Show The Irish Conference 1 Dublin 17Proceedings at the F conference are not altogether harmonious I 1 I har-monious A delegate named Lou t den who attempted to speak was jl t t shouted down as a land grabber r J and renegade and denounced by ij i i a suspect Barrington as a coward < r t 1 who ran away from coercion All i the speakers declared the land act I 1 an utter failure Davitt said he was 5 unable to see with Parnell in his scheme of land reform but would 4 cooperate with him for the abolition 111 j aboli-tion of landlordism i Davitt moved as an amendment Ito J I-to the proposed constitution that t the central council of the new c i > 1 league council consist of thirtytwo 1 1 1 members one for each county the J f parliamentary party to have no q Y nominations but its members to be H j j eiigioie i f London iTimes Dublin special l t l t spe-cial Not only has the Irish conference 1v > con-ference excited no enthusiasm but 1 4 j the assembly w s composed of elements y s ele-ments heterogeneous as the pro t i gramme was multifarious It was it only by the skillful hand of the chairman sometimes that there was 4H J not rupture Dissention was open f i shown clearly enough in Parnells opening statement and in Davitts 1 t prompt rejoinder and the tone of iJt bitter emphasis wherein the latter c < i i i i spoke betrayed the feeling of a man laboring under a disappointment 4 disappoint-ment which he struggled to suppress ft t sup-press |