Show TELEGRAPHIC i THE IB1PH + The League Must Go MaDS More Arrests Bulldozing Played One > Dublin 7The headquarters of the Land League are transferred to Liverpool I Liver-pool It ij i stated that government in the case of land leaguers wh have escaped to England have consulted English and Irish Jaw officers They consider any attempt to encourage intimidation from England the subject of indictment A Paris correspondent writes that the clerical press condemns the Irish arrests A Berlin correspondent represents that the arrett of Parnell has tended to raise Gladstone in the estimation of the Germans Ger-mans and the North German Gazette sajs the time for indulgence has gone by The Irish Timee ccuses the police of the fiercest excesses in dispersing the crown on Saturday There are twenty three persons in Limerick hospital with bayonet wounds Tha magistrate stated from the bench today that the police had strict orders not to fire with blank i cartridge but fire with effect Biggar left Dublin last night for Holy hood He fully expected to be arrested but resolved no longer to await the action ac-tion of the castle authorities James Painer secretary and another prominent member of the Middletown Cork League j Lemon secretary and OToole member of the Tullon Dublin County branch Lynam organizer of the Kings and Queens counties and West Meath League White secretary of Clare League and Henry Egan secretary of Tullamore Leagueare all lodged in JNaas jail The authorities contemplate arrests in Belfast and other parts iunortbof Ireland Sexton Dillon and OBrien are charged with being reasonably suspected of treasonable trea-sonable practices It is proposed to start a fund for the maintenance of state prisoners pris-oners Members of the League claim that Arthur UConner being thoroughly instructed in the management of the League his escape will enablo the organization to continue Dublin 17The corporation today adjourned to seek an interview with Furster chief secretary in accordance with resolutions to endeavor to obtain an assurance that the ostentatious display of police force on Saturday and Sunday with such lamentable consequencesshall not be repeated Abraham treasurer of the Limerick Land League U arrested charged with being reasonably suspected treasonable practices In Limerick tonight the rioting was renewed Three companies of the Sixty seventh Regiment escorted Abraham treasurer of the Limerick League to jail The occupants of houses stoned the police po-lice After lodging Abraham in jail the police again charged and fired upon the mob in High street A mob of fifteen hundred chased a number of onstables down Abboy street toward Stone Street barracks The constables con-stables reached the barracks amid a shower of stonep The mob then returned re-turned to Sackvile street and crossing the bridge met another body of police near Trinity College They hunted the police down Dane street Several streets open for repairs gave the crowd an ample am-ple supply of stones The mob attacked the Irish Times office braking the windows and afterward proceeding along the southern quays smashed the windows of every house where lights were seen They wreaked similar vengeance on the Mail office and the Friendly Brothers Club The police were then drawn across Sackville street The crowd fled at their advance and dispersed at midnight mid-night Liberal members of the Dublin corporation corpo-ration have passed a resolution in favor of conferring the freedom of the city en I Parnell whose name has been removed from the list of magistrates Forater replying to the corporation deputation stated that the police in clearing Sackvflle street acted upon instructions in-structions to prevent the mob fr jm taking tak-ing possession of the street If the mob had been allowed to take possession the 1 consequence would have been far more lamentable He regretted that any one had been hurt but said should a like occasion asion arise he would certainly make use of the same force Forster concluded by saying it was the duty of the lawabiding 1opleto keep out of the way and thus avoid being implicated in the disturbances disturb-ances The rioers tonight were mostly rough Wrmen and corner boys were ready for any mischief The police with difficulty kept them from dl inQ serious damage Limerick at midnight was quiet and the troops had returned to the barracks In Dublin tbo noting was renewed tonight to-night The police were compelled to retreat treat over Carlisle Bridge under a shower of stones At Charleville County irk the police were stoned Tile riot act was read and the military beirrg called out cleared the streets Thirtyfive arrests London J7The Thirteenth regiment is i ord + red to Ireland The Times says For 1ars resolute and unflinching reply to the deputation must dispel the hope that the pulicy of government can bo do feated by the manipulation constitutional constitu-tional l commonplaces and by appeals to shadowy sentiment Tbe Pall Mall Gazette says as neither OBrien nor Quinn participated in a pub lie meeting their arrest is naturally taken to mean that government will tolerate tol-erate no form of intimidation however indirect Ve my infer that the Castle will construe too vigorous criticism of its action as intimidation RecenC proclamations procla-mations lead to the same inference The Land League ito be suppressed forcibly that is the long and short of the matter The violent suppression of the Eeajjue wheh ha never been declared illegal is only hq beginning of the tank which lies before the country If the land act fails to bring even temporary peace then Great Britain will hav nothing less to do than to frame a wholly new system ef government for Ireland It is intolerable intoler-able even impossible that we can con tinue to govern by a series of spasmodic coups de elat Poison mav be a useful drug ia certain emegencie but the nation cannot live on political poieon for it daily food not even in Ireland Philadelphia 17 Gladstone was burned m effigy toll Jrh1 by admirers of Parnell m manufacturing districts in the northern quarter of the city Alarge 64 crowd collected San Francisco 18A meeting last night denounced the arrest of Parnell and others Four hundred dollars was subscribed sub-scribed to the fund Boston liThe reception to T P 0 Jon nor M P for Galway tendered lay ice Irish National Land LeagKa in Music Hall this evening Attracted an immease audience OConnor appeared upon the platform escorted by Mayor Prince and was received with great applause Wendell Phillips entereda few minutes later Many prominent gentlemen occupied seats upon the platform plat-form After the singing of Irish melodies by a chorus of 200 voices from Catholic choirs of the city Mayor Prince rose I amid wild applause and after a few introductory remarkp laid the audience would be addressed by several speakers including Hon T P OConnor and if ht said some things which the powers in England did not like to hear he would not be troubled by soldiers He closed by introducing OConaor When the applause which greeted him bad subsided OConnor made a spech saying 5000 000 had gone to Ireland from America in the last twenty years and every dollar had gone into the pockets of British landlords He knew of the brutality and cowardice of the English government but did not think it would commit the outrage of arresting Parnell fur when he left England Parnell was acting strictly within constitutional bounds He said it was done because government was in a dilemma for if just jus-t co was done the landlords would be bankrupt and if justicewas not done the people would trample the land act under their feet and stand by the Land League government would suppress the Land League it must imprison not only seven and a quarter millions of people peo-ple in Ireland but the whole twenty millions of the Irian race and it cannot be done by the imprisonment of twelve leaders Irishmen loved America for its liberty Gladstone might as well try to drink the ocean dry as kill the living spirit that has struggled in Ireland 700 years Mayor Prince read a telegram from James Redpath and Wendell Phillips spoke briefly saying of Parnell it was men who cannot be answered who are put in jail Dr Egan made a short peach and the meeting adjourned New York 17A special from Dublin Dub-lin says The importance of affairs hereon here-on Saturday and Sunday nights is not ascribable to the violence of the crowd but to the brutality of the police There was hardly a member of the special force not more or less drunk One policeman said the force had had nothing to eat and but little sleep since Saturday morning but they were able to get drink at several public houses The result was they were wild with liquor and if it were not for their assaults upon innocent people peo-ple little would have been known of the excitement in the streets Wellknown citizens newspaper reporters telegraph messengers and even women suffered from the outrageous conduct of the police po-lice |