FRUSday, aumyat 28, LEHy, aera: CRE PRISUNE, WILLTAME LASS, Bc, - FEWER EAGLES _EXPERT SAYS aot) LONG SAULT RAPIDS FIR = = : SAULT BAM Eifty years of international discussion, dreaming and disagree- ing became just a memory as the first work on the $600.000.000 St. Lawrence river project commenced on both Canadian and US, Sides of the river. First problem that enc'reers are tackling is the iversion or the When finished 8 from the project will be delivered in 1958. Rockets from the Ws. ST TO DISAPPEAR IN ST. LAWRENCE PROJECT —Central Press Canadian Eagle expert Charles Lavelle Broley of Gorrie, Ont., says that the famed birds are dying out in southern Canada. _ The trouble , he says, that during nesting season, the eagle is too often frightened away from the nest and the unhatched eggs perish from cold. Broley is 75, but still climbs 80-foct trees to band young eagles, as shown above, on Whiskey Island, near Brockville, Ont. He has many sears to show of his -battles with bald eagles, who when raising their young are tough birds to tackle. Last view of their sister Emilie is had by Yvonne, Marie, Cecile and Annette before the “i GF EMILIE BY SURVIVING SISTERS a, 2 AM . JACKIE IS AMATEUR IS AAU DECISION 2 ie 3 —Central Press Canadian Disqualified from the discus —World Copy right, 1954, International News Photos —Distributed by Central Press Canadian casket was closed and taken to the Dionne family _ ailment. WINS CLOSE, STEPS INTO OPEN = Soe Central Press Canadian First woman to cop the Canadian ladies’ close golf title four years in a-row, petite Marlene Stewart, 20, is congratulated by Noreen Laing, left, of Toronto, who came in fourth in the tourna- ment at Dartmouth, N.S. Miss Stewart, from Fonthill, Ont., cap- teo-1 the title with a 232 total for 54 holes, nine strokes better 1. runner-up Dorothy Herbertson of Victoria, B.C. She then went on to the Canadiar ladies’ open tournament, winning her first round in rain so heavy the cups were full of water. burial plot at Corbeil, Ont. Emilie died of suf- on —Central Press Canadian Gareth Lucier, 17, of Windsor, Ontario, holds the glider which won him first place in the senior class tow the U.S. naval air station in Glenview, Iino: “Tow-Toddy” is of original design. ine-glider contest at is. The glider, called foeation during an epileptic seizure, but doctors say the surviving quints show no signs of the 7: = Yukon Replaces Protocol With Warmth oe ee ; —Central Press Canadian Hi, Duke.” say these admiring schoolchildren as they weleame the Queen's husband to Whitehorse, Yukon. Some 5,000 citizens € far north community dispensed with protoc ing in- formally with the Duke of Edinburgh Poe ing a nuret ate mond, worth more than $1,000,000, at Port Radium, the Duke tuck Ori bY Plane across the Arctic Circle to the Eskimo trading post of Coppermine, on Great Slave lake. SOUTHERN CARIBOO Trap Shooting Championsh Sunday, August 29 TO BE HELD 10 A.M. Pp Stampede Grounds