Anl Aged Couple Brutally Murderedâ€" The Crime 8. Mysteryâ€"Empnnel- ling the Jury. A murder trial which promises to be a cause celebre recently commenced at Chicago, 1",, and it is not without intorest to Cana- dians, as the accused is one Nail McKeague, the son of a farmer who lives near I‘horold, Ont. Moat murders in Chicago, though bru- tal, are done in the light 01 day; but this one is shrouded in mystery. The story of the crime is briefly thinâ€"Sixteen mile-s Bl rth of Chicago lies the pretty little suburban village of \Vinnetka. In a handsome two- storied cottage, isolated from the other houses, lived J ames L. “’Jllson and his wife. \Villson was 7‘2 years old and his wife 82 years. They were wealthy, and the hus- band frequently came to the city to superin- tand his money matters. On Wednesday. Feb. 13, a. young lady named Miss Emma Dwyer (whose custom it was to call at the house and remain with the old lady while \Villson was in the city), rang the door hell, but received no answer. The house was barred, and no noise could be heard inside. She passed to the rear, and entered through nn ,r A 4-1... .fla I“... MURIP'ER MIDST FOUL. uuu uuuvu -_ a. kitchen windvgv}: "What a sight met h'er gaze! on the walls, the ceiling. the furniture, the floor. The old man VVillson lay near the door of his bed-chamber, dead. Two bul- lets were lodged in his body, and the breast- bone and nine ribs had been crushed in by i the jumping of the murderer upon him. [Ip- stairs, in her bed, was Mrs. VVillson, beaten almost out of human semblance. The right arm lay outside the blood-soaked ooverlet. Her thin ï¬ngers were grasping a stout cane which had snapped in two when she defend- ed herself. -She had been beaten to death with a pair of iron tongs, which were found dripping with blood at the bedside. Her lower jaw was splintered, her eyes gouged, and her right arm broken in two places. The young woman was horriï¬ed, and ran to a butcher whose shop was within sight, and solicited his assistance. That person was Neil McKeague, the new risoner. When she came to the shop she ound hIcKeague standing in the doorway, looking apparent- ly towards Willson’s house. THE CRIME A MYSTERY. \Vho committed the murders was natural- ly the ï¬rst thought. Its object was plainly robbery; but why should robbers kill the old couple if they were not known to them, as ordmary professional cracksmen would have been? A number of arrests were made proforma of tramps and other suspicious per- sons seen in the neighbourhood, but there was no evidence forthcoming to warrant their detention. The heir of the old couple called in the services of Pinkerton’s detec- tives. and a clue was quickly followed up, which led to an arrest. At the time of the murder there was snow upon the ground. Tracks were found in the snow leading to the front gate. Exact plaster casts of these tracks were taken by the detectives. In the rooms where the crime was committed were found three rubber vest buttons of peculiar make. The name of a Paris maker was stamped on them. All were blood-stained. One had a iece of cloth attached, as if rent from some ody's clothes. These valuable links in the evidence were naturally taken care of. The day before the murder, Will- son had received a considerable sum of mon- ey through the sale of some property. All this money, his gold watch, a memorandum book, and other valuable papers were gone; but 3350 in cash and $3,000 in village bonds were found in an old trunk undisturbed. They were probably overlooked. THE SUSPICION IIXED. Among the villagers who was fond of dis- cussing the murder was the young Canadian butcher, McKeague. He repeated constant- ly, with varying details, a story to the effect that the night before the murder VVillson came to his store and said “that he expected a caller that night and wanted an extra nice steak.†The constant reiteration of this story made people whisper that it might be possible there was an object in his domg so. The whispering became loud talking. Mc- Keague’s custom fell off. His store was avoided. It became known that McKeague owed VVillson a lar e sum of money. but the evidence of this debt was taken in the papers carried ofl’ by the murderer. Detec- tives watched Mcheague. His clothes were secretly examined and the three buttons matched other buttons upon his clothes. The microscope identiï¬ed the threads attached to one button as being the same mate rial as in one of his vests. His pistol carried bul- lets of the same calibre as those in the old man's body. Despite his protestations of innocence, this circumstantial evidence was deemed suflicient for has arrest. His father, a. gentlemanly old man. came on from Thorold, 0nt., interviewed his son, and pm- nounced him guiltless. He then secured eminent counsel and employed detectives for the defence. His trial was opened before Judge An- thony. The prisoner is a cleanly-shaved, plump-faced, rather goodlooking man, and decidedly free from the hang-dog appear- ance usually ascribed to murderers. He was fashionably but inexpensively dressed. His coat was closely buttoned to the chin. A bright cameo pin relieved his dark scarf. His collsr was altogether oi the latest fash- ion, and his get-up unlike that of amen who has been in gsol {or some time. His hair was worn short, and parted nearly in the middle. The whole da was wasted in chal- lenqing the jurors. verybody who had conscientious objections to capital punish- ment, or were over 60 years old, or who had formed an opinion about the murder from reading the newspapers were allowed to stand aside. It was amusing to notice how the “ re-formed conviction" racket was works by the jurors who anted to get away. From ten in the morning till ï¬ve in the afternoon not a single juror had been se- lected. If somebody had put the newspa- per-reading test to the presiding judge it is possible he would have "excused" himself Hum attendance also. The McKeegue trial continues to draw a. crowded court, although not a particle of evidence has yet been submitted. Only four jam 9 having been sworn so far. Every person presented as a possible juror is as a. ule willingly excused from further atten. dance. Nearly one hundred persons have been rejected. McKeague's counsel appears conï¬dent of a verdict of acquittal, and so do his aged Scotch father and mother, who are BLOOD WAS EVERYWHERE, MCKEAGUE IN THE DOCK EMPANELLING A JURY. here from Thorold. Hus sister, aunt, and afl'isnocd, Belle Hagen. are in court; every day. The press is devoting much attention to the trial, and one journal is publishing neat sketches of the principnl Witnesses, counsel, &c. All the evidence is circumstun' tial and is now centered around a. single waistcoat button with a few threads at- tached. The defence conï¬denbly assert Mc- Keague's innocence, and maintain that Pin- kerton's De‘ective Agency employed by the prosecution to work the case up knows that he isgulltless. For this latter remon the defence challenged all thejurors who have had dealings with these renowned detec- tives. Mnjor-Genernl Middleton, who has accept- ed the command of the Canadian Militia, will proceed to Ottawa. immediately upon his arrival in the country to assume his new duties. The General Will be much missed at the Royal Military College, Sendhurst, where he has been Commandant and Score- tary since September, 1874. In alluding to his defarture from that establishment the Army and Navy Gazette says that he has earned the respect and gratitude of every- bojy, and than the thoroughness with which he has carried out the duties of his by no means ainecure ap intment has done much to raise the genera tone of the college. The Gazette goes on to any that is would have been impossible to have found a more wor- phy yucceseor to General Luerd, and if Ma- jar-General Middleton does not continue the good work commenced by Sir Edward Selby Smith and continued by General Luard, it wxll be due to a want of ofï¬cial encourage- ment on the part of the Canadian Govern- ment, and nut to any lack of zeal on his PME: A . The General is already well known in Canada, where he ï¬rst came at the time of the Trent afl'air as a Major in the 29th ltegt. The headquarters of that corps were at Ham- ilton, but Major Middleton spent a great deal of his time in Montreal, where he is widel) known and universally liked. After serving some ten years on the staff of (len- eral Windham he left for home at the time of the Withdrawal of the Imperial troops, and soon afterwards was appointed Corn- mandant of the Royal Military College. The General obtained his ï¬rst commlssion as on- sign on the 30th December, 1842. and saw his ï¬rst active service in 1846, in the south- ern part of New Zealand, where he took part in the attack on Wanganui. He afterwards served in India during the Santhal rebellion and the never to be for otten Sepoy Mutiny of 1857-58. He was orderly ofï¬cer to Gener- al Franks in the action of Soltanpore, and subsequent aï¬â€˜airs on the advance to Luck- now. At the siege and capture of that city he was A. D. C. to General Luard, and took part in the storming of Bank’s House. and the Msrtiniere. where his gallant conduct gained him the Brevet of Major. The Gene- ral subsequently served in nearly all the principal actions during the mutiny, and was time and again specially mentioned in home despatches and has received the order of Commander of the Bath. According to the new rules relative to compulsory retirement Major-General Middleton would have had to leave the army as a Colonel next November, but getting the command of the Canadian Militia and his Major-Generalship he can now serve on for some years. The General was recommended to Lord Clyde by Lieut.- General Sir E Lugard tor the Victoria Cross {or two acts of bravery of which the follow- ing is a brief outline: On April 15. 1858. in the engagement near Azemghur a troop of the military train charged a large body of rebels. Captain MiddletonI staff oï¬icer, had been ordered by Sir Edward Lugard to take command olthepartyand gallantly he led it. In the melee. Lieutenant Hamilton, 3rd. Sikh Cavalry, fell from his horse mortally wounded. A body of Sepoys, tulwar in hand, rushed at him to cut him to ieces, Captain Middleton and Farrier rancis Murphy, in a desperate hand to hand ï¬ght, killed several of the enemy and drove of! the rest and enabled some others, who after- wards came up, to carry ofl' the wounded oflicer. On the same day and about the same time, Private Fowles of the Military Train was unhorsed and wounded. The rebels were swarming about him and were on the point of cutting him to pieces when Captain Middleton cooly dismounted placed Fowles on his horse and brought him into camp. More devoted and heroic conduct was never rewarded by the Victoria Cross. Yet, though Murphy received the decora- tion in question, Lord Clyde declined to recommend Captain Middleton on the ground that he was on the personal staï¬at the time. In writing about this the Army and Navy Gazette ststed that this was incorrect, for Captain Middleton had been expressly placed in command of the party. But even had he been merely present as a. stall' oflicer, the Gazette fails to see how that fact would have diminished the credit due for his un- selï¬sh and heroic conduct. Corporal Punishment. “ D.) you believe in corporal punishment 2" asked a. visitor in a large grammar school out West. " That depends,†replied the lady-teacher, with a ecnliar look. “on the size of the boy. I he is bigger than I am. I try moral suasion." “_\V}}at if the moral suasion doesn‘t per- presa suade "In that case. I have a method which never fails.†“ What is that 2" " I hand the fertile to the refractory pupil and compel him to give me as many strokes with it as he thinks his own punishment de- serves.†“ How many times have you done that T" “ Only twice Within slx years. So I think the system} a good one.†The idea is by no meangnew. Every boy and girl who has read Miss Alcott’a " Little Men †will remember the cage of Father Baer and Emil. It must be said, however, that such a system of punishment might safely be followed by a lady-teacher, when the result would not always be so pleasant if a gentleman should adopt it. Mrs. Plaindame. after looking long and thoughtfully at a plaster cast of Shakspeare, remarked : “ Poor man 1 how pale he was I He couldn’t have been well when it was taken." " No,†replied Fogg, †he was dead.†“ Ah 1 that accounts for it,†said Mrs. P., drawing a. sympathetic breathâ€"Baffle Ea: “Yes, Ishauld think it was," and the visitor yang aiway, thoughtful. Major-General F. D. Middleton. ’ll Accounted For. 4. Never ï¬ll a. lamp after dark, even if you should have to go Without a. light. 5. See that the lamp wick: are always clean and that they work freely In the tube. 6. Never blow out a lamp from the top. 7. Never take a light to a. closet where there are clothes. If necessary to go to the closet. plnce the light at a distance. 8. Use candles just: as much as possibie in gomg about the house and in bedrooms, They are cheaper. can't explode, and for very many purposes are just as good as lamps. The following simple precautions suggest- ed by the New York Independent, if strictly followed, would prevent a. great msny dear tructive ï¬res. The rules might be posted in every store, dwelling, and factory with good results: The leading causes of ï¬res are kerosene oil, matches, and furnaces. 1. Always buy the best quality of oil. 2. Never make a sudden motion with a. lamp. either in lifting it or setting it down. 3. Never plucea lamp on the edge of a table or mantel. 9.. Matches should always be kept in earthen jnrs, or in tin. 10. Tney should never be left Where rats or mice can get hold of them. There is noth ing more to the taste of a rat than phospho. me. They will eat it if they can get; m it. A bunch of matches is almost certain to be set ï¬re if a. rat gets at it. 12. Never let a match go out of your hand after lighting is until you are sure the ï¬re is on, and then it is better to put itin a stove or an earthen dish. 11. Have goon safes in every place where matches are to be uaed, and never let a match be left on the floor. 13. It ‘is far better to use the safety matches. which can only be lighted upon the box which contains them. 14. Have yourfurnacesexamined carefully in the fall, and at least once during the win~ ter b a competent person. All of the pipes and non should be carefully looked to. 15. If there are any cloaets in the house near chimneys or flues. which there ought not to be. put naming of a combustible na- ture in them. 1?. 'ane your 315er ltoked to frequently, to see that there are no holes for coal to drop out. o 16. Never leave any wood near a furnace, range,gr stove to dry. Â¥ 18. Never put any hot ashes or coal in a. wooden receptacle. 19. Be sure that there are no curtains or shades that can be blown intos. gaslight. 20. Never examine a gas meter after dark, Fires, of course, arise from other causes than those we have stated. Smokers burn up much valuable property which is not in the shape of cigars. Bunches of oiled rags of the most insnimmte nature in themselves still perlorm the most wonderful feats in the destruction of property. Tramps, with their old pipes, will creep. into barns and haymows, and servants Will be careless in thousands of ways. but if every person who own: property will give the subject atten- tion, and see that those around him are post- ed, and see that reasonable rules are always obeyed, man thousands of dollars could be saved annual y which are now burned out of existence. Greatness nnbending from its digniï¬ed surroundings to refresh itself with the amusements of commoner folk envelopes it« self, in so doing, with a peculiar charm. Many a man plays on the floor with his chil- dren. without any fear that such rompings may go to make istory. The diversions of busy men are seldom what we should im- agine them to be; for the reason that, in order to produce the desired effect; they must as far as possible produce a. contrast to their daily toil. Beethoven, when in want of a. change after mental labor, liked best of alltorun round the largest square in his vicinity. Hartley Coleridge, in the same way. Will fond of tearing wildly round a ï¬eld. Richter’s relaxation was a long walk on a rainy day. He took his family with himâ€"all being clad in clothing that a thor- ough wetting would not spoil. Jean Paul averted that the electrical eifect of such a rain-bath on the human system is one of the best therapeutics in the werld ; and we in- cline to agree with him. Victor Hugo does his locomotion by proxy; next to playing with his grand-children he loves to knock about Paris on the top of omnibuses. Carlyle, on the other hand, liked travel- lin inside an omnibus, though why. no- bo y, apparently has discovered. Adam Smith’s sole indulgence (beyond a. taste for ï¬nely bound books) was a. passion for pedes- trianism. Never was there a more peripa- tetie philosopher. One Sunday morning in 17 5, he went to his door! in Kirkcaldy, to la l the fresh air; the peripatetio instinct came upon him unawares. He walked straight away to Burntisland, many miles from Kirkoaldy, and astonished the kirk going folk there with an apparition in dress- ing gown and slippers. During this particu- lar walk Smith exco itated the ï¬rst chapter of the “ Wealth of ï¬ations.†Scott was a great pedestrian, lame though he was,. Christopher North once walked seventy miles in one day for some loch ï¬sh- ing ; Dickens could have emulated the fast; and Professor Blaokie has boasted that he has not only walked seventy miles in one day, but slept by the roadside during the following night. This eccentric Scotch Pro- fessor has made' such good use of his legs that there are few towns in England and none in Scotland to which he has not walk- ed. Mr. Fawcett, though blind. takes the keenest delight in ï¬shing. and casts a fly with the utmost skill. Mr. Bright is an- other votary of the r01. At the Reform Club, in winter, he may be found laying billiards with the zest of a “ goo cue.†But his highest enjoyment lies in our poets. He reads himself to sleap every night with the work of one of our classical bards. It may be wondered whether, in some secret drawer, the orator preserves some little bundle of his own verses, prompted by such continuous reading in the harmonious thoughts of mighty men. Campbell declared that there was no inspiration to the writing of poetry so gmd as the reading of poetry. Little Nell : "Mamma, what is color blind P†Mamma: “Inability to tell one color from another, my dear.†Little Nell : “Then I deal; the man that made my geog- raphy, is color-blind." Mammal : "And why!" thtle Nell: “Because he’s got Greenland painted Yellow, and the Red Sea. plinter black.†Great Men’s Diversions. How to Prevent Fires \N4‘.’W At the marriage of the Princess Victoria of Hesse to Prince Lmis of Battenburg, re- cently in D‘rmstedc, the streets were pro- fusedly decorated with flags in honor of the event, and were thronged with sightseers. After the performance of the civil merriage, the bride was lezl to the palace chapel by her grandmother, the mother of Grand Duke Louis. They were followed by a procession of Royal guests, Queen Victoria lea/ding. followed by the Prince and Princess Imperial of Germany, the Prince and Princess of Wales, Princess Beatrice, Prince William of Prussia, and Prince Alexander, of Bulgaria, the brother of the bridegroom. In the bridal possession the bride and the bride. groom walked between the Princesses of Bettenbere. When the bride and bride- groom exchanged rinqs at the alter a. salute of thirtyvsix guns was ï¬red. Queen Vic- toria. stood during the choral portion of the services. At the conclusion of the ceremony she embraced the couple. The bride wore the veil of her mother, the late l3rincess Alice. All the guests exceptqueen Victoria attended the banquet in the even- ing, The only toast drunk was to the health of the newly wedded pair. Tne couple afterward started for Jugenhelm amid the plaudits of throngs of peo le. The streets were beautifully illuminate in the evening. A performance of “Colomln†was given on \Veanesday at the Opera House. The Princess Victoria and Prince Louis 0! Batteuberg occupied the front centre places of the royal box, and grouped arcnn'l them were other royal parsonages. The city was brilliantly illuminated and there were a torchlight procession and sere- nades. Princess Victoria was born at \Vind- sor, on the 5th of April. 1863. She is the eldest daughter of the Grand Duke Ludwig IV. of Hesse-Darmstadt and the late Prin- cess Alice. daughter of Queen Victoria. Prince Louis of Battenberg is a. comely, graceful young fellow and a great favorite in royal German Circles. He is the oldest son of Prince Alexander of Hesse, the uncle of the Grand Duke. This young Prince was born May 24th. 1854, and became a naval oflicer in the British navy, besides being an ofï¬cer in the Hessian Royal Artillery. He is of an ambitious nature, and took a decided position of activity in pushing his brother Alexander into lace as Prince of Bulgaria He ï¬rst met theq’rincess in Darmstadt. and, obtaining the aid of the Prince of Wales. pursued his suit and got the sanction of the head of the Hesse house. He then roceed- ed to \Vindsor, when the Queen of ngland approved the betrothal, thus adding another link to the Germain chain that encircles the British throne. Alittle 01 l woman, pale-faced and towed in form. dressed in the habit of the order ofSt. Vincent de Paul. is always to be found pac- ing the wards or corridors of the chain of institutions which surround the block boun ‘1- ed by Sixty-eighth and Sixty-ninth strvets, LexingtOn and Third Avenues, New York. This is Sister Irene, the foster mother of thousands of foundllngs. Toddlers of all complexion: cling to her skirts and nestle at her side, awaiting her beniguant smile and loving greeting. Four fully appointed buildings, the Asylum' St. Ann‘s and St. John’s Hospitals, and an imposing chapel, occupy the square purchased by the efl'orts of this woman, who began her work without a penny in her pocket. Sister Irene and Mrs. P. L. Thebaud bagged the ï¬rst ten dollars that was the nest-egg of the fund to save the foundlings. Last week $10,017 was paid as wages to the nurses who take care of the chzldren in their homes. There are nearly two thousand cuildren in the asylum, besides 1,700 nurses outside. The number left in the creche daily average forty-nine. "The great effort of my life,†ssys Sister Irene. “ is to restore the mothers ; if they come here they are shielded, and, by kindness ani good counsel, brought back to a virtuous way of living. †The weather orophst looks for spring this month. The wise man looks for a blood puriï¬er that will not injure his system : he can ï¬nd what. he wants in Dr. Carson's Stomach Bitters. the greatest at .11 blood-puriï¬ers. In uge homes M 50 cents. Sailing (luring winter from Portland every Thursday. and Halifax every Snturday to Liverpool. and in summer from Quebec every Saturdny to Liverpool. calling“ Lou- donderry to land mails and psesengers for Scotland and Ireland. Also from Baltimore via Hall!“ and St. John's N. E. to Liverpool fortnightly during summer month. The steamers of the Glasgow line: all during winter between Portland and Glasgow. and Boston and Glasgow alternately: and during summer between Quebec and Glasgow 2mg! Boston and Glasgow every week. . 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