Eighty-Third Congress Ends Session With Some Top Legislation Incomplete TODAY and WEDNESDAY TWO FEATl HUGO HAAS - CLEO MOORE In "ONE GIRL'S CONFESSION" I .ALSO HELEN WALKER - ROSS ELLIOTT in "PROBLEM GIRLS" ADULT ENTERTAINMENT ONLY list of key measures which will j House, made a firm start toward make or break their record. ' edging away from the Demo-Many of the hottest potatoes, cratic party's New Deal and Fair including some of the president's Tnl nhilosoDhies. recommendations, were simply ONLY A START itii in the bin. Others, on the But even Republicans conced-arlvi'-e of the president, were ; ed it was only a start, and much handed to study commissions for of it at that achieved only with closer scrutiny. . Democratic aidt This first session, of the first j Eisenhower will give his own By don wuiTr.iiF.An WAonlN'UTON (API At the r yoke of midnight, the Republican-controlled United States rd Congress wrote finis to a .tfxed record of action and lethargy in helning President Eisenhower fulfil his campaign pledges. But members left behind for PLl'S - NEWS CAPIT01 LAST SHOW 8:15 A FAMOUS PLAYERS 5 THE Vnt, estimate of this session's achievements in a radio broadcast , i ' ' ' . . ... . -' - W'- , .ri!L'. ::!. ' - t ' " , . their second session beginning Congress in two decades to be yan. 6 or a possible special Republican - controlled while a .riveting this fall an imposing Republican was in the White TODAY and WEDNESDAY 7 p.m . . o j '" is' .. - Prinze Rupert Daily News Tuesday, August 4, 1953 'TaiiBStiEv? Thursday. Monday night he sent letters' of "warm thanks and appreciation" to the House of Representatives and Senate. There was no hint in the letters of any chagrin over his blecrest leeislative misfire: a plea to boost the statutory debt limit. With the debt now $272,500,-000 000 and more borrowing predicted, Eisenhower's fiscal leaders had been insistent that the " WALLACE'S DEPARTMENT STORE kT. t f IHMfcwS i .:,tt ruNi Mtiii cuunrs am ncu uciunu-ma m iw nm mm ' . i TOTE. Motlicr-in-l.aw's Day I'ashionx of Yesleryear Open House j- -- THE LITTLE CHAMP back of the cue ball is sev;n-year-old billiard ace Guy Delville of Roubalx, France, who Inherited his mastery of the cue. He ' the son of a seventcen-time national billiards champion of France. I'AMOI'S PLAYERS mi-Annual j r I r I : Pi statutory debt limit be raised! from 275,000,000,000 to $290,000,-000.000. ' , A special session in Octo'ber or i November was obvioUslyMn pros- pect. But Eisenhower said in his letters to the members of Con- f gress: "I look forward to seeing: all of you again in January." In the closing hours Congress pushed through final agreement on a $53,500,000,000 program to finance the snending of the p.ov- ernment and the armed services : India Sets Up Wild Life Board to Study Problem of Conserving Country's Big Game mock aaie: r oor 1 WALLACE'S DEPT. STORE I u fNWVViRf9liflRn3VHEBIIIIIIIIIIIIII By ADIUENNE FARRELL NEW DELHI (Reuterst Ama i in the year which started July 1. teur hunters, prowling the The bill was trimmed, but not , countryside by night with high-enough to balance the budget, powered rifles, are massauung The outlook is that despite the india's wild life! cuts there will be a whopping! Hercis 0 deer and nilgai !5.RO0.OO0 000 deficit at the close I ihlue-hull) which used to roam '.in' BILL MURRAY will spcok to you on CFPR Tuesday, Aug. 4tl 10:15 p.m. PROTECT YOUR FUTURE Vole SOCIAL CREDIT on . August 10th Some are already extinct. The la:;t report of a wilu cneela in India was several years ago, though in mogul times tlity used frequently to be caught and used as "hunting leupaius" to catch game. Lions, the symbol of India, now survive only in the forest riaurashtra. where they are protected. They are the last lions in Asia. A census last yenr showed that there, are only 250 The rhinoceros, once, on its way to extinction, has been protected for 40 years, and elephants are still numerous, tie-hpue the shrinking of forest areas. To preserve the fauna of the country, the Inuian government has set up a wild life board which will study the problems of const r.ing each species and draw vr strict regulations against ;..icit shotting. . i 1 1 ij LINDSAY'S CARTAGE AND STORAGE LTD. Established 1!U0 MOVING . . . PACKING . . . CRATING SHIPPING . . . FORWARDING . . . STORAGE Experienced handling Local, Nation-wide riid World-wide Shipments. 'MOVE WITH EASE . . . SHIP VIA LINDSAY'S" Agents Allied Van Lines Ltd. Phone 60 or 68 Oor. 2nd and Park Ave. left. freely through the jungles and fields of northern India, are being liquidated by poachers who hunt them down in the headlights of cars and jeeps with no regard to seasons, sex or size of the beasts they kill. As the deer vanish, so the bigger game, tigers and panthers, robbed of their natural food, begin to raid villages, killing cattle. Some of them become man-eaters, so that expeditions have to be organized to hunt them down. The problem of India's van Former Master of Sail Takes of the fiscal year. ; The rnon-v hills also included ! $6,500,000,000 for military and '"nnomic aid to friendly nations, i nlus another $200,000,000 for South Korean rehabilitation. A Senate committee approved bill calline for the U.S. to contribute $100,000,000 toward loint construction with Canada of the St. Lawrence seaway. It was scheduled for debate next January. Rome of the maior actions taken included dropping price and waee controls: extending rent controls in critical defence nr!is. and gave the nresident authority to send $100,000,000 worth of food surpluses overseas to help feed hungry nations. Wife and Family to Kamloops Odds n' Ends Sale KAMLOOPS. B.C. 0 Captain Seymour H. Biggs, 82, has cast anchor in Kamloops where he Master of sail, he holds a master's square-rigged ticket of highest competency. He once took a sailing ship through the ishing vild life is worrying nat Sporting Gcods of Every Type . . . & Fishing Equipment fa Swimming Accessories Lifebelts Exclusive Nylon Filled and Covered Sleeping Bags governments lives with his wife, daughter and uralists here and MEN'S SHOES Dress und Work styles .... SALE PICICE and two son-in-law children. in several of the states have plreadv -taken action to try to i protect wild animals. LADIES' PUMPS and SANDALS $ grand- Straits of Magellan, which la a short cut for steamers around the southern tip of South Amert- ca but is not considered suitable for sail. : On a West African trip years . All colors. Wide selection SALE PRICE The SPORT SHOP . Water Rights .; ; Fight Resumes r m m Boys' Oxfords and Kiddies' Shoes SALE I'KK'E Ladies' Pumps Kiddies' Ploy Shoes '1 With Crepe and Neolito Soles SALE PRICE ago he took a baby parrakeet from its nest and the bird has iy-en his constant companion since. during the depression years of the 1930's he was instrumental in helping hundreds of Canadian youths to get to England to Join the Royal Air Force. His old friend, Dr. E. C. Hart, then coroner in Victoria, "agreed to give a physical check-up to my boys for $2 each," says Captain Biggs. The news got around and boys came from many parts of Western Canada. You'll find bargains galore at astuundincly low Pnfr Call early and avoid disappointment. n ,. xt;; .r"", nim, " ONLY 1 n i ' Hear TO I V . I ALASKA I FASHION FOOTWEAR , . GREAT FALLS, Mont. AP : The Montana-Canada fuss over wtter rights has broken out into the open again. Canadian members of an ln-lornational joint water comrnis- i sibii were charged with being I non-committal in conceding any i share of the Waterton and Belly i river water with Montana j ' Attorney-General Arnold Ol- s!?n of Montana made the charge in a Great Falls federal-state : conference on sharing the waters which rise in Montana and flow into Alberta. Montana wants to use the vaters to recover thousands of acres of northern Montana land by irrigation. , "We have been- stymied since '948 on arriving at a real plan 1 ccause of the Canadian attl-i tucie." Olsen said, i " These waters are being trad-( d off for something else the i United States wants from Can-! adn. It's been a one-way street ! and we've yielded every step of "" i III!! DUU ,, " . :. ;! Via ! TONIGHT' ' ' - ELLIS ft iriii in n t( ; , ' ' M li 'lOl'i Sprn. CiM PR I! 0ffice PP- pt Off ' ' Phone 266 the way." 1 fly... FISHING... I Hot Gasoline AUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP) Vol-anis cones around this city have been extinct for years but citi-;ns are wondering if they are :s dead as they seem. Gasoline hi underground tanks have been found to be hot and boring under one tank ciiscloset. w..m air1 emerging from a fis.su: LAKE KHTADA SUNDAYS OR BY PRE-ARRANGEMENT In 190S, th New Wcitmintttr locrMM tcom later tfet fomoui "Sxi I monbelltct" become th ftrtt Horn to tht CotiodioH LacresM Chomptenthip. 1 :-, -i '. '. 1 1 ! Skeena Federal Candidate SfK f JtJ Labor Progressive Party yJa UEEN HARLOTTE IRLINES i v .... . 1 i GROUPS OF SEVEN,. PER PERSON In 1904, Villiam Braid founded B.C.'s first . distillery, and established the standard of quality that distinguishes B.C. 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