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j Agons. Zelig boasted of bis ay under the law. _ £0 wide hole in the law's mesh, which never seeme’ to hold Zelig, drove the members of the Sirocco gang to despera- tion. After waiting for the law to pun- teh the man who was breaking up their Dieckmall business, the gangsters @4 in to put Zelig out of busin thelr own way. The shooting in China- town was the firet fight, and the attempt to murder Zellg as he wae coming out of Centre Street Court was the second and nearly successful measure of re- prisal. Charies Torti, aiias Frank, Caputo; Lows Bull and Victor Mrfrino, the three men who were arrested immeti- itely after the shooting of “Hig Jack” in front of the Criminal Courts Building, at noon Monday, appoared be- fore Magistrate Kernochan in the Cen- tre Street Court to-day. Detectives Oliver and Noian of tie Teadquarters staff, who had wiinessed thn shooting from the Centre street steps of the building and arrested the threo, teat!- fied against them. Upon the stayment of Oliver that he had heerd the it shot and had seen Torti fire two more at Zelig and then fun into the entrance to the by ® at No, 116 Contre street, before which Zig was standing when shot, and throw the revolver up the stairs, the Magistrate held Torth withou: bai! to await the action of the Grand Jur committed him to the Tombs. Both detectives swore when they were endeavoring to arrest Tort, Lo Bull and Marrino tried to thrust the:mstives between the detectives and the shooter and did everything possible to hinder the arrest. Whon Magistrate Kernogh- am heard Marrino had been found guilty Of @isorderiy conduct on May 9 and that Bull apeared to be in alliance with Jack Poggi, the keeper of the saloon where | the Chivfiatown shooting occurred, early Monday morning, he held them both for semtence to-morrow on charges of dis- orderly conduct, POLICE WITNESE REFUSES TO TESTIFY AGAINST PRISONERS. Frank Hart, ‘Alberto Leonardo and James Martello, the three men arrested nd THE EVENING WOR Gang Leaders Sketched as They | Appeared in Court “CHICK TRIGGER.” JAKE SEIDEL. HARRIS BAK fetiowing the pistol battle in Ninth street and Becond avenue, at 3 o'clock thle morning, were arrainged before | Magiatrate Appleton in the Exsex Mar-| ket Court later in the day on charges | Of felonious assault. Charles Lewis of WM Manhattan street, who got @ bul- | Jot in the thigh and another in the right | Qpkie, was unable to leave Bellevue | Hoepital to appear against the thr Ror could Anthony Angerlo of No, 43% West Thirty-ftth street, who has @ less eerious wound in the right leg, But Jacob Lazarus, arrested near the scene, Of the row, was brought to court by the | detectives. | Lasarus, so the police said, had | picked out Leonardo as the man who bot Lewis during the pistol duel, but when he appeared before the Magia- trate to-day Lisarus was mut He fefused to admit he had seen any of the three prisoners before and Magis- trate Appleton had no recourse but to | Jet Lasarus go. The three Kang fig! ere he held on @ short aMdavit, how. | ever, for further examination on | June * Detectives discovered to-day that | the Charles Lewis who wan shot is meme other than Ike Schnear, one of | the best known pickpockets on the | lower east side, the police say, and a eon companion of “Big J Zells. ‘The shooting ly to-day occurred Ntth street and Second avenue, and the sound of the shots brought « large crowd that witnessed desperate bat- te between the men arrested and the police, who arrived promptly on the seene of trouble, | TWO MEN, WOUNDED, IN BELLE. | VUE. Ta Bellevue are these men: Charles Lewis, thirty-clght, a sales- man, of No, 161 Manhattan street, thie borough, with wounds in the fight ankle and thigh. He is cred- fed to be innocent of participation fa the fight, but fe held as a material ‘Witness. Antony Angerlo, thirty-five, of Mo, 4 West Thirty-nitth street, Wound in the right les and believed fo have been one of the shouting gangnters. ‘The police gathered tn Frank Hart, twenty-two, driver, No. 181 De Graw stfeet, Brooklyn, charged with felonious | aepault; Albert Leonardo, thirty, truck: | man, No. 177 Fifteenth sireet, Brooklyn, | fonious sesauit; James Martollo, seven- teen, “driver, No. 161 Elisabeth stiee:, | felonious &Bault. “= Paliceman James H..Thompson, who Was on peg post at EMbhty-firet street end Becond avenue, heard the cannon- e@ing and, rapping for assistance, | brought Sergt. Pyle and Policenan Ryan, of the Fifth, atreet station. They | ame upon the galigster: they w Tuaning away. They saw several men Berl their revolvers from them and | overtook three fugitives between Ninth end Tenth streets, The thugs put up a te Aight, deapite night sticks, but Lieut. Joseph Mannion took @ hand, the men we Going over the battle ground Police- | fan Thompson found in a flower box | © thirty-eight calibre revolver, fully dis- | @harged. Another, picked up in the west, hed been fired four times, and & third, from which the number had | been carefully filed, had two empty) ebells. FIFTY SHOTS FIRED AT “CHICK” TRIGGER. The war with the pistol, the knife and @gnemrie is going on with @ reck freedom of action that the police seen unable to curb, “Chick” Trigger, who, winning the favor of Wanda Murphy, | Chinatown show girl, “caused the feud Of the gangsters, had just been released trom Tombs’ Court @ few hours before, ‘Was standing in front of No. 241 Bowery et 38 o'clock yesterday afternoon When {rom three automobiles flied with rival gangsters came a hall of Bullets. More than fifty shots were Ten Hours of Crime by Murderous Gangs Shooting Up the Gity Tn the ten hours following 5.80 o'clock last night there were six gun fights, inspired by the Apache warfare of rival gangs, on the streets of New York. One man was murdered, six were wounded and only four were arrested, though in some instances as many as fifty shots were fired in a crowded atreet. Three of the six shootings were done from taxicabs or auto- mobiles, the new vebicle of war for the terrorists. An atitomo- ‘bile was used by the men who coolly wurdered their picked vic- tim in the Bronx, . Following is the record of ten hours of unchecked disorder: 5.30 o'clock—A fusilade from three Moving taxicabs directed against “Chick Trigger,” Sirocvo gangster, at No. 241 Bowery. 7.30 o'clock—Rocco Cusano murdered by revolver fire from gangsters in front gf his home at No. 594 Morris. avenue, the Bronx. The gangstets escaped in an automo- bile, | @aid to liv ~_ eg FORTUNE TELLER After, Battle weyen yica4un VICTOR MARTELLO. ~~ to'Own Wife, Who Urged the Wedding. Sumptuous Presents Returned — Bride - to- Be Is Prostrated. Stretched on a sick bed in the home on in trying 10 rem down the murder: | of her sister, Mrs. William Barrows Cusano was carried by hia cousin to | &t No. 167 Eightisth street, Ray Ridge, a drug store near te Wa dead. | 8d surrounded by thovsunds of dol- —_—— | lars’ worth of wedding presents, Mre. PRIZE FIGHT MANAGER, M. B. Kennedy, a hnnphang widow, toki DICK CURLEY FIRED AT. | geen yioato to the fascinating “Be FROM TAX1 IN BOWERY | wera 3. sentetic.” who was to have a wed her to-morrow night, but who has tad hegre Here mysteriously vanished. t el ny, Ww | makes his east elde headquarters at the| Still is the apell of the remarkable | Bridge Cafe, Delancey atreet and Bow- | ‘#cination the suave and food looking | @ry, was fired upon early to-day by a| Young man of mystery cast upon her, man in an automobile as he was enter-| the forty-tiree-year-old widow was loth ing Cushman's coffee room at No, 147| to believe the report she got last night Third avenue. He darted through the|that he has a wife and family living, Place and out aide entrance, It was|and that the wife is tho fortune teller reported that one of the bullets struek| ashe consulted at Coney Island and who him, but it was impossible this morning was Wer “fa! to find Curley either at the Broadway |hotel or any “ther place he usually frequents. It is said Curley had brougte the enmity of the Fourteenth street gang- aters upon him by bi eral young women whom he had taken out in his machine. He had come down from the bout that his fighter, Packey Hommey, had with Tommy Houck at St, Nicholas Rink. It was 2 o'clock when he started to enter the coffee room, which is at the northeast corner of Third avenue and Fifteenth atrest. A dark taxicab, with the number eo clouded with dust it ‘could not be deciphered, trailed him ‘slowly from Fourteesth street, but ae he heared the door of the place drew up to him. Three shote were fired in quick suc- cession, and Curley plunged into the | place and out Intg Fifteenth street, run- hing toward @uyhesant Park, The taxi shot up Third avenue like a rocket and weHe west in Sixteenth street. ——— ‘THREATENS MRS. GOELET AND IS SENT TO BELLEVUE | August Ackerman Had Also De- “Dick” ried man came by telephone last night, and Mra. Kennedy collapsed. The wed- ding invitations had been recalled be- fore the message come, however, for ‘the reason that the bridegroom-to-be had not revealed himeeif for severa] week: Mrs, Kennedy did not tell ali story of her courtship by ‘Santelle” to Lawyer John A. Carney, of the firm of Crook & Crook, but she did reveai that within the past year she had turned over to the young man—he {s about thirty years old—#0,270, which he said he would invest for her, but of which she has had no accounting. FORTUNE TELLER WAS WIFE OF . THE WOOER. A year ago, shortly after the widow had consulted the fortune teller, who ie alleged to be the wife of “Santelle,” @he gave the young man $10,000. Last April she gave him a check for $26,270, and early In May she gave him $000, which he was to return last Saturday. Mrs. Kennedy has not seen the bor- rowing flance since Decoration Day. He Ki her then that he would return the 000 he borrowed last Saturday, The other money he was supposed to have 8.30 o'clock—A revolver shot fired in the vicinity of Jack Pogg!'s saloon at 10 Chatham Square. A seventeen- | year-old boy captured, ! 9 o'clock—-Members of the Gopher Gang fire twenty shots at two bill posters on the corner of Weat Fifteenth street and Tenth avenue, Both bill posters wounded. 2 A. M.—Dick Curley, prize fight manager, fired upon from a moving automobile at No. 147 Third avenue. 3 A. M,—Two wen wounded in a hot revolver duel between members of rival gangs at Ninth street and Sec- ond avenue, fired from the machines, w like distance apart, and moving with the precision of war ships going into action, ‘Trigger owes -his life to his nimble ness, but his friend Mike Fagin, (o whom he was talking, and who was a fraction slower, got a butlet in his foot ety were shattered and bullet holes That no other person was injured o:! were in the walls and fixtures, ———e¢e—— A Woman’s Smiles Lure Harlem Ganyster to Death by Bullets killed seems a miracle, for at that hour the street wat crowded with hom boing workers r ‘The armed automobiles sped a and {t ts not known whether any o noted thelr numoers, The plate gi ows of the barver shop at No. ‘The fatal shooting of Rocco Cusano,) merrily up to a dollar beer racket in known among his friends on the third-|/Shering Park, Westchester. There rate vaudeville stage as “Rocky Car+| again the two danced to their hearts’ son," was inspired by the Jealousy of|content, Never had “Th the Iwpo-Morello gang for Cusano's tri-| more radiant; never wa: umphs with women, sano had a | impuden', nimble toe and a jaunty, peppery dash| He invited trouble and he got ft. A with the girls who go on Bergen Beach | knife flashed at clore quarters and the outings,” and for that reason his body | daring dancer got a stab wound under was filled with bullets as he was coms | one eye, Then, while Cousin Joe Talp- ing down the steps of his home, No. 64' yon Was ranging around trying to find Flower" been Rocky" more invested for her. She gave him a power of attorney that permitted him te open her eafe deposit box, where she had manded $1,000 From Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont. August Ackerman, thirty-four years|@bout 40,000 in bonds and securities. old, who called Dimaelf an inventor,| She has not investigated to learn if the and sald he Ived at No, 2% Bast|¥oung man helped ‘himeelf to any of these, When he did not show up last Satur- day Mrs, Kennedy began to worry. She had bought a $10,000 cottage and fur- Thirtieth street, was committed to-day the observation ward in Bellevue! Hospital by Magistrate Krotel, after he | had been arraigned in the Yorkville| nished it luxuriously. This cottage a: Court charged with sending, thr Joins ‘her sister's home on Eighticth letters to Mrs, Robert Goel Gees ta orntdaa ane caacUt kate Goolet home, No. 891 Fifth avenue, fevea | hichicélan the weddings Bee to Louise & dressmakers, No, 54? when “Santelle’ dropped out of sigat the widow's relatives insisted on inves- tigating the bridegroom-to-be. Mrs. Kennedy had not permitted them to look him up before. They eould learn nothing reassuring and the wedding in- vitations were recalled, Just what will be done depends upon @ consultation between Mrs. Kennedy and her law- yers. This afternoon she was inclined still to have faith in the missing man. Upon the advice of her relatives, the Fifth avenue. A representative of Louise & Co, ap- peared as complainant against Acker- man, The detective who arrested him Informed the Court that the man hi confessed writing begging and threaten- ing letters to Mrs, O, H, P, Belmont ae well as Mrs. Goclet, In his last let- ter to Mrs, Goclet he demanded $1,000 to be paid in weekiy instalments of $20, When arrested he had one bun- dred letters In his pocket, all of them! deserted bride-to-have-been ordered all couched In wild and incoherent lan- the wedding presents packed up and guage, Magistrate Krotel sald after shipped back to the donors this after- reading some of the letters the man| jon, was undoubtedly insane. a WASHINGTON REPUDIATES RULING ON SOCIALIST. Judge Hanford Ordered to Reopen Case of Oleson Whose Citizen- ship Papers Were Cancelled. a NEW YORKER KILLS SELF. Adolph Moyer Ends Life in Hotel at Atlantic City, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June Adolph Meyer of New York spot and killed himself to-day in an Atlantic ave- Morris avenue, the Bronx, last night. | somebody to beat up in retaliation for Cusano was well known in Harlem | the stabbing of Cusano, somebody vaudeville houses, down at the old Lon- | sipped up close to & injured dancer don on the Bowery and the Star in| 4% bave him an “earful” of adv; Blow quick,” was the Warning, “and leave ‘Ti Flower’ behind, or you'll be carried away from here in @ morgue gon.” Brooklyn When he came out in Ught- fitting trousers and wearing a natty straw hat, the jingle of his toes on the | w; resin always fetched the gum-chewing | Cusano took the hint and left the para, beauties and “Rocky” never lacked for| minus hiv sweetheart. But he did not @ partner at a “racket” or a beer guaale|4top the girl and that ts the reason he at College Point on a Sunday, was murderod jast night. ‘A month ago Cusano, in company with| ASSASSINS HIDE BEHIND BAR- his cousin, Joe ‘Talpyon, # bruiser, who| RICADE TO FIRE FATAL SHOT, is known as “Knockout Warden" in the Tho murder was executed with covi cheap athletic club fights, went down| precision. Early in the evening ¢ tax! on a Sunday to visit some friends who containing five or six men, drove uz belong to the White Doves, a gang that One Hundred and Fiftleth street to Mors has ite headquarters on One Hundred /!# avenue, This avenue at that point Is torn up by street workers, bles on both sides of the perfect barricate, Th vir machine on the piles of cob- et forming urderers joft er and slipped and Thirteenth street between Second and Third avenues, in Harlem's Little | |Italy. The Doves mixed it with the Joo |; Bakers, @ rival crowd of thugs, and at! quictly vehind the pile of stones until the time some of the Lupo-Morellos,| they stopped in front of the building at who were {n cahoots with the Joe!No. 693, opposite the house where Cusano Bakers, tried to “lay out’ Cusano and! lived. The members of the revenging 19 prise-fighter cousin, gang evidently counted on the dancer's | coming out about 8 o'clock to pay @ call THE FLOWER” GETS CUSANO, | on “The Flowe: THE GALLANT, INTO TROUBLE, | They counted right. Cusano appeared ‘The wrath of the Lupo-Morello toughs | tp fae. Goorway an d started to came was increased when, at a subsequent! and Cusano, trving feebly. to tain “racket,” the nimble-footed Cusano ap- | run into the ho dead on peared with a black-eyed, t rin, W win, who ts Known as The Flower" up cover of the stone pile, back to th He and “The | ™ chargin, in the gas house quarter, Flower’ danced dizgily through varia- Bated intractoles of the “Mobi | amen and the “Reno wr: | “Joo browed swains of the Lupo-Morello gang | the he departing taxi, its who was atanding on promised Cusano that if he didn’t] house, . Kuen What chuck up “The Flower,” they would] tie! meant and started to run in the aiit him, jAirection of the flashes. ‘wo men i“ | passed him, both of wiom he rfeognlzed Rocky" evidently had some sand | ay iwembers of the Lupo-Mortilo gang, for last and his information on this score ts the above his shiny patent leathers, , te .apd “The Figwer" thing the detectives have to work nue hotel, where he took a room Tues day night, The police gained entrance to the room through a window from a porch roof. Meyer was found dead with a pistol wound in the head, A revolver was still clinched in hie rignt hand, In the room were found $1.16, a pair of antique gold earrings and an old silver watch and chain, Nothing 19 known here to his {entity othe: WASHINGTON, June 5.—Presijent Taft and Attorney-General Wickersham to-day ordered Federal officials # Seat- tle to grant @ new trial to Leonard Ol- son, whose citizenship papers were can- celled by Federal Judge Hanford at Se- Aitle, because Oleson Was @ Socialist, Represuntative Berger, the Wisconsin Boclalist, to-day prepared an impeach- ment Indictment against Hanford for presentation in the House to-morrow. Berger was closeted with the Presi. dent for an hour and later aad both| then thet he has conducted « baie Tart and the. Attorney-General’ wtec| in New York. He has been ta the city lutely repudiated Hanford's ruling and| only two days. An envelope bearing the will furnish all papers in the Govern-| printed address, -H. C. Myer Company, nent’s possession in connection with! 3 Leonard street, New York, was found the Hanford case, for any investigation | jm his pocket. jot the matter by the House, That Ola- eon had been done “ross Injustice” was stated by Attorney-General Wickersham in a letter to-day received by Berge OE ie a Special for Weduesday, 5th rae Wire oe 10€ WEDNESDAY’S OFFERING "HS ROR RES 25C ‘The Great aa Family Liniment Milk Chocolate Covered Assorted Nut Clusters with this vi te, all ted for thelr nu- antl Boe toy pains, (iitous ‘avalities, bunched. toxetner, tes th Nethp and covered with a generous thick me kesh hm mL: Y «Ps cl ie | | POUND BOX LD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1912. 10 ACH WIDOW) ‘Man of Mystery’ Took Fiaticee | DECAMPS WITH WEALTH | Pes Sor We Sree eee Ht —— oe COLUMBIA WAKE - ALOUD DEMAND FR FOOTBALL Six Hundred Graduates Cheer Twenty Minutes While Pres- ident Frowns. ‘There was a demorstration at the Alumn{ Lunetton of the Columbia Uni+ cersity this afternoon in favor of foot ball, which for ‘veveral years hag been excluded from the university's ath- letics. Led by two old stars of the gridiron, John Jerome Kelly the sir hundred gradu, ers of approval of the two ald stars led the cheering by outing: “We want fooiball! We want foot Nearly every | man ta th took up the cry with the ¢ | President Butler, who, responsible to } ting of the game, kept strictly | anc ta m any participation ration, The President | frowned and vcomed rather displeaved lat the outouret ofapproval of football. The domonstration lasted for twenty minutes. The band Joined In and ren- dered its share to tho gayety of the oc- casion, After the luncheon was over the grad- uates continued cheering for the rein- statement of the old game in the univer- sity for ten minutes, and many expressed the hope later that it might be rein- stalled among the college sports, i, President Butler announced a t to the University of $300,000. This announcement was greeted with cheers by the @ix hundred graduates present, who shouted and yelled their gpproval. President Butler explained that the gift came to the University under a pro- vision in the will of P. Furnald and will be used for the construction of a dormitory at One Hun- dred and Fourteenth street and Broad- way. new building will start to-morrow. Another announcement which ni y raised the roof and indicated the inter- est of the graduates in the athletic life of the university was made by the class of 1902, This class has pledged the sum of $4,000, which will be invested and, after the lapse of twenty-five years, will be turned over to the university, both principal and interest, for the develop- mont of sports end athletics in Colum- ja. es HOCKING VALLEY POOL CAUSES BIG LAW SUIT. As a result of @ secret investigation by the New York Stock Exchange a lawsuit that will Involve millions, grow- ing out of the old Hocking Valley pool, engineered by James R. Keene, was filed to-day in the Supreme Court, The plain- tiffs are Sidney S. Schuyler, John R. Chadwick, Charles I. Burnham, James W. Murphy and William F. Osborn who bring action as holders of voting trust certificates of the Hocking Valley Pro- ducts Company. They also sue in be- half of other holders of voting trust certificates. ‘The action is directed at the Hocking Valley Products Company, the Chartiers Oll Company, Nicholas Biddle, Justin Du Pratt White and Frank N. B, Close, vho are voting trustees of the Hocking Vatey Products Company. The complaint, which comprises one hundred typewritten pages, recites the history of the Hocking Valley pool and its crash and states that the Hocking Valley Products Company is an out- growth of the old pool holdin, ‘The complaint charges the voting trustees with collusion with the direc- tors and officers of the Chartiers Ot! Company in executing @ lease of its oll | and gas lands in Ohio, said to be worth | several millions, It {s charged that the defendants had no right to do this, The plaintiffs ask that the lease be cancelled and that an accounting of all the profits derived from the lease be made to the Court. The New York Stock Exchange hes been investigating this matter quiet); SHORT VAMP SHOES y Cuban and French Heels ALSO IN Colonial Buckskin, Canva AND ALL LEATHERS ALL $1463, FAIR PRICES, J. GLASSBERG, 2STORES pm Bd AWN. 10th Bt. San tw way Mlustrated catalogue d free, tio, “LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS, W8T-—bady's aed Ww and Hopkins send theket 67 Saal Gh Bast 184 h, between i reward; if pat fy. 26 wer ite long-haired dog; Halny ed, ne nner GEER Y (Trade surk.) Special for Thursday, 6th COMMSIATE HSE, Cua 10¢ ro iD LOX THURSDAY’S OFFERING L PS STYLE BUTTER 2%e Socata, POUNTS BOX Tho specified ol sieht dn each ‘the containe: instance in- r Before the outburst in favor of foot- | the late Francis Work on the excavations for this for several weeks. The matter was then placed in the hands of Attorney W. Benton Ciisp of No. 80 Broadway, who wht action. ROOSEVELT WINS IN SOUTH DAKOTA. | SIOUX FALLS, 8, D,, June 5.—With | returns far from complete, It appeared | to-day that Col. Roosevelt will have the entire delegation of South Dakota to the eepubtican National Convention. Only Ja small part of the State had been! | heard i, but the reports from seat tered sections gave the Colonel @ com: | |fortable matority. Estimates placed L Rocsevelt’s plurality at from 10,000 to 12,000. 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