Fort Worth Daily Gazette
17 November Gazette
Are the Whitechapel Murderer and the Austin Murderers One and the Same?
Austin, Tex. Nov. 16.
A very curious circumstance has been discovered here bearing on the London woman murders, and which strengthens the opinion entertained by many that the Whitechapel murderer is identical with the assassin that killed eight women in 1885. An article produced in the Daily Statesman calling attention to the similarity of the Austin and London crimes, and especially the fact that a Malay cook running on an ocean steamer was suspected, called forth a letter to the editor. The letter stated that a Malay cook had been employed at a small hotel in Austin in 1885, the date of the Austin assassinations. A reporter investigated the matter, calling on Mrs Schmidt, who kept the Pearl House near the foot of Congress Avenue, opposite the union depot, three years ago. It was ascertained that a Malay cook, calling himself Maurice, had been employed at the house in 1885 and that he left some time in January 1886. It will be remembered that the last of the series of Austin women murders was the killing of Mrs Hancock and Mrs Eula Phillips, which occurred on Christmas Eve night, 1885, just before the Malay departed, and that the series then ended up (to) the present. A strong presumption that the Malay was the murderer of the Austin women was that all of them except two or three resided in the immediate neighborhood of the Pearl House. Mrs Hancock with her husband lived within one block, and so did Mary Ramle, the colored girl and others who were assassinated in their beds and dragged out into their yards.
17 November Gazette
Are the Whitechapel Murderer and the Austin Murderers One and the Same?
Austin, Tex. Nov. 16.
A very curious circumstance has been discovered here bearing on the London woman murders, and which strengthens the opinion entertained by many that the Whitechapel murderer is identical with the assassin that killed eight women in 1885. An article produced in the Daily Statesman calling attention to the similarity of the Austin and London crimes, and especially the fact that a Malay cook running on an ocean steamer was suspected, called forth a letter to the editor. The letter stated that a Malay cook had been employed at a small hotel in Austin in 1885, the date of the Austin assassinations. A reporter investigated the matter, calling on Mrs Schmidt, who kept the Pearl House near the foot of Congress Avenue, opposite the union depot, three years ago. It was ascertained that a Malay cook, calling himself Maurice, had been employed at the house in 1885 and that he left some time in January 1886. It will be remembered that the last of the series of Austin women murders was the killing of Mrs Hancock and Mrs Eula Phillips, which occurred on Christmas Eve night, 1885, just before the Malay departed, and that the series then ended up (to) the present. A strong presumption that the Malay was the murderer of the Austin women was that all of them except two or three resided in the immediate neighborhood of the Pearl House. Mrs Hancock with her husband lived within one block, and so did Mary Ramle, the colored girl and others who were assassinated in their beds and dragged out into their yards.
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