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Show x . NEWS SUMMARY. FAMOUS WOMAN SUFFRAGE LEADER PASSES AWAY Pertinent w .. 'I&jxcs zTlbctfoill There are 1 10,0140 eases of epilepsy la .he Uuittid Slates. Since the first instant there have been 14u cases of eholera and 132 deaths in all F.gypt. llurglara blew open the postoflica safe at Culver, Ind., and got away with S10U0 worth of stamps. Conditions in the Russian iron trade are as critical as ever, says Petersburg dispatch by way of London. Jeff Chenault, City Marshal Jordon and Tuuey Jones were killed in shooting affray at Orange, Texas. A' consolidation of leading manufacturers in this country of axes and certain lines of edge toole is in prospect. Gen. Matos still lias 0000 men under his command, opposed to the 5000 troops commanded by President Castro. The Indiau government has refused the Standard Oil company permission to prospect in the oil fields of Burnish. General Toral, who surrendered Santiago de Cuba to the American forces in July, 1 SU8, has become insane at Murcia. Robbers blew open the safe of the Tampa, Kan., state bank and took bout 83800 in currency, escaping on a xnd car. There have been slight eruptions of the Soufriere volcano, on the island of St. Vincent recently. The crater is smoking continually. George Vest, Jr., son and private secretary of Senator Vest of Missouri, died suddenly at the Columbia hotel in Washington of acute gastritis. As an evidence that President Castro of Venezuela does not consider that he has peace hss been ordered 2,000,000 cartridges from Hamburg. The trip of the gunboat Marietta to Barcelona, Venezuela, resulted in a satisfactory settlement of the case of States Consul Baize at "Ctmks odi. Minnesota's Pride Humbled. Nuiirafl.ii Rave lliu Miiiiip.sntii a rude shuck In their annual tin Gopher lentil in a game, t battle ly cm tuiuliduan. Nebraska played the finite from star' to ti nihli and earned tin v ir t dry. If r defense was tuo strung fur ber opponents. Her nffeiiaive work was more finished and in ibe second half sup-porter- s hard-fough- supe-rior- punting was done by both teams with little advantage either way. Minnesota was crippled by the loss of l.afans and levies, win) could not go into the game on account of Injuries. Nebraska depended upon mass plays and, although outplayed in the first half. she. located the weak places and was able to make a touchdown in the second after missing three attempts to score by place kicks. Nebraska's line was much superior to that of the ('ciphers and her play was very fierce. Her men were repeatedly cautioned and twice penalised for foul work In the line. Nebraska used trick plays effectively, twice making long gains ou a double pass. Westovcr was the star of the game, stopping nearly every attempt to gain around his end of Ihe line, and frequently getting down the field and downing his man after a punt. Bender and Shedd were responsible for most of the gaines made by the Cornhusk-rs- . Bonder played a clean game at quarter aud did good punting. Much 1 day. forty yards. The longest run for Notre I lame was made by Carver at In the second half, the first kick-ofthirty yards. Puriig the second half to be the weight of Michigan shown sad the line of Notre Dame mis torn to pieces at will. f bc-ca-n Little Too Strenuous. A the South Dakota team Novatny was knocked senseless. Olson was knocked down for strangling, Captain Newcomb received a broken shoulder blade and Thompson a broken rib. For Omaha Khy was hit In the stomach, Junghiuth, who knocked Novatny senseless, was chased from the field. Umpire Whlttcnmr? was knocked down for calling Mustine a Mar, etc. Omaha dispatch to the Chicago Inter Ocuau. Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, of in- ternational fame as woman suffragist, reformer and philosopher, died last week at her home In the Stewart man suffrage convention, which was held at Seneca Falls, N. Y., on July 8, 1848. She is the only signer of that call who has stuck to her colors throughout the years and has never flagged street, She was eighty-seveyears old. Her in the work then begun, although she son and her daughter and several has faced storms and hurricanes of grandchildren were at her bedside ridicule and vituperation. when the end came. It had not been Mrs. Stanton was born of Puritan unexpected. ancestry at Johnstown, N. Y., NovemFor a long time old age and heart ber 12, 1816. Her father was a distindisease had been weakening her. She guished lawyer of the time. was unconscious through weakness, She was educated at Mrs. Willard's and died as if merely falling Into a seminary at Troy. She was married in 1840, went abroad, and on her resleep. Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton may turn took up abolition. No convention of woman suffragists was complete truly be called the grand old woman of the suffragists. She was one of the without Mrs. Stanton. The cause has signers for the call fur the first wo lost a powerful champion. 250 West New York. Apartment House, Ninety-fourt- h n Northwestern Overmatched. Commenting on the Maroon-Purplgame a famous football coach who aw the contest said : Northwestern depended mainly on straight football. Once or twice the Purple eleven tried some trick play, but it generally resulted miserably. On offense the two Northwestern half backs stood a little In advance of the full bac k, facing in towards the quarter hack. The Purple players frequently attempted to use a hurdling attack In which Boot'i, the quarter back, was given the hall and Baird and Floager tried to throw him over the line. This offense met with poor success. Finally, late In the second unit,- me; oMinii ohcks luun up their old formation, standing in a straight line with some men drawn back. This arrangement was much 3ike Chicago's. "Both teams were slow. The lack jf speed was, of course, due to a large extent, to the wan weather. Chicago did uol haVe any great speed, but it was faster than Northwestern. The latt r tram wore Itself mt In the first half, and although it .fought gamely through the second it was putting up a hopeless battle. e "1 isu-pikt- Beloit Scored on Wisconsin. In the Ini of Wiscousin-Bc-loiof good tricks game, a were pulled ou" from the new , notably Abbult'a iwi-- . i run, in whieh owever. the ball was called back to the tifieeu-jarline for alleged use of hands ly one of his it. t offerers. For the rest Wisconsin m.i d tl e eame style of that l;u. mad.- tLq Badgers famous during the last six years half backs and straight bucks by the halves off tackle, and an occasional dash from their positions in the line-uby guards and tackles. The game resulted: Wisconsin, 52; Beloit. fi. t lo-ipl- line-up- forty-live-yar- d 1 d Former Btar on baseball ana ball teams at Princeton. Now head coach at the Wisconsin Gridiron. Northwestern Lost Chances. t game beDuring the tween the University of Chicago and Northwestern football teams Northwestern had four good chances to score. Two were ou touchdowns and two were on goals from the field. In the first half Northwestern made one move which was criticised both favorably and unfavorably. While in the d neighborhood of Chicago's line two rushes were stopped. Two yarns ne iin:rtMi; JUr Ibe fliat down, but Instead of going for the two Northwestern took twenty yards, yards loss and retained the ball. Again they moved up to the danger point, lmt only to fall again. hard-fough- tl-- KNOWN NOVELISJj;. Weekea Does Brilliant Work. Columbia's football team trounced the Hamilton eleven by a score of 35 to o. The game was noteworthy for several spectacular plays, two of which were made hv Hamlil Weekes. Weekes did not play the first half in anticipation of the mining game with In the second half he Princeton. caught the ball on the kickoff at Columbia's two yard line and ran luS yards down the field fur a tuttcliduwu, the longest run ever made on the polo grounds. Soon after he was given the hall and ran eights yards for another touchdown. Weekes only played fifteen of the forty-livminutes of the game. Abbott. Michigan Team Was Too Heavy. Noire Datno in Michigan diTuaft-Their iimnml fuoilail combat by score of 2a in u. Win twelve pounds to a man against ilium 'nt re Dame put up a good fa-raid hld down ihe Michigan in fi t. points in The first half. For Mkhic.:m the hacks n lid the work, while fur Notre Dame. Salt'imi gained mut of the ground. Tie1 Wolverines ontpiayi-the lloosiers in swiftness and tackling, although during the first half Notre lame's line withstood the Tierce plays of Michigan. Sweeley of Mlohipvi made the longest run of the , im-t- i ln-- e AUTfVOff OP Tse Octoaij" novel1898 he went to Cuba as the war corFrank Norris, the ist and war correspondent, died in respondent of McClure's Magazine. After his return from Cuba Mr. San Francisco last week of appendici- Ball Playera have fairly Cumiskcy and Seli-prosperous sets of hall players, not a few of iL non being i rally wealthy. One or two of the younger men in the National longue outfit may have to borrow from fat her or got advance money, but the number will be limited, while the White Sex a supposed to he well fixed to a man. Both of the managers have plenty. Sulei owning a good homo in and ran ling among Chicago men of independent means. o I n Norris devoted himself exclusively to literary work, and rapidly achieved an enviable reputation as a writer of novels and magazine stories. ms first work to attract wide attention was The Octopus, a depicting the strncfle between the California wheat groivi is and the railroads. This story firmly Uahlmhed the writer's reputation as a snic-ssfunovelist and much discussion. Other works by Mr. Norris are "A Man's Woman." B!ix" and Moran or ihe l.ady Lefty." Ketcham Offers a Big Wager. Tin- author's latest work, entitled In defiance of the opinions of veterThe Bit, is the second story in the an drivers. Uudd Imble. IM (Shts. epic of the wheat" began by Tho John Schlann ami Scott Hudson tlint New York. Octopus, and is now being brought Cresceiis has seen hit. days and the Uitlander uprising in mil as a set Ini in an eastern publicaDuring will not trot in better tbnn 2 on Norris went tion. It is (In- i atrative of a "deal" Soul i Africa in 1895-9the occasion of hi- - eTort imalnst of the in the Cl.b neu wheat j it, and is sxid war as there the correspondent world's ft run!. t;...i-- . Ic(e-HiiSan Frar.eiseo Chronicle. On Ids re- Vo show power iiml originality. When Cfcseelis owner. ;tld be Would color turn in SOi'i 97 lie bee.'im editor of strif eii with ibe illness lint caused on, a miner of jf i,at amount! the San Franciseo Wave, in which bis ibnili .Vr. Norris mis engaged in were poMcd at odds of to 5. that of Ills short stories and writ.r.g a tlunl novel on a somewhat many Ci corns will irc t,o track at Mtn-pht- i Latches were published. At the out- similar topic. is death is a distinct Tei:n in b.'ticr than 2:04. war In loss to Anii iicnn liteni'iire. break of the tis. The name of Frank Norris is closely Identified wits Chicago, an he was horn in that city in 1870 and his latest novel depicts Borlal and business life l here. He was the son of B. F. Nora ris, Chicagoan, Inti received most of his early education on the Pacific mast, graduating from the San Francisco high school, and the University of California. After taking a short post graduate course at Harvard university the young man went abroad and spent two years in Iniis studying art. He returned to tills country in H89, and in the following cnr married Miss Jeannette Black In well-know- ! -- l cM-iie- "McT.-tMMio,- - t 6 - , -- i i 1 i It is reported from Denain, Department Du Nord, France, that at a meeting of 2000 miners held there it was voted to cun tiuue the strike. Denain is being patrolled by troops. At Wilkesbsrre, la., Dennis Dorris, a foreman, was fatally shot by a miner named J. C. Hennessey, because lie had been refused work. Doris is popular aud there were threats of lynching. Walter M. Junes, who was superintendent of the harbor police at Havana from the close of the Spanish, war unliLa few months ago, when he retired because of ill health, is dead. A rebellion against taxation to meet the indemnity China is to pay to the powers has broken out in the southwestern part of Clii-province. Troops have been sent to suppress the disorders. In Washington, D. ?., the coroner's jury lias held Richard Cole, a colored porter, for the murder of Mrs. Ada Gilbert Dennis, the dressmaker who was assaulted on the night of Dcremf her 10th last, anil who died recently. Insects imported into Hawaii from Mexico for the purpose of having them attack the iantaua, which is a most destructive weed throughout the islands, are supposed to be doing what was expected of them on the inland of Maui. Tanbara Gisaburo, a Japanese, who was found guilty in the United States court of the murder on the high seme of UspL Jacobsen on the schooner Fred J. Wood, lias been sentenced by Judge F.stee to be hanged on December 24 Hi. August Krrgle of Stillwell, Ind., lias just been reunited with liis sister Jns-ti- na K regie of Oxford, O., after a separation of forty-eigWhen years. K lost escli other 6 visa regie they years of age and Miss K regie was two years his junior. It has finally been that the details and conditions of the cvsuua-- i tion of Shanghai by t lie troops of the Powers arc to be adjusted subsequent to the actual evacuation, which will, as previously agreed upon, take plaoe at an early date. Edward llulioney. a deputy sheriff was found dead on Hit lake shore at I n ti ill . A man and woman were seen late Saturday night near where the body was found. Mahoney for many yars bad acted as truincr for the Duluth Boat club. Li hard-fough- In-- . ! r Star Lift End. Her- Newfoundland. In Buffalo, N. Y Christopher Willis shot and fatally wounded Mary Ferguson, his fiancee, and then shot and killed himself. The cause has not been ascertained. I well-know- Wisi mi.-i-n Secretary Hay and Sir Michael j Indians Down Cornell. The Carlisle Indians defeated Cornell by a score or 1 Mo fi in a fierce t and contest. The Indians in their p'ayed form, using a tackle hack formation with much success. Johnson. Wheelock and Williams played star games. Cornell put up a stubborn contest. Pop Warner played a star game. The Indians used a tackle hack formation which Cornell seemed unable to solve. Cornell hut once succeeded in working the hall down to the Indians ten yard line, only to lose it on downs. Well-to-D- place. bert have taken up again the Bond treaty, providing for limited reciprocity between the United States and JEAD e old-tim- that FRANK NORRIS. WELL- - five-yar- - full-backs- , Vice-Unit- ed s 1 Bpanlsh-America- u ht 1 Hr |