on taith aldna, for eoiue time. 1 The Iom to raUron, N. J., U now kplannl at f H.OOC.OOO, hut the city la not In tietxl of oimlile alii. Klevnn person lout tlielr live in a Ht. Umla Are. Krltinh fn nave captured many 1W during the at woek, Younit Theoilora Kooeevelt. while very Uk, la not wtmlilered dangermia Klre at PaUron, N. J., canned a Urn of flO.OOO.OOO and left at Ul 1,000 famlllea homelem. The foreign mnauU at Tanaum have nolifieil the rebel leader Hurrera that they will remain neutral. The nreiililent wtoed the reoommend atinn that he be breveted colonel and brigadier general for meritorious aerv lw In the war with Hj.ain. Roar Admiral Sainpaon ha bwn re- tln-d. BERTHA 18 WRECKED. ELEVEN MEET DEATH. NEWS OF THE STATE rUl Nm In a St Louit MoUl-Stvcral Oangcrouily lnurtd. tl. Lou!, Feb. 12. An early morn lug flru which ditroytl lurge tlirue Ntory dwelling houne iM-cupitxl by men exrluiitvely, cailmil the (loath of 11 per nii ID inon and one woman and 'lungerotiHly injurwl wveii other. A io.n or more who had nurrow e'a' from death received Iikm aoriou injuries or were froxlhitUni. It 1 extlinativl tlmt betweeu il' and 40 'rwin worn in the building at tin) time the fire broke out, and it ia believed that all have been uo iiimti'il for. The flnanvial loos i nominal. It 1 thought that f 10,000 will .vivor the duuiugti to building and Content, w hii-h were totally deHtroyed. The fire atarttnl about - 3:30 A. M., when few Mtopl were abroad, and TEM8 OF INTEREST FROM ALL PARTS OF OREQON. if -'v - i .'. .. .. - Cemratrdal and financial flappcnlaji of Ira. . porUnca A Brief Review of the Growth and lproveaent( of the Many Industrie Throoghout Our Thrrvlnf, Oonmonweelth IVnillotou ba derided to adopt a re trenchment policy, the firMtactof which wa to let one pollonmau go. Aahland la iuveetigatlng the matter f a comprehensive aewer ytin for the city. An estimate place the coet at 20,000. A company ia being organized to con struct seven telephone line from Pen dleton to the amall outlying district which are not at present aupplied. A petition i being circulated In and around Baker City asking emigres to set aside Crater lake and adjacent land sulliciunt to make a national park. The price of hop continue to ad vance steadily. Buyer around Halem are offering 13X cent per imiiiikI, but the growera in most case refuse to sell at that priiv. The Wasco Warehoune Milling Com pany has Just made a shipment of 10,- uwj sacka oi nour to I Inna. This ia the first shipment of flour from Wasco county to n foreign market. The largest real estate deal in the history of I'matilla county, was con suniated when J. E. Smith puchased .50,000 acre of land. The deal also hi cludea 180,00 head of sheep. The price pa lii wa 9200,000. JOSEPH R. WHITNEY. A well known Oregon newspaper man and txlitor of the Iaily and Weekly Herald, of Alluinv. He I a candidate for the nomination for Mate Printer on the lSepuhliian ticket. He was born in Marion County, I a graduate of the I'niversity of Oregon, and ho been engiigcil in the newspain r businos for nearly 20 year. Sampson ha filed a brief with the president protesting against Kchley'e claim. (lermany'i colonial policy has proven (allure, The senate haa pasmnl the pension appropriation bill. Theodore Roonovolt, Jr., la seriously ill with pneumonia. The trouble at the Colorado School of Mine ha been settled. Kngland, America and Japan will op pose the Manchtirlan treaty. The aultan of Turkey ha sentenced hia brother-in-law to be killed. Holland refuse to have anything mora to do with the pence proposal. A severe snow atorm li raging In Texaa. , England will abandon her right In Wol Hal Wei. The senate has paaed the urgency deficiency bill. Fire at Albany, N. Y., destroyed $50,000 worth of property. President Roosevelt and wife are vis iting the Charleston exposition. European powera are (till disputing over thoir attitude during the Spanish war. Thirteen norsona were killed and at leant 100 injured by a gai explosion at Chicago. The woolgrowers' convention placed itself on record In favor of oleo margarine. Representative Newlands, of Nevada, Introduced a resolution In the house for the annexation of Cuba. the vessel struck on Harold Island. All the passenger were In bed, and the shock caused great confusion and a stamiiedo wa made for the upper deck. Captain Johansen and the iillicera of the hip restored order In a abort time, and on Investigation it was found that the vessel wa in such close proximity to the shore that the gangplank would reach an elevated rock. The passen ger at once walked ashore, and later bedding and baggage were landed, and a camp aa made ou barren rocks. On the approach of tiuyiigtit the work id lightering the vessel waa com menced by landing horse and other freight. A kedge anchor wa put out, and the vessel hauled into deep water with the aid of the donkey engine, but a atsjn as deep water was struck ahe lxgaii to sink, The vessel wa swung on the bench. Fhe has lost her keel, ami there is a large hole in her Ixittom forward engine room, and It ia believed she will he a total loss. gained much headway before it was dis covered ami the alarm given. There was considerable delay In turning in an alarm, and when the engines Anally reached the scene, the w hole front of the building was in flame and the in tenor wu a mottling furnace. By that time all who escied death had got out of the building by jumping from the window or climbing down rope made of bedclothes. A few escaped on the K mil ml floor through the front door, Several escape were very narrow Every one who got out suffered some injury or was frost, bitten. Some barely had time to got out when aroused, the tinmen had spread so rapidly. Some saved their ciotlilng,Jvthich they carried in their hands, but other were not no fortunate, losing everything. COST OF OUR NAVY. A farmer and wife, living near New York, received a legacy of 5,000 from a man whom, aa a hungry wanderer, thoy befriended 18 years ago, - Herbert Oicknese waa sent to jail at Fort Wayne, Ind., for contempt of court. lie persisted In calling on hia wife, who is suing fur divorce. Potcr Qulnn, aged 35, who inherited a fortune from lila father, squandered it in high living and baa juat died in New York, a homeless wanderer, Ship aad Rtpaln Since 1883 Itave Cost Over $100,000,000. Washington, Feb. 13. Tho new navy has ciwt the United States t ,)tt,H03,928 for construction ami 10,343,233 for re- pnira on completed vessels. . These flg' urea were supplied In a statement for warded to the senate by the secretary of the navy in reswnse to a resolution adopted by the senate In February, 1901. Tho facts are all given In tab ular form, without explanatory text. In addition to the expenditures made on vospcls now afloat there are several ships in course of construction. These include the Kentucky and the Rear sarge, on each of which an expenditure of 14,000,000 haa been authorized, and tho Illinois, Indiana and Alabama, on each of which an expenditure of 3, 850,000 is authorized. There are also several smaller vessels In course of con struction which will bring the total up to a considerable extent when the ves sel are completed. The statement covera the period from 1883 and begins with the building of tho Chicago, Atlanta and Boston. Of the completed vessels the Oregon cost the greatest amount 90,575,033. The Massachusetts Is second In point of cost 90,047,175. The cost of tho Maine was 94,077,788. ' Negotiation! Agiln Opened. Constantinople, Feb. 13, The Amer ican delegates remaining at Seres, Macedonia, after the failure recently of the negotiations for the ransoming of .the abducted missionary, have again opened negotiations, Bl Publlthere Asilgn. Boston, Feb. 13. Small, Maynard & Co., publishers, of this city, have made an assignment. No statement of asset and liabilities is given. MINDANAO GOVERNOR RESIGNS TEN MILLION DOLLAR FIRE. The flax mill at Salem is now au assured fact. The receipta of The Dalle land oflicej tor Jauuary were nearly 110,000. Ir. W. D. Jeffrie, for 40 year practicing physician of Salem, ia dead. Placer miners of Southern Oregon gladly hail the rains of the past few days. ' The Willamette river at Albany is lower than for many year at thi time oi the year. Stpe have been taken by the busi ness men ot Koaeburg to organize i board of trade. A representative of the English gov. eminent ia around Elgin buying horses tor South Africa. President Eliot, of Harvard univer sity, will visit the state university at Eugene next month. So far in Linn county there have been 600 registrations for the June election out of a probable total of 5,500. Miner in Southern Oregon have long been throwing away what was suppoeed to ba lead ore, but which has proven to be rich ailver ore. The report of the commissioner of patent for the past fiscal year bIiows that there were 125 patents issued to Oregon inventor. BiuImm Portion of Patertoa, H. I, Des troyed 1,000 familwi flonteleu. Paterson, N. J., Feb. 11. A great fire awept through Paterson today and in it deaulate wake are the ember and nhe of projierty valued at $10,000,- 000. It burned it way through the business section of the city and claimed a it own a majority of the finer struc ture devoted to commercial, civic, educational and religious use, aa well score of bouse. There wa but small tribute of life and injury to the conflagration, but thousand were left homeles and many thousand without employment. A relief movement for the care of those unsheltered and unprovided for ha already been organized and Mayor John Ilinchliffe nay that Paterson will be able to care for ber own with out appealing to the charity of other communities and atate. The great manufacturing plant of the place are aafe and tlie community, temporarily dazed by the calamity, ha already com menced the work of reorganization and restoration. The fire began ita work of destruction at the power bouse of the Jersey City, Hoboken A Paterson Traction Com pany, which fronted on Broadway and extended a block to the rear of Van Houten etreet. It commenced in the car shed and waa burning fiercely when one of the employes detected it. It wa leaping through the roof and the gale was lifting it in fork and whirls when the fire apparatus came into the roadway at Van Ilcmten and Main streets. The firemen tried to hem the blaze in, but it skipped across Van Hon ten street in one direction and Main street in another, and gaining vigor a it went, burned unchecked down into the business district. Every piece of fire mechanism in the city waa called out,. but the fire and gale were master. The fire came at midnight and was only checked after a desperate fight that lasted until late this afternoon Everyjcity and town within reach of Paterson sent i firemen'and apparatus to (the aid of the city, and it took the united effort of them all to win the battle. A northerly gale gave the con flagration it impetus and carried its burning brands to kindle the blaze afresh at other points. The firemen made stand after stand before the wall of fire, but were repeatedly driven back, and when victory finally came to them they were grimed and exhausted. F0KM AN ALLIANCEl ENGLAND AND JAPAN UNITE TO AID CHINA AND COREA. Portland Market. Wheat Quiet Walla Walla, 63c; bluestem, 64?64Hc; Valley, 9 19 20; brewing, Military Officers Would Not Recognize Hit Authority. Manila, Feb. 12. The governor of the town ot Cayagnn, in the province of Misamis, island of Mindanao, haa re signed, declaring that the military au their it ics there do not recognize his au thority in refusing to receive his writ of habeas corpus. Home months ago many of the leading officials of MisamiR province were arrested because they tendered a banquet to an insurgent colo nel, and bccnuHe it was proved that they had also contributed funds to the in surgent cause. -At that time General Davis, commanding at Zamboanga island of Mindanao, requested that the province be transferred from civil to miltinry control. The military author ities in Misamis refused to allow the prisoners to lie represented by a lawyer' sent by the civil commission from' Manila for that purpose, holding the arrested officials a prisoners of war. Lately Oenornl Chaffee instructed Gen eral Davis to release the prisoners in question, and notified the' civil author ities when and whore they could arrest them. But the fact that their offense was committed before the passage of the law of sedition makes further ac tion In tho matter improbable. Gen eral Chaffee deeming it inadvisable that civilians should lie tried by a mil itary commission Sonor Lerma, the nowly elected gov ernor of Batumi province, fled after his election when he was called upon to ac count for $4,000 of insurgent funds.- He ia still missing. Raided by Outlaws. Alamagorda, N. M., Feb. 11. News has been received here of a mid on the store of the Pew Mercantile Gompuny, at Fort Sumner, by a gang of outlaws, supposed to be the same that recently robbed a bank and pay car jf-HjuUn Barley Feed, $20J1 per ton. Oata No. 1 white. 91.10ei.25: gray, Il.ObQ'l.lB, per (roaclad Agreement lalcaded to Check the fast Growing Power of Russia la the fir East, Abo to Insure the Independ ent of the Chinese Empire and Adjoin ing Regions. GREAT SAND 8TORM. Rosa. One of the employes was killed and $400 in can! The snnii is headed fur the mountains and is being purst sheriff a posse. 1 .e Flour Best grades, $2.803.40 barrel; graham, I2.502.80. Mlllstuffa Bran, 918 per ton; mid dllnga, 921; shorts. 920.50; chop, 917 Hay Timothy, 9U12; clover, 97 7.50; Oregon wild hay, 5ijf6 per ton. Potatoes Best Burbanks, 90c$1.26 per cental; ordinary, 70 85c per cen tal, growera' prices; sweets, I1.75i3 2 per cental. Butter Creamery, 2527Hc; dairy, 1820c; store, lllSc. Eggs 2021c for fresh Oregon. Cheese Full cream, twins, 13 lSVic; Young America, 1415c; fac tory prices, llc less. Poultry Chickens, mixed, 933.50; hens, $404.25 per doien, 910c per pound; springs, 10c per pound, 93 3.50 per dozen; (lucks, 96.507.60 per dozen; turkeys, live, U12Vic; dressed, 14 ($150 per pound. Mutton Gross, 4c per pound; dressed, 77c per pound. Hogs-r-Gross, S&c; dressed, 6V47e per pound. Veal 8H9c per pound, dressed. Beef Gross, cows, 34c; steers, 44Hc; dressed, 67Hc per pound. Hops ll12Hc per pound. Wool Nominal. Valley, 13 15c; eastern Oregon, 8 12 He; mohair, 2121c per pound. The buffaloes are increasing in such proportions in Canada that they prom ise in the course of a few years to be come again fairly abundant. Cecil Rhodes, the millionaire and statesman, who is credited with having provoked the Boer war, is, it is said, to receive the honor of a peerage. John Hill, a planter at West Baton Rouge, La., has given to the Louisiana state university $25,000 for the erection of an alumni building and library. Ten thousand dollars have been con tributed to the national fund for a Mc Kinley memorial by the. working- men of Homestead, Pa. England's imports of , iron and steel are increasing, while the exports are falling off. British trade papers are alarmed. Hurricane Sweeps Over the Western aad Cen tral Nevada Desert. Reno, Nev., Feb. 'k13. Since early this morning the wide stretch of desert in Western and Central Nevada has been swept by a wind storm that at times haa approached tlie proportions of a hurricane. At several points on tlie Central Pacific, between Reno and Elko, the w ind at times blew at the rate of 80 miles an hour, and though there was no serious damage to prop erty, it delayed trains, prostrated tele graph wires and long stretches of rail road are almost buried in sand. Vast clouds of sand, picked np by the gale, were hurled across the country with fearful force, and at Wadsworth, Des ert, Thistle and other towns, business was practically suspended all after noon, it being impossible for people to breathe while facing the drifting whirling walls of loose dust and sand At Desert and Mirage, the sand filled the air to such an extent that the sun was obscured and lamps were neces sary. At Humboldt House, about 40 miles west of Winnemucca, the few people who ventured out of doors beheld a pe culiar sight. About eight miles south of the town is a mountain, rising abruptly from the sandy desert. The wind, sweeping across the flat country. caught the snow of this hill and seemed to stretch it out for two or three miles from the slopes. ' Through occasional break 8 in the clouds of dust across the plain between the town and the moun tain the middle slopes could be seen apparently swept bare of snow in a few hours by the1 terrific force ol the wind The storm tonight shows but little sign of aoating. EXTENDED MONROE DOCTRINE VALUE OF DANISH ISLES. London, Feb. 13. An important par liamentary paper waa issued tonight, giving the terms of a practical alliance between Great Britain and Japan for the preservation of Cores and China. The paper covers a dispatch sent by Lord Lansdowne, secretary of state lor foreign affair, January. 30, to the Brit ish minister to China, Sir Claude Mac- donald, and comprise a signed copy of the agreement. In explanation, the paper says the agreement may be re garded as an outcome of the events of the past two year. Throughout the Boxer trouble Great Britain and Japan bad been In close, uninterrupted com munication, and actuated by similar view. "We each desire," said Lord Lans downe, "that the integrity and inde pendence of the Chinese empire should be preserved, and that there should be no disturbance of the territorial status quo in China or the adjoining regions." The discovery that their far Eastern policies were identical resulted in each party to the agreement expressing its desire that their common policy find expression in an internationalcontract ol binding validity. Lord Lansdowne further says tbat the British government was largely in fluenced inl entering upon this- import ant contract by the conviction that it contains no provision which can be re garded aa aggressive or self-seeking. He say it is concluded merely aa a measure of precaution, and that it in no way threaten the present position or legitimate interests of other power. His majesty's government trusta tbat the agreement will be of mutual advant age to the two countries, and make for the preservation of peace, and, should peace unfortunately be broken, it will have the effect of restricting the area of hostilities. latest Acq tuition of Great Strategic Import, ante Provision of Treaty Eaplilned. Washington, Feb. 11. The recent favorable report by the senate commit tee on foreign relation on tho treaty for the cession of the Danish West Indie wa accompanied by a written statement by that committee to the sen ate. This report bold that during 1000 the islands exported to the United States sugar, molasses and distilled spirit amounting to $568,945, and that during the same period the importa tion from the United States amounted to ,$624,524. The annexation of the inlands was nought by the United States years ago, and aa far back aa 1867 Den mark declined to sell the islands for $5,000,000, but made a proposition to part w ith them for $15,000,000. Sec retary Seward offered $7,500,000, which waa declined. He afterward agreed to pay that amount for the islands of St. Thomas and St. John, but the trade fell through becanrn of com plications which arose. Continuing, the report rays: "These islands, together with Porto Rico, are of great importance) in strategic way, whether the strategy ba military or commercial. St. Thomas is a jiatnral point of call for all Euro pean trade bound to the West Indies, Central America or Northern Sooth America. These islands, together with Porto Rico, form the northeastern cor- -ner of the Caribbean sea and are ot great importance in connection with ie American isthmus, where canal ill be constructed between the At lantic and the Pacific. They are of first importance in connection with our relations to the region of the Orinoco and the Amazon and with our control of the Windward Passage. In view of the isthmian canal and European set tlements in South America, every addi tional acquisition by the United States is of valne. 910, SWITCHMEN'8 STRIKE. Sent Pickett at Missoula Tan Back Crews ' to Take Their Places. Missoula, Mont., Feb. 13. The strik ing Northern Pacific switchmen have posted pickets along the line, and today succeeded in turning back two crews, one from Helena and the other from Butte, sent by the railroad company to take the place of the strikers. Freight has been badly congested in the yards as a result of the trouble. Brakemen and conductors still refuse to make up trains; unless the regular yard crews do the switching. The strike has assumed a grave aspect, and unless the officials of the company recede from the posi tion they have taken a strike along the entire system is probable. The cause of tlie trouble was the dis charging of two men who refused to work with a road engine without side board attachments. The switchmen de clare they are violating a state law in complying with the order of the rail way company. The statute in question provides that trainmen and yardmen who are Injured while working in the yards on an engine without sideboards i alone held responsible for such in juries, and can collect no damages from the company. $1,400,000 IN OHIO CITY. Hobion Would Nave It Reach to the Wells of Pekln. s New Haven, Conn., Feb. 8. Captain R.- P. Hobson, who was a guest of the New Haven Business Men's association at their annual banquet, urged that the Monroe doctrine be extended to the Filipinos and to the walls of Pekin declaring that Europeans should not partition China, but open it to the trade of the world, as the United States opened Japan. Among the dangers that face Europe, he mentioned a possible Slavic invasion, in the event of which, he said, it would fall to the lot of the United States to assist in saving Eu rope from general war. Without a rel atively powerful navy, such action would be manifestly impossible. Smallpox at Reno. Reno, Nev., Feb. 11. Several new cases of smallpox are reported in Reno, among the whites, and the state board of health has declared smallpox epi demic in Reno, and will probably order the public schools closed. Thirteen Persons Killed. Panama, Feb. 11. An accident in the Church of Horencitos, in Chiriqui, resulted in the death of 13 persons and the severe wounding of 30 othera. Twelve Great Manufacturing Plants In Spring. field Burned. Springfield, O., Feb. 13. The largest fire in the history of Springfield broke out in the Champion Chemical Com pany's plant of the East street shops yesterday, and in an hour and a half 12 manufacturing plants were in ruins The estimated loss is $1,400,000 The fire started in some chemicals in the Champion chemical plant. The companies were greatly handicapped by the light pressure of water. Ten fire men were caught in one building and had a very narrow escape from death. A company of the National Guard is now on duty to keep awav crowds and ma rauders. Four freight cars w ere totally destroyed and many others mined. Hundreds of buildings in the vicinity of the fire were in imminent danger, The firemen, owing to the high wind were unable to check the spread of the flames. The total number of men employed. by the different concerns located in the building was nearly 900. The insurance is $130,000 on the con tents and $110,000 on the buildings a total of $240,000. Dust Explosion In a Miae. Bon Air, Tenn., Feb.. 13. Over 15 men were injured by a dust explosion in the main entry of mine No. 15. All were rescued and all will probably re cover. About 100 men are employed. hi Hopeless Wreck, London, Feb. 13. The British steamer Knight Companion, from Port- BIG BOOST FOR LINE. or the felcfakjak-rrtlafMj iUilroai Goldendale, Wash., Feb. 10. The) citizens of Goldendale and Klickitat county have'raised $10,000 for the right of way for the railroad from thia city to Portland. The committee in charge of this matter considers thia amount sufficient to secure the right of way from Goldendale to Lyle, 41 miles. All rights of way have been teen red, excepting three or four between Golden dale and the head of Swale canyon, distance of about 18 miles, through the farming part of Klickitat county. The rest of the route lies principally through government lands, there being but few settlers and a few Indian claims along the Big Klickitat, there fore little trouble will be encountered on this score. Contracts have not yet been signed, but it ia expected that work will com mence on the grading within 30 days. The company organized for the pur pose of building this line will reserve two years in which to complete the line from Lyle to Goldendale, but expects to carry the crop from the Klickitat val ley this year. Property valuations have already advanced perceptibly in the vicinity of Goldendale and along the route of the proposed road. VETOES HIS OWN BREVET. Roosevelt Will Net Be RewardesT for Hi War Service Washington, Feb. II. The president has approved, with one notable excep tion, all the recommendations madefby tne army Doard oi which Ueneral Mac Arthur was president, for the bestowal of brevet rank on all the officers of the army who rendered especially meritori ous services during the war with Spain and in the subsequent campaigns in the Phpilippines and China. The ex ception noted is the case of Theodore Roosevelt, who was awarded the brevets ot colonel and brigadier general for dis tinguished services at San Juan and Santiago. Under the law these brevets require the confirmation of the senate) and the nominations have been made out for transmission to that body during the week, but, as already stated, the list will not contain the name of the president. It is expected that' the medals of honor and certificates of merit recommended by the board for individ ual gallantry, which also have been ap proved by the president, will be an nounced at the war department this week. These awards do not require the sanction of the senate. . BOERS TAKEN BY 8URPRI8E. AlKntrt't rnmrninrin Pllti Inlaw s.UUaa HmJ w wi sawn iianyi After Short Fight Johannesburg, Feb. 11. At 11 o'clock last Thursday night Colonel Kekewich, having ascertained the whereabouts of Commandant Albert'a laager at Gruisfuntein, sent men to cap ture it. The British force arrived at daybreak and immediately stampeded tne norses oi tne Boers with pompom and a well directed rifle fire. The Boers were completely surprised, and after a short reply to the British attack practically the total commando fell Into the hands of the attacking force, who captured 131 prisoners, including Com mandants Landrost and Potgieter and Cornet Duflessis. Another Subway Explosion. New York, Feb. 8. An explosion of dynamite in the rapid transit subway in Park'avenue, between Forty-first and Forty-second streets, hurled a piece of rock weighing 30 pounds through the plate glass door of the Grand Union li ntftl a ml ViwiWa .utM.1 .ln.ln. M land, Or., for Hong Kong, which went that establishment. Two persona were ashore at Inudoye, on the coast of hurt by fl aU b neUhif of Japan, is regarded.as a hopeless wreck. them w,gUined Kri(m injary