E TITE OMAIIA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 14, 1907. r i u 5 t War is Declared on the Aost Powerful of Italian Criminal MB, July 1S.A double murder fas committed near Naples ft. little nu-re than a year ago. A man named Cuocolo wan enticed to Torr dl Qreco and there slabbed to death. His body wag found on the beach the next morning- covered with the charac teristic stabs or gashes of the Camorra execution. On the same dajr Cnucolo's wife waa found dead, stabbed In the aame way aa her liuaband, In her house at Naplea. It waa ascertained that the two murders took place Rlmuttaneo'tsly, and as tmth husband and wife met their death In the aame man ner and aa thlr money and Jewelry were tyt untouched as a sign that theft waa not e moT.ive 01 ine crime, ine conclusion waa rawn that the crime was an execution of the Csmorra. Neapolitans, young and old, hurried to the lottery shops where they asked for the numbers corresponding to the words, hus band, wife, murder, vendetta and Camorra, and they staked all the money they could afford on these five numbers for the next drawing- of the lotto. The Cuocolo murder waa, after all, nothing; but an ordinary fatto dl sangue. an event of blood, quite a common occurrenoe. (Fatto dl sangue la a. most comprehensive expression, not only In the Neapolitan dia lect but also In the Italian language. It means anything from a trifling knife stab . to a murder, provided the Injury hae been caused by violence. If a crowd gathers In the streets around fallen cab horse or a stabbed man, and a Curious person on Its outskirts asks another what la the matter, the reply la given with equal difference In both casea. Tou are told that a horse has slipped or that It la only a fatto dl aangue, but you cannot guess aa much from the largeness or smallnesa of the crowd. Fatl dl sangue are common In Italy, and especially ao at Naples. Whether they are due to the Camorra or not does not make the least clIfTererce. save as regards the choice of the numbers for the lotto. Consequently the local papers described the double murder and ended their accounts with the usual formula that the police were Investigating the case. Nobody doubted that the case would In a few duya be en tirely forgotten. In fact, after a while the police dropped It altogether. Some arrests were made, u la true. A party of young men and some women of bad repute happened to go to Torre del Qreco for a picnic on the dny of the murder. By a mere coincidence, ac cording to the police theory, they happened to be all more or leas connected with the Camorra. They were therefor arrested, prohably owing to a mistake of an ovenealous and new police official, but they all proved an alibi and the Investigating Judge released them, as he was expected to do. The case of the Cuocolo double murder waa then entirely dropped.. The organization of the police system In Italy Is very complicated. The entire police force Is divided Into three separata bodies, each Independent of the others, and under different chiefs. The civil police are known aa the public security police and are under the direct orders of the home office, or ministry of the Interior, which la represented In large cltlea by a chief of police known aa the quoestor. The duty of the public se curity police la the prevention and detec tion of crime. y In thla they are helped by the cara Pj blnlerl. or gendarmes, who are practically V, - , .. , w I.. thjtrafnm soldiers, not (si . y rp W JLjiTfc Special uuujr They are well trained ana . yageous. The anomuiy ' T"' . . . v. t K-v an, soldiers they ape under the orders of the military commander In chief, but at the aame tjme they, too, depend on the mlniatry of the Interior and therefore on lta representa tive, the quoeator. They are aupposed to act with the civil police, but being highly efficient they often act Independently -nd are often successful when the police fall. Beside the civil police and the cara blnleri. each eJty has Ha own special police men, or munclpal guards, under the order of the mayor. The direct consequence of so complicated a police system Is Jealousy among the three different bodies. The civil policemen are always striving to gC ahead of the carablnleri. while the municipal guards manage to get In the way of both policemen and carablnleri, and. Instead of helping or co-operating, generally aucoeed t In hampe-rtng their work. k In practice the carablnleri are the only f efficient policemen In Italy, and, aa a oon " sequence, to them falls all the heavy work. They are detailed to capture brigand 01 runaway convicts In Calabria. Blolly and Sardinia. Recently a nonoommtoaloned of ficer of carablnleri waa decorated per sonally by the king with the gold medal of valor for having captured during his twenty years of service In Sardinia more than thltty brigands. In roost oases single handed. Thla man had fourvhores shot under him. He waa wounded seriously on several occa sions, he saved the llfs t two of his officers at the risk of bis own and his body was covered with scars from stabs and knife wounds. His pay Is less than $1 a day. The carablnleri quell revolts, disperse crowds of strikers, arrest anarchists, guard . the railway lines when the king travels, f follow his carriage on bicycles when he " drives and patrol the country road on horseback and the city streets on foot, night and day. One see them helping firemen In putting out Are, rescuing a person from drowning and showing the way to lost tourist. The carablnleri are amon- the beet soldiers and polloemen, but the worst, paid and most modest men In the world. When the Naples olvll polloe dropped the Cuooolo murder cae the ministry of th Interior decided that an effort ahould be made to capture the criminal and detailed a party of carablnleri under a captain to take up the Investigation where the police had left It off. The quoester of Naples was dismissed, several police officials were re moved from Naples and a Judge who or tered the release of several persons us tpeoted of having assisted In the murder of Cuocolo ana jus wire w . Th ground thu being cleared, the cara blnleri began their work, not where the police left It off, however, bnt at the very beginning. The work allotted to these ten men turned out to be dlffloulu dangerous and unusual In the annals of police msiory. It is still going on. Vf The prisons of Naples ara crowded with vln-.lnal charged with complicity In the aiurder of Cuooolo and his wlfs and with other crime. lnnumerbl and unmentlon tble. that have been committed In Naples In the last fifty years. Ten modest soldier o linemen have waged war against the most powerful and best organised criminal association In th world, a society more than seven centuries old. whose headquar ter have always been In Naples, but whose ram mentions have Invaded the entire world. If the Camorra is doomed to disappear It will die a hard death and not, without a great struggle. In fact, although th oblef of the Camorra have prsotloally all been arreeted. the criminal organisation exists) till, as was shown th other day oTirlng the tramway sink In Naples, when th whole garrison had to be called out la or der to quell a street riot wthoh, owing to ta aclivs pxUclUoa pt tl la4srlss Camorristl, almost developed Into a revo lution. The origin of the Camorra Is said to be Spanish, and the camorristl of today are supposed to be the descendants of a special class of Spanish brigands known as ga murrl, from gamurra, a short coat or pea Jacket which they wore. These gamurrl were ordinary highway robbers, but they were united together under a sort of mili tary rule. They had special laws and cus toms, and, like their Neapolitan descend ants, very often they were In league with the police. Living In an eg of chivalry, the Span lah bandits were occasionally Just and gen erous, two attrlbutea which entirely disap peared when the association developed In Italy under the Spanish domination. In fact, a Spanish historian of the gamurrl, writing about the Itlalan or rather Neapoli tan ramification, remarks that the Institu tion degenerated In a revolting manner. The t'amorra In Naples retained only the complicated organization, the disciplined and formal rule and the secrecy of Its Spanish prototype, but In all other respects It changed altogether and became nothing else than a gang of thieves, hardened In all sort of crime, brutal and corrupt. Tbs Ait k '-.-3'' . IS IteMER. WHO HAS Camorra or Honorable Society uch is lta official name waa tolerated by the Bour bons and helped the police in times of revolution. Hence it attained such an ascendancy and developed to such an ex tent that today It Is considered one of the national Institutions of Naples and south ern Italy. The Camorra has been defined as the parasite of the social organization of Na ples, which owing to the great excess of population as compared with the available means of subsistence Is In a permanent n.V tate of demoralization. The Camorra la divided Into two classes, known as the alta, or high, and bassa, or low, Camorra. To the former belong the high chief of the Honorable Society, known ns caplntesta, or head chief, the twelve chiefs who preside over the twelve districts of Naples, known as caplntrltl, and the camorristl, or full members of the association. To the latter belong the glovlnottl ono ratl, or honored lads, the recruits, and the plccluottl, a th glovlnottl are called after being Initiated. The glovlnottl are gener ally boys, beggars and pickpockets, who aspire to belong: to the society. Tl first step In this direction Is a sort of examination held by one of the district chiefs. II the candidal l round to promise well he Is admitted on trial and an al- most Imperceptible line Is tattooed on a visible part of his body. This denotes his rank. The glovlnotto la then expected to give a proof of his courage by performing what la known among the society as a bravura, or act of honor. This generally consists in stabbing a policeman or carablnlere, or Capital of Barbary (Copyright, !9W, by Frank O. Carpenter.) T 1RTPOLI. July 11. (Special Corre spondence of The Bee.) I write these notes In the city of Tripoli. It Is the capital of Barbary, that vast country of oases and desert, lying between Tunisia and Egypt, on tho Mediterranean sea. I came here from Sfax, passing around the Ouf of Gabes and skirting the Desert of Libya the greater part of the way. Our boat was a little Italian steamer which sails from Genoa to Tunis and then goes on around to Tripoli and back to Naples via Sicily and Malta. We came to anchor in the harbor this morning and were brought to the shore by boatmen as fierce looking; a the pirate who fought her against our American sailors 100 years ago. It was In the harbor of Tripoli that Unole Sam had hi first great naval engagement, after the conoluaton of tb war which made him Independent of Great Brttan. This town was then a great plratloal stronghold. It levied Its tribute oa all the ships of the Mediterranean, and its soldiers not Infre quently captured Christians and- either held them for ransom or kept them In slavery. They had committed outragree upon our shipping during the last days of John Adams presidency, and It was In 1A01 that we formally declared war and sent Commo dore Decatur aoroaa th Atlantio and over the Mediterranean to punish th pirates, Decatur recaptured and burnt the Ames lean frigate Philadelphia in the harbor her In February, 1901 and we then taught the sml-avave that, although they might take their toll from the nations of Europe, our own little republic across th Atlantio niuat b left alone. It BeloBsra to tho altavai. Trda land of Barbary now belong to tha sultan of Turkey. It has a governor fen ral appointed by htm, and there Is aa army of U.ono soldiers in the barracks oa th dg of the city which he ha sent to keep order. The country 1 o large that th army nan polloe lltti more than Tripoli Its If. and th result la that every man who goe Into th desert carries a run with htm, snd that all th caravan must hav their armed escort. Nearly everyone who come In from th Interior has a f i strapped to his back. During a Journey which I have made to en of th oases, I mat many man so rrmed, and I am to 14 that th country I everywhere nnaaf. Tripoli I for th most part nothing butf sand. It la as long as from New York U Detroit, as wld a from Philadelphia to Buffalo, and It contain altogether an area ten time that of th state of Ohio, Th only cnKtTeted portions are a marrow Ulfi of toad figem Un it sdltarrtAsaa ", executing some slight set of revenge, or, vendetts-llke, slashing the face of an enemy with a rasor. After this he be comes a picciUKtto, and ovar the line a dot Is tattooed. Tl.e rlovlnottl and plccluottl are the rank and file of of the Camorra, and, naturally, sr? very numerous. They' do all the dirty work and most of the slabbing- falls to their share. Very often they are arrested and sen tenced to a term of Imprisonment or a fine. The latter Is paid by the Camorra and In the former case they are kept at the expense of the society, and nosooner do they come out of prison than they aro promoted to camorristl. The t'amorra keeps watch on all the Crimea that are committed at Naples; of every theft that Is committed part of the spoil, a regular percent are fixed by a tariff, goes to the Camorra. A tax: I levied on every house of bad repute, every wine shop, every pcrscn who lends money at usury, whether he belongs to the society or not. All the cabs that como Into Naples from the neighboring villages pay a soldo la cent) to the Cnmorra. Every farmer who brings his produce tc market has to pay the Camorra. No furmer refuse to pay; TO J34Y TAXZXS TO THF. CAMOKRA. If one does, either one of his horses Is killed or he hlmxclf sut'tora sumo damage. If complaint Is made to the police by victims of the Camorra, for the first offeiiRe they suffer u sfreglo (a disfigure ment, generally on the face by means of a slash with a razor), and a second de nunciation may lead to their death. When a plccluotto lias served a certain term as such and worked well he. Is ad mitted to the hle'i class of the Camorra. But first he has to pass an examination which Is held by the district chief and several camorristl, one of whom acts in the capacity of sponsor, or compare, of the- piccluotto. Several questions are put to the candi date, which have to be answered to the full satisfaction of the examining board. When this Interrogatory is over the chief asks: "What do you seek now?" to which the candidate has to reply: "My companions." "Who are your companions?" "The camorristl." "What does camorrlsta mean?" "A man of courage who commands the low society and stands with one foot on the ground and the other In the gTave." The piccluotto then takes the oath of .ecrecy and in fifteen days time, durln which he has to show his courage bravura either In a duel or In performing more stabblne, he Is definitely admlt'cd in the ranks of the camorristl. He Is kissed anil embraced by all his comrades and a great dinner Is given In his honr, another dot Is added to the line tattooed on his body and He Is allowed to marry if he chooses. Glo- vlnottl and plccluottl have not this prlvll-' end the oases, which are found scattered here and there through the d-j;er of Ubya. The population Is scanty. H num bers altogether not more than l.O'O.OnO, or about half a many as then? are in Clii-cag-o, and these are made up of wild Arab tribes, many of which are at war with each other. e Tripoli and the Soudan. The foreign trade of the country Is with the Soudan and Europe. Tripoli lie di rectly north of I-ake Chad, and It is the chief starting place for the caravans which cross the Sahara. There are half a dozen route over the desert from here to the rich lands of central Africa, and a great deal of Ivory, ostrich feathers and shins are brought to Tripoli on camels from those countries. The trip takes several months snd the caravans often include In their freight female slaves for the Bar bary harems. Millions of slaves have been thus carried over the desert and vast numbers have been sent from here to Tunisia and Turkey. The caravan routes are lined with the bones of slaves who hav cUutl ou tha way, uul U-o u.id wouU .V y - -i I Ms WiEKC eg-e The district chief are elected for life from among the tamorristi and the head chief from among the twelve district chiefs, The Camorra has its own special tribunals and Its special laws. The first axiom of and Its exist now were it not that the people fear that the Christian powers might object. City of'Trlaoll. Tripoli, the city, lies in the Libyan desert, on the edge of the Mediterranean sea. It Is not an oasis of mud houses sur rounded by mud walls, such as I have de scribed In my letters from the Sahara, but It is a cesert city of 00,000 inhabitants with great white buildings and walls of atone. Approaching It from the sea the town looks like a mighty fortification. It la built upon a sloping peninsula, the houses run ning around a beautiful bay, guarded by rocky Islands, which rise like sentinels out of the blue Mediterranean. At one end of the bay Is a huge fortification, commanded by TurkiBh soldiers, and at the other Is the Kalbah, a fortified caatle, containing the government offices. Between these two, running around inside the horns of tho crescent, are white buildings, mtxd here and there with structures of green, blue and rose pink, which, rising almost straight up from the water, form a great bow, with these forts at the end.t Behind are oLL&r buildings of Uirea aod tour stories. V 1 M-. PART OP TUB TRIPOLI WATEtt WOBK3. 3 Jit is " it. -V; K . -1 TriC CAMORKI3TI LIVE Iff NAPLES tho Camorra courts is the following: "Sentences are Just becuuse the Camorra does not Judtfe with the pen, but with the heart and mind." Among the punishments decreed by these tribunals are tho following: Suspension, Queer Population and. over them all, may be seen the tall lean white minerals of the mosiiues with green caps on their tops. The houses are of Arabic architecture and orknlul In shape, and when one climbs to the roofs of the highest buildings, as I did today, he sees that each house Is built about a lit tle court, the walls facing, which are pair. tell bright blue. Aa I stood on the house top, all Tripoli lay below me. It looked much like a Jum ble of great goods boxes cast by the hands of the goda down Into the inliit-t f the desert. There are but few trees In the town. At the right, facing the sea, some distance away, is an oasis of date palms, but on the other side, as far as the eye can reach, there are nothing but the hare yellow sands of the desert of Libya. The city lies Just south of Malta and Sicily, and It is, I should say, Juat about midway between Alexandria and Tunis, the two greatest of the African cities on the south ern side of the Mediterranean sea. Walk Throuab the Streets. But let us suppose that we are down In Uio city Itself, wandering about through the mmm I; -f . w y;;.r,.,,';,.,J allSfc r;. y r . . TT u ,A n ( Vi ri. M IS h -if- Ma.t w. - B. - AN 1 y ,4.1 permanent or temporary, from enjoying the profits of Camorra operutlona or work; cx pulsion, permanent or temporary, from the honorable society; sfreglo, or permanent visible disfigurement by means of a broken glass or a razor. streets. The time Is midday, and the Afri can Bune blazes like a furnace In thla trop ical sky of the desert, it dazzles our eyes and the white buildings about us catch the rays and throw them back, almost blinding. In the chief streets of the city there is no sun at all, and It Is only when we strike the open spaces that we realize tho brightness outside. Tripoli Is a city of caverns. Most of the streets are either covered with matting or boards, or are actually built over like great vaults and lighted here and there by holes In the roofs. It Is llko going through half lighted tunnels, and we might wander about for hours bareheaded without fear of the sun. This Is especially so In the busi ness sections. The bazaars consist of strwets, ten or fifteen feet wide, with white vaulted roofs, the light coming through holes In the latter, each of which is about a foot square. Now and then there wiji be a break In these roofs, making a short open space where the sun shines, but after that the vaults beln again so that one could go through almost the whole town and keep under cover. The business streets are paved with stone, and along the walls of the houses run ledKes about three feet high, upon which trie shops face and where the customers sit while they bur gain. I.Ike a tiriue Arbor. The chief shopping section of Tripoli con sists of a mighty grape arbor. Hern the street Is roofed over with a lattice work, upon which grape vines have been trained, and their cool, green leaves temper the rays of the sun. This street Is lined with shop, Km of which sre sbout fiften feet square. Such shops are considered great business establishments, and their turbaned owners are among the nabobs of the cliy. The ordinary store Is not as wide nor as long as a library table, and there are many an small that the merchant within could not ask a friend to enter without nnvlng his goods. Almost all th streets are su-h that wheeled vehicles cannot go through them and some will not een admit donkevs Most of the freight Is carried by porters who go sbout with great loads on their backs or heads. In the wider streets lit tle donkeys are the chief beasts of burden, while the camels carry the heavier loads. Water (amela. One of the most Interesting features of Tripoli is connected with Its water supply. This town of ftfi.ooo has no water mains or sewers. There sre no hydrants, end the water used comes entirely from wells In or near the city. Some of It I carried In goat kins on th backs of men, s une of tt In clay Jars on the heads of women and great deal In barrels on th hum-, of (Oontlnusd on Fa Pour.) Leagues "C V f r M W ? V f X f A sr B7AI - 'J v.1 ..r55 V . w nil ual r Neapolitan Typi: (.'apltnl punishments or rather murders, are executed by means of tnRltrntl 0-ttersl or knives, and the modo of killing differs according to the gravity of the crime com mitted The worst Is by stahhln; In the stnninch, which prolongs death. Next comes stabbing In the chest or heart, and fln.illy stabbing In the head. The secret tribunal of the Cftmorra alts s-cncrully In a cellar, and If the crime tinder consideration Is a cnpltal one It la composed of the head and the twelve dis trict chiefs. No defense Is admitted, but a Camorrlsta acts as prosecuting counsel. The members of the court come fully armed but their first act on entering Is to hand over their weapons to the chief, who ties them up in a handkerchief and delivers them to a cumorrlsta who remains at the door. The presence of the accused Is not neces sary When death is 'decreed four plc cluottl are called In and charged with the execution of the sentence, generally within twentv-four hours. The punishment for denunciations to the police Is always death, as fn the case of Cuocolo. As evidence that the sentence has been curried out the executioners generally take sorno object belonging to the accused and Hive It to the chief, who displays It In suoli a manner so that all the Camorristl can see It. In the case of Cuocolo, Errioone, the head chief, wore the dead man's ring for an entire month after the murder. The Camorristl have a slung of their own- which Is characterized by the fact that It Is only used In poetry. Thus, for example, a Camorrlsta, very often dis guised as a lazzarone or tramp, sits In the sun and sings about a huntsman who went out shooting birds and tried to hit them ulld" tl"'r wlnss- PePle tP .an.d 'l,enj f there happens to be i.amnrns 1 among them these understand that the huntsman Is a Judge and that he Is attempting to get some Information out of members of the society. Camorristl communicate with their com panions In prison by means of these songs; they warn each other of the approach of the police and they arrange robberies and murders In broad daylight and In the most frequented places. The Camorristl are very superstitious. For Instance, they firmly believe that the murderer who swallows a drop of blood, of his victim Is never arrested by the police. In case they have to rob a church or a shrine, before doing so they kneel down and say some prayers, followed by a form- ula to the effect that the robbery Is not an Insult to God, but a means of getting a living. Camorristl often make vows to saints and In case their undertaking succeeds they wear a month the special colors of the saint, green for St. Anne, black for the Mother of Sorrows and so on. A favorite vow of the Camorristl Is to ' marry a woman of bad repute In order to prevent her from leading a life of sin. The general Impression throughout Italy Is that the Camorra Is In league with th police. It Is said that all the men who represent Naples in Parliament owe their elections to the Camorra.' Even the municipal elections are Influenced by tho Camorra and hence It follows that th Honorable society has protectors In high places The N'enpolltan deputies have certainly never made any effort against the Camorra, in Parliament ntr' have they denied the revelations rnudn by locul newspapers alleging their complicity with the Honorable society. A deputy from tho north of Italy. Signer Giacomo Ferrl, during a r-ent debate In the house, provoked by a question he asked as to whether the poll, e were so much in league with the Camorra as to hamper the work of the carablnleri, furnished the following Information Mbout this criminal organization whose existence had b' ( n denied by some Neapolitan depu ties. It Is a well known fact, he said, that the authors of the Cuocolo murder were not arreBted owing to tiie connivance of the police. Since the Carablnleri have taken the matter In hand many things have come to light. A priest, Don Clro Vitozzl. has been arrested, and It has ben ascertain) d that he a the chaplain of the Camorra. H persuaded the Investigating Judge tt set free the persons first arrested, for the Cuocolo murder, and It han been proved that this man, who is Indicted for nineteen crimes. murders, Immoral trafficking, apol'atlon of graves, etc., was a friend of jurig'-s and high police officials. Bills of exchange drawn In favor of Judges and police commissioners have been found In possession of lion Clro Vitozzl, Krrli one and other ramorrlstl. Signer Ferrl, there fore, conclude.! bv saying that there J not the least shadow of doubt that the police and Camorra were In league an! he expressed his firm eonvlc'lon that wei It not for the personal Intervention of the king no effort would hav been ever mad to oc m bat tha Camorra. i i