1941
Weegee Daily… October 9, 1941… Their First Murder…
DARTED and LIQUIDATED
Brooklyn School Children See Gambler Murdered in Street
“Pupils were just leaving P.S. 143, in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, at 3:15 yesterday when Peter Mancuso, 22, described by police as a small-time gambler, pulled up in a 1931 Ford at a traffic light a block from the school. Up to the car stepped a gunman, who fired twice and escaped through the throng of children. Mancuso, shot through the head and the heart, struggled to the running board and collapsed dead on the pavement. Above are some of the spectators…”

Weegee Daily, October 9, 2013
Brooklyn Dog Walkers See Photographer Standing in Street. Approximate location of Their First Murder…


Intersection of Roebling St. and N. Sixth St., Brooklyn. Approximate location where Peter Mancuso was shot in a 1931 Ford… Sidewalk where the slayer fled toward N. Seventh St… The entrance of the former P.S. 143…



New York Daily News, October 9, 1941
“A small-time Brooklyn gambler, Peter Mancuso, 23, was slain at 3:20 P.M. yesterday when he stopped his car at the crowded intersection of Roebling St. and N. Sixth St., Brooklyn.
A lone assailant darted up to the car and liquidated Mancuso with two bullets fired at close range through the open front window…
One bullet hit Mancuso in the head, another in the heart. With a dying effort he got the door of the car open and toppled into the street…
Meanwhile, P.S. 143, a block away, on Havermeyer St., was just letting out. The slayer dashed down N. Seventh St. heading for the school and zig-zagged among the crowds of children… the fugitive darted into Havermeyer St. and disappeared.”
To be continued…
Weegee Daily… September 12, 1941… “quiet understanding, no excitement.”

PM Daily, September 12, 1941
Orthodox Jews heard the President in East Side spots…
PM Photo by Weegee

Weegee Daily, September 12, 2013
Yesterday the President could have been heard in East Side spots, like this restaurant at East Broadway and Jefferson Street… “quiet understanding, no excitement.”
We kinda phoned this one in…
WD Photo by Ceegee
Weegee Daily… September 11, 1941… This unidentified girl…

PM Daily, September 11, 1941
This unidentified girl had just left the Sheridan Theater near the exploded water main but the flood was so deep that she couldn’t get across the street…

Weegee Daily, September 11, 2013
Sheridan Theater is long gone; St. Vincent’s hospital is rapidly diminishing…

To be continued…
Weegee Daily… August 28, 1941… “Tragedy in Brooklyn: Mother Kills Three Children and Herself… “

PM Daily, August 28, 1941
Tragedy in Brooklyn: Mother Kills Three Children and Herself…
Neighbors See Removal Of Mass Murder Victims. At 6:20 yesterday morning, William Morey of 311 20th Street, Brooklyn, yelled for help… Her farewell note read: “We all have syphilis disease. This is the best way out.” Police say she was deluded. The police department fired Morey in 1938 for drinking – he hasn’t kept a job since then.
PM Photo by Weegee

Weegee Daily, August 28, 2013
At around 6:20 yesterday evening…


WD Photos by Ceegee




New York Daily News, August 28, 1941
Mother Goes Berserk
Kills 3 Children – Wounds 4th Child and Husband
Morey was under suspicion until police found Mrs. Morey’s note reading: “This is the best way out. Don’t touch anything. We’re all diseased.”
Weegee Daily… August 27, 1941… Weegee Has a Saloon…
“From the shade of the old apple tree…”
“Save on Cameras”
“The Funny Place”
“The One & Only”

New York Daily News, August 2913
“Margaret Hart Ferraro, Burlesque Queen, Dies
By DOUGLASMARTIN
Published: January 30, 2000
Margaret Hart Ferraro, a New York stripteaser who went on to become a savvy real estate investor, political wife and society matron in Los Angeles, died on Wednesday after a long illness. She had habitually refused to give her age, but friends said 84 might be close.She was married to John Ferraro, the Los Angeles City Council president, and had become a zestful participant in the city’s life. ”Margaret was one of the funniest, most outrageous and loving women I ever met,” Mayor Richard Riordan said.
Mrs. Ferraro won fame under the name Margie Hart, and was billed as ”the poor man’s Garbo.” A line in the song ”Zip!” in Lorenz Hart’s ”Pal Joey” refers to her: ”Who the hell is Margie Hart?” Danny Kaye immortalized her in a song that talked about farmers who ”used to utterly utter when Margie Hart churned her butter.”
Although in 1985 Mrs. Ferraro told The Los Angeles Times that her costumes were less revealing than modern bikinis, a contemporaneous burlesque dancer and rival, Sherry Britton, disagreed. ”She was the reason that Mayor La Guardia closed up burlesque here,” she said in an interview. ”She was the first one to go without her G-string.”
Ms. Britton said that in 1939, she was working at Minsky’s Gaiety, then a theater at 46th Street and Broadway, with Margie Hart, and Miss Hart was dating a detective who warned her when the censors were coming to give her time to slip on a G-string. When she started dating someone else, the warnings stopped and Miss Hart was arrested.
In 1942, Miss Hart, who was known for her flaming red hair and statuesque figure, married Seaman Block Jacobs, a comedy writer for Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, George Burns and others, and switched to legitimate theater. She appeared in two traveling productions of Broadway shows, ”Light Up the Sky” and ”Cry Havoc,” and received good reviews.
The couple moved to Los Angeles in 1947 and divorced in 1955. She joined the Los Angeles social circuit, holding large parties in her Bel-Air house. She met John Ferraro, a former All-American football player at the University of Southern California and a City Council member, in the 1970’s. They married in 1982.
”She loved people and they loved her,” Mr. Ferraro said in a prepared statement. ”She was very intelligent, enjoyed her own unique views of Los Angeles and the world of politics, and didn’t mind sharing those views.”
Mrs. Ferraro was born on a farm in Edgerton, Mo., and was raised with seven sisters and one brother. She ran away from home and joined a chorus line in Chicago, Mr. Jacobs said. Soon, she was on the burlesque circuit, traveling the Eastern and Midwestern United States.
”She had a very great stage presence,” Ms. Britton said. ”Very sexy, gorgeous body.”
But she also liked to show off her mind. At a time when the first lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, was writing a column titled ”My Day,” Miss Hart was writing one with a significantly different slant called ”My Night,” published sporadically in show business publications.In Los Angeles, she demonstrated a keen intelligence, fixing up old buildings in the Hancock Park area and selling them at a profit. She was president of Screen Smart Set, a support group for the Motion Picture and Television Home in Woodland Hills, Calif.
She suffered an aneurysm and a stroke that left her partially paralyzed shortly after she married Mr. Ferraro, but continued to attend charity events in elegant, sometimes flamboyant fashions. She insisted on leaving her wheelchair at home, relying instead on a fashionable cane.
Her death is another mark of a closing era. Last year, two famous ecdysiasts, the word Mencken coined for striptease artists, Lili St. Cyr and Ann Corio, died. Neither revealed her age, but most people thought they were in their 80’s.
Mrs. Ferraro is also survived by a son, Thomas Jacobs of Salem, Mass.; a daughter, Morgan Most of Agoura Hills, Calif.; and five grandchildren.
Eddie Jaffee, Mrs. Ferraro’s publicist for many decades, once asked the membership requirements of a women’s luncheon group called Great Old Broads that she attended. Mrs. Ferraro laughed and said it took years to qualify. ”First, you have to be a great young broad.””








































