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LATER NEWS. Heavy rains, snow and chinook winds caused washouts that blocked all railway traffic in western Montana for over a week. An engine explosion in the saw mill of John Woodward, at Ackerman, Miss., killed Frank Woodward, Jim Hempill and Fayette Norloin. Football games the 20th resulted as follows: Yale 6, Princeton 0; Pennsylvania 15, Harvard 6. New counterfeit ten-dollar bills on the National bank of Los Angeles, Cal., have been discovered. The steamer Victoria, sent out by the Norwegian government to search for Prof. Andree, has returned without finding any trace of him or his balloon. The floor of the Cory Methodist church at Cleveland, 0., collapsed, precipitating 500 colored "worshipers to the ground, a distance of seven feet. A panic ensued, but only three persons were hurt, and they not seriously. Forty-eight men were arrested in the swamps of Mississippi by United States inspectors on the charge of violating the alien labor contract laws. Patrick Conway went to sleep in a foundry oven at Trenton, N. J. A fire was started soon after, and he was nearly roasted to death before rescued. Fire among the warehouses of Melbourne, Australia, caused a loss of $5,000,000. Two very distinct shocks of earthquake were felt at Randsburg, Cal., but no damage was done. Angel Paz, the Cuban insurgent, who betrayed General Adulfo Castillo into the hands of the Spanish troops, was hung by the insurgents. The powers threaten to make a demonstration in the Dardanelles. The will of the late Henry George, filed for probate in New York leayes his entire estate consisting of the home at Fort Hamilton, worth about $8,000, and the copyright of his books to his widow. A masked negro attempted to hold up a street car in Kansas City, Mo. The gripman, E. O. Prowett, threw a grip hook at the highwayman, who instantly shot the gripman in the groin. Conductor G. W. Church came to his comrade's assistance and was shot in the breast being seriously wounded. The negro escaped. All the British prisoners held in Cuba have been released and all the Americans and French prisoners will be set at liberty in a few days. Motorman Theodore R. Merrick was was killed and Motorman W. E. Horner so badly injured that he died in a head end collision on the Baltimore & Northern railroad at Baltimore, Md. The officials say Merrick disobeyed orders. E. J. G. D'Albani, a clerk in the general offices of the Northern Pacific railway, committed suicide by jumping off the high bridge at St. Paul, Minn., into the Mississippi river. Rev. A. E. Morrison, Methodist minister at Pan Handle, Texas, was arrested by the police of Topeka, Kas., upon the charge of wife murder. Luke Usher, president of the National bank of Pottsdam, N. Y., which failed last January, has been indicted upon eleven charges. The allegations charge Usher with misappropriating $700,000. The large department store of D. Heenan & Co., Streater, III., was destroyed by fire. Loss, $250,000. The fire was caused by a lamp explosion. The presentation of a handsome silver service on behalf and in the name of the citizens of Nashville, Tenn., was made to the gunboat Nashville, at the Norfolk (Va.) navy yard. Mrs. Wm. H. Mason was burned to death at Baltimore, Md. The steamer Saratoga, from Havana, having on board the released members of the Competetiors filibustering expedition, arrived at New York. A party of insurgents attracked the Spanish outposts of Havana and a sharp engagement followed. The sounds of firing caused great excitement in Havana, as it is known that large rebel forces are quartered near the city. The large steamer Lackawanna, loaded with flour and merchandise, struck on Ballard's reef, near Amherstburg, Ont., and just as she got her lines out she sank forward in 18 feet of water. MARKETS. Minneapolis, Nov. 22. Wheat-No. 1 northern, 891/2 to 90c; No. 2 northern, 84½ to 85c; December,