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Show TODAY'S TELEGRAMS, I "ibocuimrrralr. Detveb, June 2 A Datango, Colo special to tlie A'cics says: Mrs. Robert Morrow yesterday attempted to light a lire writh kerosine. An cxt losiou occurred which stt fire to the cloths of the woman, her four-. year old son ami ycung baby. They were all three cremated in tlie houi, which was Lurni-d above tLem before any ase'staucc could be rendered. Ntuaeeullera hlrtkr. rnTSnCBO. June 2. Seven hun- dred stonecutters struck this morning morn-ing for an advance of n ages. rranclatse to Vtoirtrn liOSDO v, J line 2. The Women's Liberal Federation will present a memorial to Mr. (Jladstnm asklug him to Include the franchise to women in the programme of issues at the next general election for mesi-btrs mesi-btrs of Parliament. htnmlr Wa&iiington, June 2. A conference con-ference was ordered ou ths naval appropriation bill. Petitions were presented from Kansas City for reciprocity in tlie trade with Mexico. -and from New Hampshire and Vermont against urtber concessions to Pacific railroads. In Emerr ConnlT. ' The people who settled ou tho Muddy have now got the water on their townsite. N'o body of settlers set-tlers evtr struggled more heroically to overcome obstacles to settlement than tlic-o who are now- located on the Muddy in the townsite called lmtry, and, judging from present prospects, thtlr tfibrts will be crowned with success. Tht crops that have betn I lanted promise to yield a good harvest. W. O. Petty is now Bishop of tlie ward. 1-erron is still growing, and a great breadth of land further south is alrea ly under cultivation. Orangeville presents the ino-t thrifty appearance of any town In tlie count, (String perhaps to Ms more extensive planting of tret" which tends to give the place a home-like look. Ntw canals arc being tascn out above the town, winch will bring in a great quantity of additional land, txttnd'ng nearly half way to Fenon. Castlcdale, though the capital ol the county, will have to show more thrift and tnergy or be lift far in tht rear b somt of her more energetic ener-getic neighbors. Tlie people of Huntington are making another effort upon their mttting house. More acreage Is unlcr cultivation here than U'ual, and a large 'quantity of luccrn is being raisul. Cleveland will tins j ear rait; good crops so that the patient settlers there will soon begin to obtain results from their fiatitucc and toil. Want of water las been the drawback for years, but this season thert at pears to Ix plenty for all Tht inhabitants of Price are more hopeful, and great pains are lielng taken 1 them to cultivate their lols. Tl t towns above mentioned ire the main places in Castle Vnl hy, and are strung out on a line north and south to the extent of about fifl tight miles. A sad and fatal actideut hap-pencd hap-pencd on Thursday, a shor distance dis-tance above OrangcvIlIc,In the Con-tnnwood Con-tnnwood canyon. A. Ctoward and his famll, accompanied 1 his father. James M. Cloward. liad camiietl on Wednesda nuclit near the coal beds. Tiny liad an oj-tn one Iiore liggv aud a lieavj two-horse w agon. When they ttatt el from camp in the morning the single horse backed ou a hill, fright ening Mrs. Cloward, who was dnv-Ing. dnv-Ing. The men wenttohtr assistance assist-ance and she alighted from the bugg You ug Mr. Cloward w anted to drive the Iiorv: and force him up the ni'r, lt liis father thought he could himself managt. He had not proceedeil far, however, when tlit hore began to lack on a dugu ay. and prvuntly the horse, vthlclcanJ all Its occupants ftllovtr the liauk, throwing the old man out. hen the son readied lilm he was dead, his neck having betn broken by the fall. James M. Cloward had been a resldtnt of Moroni, baupetc County, for about twenty jears, and had Isen in Castledalc for the last two months. He was C2 years of age. Tlie bod will be taken to Thistle on the II j. W. ItailroaJ, and thence to his former home in Moroni, for interment TrtA eluu |