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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a3feb13 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #56191 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56191) diff --git a/old/56191-0.txt b/old/56191-0.txt deleted file mode 100644 index c6b4e54..0000000 --- a/old/56191-0.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1489 +0,0 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Cruel Murder of Mina Miller, by Unknown - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - -Title: The Cruel Murder of Mina Miller - -Author: Unknown - -Release Date: December 17, 2017 [EBook #56191] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRUEL MURDER OF MINA MILLER *** - - - - -Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at -http://www.pgdp.net (Images Courtesy of Cornell University -Law Library, Trial Pamphlets Collection) - - - - - - - - - - WEDDED AND MURDERED WITHIN AN HOUR! - - THE CRUEL MURDER OF MINA MILLER - BY - KENKOUWSKY, alias “KETTLER.” - - The Guttenberg-Hoboken Tragedy. - - A THRILLING AND REMARKABLE CASE, WHICH - RECALLS THE MURDER OF MARY RODGERS, - “THE SEGAR GIRL,” WHICH TOOK PLACE ON - THE SAME SPOT, THE SCENE OF OTHER - MURDERS OF A LIKE CHARACTER. - - THE ONLY LIFE OF MINA MILLER PUBLISHED - - BARCLAY & CO., Publishers, - 21 North Seventh Street, Philadelphia, Pa. - - AGENTS WANTED AT ALL TIMES. - - - - - Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1881, by - BARCLAY & CO., - In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. - - - - -THE MINA MULLER MURDER. - -MURDERED BY HER HUSBAND OF AN HOUR. - - -On Friday morning, the 13th of last May, a German, whose purpose was -to gather green leaves to sell to florists in N. Y. city, entered the -path leading from Bergen avenue, in the district known as Bull’s Ferry, -north of Weehawken. He had followed it eastward toward the river about -100 feet, and had turned aside to the right about twenty feet, when -he was appalled by almost stepping upon the dead body of a woman. He -hurried away to inform the police. - -Early in the afternoon Coroner Wiggins, of Hoboken, visited the spot -and made a careful examination. He judged that the woman had not been -over 25 years old. Along the top of the head, on the left side, was a -deep gash, and beneath it the skull was fractured. There was another -gash over the right eye. Both of these gashes were apparently made -with the edge of a stone. The nose was broken in the middle. The right -side of the head had apparently been crushed by a stone. The left ear -was injured as if an ear-ring had been torn from it. Search was made -for the missing ear-ring, but it was not found. Her face had become -blackened by the sun, which shone upon the spot where the body lay. The -features were small and symmetrical. She wore number one or number two -buttoned shoes. - -An investigation was at once begun by the coroner, but without much -success. - -On the 18th the young woman was completely identified as Mrs. -Philomena Muller, the wife of Simon Muller, a tobacconist, at 502 West -Thirtieth street, N. Y. Mr. Muller called at the Morgue at 3 o’clock on -the afternoon of May 18th, in company with a lady whom he introduced as -Miss Maria Schmidt, his wife’s sister. He said they desired to look at -the body. They were led into the damp vault, and at sight of the body -Miss Schmidt was overcome, and she retired to the adjoining basement. -Mr. Muller gazed upon the body calmly. The jewelry and clothing of -the dead woman were shown to him, and he positively identified them -as the property of his wife. He said that he had given her the cameo -brooch. Mr. Muller said that some time ago his wife deserted him, -and since then she had not lived with him. Miss Schmidt had seen her -sister about two weeks before. Mrs. Muller then informed her that she -had found a decent man, who was going to marry her and take her to -Germany in the steamer L’Amerique, which was to sail on the 4th of May. -When Miss Schmidt told Mr. Muller of this he went to the wharf of the -Transatlantic Steamship Company on the morning of May 4th, and remained -at the gang plank of the vessel until all the passengers had gone -aboard. He was certain that his wife was not among them, but he did not -know her paramour. - -Before this identification was made, the authorities of Hudson county -had obtained conclusive evidence of the fact that the murdered woman -was Mrs. Philomena Muller, and that her assassin had married her on the -morning of the day on which he killed her, and had taken passage on the -following day for Europe. As Mrs. Finck, the wife of an alehouse keeper -in Pierce Avenue, West New York, was sitting in her saloon on the -afternoon of Tuesday, the 3d of May, a man and a woman entered and sat -down at a table. The woman ordered drinks, and called for a glass of -beer. Her companion drank soda water. While they were there the woman -talked almost incessantly. She said that they came from Morrisania. She -seemed to have plenty of money. When she paid for the refreshments, -Mrs. Finck noticed a large roll of bank notes in her pocketbook, -besides some silver and gold. Before going away, the woman borrowed -a corkscrew to open a bottle of Rhine wine which she had with her. -She said she had bought the bottle in Union Hill. Mrs. Finck minutely -described the woman, and the description tallied exactly with that of -the woman who was murdered. Prosecutor McGill was so impressed with -the accuracy of Mrs. Finck’s description, that he specially detailed -Detectives Swinton and Fanning to trace the movements of the unknown -couple. They began their search on Tuesday evening, May 17th, and -Wednesday the 18th they submitted to the Prosecutor a circumstantial -account of their discoveries. - -They began by looking for the person from whom the bottle of Rhine wine -had been purchased. Every saloon along the Boulevard and the Hackensack -plank road was visited, but to no purpose. Continuing their inquiries, -they entered an inn kept by Edward Stabel, on the Weaverstown road. -When they questioned him he said he remembered that on the day -indicated by them a woman had called at his place and asked for a -bottle of Rhine wine. As he did not have any he sent his granddaughter, -Lizzie Haas, to Mr. Eberling’s store, in Bergenline avenue, for a -bottle of it. While the girl was absent the woman chatted pleasantly -with Stabel. She told him, among other things, that she had just been -married by the Rev. Mr. Mabon, the pastor of the Grove Reformed Dutch -Church, and that she wanted the wine to celebrate the event, and to -treat the minister. She also said that she was about to sail for -France. When the girl came back with the bottle of wine the woman paid -her fifty cents for it, and gave her ten cents additional out of a $5 -gold piece that Stabel changed for her. On leaving the saloon the woman -was joined by a man. Stabel could not recollect anything in particular -about the man, except that he had stood outside on the street while the -woman bought the wine. But he gave a very accurate description of the -woman and her dress, which tallied both with Mrs. Finck’s description -of the woman she had seen, and with that of the murdered woman. Mrs. -Stabel furnished additional details. She said the woman came to the -saloon on the 3d of May. She was sure of the date, because on the -same day there was a burial in the Grove Church Cemetery which is -only a short distance from the inn. The woman told Mrs. Stabel of her -marriage, and explained that it had been secretly performed, because -her brother disliked her husband, and had objected to the match. She -also said that she had been married once before, and had attended a -cigar store which her former husband kept in N. Y. city. Mrs. Stabel’s -circumstantial description of the woman tallied yet more accurately -than her husband’s with that of the murdered woman. - -The detectives then went to the parsonage of the Grove Reformed Dutch -Church, where they found the Rev. Dr. Mabon. He recollected having -married a couple on May 3d. The woman, he said, entered his residence -alone, leaving the man in the yard, where he paced up and down as -if absorbed in meditation. The woman asked Mr. Mabon if he would -perform a marriage, and upon being told yes, she went out and returned -immediately with the man. As the couple had not provided a witness, the -clergyman called in John Schuman, a barber in Union street, Union Hill. -The man and woman made satisfactory replies to the usual questions, and -they were married in legal form. After the ceremony they subscribed -the following record of the marriage, which is now in Mr. Mabon’s -possession: - - On Tuesday, May 3, 1881, Louis Kettler, single, aged 33, - bricklayer by occupation, and residence 1511 Second avenue, New - York, married to Mina Schmidt, single, aged 34, residence, 1247 - Third avenue, New York. Father of bridegroom, Louis Kettler; - father of bride, Anastasius Schmidt. Both of the contracting - parties were born in Katenheim, Germany. - -The woman did most of the talking, and seemed to be in excellent -spirits. She exhibited a bulky pocketbook, and asked Mr. Mabon how much -his charge was. He replied that she might pay him whatever she thought -proper. As she had no small bills she went out to get change, and came -back presently with the money and a bottle of Rhine wine, which she -offered to the clergyman. When he refused it she tried to persuade him -to take a drink, but he declined, and, after a few more words, the -strange couple quitted the parsonage. Mr. Mabon could not recollect -anything about the dress of either of the parties, but his colored -servant girl told the detectives that she had particularly noticed the -man as he was striding up and down the garden, and acting as if his -mind was troubled. She said he was stout, with a full face and dark -moustache, and wore a high, flat-topped Derby hat. - -Mrs. Sarah Rigler, who lives in the neighborhood of the church, saw the -couple before their marriage. They came along the road, and the woman -stopped and asked Mrs. Rigler: - -“Can you please direct me to a priest?” - -“Do you want a priest or a minister?” Mrs. Rigler inquired. - -“I want a Protestant priest,” the woman responded. “I am going to be -married, and I want him to marry us.” - -Mrs. Rigler’s description of the woman was almost precisely the -same as Mrs. Stabel’s. The man, she said, was quiet, and did not say -anything in her hearing. When the couple were last seen by the people -in the neighborhood of the church they were walking together toward -West New York by a road that led in the direction of Finck’s saloon and -the Guttenberg ferry. - -[Illustration: MARTIN KENKOUWSKY.] - -[Illustration: MINA MULLER.] - -The detectives next went to 1247 Third avenue, N. Y. city, the number -that had been given to Mr. Mabon by the bride as her residence. There -they were unable for a long time to find any trace of Mina Schmidt. -Finally the daughter of the janitor remembered that a woman answering -Miss Schmidt’s description had been living at service with a family -in the house. But the family had moved, and the servant had gone with -them. An expressman named Body had taken away her trunks. After a -tedious search Body was found. The young woman whose trunks he had -removed proved not to have been the murdered woman. But Body said that -about the 1st of May a woman whom he knew as Mrs. Mina Muller offered -to sell him some articles of furniture, as she was about to move. -They were unable to agree on the price. Mrs. Muller returned shortly -afterward and left an order to have an express wagon call for her -baggage at 1511 Second avenue, where she was then staying. Body sent -William Norke, one of his drivers, to the place, and the man received -from Mrs. Muller four trunks, a bundle of bedding, and a valise, -which, by her directions, he carried to Theodore Scherrer’s Hotel, at -178 Christopher street. Body and Norke described Mrs. Muller, and the -detectives were satisfied that she was the woman who, under the name -of Mina Schmidt, was married by Mr. Mabon in the Grove Church. A man -whom the driver did not know, but who, from his appearance, he believed -to have been the murderer, superintended the transfer of her packages, -and rode in the wagon with Norke to the hotel. On the way there he told -Norke that he intended soon to sail for Europe. - -At 1511 Second avenue, whither the detectives next proceeded, -they found a German woman named Mrs. Schwan, who keeps a dyeing -establishment. She did not know any man named Kettler, but she said -that a man who answered in every respect the description of Kettler had -lived in the house, but had moved about the first of May. He had lived, -she said, with a young widow, to whom she had heard he was married. -Mrs Schwan described the woman, and again the description tallied with -that of the murdered woman. Mrs. Schwan had been told that the woman -had another husband living in Thirty-ninth street. Charles Rost, the -landlord, said that on March 3d Mrs. Muller had engaged three rooms, -front, on the top floor, and had furnished them comfortably. She told -Rost that she was working for Hahn, the butcher, in Third Avenue. Her -husband, Mr. Muller, she said, had died of consumption, and had left -her $1,000 insurance on his life. She was away all day as a rule, and -returned to her apartments in the evening. - -“One day,” said Mr. Rost, “about five weeks after she came here, I -had occasion to go to the roof. Her room door was wide open, and Mrs. -Muller was at work within fixing up her curtains and arranging her -room. I said to her in fun: - -“You ought to have a husband here, Mrs. Muller.” - -“‘Oh! I’ve got one,’ she said. ‘My name is Mrs. Kettler now. I’m not -Mrs. Muller any longer.’” She said, too, that her new husband was a -mason, kalsominer and paper hanger, and was getting good wages. A few -days after that Mr. Rost met him in the hallway of the house for the -first time, and asked if he lived there. He also told Kettler that -he believed Mrs. Muller had another husband living. His suspicions -had been excited by the woman’s talk of her dead husband and her -inconsistent lack of mourning attire or demeanor. On May 2nd, they sold -their furniture, and moved their trunks and bedding, no one then knew -whither. “The man,” said Mrs. Rost, “was a greenhorn,” and this was the -testimony of others in the building who had noticed him. - -Among the persons by whom the woman had been employed was Moise Hahn, a -butcher in Third avenue. He said that she worked for him until May 1st, -when she quitted, as she intended to go to Europe. She was then living -with a foreigner whose name Hahn did not know, but whose description -corresponded with that of the groom in the marriage ceremony in Mr. -Mabon’s house. She told Hahn that she was going with him to Mulhausen -in Alsace. - -Mr. Scherrer of Scherrer’s Hotel at 178 Christopher street, to which -place Norke had carried the trunks and bundles belonging to the woman -who gave her name as Mina Miller, informed the detectives that on -Monday evening, May 2, a German went there with an express wagon -containing four trunks, a bundle of bedding, and a valise. - -“The man,” Scherrer said, “afterwards introduced a woman who he said -was his wife. She was very talkative and had all the money and paid -all the bills. The man told me that they were going to sail in the -steamship L’Amerique on the 4th inst., and were going to Mulhausen, in -Alsace. On the day they came to my place the man, who said his name -was Kettler, left the trunks here, but spent the night at Mr. Boker’s -place, two doors further down the street. On Monday, May 3, Mr. and -Mrs. Kettler and I had a long chat about the old country, and about -noon they left my place and went to the direction of the Christopher -Street Ferry. Mrs. Kettler promised my wife that she would come back -to bid us good-by. Late on Tuesday night Mr. Kettler returned alone. -I asked him where his wife was, and he said she had gone to spend the -night at her sister’s house, and was to meet him on board the steamship -in the morning. He seemed to me to be very much excited and uneasy, and -his behaviour struck me at the time as peculiar. The next morning he -had his trunks sent to the steamship wharf, and went away. That is the -last I saw of him.” - -Louis Groth keeps a lager beer saloon in Thirty-ninth street, near -Ninth avenue. A friend of his living at 1511 Second avenue, in the same -house with Mrs. Muller, told Groth of her being there with Kettler. -Groth told Mr. Schmidt, Mrs. Muller’s brother, who lives at 555 Ninth -avenue, and he informed Mr. Muller of his wife’s whereabouts. - -Mr. Schmidt was at his home at 555 Ninth avenue last evening. He told -our reporter who called that he saw his sister for the last time on the -Sunday before the murder. Previous to that, upon the information from -Louis Groth that she was living with Kettler in Second avenue, he saw -her there, and remonstrated with her. He also had a talk with Kettler, -who, however, said nothing of any proposed marriage. He said, however, -that he knew Muller. Muller told Schmidt that he didn’t know Kettler. -Schmidt says that when his sister Mina called at his house on Sunday -she got a bank book containing $40 which he had been keeping for her, -and told him that she had sold her furniture, and had altogether $116. -She was going to marry Kettler on Tuesday, May 3, and go with Kettler -to Alsace, which was his former home. Her brother says he told her he -did not want her to marry again while she had a husband, but she said -she was determined to do so. - -Mr. Schmidt has a brother August, a musician, living at 49 Avenue A. -and two sisters now living one of whom is married. Muller, he says, was -attentive to the unmarried sister, and Mrs. Muller and he continually -quarrelled about this intimacy. Their disputes were so violent as to -attract the attention of the people in the house where they lived in -Thirty-ninth street, and once Mr. Muller was badly whipped, it is -reported, by some friends of Mrs. Muller. - -Muller and his wife were married in 1874, and lived for three and a -half years in the house at 338 West Thirty-ninth street. Muller made -cigars and kept a small store there. When he and his wife could stand -each other no longer, said Mr. Schmidt, they separated, and Mrs. Muller -for a while lived in a house in the same block. About three months -previous to the murder she left the neighborhood and secured employment -in the butcher shop of Moise Heahn in Third avenue. Muller sold his -store out on April 1, and removed to his present place in Thirtieth -street. Mr. Schmidt said that Kettler, after marrying his sister, -undoubtedly led her to the lonely place of the murder for the sole -purpose of killing and robbing her of the $116 which she had, and the -gold watch and chain. - -As Mrs. Muller left her brother’s house on Sunday she said to the -saloon-keeper on the ground floor, “I’ve got another man--a nice man -now--and I’m all right again.” - -Kettler had been only seven months in this country. - -Attorney-General Stockton directed Mr. McGill to telegraph to the -authorities at Havre, describing Kettler, and requesting his arrest on -a charge of murder. Detective Edward Stanton was to sail for Europe on -Saturday in pursuit of the murderer, but subsequent events proved this -unnecessary, as the reader will learn by following this complete and -dramatic recital. - - - - -TRACKED AND ARRESTED. - - Wildly Declaring his Innocence, yet admitting that he was in - Hoboken with the murdered woman--“She Led Me Astray”--A very - Touching Scene with his Wife. - - -Martin Kenkouwsky, alias Louis Kettler, the murderer of Mrs. Mina -Muller, was captured on the night of May 19th, 1881, by Policemen -Morris Fitzgerald and Richard Tregonning of the Thirty-seventh street -police station, as he was walking in Thirty-sixth street, near Tenth -Avenue, New York City. The clue which led to his detection was -discovered and followed out almost to the end by Gustavus A. Seide, -a reporter for a Jersey City newspaper, and compares, as a piece -of amateur detective work, with the detection of Chastine Cox, the -murderer of Mrs. Hull. Seide recognized that there was a flaw in the -theory that the alleged murderer had gone to Europe in the Amerique. -There was no certainty that the baggage which was taken from Sherrer’s -house on the day the steamer sailed was delivered at the pier of the -French line, nor was there positive evidence that Kettler himself had -been seen on the pier that morning. Superintendent West of the French -pier said that on the day the Amerique sailed, a man answering somewhat -Kettler’s description had applied to him for a ticket, and he had -referred him to the purser. Baggage corresponding to what Kettler was -supposed to have taken with him the Superintendent had not seen on the -pier. - -Seide came over to New York early Thursday morning, May 19th, and -proceeded at once to look for the man who was supposed to have taken -Kettler’s baggage from Scherrer’s Hotel to the pier. Scherrer had seen -the man in the neighborhood quite frequently, but did not know his -name or where he kept. He, however, described him to Seide as a tall, -well-built man, with dark moustache and dark complexion. The reporter -started out, and visited the truck stands between Christopher and -Twentieth streets, but could not find his man. Returning to Scherrer’s, -he found a man, whom he describes as a “dilapidated individual,” taking -a drink at the bar. Seide again asked Scherrer for a description of the -truckman. Scherrer gave it as before, adding that he drove a red truck -with one brown horse. Here the “dilapidated individual” spoke up and -said, the truckman might be found at Christopher and Bleecker streets. -On inquiring there Seide learned that he changed his stand a few days -before; but where he had gone no one in the immediate vicinity could -tell. He, however, discovered that his name was C. A. Strang. He then -made inquiries for Strang’s whereabouts in various smithies and liquor -stores, and in one of the latter he ascertained that Strang lived in -Greenwich street, on the west side, a few doors below Christopher -street. - -At this point Seide telegraphed over to Detective Stanton of the New -Jersey force, and awaited his arrival. Then they went to Strang’s -house, where Mrs. Strang informed them that her husband was at the -new market, corner of West and Gansvoort streets. There they found -him. They asked him if, on the morning of the sailing of the Amerique, -he had taken baggage belonging to Kettler to the steamship wharf. He -replied that he had not; he had taken the baggage to a Mrs. Clifford’s, -at 179 Charles street, and about ten days afterward he had removed -the valise and three ordinary yellow trunks to 510 West Thirty-sixth -street. The other trunk, which was long and black, he had not seen -again. He was not sure whether he had taken the first load on the 3d -or 4th instant. He at first refused to go with them to the house in -Charles street, saying he was too busy; but when Seide and Stanton -offered to pay him for his time, he consented. - -Mrs. Clifford said that a man answering Kettler’s description had -come to the house either on the 3d or 4th inst., and she remembered -that Strang had brought a valise and four trunks. Kettler had remained -at the house about ten days, paying her regularly. Once he paid her -with a five-dollar gold piece. She did not notice anything peculiar -or restless in his behaviour. He kept to the house pretty closely, -though he was generally out nights. She saw, however, that he read the -newspapers very closely. He told her that he was going to California. -When asked if on his departure he had taken all his baggage, she -said, no, he had left a long black trunk, which they would find in -the wood-shed. They opened the trunk, and found it full of crockery -and cooking utensils. They carried it to Strang’s truck, and directed -Strang to carry it to the house in Thirty-sixth street, to ask for -Kettler, and if Kettler was there, to give them a sign, as they would -remain outside. Strang inquired for Kettler, but was told that no -man of that name lived there; but that a man corresponding to the -description lived one flight up with a wife and two children. Strang -took the trunk up stairs, and found a woman, a young boy, and a little -girl in the room designated. The woman said the trunk belonged to -Martin Kenkouwsky, her husband, and offered to pay fifty cents for its -delivery. Strang then signalled to Seide and Stanton that the man was -not in, and the reporter and detective went to an adjoining house, and -received permission to watch from the windows. Seide went out again -to speak to Strang, and while he was talking to him in front of 510 -West Thirty-sixth street, both were arrested by Policeman Tregonning. -The police of Capt. Washburn’s precinct had been looking for the same -man, and had traced him to this same house. This was the cause of -the arrest of Seide and Strang. When they got to the station, Seide -explained to the Captain who he was, and the Captain sent him back with -a policeman to get Stanton to identify him. At first they couldn’t -find Stanton, and the policeman wanted to take Seide back. In the -meantime the Captain had sent Policeman Fitzgerald to aid Tregonning -in arresting Kenkouwsky. The policemen, Seide, and Stanton, who had -meanwhile relieved Seide of his embarrassment, waited for about three -hours, when they saw a man answering the description of the murderer -walking up the street. Policeman Fitzgerald arrested him. He offered -no resistance, and his only exclamation was in German: “Was ist? was -ist? was ist?” He was at once taken to the station, where he was locked -up. Sergeant Brown was sent down for Scherrer, and a policeman was -despatched for Strang. Scherrer arrived about twenty minutes after the -arrest, and identified the prisoner as the man who had been at his -house under the name of Kettler. Strang also soon appeared, and he too -identified Kettler. Meanwhile Policemen had entered the room at 510 -West Thirty-sixth street, notified the woman of her husband’s arrest, -and taken the four trunks and the valise to the station. Our reporter -was present when the trunks were opened. Almost the first thing found -when one of the yellow trunks was opened was a letter addressed to -Mrs. Mina Muller, 338 West Thirty-ninth street. In a corner of the -envelope was printed “Germania Lodge, No. 70, K. of H.” It contained a -request for her to attend a lodge meeting on Jan. 10. The trunks were -full of articles of female attire, and in one of them was a pair of -men’s gloves of white leather, stained with dirt and badly torn, as -though whoever wore them had been handling some rough object. It is -thought that Kenkowski wore these gloves when he was married and when -he crushed Mina Muller’s skull with stones. A gray wrapper, and a straw -bonnet and table covers were among the other objects found. - -[Illustration: MARRIAGE CEREMONY WHICH TOOK PLACE AN HOUR BEFORE THE -MURDER.] - -[Illustration: MURDERING MINA MULLER IN THE WOODS NORTH OF WEEHAWKEN.] - -At about half-past 9 the prisoner’s wife arrived at the station with -her boy, who was crying bitterly. She asked why her husband had been -arrested, and why the trunks had been taken away. When asked what his -name was, she replied, “Martin Kenkouwski,” and added that they had -been married ten years ago in Alsace, and had only been in this country -a little more than half a year. Her husband was a mason and kalsominer. -When asked if he had been at home regularly lately, she said he had -been away about ten days in the beginning of the month. - -“Do you know,” asked the interpreter (the woman and her husband spoke -in German), “that he married another woman, and killed her?” - -“I don’t believe it,” she replied firmly, while the boy cried more -loudly than before. “I don’t believe it!” she reiterated. “Let me see -him! Don’t cry my child” (turning to the boy), “or you will make me -weep. Don’t cry!” Here her voice faltered, and she burst into tears. - -She was then led to the cell. Here a heart-rending scene occurred. She -threw herself with her child against the grating, sobbing and calling -for her husband. He was far back in the cell, and when he heard her and -the child, he shrieked from out of the darkness: - -“Katrina! Katrina! Merciful Heavens! My child! My child! Great God, are -you here!” - -Then he rushed forward to the cell door, pressed his face against the -iron trellis work, lifted his hands and called out: “Before God I stand -a guiltless man, and if I die I die guiltless. I was misled by the -wicked woman; she led me astray. My God, Katrina! Katrina! Give me your -hand!” - -Here he thrust his hand through the cell gate, and his wife clasped it. -She was too much overcome to speak for a while, and the child moaned -and sobbed. Kenkouwski continued reiterating his innocence, when he -called out again. “The wicked woman misled me; she led me astray.” - -His wife exclaimed: “Have I not been a good wife? Have I not prayed to -God for you?” Then she sobbed again. After a while she said to him: “I -don’t believe you killed her! I don’t believe it!” After this she and -the child were led away, and he called after them: “By God, Katrina, I -am innocent. I am innocent.” - -The woman said he had always been a good husband to her, nor did she -seem to know anything of Mina Muller. She said nothing when asked what -she had thought when her husband came back with three yellow trunks -after an absence of ten days. - -Shortly after the woman left, Kenkouwski was led before the Sergeant -for examination. He looked wild and nervous, and gesticulated -violently. “He must be watched well to-night,” said one of the -policemen, “or he’ll hang himself.” As he approached the desk, he -suddenly threw up his arms and exclaimed: - -“Now, I will tell you the truth. If it is not the truth you may take a -knife and cut my throat, like this,” (here he pulled his finger across -his neck.) “Mina Schmidt told me the other day that she knew I was -married, but she wanted me to marry her and go to Germany with her, -where she had very good parents living. At that time I didn’t know she -was married. We went to Guttenberg to get married, and when we got -over there we went to the Schutzen Park. Two men there came up to me -and told me that she did not love me, that she loved another. When she -heard this she sprang up and ran away from me, and I have not seen her -since.” - -He was then led back to his cell. He was again brought from his -cell at about 11 o’clock to be looked at by the reporters assembled -in the Thirty-seventh street station. He had been lying down, and -the light dust from the cell floor covered his back. He looked in a -bewildered manner at the throng about him, spoke a few words in German, -reasserting what he had previously said in regard to the murder, and -was taken back again. His eyes were bloodshot, and he spoke in a -nervous manner. - -“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!” exclaimed Kenkouwsky, “does any one speak French? - -“I do!” replied another reporter, addressing him in French. - -Kenkouwsky sprang from his seat and, with tears falling fast, seized -the reporter by the hand and said: “Tell them that as our Saviour, who -was crucified, was innocent, so am I!” - -“Of what?” asked the reporter. - -“Of the murder of Mina Schmidt. I married her that day, although I -have a wife here. She told me she loved me. I did not tell her I was -married. After we were married we went to Schuetzen Park. There we sat -at a table drinking, when two men came by. They greeted Mina as old -friends, and we all drank together. One of the men took her away, and -the other then told me that Mina had said that she did not love me. -They all left me, and I, after hunting for them, came back to this city -and tried to find her.” - -Chief of Police Donovan of Hoboken, who had been standing by all this -time and listening to what the reporter quickly translated, touched the -reporter on the shoulder and said: “Ask him if he was not in Jersey -City last night.” - -The reporter asked the question. Kenkouwsky staggered back and -repeated, “Jersey City! Jersey City! Where is that?” The reporter -repeated the question. - -Kenkouwsky replied: “I was with my wife last night.” - -“In Jersey City?” asked the reporter. - -“No; I was with a woman there.” - -Chief Donovan’s eyes brightened, and he then said: “Last Monday a -young girl, whose name I cannot now mention, was taken into a house by -this man. He made her drink wine, and as she was partly stupefied, he -locked the doors and assaulted her. It was for this offence that I and -my detectives were hunting him up to-day. We did not then suspect that -he was the murderer of Mrs. Schmidt. Last night he was to meet another -girl, but she became frightened and did not stay where he told her to -until he came. He eluded us by ten minutes.” - -In the prisoner’s pocket was found a clipping from a German paper of -the account of the hanging of Mrs. Meierhoffer and her paramour last -winter. To the reporter he said he had not read any account of the -Guttenberg murder until the day previous to his arrest. - -At midnight Chief Donovan had the trunks of Mrs. Mina Schmidt taken -over to Hoboken. - -Detective Stanton told our reporter that an empty watch case had been -found in the room at 510 West Thirty-sixth street. On the yellow trunks -labels were pasted with the address: - - +--------------------------+ - | MONSIEUR JOSEPH REYMANN, | - | | - | No. 52 Rue Clissant, | - | | - | Paris (France). | - +--------------------------+ - -The purpose of this address was, it is supposed, to induce Scherrer to -believe that he was to take the French steamer. - -Seide says he has ascertained that on Monday night, May 2, Kenkouwsky -applied at Becker’s Hotel in Christopher street, for a room, but -refused to write his name. The entry is in the hotel clerk’s hand. -“Louis Kettler, Room No. 1.” - -Coroner Wiggins began an inquest in the case in Hoboken on the -afternoon of May 19th. Simon Muller, the husband of the murdered -woman, testified: “Coroner Wiggins told me on Wednesday that my wife -had been found murdered in Guttenberg. I told him that it could not be -so, for that she had gone to Germany with a man from Alsace. I went -to the French steamship wharf on the day I heard they were to sail, -and watched for her until the ship sailed, but she did not come. I was -married to her five years ago. Our married life was unhappy, and on the -5th of last January she left me. She had then between $75 and $100.” - -Carl Schmidt, the brother of the murdered woman, testified: “I last -saw my sister Philomina at my place, 555 Ninth avenue, New York. She -came to my house on Sunday, May 1, at about 5 o’clock in the afternoon. -She told me she was going with a man named Louis Kettler to Mulhausen, -in Alsace. I asked her why she was going. She replied that Kettler was -well off at home. ‘You know,’ she said, ‘what treatment I have had -from my husband.’ I told her that I knew he did not treat her right, -but that she should not go with this man, as she did not know him at -all. And further, I told her that she must first get a separation from -Muller before she could go with another man. She answered, ‘I don’t -care how it will result, I will go with him. My husband tried to shoot -me.’ She also told me that she had known Kettler for four weeks, and -he had told her that he had property in Mulhausen, and that he would -give her a good home there. Kettler, she said, was richer than the -whole Schmidt family. She left me at about 6½ o’clock to go to my -other sister’s house in Tenth avenue, between Nineteenth and Twentieth -streets. I never saw Kettler but once, and that was on a Sunday in -April in Second avenue, near Seventy-ninth street, in my sister’s -apartments. On May 2nd a cousin of my wife met Kettler on the street -and asked him when he and Mina were going to Europe. He replied that -he was not going to Europe. The cousin then asked what Mina would do, -and he said she would go to the country, where she had friends to stay -with. Kettler then suggested that the cousin and he should go off -together, and leave Mina behind. Since the 3rd of May, on the 9th or -10th of the month, I think, the woman Sacks saw Louis Kettler passing -up on the opposite side of the street. When she noticed him she called -my wife, who was in the room with her, to the window.” - -The Rev. Dr. Mabon, the pastor of the Grove Reformed Dutch Church, on -the Weavertown road, at whose house the murdered woman and Kettler were -married, testified that he had performed the ceremony. - -“When I asked the man,” he said, “if he took the woman for his lawful -wife, he answered ‘Yes,’ and at the time I noticed a tear in his eye.” - -The inquest was suddenly adjourned on the news of the murderer’s arrest -in N. Y. city. - - - - -THREATENING TO LYNCH HIM. - - The Scene at his Parting from his Wife and Children--Angry - Throngs in Hoboken--Giving Away the Murdered Woman’s Watch--The - Testimony. - - -Over in New York Martin Kenkowsky was closely watched. He was so -agitated when he was led back to his cell on Thursday night, that -Policeman Finerty was detailed to watch him, as it was feared he might -attempt to kill himself. The policeman says that the prisoner was -restless until after sunrise. At first he paced the cell like a caged -animal, stopping now and then and pressing his face against the gate, -his bloodshot eyes glaring through the trellis work. This continued -several hours. Then, for the first time, he gave way to his feelings. -He threw himself upon the floor and moaned piteously. Then he sprang -up again, leaped to the gate, and tried to shake it. After that he -again paced the cell, wringing his hands wildly and calling out German -words which the policeman could not understand. Toward morning he -became more quiet, but even when lying down he tossed about and did not -sleep. Finerty says that Kenkowsky is one of the most powerful men he -has seen; that when he tried to shake the cell gate he could see the -muscles moving beneath his sleeves. - -The news that the Guttenberg murderer had been captured spread rapidly -in the neighborhood, and by eight o’clock in the morning some 400 -persons were in Thirty-seventh street, pressing toward the police -station and standing on either side of the station nearly all the way -to Ninth and Tenth avenues. A little after 8 o’clock a woman with a -young boy at her side and a little girl in her arms was seen trying to -make her way through the crowd. Whenever it was so dense as to impede -her progress she spoke a few words, and those in the immediate vicinity -fell back and allowed her to pass. The boy was crying bitterly, but -the woman’s features were firmly set, and the little girl, who seemed -to be about 6 years old, was quiet. When the woman had made her way to -the station door she hesitated a moment. Then she entered, dragging the -boy, who seemed unwilling to follow, after her. She was the prisoner’s -wife. People now began to climb upon some empty trunks near by, and -even women with babies in their arms were seen on the wagons. Up to -this point the crowd had been quiet. But when the coach in which -Kenkowsky was to be conveyed to the Jefferson Market Police Court -appeared, some one shouted, “Kill him!” and an angry howl went up from -the dense throng. - -“Lynch him! Hang him to a lamp post!” was shouted by others. No -attempt, however, was made to carry out these threats. - -Meanwhile Chief of Police Donovan of Hoboken and Detective Stanton had -arrived, and the prisoner had been led from his cell. When he saw his -wife and children he burst into tears. His wife also wept and called -out: - -“Why did you not take my advice? Why did you not stay away from her?” - -“I swear to God I am innocent,” he called out. “Let me kiss you, -Katrina; let me kiss you and my children!” - -He stepped toward her with arms spread as though to embrace her, but -she started back in a half frightened way. The boy, however, sprang -toward him and clasped his arms around his neck. The woman turned her -face away and only allowed him to kiss her neck, while the little -girl pushed him off and then shrank away. Just then the crowd without -howled. Kenkowsky turned ghastly pale and trembled, while his wife -fainted and fell upon the floor, and the boy wept louder than ever. The -little girl leaned over her mother and patted her cheek with one hand, -while with the other she made a repelling motion toward her father. The -prisoner was led away, and as soon as the wife came to her senses she -went away with her children. When the door closed on her she stood for -a moment gazing in a dazed manner at the crowd. The people seemed to -pity her. One man took her hand and led her down the steps, and then -she passed through the crowd unmolested by either word or act. Her -face was pale but calm, and the little girl was as quiet as she had -been throughout all the trying scenes, but the boy, who clung to his -mother’s skirt, was still crying bitterly. - -Kenkowsky was again led back before the sergeant at the desk as soon as -his family had gone. He was then quite calm and collected. He turned to -a policeman and said in German: “I am innocent. I suppose you will let -me go home soon.” - -“Why,” replied the policeman, “whether you’re guilty or not, you’ll -be mighty lucky if you get off.” - -[Illustration: FINDING THE BODY OF MINA SCHMIDT, ALIAS MULLER, ALIAS -KENKOUWSKY, WHERE IT HAD BEEN LEFT BY HER HUSBAND] - -The prisoner was then asked if he would go quietly to court, and he -said he would. He was manacled, and between two policemen was marched -out of the station. His appearance was a signal for another howl from -the crowd, who pressed around the party so closely that the policemen -used their clubs. The prisoner turned pale, and trembled as he had done -in the station when he heard the angry cry without. He was hustled into -the coach, and as soon as the door was closed the driver whipped up -his horses, and they started off at such speed that the crowd had to -fall back. Many, however, ran after the coach several blocks down Ninth -avenue, and some boys followed it all the way to the Jefferson Market -Police Court. - -The prisoner was taken into a small room, and when court was opened -he was led before Justice Morgan. Capt. Washburn, Coroner Wiggins, -Chief Donovan, Detective Stanton, and G. A. Seide were in court. Capt. -Washburn stated the case to the Justice, and said the New Jersey -authorities wished to have the custody of the prisoner. The Justice -called up Kenkowsky and asked if he knew why he was to be taken to -New Jersey. The French interpreter translated the question, but the -prisoner said he understood German better than he did French, so the -German interpreter was called in. Kenkowsky replied in the affirmative. -He further said that he knew his legal rights, but that he was willing -to go to New Jersey without any formal proceedings. The Justice then -endorsed the warrant and Capt. Washburn handed over the prisoner to -Chief Donovan. Kenkowsky’s manacles had been taken off, and he asked -that he be allowed to have his arms free. His request was granted. - -Kenkowsky was then again placed in the coach, which was driven -hurriedly through West Tenth street to the Hoboken ferry and upon the -ferryboat Moonachie. - -Kenkowsky’s coming had been anticipated in Hoboken, and an immense -throng had gathered at the ferry on the Hoboken side, rendering the -streets leading to the river almost impassable. As each boat reached -the slip the policemen on duty there experienced the utmost difficulty -in restraining the crowd that pressed forward eagerly in the desire -to get a glimpse of the prisoner. When at last he landed on the New -Jersey shore the carriage was driven as rapidly as possible through -the multitude in the direction of Police Headquarters. Some one in -the throng recognized Chief Donovan in the vehicle and shouted to the -bystanders: - -“There’s the murderer! There’s the murderer!” - -The news spread like wildfire, and was received with mingled threats -and shouts of exultation. Cries of “Hang him!” “Lynch the wretch!” -“We’ll fix him!” were heard on all sides. The coach dashed up Newark -street to Hudson street, pursued by over 2,000 persons, shouting at the -top of their voices. Chief Donovan deemed it prudent to avoid the still -larger crowds that swarmed around the police station on Washington -street. He therefore directed the driver to pull up his horses at the -end of an alley that led to the rear of the building. The prisoner was -conducted through this passage to the station. He was placed in a cell -at the end of the corridor. - -While he was lying in jail awaiting the opening of the inquest, -which had been adjourned until 2 o’clock, another link in the chain -of circumstantial evidence against him was being prepared. Regina -Herkfeldt, 20 years old, of 153 Newark avenue, told the police that on -Monday, May 9, she went to an intelligence office in Mott street to get -a situation as a servant. There she met a man answering Kenkowsky’s -description. He engaged her to do housework, and took her to 149 -Charles street. There he locked her in a room and assaulted her. He -then led her to the street and left her. Afterward he followed her into -a saloon and took her pocketbook and a ring from her finger, and left -the saloon with them. She followed him to Thirty-fifth street and Tenth -avenue, where she lost him. Three or four days afterward the man went -to her brother’s place of business (her brother is a galvanizer in the -Pennsylvania Railroad shops), and told him that he wanted to marry the -girl. After that he went to her house and told her he would marry her, -and they went to Canal street, New York, to her sister’s house. Last -Sunday the man went to her house and told her he was going to Chicago. -He said he wanted to give her a gold watch and a ring. The watch was a -lady’s hunting case gold watch, with flowers engraved on the outside -case. The inside case did not look like gold. The ring was chased, and -had one round dark blue stone set in a crown setting, with four claws -which held the stone. He would not let her keep the ring, but said he -would send her one from Chicago. He went back on Wednesday, the 18th, -and told her she must get a situation, and he would send for her from -Chicago. The girl could not remember the man’s name. - -When Chief Donovan heard this story he telegraphed to Jersey City for -the girl, and she was taken to Hoboken by Detective Bowe. Kenkowsky and -a number of other persons were admitted to the large drill room of the -station, and the girl was then led in and requested to point out the -man. No sooner had she entered the apartment than she walked opposite -to Kenkowsky, looked at him steadily for an instant, and then, as she -waved her umbrella toward him, exclaimed: - -“Das ist der man.” - -“Ask him,” said Chief Donovan to Aid Ringe, “whether he has ever seen -this woman before.” - -The aid interpreted the question and the prisoner grunted out a -negative answer. - -At 2 o’clock in the afternoon, the hour appointed for the continuation -of the inquest, a great throng swarmed in Washington street between -Police Headquarters and the Morgue. Kenkowsky was led through this -crowd by Chief Donovan and an escort of policemen. The prisoner’s -appearance was greeted with the same threatening cries that had been -uttered on his arrival in Hoboken, but he bore up against the clamor -with real or well-feigned indifference. When he entered the hall and -was being led to a seat at the side of the Coroner’s chair his eyes -accidentally fell upon the lay figure that had been draped with the -clothing of the murdered woman. When he saw it he averted his face with -a perceptible tremor. He almost immediately recovered his composure and -dropped into his seat. - -The Rev. Dr. Mabon, the pastor of the Grove Reformed Dutch Church, -testified: “To the best of my knowledge I think the prisoner is the man -that I married under the name of Louis Kettler.” - -Sarah Jane Rigler, who had directed the couple to Dr. Mabon’s house on -May 3, testified: “I recognize the prisoner as the man who was with the -woman who asked me where she could get a minister to marry them.” - -John E. Schumann, the barber who had been called in by Dr. Mabon to -witness the ceremony, said that he believed the prisoner to be the man -who was married on that occasion. - -Regina Herkfeldt testified concerning her acquaintance with Kenkowsky. -She identified a watch that was produced as the one that he gave her. -On cross-examination she considerably modified her previous account of -the prisoner’s assault upon her. - -John E. Luthy, a watchmaker of 315 West Thirty-fifth street, testified -that the prisoner called at his place on May 16 with the watch and left -it there, taking a receipt for it. - -Charles H. Peters, a roundsman of the Twentieth Precinct, this city, -testified to a conversation he had had with the prisoner at the station -on the night of the arrest. Kenkowsky admitted to him that he knew -Mina Muller. He at first denied but afterward confessed that he had -given a watch to Luthy to have repaired, and that it belonged to Mina -Muller. He told the roundsman that after the trunks had been taken to -Christopher street, Mina proposed to him to take a walk, and they went -over to New Jersey and visited the Scheutzen Park. They strolled into -a saloon on the Guttenberg road and had some beer. After leaving it he -told her he wanted to go back to New York, and she objected. As they -were talking, two men, he asserted, came along the road. One of them -said to the woman: “Hello, Mina! what are you doing over here?” When he -heard this familiar language he turned to his companion, and said: “If -you are that kind of a woman, I’ll have nothing to do with you,” and -then he parted from her, leaving her with the two men. - -While the inquest was going on the wife of the prisoner entered the -room and managed to force her way through the throng. When she turned -her eyes toward her husband she threw up her arms and fell unconscious. -She was carried down stairs to the station, where restoratives were -applied. - -In the evening Kenkowsky was taken to the county jail and placed in the -cell formerly occupied by Covert D. Bennett. - -In the trunks in Kenkowsky’s possession was found, in addition to a -lot of female clothing, a white shirt. The sleeves from the wrists to -the elbows were spotted with blood; the bosom, too, was marked with -similar stains. On each side of the shirt at about the waist there were -marks of bloody fingers. A pair of buckskin gloves with very small -spots of blood on the back was also found; the palms were soiled, as if -they had been used to handle some rough and dusty article. - - -THE MURDERED WOMAN’S FUNERAL. - -At 11 o’clock on the morning of May 20th, Martin Sanger, an undertaker, -removed the body of Mina Muller from the Hoboken Morgue and placed -it in a plain coffin, which was put in a hearse and driven to -the residence of the deceased woman’s brother, Carl Schmidt, 555 -Ninth avenue. On the lid of the coffin was a silver plate with the -inscription: “Mina Muller, died May 3, 1881, aged 34 years.” A shield -bearing the words “Ruhe in Frieden,” was also on the coffin. A wreath -of flowers inwoven with the dead woman’s name rested upon the head of -the coffin, surrounded by bouquets. A throng of Germans, mostly women, -were waiting in front of the house for the arrival of the body. When -the hearse appeared at about two o’clock, the sidewalks for nearly -a block were almost impassable. Vehicles blocked the street in some -places, and many men and boys had climbed upon the elevated railroad -columns. Six carriages containing the husband and brothers of the -deceased woman, and the officers of Lodge No. 70, Knights and Ladies of -Honor, accompanied the hearse to the grave in the Lutheran Cemetery. -Louis Schlisenger, the president of the lodge, read its ritual. Mr. -Muller wept during the service. - -Mr. Schlisenger said the Lodge would pay the sister of Mrs. Muller -$1,000. Mrs. Muller joined the Lodge several years ago. She originally -assigned the money she was entitled to as a member to her husband, but -on May 3 she revoked this and assigned it to her sister. When Mrs. -Muller saw Mr. Schlisenger she told him she was going to France, and in -case of her death she desired that her sister should receive the money. - - -THE PERSON WHO CAUSED KENKOWSKY’S CAPTURE ARRESTED AS AN -ACCOMPLICE.--HOW KENKOWSKY SPENT SUNDAY. - -At half-past one o’clock on the morning of May 22d, Detectives -Heidelberg and Dolan arrested Philip Emden of 414 West Thirty-ninth -street, on the charge that he was an accomplice of Martin Kenkowsky. -Emden was locked up in a cell at the Police Headquarters. In the -morning, however, he was liberated. It was said that he was arraigned -at the Jefferson Market Police Court and liberated; but on the other -hand it was reported that he was not taken to court at all, but that -Captain Washburn of the Twentieth Precinct called at headquarters, and -that after a conversation the captain had with Inspector Byrnes, Emden -was liberated. The police were reticent about the procedure, but the -result was that Emden was freed. - -Capt. Washburn was indignant at Emden’s arrest. He said: “Emden was -the first man to give a clue to Kenkowsky, and I promised to keep -his name a secret. We are in the habit of taking informers’ names in -confidence; otherwise people wouldn’t give us information. Prosecutor -McGill also promised me that he would not disclose the name. I think -Kenkowsky’s wife found out that Emden had given me information, and -she tried, out of revenge, to throw suspicions on him. Emden has lived -three years in the district, and is a quiet, well-behaved man. Chief -Donovan was perfectly willing that Emden should be set at liberty. -Emden will accompany me to testify at the inquest. He certainly has not -behaved like a man who has committed a murder.” - -Philip Emden was found at his house, 414 West Thirty-ninth street. -According to his statement he met Kenkowsky shortly after the latter -came to this country. Emden is a mason, and found odd jobs for -Kenkowsky, who is of the same trade. On Feb. 19 last Emden married -Bertha Himmelsbach, and Kenkowsky was one of the witnesses to the -ceremony, though on the certificate his name appears as Martin -Karkowsky. Shortly after the marriage Emden was told by Kenkowsky that -Mina Muller, a friend of his, knew Bertha Himmelsbach, who, she said, -was a bad woman. This led to difficulties between Emden and his wife, -which ended in their separation on April 17. Since that time he has -seen very little of Kenkowsky, but he says that on one occasion the -prisoner showed him a gold watch and chain corresponding to those owned -by Mina Muller. Emden does not know whether this was before or after -the murder. - -On Thursday morning he read of the identification, and in H. Luhr’s -liquor store, 587 Tenth avenue, he mentioned that Kenkowsky had known -Mina Muller. Luhr, who knew Kenkowsky, suggested that the description -of the man who was married in Guttenberg tallied with Kenkowsky’s -appearance. Emden made up his mind to see if Kenkowsky was still at -his house, 510 West Thirty-sixth street. As his pretence for calling, -he determined to say that he had a job for the alleged murderer. He -found him in bed, and, when he asked if he wanted the job, Kenkowsky -said that he was engaged as a cook in a Jewish family on Fifth avenue, -and only came home nights. After working hours, Emden went to Capt. -Washburn and informed him of his suspicions, and a policeman was sent -with him to watch the house. In front of the house they found Strang, -the trunkman, who in the meantime had been tracked by Seide. Strang -asked Emden if he could speak German, and, when the latter answered in -the affirmative, requested him to ask the German woman up stairs if -a trunk he was to deliver belonged to her, saying he had left three -trunks there some time previously. Emden went up stairs and asked -Mrs. Kenkowsky if three trunks had been delivered there, and she -said they had not. When Emden came back to Strang with this answer, -Strang requested him to ask again, and this time she replied in the -affirmative; and when Strang brought up Kenkowsky’s trunk, she said, in -surprise: “Why, he told me he had taken it to where he was working in -Fifth avenue.” - -Kenkowsky’s wife was found at 510 West Thirty-sixth street. She had -just returned from a visit to her husband in jail. Her eyes were red as -though she had been weeping. - -“Philip Emden,” she said, “has been a good friend to me and my poor -little ones. When I told my husband this afternoon in jail that -Philip had been arrested, he threw up his arms and exclaimed: ‘Philip -arrested! Philip, who has always been so good to us? He is innocent, -Katrina, as innocent as I am myself.” - -Martin Kenkowsky spent Sunday quietly in his cell in the Hudson County -Jail at Jersey City. He ate his meals regularly and with much relish, -and slept for an hour after dinner. In the afternoon his wife and two -children visited him. He embraced them and had a long conversation with -them in the presence of a turnkey. In the course of their talk the -woman charged him with having stolen a five-dollar gold piece from her -room on the evening of May 3d. That was the day on which the murder -was committed. Kenkowsky admitted that he had taken the money. He said -that after he had left Mina with the two men at Union Hill, he returned -to New York city and went home. There he found the $5 piece, which -his wife had saved, and put it in his pocket. When he was told of the -arrest of Emden he seemed to be very much surprised. He said he knew -Emden, and had become acquainted with him only a short time ago. - -“But,” he exclaimed, “he is as innocent as I am.” - -The prisoner referred frequently to his former narrative as to the -circumstances under which he parted with Mrs. Muller in New Jersey. He -stated that one of the two men who accosted her in the Schuetzen Park, -and with whom he says he left her, was tall, and had a red moustache, -and the other was shorter and thinner. He was convinced, he declared, -that they murdered her. - -City Missionary Verrinder held divine service in the corridor of the -jail on Sunday morning. Kenkowsky, at his own request, was permitted -to attend the exercises. He sat on the foremost bench, directly in -front of the minister, and although he did not understand the sermon, -he bowed his head reverently whenever the name of Jesus was uttered by -the preacher. At an early hour he went to bed, and fell asleep a few -moments later. - -The reader who has followed us thus far will perceive that scarcely -ever in the records of modern murder cases has such a steel coil of -circumstantial evidence, in such a small space of time, so completely -woven itself around a murderer. Kenkowsky attempted to prove an alibi -by asserting that on the day of the murder, and several hours before -it could have taken place, he was on his way to cross the river, and -that on his way he had asked the direction to the ferry of a carpenter -whom he saw putting up posts for a fence. This carpenter was found, and -testified that a man on that date had asked him the way to the ferry, -but he failed to recognize Kenkowsky as that man. The bottom of the -alibi leaked, however, when the gentleman on whose property the fence -was being put up showed his diary, in which was recorded a mem. of that -particular job, dated several days after the date of the murder. What -verdict could a coroner’s jury bring in but one fastening the crime on -Kenkowsky? The trial will be read with great interest. - - -THE END. - - -[Illustration: MARTIN KENKOUWSKY, ALIAS KETTLER, IN HIS CELL.] - -[Illustration: AUGUSTUS A. SEIDE, THE JERSEY CITY REPORTER WHO SOLVED -THE WEEHAWKEN MYSTERY.] - - - - -Transcriber’s Note - -Efforts have been taken to transcribe this work as originally -published, including inconsistent capitalization and punctuation, -and alternative titles, names and spelling, except on page 37 where -“ogether” has been changed to “together”. - - - - - -End of Project Gutenberg's The Cruel Murder of Mina Miller, by Unknown - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRUEL MURDER OF MINA MILLER *** - -***** This file should be named 56191-0.txt or 56191-0.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/5/6/1/9/56191/ - -Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at -http://www.pgdp.net (Images Courtesy of Cornell University -Law Library, Trial Pamphlets Collection) - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - -Title: The Cruel Murder of Mina Miller - -Author: Unknown - -Release Date: December 17, 2017 [EBook #56191] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRUEL MURDER OF MINA MILLER *** - - - - -Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at -http://www.pgdp.net (Images Courtesy of Cornell University -Law Library, Trial Pamphlets Collection) - - - - - - -</pre> - - -<hr class="divider" /> -<h1>THE CRUEL MURDER<br /> -<small>OF</small><br /> -<span class="p140">MINA MILLER</span><br /> -<small>BY</small><br /> -KENKOUWSKY, alias “KETTLER”</h1> -<hr class="divider2" /> - -<div class="hidehand"> -<div class="figcenter width400"> -<img src="images/cover2.jpg" width="400" height="665" alt="Cover" /> -</div> -</div> - - -<div class="section"> -<hr class="divider" /> -</div> -<p class="center p130 underlined"><span class="smcap">Wedded and Murdered Within an Hour!</span></p> - -<p class="center p130">THE CRUEL MURDER<br /> -<small>OF</small><br /> -<span class="p180">MINA MILLER</span><br /> -<small>BY</small><br /> -KENKOUWSKY, alias “KETTLER.”</p> - -<hr class="small" /> -<p class="center p140">The Guttenberg-Hoboken Tragedy.</p> -<hr class="small" /> - -<p class="center">A THRILLING AND REMARKABLE CASE, WHICH<br /> -RECALLS THE MURDER OF MARY RODGERS,<br /> -“THE SEGAR GIRL,” WHICH TOOK PLACE ON<br /> -THE SAME SPOT, THE SCENE OF OTHER<br /> -MURDERS OF A LIKE CHARACTER.</p> - -<hr class="small" /> -<p class="center p140">THE ONLY LIFE OF MINA MILLER PUBLISHED</p> -<hr class="small" /> - -<p class="center">BARCLAY & CO., Publishers,<br /> -21 North Seventh Street, Philadelphia, Pa.</p> - -<hr class="small" /> -<p class="center p120">AGENTS WANTED AT ALL TIMES.</p> - - -<div class="section"> -<hr class="divider2" /> -<p class="center p120">Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1881, by<br /> -BARCLAY & CO.,<br /> -In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. -</p> -</div> - - - -<div class="chapter"> -<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span> -<hr class="divider" /> -</div> -<p class="center p180">THE MINA MULLER MURDER.</p> - -<hr class="small" /> -<h2><a name="i" id="i"></a>MURDERED BY HER HUSBAND OF AN HOUR.</h2> -<hr class="small" /> - -<div class="width80"> - <img class="drop-cap" src="images/drop-o.png" width="80" height="168" alt="O" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="uppercase">On</span> Friday morning, the 13th of last May, a German, whose purpose -was to gather green leaves to sell to florists in N. Y. city, entered the -path leading from Bergen avenue, in the district known as Bull’s Ferry, -north of Weehawken. He had followed it eastward toward the -river about 100 feet, and had turned aside to the right about twenty feet, -when he was appalled by almost stepping upon the dead body of a woman. -He hurried away to inform the police.</p> - -<p>Early in the afternoon Coroner Wiggins, of Hoboken, visited the spot -and made a careful examination. He judged that the woman had not been -over 25 years old. Along the top of the head, on the left side, was a deep -gash, and beneath it the skull was fractured. There was another gash over -the right eye. Both of these gashes were apparently made with the edge -of a stone. The nose was broken in the middle. The right side of the -head had apparently been crushed by a stone. The left ear was injured as -if an ear-ring had been torn from it. Search was made for the missing -ear-ring, but it was not found. Her face had become blackened by the -sun, which shone upon the spot where the body lay. The features were -small and symmetrical. She wore number one or number two buttoned -shoes.</p> - -<p>An investigation was at once begun by the coroner, but without much -success.</p> - -<p>On the 18th the young woman was completely identified as Mrs. Philomena -Muller, the wife of Simon Muller, a tobacconist, at 502 West<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span> -Thirtieth street, N. Y. Mr. Muller called at the Morgue at 3 o’clock on -the afternoon of May 18th, in company with a lady whom he introduced -as Miss Maria Schmidt, his wife’s sister. He said they desired to look at -the body. They were led into the damp vault, and at sight of the body -Miss Schmidt was overcome, and she retired to the adjoining basement. -Mr. Muller gazed upon the body calmly. The jewelry and clothing of the -dead woman were shown to him, and he positively identified them as the -property of his wife. He said that he had given her the cameo brooch. -Mr. Muller said that some time ago his wife deserted him, and since then -she had not lived with him. Miss Schmidt had seen her sister about two -weeks before. Mrs. Muller then informed her that she had found a decent -man, who was going to marry her and take her to Germany in the steamer -L’Amerique, which was to sail on the 4th of May. When Miss Schmidt -told Mr. Muller of this he went to the wharf of the Transatlantic Steamship -Company on the morning of May 4th, and remained at the gang plank -of the vessel until all the passengers had gone aboard. He was certain -that his wife was not among them, but he did not know her paramour.</p> - -<p>Before this identification was made, the authorities of Hudson county -had obtained conclusive evidence of the fact that the murdered woman was -Mrs. Philomena Muller, and that her assassin had married her on the morning -of the day on which he killed her, and had taken passage on the following -day for Europe. As Mrs. Finck, the wife of an alehouse keeper in -Pierce Avenue, West New York, was sitting in her saloon on the afternoon -of Tuesday, the 3d of May, a man and a woman entered and sat down at a -table. The woman ordered drinks, and called for a glass of beer. Her -companion drank soda water. While they were there the woman talked -almost incessantly. She said that they came from Morrisania. She seemed -to have plenty of money. When she paid for the refreshments, Mrs. Finck -noticed a large roll of bank notes in her pocketbook, besides some silver and -gold. Before going away, the woman borrowed a corkscrew to open a bottle -of Rhine wine which she had with her. She said she had bought the -bottle in Union Hill. Mrs. Finck minutely described the woman, and the -description tallied exactly with that of the woman who was murdered. -Prosecutor McGill was so impressed with the accuracy of Mrs. Finck’s -description, that he specially detailed Detectives Swinton and Fanning to -trace the movements of the unknown couple. They began their search on -Tuesday evening, May 17th, and Wednesday the 18th they submitted to -the Prosecutor a circumstantial account of their discoveries.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span> -They began by looking for the person from whom the bottle of Rhine -wine had been purchased. Every saloon along the Boulevard and the -Hackensack plank road was visited, but to no purpose. Continuing their -inquiries, they entered an inn kept by Edward Stabel, on the Weaverstown -road. When they questioned him he said he remembered that on the day -indicated by them a woman had called at his place and asked for a bottle -of Rhine wine. As he did not have any he sent his granddaughter, Lizzie -Haas, to Mr. Eberling’s store, in Bergenline avenue, for a bottle of it. -While the girl was absent the woman chatted pleasantly with Stabel. She -told him, among other things, that she had just been married by the Rev. -Mr. Mabon, the pastor of the Grove Reformed Dutch Church, and that she -wanted the wine to celebrate the event, and to treat the minister. She also -said that she was about to sail for France. When the girl came back with -the bottle of wine the woman paid her fifty cents for it, and gave her ten -cents additional out of a $5 gold piece that Stabel changed for her. On -leaving the saloon the woman was joined by a man. Stabel could not recollect -anything in particular about the man, except that he had stood outside -on the street while the woman bought the wine. But he gave a very -accurate description of the woman and her dress, which tallied both with -Mrs. Finck’s description of the woman she had seen, and with that of the -murdered woman. Mrs. Stabel furnished additional details. She said the -woman came to the saloon on the 3d of May. She was sure of the date, -because on the same day there was a burial in the Grove Church Cemetery -which is only a short distance from the inn. The woman told Mrs. Stabel -of her marriage, and explained that it had been secretly performed, because -her brother disliked her husband, and had objected to the match. She also -said that she had been married once before, and had attended a cigar store -which her former husband kept in N. Y. city. Mrs. Stabel’s circumstantial -description of the woman tallied yet more accurately than her husband’s -with that of the murdered woman.</p> - -<p>The detectives then went to the parsonage of the Grove Reformed -Dutch Church, where they found the Rev. Dr. Mabon. He recollected -having married a couple on May 3d. The woman, he said, entered his residence -alone, leaving the man in the yard, where he paced up and down as -if absorbed in meditation. The woman asked Mr. Mabon if he would perform -a marriage, and upon being told yes, she went out and returned immediately -with the man. As the couple had not provided a witness, the -clergyman called in John Schuman, a barber in Union street, Union Hill.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span> -The man and woman made satisfactory replies to the usual questions, and -they were married in legal form. After the ceremony they subscribed the -following record of the marriage, which is now in Mr. Mabon’s possession:</p> - -<blockquote> -<p>On Tuesday, May 3, 1881, Louis Kettler, single, aged 33, bricklayer by occupation, and -residence 1511 Second avenue, New York, married to Mina Schmidt, single, aged 34, residence, -1247 Third avenue, New York. Father of bridegroom, Louis Kettler; father of bride, -Anastasius Schmidt. Both of the contracting parties were born in Katenheim, Germany.</p> -</blockquote> - -<p>The woman did most of the talking, and seemed to be in excellent -spirits. She exhibited a bulky pocketbook, and asked Mr. Mabon how -much his charge was. He replied that she might pay him whatever she -thought proper. As she had no small bills she went out to get change, and -came back presently with the money and a bottle of Rhine wine, which she -offered to the clergyman. When he refused it she tried to persuade him to -take a drink, but he declined, and, after a few more words, the strange couple -quitted the parsonage. Mr. Mabon could not recollect anything about -the dress of either of the parties, but his colored servant girl told the detectives -that she had particularly noticed the man as he was striding up and -down the garden, and acting as if his mind was troubled. She said he was -stout, with a full face and dark moustache, and wore a high, flat-topped -Derby hat.</p> - -<p>Mrs. Sarah Rigler, who lives in the neighborhood of the church, saw -the couple before their marriage. They came along the road, and the woman -stopped and asked Mrs. Rigler:</p> - -<p>“Can you please direct me to a priest?”</p> - -<p>“Do you want a priest or a minister?” Mrs. Rigler inquired.</p> - -<p>“I want a Protestant priest,” the woman responded. “I am going to -be married, and I want him to marry us.”</p> - -<p>Mrs. Rigler’s description of the woman was almost precisely the same -as Mrs. Stabel’s. The man, she said, was quiet, and did not say anything -in her hearing. When the couple were last seen by the people in the neighborhood -of the church they were walking together toward West New York -by a road that led in the direction of Finck’s saloon and the Guttenberg -ferry.</p> - -<div class="figcenter width500"> -<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span> -<img src="images/i010a.jpg" width="500" height="499" alt="" /> -<div class="caption smcap">Martin Kenkouwsky</div> -</div> - -<div class="figcenter width500"> -<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span> -<img src="images/i010b.jpg" width="500" height="499" alt="" /> -<div class="caption smcap">Mina Muller.</div> -</div> - -<p>The detectives next went to 1247 Third avenue, N. Y. city, the number -that had been given to Mr. Mabon by the bride as her residence. There -they were unable for a long time to find any trace of Mina Schmidt. Finally -the daughter of the janitor remembered that a woman answering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span> -Miss Schmidt’s description had been living at service with a family in the -house. But the family had moved, and the servant had gone with them. -An expressman named Body had taken away her trunks. After a tedious -search Body was found. The young woman whose trunks he had removed -proved not to have been the murdered woman. But Body said that about -the 1st of May a woman whom he knew as Mrs. Mina Muller offered to sell -him some articles of furniture, as she was about to move. They were unable -to agree on the price. Mrs. Muller returned shortly afterward and -left an order to have an express wagon call for her baggage at 1511 Second -avenue, where she was then staying. Body sent William Norke, one of his -drivers, to the place, and the man received from Mrs. Muller four trunks, -a bundle of bedding, and a valise, which, by her directions, he carried to -Theodore Scherrer’s Hotel, at 178 Christopher street. Body and Norke -described Mrs. Muller, and the detectives were satisfied that she was the -woman who, under the name of Mina Schmidt, was married by Mr. Mabon -in the Grove Church. A man whom the driver did not know, but who, -from his appearance, he believed to have been the murderer, superintended -the transfer of her packages, and rode in the wagon with Norke to the hotel. -On the way there he told Norke that he intended soon to sail for Europe.</p> - -<p>At 1511 Second avenue, whither the detectives next proceeded, they -found a German woman named Mrs. Schwan, who keeps a dyeing establishment. -She did not know any man named Kettler, but she said that a man -who answered in every respect the description of Kettler had lived in the -house, but had moved about the first of May. He had lived, she said, with -a young widow, to whom she had heard he was married. Mrs Schwan described -the woman, and again the description tallied with that of the murdered -woman. Mrs. Schwan had been told that the woman had another -husband living in Thirty-ninth street. Charles Rost, the landlord, said that -on March 3d Mrs. Muller had engaged three rooms, front, on the top floor, -and had furnished them comfortably. She told Rost that she was working -for Hahn, the butcher, in Third Avenue. Her husband, Mr. Muller, she -said, had died of consumption, and had left her $1,000 insurance on his -life. She was away all day as a rule, and returned to her apartments in -the evening.</p> - -<p>“One day,” said Mr. Rost, “about five weeks after she came here, I -had occasion to go to the roof. Her room door was wide open, and Mrs. -Muller was at work within fixing up her curtains and arranging her room. -I said to her in fun:</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span> -“You ought to have a husband here, Mrs. Muller.”</p> - -<p>“‘Oh! I’ve got one,’ she said. ‘My name is Mrs. Kettler now. I’m -not Mrs. Muller any longer.’” She said, too, that her new husband was -a mason, kalsominer and paper hanger, and was getting good wages. A -few days after that Mr. Rost met him in the hallway of the house for the -first time, and asked if he lived there. He also told Kettler that he believed -Mrs. Muller had another husband living. His suspicions had been excited -by the woman’s talk of her dead husband and her inconsistent lack of -mourning attire or demeanor. On May 2nd, they sold their furniture, and -moved their trunks and bedding, no one then knew whither. “The man,” -said Mrs. Rost, “was a greenhorn,” and this was the testimony of others -in the building who had noticed him.</p> - -<p>Among the persons by whom the woman had been employed was Moise -Hahn, a butcher in Third avenue. He said that she worked for him until -May 1st, when she quitted, as she intended to go to Europe. She was -then living with a foreigner whose name Hahn did not know, but whose -description corresponded with that of the groom in the marriage ceremony -in Mr. Mabon’s house. She told Hahn that she was going with him to -Mulhausen in Alsace.</p> - -<p>Mr. Scherrer of Scherrer’s Hotel at 178 Christopher street, to which -place Norke had carried the trunks and bundles belonging to the woman -who gave her name as Mina Miller, informed the detectives that on -Monday evening, May 2, a German went there with an express wagon containing -four trunks, a bundle of bedding, and a valise.</p> - -<p>“The man,” Scherrer said, “afterwards introduced a woman who he -said was his wife. She was very talkative and had all the money and paid -all the bills. The man told me that they were going to sail in the steamship -L’Amerique on the 4th inst., and were going to Mulhausen, in Alsace. On -the day they came to my place the man, who said his name was Kettler, -left the trunks here, but spent the night at Mr. Boker’s place, two doors -further down the street. On Monday, May 3, Mr. and Mrs. Kettler and -I had a long chat about the old country, and about noon they left my place -and went to the direction of the Christopher Street Ferry. Mrs. Kettler -promised my wife that she would come back to bid us good-by. Late on -Tuesday night Mr. Kettler returned alone. I asked him where his wife -was, and he said she had gone to spend the night at her sister’s house, and -was to meet him on board the steamship in the morning. He seemed to -me to be very much excited and uneasy, and his behaviour struck me at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span> -the time as peculiar. The next morning he had his trunks sent to the -steamship wharf, and went away. That is the last I saw of him.”</p> - -<p>Louis Groth keeps a lager beer saloon in Thirty-ninth street, near Ninth -avenue. A friend of his living at 1511 Second avenue, in the same house -with Mrs. Muller, told Groth of her being there with Kettler. Groth told -Mr. Schmidt, Mrs. Muller’s brother, who lives at 555 Ninth avenue, and -he informed Mr. Muller of his wife’s whereabouts.</p> - -<p>Mr. Schmidt was at his home at 555 Ninth avenue last evening. He -told our reporter who called that he saw his sister for the last time on the -Sunday before the murder. Previous to that, upon the information from -Louis Groth that she was living with Kettler in Second avenue, he saw her -there, and remonstrated with her. He also had a talk with Kettler, who, -however, said nothing of any proposed marriage. He said, however, that he -knew Muller. Muller told Schmidt that he didn’t know Kettler. Schmidt -says that when his sister Mina called at his house on Sunday she got a bank -book containing $40 which he had been keeping for her, and told him that -she had sold her furniture, and had altogether $116. She was going to -marry Kettler on Tuesday, May 3, and go with Kettler to Alsace, which -was his former home. Her brother says he told her he did not want her -to marry again while she had a husband, but she said she was determined -to do so.</p> - -<p>Mr. Schmidt has a brother August, a musician, living at 49 Avenue -A. and two sisters now living one of whom is married. Muller, he says, was -attentive to the unmarried sister, and Mrs. Muller and he continually -quarrelled about this intimacy. Their disputes were so violent as to -attract the attention of the people in the house where they lived in Thirty-ninth -street, and once Mr. Muller was badly whipped, it is reported, by -some friends of Mrs. Muller.</p> - -<p>Muller and his wife were married in 1874, and lived for three and a -half years in the house at 338 West Thirty-ninth street. Muller made -cigars and kept a small store there. When he and his wife could stand -each other no longer, said Mr. Schmidt, they separated, and Mrs. Muller -for a while lived in a house in the same block. About three months previous -to the murder she left the neighborhood and secured employment -in the butcher shop of Moise Heahn in Third avenue. Muller sold his -store out on April 1, and removed to his present place in Thirtieth street. -Mr. Schmidt said that Kettler, after marrying his sister, undoubtedly -led her to the lonely place of the murder for the sole purpose of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span> -killing and robbing her of the $116 which she had, and the gold watch -and chain.</p> - -<p>As Mrs. Muller left her brother’s house on Sunday she said to the -saloon-keeper on the ground floor, “I’ve got another man—a nice man -now—and I’m all right again.”</p> - -<p>Kettler had been only seven months in this country.</p> - -<p>Attorney-General Stockton directed Mr. McGill to telegraph to the -authorities at Havre, describing Kettler, and requesting his arrest on a -charge of murder. Detective Edward Stanton was to sail for Europe -on Saturday in pursuit of the murderer, but subsequent events proved -this unnecessary, as the reader will learn by following this complete and -dramatic recital.</p> - - - - -<div class="chapter"> -<hr class="divider" /> -</div> -<h2><a name="ii" id="ii"></a>TRACKED AND ARRESTED.</h2> - -<blockquote> -<p class="center">Wildly Declaring his Innocence, yet admitting that he was -in Hoboken with the murdered woman—“She Led Me Astray”—A -very Touching Scene with his Wife.</p> -</blockquote> - - -<div class="width80"> - <img class="drop-cap" src="images/drop-m.png" width="80" height="143" alt="M" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="uppercase">Martin Kenkouwsky</span>, alias Louis Kettler, the murderer of -Mrs. Mina Muller, was captured on the night of May 19th, 1881, -by Policemen Morris Fitzgerald and Richard Tregonning of the -Thirty-seventh street police station, as he was walking in Thirty-sixth -street, near Tenth Avenue, New York City. The clue which led to his -detection was discovered and followed out almost to the end by Gustavus -A. Seide, a reporter for a Jersey City newspaper, and compares, as a piece -of amateur detective work, with the detection of Chastine Cox, the murderer -of Mrs. Hull. Seide recognized that there was a flaw in the theory -that the alleged murderer had gone to Europe in the Amerique. There -was no certainty that the baggage which was taken from Sherrer’s house -on the day the steamer sailed was delivered at the pier of the French line, -nor was there positive evidence that Kettler himself had been seen on the -pier that morning. Superintendent West of the French pier said that on -the day the Amerique sailed, a man answering somewhat Kettler’s description -had applied to him for a ticket, and he had referred him to the purser.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span> -Baggage corresponding to what Kettler was supposed to have taken with -him the Superintendent had not seen on the pier.</p> - -<p>Seide came over to New York early Thursday morning, May 19th, -and proceeded at once to look for the man who was supposed to have taken -Kettler’s baggage from Scherrer’s Hotel to the pier. Scherrer had seen -the man in the neighborhood quite frequently, but did not know his name -or where he kept. He, however, described him to Seide as a tall, well-built -man, with dark moustache and dark complexion. The reporter -started out, and visited the truck stands between Christopher and Twentieth -streets, but could not find his man. Returning to Scherrer’s, he -found a man, whom he describes as a “dilapidated individual,” taking a -drink at the bar. Seide again asked Scherrer for a description of the -truckman. Scherrer gave it as before, adding that he drove a red truck -with one brown horse. Here the “dilapidated individual” spoke up and -said, the truckman might be found at Christopher and Bleecker streets. -On inquiring there Seide learned that he changed his stand a few days -before; but where he had gone no one in the immediate vicinity could tell. -He, however, discovered that his name was C. A. Strang. He then made -inquiries for Strang’s whereabouts in various smithies and liquor stores, -and in one of the latter he ascertained that Strang lived in Greenwich -street, on the west side, a few doors below Christopher street.</p> - -<p>At this point Seide telegraphed over to Detective Stanton of the New -Jersey force, and awaited his arrival. Then they went to Strang’s house, -where Mrs. Strang informed them that her husband was at the new market, -corner of West and Gansvoort streets. There they found him. They -asked him if, on the morning of the sailing of the Amerique, he had taken -baggage belonging to Kettler to the steamship wharf. He replied that he -had not; he had taken the baggage to a Mrs. Clifford’s, at 179 Charles -street, and about ten days afterward he had removed the valise and three -ordinary yellow trunks to 510 West Thirty-sixth street. The other trunk, -which was long and black, he had not seen again. He was not sure whether -he had taken the first load on the 3d or 4th instant. He at first -refused to go with them to the house in Charles street, saying he was too -busy; but when Seide and Stanton offered to pay him for his time, he consented.</p> - -<p>Mrs. Clifford said that a man answering Kettler’s description had -come to the house either on the 3d or 4th inst., and she remembered that -Strang had brought a valise and four trunks. Kettler had remained at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span> -the house about ten days, paying her regularly. Once he paid her with a -five-dollar gold piece. She did not notice anything peculiar or restless in -his behaviour. He kept to the house pretty closely, though he was generally -out nights. She saw, however, that he read the newspapers very -closely. He told her that he was going to California. When asked if on -his departure he had taken all his baggage, she said, no, he had left a long -black trunk, which they would find in the wood-shed. They opened the -trunk, and found it full of crockery and cooking utensils. They carried -it to Strang’s truck, and directed Strang to carry it to the house in Thirty-sixth -street, to ask for Kettler, and if Kettler was there, to give them a -sign, as they would remain outside. Strang inquired for Kettler, but was -told that no man of that name lived there; but that a man corresponding -to the description lived one flight up with a wife and two children. Strang -took the trunk up stairs, and found a woman, a young boy, and a little -girl in the room designated. The woman said the trunk belonged to Martin -Kenkouwsky, her husband, and offered to pay fifty cents for its delivery. -Strang then signalled to Seide and Stanton that the man was not in, and -the reporter and detective went to an adjoining house, and received permission -to watch from the windows. Seide went out again to speak to -Strang, and while he was talking to him in front of 510 West Thirty-sixth -street, both were arrested by Policeman Tregonning. The police of Capt. -Washburn’s precinct had been looking for the same man, and had traced -him to this same house. This was the cause of the arrest of Seide and -Strang. When they got to the station, Seide explained to the Captain who -he was, and the Captain sent him back with a policeman to get Stanton to -identify him. At first they couldn’t find Stanton, and the policeman -wanted to take Seide back. In the meantime the Captain had sent Policeman -Fitzgerald to aid Tregonning in arresting Kenkouwsky. The policemen, -Seide, and Stanton, who had meanwhile relieved Seide of his embarrassment, -waited for about three hours, when they saw a man answering -the description of the murderer walking up the street. Policeman Fitzgerald -arrested him. He offered no resistance, and his only exclamation -was in German: “Was ist? was ist? was ist?” He was at once taken to -the station, where he was locked up. Sergeant Brown was sent down for -Scherrer, and a policeman was despatched for Strang. Scherrer arrived -about twenty minutes after the arrest, and identified the prisoner as the -man who had been at his house under the name of Kettler. Strang also -soon appeared, and he too identified Kettler. Meanwhile Policemen had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span> -entered the room at 510 West Thirty-sixth street, notified the woman of -her husband’s arrest, and taken the four trunks and the valise to the station. -Our reporter was present when the trunks were opened. Almost -the first thing found when one of the yellow trunks was opened was a letter -addressed to Mrs. Mina Muller, 338 West Thirty-ninth street. In a -corner of the envelope was printed “Germania Lodge, No. 70, K. of H.” -It contained a request for her to attend a lodge meeting on Jan. 10. The -trunks were full of articles of female attire, and in one of them was a pair -of men’s gloves of white leather, stained with dirt and badly torn, as though -whoever wore them had been handling some rough object. It is thought -that Kenkowski wore these gloves when he was married and when he -crushed Mina Muller’s skull with stones. A gray wrapper, and a straw -bonnet and table covers were among the other objects found.</p> - -<div class="figcenter width500"> -<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span> -<img src="images/i018a.jpg" width="500" height="788" alt="" /> -<div class="caption">MARRIAGE CEREMONY WHICH TOOK PLACE AN -HOUR BEFORE THE MURDER.</div> -</div> - -<div class="figcenter width500"> -<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span> -<img src="images/i018b.jpg" width="500" height="548" alt="" /> -<div class="caption">MURDERING MINA MULLER IN THE WOODS NORTH OF WEEHAWKEN.</div> -</div> - -<p>At about half-past 9 the prisoner’s wife arrived at the station with her -boy, who was crying bitterly. She asked why her husband had been -arrested, and why the trunks had been taken away. When asked what -his name was, she replied, “Martin Kenkouwski,” and added that they -had been married ten years ago in Alsace, and had only been in this country -a little more than half a year. Her husband was a mason and kalsominer. -When asked if he had been at home regularly lately, she said he -had been away about ten days in the beginning of the month.</p> - -<p>“Do you know,” asked the interpreter (the woman and her husband -spoke in German), “that he married another woman, and killed her?”</p> - -<p>“I don’t believe it,” she replied firmly, while the boy cried more -loudly than before. “I don’t believe it!” she reiterated. “Let me see -him! Don’t cry my child” (turning to the boy), “or you will make me -weep. Don’t cry!” Here her voice faltered, and she burst into tears.</p> - -<p>She was then led to the cell. Here a heart-rending scene occurred. -She threw herself with her child against the grating, sobbing and calling -for her husband. He was far back in the cell, and when he heard her and -the child, he shrieked from out of the darkness:</p> - -<p>“Katrina! Katrina! Merciful Heavens! My child! My child! Great -God, are you here!”</p> - -<p>Then he rushed forward to the cell door, pressed his face against the -iron trellis work, lifted his hands and called out: “Before God I stand a -guiltless man, and if I die I die guiltless. I was misled by the wicked -woman; she led me astray. My God, Katrina! Katrina! Give me your -hand!”</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span> -Here he thrust his hand through the cell gate, and his wife clasped it. -She was too much overcome to speak for a while, and the child moaned -and sobbed. Kenkouwski continued reiterating his innocence, when he -called out again. “The wicked woman misled me; she led me astray.”</p> - -<p>His wife exclaimed: “Have I not been a good wife? Have I not -prayed to God for you?” Then she sobbed again. After a while she said -to him: “I don’t believe you killed her! I don’t believe it!” After -this she and the child were led away, and he called after them: “By God, -Katrina, I am innocent. I am innocent.”</p> - -<p>The woman said he had always been a good husband to her, nor did -she seem to know anything of Mina Muller. She said nothing when asked -what she had thought when her husband came back with three yellow -trunks after an absence of ten days.</p> - -<p>Shortly after the woman left, Kenkouwski was led before the Sergeant -for examination. He looked wild and nervous, and gesticulated violently. -“He must be watched well to-night,” said one of the policemen, “or he’ll -hang himself.” As he approached the desk, he suddenly threw up his -arms and exclaimed:</p> - -<p>“Now, I will tell you the truth. If it is not the truth you may take -a knife and cut my throat, like this,” (here he pulled his finger across his -neck.) “Mina Schmidt told me the other day that she knew I was -married, but she wanted me to marry her and go to Germany with her, -where she had very good parents living. At that time I didn’t know she -was married. We went to Guttenberg to get married, and when we got -over there we went to the Schutzen Park. Two men there came up to me -and told me that she did not love me, that she loved another. When she -heard this she sprang up and ran away from me, and I have not seen her -since.”</p> - -<p>He was then led back to his cell. He was again brought from his -cell at about 11 o’clock to be looked at by the reporters assembled in the -Thirty-seventh street station. He had been lying down, and the light dust -from the cell floor covered his back. He looked in a bewildered manner -at the throng about him, spoke a few words in German, reasserting what -he had previously said in regard to the murder, and was taken back again. -His eyes were bloodshot, and he spoke in a nervous manner.</p> - -<p>“Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!” exclaimed Kenkouwsky, “does any one -speak French?</p> - -<p>“I do!” replied another reporter, addressing him in French.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span> -Kenkouwsky sprang from his seat and, with tears falling fast, seized -the reporter by the hand and said: “Tell them that as our Saviour, who -was crucified, was innocent, so am I!”</p> - -<p>“Of what?” asked the reporter.</p> - -<p>“Of the murder of Mina Schmidt. I married her that day, although -I have a wife here. She told me she loved me. I did not tell her I was -married. After we were married we went to Schuetzen Park. There we -sat at a table drinking, when two men came by. They greeted Mina as -old friends, and we all drank together. One of the men took her away, -and the other then told me that Mina had said that she did not love me. -They all left me, and I, after hunting for them, came back to this city and -tried to find her.”</p> - -<p>Chief of Police Donovan of Hoboken, who had been standing by all -this time and listening to what the reporter quickly translated, touched the -reporter on the shoulder and said: “Ask him if he was not in Jersey City -last night.”</p> - -<p>The reporter asked the question. Kenkouwsky staggered back and -repeated, “Jersey City! Jersey City! Where is that?” The reporter -repeated the question.</p> - -<p>Kenkouwsky replied: “I was with my wife last night.”</p> - -<p>“In Jersey City?” asked the reporter.</p> - -<p>“No; I was with a woman there.”</p> - -<p>Chief Donovan’s eyes brightened, and he then said: “Last Monday -a young girl, whose name I cannot now mention, was taken into a house -by this man. He made her drink wine, and as she was partly stupefied, -he locked the doors and assaulted her. It was for this offence that I and -my detectives were hunting him up to-day. We did not then suspect that -he was the murderer of Mrs. Schmidt. Last night he was to meet -another girl, but she became frightened and did not stay where he told her -to until he came. He eluded us by ten minutes.”</p> - -<p>In the prisoner’s pocket was found a clipping from a German paper -of the account of the hanging of Mrs. Meierhoffer and her paramour last -winter. To the reporter he said he had not read any account of the Guttenberg -murder until the day previous to his arrest.</p> - -<p>At midnight Chief Donovan had the trunks of Mrs. Mina Schmidt -taken over to Hoboken.</p> - -<p>Detective Stanton told our reporter that an empty watch case had been -found in the room at 510 West Thirty-sixth street. On the yellow trunks -labels were pasted with the address:</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span></p> - -<div class="box"> -<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Monsieur Joseph Reymann</span>,</p> -<p class="center">No. 52 Rue Clissant,</p> -<p class="right">Paris (France).</p> -</div> - -<p>The purpose of this address was, it is supposed, to induce Scherrer to -believe that he was to take the French steamer.</p> - -<p>Seide says he has ascertained that on Monday night, May 2, Kenkouwsky -applied at Becker’s Hotel in Christopher street, for a room, but -refused to write his name. The entry is in the hotel clerk’s hand. “Louis -Kettler, Room No. 1.”</p> - -<p>Coroner Wiggins began an inquest in the case in Hoboken on the -afternoon of May 19th. Simon Muller, the husband of the murdered -woman, testified: “Coroner Wiggins told me on Wednesday that my wife -had been found murdered in Guttenberg. I told him that it could not be -so, for that she had gone to Germany with a man from Alsace. I went to -the French steamship wharf on the day I heard they were to sail, and -watched for her until the ship sailed, but she did not come. I was married -to her five years ago. Our married life was unhappy, and on the 5th -of last January she left me. She had then between $75 and $100.”</p> - -<p>Carl Schmidt, the brother of the murdered woman, testified: “I last -saw my sister Philomina at my place, 555 Ninth avenue, New York. She -came to my house on Sunday, May 1, at about 5 o’clock in the afternoon. -She told me she was going with a man named Louis Kettler to Mulhausen, -in Alsace. I asked her why she was going. She replied that Kettler was -well off at home. ‘You know,’ she said, ‘what treatment I have had from -my husband.’ I told her that I knew he did not treat her right, but that -she should not go with this man, as she did not know him at all. -And further, I told her that she must first get a separation from Muller -before she could go with another man. She answered, ‘I don’t care how -it will result, I will go with him. My husband tried to shoot me.’ She -also told me that she had known Kettler for four weeks, and he had told -her that he had property in Mulhausen, and that he would give her a good -home there. Kettler, she said, was richer than the whole Schmidt family. -She left me at about 6½ o’clock to go to my other sister’s house in Tenth -avenue, between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets. I never saw Kettler -but once, and that was on a Sunday in April in Second avenue, near -Seventy-ninth street, in my sister’s apartments. On May 2nd a cousin of -my wife met Kettler on the street and asked him when he and Mina were -going to Europe. He replied that he was not going to Europe. The cousin -then asked what Mina would do, and he said she would go to the country, -where she had friends to stay with. Kettler then suggested that the cousin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span> -and he should go off <a name="together" id="together"></a><ins title="Original has 'ogether'">together</ins>, and leave Mina behind. Since the 3rd of -May, on the 9th or 10th of the month, I think, the woman Sacks saw -Louis Kettler passing up on the opposite side of the street. When she noticed -him she called my wife, who was in the room with her, to the -window.”</p> - -<p>The Rev. Dr. Mabon, the pastor of the Grove Reformed Dutch -Church, on the Weavertown road, at whose house the murdered woman -and Kettler were married, testified that he had performed the ceremony.</p> - -<p>“When I asked the man,” he said, “if he took the woman for his -lawful wife, he answered ‘Yes,’ and at the time I noticed a tear in his eye.”</p> - -<p>The inquest was suddenly adjourned on the news of the murderer’s -arrest in N. Y. city.</p> - - - -<div class="chapter"> -<hr class="divider" /> -</div> - -<h2><a name="iii" id="iii"></a>THREATENING TO LYNCH HIM.</h2> - -<blockquote> -<p class="center">The Scene at his Parting from his Wife and Children—Angry Throngs -in Hoboken—Giving Away the Murdered Woman’s -Watch—The Testimony.</p> -</blockquote> - -<div class="width80"> - <img class="drop-cap" src="images/drop-o.png" width="80" height="168" alt="O" /> -</div> - -<p class="drop-cap"><span class="uppercase">Over</span> in New York Martin Kenkowsky was closely watched. He was -so agitated when he was led back to his cell on Thursday night, that -Policeman Finerty was detailed to watch him, as it was feared he -might attempt to kill himself. The policeman says that the prisoner -was restless until after sunrise. At first he paced the cell like a caged animal, -stopping now and then and pressing his face against the gate, his -bloodshot eyes glaring through the trellis work. This continued several -hours. Then, for the first time, he gave way to his feelings. He threw -himself upon the floor and moaned piteously. Then he sprang up again, -leaped to the gate, and tried to shake it. After that he again paced the cell, -wringing his hands wildly and calling out German words which the policeman -could not understand. Toward morning he became more quiet, but -even when lying down he tossed about and did not sleep. Finerty says that -Kenkowsky is one of the most powerful men he has seen; that when he -tried to shake the cell gate he could see the muscles moving beneath his -sleeves.</p> - -<p>The news that the Guttenberg murderer had been captured spread rapidly -in the neighborhood, and by eight o’clock in the morning some 400 -persons were in Thirty-seventh street, pressing toward the police station and -standing on either side of the station nearly all the way to Ninth and Tenth -avenues. A little after 8 o’clock a woman with a young boy at her side -and a little girl in her arms was seen trying to make her way through the -crowd. Whenever it was so dense as to impede her progress she spoke a -few words, and those in the immediate vicinity fell back and allowed her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span> -to pass. The boy was crying bitterly, but the woman’s features were firmly -set, and the little girl, who seemed to be about 6 years old, was quiet. When -the woman had made her way to the station door she hesitated a moment. -Then she entered, dragging the boy, who seemed unwilling to follow, after -her. She was the prisoner’s wife. People now began to climb upon some -empty trunks near by, and even women with babies in their arms were seen -on the wagons. Up to this point the crowd had been quiet. But when -the coach in which Kenkowsky was to be conveyed to the Jefferson Market -Police Court appeared, some one shouted, “Kill him!” and an angry howl -went up from the dense throng.</p> - -<p>“Lynch him! Hang him to a lamp post!” was shouted by others. -No attempt, however, was made to carry out these threats.</p> - -<p>Meanwhile Chief of Police Donovan of Hoboken and Detective Stanton -had arrived, and the prisoner had been led from his cell. When he -saw his wife and children he burst into tears. His wife also wept and -called out:</p> - -<p>“Why did you not take my advice? Why did you not stay away -from her?”</p> - -<p>“I swear to God I am innocent,” he called out. “Let me kiss you, -Katrina; let me kiss you and my children!”</p> - -<p>He stepped toward her with arms spread as though to embrace her, but -she started back in a half frightened way. The boy, however, sprang toward -him and clasped his arms around his neck. The woman turned her -face away and only allowed him to kiss her neck, while the little girl pushed -him off and then shrank away. Just then the crowd without howled. -Kenkowsky turned ghastly pale and trembled, while his wife fainted and -fell upon the floor, and the boy wept louder than ever. The little girl -leaned over her mother and patted her cheek with one hand, while with the -other she made a repelling motion toward her father. The prisoner was -led away, and as soon as the wife came to her senses she went away with -her children. When the door closed on her she stood for a moment gazing -in a dazed manner at the crowd. The people seemed to pity her. One -man took her hand and led her down the steps, and then she passed through -the crowd unmolested by either word or act. Her face was pale but calm, -and the little girl was as quiet as she had been throughout all the trying -scenes, but the boy, who clung to his mother’s skirt, was still crying bitterly.</p> - -<p>Kenkowsky was again led back before the sergeant at the desk as soon -as his family had gone. He was then quite calm and collected. He turned -to a policeman and said in German: “I am innocent. I suppose you will -let me go home soon.”</p> - -<p>“Why,” replied the policeman, “whether you’re guilty or not, you’ll -be mighty lucky if you get off.”</p> - -<p>The prisoner was then asked if he would go quietly to court, and he -said he would. He was manacled, and between two policemen was marched -out of the station. His appearance was a signal for another howl from the -<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span> -crowd, who pressed around the party so closely that the policemen used -their clubs. The prisoner turned pale, and trembled as he had done in the -station when he heard the angry cry without. He was hustled into the -coach, and as soon as the door was closed the driver whipped up his horses, -and they started off at such speed that the crowd had to fall back. Many, -however, ran after the coach several blocks down Ninth avenue, and some -boys followed it all the way to the Jefferson Market Police Court.</p> - -<div class="figcenter width600"> -<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span> -<img src="images/i026.jpg" width="600" height="337" alt="" /> -<div class="caption">FINDING THE BODY OF MINA SCHMIDT, ALIAS MULLER, ALIAS KENKOUWSKY, WHERE IT HAD BEEN LEFT BY HER HUSBAND</div> -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span> -The prisoner was taken into a small room, and when court was opened -he was led before Justice Morgan. Capt. Washburn, Coroner Wiggins, -Chief Donovan, Detective Stanton, and G. A. Seide were in court. Capt. -Washburn stated the case to the Justice, and said the New Jersey authorities -wished to have the custody of the prisoner. The Justice called up -Kenkowsky and asked if he knew why he was to be taken to New Jersey. -The French interpreter translated the question, but the prisoner said he understood -German better than he did French, so the German interpreter was -called in. Kenkowsky replied in the affirmative. He further said that he -knew his legal rights, but that he was willing to go to New Jersey without -any formal proceedings. The Justice then endorsed the warrant and Capt. -Washburn handed over the prisoner to Chief Donovan. Kenkowsky’s -manacles had been taken off, and he asked that he be allowed to have his -arms free. His request was granted.</p> - -<p>Kenkowsky was then again placed in the coach, which was driven -hurriedly through West Tenth street to the Hoboken ferry and upon the -ferryboat Moonachie.</p> - -<p>Kenkowsky’s coming had been anticipated in Hoboken, and an immense -throng had gathered at the ferry on the Hoboken side, rendering the streets -leading to the river almost impassable. As each boat reached the slip the -policemen on duty there experienced the utmost difficulty in restraining the -crowd that pressed forward eagerly in the desire to get a glimpse of the -prisoner. When at last he landed on the New Jersey shore the carriage -was driven as rapidly as possible through the multitude in the direction of -Police Headquarters. Some one in the throng recognized Chief Donovan -in the vehicle and shouted to the bystanders:</p> - -<p>“There’s the murderer! There’s the murderer!”</p> - -<p>The news spread like wildfire, and was received with mingled threats -and shouts of exultation. Cries of “Hang him!” “Lynch the wretch!” -“We’ll fix him!” were heard on all sides. The coach dashed up Newark -street to Hudson street, pursued by over 2,000 persons, shouting at the top -of their voices. Chief Donovan deemed it prudent to avoid the still larger -crowds that swarmed around the police station on Washington street. -He therefore directed the driver to pull up his horses at the end of an alley -that led to the rear of the building. The prisoner was conducted through -this passage to the station. He was placed in a cell at the end of the corridor.</p> - -<p>While he was lying in jail awaiting the opening of the inquest, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span> -had been adjourned until 2 o’clock, another link in the chain of circumstantial -evidence against him was being prepared. Regina Herkfeldt, 20 -years old, of 153 Newark avenue, told the police that on Monday, May 9, -she went to an intelligence office in Mott street to get a situation as a servant. -There she met a man answering Kenkowsky’s description. He -engaged her to do housework, and took her to 149 Charles street. There -he locked her in a room and assaulted her. He then led her to the street -and left her. Afterward he followed her into a saloon and took her pocketbook -and a ring from her finger, and left the saloon with them. She followed -him to Thirty-fifth street and Tenth avenue, where she lost him. Three or -four days afterward the man went to her brother’s place of business (her -brother is a galvanizer in the Pennsylvania Railroad shops), and told him -that he wanted to marry the girl. After that he went to her house and told -her he would marry her, and they went to Canal street, New York, to her -sister’s house. Last Sunday the man went to her house and told her he -was going to Chicago. He said he wanted to give her a gold watch and a -ring. The watch was a lady’s hunting case gold watch, with flowers -engraved on the outside case. The inside case did not look like -gold. The ring was chased, and had one round dark blue stone set in -a crown setting, with four claws which held the stone. He would not let -her keep the ring, but said he would send her one from Chicago. He went -back on Wednesday, the 18th, and told her she must get a situation, and he -would send for her from Chicago. The girl could not remember the man’s -name.</p> - -<p>When Chief Donovan heard this story he telegraphed to Jersey City for -the girl, and she was taken to Hoboken by Detective Bowe. Kenkowsky -and a number of other persons were admitted to the large drill room of the -station, and the girl was then led in and requested to point out the man. -No sooner had she entered the apartment than she walked opposite to Kenkowsky, -looked at him steadily for an instant, and then, as she waved her -umbrella toward him, exclaimed:</p> - -<p>“Das ist der man.”</p> - -<p>“Ask him,” said Chief Donovan to Aid Ringe, “whether he has ever -seen this woman before.”</p> - -<p>The aid interpreted the question and the prisoner grunted out a negative -answer.</p> - -<p>At 2 o’clock in the afternoon, the hour appointed for the continuation -of the inquest, a great throng swarmed in Washington street between Police -Headquarters and the Morgue. Kenkowsky was led through this crowd by -Chief Donovan and an escort of policemen. The prisoner’s appearance was -greeted with the same threatening cries that had been uttered on his arrival -in Hoboken, but he bore up against the clamor with real or well-feigned -indifference. When he entered the hall and was being led to a seat at the -side of the Coroner’s chair his eyes accidentally fell upon the lay figure that -had been draped with the clothing of the murdered woman. When he saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span> -it he averted his face with a perceptible tremor. He almost immediately -recovered his composure and dropped into his seat.</p> - -<p>The Rev. Dr. Mabon, the pastor of the Grove Reformed Dutch Church, -testified: “To the best of my knowledge I think the prisoner is the man -that I married under the name of Louis Kettler.”</p> - -<p>Sarah Jane Rigler, who had directed the couple to Dr. Mabon’s house -on May 3, testified: “I recognize the prisoner as the man who was with -the woman who asked me where she could get a minister to marry them.”</p> - -<p>John E. Schumann, the barber who had been called in by Dr. Mabon -to witness the ceremony, said that he believed the prisoner to be the man who -was married on that occasion.</p> - -<p>Regina Herkfeldt testified concerning her acquaintance with Kenkowsky. -She identified a watch that was produced as the one that he gave -her. On cross-examination she considerably modified her previous account -of the prisoner’s assault upon her.</p> - -<p>John E. Luthy, a watchmaker of 315 West Thirty-fifth street, testified -that the prisoner called at his place on May 16 with the watch and left it -there, taking a receipt for it.</p> - -<p>Charles H. Peters, a roundsman of the Twentieth Precinct, this city, -testified to a conversation he had had with the prisoner at the station on the -night of the arrest. Kenkowsky admitted to him that he knew Mina -Muller. He at first denied but afterward confessed that he had given a -watch to Luthy to have repaired, and that it belonged to Mina Muller. -He told the roundsman that after the trunks had been taken to Christopher -street, Mina proposed to him to take a walk, and they went over to New -Jersey and visited the Scheutzen Park. They strolled into a saloon on the -Guttenberg road and had some beer. After leaving it he told her he wanted -to go back to New York, and she objected. As they were talking, two men, -he asserted, came along the road. One of them said to the woman: “Hello, -Mina! what are you doing over here?” When he heard this familiar language -he turned to his companion, and said: “If you are that kind of a -woman, I’ll have nothing to do with you,” and then he parted from her, -leaving her with the two men.</p> - -<p>While the inquest was going on the wife of the prisoner entered the -room and managed to force her way through the throng. When she turned -her eyes toward her husband she threw up her arms and fell unconscious. -She was carried down stairs to the station, where restoratives were applied.</p> - -<p>In the evening Kenkowsky was taken to the county jail and placed in -the cell formerly occupied by Covert D. Bennett.</p> - -<p>In the trunks in Kenkowsky’s possession was found, in addition to a -lot of female clothing, a white shirt. The sleeves from the wrists to the -elbows were spotted with blood; the bosom, too, was marked with similar -stains. On each side of the shirt at about the waist there were marks of -bloody fingers. A pair of buckskin gloves with very small spots of blood -on the back was also found; the palms were soiled, as if they had been -used to handle some rough and dusty article.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span></p> - - -<h3>THE MURDERED WOMAN’S FUNERAL.</h3> - -<p>At 11 o’clock on the morning of May 20th, Martin Sanger, an undertaker, -removed the body of Mina Muller from the Hoboken Morgue and -placed it in a plain coffin, which was put in a hearse and driven to the -residence of the deceased woman’s brother, Carl Schmidt, 555 Ninth avenue. -On the lid of the coffin was a silver plate with the inscription: -“Mina Muller, died May 3, 1881, aged 34 years.” A shield bearing the -words “Ruhe in Frieden,” was also on the coffin. A wreath of flowers -inwoven with the dead woman’s name rested upon the head of the coffin, -surrounded by bouquets. A throng of Germans, mostly women, were -waiting in front of the house for the arrival of the body. When the -hearse appeared at about two o’clock, the sidewalks for nearly a block were -almost impassable. Vehicles blocked the street in some places, and many -men and boys had climbed upon the elevated railroad columns. Six carriages -containing the husband and brothers of the deceased woman, and the -officers of Lodge No. 70, Knights and Ladies of Honor, accompanied the -hearse to the grave in the Lutheran Cemetery. Louis Schlisenger, the president -of the lodge, read its ritual. Mr. Muller wept during the service.</p> - -<p>Mr. Schlisenger said the Lodge would pay the sister of Mrs. Muller -$1,000. Mrs. Muller joined the Lodge several years ago. She originally -assigned the money she was entitled to as a member to her husband, but on -May 3 she revoked this and assigned it to her sister. When Mrs. Muller -saw Mr. Schlisenger she told him she was going to France, and in case of -her death she desired that her sister should receive the money.</p> - - -<h3>THE PERSON WHO CAUSED KENKOWSKY’S CAPTURE ARRESTED AS AN -ACCOMPLICE.—HOW KENKOWSKY SPENT SUNDAY.</h3> - -<p>At half-past one o’clock on the morning of May 22d, Detectives Heidelberg -and Dolan arrested Philip Emden of 414 West Thirty-ninth street, -on the charge that he was an accomplice of Martin Kenkowsky. Emden -was locked up in a cell at the Police Headquarters. In the morning, however, -he was liberated. It was said that he was arraigned at the Jefferson -Market Police Court and liberated; but on the other hand it was reported -that he was not taken to court at all, but that Captain Washburn of the -Twentieth Precinct called at headquarters, and that after a conversation the -captain had with Inspector Byrnes, Emden was liberated. The police -were reticent about the procedure, but the result was that Emden was -freed.</p> - -<p>Capt. Washburn was indignant at Emden’s arrest. He said: “Emden -was the first man to give a clue to Kenkowsky, and I promised to keep -his name a secret. We are in the habit of taking informers’ names in confidence; -otherwise people wouldn’t give us information. Prosecutor McGill -also promised me that he would not disclose the name. I think Kenkowsky’s -wife found out that Emden had given me information, and she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span> -tried, out of revenge, to throw suspicions on him. Emden has lived three -years in the district, and is a quiet, well-behaved man. Chief Donovan was -perfectly willing that Emden should be set at liberty. Emden will accompany -me to testify at the inquest. He certainly has not behaved like a man -who has committed a murder.”</p> - -<p>Philip Emden was found at his house, 414 West Thirty-ninth street. -According to his statement he met Kenkowsky shortly after the latter came -to this country. Emden is a mason, and found odd jobs for Kenkowsky, -who is of the same trade. On Feb. 19 last Emden married Bertha Himmelsbach, -and Kenkowsky was one of the witnesses to the ceremony, though -on the certificate his name appears as Martin Karkowsky. Shortly after -the marriage Emden was told by Kenkowsky that Mina Muller, a friend of -his, knew Bertha Himmelsbach, who, she said, was a bad woman. This -led to difficulties between Emden and his wife, which ended in their separation -on April 17. Since that time he has seen very little of Kenkowsky, -but he says that on one occasion the prisoner showed him a gold watch and -chain corresponding to those owned by Mina Muller. Emden does not -know whether this was before or after the murder.</p> - -<p>On Thursday morning he read of the identification, and in H. Luhr’s -liquor store, 587 Tenth avenue, he mentioned that Kenkowsky had known -Mina Muller. Luhr, who knew Kenkowsky, suggested that the description -of the man who was married in Guttenberg tallied with Kenkowsky’s -appearance. Emden made up his mind to see if Kenkowsky was still at -his house, 510 West Thirty-sixth street. As his pretence for calling, he -determined to say that he had a job for the alleged murderer. He found -him in bed, and, when he asked if he wanted the job, Kenkowsky said that -he was engaged as a cook in a Jewish family on Fifth avenue, and only came -home nights. After working hours, Emden went to Capt. Washburn and -informed him of his suspicions, and a policeman was sent with him to -watch the house. In front of the house they found Strang, the trunkman, -who in the meantime had been tracked by Seide. Strang asked Emden if -he could speak German, and, when the latter answered in the affirmative, -requested him to ask the German woman up stairs if a trunk he was to -deliver belonged to her, saying he had left three trunks there some time -previously. Emden went up stairs and asked Mrs. Kenkowsky if three -trunks had been delivered there, and she said they had not. When Emden -came back to Strang with this answer, Strang requested him to ask again, -and this time she replied in the affirmative; and when Strang brought up -Kenkowsky’s trunk, she said, in surprise: “Why, he told me he had taken -it to where he was working in Fifth avenue.”</p> - -<p>Kenkowsky’s wife was found at 510 West Thirty-sixth street. She -had just returned from a visit to her husband in jail. Her eyes were red -as though she had been weeping.</p> - -<p>“Philip Emden,” she said, “has been a good friend to me and my -poor little ones. When I told my husband this afternoon in jail that Philip<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span> -had been arrested, he threw up his arms and exclaimed: ‘Philip arrested! -Philip, who has always been so good to us? He is innocent, Katrina, as -innocent as I am myself.”</p> - -<p>Martin Kenkowsky spent Sunday quietly in his cell in the Hudson -County Jail at Jersey City. He ate his meals regularly and with much relish, -and slept for an hour after dinner. In the afternoon his wife and two -children visited him. He embraced them and had a long conversation -with them in the presence of a turnkey. In the course of their talk the -woman charged him with having stolen a five-dollar gold piece from her -room on the evening of May 3d. That was the day on which the murder -was committed. Kenkowsky admitted that he had taken the money. He -said that after he had left Mina with the two men at Union Hill, he returned -to New York city and went home. There he found the $5 piece, -which his wife had saved, and put it in his pocket. When he was told of -the arrest of Emden he seemed to be very much surprised. He said he -knew Emden, and had become acquainted with him only a short time ago.</p> - -<p>“But,” he exclaimed, “he is as innocent as I am.”</p> - -<p>The prisoner referred frequently to his former narrative as to the circumstances -under which he parted with Mrs. Muller in New Jersey. He -stated that one of the two men who accosted her in the Schuetzen Park, -and with whom he says he left her, was tall, and had a red moustache, and -the other was shorter and thinner. He was convinced, he declared, that -they murdered her.</p> - -<p>City Missionary Verrinder held divine service in the corridor of the -jail on Sunday morning. Kenkowsky, at his own request, was permitted to -attend the exercises. He sat on the foremost bench, directly in front of the -minister, and although he did not understand the sermon, he bowed his head -reverently whenever the name of Jesus was uttered by the preacher. At an -early hour he went to bed, and fell asleep a few moments later.</p> - -<p>The reader who has followed us thus far will perceive that scarcely -ever in the records of modern murder cases has such a steel coil of circumstantial -evidence, in such a small space of time, so completely woven itself -around a murderer. Kenkowsky attempted to prove an alibi by asserting -that on the day of the murder, and several hours before it could have taken -place, he was on his way to cross the river, and that on his way he had asked -the direction to the ferry of a carpenter whom he saw putting up posts for -a fence. This carpenter was found, and testified that a man on that date -had asked him the way to the ferry, but he failed to recognize Kenkowsky -as that man. The bottom of the alibi leaked, however, when the gentleman -on whose property the fence was being put up showed his diary, in -which was recorded a mem. of that particular job, dated several days after -the date of the murder. What verdict could a coroner’s jury bring in but -one fastening the crime on Kenkowsky? The trial will be read with great -interest.</p> - - -<p class="center p120">THE END.</p> - - - -<div class="section"> -<div class="figcenter width500"> -<img src="images/i034a.jpg" width="500" height="777" alt="" /> -<div class="caption">MARTIN KENKOUWSKY, ALIAS KETTLER, IN HIS -CELL.</div> -</div> -</div> - -<div class="section"> -<div class="figcenter width500"> -<img src="images/i034b.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" /> -<div class="caption p120"><span class="smcap">Augustus A. Seide</span>,<br /> -THE JERSEY CITY REPORTER WHO SOLVED -THE WEEHAWKEN MYSTERY.</div> -</div> -</div> - - -<div class="section"> -<div class="figcenter width600"> -<img src="images/endpaper.jpg" width="600" height="362" alt="Endpaper" /> -</div> -</div> - - -<div class="section"> -<hr class="divider" /> -</div> -<div class="tn"> -<p class="center p120">Transcriber’s Note</p> - -<p class="noi">Efforts have been taken to transcribe this work as originally -published, including inconsistent capitalization and punctuation, -and alternative titles, names and spelling, except on page 37 where “ogether” has been -changed to “<a href="#together">together</a>”.</p> -</div> - - - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of Project Gutenberg's The Cruel Murder of Mina Miller, by Unknown - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRUEL MURDER OF MINA MILLER *** - -***** This file should be named 56191-h.htm or 56191-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/5/6/1/9/56191/ - -Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at -http://www.pgdp.net (Images Courtesy of Cornell University -Law Library, Trial Pamphlets Collection) - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. 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