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Morgan to Aid in Chase of Men Who Killed Rosenthal
AFTER "HIGHER-UP” POLICE
Gangster Implicated by Gossip
Surrenders Himself Volun
tarily to Police.
XEW YORK, July 23.—Just a week
ago today Herman Rosenthal, a gam
bler vbo had charged the police with
levying tribute upon lawbreakers, was
s ' ni ,t to death in front of the Metropole
hotel, but his actual slayers are still at
large, though a number of policemen
w , re only a short distance away at the
time. The belief is generally growing
that the actual assassins will never be
captured unless run down by private
endeavor.
That private help will be given Dis
trict Attorney Whitman became known
today. J. P- Morgafi and other mil
lionaires have pledged aid in running
down the slayers to preserve law.
There was another arrest in the case
today, but it was made only when a
man whom the police had confessed
themselves unable to find surrendered
himself. The latest prisoner is Harry
Vallon. who has been frequently men
tioned as a member of the gambling
coterie that Rosenthal bad embittered
by his revelations.
He drove up to police headquarters
at 1 o'clock this morning and gave
his name to the lieutenant and was
escorted to the Mulberry street police
station. There he was booked as “Har
r - Vallon. 35 years old, clerk —suspi-
cious person."
Whitman Hot After Police.
p strict Attorney Whitman today said
when asked if he would permit any of
the Rosenthal murder conspirators to
escap, by testifying before the grand
jury:
"I will protect as far as my power
goes every man in this case if I can
get the evidence I want against police
men. evidence I know exists. I will let
Shapiro and Libby and Bridgie Webber
and Sam Paul and Jack Rose himself
turn state's witnesses if I can get the
police conspirators.
•There are bigger men than Becker
In this c. sc. and I want them. What
has the police department, except
•Doughertv. done? Nothing. They are
not doing anything now. Dougherty is
honest and on the level, but can he
swing this thing alone?
“The murder smells of police conni
vance For an hour before Rosenthal
was shot preparations were being made
in Forty-third street for the murder.
There were fifteen or sixteen men in it
at the very least. The street was kept
clear of taxicabs.
"Rosenthal was watched. The de
tails were worked out in plain sight.
Rut the police were blind. After the
killing there was plenty of time to get
the murderers. It was a leisurely job.
Rut the police did not hurry any. What
did they do about getting evidence
then" Nothing. The only man they
held was young Gallagher, who gave
the correct automobile number after
half a dozen policemen had reported
incorrect ntimbers. And they locked
Gallagher up. In any other murder they
would have scurried around and ar
res* cd everybody in sight.
Dougherty knows the police are
hath of It. and that it was to the ad
vantage of certain policemen that Ro
senthal be murdered.”
Widow Before Grand Jury.
Shaking with sobs but nevertheless
declaring she would get revenge for the
death of her husband, the assassinated
gambler, Mrs. Lillian Rosenthal was
aken before the graftd jury today. She
was the confidante of her husband and
through her testimony District Attor
ney Whitman expects to obtain cor
roboration of the charges that the po
lice levied tribute oil gambling.
Along this line he sought information
nn the following:
The various dinner parties which she
attended together with Rosenthal, Lieu
tenant and Mrs. Becker and others.
Whether Jack Rose was placed in
Rosenthal's gambling house by Becker
to tally the receipts and see that he
received his full share of the profits.
The conversations she overheard and
those in which she participated between
Rosenthal and Becker and between
Rosenthal and others which had direct
bearing on the case.
The various warnings received from
Rose and others that unless Rosenthal
left town he would be killed.
Telephone messages received from
Res., immediately before the tragedy in
"hi.h he intimated that Rosenthal was
marked for death.
The raids on Rosenthal's gambling
houses and the insistence by Becker,
on one of these occasions, to look up
Rosenthal's nephew, who was found in
the house but who was in no way con
f"'ted with the gambling operations.
The debt owed by Rosenthal to Beck
<nd the agreement which caused Its
cancellation.
Habeas Corpus Hearing Goes Over,
Ihe hearing before Judge Leonard
A . Giegerich. of the supreme court, oq
the application for a writ of habeas
corpus for Sam Paul and Louis Web
hi'r f< the murder of Rosenthal was
continued today until 10:30 tomorrow
morning Application for the continu
um > was made by Assistant District
Attorney Robert Johnstone, who ex
plained that the stenographic notes on
*hr application had not been trans
• Attorney Harford T. Marshall,
'rpresi nting Paul and Webber, agreed
,n 'he continuance.
SUNDAY SCHOOLS ORGANIZE.
KASTMAN, GA.. July 23.—D. W.
' "mis. (? f Atlanta, general secretary
‘T h'' Georgia Sun lay School associa
was the thief speaker at the or-
S' t .zation of the Dodge County Sun-
School association. O. R. Bennett,
•he Baptist Sunday school. was
’ ‘T president, and George T. Mr
"f the Methodist Sunday school,
" M named secretary and treasurer.
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Mrs. Lillian Rosenthal, wife of Herman Rosenthal, the gamb
ling king, slain in New York as result of threatened “squealing.”
PEACE IN ATLANTA’S
BULL MOOSE CAMP;
DELEGATES NAMED
Grim-visaged war hath smoothed its
wrinkled front almost, anyway in the
ranks of the Georgia “bull moose” party.
Atlanta bull moosers of various persua
sions- 57 of them met at me Aratgon
hotel last night, and resolved: first, to quit
rowing among themselves; second, to go
after the common enemy.
To that end a number of gentlemen
present made ringing speeches eulogizing
Theodore Roosevelt, and predicting that
he surely will be elected president in No
vember.
Bernard Suttler called last night's
meeting to order and V. C. Terry was
elected chairman, and A. M. Crosby
secretary. The gathering elected six
delegates to the forthcoming state con
vention of bull moosers in Atlanta, as
follows: C. W. McClure. Robert L.
Rodgers. Victor C. Terry. Samuel .1, Jones,
J. F. Race and Horace Grant.
The meeting resolved many more or
less Important things with respect to po
litical-conditions, national and state, and
resolved particularly never to fraternize
with the negro.
Samuel J. Jones and A M. Crosby were
elected from the Fifth district to the na
tional bull moose convention in Chicago
next month.
GIRL IS GIVEN ONLY $lO
AS BALM FOR HEART
CHICAGO. July 23fl The modest sum
of $lO was all that Miss Konda Go
wacka asked as balm for a broken
heart when she filed a suit for breach
of promise against Adam Zakwij. The
man who was to have been her hus
band failed to appear on the day set for
the wedding, and, as Miss Gowacka had
spent a considerable sum as well as
devoted much of her time to courting
previous to the wedding, she presented
a bill.
The $lO asked for one broken heart
on the bill, which in all amounted to
$751.50. was the last item entered. The
other items included 92 days of court
ing at $5 each: a wedding supper which
had been ordered. SIOO. and a trous
seau, $175. She brought suit for $1,000;
hut the Jury awarded her only the
amount of the itemized bill.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY. JULY 23. 1912.
CRAZED BY CAMORRA
TALES, ITALIAN RUNS
AMUCK, KILLING FOUR
ROME, July 23.—Crazed by reading
accounts of the Camorra trial at Vi
terbo, a young banker's clerk named
Sabatino ran amuck today in the town
of Rajano and killed four persons be
fore gendarmes finally shot him down.
Sabatino rushed into a room in his
home, where his wife and three children
were, and. shrieking In maniacal fury,
began firing at them with a revolver.
His brother ran into the room and was
immediately shot dead. Then the ma
niac's mother-in-law ran to the rescue
of her daughter and grandchildren and
was in turn shot down. The next vic
tim was the father of the demented
man, who was killed as soon as he en
tered the room. The wife and children
escaped the shots fired at them. Saba
tino Reloaded his weapon and rushed
into the street, firing at every person he
saw. Four gendarmes finally sur
rounded him and ordered him to sur
render. His answer was to shoot one of
them dead and seriously wound anoth
er. Thereupon the other two fired at
the maniac with their carbines and
killed him.
MOTHER. AGED 84, SPANKS
HER DAUGHTER. AGED 60
PHILADELPHIA. PA.. July 23. -Mrs.
Margaret Armstrong, eighty-four years
old. was before Magistrate Mael-arland
charged with chastising Mrs. Maria
Dean, her daughter, sixty years
According to Mrs. Dean, one of the
chief delights of her mother is to chase
her around their home with a broom
and insist that if Mrs. Dean doesn't
like a spanking she should go and live
elsewhere. Mis. Dean said the home
had been left jointly to herself and her
mother.
Magistrate MacFarland advised the
aged mot het to be more careful of the
manner in which she wielded the broom
during the hot weather Mother and
daughter refused to leave the court
loom together.
WILL PROSECUTE
GIRL'S WHIPPERS
Lawyers Engaged to Push
Cases Against Dawson Men.
Essie Carter in Bad Shape.
MACON. GA.. July 23.—Essie Car
ter, the young white woman who was
whipped at Dawson Saturday night by
a number of prominent men. is in a
very serious condition and the at
tending physicians and her friends are
alarmed. A high fever has developed,
but the possibility of blood poison is
the chief fear. The girl's body is so
swollen that she is in constant agony.
There is hardly an inch of flesh from
the neck down that is not cut and dis
colored and there is so much soreness
that she can not bear the touch of
either clothing or bandages.
Two Macon lawyers have been en
gaged to prosecute W. S. Dozier, Clyde
Dozier and Pope McClung, whom the
girl and her sister. .Mary Carter, charge
with the whipping.
It is probable that the proceedings
will also implicate a dozen other men
who are declared to have witnessed the
occurrence. Tfie girls say that only
W. S. Dozier, the father of V. E. Dozier,
the 18-year-old boy who. was infatuated
with Essie Carter, plied the whip.
CASH COMES TOO LATE:
MERCHANT A SUICIDE
PHILADELPHIA. PA.. July 23. Is
rael Gottesman. a wool merchant, of
St. Louis, committed 1 suicide by taking
poison in Green's hotel here because he
was unable to collect. $8.50b last night.
A half hour after Gottesman died the
debtor walked into the hotel prepared
to make payment.
Gottesman said last night that unless
he collected the money he would be
ruined. On a bureau were promissory
notes for $30,000 which had been paid,
a bank book shoving a balance of $4.-
245. a gold watch, Sfi6 in cash and a life
insurance policy.
TRAMP AND HOBO NOT
SAME: “B 0 WILL WORK
NEW YORK. July 23.—Jonathan
Drury, arrested here as a tramp, says
he is a hobo. The difference between a
tramp and a hobo, according to Drury,
is that tile latter will take work when
he can get it.
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MOTHER OF TWO ATLANTA
WOMEN DIES AT HARLEM
HARLEM, GA. July 23.—1 n the
death of Mrs. Irene Lamkin, which oc
curred at her home neat this place,
qne of the most prominent women in
this section passed away. She was 68
years old and was the mother of four
children. Mrs. George Bennett and Mrs.
Carl Ellington, of Atlanta, and Mrs.
Marie Barrett and John Lamkin, of
Harlem. Her husband, Tyler Lamkin,
also survives.
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\»i’V ’MFI 7
LIFE OF SULTAN OF
TURKEY THREATENED;
REVOLT IS BREWING
CONSTANTINOPLE, July 23.—Be
cause of threats against his, life, the
personal body guard of Mehmed V, sul
tan of Turkey, was doubled today.
The situation here is becoming criti
cal as a result of a break in the situa
tion between the sultan and the Young
Turks. The army is threatening a
revolt
BOYS’ OXFORDS—Splendid val
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MRS. HAYGOOD SANE, SAYS
JURY AT LUNACY HEARING
MACON, GA.. July 23 Mrs. Dixie
Jarrett Haygood was declared sane by
a jury at her hearing on a charge of
lunacy brought against her by Fred H.
Haygood, who claims to be her son.
The jury’s verdict incidentally sus
tained Mrs. Haygood’s declaration that
Haygood is only an adopted son. She
made a will several weeks ago and
omitted him, and the warrant charging
lunacy shortly followed.
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