REDUCED TO ASHES. SPOKANE FALLS, WASHINGTON TER- RITORY, VISITED BY FIRE. TWENTY FIVE BLOCKS AND THE PUBL- LIC BUILDINGS DESTROYED. SPOKANE FaLLs, W. T., Aug. 6th, —~Twenty-five blocks were reduced to ashes, The estimated loss 13 $14,000,- OU. Owing to a lack of water the fre quickly spread, and was soon beyond control, and i§ was evident the city was doomed. The flames spread with fear- ful rapidity, The firemen were power- less. Attempts were made to check the fire by blowing up bulldings in its path, but it was useless. From the Pacitic Hotel the fire swept across First street to the frame buildings in the next block, and soon reached the heart of the city, The block of two-story brick buildings on Riverside avenue was easily carried away. From here the fire communicated to the magnificent Hyde block, a four- story building, tsking in the whole square between Mill streets, on Riverside avenue, next leaped across Howard street, and in a few minutes the block between Howard and Stevens street was a nass of red hot ashes. The next structure conflagration the solid block of buildings, including the post-office, between Stevens and Washington streets. At this point the fire burned out from lack of material. From the place of origin the fire bad, meanwhile, taken auvother leaping across Sprague street to the opera house and thence over Riverside avenue to Brown’s Bank; then both sides of the avenue were in tlames. The buildings between Post and Mill streets were quickly licked up, includ- ing the Grand Hotel. From here the waves of a flame poured in the adjoln- ing square on the right, containing the Frankfort block, the largest building in the city. The Frankfort cost $250, 800, time, but finally disappeared. The Arlington Hotel was now en- veloped in flames. Suddenly a man was seen to jump from the second story. He arose and started to run down Howard street, bul was overcome by the heat and fell. Several people rushed to his assistance and carried him to a place of safety. He wasa pitiable sight, having been literally roasted over his body. pame was Chas, noon to-day. Northward was the direction taken by the fire from the Arlington. 1t covsumed the block between Howard, Main, Front and Stevens streets, burning east as far as the latter thoroughfare, when a vacant lot checked further progress in that direc- tion. Everything In a northerly direc- tion, including the Northern Pacific Express office, the Union block and the Windsor Hotel was soon & mass of lame, The river prevented the fire from doing further damage, and was the means of saving all the big flouring and Jumber mills. Three hours From these the whirling through four-story brick The unfortunate man’s Davis. He died at which was saved by means of tearing down intervening buildings. the fire spread scarcely anything was waved, Provisions are scarce, and will last only a short time. The business district of Spokane was in a strip between the North Pacific Railroad tracks and the Spokane river. extended about seven squares in length. It was solidly built up with brick and stone structures, the cost of which varied from $25,000 to $125,000. Ten banking bouses, five botels, the opera house and many wholesale establish- ments, doing a business estimated at half a million dollars each, were situated within the district described. The population of the city is about 20,000. The city possessed an excellent water works, modelled after the Holly sys- tem, with a capacity of 9,000,000 gal- lons gaily. There were no fire engines, but by the system in use five or six good sized streams of water could be concentrated upcn any block in case of fire. 1he fire department was a vol- unteer one. NEWS OF THE WEEK. ~—Madison, Ind., was the scene of two tragedies on the evening of the 5th. William Johnson fired at Miss Sadie Athey, because she refused to marry him, but fortunately missed her, and then, thinking he had killed her, blew his own brains out, Richard Sisco was shot ana killed by George Schlick. The latter wounded several others and cut the throat of and dan- gerously wounded Walter Sisco, who tried to arrest him. At Ensley City, Alabama, on the evening of the 5th, Andy Williams went home and, find- ing William McCutcheon with his wife, killed them both with a revolver. At Princeton, Ky., on the evening of the Sth, John Hutchins shot and fatally wounded George and Albert Lewis, brothers. A stray shot by Hutchins also ratally wounded Frank Dunn. All the men were farmers, and the shoot« ing was the result of an old feud. As the close of a colored barbers’ picnle at Island Park, near Chicago, on the 5th, Colonel Duncan shot and killed Ed. Bennett, because he thought he had insulted Mrs, Duncan. Beunett’s friends pursued Duncan and riddled him with bullets, besides eutting and kicking the prostrate body. Duncan died during the night. —Benjamin Erb, a farmer, of Coits. ville, Ohio, was instantly killed on the bth, by the accidental discharge of agun with which he was about to go squirrel The weapon was discharged Erb’s two-year-old son, who wus bidding Is father I-by. Mrs, Christina Warfel, of J ville, Ind. was fata burned on the evening of the Oth an explesion of coal oil | with which she was starting a fire, A freight train on the Western New York and Pennsylvania Rallroad ran into a construction train at Eidred, Pa., on the 6th, and injured three Italian laborers, one fatally, besides causing a bad wreck, A freight train and two locomotives on the Omaba and Republican Valley branch cf the Union Pacific Rallway, near Weston, Neb., went through a bridge which had been weakened by the heavy rain. Engineer Mitchell and Yard Master Conklin were fatally injured, and three other train men were badly hurt. —A staging on which were four men at work on a building on Freemont street, Boston, fell 70 feet to the ground on the afternoon of the 6th, Patrick E. White and Steve Wallace were killed, and Patrick Connolly and Michael Wallace severely injured. The accident was caused by the breaking of a rope. John Steele and George Kemly, of Conshohocken, fell from the Penn- sylvania bridge at Stickler, FPa., early on the morning of the 6th, and sus- tained fatal injuries. Phillp Dough. erty, an engineer, was killed at Dech- telsville, Derks county, Fa. on the 6th, being caught In belting and drawn between two massive rollers, Thomas A. Edison’s new invention, an iron ore separator, was being tested, Ollie Martin and Maud Saylors, a betrothed couple, of Brownsyille, Ind, were drowned on the evening of the 4th, river, with a horse and buggy. | —A despatch from Utica, N. Y., {says that hop vines of thal vicinity | have been seriously injured by the | blight, and that in many of the late | varieties the crop will not pay for | picking. —A telegram from Geneva, New | York, says that Professor Brooks ob- i served bis new comet on the morning i of the 6th, and found 1t much brighter | and the tall longer. While observing i it a brilliant telescopic meteor passed | directly over the head of the comet, | leaving a fine trail of sparks, lasting | several seconds. The comet's position now 18 right ascension, 0 hours, © min- utes, 20 seconds, declination south, 6 { degrees, 4% minutes, — Harry Moyer on the evening of the | 5th shot and killed James McCormack, who entered his tent at Johnstown, | Penna., and began to abuse him, | Mover is from Norristown, and Mec- { Cormack, who was a tramp, was {rom Philadelphia. At Harlan Court House, Kentucky, on the 5th, an old feud be. tween the Turners and the Sowders | Howard faction was revived, by several | of the Howards demanding of young “Jim?' Turner that he leave the State, Turner refused, and one of the How- ards shot him dead. —A heavy storm of wind, rain, ball and thunder passed over the northern section of Rockbridge county, Vir ginla, on the evening cf the 5th, doing great damage, The wheat and grass crops have been almost totally de- | stroyed by the continuous rains. A | tornado passed over Kansas City, Mo. on the morning of the Oth, but did little damage in the city. It was fol lowed by a severe electrical storm and by torrents of rain, —Two explosions occurred on the | Tth at Kensington Gardens, Lous, where the ‘‘Siege of Sebastopol” Is | beiog produced. While Richard Light. in id -t ! per and John Smith were making rock- ets or “Hower pots,” to be used in the ( pyrotechnic display, a small explosion took place, and Lightner was burned { about the face, neck and hands A moment later some chemicals used in making the rockets exploded, and one end of the little building, In which the men worked, was blown out, and John | Smith was badly, perhaps fatally, | burned, William Hartley and a man | named Mahler were sleaping in a barn at Sterling, Nebraska, on the Tth when | it was struck by lightning and set on | fire, Hartley was burned to death and | Mabler only escaped after being ter- ribly burned. — An explosion of naphtha occurred at East Buffalo, on the afternoon of the 7th, on the steam yacht Cedar Ridge, which was about to start on a pleesure trip down the river. Edith and Larpey Crocker were burned to death, Howard Crocker was drowned, and John Rubenstein, a carpenter, was burned to death by bis boat house | taken fire from the yacht. Three other persons were injured. Two trains on the Richmond and Allegheny Railroad collided near Scottsville, Virginia, on the morning of the 7th. Both en- gines and about 15 empty coal cars were smashed, and James D, Daval, a train man, was killed. T1'wo trains collided at Washington, Penna,, on the evening of the Tth. Rev. J. D. Shanks, of Philadelphia, and a lady passenger were painfully but not dan- gerously injured. ~-A heavy rain fell in the country around Washington during the even- ing of the 6th. Great damage was done in Virginia, especially along the Washington and Ohio Railroad. There is one bad washont between Falls Church and Torrisons, Virginia, about 300 feet in extent, and a bridge between Falls Church and West End was also damaged. No trains passed these points on the 7th, and the clerks in the Executive Department and others who do business in Washington and live at the villages along the road were unable to reach the city except by means of carriages. All the streams In Virgina are greatly swollen, and much damage has been done to crops by overflows, —J. Frank Collom, a young attorney of Minneapolis, has confessed to tle forgery of the name of John T, Blals- dell, whose attorney he was, to notes and other paper amounting to $227,000, «A report comes from Denver, Colo- rado, that the Rio Grande Western train, known as the Modoc, was *‘held up” by train robbers near Crevasse on the evening of the 6th, They forced the fireman to attempt to chop through the door of the express car but, as he was unable to force the boller iron door, they gave it up, and went through the train with drawn revolvers and collected $900 and twenty watches. ~ Francis Lyshen, 79 years of age, was run over and killed by cars in the Stanton mine, at Wilkesbarre, on the —John Richter and Adolph Whit. man, butchers, quarrelled at the stock yard in Chicago, on the 7th, and Richter plunged his knife into Whit- man’s heart, killing him instantly. John McCann, a teamster, was shot in Chicago, on the 6th, by his stepson, James Dolan, receiving injuries of which he died on the Tth, —A freight wreck on the Nickle. plate road at South Whitley, Ind., on the 8th, resulted from the breaking of couplings and the subsequent collision of the sections, John Randall and Thomas Foyle, who were stealing rides, were killed, Arthur Thomas, aged 18, fell drowned in the Aarlem river, at New York, on the 8th, Frederick Wurtz was drowned while bathing in the East river, and Joseph M, Ouilet while bathing at Bay Ridge. Eugene Dearn and a friend, whose ascertained, were drowned in the bay at San Diego, California, on the 7th, by the capsizing of their boat. A 32- pound cannon loaded with ball was | i | WILLIE LEE. His name was Willie Lee, but no one thought of ealling him Willie except his sister, Willie was poor and homely. His hair was what might be called a blue white, his eyes were pale and with- ont expression, and he was altogether a very Nain person. He and ; Maury had a little house in the outskirts of the city near the car barns. His close what led him to think he would become a car conductor. At any rate, he did be weeding in her little garden beside by parties who did not know vall out of the breech, The missile passed through several walls and killed James Cosman. —The Wisconsin Central passenger train from Chicago on the morning of the Sth, was *‘neld up and robbed,” pass and say to herself: _ “Now, don't he just look fine with those blue elothes and brass buttons?” out the sickly face and made his sleepy ayes dimmer, To her he handsome and the form made him handsomer. partial to uniforms. There was a police Was would go out to watch for Willie's car going by on its last trip the she ord, by one man, The robber entered one of the sleeping cars and relieved the porter, conductor and one passenger, of their valuables. The porter tried to arouse the passengers, but a shot from the robber quieted him, though he was not hit. The fellow pulled the bell rope, and when the train stopped he jumped off and escaped. While a camp meeting was in progress at Wil- low Branch, on the Red river, north of Bonham, Texas, a party of men rode up and began firing into the congrega- tion. A panic foilowed, and some of the men in the congregation returned the fire. Fora while a regular battle ensued, The cause of the attack is not known. The preacher finished his sermon strongly guarded. —{(3, P. Brown, of the embarrassed firm of Brown, Steese & Clark, of Bos- ton, and treasurer of the Riverside and Oswego Mills Company, left Boston on the evening of the 6th, since which time nothing has been heard of him, Sheriff E. CC. Swain, Paulding county, Ohlo, has been found to be short in his accounts to the amount of over $2000. His bondsman asked to be released, but Swaln resigned, John W. Hardee, for five years a probate Judge of Towner county, Dakota, has disappeared, leaving a large indebled- ness, and a warrant has been Issued for his arrest. John I. Gale, lately clerk In the post office at Plimpton, Ohio, was arrested at Canton, in thal of the gate and she would tell him what good 57 'y Willie was The men at the barns did ne much about Willie, gatherings in the office s and sung and danced and others dad his name, Car vas aly HYS OL his thelr the registered mail, —The finding of the dead bodies of “Ollie” Jones, his wife and two other persons, all of whom had been shot in the back, was reported on the 7th from Corvallis, a small town in the Bitter Root valley, in Western Montana. A young girl who had been shot in the hip was also found in Big Hole Moun- tain. Jones had only bees married ranch, —A Chicago despatch says that there have been from 150 to 175 cases of typhoid fever on Cottage Grove avenue, between Thirty-ffth and Forty-sixth streets, that city. The epidemic is al. tributed to the pollution of the city water, caused by the recent heavy rains carrying the sewerage out to the source of supply in the lake. Thus far the cases reported have been of a mild type. — Mail advices from Japan, received in San Francisco, say that about 100 persons were drowned and 12.000 houses washed away, and about 2500 aged in four of the seven cantons, which suffered most from the overflow - ing of the river Chikugo, in Fukuo- kaken, by the recent heavy rains, Relief funds have been slarted various parts of the Empire, out of the ruins pear the lower end of Johnstown, girl, and was found in the middle of Market street, ~Itich deposits of peiroleum have beer: discovered in Tabasco, Mexico, Valuble coal mines have been found iu the State of Guerrero, Steve Brodie jumped from & bridge 80 feet in height over the Pawtucket of the 8th, and, although he struck on to the shore, AI ISA 5 able to swim turf will learn with regret of the death of J. H. horse goods house of J. H., Fenton in Chicago. ~1t is proposed by Mr. P. Lorillard and a few others to inclose Jerome Park with glass, light it with electric- itn, and use it for winter raging at night. The scheme is believed to be feasible, and estimates and plans have been contracted for, It may be made the Interest of the American Jockey Club to carry out the project. The ex- tension of the elevated railroad, the Harlem turn-out, will carry people to the grounds from the centre of the city in thirty minutes, No one has such a need of varied knowledge and accomplishments as a wife and mother, A mother ought to keep growing mentally-—she is expect. ed, by her children, to be a perfect en- eyclopedia to draw from, She who gives up her reading and interest in liv- ing questions of the day loses half her proper self, A MopeErN INSTANCE. ‘Madam, are Jou a woman suffragist?"’ “No, sir; I haven't time to be.” “Aaven't time! Well, if you had the privilege of voting whom would you support?’’ “I'he same man I have supported for the last ten years,” “And who is that?” ‘My husband. ’’ hi dead, OO! 1s ¢ i, Al i 4 3 “ 4 1% i A158 beside him ok brushed the damp bair back from his forehead “No, he ig not de ad, said ap Mitbeman, P liceman, happened for so where he was needed here. We will carry They picked him who once tu ’ overcome with fainted had not “Toddic” been there to assure her that was all right, “only hurt a cottage. Ws Mary bit.” The next day the voung lady whom Willie had saved came down in her car- riage to see how he was, She swept in through Mary's little kitchen like a queen, and Rachel, who was sitting on the step of the back door, looked at her in amazement; at the long sealskin cloak and the diamonds in her ears. “My ain’t she grand?” she said to herself. “I wonder if Willie knew her before? I wonder if he would have jumped right in front of two great big horses and a car if I had been in her place?” Jealous little Rachel! Of course he would have done it just the same had the person been the lowest of the lowly. Day after Helen Carpenter came to inquire after ‘the brave fellow,” as she called him, and when he began to got better she brought him flowers and ot house fruit os all sorts of things that he could not eat, and would not have dared to had ho wanted them. She brought him books, and read to him by the hour stuff that he did not heay. He did not care for books, but he liked to look at her as she sat by his bedside reading. He liked to hear the tone of her voice and smell the perfume of the violets she al wore, and after a while her daily t was what he lived for and looked forward so When t grew warmer he began the window in an easy chais ar sent from her own hosue, and she would | come and sit on a stool at his feet and | talk with him sbout herself and her | daily life until she made him her abject i slave and he loved her with a love that | only such people have who have never i loved before. | She was the light of his life and be | forgot that he was poor and homely, a { thing he had never forgotten before, | that she was as high above him as the | heavens are above the earth. When he held her little jeweled hand in his { as she sometimes allowed him to dq, he | would have been willing to have Ried | for her a thousand times over. | Rachel was entirely forgotten. She | would eome in sometimes to see him, { but he would always be sleepy or watoh- {ing for Helen and would not talk to | her, One day Mary sw her eyes filled with tears, and she put her arm around “Don't ery, Rachel; he will se { the light by and by,” said, and Rachel broke down and sobbed, *‘1 used to think cared for , but he i don't now, her iT 144 Hd One day Mary said to him, “Willie, don't thin) you rest but he neve si ] ! man had take: tendent sed Rachel just her, Willie Another superin- at lib rty to go able. The r Wille sed ham inst year over snr tin hi whan ho in a hurry { will Mary had promi f wdship begun terminate In a Wis 1 MOK any time WH woliseman, too, Was 5 ret Lint the vl been scan Ts dire is bride i KDew ppened, and sil about it that even ved Willie, of course, had treated Rachel - ) be al aght inal and placed then on wire ViOiets HOTA) Te 1 ANODE res nd him of her of evening Rachel her it paused a moment at bie p, and as his eyes were ( losed she concluded that sat down on the low stool face was partially turned i Pe ned his eves was, She Aas ner vor thought she sat be- he noted , her white i AR in her place,” “Wenld she ever minke me love her and ly told me she was going Yes, I suppose she them ’ Rachel was thinking over her life, and | by some strange, unexplainable mes meric sympathy Willie's mind went back over the past too. What a friend | she had always been to him and Mary, and how bravely she had fought her own battle of life thus far. “She is a | noble little woman,” he said to himself, | “and I wish I was worthy of her.” Then ; the clock struck and Rachel started up. | She drew a half sighing breath, punsed { # moment, then stooped over him and { lightly touched her lips with his. Be- fore he was aware what he was doing he nad passed his arm around her neck and pressed her head to his breast. “Do you then love me, little Rachel?” They say loye is eloquent by whom- ever spoken, and Willie was certainly eloquent. The love that wasshut up in his wn all turned and told itself seem- ingly without his aid to Rachel, and when Mary came in she found them sit- ting hand in hand, a new sweet light in their faces. When the June roses blossom there will be a double wedding in the little cottage and ‘“Teddie” and Willie will both be happy: Willie has gone back to his oar. He says he likes the road and likes the work, and blesses the day that good fortune came to him thro misfortune. — Katherine Hartman in Dansville Advertise every one of Take a few Laets, parsnips and car rots, cut away the others, leaving a space around each, and allow them to remain for seed. ~The veleran tralver and driver, isaac Woodruff, has left Point Breeze track and gone to live with a friend on a stock farm at Kent county, Md,, pbout a from Balti- FASHION NOTES. What are $:¢ facts and probabilities in regard to these very plain and scanty dresses? It is not that the ex- aggeration of style willsoon lead to very different fashions. Twenty years after erinoline became pronounced very straight dresses were worn. Bo to-day after the exaggerated “Yournure” a return is made to scanty costumes, Some ptill cling to two double springs and a small cushi there are others who will have and dress themselves closely parasols, : Fashion truly resembles captain who persues his terrible without care for the vietims about him. In the same manner fashion pursues y without regard for the nda that # suddenly stops, What of wll § » Lil 3 who stries 3 become of these tourngres , these springs of which so u made and which fashion suddenly discards without athonght? Never mind, it is not our business to say things that have disappeared wil oor Was adien to but t 4 Let new ¢ the coming of the new us prais the grace of our costumes their straight skis round of a style somew girange then with ) y charming draperies oidered black lace are the most appreved trix Ther ementeries made guipure ming for these new forms Ike falling knots of velvet ribbon, n was used for strings. We ised a sketeh of the jacket ¢ Jondi- ruiere” which 1s very bi Very i ¥ one is In grass embral fered with black sleeves are of “faille’ fashionable green Ciosi braid, and the collar 1 There are other models entire cloth vered with braid others areelaborate- d and still others are sim- Whatever may be the rm is always the same, v sleeves velve Ivy of with sleeves completely ™§ he fo ng fronts and and very high. We have also seen very full a costume of Nile bloe Bengaline simply trimmed with a scarf of lace . this Passes around the bot- tom of the waist and ends in two long pieces finished with passementeric Lac scarfs that are gracefully ealled Marie Antoinette are the mostelegant mantles f the th ¥ are arrange a n many different ways as fancy or caprice may dictate. Sometimes as the scarf of “Mongieur le Maire” such as we have first described, falling in two long ends, which relieves the plainness of a round skirt. Sometimes it is as a scarf neglig ently thrown over the waist which ad- mirably solves the problem of every summer, of weéaring something about the waist without the trouble of a heavy outside garment. The scarf “Mari Antoinette” is as light as a feather, a pin is sufficient to hold it in its place and one cannot be embarrassed with it. Another ingenious use of the scarf is a covering for the head. For theatres, balls, promenades in the parks or by the sea-shore, one can no more think of the padded hood or even those of simple Surah, they are too warm. The “Marie Antoinette” soarf simply gather- ed under a bow, has the great advantage of covering the head, shouldersand even the chest, it is large enomgh to be drawn over the eves and so make a sure, ele- gant and convenient cover for the prettiest heads. All who see these scarfs immediately accord to them their favor and declare them to be a neces. gity to complete a summer wardrobe. 0 SERVO, ~ Alarge grain of truth, wrapped wu in nonsense, writes a Paris correspond- ent of the Chicago Herald, was the reply of a Chioago girl, while here, toa Boston tr asking of her a fashion letter: ress,” she wrote, “why it all nds on the way you i" u d' esprit went the of the French press, and although it was Americanism untranslatable,