FRANGE ELEGTS FAURE. REPUBLICAN, Choice Made onthe Second Ballot by a Vote of 430 to 361 for M., Brisson The Monarchists and Socialists Create Great Commotion of the New French Executive, M. Francois Felix Faure, Minister of Ma- ne in the present Cabinet, was elected on | » second ballot at Versailles, France, to be resident of the French Republie in succes. Career | ! 1 to M. Casimir-Perier, who had resigned, | Faure polled 430 votes to 361 votes polled | * hia nearest opponent, M, Henri President of the Chamber of Deputies, The Socialists protested violently when Ye ballot was made known, tory result was brought about au withdrawing in favor received 4380 to Brisson 86 taken, the first being Faure » ballots were 358; M. au, 184 on the first ball 1 4 for M. Dupuy, 2 Henri Wa Felix Faure, Brisson, wt HL and when the ng own with “Down with the “Down with the Occasionally wher subsided ior il an ear- “Hurrah for the Boelalistic reputdie I” “Hurrah for the social revolution I” & tha inlists Toussaint, y President of allemel-I s of the Anse Mere ux, Minister ‘asimir-Perier his succes. presented the M. Faure re. of Marine for laughter. Lucile, met 8 apartments, and threw neck, kissing him and [ am so happy, papa!" » the Ministry cheered M. Faure was w himself on the with then the Cabinet, Ministry the ungest fi genuine en n. Faure has na figure, lines show the training he t In early Hfe as an ani Although a milli shipowner, he has simple tastes, His tion is a blow to the protectionist party, The substitution of reciprocity treaties the Melina tariff is only M. Meline's 1 Tyr fre tall, Imposing an ech naire alee for a question of time, newspaper organ, La Repub. lique Franealse, Admitted that Faure's eles tion would mean the same as a tariff ref The result of tha election thuslastieally When the t Chamber of Deputies on the the reading of President's resignation reached the Elysees, M. ( eried bitterly Tat is recoived en- the son the of in occasion message of Palnoea of the r-Pe broke down and His p oan says he wil need severnl months of absolute rest before he will the man he was when he | was eleoted President last June, Se ) th o AN be anme Life of Faure, Felix Francois Faure, just sleated as the sixth President of the Third French Repub- le, was born at Paris, January 21, 1841. His election 1a for a term of seven yoenrs, The now President of this slater rapublie once worked in a tan yard phlegmatie, and certainly will unless foreed to. But he has many bad quar ters of hour before him, the first of which will be the selection of a Premier to suceesd M. Dupuy. Though born in Paris, he was long a ship owner and merzhant in Havre, where he was one of the most active members of the Chamber of Commerce, of which body he became the President, During the Franco-Prussian war he waa a chief of battalion of the Gar'le Mobile, and lod from Havre 15 Paris a body of volunteers who assisted materially in putting down the Commune, In recognition of his eMelent military services at that eritieal time he was made a Chevalier of tha Legion of Honor May 31, 1871, He entered polities) Heo is vory not resign life fourteen years Brisson, the result for the Moderate Repub- for a I total vote of 11 551. HER NEW PRESIDENT A FIRM | reo, beine “hen lected a Deputy to repre. sent the Thisd Distriot of Havre in April, 1881, Heo was the mblioan candidate, and defeated his Monarchist opponent (Le Vail Innt du Douet) hy a majority of 201, in a Since that time he has been continuously # member of ths Chamber ol Deputies, und, what is more, has been a steadfast Republican, In the autumn of 1881 he was appointed Under Secretary in the then new Ministry of Colonies and Commerce, Gambetta be- ing Premier, He held the same post in the Ministries of Ferry, Brisson and ‘Lard, In the Dupuy Cabinet, organized in May, 1884, he wns Minister of Marine, sucoeeding Admiral Lefevre. He held that portfolio when M. Casimir-Perier became Promier, and kept it when M, Dapuy resumed the Premiership, being a member of the Cabinet when ‘he present political eris's began, M. Faure bas achieved a high 1.putation nt home as an authority on economlie, marine and rallway questions, He wns one of the ehieig of the political group known as Re. publican Unlon, and frequently spoke in the Chamber on those topics, His work on the “Budgets Finance and the Principal Countries of Europes *» 1888" received the . { the French Academy, and of Rin nendation of gnized in Europe as a standard publi. rr I— i LOST IN THE GALE. Wrecks Attended by Fatalities on Stormy Coasts, The schooner Justine foundered in Decep- tion Wash,, in a flerce She and her entire crew, which was Bay, near Seattle, gale, sald to number fifteen men, went down. The barge Seth Low, after being wrecked mee on the Florida reefs, repaired and turned into a coal barge, and after drifting about in the ocean for days and belng again rescued, is now a total wreck, Two of t! W were the barge when she went ashore off Fire Island, Long Island, were irownad, I'he British steamer Howan has foundered in the Bay of Biscay. One of ler boats, con iaining six men alive an 1 up. Tke other inched with seven men, war, has been lost, [he Itallan bark for Trieste, has rd, England, y captain and he crew were rescuasd ; O8n 0 on Oo! ' three oth THE MARKETS, Late Wholesale Produce Quoted In N of Country York. ary LX vA Western It RBeconds.... Western Dalry Factory, firkins CHEESE. State—Fullecream, white fancy -— @ Fall aroam, good to prime, WG Btate PFacotory-—~Part skims, choles . ERE art skims Cal 30 we OC Vet Jersey, Fowles, # Ducks, spring, L (Foon ih Squabs, VEGETADLEN, @ bbl Potathoea, los ', IL Island Sweet. ¥ bn no Cabbage, # 100 . Onions-«Yellow, # bbl Red, ¥ bb Squash, marrow Hubbard “4a . Tarnips, Russia, ¥ bbl. White, oh Ege plant, # bbl, Celery, # doz roots Cucumbers, ¥ orate Green pens LT Cauliflower, ¥ bbl, . .. String beans, ¥ erate... Bpirach Lettuce ORALIN, ETO, Flour inter Patents. .... Spring Patents, ,... +. Wheat, Xo. 3 Bad... .. ceases May an WW Track White Rye-Stato PORE Barley Ungraded Weatorn Beeds—Timothy, ¥ 100 KIOVOE. co0avss sannuninsnns Lard-City Steam. ......ov uu LIVE STOCK. Boovos, oity dressed. ........ 7 Milch Cows, com, to good. ...20 00 Calves, city dressed. ........ 7 Country dressed ........ . Sheep, R100 IDS. ..cinnninss Lambs, ¥ 100 the. ,.....0uu.. Hogw—Live, ¥ 100 s....... EE EE EE EL ELE EEE E00 @ 640 P00 @ 975 64 63% 6 200 450 500 5 { ul Af | was under consideration luring the morning | By special order from the Rules | | Committes was | { THE BROOKLYN TIE-UP. THE SURFACE CAR SYSTEM AT A STANDSTILL. The Knights of Labor and the Great | | | | Trolley Corporations in a Trial of | Strength Nearly Seven Thousand Men Out—The Causes Which Led to the Trouble, The first great struggle of the year bee tween corporations and thelr employes he™ gan in when tie-up or lock-out, which had been thr ing the “City of Churches" Brooklyn, tha trolls groat for two wenks, materialized just daybresk on the date set by the leaders of the movement a trial of strencth The work ealled it a lo it, while the o of the roads said the movement was n stril The men claimed that locked them out hy forcing moto surrender thelr laver eranks and al fusing to allow elnotrical workers work at the usual hour During the first day of theo employers and employes, [| 0 hafore tor men anit who the comoany called Rlo better street, is known tha the Flatbush “mail service’ n desultory ! street line, run to ss Holghts charter, of the fifty-four stro I's men numbe loyes and 2000 extras, atod was no The net loss receipts wns I'he number npon the limi elovated or else made t ng ser vies out p wns ost vw] regonrees w 1) was 360 stores of Ft of business and The loss to the ARTI EO groat . but was far in exc wmnies or the NG AS qu of the » great retail st nan ies trip } Ave a Ant in —— FIFTY-THIRD CONGRE In the Senate, THE LABOR " RLD. I HONE IND ABROAL. SABBATH SCHOOL, Ne-THInD of the females of France fourteen vears of nee are farm Inbor over I'ne ner journed without ordering ¢ Pittsburg n ORY nor clothing in'natey Tur employment to 76,0 man, IT is reported that the rond labor organizations this year, | By mind ie nLiy harbors 7521 rs, 3260 co 2200 hutehers Irpenter I'nungs makers HUNDRED r Yor) Heanme t in Ins Farniture ved from B RAMURY \ (YOMPERS wi Agtin Hin the An COTTON MILLS S MOVE § J 20m DA. —Practiently the whols Same | was occupied in the amendment to the discussion of Mr. Hill's Urgent Deficiency Hil, Was [he 10 idera~ ’ the oc a number 0 which passe 20m Day the re ten 11 bill to Mr. Hateh, juest of th dance with Dairy Union, at- ssage of Mr. Grout's regarine, butterine and of dairy proviucts subject to the Inws of any State into which it transported, he bill was a eatsd by Mr. Forman, and Mr. Grout, its author, and then Mr. Hatch endeavored to reach a vote by demanding the previous question, The bill went without ao. A -Mr. Holman reported the Indian propriation bill, «The bill ro 1ifying the pension laws was passed, Four private vangion bills were passed on motion of Mr, Martin, in ace nal pted tos ake other imitatic way be 1v0- over on salogies upon the life and services of the late Rapresentative George B. Bhaw, of Wisconsin, 271m Dav. feated the Grout oleomargarine bill, which hour, the remainder of the day consumed with business reported from the Judiciary Committee 25tn Day, The Indian Appropriation bill was discussed and a number of minor bills passed, 201m Dav.—Major T. O, Fowles, Chief Clerk, enlled the House to order and read a communication from Senator Oriep, who is somewhat indisposed, appointing Represen- tative A. M. Dockery, of Missouri, to con- duet the duties of the chalr, -In Commit- tee of the Whole there was a lively discus. sion of the Currency bill, Mr. Bland and Mr. McRae made brie! statements of thelr positions, «Mr, Cockrell then clalmed the floor and proceeded to diseuss the Indian bill, At the conclusion of Mr. Cookrell's remarks the committen arose and the House adjourned, 80TH Dav.—~The time was occupied with Sousideration of the Indian Appropriation ’» . m—II—_ ss No newspaper correspondents or artists are to be allowed passages in any v wes! sent oat with French troops to Madagasear, This order applies to the French as well as to the foreign pross. Any naval or military ofMoer who may be discovered furnishing work by pen or penell to the papers will be severely punished, The rest of the day was spent in | { the Aalivery of Pilibustering tactios agaln de- | | Chiness fs moving T. Jeflerson Coolldge Says That the Movement 1s Natural ton as ff is take it as son 120 and 8: Louis “I think that 8 We are hampered na AORISO poaratives if Northern . paratives, and t it 0 ng too husetts, Whittier 1 3 sesst—————— JAPANESE PUSHING ON. Chinese Routed and Retreat to the Great Wall, An offic eral Nogi's division of ial dispatch says that Major-Gen- invad- an attack the By 9.50 a, m, the Japan Ing army commenced upon Chinese position at 5.30 a, Kaiping was taken, The ward Hai-Shak-8al, with Chinean the Jag eso in- its hen quarters to ®t Army was welcomed by the Hitants while moving Shen-Yen with n strong de- fire to remain under Japanese rule, Dispatches from Kin-Chow say that Japan. eRe scouts report that a large for down to support the Kaiping foroe, 1 has retired toward New-Chwnang, At Kaiping the Chinese name bered 3000 men and they had twelve guns, About 200 Chinese were killed ; the number of wounded Chinese f8 not known. About 150 prisoners were taken. The Japanese casunities are not stated The Japanese are steadily advancing on Chin-Chow. The Chinese are retiring slowly to the Great Wall, where it is expected they will make a stand. Heavy snows impede the progress of the armies. Several skir. mishes have oocurred, and in their retreat the Chinese have left numbers of their wounded behind thom —— EXPORTS AND IMPORTS. Excess of Exports During 1804 of $152,204,824. Paring the twelve months endel Decem- ber, 1804, the excess of exports over imports was $152,204,824, and the exonrss for the core responding period of the preceding year wns 2109,5602,002, In December, 1884, the exports of gold ax. ooeded the imports by $9,412,427, and dur. fog the twelve months ended December, 1894, the axoess of exports over imports was $51,200,851. The excess of exports of silver over imports during the twelve months end- ed Desomber, 1804, was £84, 540,194, The number of immigrants arrived in the United States during the twelve months sod od December 81, 1804, was 248,944, and dur ing the Serticiding period of the preced ing voar, 488.7976. anifestations of | | LATE DOMESTIC AND FOR- EIGN TELEGRAPHIC NEWS, | Two Men Capture an Express Mes songer and Three Other Men Nes Ottumwa, Ill.—~Chicago’s New Scourge — Slam’s New Crown Prince-—~Navajo Indlans Starving. Chicago, Burlington and Quiney train No. 4, a through passenger express from Denver to 1. train Chicago, was robbed near OtL- tumwn, The a few nights ago consisted of six passenger econches, an express car, a mall car and a bageage car, Just before it slowed up at Chillicothe, a small station, at 6 o'clc m., two rough-losking strangers wers hanging around the station, sdintely after the train continued on eust the men disappeared, They f ped upon the rear platform of thr WK | seen r left Chillicothe when % express ear door | prosente “Tho Tombstone Maniae.” is indiy ial, who has Chicago's New Scourge, some Chara : Ss When 4 } lncks, It begins with a feverish feeliag, oh localizes in the nose and throat, L tai Rea U »ilke pains In ihe back, chest and head, and an order by the physician to take to one's bed. The pros ai AE for | a Kt pan oth led returning ad M their pas Rall- } bride bridegroom ng = Mo LL] lian Lan vms and John Muy hurt, Navajo Indians Starving. Recretary Carlisi and InMan ( ana i wan mmis. METress to a! of the Na- Agent Will. indians’ crops re, that their sd and that Ohio n ( an Families Destitute, trap t} Nols tele graphe and Shawnee tual need, an are yet fo vy wired merce re be K w Chopped His Wife to Bits, Hayward Graha h w his 1 murd fled 1 his wife to bits hear Luey, Tenn. was captured after ubbed into insensibility, and lodged phis jail, Hi me but being in the Men For a Statue of De Lesseps, The Government of ( bia has issued decree providing tor the erection of a statue in honor of t} nand De Lessepe, the | ma Canal, A Panama it Ferdi i rojsctor of the Pa eo inte O Siam’s New Crown Prince. The King of Riam has replied to the peti. tion of the nobles that he will proclaim Cowfa Maha Vagiravat, the eldest son of the second Queen, Crown Prinos, ——— MINERS PERISH. Drowned in Suddenly Flooded Eng- Hah Colliery Workings, An nocident occurred at the Biglake col | Hery at Audley, North Staffordshire, En; land, by whieh, it was thought, at least twenty persons lost their lives, Two bundred and thirty men and boys were at work in the colliery, when there was a sudden inrash of water from the old work ings, About seventy men resched the shaft and were speedily boisted out of danger, The pumps were promptly put to work, and resculug parties aescended into the mine, By 8 o'clock 150 of the men and boys had boon rescusd, Of the eighty who were then below it was thought that twenty were in the lower workings when the mine was flooded, and that they bad been drowned, Tae 85000 reward offarad hy the National Rhoe and Leather Bank, of Now York Oity, for the arrest of Samual Seely, the bank's defaulting book keeper, has been divided equally among MeFariand, the informer, and the two Chicago detectives who made the arrest, IR LESSON 0H EE INTERNATIONAL FOR JANUARY Text “The Great sion,”” Math, xvi, 13 Golden Text: Math, xvi, 10 Confes- —-t I.esson : , A Commentary. 13 TONAres v4 y “When Jesus eame unto the o pocrites wind to ar question of this vers 5 tiAnA John the Buptis Jeremias, or one varied are ing Him, the they the i for whi ir backs up« ss and wha oy ¥ shall be i in heay We know and x. that Peter was the first of all the aposties 10 preach the gospel both O JEWS Lies, Bad THUS, e opened the door to all, and this is the power of keys, As to the binding and loosing, we know that the same power was given to a WO ever is Rev, xxi eart ’ ws hata HOI ACE RAL apter xvi ’ | et Master was re uke Him, this shall margin nature of the natural man to pity one's sell } 1 the SAYS, » mu ilve unto '\nsol ves, please Him yd alone can tell that they rather hath called them, so whether they are Christians at all or ne Christians should bea: in mind that who live are always delivered unt for Jesus's sake, that the life also might made manifest in we she h arselves, but ur n w again™ He tu hind Me, satrn Thou art an y Me, for thon savorest not the of God, wse that be of thinks of pitying , but from satan, and man. He hates themselves, ones who ’ be . ‘that enc 1 rose “But thea b offense unt things that men.” Nes what the Lor oneself, It is not fro: the adversary of God the Christ life, and if he cannot destroy will do all he oan to hiader it. ‘““Not I, but Christ, who liveth in me,” is the true Chris tian motto, and only those who thus live can le a glory to God and a blessing to their fellows. It is like man to get and enjoy and gratify himself; it is Mike God to give and minister unto and make others glad. “For the Son of Man came not to be ministered unio, but to minister and to give His life a ransom for mans” (Math, xx., 28), ~Lesson Helper rent be ne a —— Patent OfMee Work is Up. For the firet time in fifteen years tha United States Patent Office Ands ftseil up to date with Its work, This means that in all | of its thirny<ahroe examining divisions the work is in such a condition that & new ap. plieation filled now will be acted on on its merits within thirty days, and an amends ment will receive attention within two weeks after it 16 filed, One year and a baif aro the more important and busiest hranches of the office wore months behind, One your ARO wont y-even divisions were more than Bn month in arrears ; twelve were mors than two months and seven more than three months behind hand, The office foros has not been increased, nor has the number of applicants fallen off, The new applications average between seven and eight hundred a week, ani the Bumbes of amendments about sixteen hua- red,
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