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| - Spector Hughes refused to say whether this man was in custody, though | was about to sit down a man not known to the friends about him tappc SiaNG Wvoauw ’ e@vmsRwme,, VVased “THEY LL KILL ME, ” GAMBLER TOLD WHI TMAN Zag was released on bail after a murderous gunfight on the Criminal Courts steps a few wecks ago, loaded with a band of desperadoes who were evidently sent to kill anybody that tried to “get” Zelig. The po- lice drove the automobile away that time before there was bloodshed. CHAUFFEUR ARRESTED, GAMBLERS SOUGHT. Zelig's bondsman, and his good friend alw is Sam Paul. Rosen- thal’s attack on the connection which he said existed between gamblers and the police made specitic mention of Sam Paul's place, which is in the old Sans Souci Music Hall, Third avenue and Thirteenth street. financial backer is reputed to be a politician of great power, who is di- rectly at odds with what is known among sporting men as the “Sullivan, crowd” —made up of men who, like Rosenthal, have always sought the friendship of the Sullivan clan and have fought for its political advance- ment. | A friend of the murdered man called on District Attorney Whitman | this afternoon, bringing with him a scared and reluctant man, whose | name was withheld from publication. This man said he had gone on an outing of the Sam Paul Associae | tion to Northport, Long Island, last Sunday. He had watched a poker game in which men known to him as Dollar John, Bridgey Webber and Jack Rose were playing with four other men whose names he did not know. They were discussing Rosenthal’s so-called “squeal.” “Don’t bother about him,” the witness quoted one of the players— not necessarily one of those named—as saying. “If he doesn’t quit within the next few days we'll get ‘nim and get him for keeps.” There are several men named Jack Rose in sporting circles on the east side. By a strange coincidence Jack Rose is also the name of the closest friend of Lieut. Charles Becker outside the Police Department. There were reports sent out a little before 4 o'clock this afternoon that the police were on the verge of making three new arrests and had every reason to believe that they would know all about the murder of Rosenthal before sunset to-morrow. Within three hours after Rosenthal was shot to death three men were in custody. Louis Libby, part owner of a garage at No. 72 Washington Square South, was focked up at Police Headquarters. The police are satisfied that the automobile which took the murderers to the Metropole was his and «was driven by him, They say they have men who will swear that Libby is one of those who shot Rosenthal down. He is a square, thick- set youth, lew of brow and with a thrust-out chin, who is a frequenter ot the Second avenue cafes. Libby is charged with murder. He was caught at his lodgings, No. 35 Stuyvesant street. A man whose identity the police tried to hide under the name of John Doe, but who is known among gamblers as John Ross, or Clark, a or Wood or Koch, was arrested by Deputy Commissioner Dougherty as he was about to enter a Forty-fourth street gambling ‘nouse, just be- fore daylight. He was ostensibly ‘detained as a witness.” The police say that he was in and about the hotel just before the shooting and that they believe he knows much that will nelp them put their hands on the whole band of assassins, LIBBY’S GARAGE PARTNER ALSO ARRESTED. William Shapiro, the partner of Libby in the garage and automobile business, with whom he shared. rooms, ts ‘held, like “John Doe,” as a material witness. According to the police, Shapiro is likely to know as much as Libby about. the personnel of the band of murderers. The police assert positively that the gray automobile used by Rosenthal’s assassins has figured before in crimes committed by east side desperadoes. ~ When Inspector Hughes was asked, a little before noon to-day, if the police had talked with Paul, he said: “{ shall lot say whether we have tried to find Sam Paul or not, but 1 will say that he is not in custody.” Though Mrs. Rosenthal told District-Attorney Whitman, who began an investigation of the murder in person at 6 o'clock this morning, that her husband never owned a revolver and would not carry one, the police Teported at noon that one had been found in his pocket. in her statement to the District-Attorney, Mrs. Rosenthal men- tioned a former theatrical man and close companion of her husband. In- there were rumors in the White Light District that he had been arrested with the witness “John Doe” by Deputy Dougherty. SUSPECT HELD AFTER DENIAL OF ACT. Libby was taken before District-Attorney Whitman at noon by In- @pector Hughes and Deputy Commissioner Dougherty, who had brought Bim down from Police Headquarters in an automobile. After half an hour's talk with the District-attorney, Libby denied that he had been in the big gray car last night. “Shapiro had the car last night,” he said, “1 was not in it.” “Do you mean that?” asked the District-Attorney sharply. Libby shifted about « little, and then said he wouldn't talk any more until he had seen a lawyer. He was taken across the street to Coroner Peinderg and waived any protest against being remanded to Polico Head- Quarters for twenty-four hours, Notwithstanding bis denial that he was in the car, the police have been told that Shapiro and Libby both appeared at the garage in South Wash- ington Square at about 2.30 o'clock this morning, and left the car, saying that 1f anybody asked when the car had come in he was to be told that Libby and Shapiro had been at Couey Island with the car and had come in between 11 o'clock and midnight. Shapiro stuck to this story when he was arrested. The position of Lieut. Becker, against whom most serious charges ‘were made, was @ topic for much speculation amony policomen and gam- blers to-day. It was announced for Police Commissioner Waldo that} Becker would not be disturbed in his present assignment unless the Districi-| Attorney asked for such a change. The whole gambling situation has been turned over to the District-Attorney by the Commissioner. If no criminal prosecution is made out against any officer of the Police Department there! will be @ second investigation by the Commiss{oner, and then, it charges | Paul's | \lers, There were men here to see him “KNEW HE'D BE MURDERED,” HEARTBROKEN WIFE'S CRY Mrs. Rosenthal, Slain Man’s Widow, Tells Story of Her Husband’s Last Moments With Her—Declares His Death Not Due to Any War Among Gamblers. Broken-hearted at the tragic death of her husband, the widow of Rosenthal sat to-day in the house of mourning, which had been Rosen- | thal’s gambling house till the police suppressed it, waiting for news of the arrest of the gambler’s slayers, When an Evening World reporter was admitted to the home in West Forty-fifth street, Mrs. Rosenthal herself opened the lower door, At the same moment a policeman in uniform rang the bell of the upper door, which had been the entrance of the gambling house, and told the police sentry on duty in the hall that he could report back to the station. Mrs, Rosenthal heard this message: Sam Bernard's brother, and one of Her- “The captain eays for you to report)/Mman’s friends. They had just left pack to the house, There's no use in} you"—indicating the reporter—"in front keeping a man here any more.” of the New York Theatre. And rignt The widow threw out her hands/here in this room Dick told Herman dramatically, he better go away for a few days, “There he goes!" she “Herman told Dick just what he throwing herself in a he had told you a few minutes before: “My Herman 19 dead. ‘I shall not leave New York for any- hated him has his wish. The oppression | body, This 1s my home and I do not can cease now.” mean to be driven out of it by cny WIFE DECLARED THAT GAMB.|man's threats. : * later last night at 9 o'clock he LERS WEREN'T WORRIED. Dewan to set nervous and sald he was “I have just said to District-Attorney | going around the corner, I begged him Whitman and I say to you that the|to stay in. I told him they might kill murder is not due to any war he may bim; that I had @ feelin; was gol: have had in the past with other gamb-/to be murdered. , sige: exclaimed, “Don't you worry, dear,’ he all day yesterday. Some wero friends who came to advise him to get out of town. Others were wanted to know how go in hin testimony. To sald that the last man in New York any one can kill right now..’ MRS. ROSENTHAL ANXIOUS ALL NIGHT LONG. gamblers all under- it long until 2.30 o'clock. not worrying. And then when I saw !t was not Her- lerman came home at 4 o'clock! man at the door, I jerday afternoon with Dick Bernard,! him, They said was sick, I told —---—_— ——— — ———— a handkerchief in the other, hurried out to the street. On the very steps of the hotel, five men, all young, all wearing clothes of the latest Broadway cut, closed in about lim, put revolvers at his head, and while he stood staring at them, speechless with horror, shot him to death. His body slumped to the sidewalk and lay there with tho hat still in one hand and the handkerchief in the other. ‘ The five murderers ran swiftly up the street to a gray automobile! which was waiting for them with open doors and throbbing engine. They | chased them in a tnxicab, but lost all trace of them at Madison avenue and Fifty-elghth strect. Within two hours the car in which they had escaped had been traced by ite Hcense number to a garage at No. 72 Washington square South, It was there that Montani, the owner and drivor of the taxicab used in the $25,000 banknote robbery, last spring, kept his cabs. Louis Libby th rested, Later, he was !dentified as onc of the men who had shot Rosenthal, His home is at No, 35 Stuyvesant street. He had a stand near the Cafe Boulevard, in Second avenue, a neighborhood {n which has centered the bat- tle between Rosenthal and his fellow gamblers and the police. The police profess to know that Libby's car was hired by Rosenthal’s murderers last uight in front of the Cafe Boulevard. But certain it {s that Little Vionna—Second avenue from Fourteenth strect to Houston—talked of but little else than Rosenthal’s fight with the police last night. He had a few friends in the chattering groups over the cafe tables. He was spoken of as one who had struck a blow at the main means of making a living of many of the people along Second avenue. “LITTLE VIENNA” NOT DAZED BY TRAGEDY. A little group in the Vienna Restaurant, nearly opposite the old Hesper Club, which was a slight cloak for Rosenthal's gambling enterprises for many years, talked so loudly that they were frequently warned by others to lower their voices. “They'll get him. Don’t worry, they'll get him!” was the burden of their talk about Rosenthal. At five minutes pest 2 o'clock this morning, not ten minutes after Rosen- thal had been shot down, a youth in his shirt sleeves ran in, shouting to this group: “They got him all right! They got him. He ts de The group hastily rose, knocking over some of their chairs, and rushed out into the street, Herman Rosenthal iMved at No. 104 West Forty-fifth street. He had living rooms in the basement and at the top of the house, With him lived his wife, who was formerly the wife of bam Harris, the theatrical manager, and @ brother, who s an interpreter In the Criminal Courts. The middle part of the house is a gambling house, but has not deem used for several | months since Lieut. Becker, who was accused by Rosenthal on Saturday of having been his silent partner, raided the place and stationed a policeman on guard in the hallway, Rosenthal, with his nightly professional occupation gone, became a fre- quenter of the new Hotel Metropole, which was established by the Consl- dines, but has been for several weeks in the hands of a receiver. He usually sat In the cafe at a side table, Sometimes he had men with him, especially in the last few nights, with whom he held whispered conversations, Rosenthal left his home at nine o'clock last night, in spite of the protests of | his wife that she had a premonition that he would be murdered If he went*gn the rtreets, Meesages had been recelved at his house over the teleprone dnd against a policeman are proved, the offender will be dropped from the| from men who catled in person to tell him that his fe had been in danger since Saturda ve every minute. department. Men who were about the Metropole between 1 and 2 o'clock this morning, remembered today that there seemed to be trouble in the air, One man who was passing the hotel at 1 o'clock noticed three different groups ot ten banging back near the entrance talking in low tones. A man from! one of the groups walked over and stared this man in the face with a scowl | when he paused to take a second look at the furtive consultations, There | are usually a lot of taxicabs crowded along the curb in front of the Metro-| pole unti) he gray of dawn. There were none there between 1 and 2 this werning. ' ROSENTHAL ANSWERED CALL HE EXPECTED. Herman Rosenthal, with that nervousness which is but natural in a man who had been warned twonty times within a day that he was doomed | to die within a few hours, sat with a group of friends in the restaurant talking over his troubles, Ho told them he was expecting to be called by a| friend. He left the group once and went out, Then he returned, and as he him on the shoulder und said: “Somebody wants to sce you outside.” The call bad come, Herman Roveathin), \6! 11s i: Bot ty ome band and veran, the night clerk, a twht Hcense and 4 Waiter Smith conduct him to Ronenthal enti and cafe bout one o'clock, Metropo'e for an hour before he was killed, Among them were Chariie O'Day, Judge Crowley, Sandy Ciemmons and a man named MoMahon, O'Day said to-day that before Rosenthal sat with him and two others he had seen Rosenthal roving among the tables, apparently not quite master of | himself, obviously nervous and pale, trying to get @ smile or an encouraging | word from members of the sporting community who were sitting there. He bad many rebuffs, When he dropped into @ chair with O'Day and the rest, he aid to O'Da: “Charley, you know T am no squealer, don't you?’ | "I am not Interested, Herman," O'Day eald he replied. not in the gambling game, Let's talk about something els i Rorenthal eat with them moodtly for some time, O'Day sald, now and then rying to break Into the conversation and getting little encouragement, At a | quarter before two o'clock he went out and came back with copies of the early | newspapers and urted himself in them, reading accounts of his campaign t Recker, While he was thus engaged @ man whom Kosenthal » nenize came In, ve Kot somebody outside that wants to see you, Herman,” sald t | Rosenthal ‘hurried out, his hat in one hand and ndkereMef trailing in the other, The persons in the cafe paid litle attention; they could not remember easily outdistanced Detective Frye and Policemen Madigan and File, who| owner and driver of the gray car which the detectives had traced, was ar- | “But I knew better than he did. 1/H Gray Auto Used by Assassins in Escape After Shooting of myself and will be back at 2 o'clock.” WAS GOING WITH HUSBAND TO WHITMAN. Mrs. Rosenthal sat by the window as she talked. Every little while her voice seemed to become mechanical as she drifted in @ monotone through her tragic story. Though her face was swollen with erying falilng in loose strands about he: ders hor face of the striking beauty which had made it noted wherever she and her husband were seen In Broadway restaurants, “I know the names of the men who would have to Mr. Whitman to tell of paying money to the police. I know the gambling situation as Her- man did. I was gol man with him to-day, “Poor Herman! He never fought back. Even when they came here and blew up our front steps with a bomb he would not carry a revolver. He AUTO USED BY THESASSASSINS them not to lle to me. Then they sald he had been shot, ‘But there was one bi when my Herman w thought he was the only one who knew | the things he was to tell the Grand Jury | found @ revolver in the dead man's to-day, They did not know that I had| Pocket. Her friends say that he prob- all his confidence, knew everything that |®¥ly kept his possession of it a et he knew and knew the books of the ‘"0™m her to save her from worry. rday people stood before business. I shall stay right here. I am| went oni. “atl calene at Mr. Whitman's disposal, I shall live| nd pointed at the in this house until the three-year lease they were telling expires,” | Herman Rosenthal lived Rosenthal left nis home at No, 194! here and that the police were keeping a West Forty-fifth street at 9 o'clock|man in uniform in the front hall so last night to go to the Metropole Hotel, that he could not do business, though wife rays she begged him not to that she had a presentiment somethi: ‘would happen to him, | ‘Then every little while somebody “It I'm going to get It I'll get !t some | would call to ask {f Herman knew that time," she says he replied. “They can t| there were men out to ‘xet him’ and ad- do me any harm; I'm able to take care! viaing him to go out of town. | we have one of the things in the house.” Mrs. Rosenthal did not know at this to-day whether the man who called Rosenthal went out first or second. A moment later came the sharp cracking of revolvers in the etreet. of the hotel was about half filled. Among the persons who were in the con- fusion which filled the place as word went from mouth to mouth that aman had been murdered were Charles Ross, the actor; George Weeks, Lee Harrison, | John Hyams and his wife, Lelia MeInty nd former Detective Willlam Fil n plain policeman. File was off duty; it was he who took the lead in the chase for the derers. File, who w: the corridor of the restaurant when Rosenthal went. out to. his death, told Inspector Hughes that from the revolver flashes which he saw, at least one man was hiding Lehind @ tub of artificial shrubbery at the side! jof the door. This man, File thought at tho,timg, fired five shots, Tle dashed jout to the street, he said. The man from behind the bush was almost at the Butomobile. Tho others were already in it. Coroner's Physician Schulte made an autopsy on Rosenthal's body this after- noon, He found that only two bullets had struck the gambler, One entered his cheek, p: through the root of the tongue and lodged in the spine. The other had been fired into the centre of the gambler's head, either as he fell or as ha lay on the ground. Powder marks showed that the revolver had been held against the scalp when this bullet was fired. ASSASSINS CAME IN AUTO, STOPPED NEARBY. This 1s what happened just before Herman Rosenthal appeared on the steps of the hotel and lcoked up and down the street looking for the man he was to} meet, as told by Charles E. Gallegher, an actor, and Clark Conte of the Elks! ‘The gray touring car with lx men in it, four in the tonneau and the driver and another man tn front, rolled past the Hote! Metropole and pulled up a hun- dred feet or more tu the east and on the other side of the street. The driv and the four men tn the tonneau got out, two on one side and three on the other, The man on the scat next to the whee] remained with the car, The engine was kept in action. ‘The two men who got out on the left side of the car crossed the street and walked back toward the Metropole slowly. The other three walked back a Mttle faster on the other side of the street, and then crossed, so that all five the hotel door, Almost at the same instant Rosenthal appeared. They up close to him, their revolvers at his head and four of them aRonally across eot to the automobile. A slim, keen cyed, dark main with eyes like a hawk, dressed tn a od blue serge ult and with a black slouch hat pulled down over 1 Mngcred for & moment peering down at the dead gambler's fa though to be sure that the bullets had really killed Then he ran swiftly after the others. When he reached the car it was already moving and when ie *prang to the running board it was off with a bound. He climbed into the tonneau as it swerved into Tifth avenue, Police Lieut. Edward Frye was at Forty-third street and Seventh avenue, Policeman Thomas Brady at Forty-third street and Broadway and Policeman Tom Madigan at Forty-fourth street and Broadway, Former Detective Fyles, now a policeman, had been eating with two men in the hotel and was coming out when the shooting took , Fyles shouted to John Horan, chauffeur of a taxicab, and In a moment Lieut. Frye and Policeman Fyles and Madigan were speeding after the flying touring car, This ts belleved to have been responsible for the report that one or more of the men who did the shooting wore a policeman’s uniform. They left Police- man Brady to guard the body, which was already surrounded by a large and excited crowd, including many women in evening dress who had been to after theatre suppers. The gray car shot round into Fifth avenue before the taxicab had a good start, The pursuers learned from W. 8. Wells, a milkman of No, 86 Fulton stieet, Brooklyn, that the touring car with the assassins had turned into Forty- sixth street and had gone east. The taxicab followed, and it was learned from citizen that ft had turned into Madison avenue at Forty-sixth street, and had fone north. The policemen kept up the chase to Fifty-elghth street and could we. no further trace of the gray car, GREAT CROWD SURROUNDS BODY. By the time they got back to the Metropole there was a crowd of 3,000 or more persons. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, 443.40 Sands Hook ....++ Gorervor's Island | Special for Tuesday, the 16th WEAN HAR BEHIY, foros ¥ € ‘KISS 10¢ BOX ate Milk Choco! ale Covered Peppermints A cream centre with a perfect pep- refreshing rong these hot days is LIPTON’S permint flavor, given rare do- Helousness by @ coating of owe Prem- HOT OR ICED. ate, A real soother, Ic to Mr, ‘Wait. | such a man that he would not! time that the police sald they had| . | everybody else In the block could do} business—and they were laughing at us.) The cafe! Rosenthal's body was lying where it fell, covered with a table- | clath, The Tenderloin was pouring ita motley crowd Into Forty-third street a@ the rate of IMevery minute. Guests came flocking from. all the hotels in the neighvorhool and the reserves of the West Forty-seventh street station, unable to cope with them, sent a hurry call for the reserves of the West Thirty-seventh street stu Almont immediately after the crowd gathered ubout Rosenthal's body the word was passed around: “It's Rosenthal, who turned up the gamblers.” Jake Berger and Mr. and Mrs, John Reisler, friends of the Rosenthals, hur- | rled around to Mra. Sadie Rosenthal, who was up waiting for her husband to return to thelr home, No, 10 West Forty-ffth street. “What's happened?" arked Mra, R hal when she opened the door to her friends, Then she quickly added jerman’s shot, I knew it. He's dead!" She fell over in a faint. When she had been revived she told about trying to persuade her husband to stay at home. District-Attorney Whitman was told over the telephone about the murder & short time after it oceurred and hurried from his home, No, 37 Madison aves nue, In a little while assistants, stenographers and others he had hastily mmoned by phone joined him at the West Forty-seventh street police star n, where he had an examination under way and was hearing witnesses at .80 o'clock this morning. Shortly after the District-Attorney arrived, Deputy Police Commiestoner {Dougherty and Inspector Hughes reached the station to assist In the inquiry. | Later the District-Attorney with a stenographer went to the Rosenthal home and found Mrs. Rosenthal able to give him all the information she had despite “| her excited condition, Jim Considine, brother of the proprietor of the Metropole, who was said Co have seen the shooting and given a description of it, in which he was quoted as enying he believed one of the stayers wore a uniform, this afternoon dented that he had been present at the scene. He was at a friend's place across Longacre Square when the shooting occurred. Lieut. Frye was within fifty feet of the hotel. He sald () Rosenthal come from the hotel; nor cid he pay any @ as it came from across the street. “The firet I knew of the shooting was when the shots be it he did not notice tlon to the automobile n to sound,” he said, “Tran in the direction of the hotel, but the automobile apparently did not stop moving. The men got from it, ond after Rosenthal foil they leaped back into the car and the machine went toward Fifth avenue with such speod that tt ‘was imposelble for me to see what sort of car It was or to make out the number, “I eent for an ambulance from Mower Hospitat. that Rosenthal was killed instantly.” The ambulance surgeon satd y cut and ed interna was injured a internally._No PIMPLES GAME ON HANDS AND FACE Red and Came Into Very Large gads. Face Itched. Unsightly. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment, Now Face and Hands Are Just As \f Never Had Pimples, —_-——. 1624 Anna St., Elizabeth, N. J.—“T noticed some pimples on my bands and face They came out scattered. They were very red and came into very largo heads. They mado my face iteb. I began to scratch thom and they got worse and worse. They ‘were unsightly. I asked the people around if they knew of anything that would cure them, They told me it was eczema and to 800 the doctor, but I did not want to. 5 aw the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint- ment advertised eo I sent for free samples and they helped me. When they were gone 1 bought some moro and I used them for three weeks and my face and hands got better. Now my faco and bands are just es if I pever had pimples." (Signed) Miss Anna Martinek, Dec. 15, 1911. A generation of mothers has found no soap 80 well suited for cleansing and purifying the skin and hair of infants and children ee Cuticura Soap. Its absolute purity and re freshing fragrance alone are enough tof recomménd {t above ordinary skin soaps, but there ts added to theeo qualities delicate yet effective emollient proportion, derived from Cuticura Ointment, which render it most valuable in overcoming a tendancy to distressing eruptions and promoting @ nore mal condition of skin and hair health. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment asp sold everywhere. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-). book ou the skin and scalp. Address post<erd “Cuticurs, Dept. 'T, Boston." 4@-Tonder-faced men should use Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick, 25°. Sample free. GENUINE ROSENTHAL NAMED PAUL’S PLACE AS ONE BIG PROTECTED DEN. 1}, This ts the statement made by Informer Herman Rosenthal on Sat \Qurday which stirred the wrath of the east side gamblers, and espe- cially that ‘of Sam Paul, against him; Sam Paul w the only man directly indicated as mbler under police protection Rosenthal's whole statement: “There is one place near Thir- | teenth street and Third avenue that used to be a music hall. It | was raided last Saturday, and 3 | | on Monday it was in fall swing } { i he algo was. injured No arrests were male. Ver egain, You can go down there any afternoon and find 600 men | playing crap and stuse. One of ‘the proprietors is an Bast Side |} politician. 3¢ % can get to Com- missioner Waldo you can bet Tl make some startling dis- closures.” ' pica aca AMBULANCE OVERTURNED BY CAR; SURGEON HURT) A_Lincoln Hosp! ambulance driven |by Harry Spencer and in charxe of In- terne Edward Preasiey was bumped into and overturned by @ One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street cross-town trotey car at St, Ann's avenue and One Hun- nd Thirty-elghth street, the Bronx, . Both Spencer and Pressley were }serously injured and were taken back to the hospital in another automobile ambulance. The wrecked amiulance was an elec- |tric _vehtcle and was speeding to a call at One Hundred and Thirty-third street and ‘Third avenue. ‘The car was coming around the corner of St. 4 into One Hundred and Thirty street, and the driver of the lexpected the motorman to stop at the corner, Instead the car apun round the curve full tit and struck the ambulance bow on, The lighter veh‘ was toppled over and the driver was pinned In his Dr. Pressley fell under one of the Both were wnconaclous when dragged out. 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