 As long as we're doing this, might as well read the Al Capone card, right? Al Capone card, since it's also on the box, right? And it's card number seven in the series. And these guys came out, check it out, came out in 1992, true crime series one, G-Men and Gangsters, Tex Copyright 1992, Paul Allen Collins and George Haganar, Art Copyright 1992, Paul Lee Eclipse Enterprises, PO Box 1099, Forestville, California 95436, G-Men Equals Gangst... No, G-Men Equals... G-Men is the cops, isn't it? Gangster Man? Is it Gangster Man? No, I think G-Men is like FBI, right? So, you know, there's 220 cards here, we're picking one, and at some point maybe we'll read the whole thing, right? So, card number seven from series one of true crime from Eclipse Comics, Al Capone. Alfonzo Capone grew up in Brooklyn slums and was thrown out of school in the sixth grade for attacking his teacher. What a badass! While working as a bouncer at the Harvard Inn for Frankie Yale, then head of the Union Sicilian Capone cracked many a drunk skull and was himself cut across the cheek, thus acquiring the nickname Scarface. By 1919, Capone was suspected of two murders and had became close friends with many future mobsters, including Lucky Luciano, Ciro Teranova and Johnny Torino. Capone was working for Torino in Chicago when Torino took over Big Jim Colosimo's mob in 1920. Torino set Capone up at the Fordus Saloon as a bodyguard, chauffeur and brothel pitchman. Capone was Torino's right-hand man, learning the business while Torino created a multi-million-dollar crime syndicate employing 1,000 men. In 1925, Torino was wounded in a gang shooting. He retired a multi-millionaire leaving Capone to inherit his remarkable criminal organization. Like any corporation, Torino's mob was divided into departments. In this case, bootlegging, brothels, gambling and contract murder. The key leaders of what would be known for the next 30 years are the Capone mob, as the Capone mob were already in place when Capone took charge. Capone was an efficient crime boss, fiercely loyal to his key men. He often continued gang wars rather than turn a single hitman over to the enemy for retribution. He was the first mobster to court reporters, occasionally even holding press conferences. He would need all his skill to survive the next four years as the Torino-Obrian Torio-Obanian feud gave rise to the bloodiest gang war in US history. See card 8, Peter von Fratzus, Peter von Fratzus, we have Peter von Fratzus here. Peter von Fratzus, look at that slim mustache. G-men, there we go, alligot. G-men is government men, government agents. Cool, thank you. So pretty cool. Huge history here, huge history here.