"...in the meantime,
In-between time,
Aint we got fun?"
--" Aint We Got Fun?"
G. Whiting
Deanies behavior often ranged from the reckless to the erratic. He could, in the
process of 24 hours, snuff a man out without remorse, then treat a bum to a full-course
meal because he felt sorry for him. Once, while awaiting his hearing in a courtroom, he
took up a collection for food and clothing for a young runaway girl charged with vagrancy.
When he read in the newspaper that a local child was dying from leukemia, he stepped
forth, introduced himself to the parents and offered to pay the hospital bills for an
extended stay. Then wept uncontrollably when the child died.
One morning before rush hour in the Loop, he was crossing the Michigan Avenue Bridge
over the Chicago River on foot when a car backfired. Mistaking it for a shot, he wheeled
and, as he later put it, "took a pop at the only guy I saw". When he realized he
had shot an innocent man in the leg, he called an ambulance, sent him the finest cigars
available, and cuffed the hospital bill.
The anthological Bloodletters and Badmen by Jay Robert Nash explains that at
certain times of the year Deanie and Viola, accompanied by "Bugs" Moran and the
other lads, would fill up their car and deliver presents to childrens orphanages. At
least once a year, the OBanion couple visited the gravesite of Emma OBanion in
Maroa.
Then there are the more bizarre examples of behavior. Take, for example, the
OBanion mob's gangland-style retribution against a -- horse! Deanie and Viola would
often hire horses and ride leisurely through the pastel greenery of Lincoln Park, off the
lakefront. One afternoon, "Nails" Morton -- an equestrian in his own right --
joined them. The animal he was given seemed particularly skittish and, when Morton
attempted a gallop, the unobliging nag reared and bucked its rider against a tree. Skull
crushed, Morton died that afternoon. That evening, Deanie and Hymie visited the stables
and took their revenge, emptying all cylinders into the beast. (This scene was repeated in
the 1932 gangster melodrama, Public Enemy)
Others episodes are downright larcenous. On the night of January 19, 1924,
Deanies gang stole $1 million worth of whiskey (nearly 2,000 barrels) from the
Sibley Warehouse in Capone territory, on South Sangamon Street. They left behind, as a
joke, an equal amount of barrels of water. Having a notorious counterfeiter fake a bill of
sale from Sibley, Deanie used the huge cache of liquor to buy shares into the Cragin
Distillery on the far North Side.
Sometimes Deanie became the victim of his own squirrelly behavior. When he had learned
that a local prizefighter, Davey "Yiddles" Miller, had planned to hijack a
delivery of North Side beer, he went after him in a blind rage. Hunting him down, he
spotted Davey and his brother Max emerging from the LaSalle Theatre under the marquee
lights, where they and their dates had just seen the comedy Give and Take. In front
of a throng, Deanie fired a shot point-blank into Yiddles stomach and another at
Max, the last of which bounced off Maxs belt buckle. Davey miraculously survived and
did not press charges. But, in court for assault, Deanie waved it off with a charade of
atonement. "Your Honor," said he, "we were raging about money owed. It was
just a piece of hot-headed foolishness." Of course, Deanie was exonerated.
Often, Capone and Torrio found his pranks dangerous. Their constant reminders to him to
be less conspicuous merely provoked other, worse antics. One such caper was the
Exley/Duffy affair.
John Duffy was a scramble-headed gunner from Philadelphia who, probably to escape the
local officials, had wandered aimlessly into Chicago. Because he helped pull a few
incidental jobs for Deanie, Duffy had become somewhat of a hanger-on to the OBanion
bunch. In mid-February, 1924, he had gotten into a violent, drunken quarrel with his
live-in, a saloon tramp by the name of Maybelle Exley. When she went to bed, he smothered
her with a pillow. The drink wearing off, he panicked. Calling boss OBanion, begging
for money to get out of town, Deanie agreed to go a step further. "Ill drive
you to safety," he told him. "Meet me in an hour at the Four Deuces." He
hung up. Duffy knew where he meant -- Torrios headquarters saloon on South Wabash--
but wondered why of all the closer places to meet, he had chosen the Four Deuces.
Duffy, after a quick shot of whisky at the club, stepped outside to spot Deanies
automobile round the corner; he climbed in and Deanie nosed his car westward out of town.
Once outside the city limits on a stretch of wooded road, Deanie shot him. Dumping the
body from his car, he drove home, singing at the top of his lungs.
His plan had been devious; a case of killing two birds with one stone. Since Duffy was
now a fugitive and seemed to be the type wont to crack under police prodding -- and since
he knew too many secrets of the OBanion enterprise -- Deanie decided to eliminate
him. He had purposely left the body where it would be discovered, the stroke of genius
being that Duffy was sure to have been seen at the Four Deuces, thus implicating Torrio
and Capone!
Capone was livid. Deanie roared.
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