Show LATEST TELE6KAM8 1 THAT UOR1B I1B4GE The Sentiment Aroused by ihe Murder 01 Cn > endish o and Burke Profonitd i Regret and Excited Ex-cited Indignation A Dark Day for Poor Ireland1 New York 7 H folds cable The details of the tragedy are as follows A boynamedJacob Stute while birdsnesting in the park saw about 200 yards from where he was and lese to the road a group of men as if wrestling He thought they were roughs and did not pay attention them He then saw two men fall to the ground and four others jump on a car and drive off toward Chapilzed which lies in a direction opposite to the city They drove at a rapid pace and he could not giv description of the appearance of the men A gentleman gen-tleman named Maguire and friend who were on bicycles shortly before be-fore had passed Mr Burke and Fredrick Cavendish when on their way along the main road thrQugh the park and on their return jbur ney they found the chief secretary lying in the centreofthe carriageway carriage-way and Mr Burke prostrate upon the pathway Both the gentlemen were lying in large pools pf blood They informed the police at the park gate station of what they hadseen The police at r once pro ceeded the scene otJb pcmider and conveyed the bodies to the hospital hos-pital On examination was found that Burke had liad several stabs near the region of thd hea Iit and histhroat had been cut J almost completely com-pletely across His clothes were absolutely saturated with blood and his hemorreape must havftbpen tre mendous His clothes were also torn His gloves had been torn in many places and his hands bore marks spggestive of a fierce encounter en-counter wtli his assailants Lord Frederick did not wear gloves He had been stabbed in several places about the chest One wound was through the right lung and penetrated pene-trated deeply At the time ot the dreadful occurrence the park as might be expected on a lovely evening even-ing was crowded in many places with people It is a remarkable fact and one suggesting that the murderous onslaught must hav < been short terrible and excessive that many persons sitting and walking walk-ing within a few hundred yards of where the bodies were found heard nothing of the affair After the procession today the chief secretary had discharged his official duties in connection with the ceremony of installation and immediately returned on an outside car to Phoenix Park gate Then walking toward the vice hegal lodge he met Mr Burke and both gentlemen proceeded together to-gether No arrest had been made up to I 2 oclockthis Sunday morning No one is allowed to go into the hospital hos-pital which is guarded by a large force ofpolice All the available force of constables is out searcliing for the assassins There is a strong guard of military at the vice regal lodge It is supposed that Burke was assailed and stabbed through the heart Cavendish attempted to defend de-fend him but he too was stabbed by the assassins They repeatedly plunged their knives into the breasts of their victims and having cut their throats they got on the car and drove rapidly from the park by the Chapelized gate rheleWd rapidly spread anl ere ated the wildest excitement and consternation 111 the city Lord fiitaiinai onfl tVio rifororrnl Trivfx r v M VJ were just going down to dinner at the lodge when the news was sent to them Some members of the household were at the opera at the Gaiety Theatre and were sent for When the cause of their departure was known the excitement was intense in-tense anti a proposal was made to stop the performance which was ultimately cut short When the bodies were first found Cavendishs lips were moving as if he were trying to speak but he showed no further signs of consciousness con-sciousness It is needless to add that the assassinations rare attributed attrib-uted to Fenians although this must be pure cdnjecture The assassins were seen entering the park on the car and driving rapidly along the main road and from all accounts they must have encountered their victims as they were crossing the road Robbery could not have been an object as nothing on their bodies was touched PARNELL London 7 Parnell and Davitt have spoken upon the assassination Parnell said I am horrified more than I can express ThIS is one of the most atrocious crimes ever committed com-mitted Its effect must certainly be most damaging to the Irish people have always found Lord Frederick Cavendish a most amiable gentleman gentle-man painstaking and strictly conscientious con-scientious in the fulfilment of his official duties I did not share in the disappointment expressed ion liberal Irish circles regarding his appointment as1 anticipated that the principal reforms the present session such a amendments to the s iJt a i U > 1 C land act would be under Gladstones personal supervision and I believed the administrative reforms would be somewhat postponedrJkcannofcco ceive that any sectfonfojEIHe pepple of Ireland could liave pmted fe liberately against the life of Lord i Fredrick and I am surprised that the Dublin police who had been able to protect Mr Forster should apparently not have taken any steps to watch over his successor during tliefe hoyrsof his otlicjai Hfe in IFlnd There a nears to be an unhappy destiny presiding over Ireland whifci always comes at the moment when there seems some chance for the country to destroy the hopes of her best friends I hope the people of Ireland will take immediate and practical steps to excess ex-cess their sympathy with Mr Gladstone in his most painful posi tionDavitt Davitt said STo language I can possibly command can Ixjpress the horror with winch I regard ur dera qr my despair atr t tlieir cohse uencesjT enjI heard of th ni on Saturday nigfft t could not credit the news I grieve to think igUien the government badjust run a risk ill introducing a new policy when everything seemed to be hopeful the tragic fate which suddenly overlook over-look the new official will obliterate every trace that the effort was in ended to produce Cavendishs ap p diutiitu1Wasnot racceptable to the lijJeralS nd bad baused dissensions His death wittiul further ex sp rate r-ate the conservatives and ot the terrible indignation it will arouse in England n great sharewill iL directed rected against government GLatG stones chief safety has all the while lain in the fact that the opposition had no leader of sufficient ability to inspire public confidenceand itis not unlikely Ireland wil be made to suffer a fearful retribution for the bloody act that has startled the worldno less than would the assas ination of the Queen herself have aone London iThe following manifesto festo of the Land League was adopted this afternoon at a hurriedly hur-riedly s ummon d1lleetingrat Westminster West-minster PhlaceHotel > A 2 To the People of Ireland I On the eve > of whaf seemed aJ bright future for our country that evil destiny which apparently pursued us for centuries has struck at our hopes another blow which cannot be exaggerated fn its disastrous disas-trous consequences In this hour of sorrowful gloom we venture to give expression to our profoundest sym pathy with the people of Ireland in the calamity that has befallen our cause through this horrible deed i and with those who determined at lie last hour that a policy of conciliation con-ciliation should supplant that of terrorism and national distrust We earnestly hope that the attitude and action of the Irish people will show to the world that the assassination such as has startled us almost to the abandonment of hope of our coun trys future is deeply and religiously abhorrent to their every feeling and instinct We appeal to you to showy show-y every manner of expression that amidst the universal feeling ot horror hor-ror which the assassination has excited ex-cited no people feel so deep detestation detesta-tion of its atrocity auJ so deep a sympathy with those woose hearts must be seared by it as the nation upon whose prosperity and reviving hopes it may entail consequences more ruinous than those that have t alien to the lot of unhappy Ireland duiipg he present generation We feel that no act that has ever been perpetrated in our country during the exciting struggles of the past fifty years has so stained the name of hospitable Ireland as this cow tuiily and unprovoked assassination of friendly strangerand that until the murderers of Cavendish and Burke are brought to justice that stain will suy our countrys name 1 1 f1rTC DT > nTT o1rIvu JrLta o 1 AU l LL JOHN DILLON MIOIIAEL DAVITT All Irish members heard from concur con-cur in this declaration orders for the immediate printing and posting of the manifesto throughout Ireland Ire-land have been given larnell has sent telegrams to the mayors of Dublin Cork Waterford and Limerick Lim-erick suggesting they immediately call en meeting of their respective corporations to denounce the crime London society beginning with the Queen who sent a telegram tele-gram of condolence to Lord Fredrick Cavendish had made a demonstration of sympathy as remarkableas that which occurred on the death of President Garfield Many columns of the morning papers pa-pers are filled with the names of those who called to express sympathy sym-pathy with the relatives of Lord Frederick The remains will be conveyed to Englind on Tuesday and interred at Chatsworlh on Wednesday s Dublin iOrders have been issued is-sued that all boats from Ireland be searched for the assassins The face of Lord Frederick Cav endish as he lies dead in the hospital hos-pital is calm and peaceful Burkes countenance has a < look of great agony Captain Ross late secretary ot Mr Forster has gone with a special report and as representative of Earl Spencer to London Burkes sister became quite hysterical and weak The report that she and Mr Burkes brother were missing had no foundation It was reported today I to-day that Mr Burke was the victim whose assassination had been S S f f I d i M T ell Hae i p jt f planned and that Lord Frederick Javendish was only killed because z he was in Burkes company The nquestonjfrhe bodies opened today I I MSPjIor3 had bean summoned f over nigSt and all answered to m their names except two The jury i consisted of gentlemen Mounted police occupied the hospital yard 4 There was a large crowd of people outside a Mr Whyte city coroner said he ummoned the jury to meet on Sun i Iaym5oaer that thremainsRnight fie removed at once He dared that language was inadequate to express the horror and shamewhich all must feel After the jury had 1 viewed the bodies the coroner I stated the cause of the death was quite apparent but that he would adjourn the inquest until Monday for formal evidence The murder uust havejjeen quite visible from the windows of tne viiegal < Jodge I Jblegal t It is said Earl Sp nooG himself i aw the scufte from InS dToom wiudow bufthe police Vere4unable t o vouchf of tlid accuracy oT the rumor Earl Spencer to whom the news was first broken by Colonel Caul field was terribly shocked He stated that he intends to resign immediately A meeting of conservatives was held on Sunday afternoon Sir Staf ford orthcote quisSaIisbury and all prominent membersjof theist the-ist conservative cabinet werepres ent The meeting lasted an hour Resolutions were passed expressing horror atbhe cdeed sympathy with I ornnt ntafrdthe willingness of f the opposition to support government m govern-ment with their whole strength in I coping with the murderous state of I I Ireland Sir Stafford jtforthcote aid he doubted whether government govern-ment would proclaim martial law i but that if they did they might reckon on the support of the conservatives ervatives I I t t New York 8The Heralds cable f dispatch from Dublin says four men have been arrested there dnjsuspi f cLon Popular feeling is intense I i The blow is so sudden that every 1 body is awestricken In all the churches today preachers discoursed dis-coursed with scarcely an exception leploringtheoutrageand uttered the severest denouuciations against the murderers At masses prayers were offered up for the dead Theteport which appears to have the most color of truth and is most generally believed is that the four suspects 1 I are Englishmen The privy council has been sitting all dav and three 1 generals have been in attendance Earl Spencer went to the castle this morning escorted by hussars and 4 remained eight hours with the council I It is remarked that Lord Frederick was very unwilling to come to Ireland W Ire-land with Earl Spencer He wished L r to remain in London for some days t r longer but was urged to come at once to Ireland where a great mass r i of official work was awaiting him I Last night at 11 oclock a long message mes-sage for the deceased lord was received i re-ceived from a meeting of his constituents con-stituents at Keighiey in Yorkshire stating that they had passed a t unanimous vote confidence in him and government and would return him in triumph over his conservative l conser-vative opnoneut A gentleman who was present states that yesterday afternoon i when the vice royal procession arrived ar-rived at the castle yard a man j f ji t went forward to Cavendishs car r f triage t-riage and asked if the chief secretary 1 1 i secre-tary was there His lordship raised his hafrand said I am Lord Frederick f Frede-rick Frederick Cavendish The r I g man did not replybut simply looked I on earnestly at the chie secretary II and then walked into the crowd I k Three men of thecorneihnv class t f J were arrested on suspicion at the t village of Chapelized today unable 1 f f to give an account of themselves I 1 They stated that last night they I 1 f I slepc in the fields one adding afterward t i after-ward that he slept in a lodging house in Church lane i The post mortem examination of i the bodies at the chief secretarys t lodge showed eleven wounds on > Burke and eight orf Cavendish The I chief wound on the former was inflicted i in-flicted from behind penetrating the rl heart and on the latter the chief f wound was also inflicted from behind be-hind severing an important artery on the neck One wound on Caven f dishs forearm had cut several mus c1es and fractured the bone as if inflicted in-flicted with a hatchet or sword The tl body of Burke presented the appear t ande of a stalwarB man for his age 60 years His face was drawn a good deal Cavendish was apparently c appar-ently man of slight build with a narrow chest Burkes body presented I pre-sented as the doctor stated who saw both bodies very much the i same appearance as that of Lord i Lictrim n SThe last official act of Cavendish in conjunction with Earl Spencer was to arrange for the immediate release suspects except eighty BEECHER New York iRev Henry Ward Beecher preaching tonight on the murders in leland saw the act was but trying to change the destinies of a nation by the pistol and dagger It was a bloody murder but the I work was not that uf the Irish people peo-ple or even of an Irish party and i 4 appeared to be a burst of the blind i I unreasonable fury of a few against government They thought in sU J Coutniuou on E49e 5 t HW t 1 S IB AW < < aa J i I J i > f l1 d I |