LATE TELEGRAPHIC TICKS FROM MANY POINTS. Important Newt Itcmt Received aa Wi 3o to Pre. IMsaatrra, ArrltleTits and I atallilrs. (Inlvi, a town In Henry comity, 111., was wre eked by a cyclone. Several persons are known to lie killed, ami many building were destroyed. At Chicago the steamer Viola with a party of 07 ladies and gentlemen from toe North western university is reported lost with all on board. A Ch'cago and (irand Trunk locomotive exploited one mile east of climax, Mich., fatally Injuring Knglnecr Wood, Fireman Smith and llrakeman I'urkcr, all residents of Battle Creek. Mich. What remained of the village of Rock dale, near Dubuque, la., since the disaster of 1870, was wiped out by a itorm Friday evening. No lives were lst. Riotous miners have Mopped operations at the Minnesota mines, at Tower, Minn., and the shafts are filling with water Twenty-one trains are tied up. While two men were fighting in a yard in Chicago, four women went on a high porch to see what was going on. The porch fell, nd three of the w omen were fatally injur ed. Edward W. (iould, a member of the New Vork stock exchange, and conspicuous In Wall street, was killed Saturday while par ticipating In the amateur Wild west show got up by the Stnten Island Athletic club. The accident occurred in the presence of his family and a thousand of his friends. Capital, I.abnr and Indnatrlnt, Two hundred employes of the John Por ter Company, firebrick manufacturers of New Cumberland, W. Va., went out on a strike for an advance of from 11.33 to H M) day. One thousand dockers at Bilboa, Spain have struck for an increase of wages. The police, fearing disturbances, have ar rested three agitators. Six hundred w ork men in the Malacspera and Ollargan mines have struck. The International Typographical Vnion - in tesdon at Phllapelphia repealed the ! hour law by a majorit j of 1 to 48 votes, it being found impossible tor nforce its pro visions uniformly. The Columbia rolling mill at Columbia, ra has shut down for an indefinite period. About 200 men arc thrown out of work. The Eclipse Bicycle Works, of Indian apolis, will be removed to Beaver Falls, I'a., and capitalized at 1Y,000 Employment will be given to 2S0 hands. C'anventlen News At Lansing, Mich., at the People's party convention resolution was passed against fusion, and Captain 11. 8. Osborn was nom inated for Secretary of State. The Kansas People's party convention at Wichita nominated candidates for the state ticket and W. A. Harris fos congressman-at-large, a victory for the fusionists. A woman suffrage plank was adopted, and Mrs. M. E. lase of Wichita was elected one of the delegates-at-large to the Omaha con vention. As soon as the convention met Levi Dumbnld, chairman of the People's central committee, made a plea for money to conduct the coming campaign. "I am for free silver," shouted a delegate from the Seventh district, and threw on the platform a silver dollar. The action was contagious, and money was rained on the stage by spec tators and delegates, over (3,000 bclin, real ised. PI res At Cleveland, O., the cooper shop of the Standard Oil Company, Loss, f V),000, At Jamestown, N. Y., th Pearl Furniture Company' factory. Loss, 130,000; insur ance, $11,000. At Rich Hill, Mo., five large btHiness. bouses, the losses aggregating 140,000. At Elizabethport, N. J., a large store and six frame buildings. At Jamestown, N. Y., the Pearl Furniture wmpany'i factory. Loss, 130,000; insur ance, (11,000. At Elizabeth, N. J., damage of (00,000 re sulted from the burning of a business block. At Alexandria. La., a square of buildings including the bank and hotel were burned. Loss, 175,000; insurance unknown. Two spans of the Northern Pacific bridge over Clark's Fork river. Idaho, burned. This is the largest bridge on the Northern Pacific. It is thought the fire caught from a passenger locomotive. Waaklnne News, Mr. E. B. Laeey, controller of the cur rency, has resigned. The sundry civil appropriation bill as it passed the House appropriated (00,000 for the enforcement of the Chinese exclusion act. Mr. Felton yesterday in the Senate proposed an amendment increasing the amount to 1130,000. The House committee on military affairs has taken favorable action on the Senate bill to furnish the Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association with specimens of arms, accoutrements, etc., used by the armies in the buttle of Oettysburg. Mr. Chauncey M. Depew left here Sunday (or New York. Mr. Depew dined with the President Saturday and there were rumors that be had been offered the vacant cabinet portfolio, but he refused to talk about the natter. Political. The conference committees of the divided Louisiana Democrats bave reached a mutu ally satisfactory agreement for the tending of a single delegation oninstructed to Chicago. The Foster faction has been recog nised as the bead of the party In the State. Uninstructed delegates-at-large to the Chicago convention were elected. The returns, wbich are practically com plete.in the election held In the Ninth Texas congressional district (Mill's old district), how that Antony (Dem.) baa majority of A6U over Barber (Third party.) Per The Rev. T. PeWltt Tnlmage and Mrs Talmage sailed from New York City for Liverpool, nr. Talmage will be absent un. til about the middle of September. He will visit St. Petersburg and Moscow, and will assist In the distribution of the stores that have been contributed for the relief of the famine-stricken people of Russia. In New York City there was an Increase In the death rate Wednesday dun to the ex cessive hcut. Tuesday there were 77 deuths, and Wednesday ltm were recorded. Mnrl.ary. Fmtnons lllnlne. son of ex-Hem tnry .tames (). Maine, died at his residence in Chicago, Saturday morning. Mr. Maine had been 111 several days. His deatn was the re sult orhlootl poisoning, originating In a disorder of the bowels. Emmons Maine at the time of his death was Mce I resident of the Unit i more ami Obin Railroad, and had until unite recently resided at Baltimore, cnmini: t Chicago to tttkechurge of tun western interests of the company. Ills wedding to Miss Anita .Me Corinick. daughter ol 'the treat reaper man ufacturer, was a social event of the first nisgnitude. Thev have had only one child, w ho was at the bed side when the father died. Before becoming connected with the Baltimore and hio h served in less eon stiicnons places than the vice orc-ddencv. Mr. Blaine was at different times in the service of the West ngiiiM Central, the Chicago and Northwestern and the Atchi son, To cka and Santa I e. Crime nnil Penalties, Judge J. B. Morgan, an l'.'x-l ongressman, was killed at Memphis by Henry Foster, a lawyer, during a politic.il ijuarrel. The stage from Valley Springs to San An dreas, Cel., ws stopped on the Road near North Branch Friday by one masked high wayman. The bandit got one treasure box, but missed the imi't valuable booty. Hie Weather. Thursday was the hottest day of the sea son in Pittsburg, !2 degrees was the highest official record, but many of the thermometers along the streets marked over degrees. A cloud burst deluged Chat-worth, Ills. Small structures were leveled to the ground I onsrcsslnnnl Nnmlnatlmia. Congressman John '. Otlis, of the Fourth Kansas ditriet, was defeated for nomina tion by F. V. Wharton, who was a Peinn erat before be Joined the Farmers' Alli ance. Crops. Wheat harvesting is in full blast in Southern Kansas. The quality is excel lent, and In the extreme western counties the yield is reported to be simply mitgnfi cent. The wheat yield in Franco will be vnstly superior to that of 18.11, but barley and oats have suffered severely. Financial and Comtncrrlnt. The Lancaster (I'a.) and Aurorn (111.) watch factories have been consolidated und the machinery of the latter will be trans ferred to Lancaster. The new coiupuny will have a capital of (.VXO.orn). Judicial. The Michigan Supreme Court to-day ren dered a decision sustuining the constitution ality of the Miner Electoral law. .!llceltnnenus. Otto Trager, the young newspaper re porter who left San Antonio on April 3 for the City of Mexico on a bicycle, succeeded fter a hazardous journey through the de s ert of Coahuulit ami the Sierra Mojadu Mountains in reaching Durango .May 10. On May 10 he set out for Mnztlau, on the Pa cific coast, 300 miles distant, since which time no tidings of him bare been received. (Jreat uneasiness is felt for safety. Ed. Alson, a Norwegian hardware mer chant of North field, Minn., for twenty years, died with old-fashioned leprosy. The corpse was a most horrible sight, the flesh dropping ofl his body. The Alsons have all died iu the month of June. The body of William Westing was recov ered from the wreck of the Newport, Ky., bridge disaster. This makes twenty-!.: lead. John Phillips, one of the wounded, is thought to be (lying. One man, William Barton, is still misting and is doubtless in ine wreck. The evidence adduced before the coroner's Jury indicates that the Buirda were careless in driving the piles. ncroMi i it iioi:iEit. Eleven persons took shelter from a storm by the side wall of a church at Prndoluen co, Spain. The wall collapsed and injured all of them. England's appropriation to the World'! Fair w as increased to 00,000 to-day, by a vote of the House of Commons. The Pope has enjoined Archbishop Vaughn, of Westminister, England, to avoid mixing up in party strife and especially not to oppose Irish national aspirations. Saint Teresa, offtuayamas, Mexico, bat been sentenced to be shot for witchcraft. Earl Aucrain, aid of the Earl of Jersey, was accidently shot while out with a hunt ing party. He died soon afterward. Official reports as to the Russian harvest prospects show that the general outlook is much worse than it was in the early sum mer Of 1801. The collapse of twofuctoriesin Barcelona, Spain, killed eight men. Four soldier at' Magdeburg, Germany, were killed by the bursting of a shell. Jacob Schnitzer, otherwise Emin Pasha, according; to dispatches received at Berlin, is not dead as reported recently. Mount Vesuvius, now in eruption, xha thrown up lava that has formed itself into bridge across a valley. The formation, glowing with heat, presents a magnificent spectacle at night. A bull fight at Linares, Spain, was broken np by dissatisfied spectators, who invaded the arena. Then the mob got all the bull fight they wanted, for the enraged beasts charged upon them, tossed and injured many of them, and killed one man outt.'gM. The mob pelted the mayor, and when be called out troops the soldiers refused to obey. The Mayor fled to safety in the bar racks, the rioters closi at his beela. Acton, Qdibec The latest estimates of the loss by the recent storm in this town ship place it at (50,000, which falls chiefly on the poor farmers. Three children were killed and eight adults injured, some fatally, The detestation by the storm extended over els miles. The farm bouse were entirety wrecked, and about 00 families ar tome- PRESIDENTIAL BUTTLES. THB STORY 07 A CENTURY'S XA TIONAL CAMPAIGNS. A Bit ef Political History That I Sap dally Interesting Just Row, Pastor That Have Flcursd In President Making;. The Philadelphia Times of last Sunday tave up one of its pages to "a record of a century of National contests," and from that Is con-louse 1 what follows: Nominating conventions were unknown at the time of the organization of the lie public, and at the first election of President no candidate bad been presented by any rty. It ws accepted by common consent hat Washington should be President, and as John Adams was pre-eminently the rep resentative man of New England In the struggle for independence, he was chosen Vice President. Only 10 of the original States participated In the first Presidential election. Before the end of Washington's first term Vermont ami Kentucky hail been admitted into the Union, and the whole Ift States voteil at bis second election. Wash ington again received the unanimous vote, b-ing I tj.and Adam received 77,which made him Vice President for the second term. In the middle, of Washington's second term parties began to form, and at the be ginning of 17l'l Jefferson resigned his place as Secretary of State and took the leader ship of the Republican party, In opposition to the policy of the Administration, which became known as Federalist. There was then no direct vote for Vice President; esch Elector voted for two men for President, the one receiving the highest vote became President and the next highest became Vice President. In this way Jolr.i Adams, Federalist, wss elected President, and TIioiiihs Jefferson. Republican, was elected Vice President. The alien and sedition laws of the Adams administration further wid ened the breach between Republicanism and Federalism. In 1WM Adam and Jefferson were again Jilted again each other, Charles C. Pinck ney being th" running mate with Adams, and Aaron Burr witn Jefferson. There w as no election by the people and the contest went Into the House, where, after a long struggle, in which Burr tried to win the Presidency, Jefferson was finally elected. February 2ft, 18IH, the first formal nomi nation to the Presidency was made by a t otigresHioiiai caucus, and .lefterson was lioiinnaU'd unanimously. It was a hopeless battle agaln-t him from the start, and he was re-elected by an overwhelming major ity, receiving lti'2 electoral votes to 14 for Pinckney. Iii lwiH the onlv rivalry was between the two Virginians, Madison anil Monroe, and Madison won the nomination on the first ballot. The Federalists made no formal nomination against him, but by general consent presented their old ticket of Pinck ney anil King. The campaign of 1808 did not rise to the dignity of a contest, and Mad ison Wf elected by 122 electoral votes to 47 for Pinckney. Tlie'election of 1812 occurred during the War with England, and Madison was rc-e!ectd without ditlicultv, the Feder alist party having suffered by the hostility of its leaders of the war. With theeml of the war there was an end of the Federalist party. March 111, 18111, Monroe was nominated against Crawford. The disappointment of the Crawford follow ers led to an outburst against the Congres sional caucus, and In Baltimore and several other places public meetings were held pro testing against the arbitrary power of Con gressmen to select ciiiniidates for President, but in the end the Republicans generally united in the supsrt of Montoe, who le ceived 182 of the 217 Electoral votes. At the end of Monroe's term eumo the era of pood feeling, and there was no npimeition to his re-elect ion. He would have received every electoral vote but for a New Hamp shire elector, w ho said that honor should be reserved for Washington only, and so cast bis vote for John tjiilncy Adams. But in 1824 opposition to the, Congress sionul caucus svstem was renewed, with the result that Crawford, Jackson, Clay and Adams were candidates, and that the con test was again thrown into the House. where Adams was chosen by the aid of the Clay men. Clay tjeing the lowest of the four can didates was excluded from the House con test, as onlv the Hi red hiirhust candidates can be presented there. in i2 jucksouwus nominated bv the Legislature of Tennessee and fouid'it bis second battle with Adams, reviving nenrly iou.issj majority in a popular vole ot auout l.tsKi.tmu, and 173 electoral vote to 83 for Adams. In 18 W the first political National Conven tion was held bv the anti-Masons, and it ad journed until September 211, 1831, when it reassembled in Bultimore and nominated William Wist for l'reidcnt, and Amos Ell maker for Vice President. The next Na tional Convention was held bv the friends of Clay under the titleof National Republi cans on the 12th of December. 1831, and nominated i lay lor rrcsiucnt and John Ser geant for Vice President. The National ileinocrats, a the friends of Jackson then railed themselves, called a National Conven tion to meet in Baltimore on the 21st of May, 18.12. only to nominate a candidate for Vice President, as Jackson wuHiinuiiimouslv accepted for re election und won. men came tne nomination ot .Martin Van Ruren bribe Democratic National Conven tion at Baltimore, which had no platform, Van Buren was elected. At the end of his term the Whig ft Hurrisburg nomination Willium Henry Harrison In 1839and elected him. This was the hard cider and Ioj cabin turppuign. Harrison died In otllce ami John lyler become the first accidental President. here was a serious dispute as lo the tul the Vice President should assume, but while 'lie suDject wus under discission in the Houweatid members were disntitini? whutlic? the title should be "Acting President," a message was received from "John Tyler, President," and that ended debuto and es tablished a precedent thut lias bejn main tained until now. In 1K44 both Whirs and Democrats met in Baltimore, the former nominating tiny snd the latter, under the two. third s rule, nominating Polk, who wus elected. In 1848 the Whiirs at Philadelnbla nnml. nated Zachary Taylor, and 'he Democrats at Baltimore Lewis Cass. Taylor died in-18.v iiul Fillmore became the second accidental President. During Fillmore's time the fugitive slave law wa passed and the Whig durtv was disrupted. In 1852 the Whigs at Baltimore nominated Liiupr.' K....4 tl.c 1 In... ...... 1.. - ?ily nominated Pierce, und the Free Soil flemocruev io IHllHhnr,!, sinttiiuutsl Ini... P. Hale. Pierce hud things prttty much his 3WII WllV. The first Republican National convention was he d in Philadelphia in 18AU, which nominated Freemont. The National Coun cil of Ameiirans hud previously in the tame city nominated Fillmore. The Demo. cats at Cincinnati nominated Buchanan, who was to see tDe beginning of the civil war under his administration. 7hen cornea the fuiudiur siorv of Lincoln and Johnson, and after them the nomina tion of Grant at Chicago iu 1808, his election and re-election: the election of Hayes; then of (Jurfield, his assassination ana the ad- niimsmiion oi Arthur as the third accidental president: the election of Cleveland luulihun of Harrison. Eight ballot were rein-Jred to uuiuiiiuic iur. jiurr.suil. The Cholera Spreading. Advices from Teheran, Periia, state that th cholera, which baa been raging at Incshed for some lima, 1 decreasing in se verity in Uiat locality, but 1 spreading in the Nishapux district. A plague, which U thought to b th cholera, traveling east ward, bai broken out in Mesopotamia, WHAT CLEVELAND CLAIMS. ' An Estimate by (Mate of HI Btrfnjrth ia th Chloaao Convention. Nsw York, June IS. Th New York cor respondent of the Philadelphia Isiiirrr tele graphs that lie lias obtained two Cleveland estimates of the standing of the delegates. One of these comes from one of Mr. Clere lands most intimate lriends.Heclnims57rdel egates for Cleveland and declares that there are only 22." delegntes opposed to him. This leaves Cleveland only aft votes less than the necessary two-thirds, with 100 doubtful del egates. This would mean Cleveland's nomi nation. The other es'linale cojne from one of the ex-President's most active and confi dential manngers.Jand Is slill morel favora ble. He claims IW8 votes for Cleveland 38 more than the necessary two-thirds leav ing 2i2 opposed ami doubtful. The more conservative of the two estimates is as fol io s : ?! Sf I l r ? i : t : : 22 22 ill W 18 18 8 8 12 12 tl 0 8 .... 8 .... 20 20 .... 11 0 48 41 30 1ft .... 15 20 .... 211 .... 20 20 '20 2d Id 8 .... H 12 8 .... 4 HI .... 1(1 .... 3d 27 .... 3 28 28 18 18 18 .... 18 .... 31 31 I 8 HI .... HI .... 6 8 8 21) 1 72 72 22 1ft .... 7 II (I 40 23 .... 23 8 8 (it fit 8 8 18 1 .... 17 8 8 21 21 311 HI II .... 8 8 21 12 .... 12 8 8 12 8 .... 4 24 21 (I 0 2 .... 2 .... 2 2 2 2 2 -2 2 2 2 2 !! 'fnft lint) W) STrrs AMI! TtriRiToiiirs, Alabama A rkansiis California 'olorndo t 'onnecticiit Delaware Florida tieorgin Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky I ouisiann Maine Maryland..... Masschii-ett Michigan Minnesota M ississlppi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New llauipsh're New Jersey New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tenncsfce Texas Vermont Virginia Washington Wet Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Alaska Arizona Dis. of Columbia New- Mexico iklahoma I'tab Tola' ?ecessarv to a chob e. IKKI. It will be observed that this gives Cleve land 67ft votes without counting New York, whlce sends two delegations, one of them committed to Cleveland. OHIO DEMOCRATIC STATE CON VENTION. Election of Delegate to Chicago. Nomi nation of State Tick it. Th Plat form In Full. diLi'MM-, O. On calling the convention to order Chairman James A. Norton of the mitral committee referred to the work of convention, which was the selection of dele pates to Chicago and which he said should be done with the greatest fairness. His mention of the iiuiiio of Cleveland was re ceived with much enthusiasm, which grew as he reuched the names of Hill, Whitney, Gorman and others. When the speaker teachnl the naineof iov. Campbell in the list of Ohio candidates the convention as sumed a wild scene ot demonstration. The appluuse continued for several minutes, giv ing stormy evidenco that the ex-governor had a big following in the convention. After routine business, the eon vention selected four delegafes-t-large to the Cliicugo convention. F.x-(iov-oruor Campbell, Senator Price, Kolurt Bice, of Cleveland, and Lawrence T. Ncal were tboso agreed upon, the first two al most unanimously, und the hitter after a close contest. The following Is the ticket nominated: For Secretary of State, W. A. Taylor, Franklin coiiniv: forjudge Supreme Court, (long term I Judge John S. llriggs, Monroe; (short term.) Judge Thomas I leers. Craw lord; for Clerk of Supreme Court, William II. Wolff, Fairlield county; for member Slnto Board of Public Work's, Cuplaiii J. N. Meyers. Hamilton; Presidential electors-at-lurge, H. S. Steruberger, Miami; Juiue P. Hewurd, Richland. eOME TKSBIOH JMuURKS. Extraordinary Increase of Case and Enormous Sums Paid. Oreen II. Riium, persion commissioner, bus just issued a report wherein are contained statistics showing th number of iiensioners and the sums paid to them dur ing the 11 mouths from July 1, 1M!U, toMuy SI, 18W2, and other data, as below: The number of pensioner on the rolls June 30, 1801, was 70, HiO. This was in creased during the 11 months stated to 8ftH 087, an increase of 170,027. This was due lurgrly to the liberal act of June. 18IH), there being in thut time granted 207,2ft5 oritiinal cases, 71.003 increases and fn3 restorations. The average first payment now i HM 25. Lust yeur it was (173 70. There is still one pension paid on account of the Revolutionary war. It is to a widow and wus roissucd. She gets now (;t0 month ly. A single survivor of the war of 1812 gets f .10 a month, an increase of (22. Thirty widows of the sume war draw monthly (.mi. Army pensions outnumber those paid to murine on the ratio of 10 to 0 un der the new law, and of 11 to 7 raider th geiicrul law. BETTIE LEWIS WINS. A Decision That Win Oiy th Mulatto Girl (90,000. The famous Betlie Thomas-Lewis case was decided at Richmond, Va., in the Court of Appeals, Judgs Leeke's decision in favor of tiiedefcndaut being smtuinej. Th es tate is value 1 at I225.0JJ, and it is s ii 1 t hat Bettie Lewis will receive about (JO.OJJ as her share after th expenses of the trial bave been paid. Bettie Lew-is is a mulatto, and is the illegitimate daughter of the lute W. A. Thomas, who was a well known reei dent of Richmond. The case ha been in the courts since the spring of 1800, and ha attracted great Interest throughout the en tire country. A Victory for Oleo Dealer. k FuiLADr.M'iiiA, June 20. In two rase stated for opinion Judge Riddle decided in favor of the defendant, who were charged with selling oleomargarine in violation of the Stute law, on the grounds thai where such sale tak place it must be proved that the oleomargarine was told as an article of food, DISASTERS DOUBLING UP. TWO MORE STORM HORRORS IN THE WEST. A Tornado Tear Throuch Mlnnsiota, Wreck in- Several Towns and Kill in; Scots of Persons. MinMr.Afous, June 18. Dispatches from ilankuto, Minn., say that one of the worst disasters that ever visited Southern Minne sota occurred Friday. The terrible funnel shaped tornado again stalked abroad over (he land and laid waste score of happy homes and sent 40 or ft) s-mls to eternity. The extent of the country swept by this awful visitation was greater tliiiu ever be fore known In the history of the State, and fortunate, Indeed, It Is that no town or vil luge lay in lis destructive course. Starting near Jackson, on the Smthern MlimesoU division of the Chicago, Milwau kee and St. Paul railroad, funnel-shaed clouds swept eustward and pased four miles south of Minnesota lake, and then took a broad circle to the south and passed away south nf Wells. About ft:3ll aeircling black cloud was seen r.ipiillv advancing ami demolishing every thing in its course. It struck a distiict school house, in which were the teacher ami 18 scholars. The building was demolished ami the teacher and Ift scholars killed. . At l.n-tiin three buildings were des roved and several people injured. Linden was visited, and many houses were torn from their foundations. One family, consisting of a man, his wife and child, were killed, and others injured. The storm passed on east wan), destroying farmhouses. burns, and in fact everything in its path. Four miles south of .Minnesota Lake five furmhouc and other buildings were caught in the storm and utterly demolished. Four opl were Kineo nere. .rttttiv heartrendlnir scenes occurred dur iding scci he Tiur I ing the night. The log house of a Bohem- Inn family, near Minnesota Luke. blown entirely ivnv. not one hut remain ing. The family of a man, wife ami six children spent the night miserably in the ram without shelter. They huddled to gether upon a bean of straw, and with n piece of sheet tried to ward off the cold wind ami never-ceasing rain Hint chilled them to the bone. Suis-rintcndont Earling Is in receipt of the follow inc. telegram, dated at J.a Crus-e coming via Miiukato: Trnlli No. 'J!, tin llipMnnkntn line found nlitrue. tloll on I In- ini 'k iiIhiuI folirnil c -nutlml MhmeMitn Ijike, with tivn hHi-cN lilnwn iliovn ami ihcficcu IiHtit- Ivliu nrtiunil tin tlv Injiireil. They clenri-il I he riii-k. nnil pics, a uptlm wouutleJ auil to llietn Ul Illuiiei-uiH iike. Another reutls. Trnlli No. -I Is tletl up at Minnesota l.nke. and So. 34 ul liieliiu. The tnr?n In thnt vlrlmty fl, verf tll-it-lniiiM. Niinilier l foiihtl a simw fetiee, t ntls-r anil iitlier nintcrtal un the trnek. stiil severnl fxtip kliltt! Iu the uelKlilxirlHHMl. Many were llijuretl. later mteoiiTs. At Spring Valley damage aggregating fJ.V.iKH wus done. Large, heavy clouds came np in the west, gatlierin thick and fast, when without warning the beaveni broke loose with constant ightnlng and heavy peals of thunder. The tain came down iu torrents, spring alley i reex wus quicKiy sweneti to us uiinosi. men tne bursting of a heavy cloud about nine o'clock made the little stream a rupinir torrent. raising it Ui live or six feet above tne highest mm it it ever irui uvu,i;ni nig very tiling ill the way nefore it. The first damage done was that of lifting the house occupied by a Mr. McDuggaii and carrying it down agiiinst the iron bridge, dc iiiolishimr evervthiiut iu it. and Mrs. Mo Dtiggan herself was not rescued until the home nun anchored. The following is a partial list of the killed in the vicinity of Wells: Alfred Frederick, John Brown, Mrs. John lirown, Andrew J'letrus, Mrs. John l.alusick. Herman Krew er; a daughter of Andrew Melehert, John Ivorson and three children; child in the family of Andrew Ligbtenberg; child of John Bell; child of Maryland Stein. Many dead and liiiiircd in the Polish settlement six miles of Wells, can not be enumerate I. An Albert Lea special gives the following list of the dead in Freeborn county: An drew Hansen, Michael Iverson and three rinull children; M. Siietpiin and family: K. Mi I artliey and family; Andrew Paulson; Mrs. Cbristopberson and child. I'likuown man, drowned between Hurt laiid and Richland. swrn off tiif. r.RTit. At Hartlund five ieople were killed and many wounded. When Hie center of the cyclone approached Winnebago City, it seemed as though Hint villuge wus fated and the greatest consternut ion prevailed there for a few minutes. The river seemed to divide the tornado, and one-half turned southeasterly unil one-half northeasterly. The southern tunnel swept around south vt Wells and circled in to the east. i irrv Kii.i.t n in one vlai e. Ten are reported killed in the neighbor hood Muic!ton. and 20 injured. The north ern half of thecvclone wus the more de structive. It passed nortbeasteily about four miles south of Minnesota lake, and not a building In its path was loft standing, while ninny people were killed or wounded. The country devastated is one of the most prts perous sections of the Stute, and the house were thickly dotted over the prairies, score of those houses were destroyed, and it it estimated the loss of life will foot up to from 30 to 50. Wherever a building was dcrtsoyed. it was so totally and utterly demollshtd that not a vestige of it is left. At otie pluce where the cyclone struck, eight houses in suc-ce-sion were destroyed, und at another th place was so complete y washed off the face of the earth that no truce of it or its occu pant could be found, though teurch wot made. Four miles north of Wells the s'orm raged in unrestrained fury. At Anthony Mill chert's, the wife and a little girl were at home, and after the storm the wife wat found in the grove clinging to a tree with one hand and hanging to the little girl with the other. Iu a ousiure a few rods from the house were 1' dead cuttle. Here the buildings und a grove of perhaps lou lurge trees were literary crushed into tin ground, und how the woman and child escaped death is a marvel. The devastated territory was to-day cover ed with a flood of water, and through the deep mud, on horseback ami in wugons. hundreds of people searched for some trace of their homes, some wind tossed souvenir of their lost possess ons, or for the faces of missing friends. It may be two or three riavs before the full sum of the disaster is known. i IKIIITNINO KILUTIIHFE PfRSONS IV CniCAOO During a thundemt rm that pwe I over Chicago on Thursday lightning struck th Grant monument iu Lincoln park, in the corridors of which nearly IK) wople had ought shelter. Three were killed and two seriously injured. All of the others, with the exception of three, were thrown violent ly to the stone floor of the monument and received some severe shocks. Th monu ment was but slightly damaged. The killed are: Lewis Mever, Mrs. Shelly, unknown man, The injured are Hurry Phillips and Un. Maggie Olsen, both of Chicago. Oerman Wbippid by Africana. Zanziuau, June 20. A report bus been re ceived hero that a Herman force commanded by Baron Billow and consisting of 11 v Eu roans and ISO Soudanese natives, with on gun, was severely defeated on the 10th inst. in th Mosul territory, near Kilimanjaro. One European and 100 of the Soudanese) were killed. Baron Bulow and another Eu ropean wer among th wounded. BAD DROWNING ACCIDENTS. Fly Children and Two Men Drowned Near PUtabursr. PiTTsm'Ro, Pa., June 18. Five children were drowned at Neville Island, on th Ohio river, eight miles from Pittsburg, Fri day afternoon, by the turning of wheel. From the Joy of their happy young exist ence the five were matched by the muddy water of the Ohio and plunged into the abyss oT death without a moment's warning. In the twinkling of an eye the sound of their sweet, childish prattle gsve way lo th roaring of the waters, which seined and chocked them. The names of the children drowned arc: Paul Plttock, 8 year old; Rufo Pltfock, 0 years old; Maggie Pitlook, 12 years old; Ada Plttock, 14 year old; Kdn Richardson, 14 years old. The children had taken a buggy from Mr. Plttock barn yard to the river's edge. They played in the buggy, and in romping start ed the buggy, and before they could pet out It had plunged Into the river. It is feared the mother of the Pitto-.k children will lose her reason. Israel Solomon, a young mill woiker, liv ing at Linden station, was drowned while bathing in the Moiiongahcla river, near hia home, Thomas Wlmlle, a machinist residing In Allegheny, a man of 4ft years, was drowned In the Ohio river at the foot of Island ave nue while bathing with a number of friends. Within the pat two months, since the , openingof the bathing eaoii, Coroner Mo- I Dowell has been called upon to bold in- otiests over 27 different -rsons, principally I children, who have lost their lives tiy c- " eitlental drowning. This does not include the startling number reported yesterday, which brings the total lo 3. CHICAGO'S BTO TORITADO. Elrht Llvs Lost In It. A Boat-Load of Studenta Saf j. Ciiicaoo, June II. A tornado raged In this city this afternoon. . The rainfall wa terrific. The full force of the wind struck the southwest corner of the Home Insur ance building occupied by the Vnion Na tionnl bank and blew In three large plat glass windows. J. J. P. Otlcll, President of the bunk, was struck on the thigh by a fragment of glass and severely cut. The great canvass canopy over the wig wam, in which will be held the National Democratic Convention next week, was torn to tatters and so utterly mined that the contractors determined to use instead a timber roof. Ciiicaoo, June 15 The tornado here yes terday wus more destructive than at first reported. Fight lives were lost and many people injured. It will take hundreds of thousands of dollar! to repair the dumnge. The steamer Juliet, with the graduating class of tho Northwestern University, which was supposed to have been lost with all on board, urrlved here early this morning. An authentic list of the killed follows: Fmma Klima, daughter of Frank and Mag gie Klitna; William I,osca, John Icill, Charles I. Roberts, Harvey Stewart und three unknown men. Jimti S. Kutan I Dead. Fx-State Senator J. 8. Rut.nl died Patur day morning at his home In Allegheny. Hi death was due to nervous protrution, brought on by bis work during a vigorous recent political campaign. Mr. Rutun was born in Carroll county, Ohio. May 2", Is: IK, ami was educated in the common schools, at Richmond college, (duo, ami ut 1 leaver Aca lemy, I'a., to which place be moved iu the latter fifties. He sMdiet! lu.v with the late Sam 11. Wilson of Beaver and was admitted to the bar in 180 i. iu isi;2 be was lectetl dist'ict attorney of IVnvor county, mid re-elected in lKtlft. In lSiiH he was a presidential elector for (irant. In 18(i!) he was elected a State Senator from Heaver and Washington counties and re-elected in 172. He was speaker of the senate in tho ' session of 1872. lie was appointed concl to Cardiff ami Florence in 1870. but declined. President Hayes appointed him collector of the port of Pittsburgh in 1877. He served until June. 1881. In May, 1882, he wii ap pointed doted States marshal of tho Western district of Pennsylvania, and was removed bv President Cleveland in Novem ber. 1 ". He was electetl to the State senate from Allegheny county November, 188ti, and has been prominent in politics ever emco. IMPORTANT OLEO DECISION. A United State Judge Say State Can not Prohibit it Importation, Judge Bond of the United States Court at Baltimore, Md., discharged Charles H. Mc Allister, who was arrested under the Mary land law for selling oleomargarine, the court holding iliat the arrest was illegal. In his opinion Judge Bond said: "A Stute may remilate the snl nl toragc of article dangerous to the health of the city but it cuiuiot prohibit the im portation, ine laws or the United State recognize oleomargurine as a mercantile article. Being such, while a Slate may per haps regulate its sale, it cannot prohibit it importation. The statue in nuestinn tinea this, and is unconstitutional iu th s respect Concressman Elt T. Stack house Dead. Wasiiinoton, Junt) 15 Congressman Ell T. Stackhouse, of the Sixth South Carolina district, died at his residence here early this morning of heart disease. His son beard him breathing heavily and called to hiia, but he did not respond, and before anything could be done he was dead. Mr. Stackhouse wa born in Marion county, South Carolina in 1824. He served in the Confederate army and became a colonel. He afterward be came prominent in agricultural pursuits, was President of the State Fanners' Alli ance, wo a ni-mber of the Legjluture. and was elected to th Fifty-second Congress a a Democrat. FLOURS HEAVIEST WEES. The Record of Production by th Mino- apou HUl 1 Broken. MlNNXAFOLlB. June 20. Tha r Miller tay: The mills made their ban ner run last week, grinding 214,930 barrel, or 33,821 barrels daily. The heaviest pre vious output wa 208.930 barrels, inula foe th week ended October 31, 1801. for the corresponding time last year the production was 133.4SS barrel, and in 1800. U3.G 0 bar. Tel. Water. In abundance ana unaer treat pressure baa been brought a long dUtauce to Kaplos from tlio mountain, and tba drain, rebuilt, and the prospect is that tho cholera and the fever will not toon again appear there.