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Wm. R. Taylor, Governor; Charles D. Parker, Lieutenant-Governor; Ferdinand Kuhn, Treasurer; Peter Doyle, Secretary; A. Scott Sloan, Attorney-General; Edward Seuring, Superintendent of Schools; M. J. Argand, Commissioner of Immigration. Resolutions were adopted favoring cheap transportation, the improvement of the Wisconsin, Fox and other navigable rivers of Wisconsin at the expense of the General Government, opposing protective tariff laws, back pay, monopolies, free passes to members of the Legislature, CreditMobilier, and corrupt legislation, and declaring that the party would vote for no person whose nomination was the fruit of his own importunity or a combination among partisan leaders. The State Liberal Democratic Convention of Minnesota met at St. Paul on the 24th, and decided to make no nominations. Resolutions were adopted advising all Democrats and Republicans to yield a cordial support to the nominees of the Owatonna Convention. The South. The Grand Lodge of the I. O. of O. F. in session at Baltimore, Md., adjourned on the 20th, having first voted to hold the next annual Communication at Atlanta, Ga. A Memphis dispatch of the 20th says the ravages of the yellow fever in that city had been stayed somewhat. The disease had appeared in New Orleans, and the dengue or break-bone fever raged also as an epidemic. In Shreveport the fever exhibited no abatement. New cases were notso numerous, but the ratio of deaths had been fully as great as at any time since the appearance of the scourge. An Augusta, Ga., dispatch of the 22d says that on the 19th a terrific storm passed over Florida in the vicinity of Tallahassee. A large number of dwellings had been blown down, and the crops in all that section ruined. Three or four lives had been lost, several persons injured and a large number of cattle killed. The town of St. Marks had been completely washed away, only two houses being left standing, and twenty families had been made homeless. The town of Newport had also been swept out of existence. A dispatch from Richmond, Va., of the 23d, says that the Merchants' National, the Planters', the Mechanics', the Peoples', the First National, and the Citizens' banks, of Petersburg, had suspended. A Baltimere telegram of the 24th announced that all the banks of that city had stopped currency payment. Brown, Lancaster & Cowell, agents of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway, having houses in Baltimore, New York and Richmond, had also suspended. A Little Rock, Ark., dispatch of the 24th says the money panic in that city continued, caused not so much by Eastern financial complications as by the refusal of the city banks to take the shinplasters that have been current there. A dispatch from Richmond, Va., says that the Richmond Dollar Savings Bank had suspended, and that Taylor & Williams, bankers, had failed. A dispatch to the Associated Press, from Brownsville, Texas, of September 24, says that a series of butcheries and robberies had recently been committed in Mexico, the victims in every case being Americans. The perpetrators of these crimes were arrested, and their guilt fully established, yet not one of them had been punished, the authorities being either indifferent or powerless. The facts had been reported by the Consuls to Washington, in the hopes that redress would be demanded.