Show LATEST XELERAM8 i THE MURDER MATTER LarQ Rewards for the Dw oovery of the Assassina Strange Story Cavendish In America London 0In the House of Lords the Marquis of Landsdown announced an-nounced that in consequence of the recent ministerial statements relative rela-tive to impending measures for the protection of life and property in Ireland he dropped the motion which he had announced against the Irish policy government He said he wished to impress upon government gov-ernment very earnestly the necessity neces-sity of not yielding to popular demands de-mands without the adoption of compensating com-pensating measures for strengthening strengthen-ing the law Government will offer a reward of 10000 information given within three months which will lead to the conviction of the murderers and a reward of 1000 for private information informa-tion Government will also grant full pardon and extend the special protection of the crown in any part i of the Queens domain to any person I other than principles in the prime1 who may give the information required I re-quired The body of Lord Cavendish was I i laid out for public view in the chapel at Chatsworth The features i fea-tures are calm Only one scar is I visible across the nose The Queen sent a special messenger with a wreath for the coffin The wreath was composed of yellow and white everlasting flowers and a card was attached to it with the words inscribed in-scribed From Queen Victoria A letter of condolence addressed to Lady Frederick Cavendish accompanies accom-panies the wreath The interment takes place at Edensor at 2 oclock on Thursday afternoon Business in the surrounding districts will be suspended during the whole day It is expected a deputation from the I Duke of Devonshires Irish tenantry from Cork will participate in the funeral procejsion A special train from London will convey the ministers min-isters who will act as pall bearers Gladstone has written the mayor of Cork acknowledg ing the receipt of the resolutions res-olutions passed at a meeting of citizens citi-zens on Sunday In the letter he says It is my firm belief that there will be but one common sentiment senti-ment throughout the three kingdoms king-doms concerning the terrible assassination assas-sination that Ireland in particular throughout her length and breadth will demonstrate how far she is from the slightest touch of moral complicity in so blacK a deed Parnell received telegrams from the president of the American League and officers of many branch leagues and affiliated societies requesting re-questing him to convey to Gladstone expressions of their sympathy for him and their abhorence of the crime The Standard says The appointment appoint-ment of George Otto Trevellyau as chief secretary for Ireland is I favorably received by the Irish party Trey ellyn holds advanced opinions opin-ions It is believed he sympathized with the popular party in Ireland An arrest was made at Milford Haven the appearance of the man corresponds to the discription of one of the murderers It is surmised sur-mised that he crossed over by a steam mackerel boat He retuses to give an account of himself The police are guarding the warehouse of A and S Henry and Company in consequence of the receipt of information that an attempt will be made to destroy the place The threats are suunosed to have arisen from Fenian < displeasure at the course of Mitchel Henry who is a partner in the linn There is a continued mflux of telegrams tel-egrams from ail parts of the United Kingdom aud Ireland expressing indignation at the crime Gladstone will go to CliatswortL I today The News in a leading article says We do not remember to have ever seen at such a crisis so remarkable remark-able a display of composure and restraint re-straint The government cannot complain that this trying occasion has been turned to account for purposes pur-poses of faction The Standard in a leading article arti-cle referring to the brutal ravings of ODonnovan Rossa asks very seriously se-riously whether there is not a duty resting on the executive of the United States and a corresponding one vested in the British government govern-ment with respect to the future It says American police can hardly be so ingenious as they are credited with being if they are unable at very short notice to arrest in cmer ica the ringleaders of plots against the Queens peace The Standard regards it as astonishing aston-ishing that until last evening no reward re-ward had been offered for the discovery dis-covery of the assassins The police authorities at Dublin i telegraphed the railway authorities at Chester to arrest man m the I train from Hollyhead who was suspected sus-pected of being concerned in the murders and the man was taken into custody on the arrival of the train The prisoners head was bruised and his haad bandaged The Commons adjourn to allow I al-low members to attend the funeral i of Lord Cavendish 1 I I Dublin 9The meeting of the chamber of commerce yesterday to denounce the crime theassassinsr was the largest everueldtH8f HAt H-At a meeting of flit HonffP Rule League over which the lord mayor presided a resolution expressing horror grief and detestation was unanimously carried A man has been arrested at Tip pfirary who first gave the name of Harris and subsequently ce He declared himself anative London and afterward refused to give any other information He was remanded re-manded The man arrested at Castle Bellingham Bel-lingham has been sent to Dublin for identification At a public meeting in Cork to day nearly 600 was subscribed on I the spot for the apprehension of the murderers Subscriptions to the reward re-ward fund now amount to J000 The excitement is in no wise abated Business is partly suspended The I opinion gains ground that no resi dent Irishman is connected with the I murder but that ODonovan Rossas I agents are guilty of the deed A 1 large number of tourists who landed at Queenstowu on Monday and Tuesday from America were so shocked on hearing of the murder mur-der that they immediately took a lighter to England and the continent conti-nent though they had intsnded to visit Ireland to view its scenery The authorities of Ireland are sanguine san-guine of the ultimate success of their efforts to capture the murderers murder-ers I ersJNew York Rerals Paris I Neither the adoption of the conciliatory concilia-tory policy by Gladstone nor the shocking assassination of Cavendish and Burke seems to have in anyway any-way modified the programme of the Land Leaguers I had a long con yersation with ilr Egan this afternoon after-noon in the course of which I repeatedly re-peatedly asked him whether he individually in-dividually or the League collectively collec-tively would not feel it a duty to repudiate re-pudiate and condemn theassination Egan said that he could not see any necessity for repudiating them No one in his senses would charge the League with them They will be a great blow to us Being asked what lie thought of the assassination he said I cannot but think they are the work of individual fanatics who have been casual passersby sctin on a sudden impulse That the crime can be traced to any political poli-tical organization I do not believe Heralds Dublin Another important im-portant link in the evidence regarding regard-ing the assassins flight is supplied the police by a carman who was washing his vehicle in the village of Chapelrzed when thd strange car dashed past almost knocking him down He remonstrateu with the driver and men on the car and t ok good note of the horse and vehicle which he is positive he can identify The car proceeded up Inchicore road when within a quarter of a mile of the village of Inchicore it collided with a bread cart the driver of which now comes forward with a statement which the police regard as the most important yet fur nished He is certain he can identify even the harness of the horse of which he took particular notice Rome lOThe Vatican has forwarded for-warded fora al instructions to Cardinal Car-dinal McCabe archbishop of Dublin directing him to call upon the Irish I Catholics to declare in a public document their cause is distinctly separate from sectaries Cincinnati 10Gath writes the Enquirer General Averill this morning told me a singular story about Cavendish You may not be aware said he that Cavenuisll was in the army of the Potomae in iSnu and I entertained him for awhili He came to this country with his brother Lord Hartington now the Marquis of Hartington and with Sir John Rose I met them in the following peculiar way When ilc Clellans army evacuated the peninsula penin-sula I covered the embdrkat with my cavalry and was the last officer to get in the steamer Having been ill I lost my senses when I gt on the steamer and knew nothing more till I found myself in the house of General Wadswortb at Washington As soon as I was able to get out I made ready to find the army again which was then at An tietam battlefield but before I I started I went into General Ingalls office Pennsylvania avenue he being be-ing chief quartermaster of General McOlellan and he and Nesmith of Oregon and Colonel Sawtelle and myself sat down to play a game of I poker It was a pretty long game and consecutively Ingalls and Ne smith were frozen out and the game was left to Sawtelle and me and I Wit iJ all the money I also won a considerable quantity of I wine which I took next day to Harpers Ferry I was nearly sick On the way certain Englishmen seeing see-ing me with a generals insignia introduced themselves as LordsCav endish and Hartington and with I them was Rose Cavendish was a young fellow pretty well made of I frank bluff style His elder brother I bro-ther Hartington was somethin over 30 years old When we got out at Berlin in Maryland to find the army these young fellows still went along with us and we came to a small house at the roadside which had but one bed in it and was inhabited by a poor woman We concluded to stop here for tim night and these young lords lay down on the < < t L I floor with my staff making no complaint fl com-plaint and insisted on my taking tthB bedirfBbjjfv staid around the I 1pqnime and suddenly Sartin tontlisappeared and turned up in Lees army The others did I not go I never inquired as to whether McClellan permitted Hart ington to pass the lines but have an idea he just waiked out of the iI i picket line and went over Sir John Rose whe L I saw him afterwards in Canadarather apologized for I Hartingtons disappearance Vfibh was the first time 1 knWliSTilid gone to Lee Memphis 9At a mass meeting of Irishmen held this evening the 9 following telegram was sent Charles Stewart Parnell 3f P London I t You ha vre the encouragement and I support of Irishmen of Memphis I Tennessee who subscribe SlOOD or the arrest and conviction C1fl fhe assassins 1 Few York SThe Parneil Lahd I s1eague passed resolutions deprejiat big the use of force denouncing murders in Ireland and hoping for the detection of the assassins The resolutions say Tke fiendish course of the London Times in urging the policy of hate and revenge against the Irish people is a crime still more I fiendish than the bloody deed which I l it so eagerly seizes as a pretext for the barbarous measures ifr advocates advo-cates The following message was cabled to Parnell Davltt andDillon IL Parnell Land League parent branch unanimously concurs in your noble manifesto to the Irish people in the present trying emergency t emerg-ency Boston 10At a meeting in Faneuil Hall of Irishmen representing repre-senting the Land League of Massachusetts Massa-chusetts H Miller speaking for 0 Orangemen not only of the state but of the United States said they j were ready tobury the hatchet and make common causewith the Land League for the welfare of Ireland in bringing the murderers to justice He read n letter to the same purpose pur-pose from the grand master of the i order in Massachusetts Wendell I Phillips sent a note saying No i word can adequately tell my sorrow for the injury our cause has suffered or my abhorrence of this hideous crime this disgrace to civilization But let us wait for further evidence before we consent to believe that any Irishman j Irish-man has been stung even by the intolerable wrongs of the last twenty months to such an atrocious crime Irelands marvelous patience pa-tience during the last eighty years entitles her to the benefit of such m doubt Paris DThe Temps applauds the t demeanor of the English people in i the Irish crisis It says There is no trace rashness or precipitation f The murders seem to have generated gener-ated in all parts a desire for appeas ment and concord I |