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***>* * W iThelBIBUNE-PRESS 4 IB ' Kaw York's Gr«at*»t THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE — 1887 THE GOUVERNFUR FREE PRESS — 1882 , Published Weekly on Wednesday by Mason Ro**iter Smith . % at 14 Park Street. Gouveroeur, Ii Y. > (Entered in U*e Pott OXIice at Gouverneur, N. Y. -MM secood-daas matter) Warner H. Miller . i General Manager extremely u ell informed He is a a nation of sznaH businessmen. In magnificent host Although he ad- i Istanbul, for example, the majority mits that his country Is small and, of business is done in small shops only well started toward western-j and plants from cobblers to print- ization, he tkaU with his foreign , vr% and machine shops There are counterparts on an e<jU3l basi.s 'few l*rge corporation*, by com- with pnde in his .couR?r>'s p<±it ' pari^un *ith the I'nited States and confidence m its future Me is ' But the,re is still a tremendous an optimist ^Vhen he does busi- . variatron in incume between the m*&s he do*»s it in the American u>p~lt*\e] emplo>er and the aver- way -wah a luncheon to the lead wage-earner. While I could not ers in thv,, mdu>tr> or }Jjtd*- to di»cern many\ rjr/jrut* Cla** dis- '^h f»f*h t ll i hh netell Jti Gordon J. McPhenoo Frederick T. Turktngton '. p p Advertising Manager manners social i>, so impeccable .» Newt Editor ! fact that nv is somcumes p*r- - -i naps this is a han^owr from an- f»-wf*hf& to sell, in which ( t;nctions - gem-rally who cares to speak can i there seern to be only two classes HH di>pla\s impeccable ' A large lurking class and a sizable Journalist told me one day, \for most of us Mohammedans to un- derstand your attitude on Pales- tine. - „ — ~ it « politics maybe ^ou NOTICE / Notice is hereby given that Li No. Ki.-17O29 has been is fo tbv undersigned to sell wine, liquor, beer af^tail ha\e to play up to the Jewish vW-4 tht* Alcoholic Beverage^ Control /nent in your population, but whyti^iw at 17-iy Clinton strWr. Gou- middle class with a smaH fnnge ! lands in thi» worLd. in the Pacific i o( extreme wealth the difference > fa lands in North and South Am*-r- } in income is great Thr average ! R-a and m Africa j you support the idea that Pales- j \erwur, county of St. tine must be made a national home ! N Y . for on-prvmise for the Jews we do not at all *ee I Dated October 4, 1947 \In the first place, it Un t H* j FreJ Barr vhough there were no other place | * 17-19 CUmon St. —-Ck*±\ erneur, fc>. V. NOTU'V ^Notice is ht»rvt)> in the vvyrld to which displaced ( Jews of Europe could go are many unde\ eloped, fertile Li- manv of uh,ch ! <^~' N ° HL-1934 has been issued e i o _ / ^ Mr.HBEBSHIPS - - * j Clent custom -inclined *u .jk-Uy ! labortr makes about UO lira per j couid \if developed, become much , u> the undersigned to sell wine Audit Bureau Crf Circulation* Greater Weeklies Division,, tn e busim-ss at hand in fa\oc of month, which in Turkey -*nd in- | richer than Palestine can ever be i lx*uor. beer at retail under the Al- coholic Beverage ««•••••»«•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ^~ SHIRRY 91.00 Q«MTt TOKAY $1.00 Pint y Our Georc« BUckberry Wine 100 Proof Bonded Bourbon — 6 Y^mr* Old x$TH W.95 • PINT $3.15 A»k t or Our Fre« Wine Cooking Recipes • ^ - « Gouverheur Liquor Store ENTERTAINING New York Press Association \ American Press Association the social amenities, such as a cuj Weekly Newspaper Bureau National E^toriai Association | of Turiush coffee, before the AJDerican Weekly Newspaper Pubtehcrs Council Kxcxrsm: NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE Greater Weeklies, 2^5 West .39th direct. New York 18, N. ¥• SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.00 per year anywhere in the United Suites. $3.50 in Canada $4 00 in other foreign countries. NewsstancTprice 10c per copy COMPOSITION RESPONSIBfUTV TTUS newipaper will not be liable for errors appearing in any adverUs Ing beyond co»t of the space occupied by the error. •ld©% HOME OWNED \. flation here u close to the general' -From the Arab -that is to sav Control Law at discussion He makes no bone* about his admiration for American methods American products and Americans Hut food and clothing are extreme- in general, though occasionally he !y «\\pens:ve. in terms of working European level is just about i the Moslem -viewpoint, xhvre *i> [ Ru-hville Hotel. Richvilie. county enough T () keep body and soul to- | no objection to the establishment ° r 8t Lawrence. -V Y for on- Tht-re is no lack of any ; of a natiur,*l home for the Jews. 1 premise consumption !••••••••••••••••••• •••••*••••••••••• •\• kind of rTH-rchandise in the stores but the\*Moslems fail to has been disap>pointtd And onc that happens, he not to get stung is quite again. men's although the official bkel> /exchange of 2 8 lira to the Amer- j icnn dujlar makes living for the L' S \sit bl b j The on e criticism } ha\e heard L' S \;sit<r rea.vmable by I of America came from ian ii iii\ -I standards MM i ij ii and our »The \black market\ sec w h> an Arab country must be seized in order to provide it. 'After all. the Arabs have lived in Paiestine much longer than the Jews have ever lived th«>r*\ and thev are as jealous of the;r rights to wh-dt Uky i regard as their coun- \ it is really black, for 1 try as vou would he if *ay the OCT. 15, IJM7 THE TWAIN HAVE MET ' On;?' as rvtvntiy as 1WJ, these Con tirtued from F'agt Oni'» peoples w*n- heavily Taxed, an The westernization of the furks eompans<>n with other Turks, and received Jts greatest impetus, of n;an> of tnem fear they may again course, from the late, preat dicta- r*- forced to pay exorbitant taxes tor. Mustapha Kemal Pasha, who jus* because :he> are minorities. later assumed the name of At a- Ky virtue of graduation from i turk <*father of the Turks.\ \the collie pf Turkey, a Turk becomes] No. 1 Turk ', a cognomen given to eJigshle for a commission in the him by a grateful people, who military service Hut officer's rank speak of him today with the great- is rarely givrn To minont\ people. est reverence.; \Not tt.at it l>othered me very According to Ibrahim Camli.' much, ' one highly educanxi \rrun- chief of the Istanbul bureau of the ont>\ chap told me one day. \be- Arab News Agency, the process of cauM- sou're really much letter off westernization had begtm long -be- a> a common soldier than as an Ifore Ataturk. but it was he who oflcer you have a lot more fun \legalized' monogamy, the re- . \. . Hut. from the standpoint of moval of the fez and the veil \Be- pride. I must confess that it made fore his time.\ Mr. Camli explains, rne a lit:it- angry*' \the Turks, principally in the And the two-party system is an cities, had already begun to accept innovation in Turkish politics. It western ways. The harem was di>- came atn>ut only because President appearing-^except in the rural • lnonu. who is nearly as powerful areas, where several wives were as the late Ataturk. favored it. me some of the drt-ss goods stack-| money is traded so covertly that j Scandina\ lan peoples, as the de- ed to the ceiling of his warehouse |I never *dw dollars change hands J pendants r< Leif Krickson or any Most of it was of Turkish or Mid- ; through , arching bur official ! other peoples who>t' colonists set\- dle Kast manufacture. \But kx>k | channels m the cit> is. about 3.4. ! tied ,n America i^»fore your pres- ent government waVshorn ly d«nMnded a slice of\ Istanbul, located at the junction S UiU * ** H ™^™« ] of \hc Bos[>orus with tht» Sea of \ Th » k fact That fne Jcws this, he said, as he pulled! so I was told ck>u n a couple lx>lts of cloth from j a shelf. This is* American goods and I cdu't sell it. Tru»y won't bu\ it. \It's ur.fortur.ate. but I'll tell you why. Some tinn* ago some of us rc-ce-ived some business letters on impres&i\e stationery from 1 American concerns, and we placed orders for their goods. Although we had never heard of them be- fore, according to their letter- heads, they were corporations, arvd the letterheads Ux>ked good When the merchandise arrived, we found that the goods was as much as six inches *hort in each bolt. So we just quit buying American goods \We found out later that the. so-called 'corporations' were peo- ple who had maytx 1 a desk and a telephone in a small office in New York together with a lot of other an '-economic necessity', as extra and because a number of influen- hands were needed to farm the lial newspapermen had -against land. - . . \Western dress and were in vogue. .Marmora, with a magnificent har- N>r in the Golden Horn, is a fas- ' it on religious principles miMns more TO the Arabs rtutn it would Dated October 1 1947 Caiiton and Madge Eldridge R.chville N Y. NOTKK N'»tKV i* herxnv gi\en that LJ- cense No RL-IBL^ has * bt*en is- siuxi to the undersigned to sell wine, liquor, btvr at retail under the Alcoholic Bt*verage Control Law a4 131 E Mam Street, Gou-j verneur C\>unty of St. Lawrence,) N V tor on-premise t^nsumption. ! t^d October 1, 1947. | J Frank Boprey j d-b-a- Curle\ s Restaurant i I'M E. >Uim Street ;' Gouverneur N. Y. cmating city Within the confines I t0 > ou if F* H> P U>S >f the nhJ city waHs. the buildings | America country reasons. so-called 'corporations'. They wert- without credit or any decent fi- nancial standing • considerable opposition -urged it i / <Are there many of the *V\ ^l^ « 4 , *^*^ b pie in your country - and why manners strongly. culture It came into being only a few was becoming popular, and western months ago. and even last August business methods were acceptance. finding among influential Turku who dis- trusted the \mass vote' in a two- ~ \This is not to minimize the im- party system, there was a move- portance of the accomplishments' ment to return to the one-party of Ataturk. for rt was he, in the arrangement. But this was over- greatest wisdom, who set the ter- come, and the two party system is ritorial limits of Turkey, who now a part of the basic law of the f they're all that revolutionized our government, land. and literally made Turkey a west- • • • pie in your country does your government sortv of thing\' ^ —*'I tell you that it's unfortunate, because there are many olher re- sponsible American firms with whom we have done business satis- factorily for years and years. BUT once you get 'taken' by one Amer- } ican Textile firm, you wonder if ern power. \One of In the present continuing period the world's greatest <?f change, both-the nki the - .< \ • leaders/* a Turk of Greek descent new are evident in Istanbul, Tur- told me a few dayp later. \You. key** largest city . •- cannot imagine what it meant to . \Wherr you talk And, in spite of his optimism, and his pride m the modernization •ef-Turkey, the businessman will tell you that often it is difficult j tq^ introduce a* new product or about man-: aieihod which has not been used y v abolish the fez and then to abolish power.\ Ed GreenwaJd. chief of before. \You take a risk some- l f the veil, the ancient customs of a ; the Associated Press in Istanbul, times \ he will* say. \and often it very old people. But these'things | told me. \you SP:E it here\ This j takes a long trme to 'sell* the idea told me \you SP:E it here.\ This j takes a long trme to 'sell* the idea is literally true, for along the i But once it goes, it goes well.\.I \ very old people But these'things he did, in one day! j \You have to remember that we docks, in the warehouse districts \ A number of American manufac- are\\principally a ~Moslem people.' and along the business streets, the ; turvrs are rendering real ser\ ice - and that it is a custom-in many ; visitor seos hundreds of men. < to Turkish importers, by supply- Moslem countries for the men to carrying unbelievable loads on I ing qualified personnel who not wear the eylindcically shaped red! their backs, heavy baskets of fruit, j only understand the product itself. cap. with the black fringe hang* ] stacks, of crates of vegetables and ! but are competent public relations ing down from the t^p, which we 'merchandise, huge wooden pack- ! men with advertising experience ^cat! & fez. ' • ---*— • jingboxes,. *att>fi, furniture, evervi<as weil. Again, the Kipling Last- •'Furthermore, it is a part of the j large p.eces of heavy elecxucal and ' West axiom falls apart, with the iMohammedan religion that women .mechanical equipment. / (success of western saies methods must always be veiledl^And Turk- Men here are beasts of burden, j in an Eastern land. , ^ v 1 ish men were very proud and pro- on a competitive basi* *Vith the j Perhaps the greatest *con><ast tecth'e of their wives. The veiJ pro- horse and cart, of whkrh there are j between the ancient and the mo^- tected women from the eyes of thousands driving Constantly at;ern in Turkey lies ir; rtnail sales strangers. - j breakneck speed through the nar-jon the one hand, business is con- \Thus to abolish the fez and the row coBBiestoned streets of Istan- .ducted In the stores in the prm- veil meant to remove, forcibly, bul about and around the plodding cipal business streets much the ^ some of our most^Ancient and re- human load carriers, who. by the | same as in America -the price on ligious customs. But it became il- way. are among the highest paid) the tag is the\ price you pay But is stilt illegal—to~Vortcmen in the city They are! O n the other, in the\ ancient ba- poorly clolhed. often ragged and j zaar* where you ca*i buy any- barefooted, but thry \have been j thins from food to garments, and legal—and it wear either. \And then to abolish the Arabic alphabet and introduce Roman characters, so that our languaee j s known tn live to 102. and in con- ! Middle \East antiques ' some of trast with other common laborers. j which, as in America, are of recent can be read m wwternjtylr. like tho >\ make M much \ W ^ «»»>•• I make, but Enzli&h or FVench or German ;TrV\sarne ty *^Thr« \he also did in one day. and in vessels which * doing it, he opened education to/the Bosporus and !or 'The dtfticuHy now are both ancient and modern, with some of the handsomest architec- ture the East has produced. The cries of the street vendors with their scales Tmd baskets of fruits mingle w:th the constant tooting of automobile horns in incredibly crowded stnvts. It is a busy city. colorful not only in the vast array of it.s merchandise, but in its rnag- n.fieent churehes and mosques. is dainty minarets, its ancient building. i*s multi-colored mar- kets. JT> hundreds of Korge°us °al im P^ cat * ons - formerly in IMxrt <>f \our tha! or other •hat this situation, which is alter all a local affair, has become an international matter l»ecause of xhe strategic j i pt»s!:on ; of thi-Arabic countries. [ 59 \\Vst Main ST.. countySf St NOTKK Not ice »V hen*by g.ven that LJ- (vnse No. l>^rj has bt^en issued to the undcrsi^MK-d to sell wine. liquor, cider rft\retail under ihe Alcoiioiic IVnenhje Control at Gouvernour Liqi>ar Store, with their vast resources in oil; and because of I he s'rong jx)litiral position o! the Jews in America and Kn^l ind. It therefore becomes j ;* \ery djl'ficuit problem to M>i\«\j of its international panoramic vistas and its friendly people. During the uar there was some question as to Turkey's position. for then 1 was a definite trend to- ward Germany. v\ ho had cultivated Jhe.,Turkish people from the time I Kaiser Wilhelm IJ. There are, in fact, still some Turks who think that Europe in general imght have been better •off under- Hitler* than in its presont^state of confusion. Mtffrrtfm ami -d*>*pair^ —_____ But there is no question about Turkey's political position today. A prominent Turkish businessman ptK> it this way: \We have fought seven wars with Russia. We know what Rus- sians are like \Ve do not fear them, we. hate them. We don't want our people to fall into the uVcay which has Wallen the countries and the peoples who to- day make up the L'..S. S R. or .her satellite powers. We want pro- ^T(-SS.\ s . .... Tht re are Communists in Tur- key, but generally speaking they consist only of a small clique of parlor intellectuals, and Com.nun- ists in general are extremely un- popular in this country. This is. I think as Congress- rnan_\IunJt expressed it in a re- cent inWvfew in Turkey — the hrightt-st spot on this continent. Por in Turkey, there is no'queT- •ion of developing democracy or .preserving democracy. It is al- y here, and Ihe Turks are de- \Hut the Arab wonders why. AI America and England want pxaco -and presumably, after -trH they have been through in Eurofx\ tne j Jews do. tix> that a national home I for the Jewish people can't be set i up somewhere else. The Arabian yieople feti stronK- Jy enough atn>ut it except here in Turkey, where in spite of The >Ios- j |-3? lem majority, there seeins to 'be } no pronounced -et>neern one way i wivnce, N. Y . for ofT-pre (consumption. I X>attxi October 1. 1947 George C Perreault James S Scjjar d-b-a Gcnjverneur Liquor iStaru 59 West Main St. Gouverneur, N. Y. Keep COLD CM AUTO SAFETY GLASS \ ^' Libbey-Owen Ford Quality \\ Factory Pattern Service Quality Edge Work AUTO RADIATORS CLEANED • REPAIRED • FOR SALE ^IX-IT SHOP Phone 562-J Parker Street N other To It is sim- ply a matter of fi^htin^ for the j land o* one of their own peoples j And make no mistake at>out it. i they WILL fight!\ termined that it will stay. ined ey a They are so sure of it. and so confidern of Anglo-American sup- port, that i^iey do not hesitate to \talk hack'\ iy but firmly to •he- Russians. X Since I have been here, the Rus- sian government . has handed a note to the Turks -protesting a£ajr*s! what was describe-d as an (IIAMI'S of FOOD and DRINK Try Our Delicious Specialties * Chicken in the Basket * Stuffed Greenr Peppers\ * Antipasto - Steaks and Chops And ALL LEGAL BEVERAGES, of course CASABLANCA KESTM KWT A East Main Street Phone 593-M CH J all the people. For Arabic char- mora in oldm t:mes brine in tons made to \look ?hat| f , ffor t to recruit\ Moslem pwple peof ancienThshjap—\ a - v \ 1 * trade is entjrtI > on a bar 'I in Russia and Russian-controlled piied the water of c^nrng basis. In those small shops, countries, for entry \.»TO Turkey.* ^nd'thr <;..a nf Myr- ThP sel^r's^-J^ipg ftTtce\ « ffl- Apparrnfr>- Moslem people, sub- \ ; wti^rr from 3 to 10 times as much a> he expects to pet when the deal '' cation was lustedI to the\.fe»-\ 7 ; dav.'Vo makc'lstanburonr oVihc 1!l clow>d And bar K amin « «*•«••<* aciers\ are so different that - of fresh fish to the bazaars Turkish newspapers, book* and greatest sea • magazines, in general makeup, world. Thv ships, which 1 1 have printing and design, look r&uch seen on the vwa>j are built in , like most 'western publications, much thr same miTynrr : as thfy * a-nd their circulation rxpands ai- were yr^rs aro. and *hr custom- - most daily as new \crops\ rt stu- ' ary mntrvr no^er is a picturesque cmu-n of The an Wrwnent.on a price « the ac- ceptt»d method of doin^ business. Turinsn merchant in me ba- zaar expects it and enjoys it not onJy because it means a marching of vnts. but also because be like* triangular s. I ir.rK>vation < auxiliary en- ^ dents in oncoming .*• learn to read. 2 The procesu £>( weslernlzatior • and democratize!ion was $}ov> . and Thr -—it J£ -fiULLcSfitinuing Bu: in Tne and xr n-ar.\ fc coursr of The years Turkey has 4e- ••rr as */iast - veloped a vast educat»oniii prc+- )C ar. r^n* i^ at \the Aratnan Nights rfTTrrthr modern tn ° argument and discussion and the , i \~>rry* essirrn^) thr same anorn* at waving of arms Tb<H- it involves The Turkish businessman jects of Communist dominated states arr mijrrrtling to Turkey. After due investigation, in which the Turk* took their time, they re- plied that no effor* had been made to rocrur anybody, but that if people preferred to come to Tur- kry to there wasn't much the Turk.sb. sri^^rrr.mfnt cmild do 10 chanc** th^ir opinion. And further- more. The Turkish gmernmer.t was Clad sharp 2 £ram for all her peopic one ^ tbe wnjest and soundec trr - workl \While ha if of r»ur one Turkish edura t or r **** dr^^ted * to nattonaJ defense 1 r«t item UB :t a t Yet. ir. spite of tr.is w * program. inequa];Tie» and pr<- 1 jixboes exi«t Since Tvirkfy & ^\ - mm* 9C per cen* Mo*.err. it . * perhaps unbenTanda&ie I strong relw** feeim*: ir.'.i-st the bazaars, the bu«y- Arnrr.can \aKl streets gates of Sc\irt Soprua Turkey. their Cioibo? pa'ches Rfur -. anf.ther th^:r limb* dis- is a ciaa :r. weirome any peoples who trader That quaMy of jwar^-d •-• ji\Tj»:i?h;r. its borders. Turk.sh character was nc> er bet - j pro\ iriod tha: they wrr^ WiiLnp \*>r 6i rM>n^': a!t'*d tfcur.• !w the -F»^ilG work j±r*d abirff ^*\_ Tiy>^l<ryL-t of cent discussions concerning the | Tne land of $i r »0 milhor to j • • • j Th^ foUowini: cor.vprsa'ior. Judged by the standards of aidl*\*^* &** !%ot pr-.maniy ronorrr to olher courtnes f f or e xarr.pif. | Turkey, is added ir. < f*u of rur- ^Pop8T>ents l in fbf Ph.es*, nc _ — - • _ - - ( ably iaix^- bu 4 mple. I is not rrrr«aj\k- J Turks first of l an wanted tc know what were the { attached\' | were dc*errriTw*d re: tc br THJT to *xcrrf;ce ar> j BACKACHE, . LEG FAINS MAY BE DANGER c d r*> ck•^^ or supported orx* cr-t a pr -ud people But c war. > underst ond Kard %+i BOS of mpcrb quabty FATHERS *OURBON m •• to4 tot m. m% a • fr\*-~»rxr 'c a ra»fc-^ % ^a; cr*r±A~ r: irv^^v u *» .'^ * -V Christmas Cards i Including your name printed on i__ ^ \ r -• . - • Remember -/They're •- Personalized iQreeting Cards rmrA plain envelopes to Here are the cards you liave. been looking for! Sparkling with individuality and good cheer . . • Cards that will be remembered long after Christmas - . . and they are reasonably priced # . . 33 for I 00. There are never enough R\TEX Christmas Card* to go around so BUY THEM NOW before «*• too late? Sec Oux gomftUu THE TRIBUNE. PRESS 10-14 Park Street ITS C o