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Al Capone — Part 35
Page 61
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‘3
T Their Importing business became a
. blind through which the materials |
or making mash could be pur
assed. . on
The pay’ (we find this over and
ver in tracing the history of the
prohibition era} was good. A betier
grade cooker could earn $80 to $100
a week.
The production end outgrew the
saies end of the Senna enterprise.
Ite leaders sold sore of the product
to Capone and Torrico, but not
enough. Hence they came to covet
the territory of Moran and O'Ban-
fon, which overlapped theirs in
spots,
A precarious peace had been
maintained, however, through the
efforts of Mike Merlo, head of the
Unicne Siciliano, Merlo was no
bootiegger or gangster; he was the
paternal arbiter of all the actions
of his countrymen on the near
north side. He had decreed that
there should be no warfare between
the Gennas and their rival bootleg-
gers, .
In mid-November of 1924 Mike
Merlo died. A magnificent funeral,
with a statue of him worked in
flowers to ride on a float behind the
herse, was arranged.
It was always a pleasant fiction
of the gang leaders that each had
a legitimate business. O'Banion, a
fjorid, roundfaced little fellow who
Vralked with a limp, was a florist
ind had a shop at 738 North State
jtreet, opposite the entrance toa the
Moly Name cathedral. The Merlo
funeral meant much business there.
O'Banion, who was not above
making an honest dollar, was in
that shop on Nov. 19 when three
men of dark complexion entered, He
dropped his rose trimming and went
Pped PUSS LNT Bits Wet
forward to meet the delegation.
“Hello, boys,” he said, extending
his right hand to the man in the
center, “You from Mike Merlo’s?”
“Yes,” replied the man, selzing
the hand in both of his.
While he held it in a viselike grip
one of the other strangers deliber-
ately fired six bullets inte the body
of O’Banion. He fell dead in a
bower of flowers. The killers went
away.
ma
The O’Banion killing and its aft-
ermath gave the first inkling, to the
general public, of the power that
the gangs had achieved in darkness.
The funeral of the bootlegger florist
was one of the most magnificent
ever held in the city. The coffin
reputedly cost $15,000,
But O'Banion did not go un-
avenged. His associates were quite
tough ennugh to handle the Gennas.
It was onty a little while’ until
three of the brothers—Tony, Mike,
and Angelo—were slain. The others
followed Torrio into obscurity.
Into thelr territory, without much
trouble, stepped Capone, His genius
“for orgenizaties.uas far beyond
-that of the Gennas. He established
big distilleries that could turn out
thousands .cf galians -of -alcohol
daily. It waa impossible, of course,
to-keep these hidden indefinitly, but
arithmetic showed that one which
stayed at work six weeka paid for
itself and thereafter returned a
handsome profit. Raids, then, were
only annoying, not damaging to a
great extent.
He established breweries and
made working agreements with the
brewmakers already supplying the
trade. He atrengthened his sales or-
ganization and gave it twin objec-
tives; to deliver the goods and to
see that rival wholesalers stayed
away from the saloons.
Also, Capone lifted the art of pro-
tection to new heights. It became
understood just how much tribute
a truckload of beer or a five gallon
can of alechol should pay the po-
licemen and the politicians. Some
times the police looked the other
way; sometimes they convoyed the
deliv@ry trucks to destination.
aS
The rules of the game prescribed
that the driver must follow his
specified route. If he failed a po
jiceman not aiready “taken care
of” would arrest him and take him
to a station. Once it had reached
that point and the capture had been
reported In the newspapers, no one
would dare turn the truck and its
cargo back.
Capone had able fixers. One was
Joe Fusco, who had in the old days
outranked Capone in the Torrio or-
ganization, Another wag Dennis
Cooney, who acquired and still en-
joys a fortune ectimated in tha mil.
SB LCPOUNS SStmietet iff tos Tihs
lions, which he gathered in the con-
duct of houses of prostitution. He
had the ear of the higher ups of
politics,
Also, Capone had able allies out-
side the Chicage area. There was
always a market here for better
beverages than the home bathtub
créws and the six-weeks stills could
turn out. Through Frank Uale, a
Brooklyn gangster, Capone was able
to bring in cargoes of imported
Scotch for the limousine trade.
In another way the Uale alliance
was valuable. He and Capone could,
at need, exchange crews of gunmen
to handle each other’s enforcement
work. Obviously, it was an advan-
tage to have killings done by men
who would not be recognized away
from thelr home towns.
Killers, guards, business men, fix-
ers, allies, political friends, huge
revenues—all these Capone had in
plenty before the summer of 1926
ended. He had gathered them with
a minimum of personal publicity,
Still left to oppose him and his
achemes was the north side gang,
headed by Earl (Hymie) Weiss
and George (Bugs) Moran. Its
_members were “were individualists, and.
consequently their setup ooreet.
from that cf Capone, They orgar
ized on tribal lines.- They migit.
gather for a battle, but it waa di§-
cult to hold them -tegether for
campaign, Capone Was organized
for the long pull. His men were as
solidiy combined as a burocracy and
could be trusted to carry on over &
period of months, or even years,
‘A desperate attempt to kill Ca-
pone was attributed to the cockiness
of the north siders, He was at-
tacked Sept, 20, 1926, In his retreat
at the Hawthorne hotel (this waz
before the metal shutters were put
up).
Eight carloads of gunmen drove
slowly past this hotel, The first one
let go a random blast of fire in the
street. The supposition was that
Capone and his men would hasten
to the windows to see what was
going on, and that the volleys from
the succeeding cars would wipe
them out.
The tactics were carried out ex-
actly. Into the first floor of the
hotel more than a thousand bullets
were poured. Yet no Capone gang-
ster was scratched. That was be-
cause Capone thought fast and gave
a warning when the first shots were
haar
“Down to the floor, everybody! ”
he cried,
The bullets zipped through the
windows, but the masonry saved tie
men on the floor, When ft was yll
over Capone arose from his prone
position.
“That's the last we'll take from
that mob,” he announced.
On Oct. 5 a young man who said
his name was Oscar Lundin rented
a room at 740 North State street,
Next door was the old O'Banion
place, still a flower shop and still
the headquarters of the north side
mob. On the same day a young
woman rented a room in the rear of
6 West Superior street. It over-
jooked the rear of the florist shop,
as the young man’s overlooked the
front.
In each of these rooms three men
planted themselves. From behind
the curtains they watched the move
ments of Moran, Weiss, and their
cohorts. As they watched they fin-
gered their submachine guns. Their
orders were to make sure of their
quarry—and they did not fail.
On Oct, Il a car belonging to
Weiss halted in front of the shop.
In it were W. W. O'Brien, well
known as a criminal lawyer; Ben-
Jamin Jacobs, a 20th ward politt-
cian; Patrick Murray, a beer ped-
dier; Weiss, and his chauffer, Sam
Peller
As they were getting out of mt
car there was a burst of machin/:-
gun fire from the window next dooj.
Weiss, struck ten times, died in-
atantly. Murray also was slain on
the spot. The others were seriously
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