I MARQTHO ll 5:93. (R.euters)- The public pr so or Wednesday called for th d th sentence for ex-Nazi ge er Karl Oberg. "the butcher of Pa s." for war crimes. The prosecutor also asked for eath sentence for 0be,rg's aide. Colonel Helmuth men are appearing before 5 Paris military tribunal charged with mass murder. deportaticns and.brutal tortures. mmedlately after the war they wer.-beentenced to death by a British court for the murder of Allied paratroopers. Their sen- ieace was commuted to life Im- prisonment and they were handed over to the French. The prosecutor held that Oberg. 58, was chiefly responsoble for the deportation of 220,000 Frenchmen. He said only 22,000 returned from Germany after the. war and 10,000 of these had since died from the effects of treatment in German prisons. The prosecutor. Maj. Jean Flicouteaux. told the. court there "is no question of any revenge here." . "We do n o t want revenge against a great nation which re- mains in the forefront of our com- mon clvilization. But we are, here ' this common civiliz- slion." He said Pierre Talttinger. war- time president of the Paris munic- ipal council, had described Oherg as "the terror of Paris-the, per- fect incarnation of a brute who and any- anything understand never understood never tried to thing." Oberg and Knochen claimed in their defence they were acting on Hitler's personal orders and llnstructions from Heinrich Himm- er. PIONEER STEAMBOAT The first steamboat seen on the St. Lawrence river was built by Iohn Molson at Montreal in 1808. . SPICY TASTE V COUVER (CP) - Two Ok- snag n valley industries have com- bined to offer British Columbians apple ice cream. The B.C. Fruit Groweru Association and Shuswap- Okanagsn Dairy Industries Co-op- erative are co-operating to produce the new dish commercially. CUDMORPS DRY CLEANERS 120 Kent St. Phone (922 TIRE BARGAIN! Sean: fortiiefsmoiis - AO'O ooooives .OXQ..OIO'o'o' AVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVA 0' aioiysnrolii tire . , , Harelsfieit the buy " on a long-mileage. suannteed Goodyear. IAIOAINI IN I OYHII Sill! 1'00! Seeusfodoyl MOTORS urn. onus or MAINTAINING STANDARDS or uvme Pill on ausmrss MEN I HALIFAX. (CF) - The job of maintaining present standards of living and creating a still better way of life was put on Canadian busineu men today by W. J. Bor- rie of Vancouver, president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. Bpeakinl to the chsmber's an- nual meetins. he said: "Probably our greatest contribu- tion in the clash of ideologies is to make sure that there is no reduc- tion in the standard of living but rather to create bigger and better op rtunities for all." . Borrie's comments were in- cluded in the text of a statement given to the pres before delivery at today's first general session of the chamber's four-day meeting. Taking a text from the forests of his home province of British Columbia, Mr. Eorrie said the chamber. now holding its 25th an- nual gabhering. had reached a state of "perpetual yield" in the things that make for a bigger and better Canada. ESSENTIAL T0 DEMOCRACY Linking in its membership 100 boards of trade and chambers of commerce in 10 provinces. he de- scribed it as essential to the suc- cessful operation of the democra- tic system. p Mr. Barrie spoke from his ex.- perience of nearly 100,000 miles of travel since he was elected presi- dnt in Edmonton a year ago. He travels up and down and across Canada. and into Mexico. Peru. Japan. Alaska, Honolulu and the United States. . Canada's big boards and cham- bers. by the scope of their opera- tions, frequently won local and national approbation, but smaller centres also were making their contributions. The Whitehorse board of trade in the Yukon. sponsored and prac- tically built by volunteer labor a big skating rink and sports centre. BUILD OWN ROAD The chamber of Bella Coola, B. 0.. had built 80 miles of road through the coast range "until the provincial government took over. inspired by thLs example of self- help." Arcola, Sask.. through its board of trade efforts. had become head- quarters for oil exploration in the southeastern part of the province. The chamber in Boissevain, Man.. had carried out a beautifica- tion program outstanding among small towns. In New Brunswick, the Memram- cook chamber had overcome lack of fire protection by raising enough -' - money. through strawberry festi- vals. to buy three large fire trucks and to build a fire station. These. said Mr. Borrie, were a few of thousands of projects at the "grass-roots" level. On the provincial and national levels, the fact that the chambers recommendations reflected the op- inions of so many communities made for favorable hearings and encouraging results. i saooun nasr raani Earlier this year. said Mr. Bor- rie. there had bcen a. lot of loose talk about poastbilltles of b" reces- sion. However, when this year's results were added up. it probably would be the second best year eco- nomically next to 1953 in Can- ada's history. "we have probably come to rea- lize that we cannot expect each succeeding year to produce lnow records. We must look at current problems coolly and realistically. Basic principles must be kept in mind, and one was that hard work is essential for success; while an- other was that an individual, a company or a country, must, as far as possible, live within the in- come received. Ira P. McNab. president of the Halifax board of trade. welcoming the delegates from across Canada. said the Canadian people have an investment of 30,000,000 in the facilities of the port of Halifax, and we hope thatvou as Canadian business men will see that these facilities are made use of to the full. and thus aid in the greater prosperity of Canada." Mr. McNab predicted that the Canso causeway connecting the Nova Scotia mainland with Cape Breton, and the new bridge across Halifax harbor, would" give Nova. Scotia one of the best and most complete transportation systems in Canada. Senator Tired of Appeasement MANCHESTER. N. II, (AP) - senator Styles Bridges (rep.-NH.) Tuesday night said he is "tired of being afraid of the Russians, it is about time the Russians started to be afraid of'us" ' Speaking at 11 civil defence ses- sion at St. Anselm College. the president pro tempore of the Son- ate said: "I truly believe that the only hope of peace is for us to return to the principles which made this nation great; to cease appeasement; to cease compromise on funda- mental principles . . ." The senator called for a. return to the days of "the rattlemake flag so that the Communists will . be afraid to take any action which may possibly call for strong measures on our part." Noting that the first flag of the republic was a. coiled rattlesnake with s motto. "Don't Tread-On Me", New I-lampshires senior sen- ator said that "in my opinion. that is the attitude we better adopt in the world today" svu.tm'iux9 E for - -. 208 Ct. George St. ANTI-FBEEIE Installed by experts at w. R. JENKINS” 0(l.4,04IV7ff0 Pl?0f!(i7lfM' Dial 6563 J. c. Income "20." "deluxe nodal with Pain lictlan OTHER rmous mass 1. c. mum. bolt-action repeater. toast no-' underneath like expensive guns, ll-gauge. hall choke. NOW ONLY-,CASll ..... ........ Sure-allot single-barrel shotgun. Full mas". it-gauge I an shell. Thumb type action with 4. strong automatic ' tor -...-... CASH anus I Ithaca Model I1 pump-action repeater. Feath- I. t. Bottom ejeoti Orlllh modified choke .. ' V "Liberal Trade-In Allowance On 0 Your on Gun" ' . ms me: as easy" 1-svnsm: rum .- oivav i 'l0'la DOWN 4,1':oi..e st. Silsaona.-Sears "Our Best Value” 12 Gauge was some NOW 389.95 on. 1!-llllilt full at CASH nus ; Dial 8138 mos norm: anroxoao" Recon. , HALIFAX (CP)-An RCAF '1'-B3 Silver Star let trainer set a Port- age La Prairie, Man.. to Halifax record Tuesday as it brought F0. Ralph Logan home to attend the funeral of his mother. ' o E0. Frank Macglidlllan. of wood Islands. P. E. 1.. was at the con- trols of the plane for the 1.500- mile trip which took two hours and 44 minutes. i Sources available here said the old mark for the route was set by a CF-100 fighter in three hours and 10 minutes. a MacMillan said he took advan- tage of the so-called jet stream. :a band of high altitude air travelling in a set direction at great speed. HISTORIC ISLANDS The Mingan islands north of Anti- costi in the St. Lawrence gulf were will Review Princess Pats SOEST. Germany (CP) - The founder of P r in c e s s Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry and the former princess whose name it besrs- will meet this weekend to review the 2nd Battalion. Lady Patricia Ramsay. colonel- in-ch ief and granddaughter of Queen Victoria. will stand Satur- day aftemoon wl Brig. A. Ham- ilton Gault of ontresl for the trooplng the color ceremony. first since Lady Patricia presented the new color in Calgary last year. Gauit in 1914: gave the Canadian government 5100.000 to form a small mounted corps for Britain. It took the name of the then-prin- cess Patricia. daughter of the Duke of Connaught, 10th governor-gem eral of Canada. Accompanied bp her husband. Admiral Sir Alexander Ramsay. Lady Patricia will arrive Friday for a two-day visit. with the 2nd Battalion. a component of the lst Canadian Infantry Brigade KNUP stationed here. v discovered by Jacques Cartier in 1535. Other guests will. include Col. Tl-IlS WINTER . L "of Dr B . NEXT summsa 3'Prestone" Brand may suffer the expen has been drained :1 al'i .wa Youiil. wish RESTON Bil - rm-rnsrzs iwittmat the eompletegprotection of ing system damage this winter or even tux! summer after the anti-freeze water and rust inhibitor. I Remember--a 'substitute' anti-freeze just might get you through the winter without cooling system freeze-up. But freeze-up is less than half the hizltd Of ' winter engine operation. Many cases of ANTI-FREEZE Protects the entire tual system from freezing. cation winter and, eusnmorl . are can tection Anti-Freese, you so of serious cool- nd replaced with ' ging, 5 protect -not i OAS I.lNI You may Fiust the s Prevents dram condone Nnl u- 4 you games atone. who raised. trained and led the 2nd Battalion in Ko- rea. where it was Canada's first fighting unit. C..ners will he Col. D. C. -Cameron. post-war regimen- tal commander and now Canada's director of infantry; Lt.-Col. Roy Stevens of Montreal. regimental historian; Col. H. W, Niven of G la s g o w, 78. regimental com- Canada's Mildest. g Cigarette Friday. October .3, 1954 The Guardian -& Page 7 mander at the first trooping--at Z00 PLANS Winnipeg after the First World BURNABY. B.C. (CP)-Burnaby War, and ex-sergeant T. Giles of municipal council will consider Slough, Bucks., who -fought with plans for a big metropolitan zoo the PPCLI in the First World without bars in Central Park. The war, 62-acre zoo would be part of an Gault joined the unit as a cap- over-all development plan for the taln and rose to command it. 220-acre park. smov mun" summer engine over-heating problems sed by inferior anti-freeze pro- during the previous winter. ”Prestone" Anti-freeze protects the cooling system against freeze-up, rust. corrosion, acid contamination. clog- ccpagc, deterioration of metal and rubber parts. That's complete ion! It always pays to r'rm'ston '-'Prestone" Anti-Freeze. Don't accept 'substitutes' f you're looking for guaranteed, complete protection, the kind that only ;'Prestone" Ami-Freeze can give. WARNING! be,told that other brands are am: as' "Prestone" Anti-Freeze. It isn't so! Insist on "Prestone" Brand and you can get it-anywhere! "Prerlmn-". "I?1'ertuIy" and "Prinre" no main . herb sf Union Carbide Claude Limited IKL A IKE-JHUN WU .xpVwWi . Loam rem ' tfbxf F M: X . uni; A ”l75 ":7, i) Y"'"rv-. 9 I 'D' i-,,