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Daily News from New York, New York • 47

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
47
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

to I amo when rir YOU THAT YOU EM JOY WHAT rrcAWT BE THAT I CANT EVEKI TALK' TO YOU ABOUT IT I NEEO PYCWATLICUL! AWFUL HA HAPPENED TO AtE.I WAVE TO EE A BAO. a i janii IAWEOIATELY PYCWIATOT rl JUMBLE i that scrambled word game By HENRI ARNOLD and BOB LEE Genovese's Mob Is hit by Drug Charge (Continued from page 3 Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. Factory Pay Rises Here Average weekly salaries of factory workers in the New York-northeastern New Jersey area increased by 2 between August and September, substantially offsetting a 0.9& rise in the cost of living in the same period, the U.S. Bureau of la- i I I Vincent Rizzo, 41, of 201 Avenue a reputed Genevese Ebuli i to i bor Statistics reported yesterday. Gross weekly earnings for SNOBI k-N 1 I i A 111 factory workers reache-1 $156.42 in September, according to Herbert Bienstock, regional director of the bureau.

KOYDEN 1 I -k A I I I I LOOT TAKEN FTOAA A SHOE STORE. LEWZOY I I I Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon. (Aaawera tomorrow) Jumbles: TRYST SINGE BLOUSE MATURE Answer: One irho tron't stand for being painted A SITTER Yesterday's You Can Get If Wholesale for AnExfraO.6 Washington, Dec. (News Bureau) Wholesale prices, which usually foreshadow movements in consumer prices, rose by 0.6 Ti last month in the biggest increase since July, the Labor Department reported today. The report means that it will be difficult for the Nixon administration to reach its target of slowing down the rate of inflation to at least 3r'r by the end of this year.

It indicated that the President's wage-price control program had failed to bring wholesale prices down much, if st all. The denartment's Bureaa of Labor Statistics said that wholesale prices rose 5.4 't in the 12 months since the Phase 2 wage-price ontrols went into effect in November 1971. This compares with a 5.2 'i rate of inrease in wholesale prices in the eight months before Nixon ordered wages and prices "frozen" on Aug. 15, 1971. CsITs Economy Healthy Despite the November increase, White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler told reporters at Camp David, ML, that the administration did not regard the wholesale price index figure "as a sign of worsening of the inflationary process we feel the economy is healthy (Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur F.

Burn says wage-price control could end by the end of next year if spending ceilings work. See page 62.) Fears Lead In Tinsel When decorating the Christmas tree, watch out for highly leaded tinsel icicles, the Health Department warned yesterday, Dr. Vincent Guinee, director of the department's Bureau of Lead Poising Control, recommended the u.e of tinsel marked "plastic. contains no lead." metalized" or "nonlead." which are made from aluminum or plastic He said it is unlikely that tinsel by itself could cause lead poisoning, since Christmas decorations are usually around only a short time and lead must be eaten over a period of several months to induce poisoning. 16 Indicted In Dope Ring (Continued from page 3 he disclosed, six other defendants were seized in Paris, and, this past January, in Miami, Alfred Mazza.

an Argentinian, was jailed for allegedly importing more than 300 pounds of herion. Attorney Arrested Several of the defendants were also accused of a conspiracy to attempt to spring Mazza from jail. His Florida attorney, Julio Ferrer, 28, of Miami, was to smuggle a saw to him, it was charged. Ferrer has been arrested. In July 1971, authorities related, a Belgian tourist, Josef Vienne, named as a coconspirator, brought a Volvo car into this country, which had 64 kilograms of heroin concealed in it.

The conspirators reportedly overlooked six to eight of the concealed kilos, which went back to Belgium with the Volvo, where the drugs were discovered still in the car. They became part of a later shipment of 93 kilos secreted in a Jaguar which was The Neighbors By George Clark I sr. lieutenant, allegedly paid $63,000 for seven kilograms of cocaine. The drugs were allegedly transported by Juan Carlos Canonico, whose age and address are unknown, and by Louis Ortero, 30, of 10 W. 66th St.

Both men are reputedly connected with New-York underworld leader Raymond (Spanish) Marquez. Rizzo and William Benjamin, 63, of Philadelphia, also allegedly arranged with Canonico, Ortero and their cohorts to buy another kilogram of cocaine for $100,000 in counterfeit U.S. currency. The counterfeit bills, according to the indictments, came from another finger of the international mob operation Sam Salli, 60, of Buffalo, who is reputedly a captain in the upstate New York-Canada mob faction of Stefano Meg-gadino. Linked to Japanese Salli allegedly agreed to ship $600,000 in phony money down to Rizzo and to a Genovese-Eboli capo, Matteo Di Lorenzo, 60, of 53 -12 Clearview Expressway, Bayside, Queens.

And Rizzo and Di Lorenzo not only used the money to help finance their cocaine operation, but also established connections with a Japanese national, William Mizono, to distribute the bills through California outlets to buyers in the Far East, the indictments charged. In addition to this drug smuggling-counterfeiting network, Hogan said that the investigation has peripherally resulted in indictments for other crimes. Bondswoman Accused One Federal indictment, for example, charges Rizzo, Philip Crispino, 43, of Long Beach, L.I., and Patty Marino, 30, of 524 E. 14th with conspiring to use threats to collect loan payments of $130 weekly from John Cala-maras, owner of the Blue Seas restaurant at 135 Third Ave. Ida Schenkman, 62, of 77 Baxter a bail bondswoman, has also been charged with perjury for giving false answers about the alleged loansharking operation of Rizzo, Crispino and Marino.

seized by the feds in October 1 1971, Ingersoll said. The half dozen men seized here were described as probably the most active distributors on a daily basis in this area. They are: Benjamin benny One Eye) Rodriguez, 42, of 7 Cherry Lane, Great Neck, L.I., a businessman; Rafael Angel Gonzalez, 24, of 106 Elder a part-time laundry worker; Frank J. Vispisiano, 33, of 264 East Broadway, a longshoreman. Edwin Arroyo, 32, of 79 Allen no occupation; Carlos M.

Sanchez, 37, of 910 Sheridan Bronx, a carpet layer, and Louis Frank Fragliossi, 36, of 605 Water St, a truck driver. 1972 ftawVeili Item taw. "The marriage counsellor I should share my husband's interests, but I just can't develop a taste for salami sandwiches and and beer and poker with the fellas." AND WE MUST LEARN MOT TO StHCE FACTS" LEAPJtt' 1 ShfiStSXr" jJJL-ATj ACCEPT "FACTS" AT THEIR FACE VALUE IMDICATE YOU ARE A M7ionC C2 VViSy nH.ift'-ViCfc JLS I MAN WHILE THE LInKUo F. HE WHO DESTROYED YOU LEAP TO 77 XX" I SIMPLE REMOVAL OF I HE'S fl JhE SACREP MAHPRflGORA HASTY IJ v'f i. I fl CONCEILIHG VEIL 'hlM A f.

MUST PERISH yCOHCWSKXiS, ft xv -JSl PROVES BEYOND A U2.7$.t? DrWTI.

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Pages Available:
18,846,294
Years Available:
1919-2024