“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo
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immigrants from Canada, all upstate gambling and exercised veto power on state
licensing of racing tracks, was headed by Ottilio Cuneo. This was a completely
disarming man with the face of a jolly round peasant baker, whose legitimate activity
was one of the big milk companies. Cuneo was one of those men who loved children
and carried a pocket full of sweets in the hopes of being able to pleasure one of his
many grandchildren or the small offspring of his associates. He wore a round fedora
with the brim turned down all the way round like a woman’s sun hat, which broadened
his already moon-shaped face into the very mask of joviality. He was one of the few
Dons who had never been arrested and whose true activities had never even been
suspected. So much so that he had served on civic committees and had been voted as
“Businessman of the Year for the State of New York” by the Chamber of Commerce.
The closest ally to the Tattaglia Family was Don Emilio Barzini. He had some of the
gambling in Brooklyn and some in Queens. He had some prostitution. He had
strong-arm. He completely controlled Staten Island. He had some of the sports betting in
the Bronx and Westchester. He was in narcotics. He had close ties to Cleveland and the
West Coast and he was one of the few men shrewd enough to be interested in Las
Vegas and Reno, the open cities of Nevada. He also had interests in Miami Beach and
Cuba. After the Corleone Family, his was perhaps the strongest in New York and
therefore in the country. His influence reached even to Sicily. His hand was in every
unlawful pie. He was even rumored to have a toehold in Wall Street. He had supported
the Tattaglia Family with money and influence since the start of the war. It was his
ambition to supplant Don Corleone as the most powerful and respected Mafia leader in
the country and to take over part of the Corleone empire. He was a man much like Don
Corleone, but more modern, more sophisticated, more businesslike. He could never be
called an old Moustache Pete and he had the confidence of the newer, younger, brasher
leaders on their way up. He was a man of great personal force in a cold way, with none
of Don Corleone’s warmth and he was perhaps at this moment the most “respected”
man in the group.
The last to arrive was Don Phillip Tattaglia, the head of the Tattagfia Family that had
directly challenged the Corleone power by supporting Sollozzo, and had so nearly
succeeded. And yet curiously enough he was held in a slight contempt by the others.
For one thing, it was known that he had allowed himself to be dominated by Sollozzo,
had in fact been led by the nose by that fine Turkish hand. He was held responsible for
all this commotion, this uproar that had so affected the conduct of everyday business by
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