THURSDAY Entertainment Business Slumps in England LONDON. Feb. 6 -- (Reuters) - More than 15.000 actors. actresses and musicians-or one in three in the British entertainment business -are out of work in Britain. Their plight is blamed on a big slump in the entertainment world. Three unions. Variety Artists Feds:-atlon. Equity and the Music- ians Union. with a oombined mem- bership of 40.000. say that the en- tertainment. business is over- crowded. ' "Every year about 1.000 actors and actresses are turned out by; the dramatic schools." a spokes- man for Equity said. "Unfortun- ately there are not enough plays for them owing to a slump in the theatre." Most unemployed actors are. found in the West End of London. Every Friday queues of well-dress-E ed young men and women who used to earn up to 2'25 a week line up outside the labor exchanges to draw unemployment pay. Many find temporary erenin: employment. One of l.ondou's big- gest ice cream factories is at pres- ent eminlnviru: large numbers of out-of-work male actors at night. Death Toll In Plane Crash At Tower lip To Six CARMAN. Mam. Feb. 6-(OP)- Three steel workers. trapped on a tottering radio tower. were killed early Tuesday when the 570-foot mart snapped in two. broke clear of its moorings and slammed to earth. The men were repairing damage done when an R.C.A.!'. plane rammed the tower yesterday. killing all three airmen aboard. Working in the glare of n searchlight, the steel workers made a midnight ascent inside the three-sided tower. belonging to the Canadian Broadcasting Cor- poration's Manitoba station. CBW. Minutes later, as aatiff wind blew up. the light on the mast- head swayed. there was aloud grinding noise and a. 250-foot top section crashed to the -frozen earth. The remainder of the 30- ion steel structure-resembling a pencil standing on its point- snapped at the base and fell at right angles to the first section. Tile victims were Ronnie Erick- son, 19. of Tyndall. Man: Walter if!-IE GUARDIAN. GHARLOTTETOWN The incomparable Gracie Fields. tor Canadians stationed in Hanover to. and Pie. R. Gilman. Montreal. Burtnyk. 28. of Winnipeg and Jack Dyck or the criminal district. i Names of the victims of the sir-; The girls usually find tempor- ary work as night waitresses at; dance balls. - i NEW YORK. Feb. 6-(APl--l Actress Julie lfavoc. wife of the producer Wllliam Spier and star; of the Broadway comedy "Affalrsf Of State." suffered a mlscai'ria'..zei between acts of Saturday's matineelyzation school at Winnipeg. fouled. in New Yorl: l. a guy wire of the slender mast at Life's and now is confined hospital. Havoc was ”doing The hospital said Miss plane crash were released today. They were F0. Charles Chow- Leong, 29. of acting PO. Peter Frederick Hal-vey,l 20, of woodlands. lsleham. Cam- bridgeshlre. England. and acting Po. Edward scanlan, 18. of Chis- wick. London W4, England. The plane, from No. 2 Air Navi- nocii yesterday. nudged the tower secretary said she had been "ill for '. nearby field. over I month." When you buy I Larg size Qxvnoi or 2"cAMAY'5m 13”?" 3'5 Z yb,--eead. Mm -tool Dill. i or 79; Lo: IIO: MccLeun & MacFodyen 180 Queen St. .. . I'hMIP 7339 MacFARLANE BROS. Furniture i 92 Kent St. - Opposite Ch'town Hotel -- Ch'iowii i iwin d.. much in ..,:.m..i.-.i.,- um and were slow scale ?mZmcm 7wz.2 FRI. & SAT. - FEB." 8th. & 9th. T 2 Face Ody - Repossessed Fur Goals The station continued to broad- cast until l2:05 a. m. today when the top of the tower was found to ;be swaying in a wide are as it was ibuffeted by a north uind. l Young Erickson. son of ii steel :worker. was the first to scramble 5up the narrow ladder inside the itower. The others followed at 50- E-.'fl0l. intervals. A dozen others lwatched from the ground. Erickson apparently felt the lower start to go and clambered to the outside near the 500-foot, level. He was hurled clear as the 575.000 imast crumbled. The other men Iwere trapped inside. Worry FALSE . TEETH K Slipping or irritating? l Don't be embarrassed by loose itruse teeth slipping, dropping or lvobbling when you eat. talk or laugh. J-is: sprinkle a little FAS- TF2EI'H on your plates. This pleas- ant powder gives a remarkab.e-. .sen.se of added comfort and se- icurlty ov holding plates more .liimly. No gummy. gooey pasty . ia. e or feeling it's alkaline (non- tr-idl (ii-.3 F'AS'I'EE'T'H at any drug store. -TRADE-IN FUR COATS V18. 566. MIoFllRLAllE . - till EXOIIANGES -no REFUNDS - rlsniis-oisii . St.-Opposite Cli"l'own liotel- Ch"l'own Paraitaro . supported by other major CANUCKS IN GERMANY HAS A "FIELD DAY" ndlans during world War II. recently left her home in Oapri to perform comedlclinc are: Rfn. Bill Geddes. Winnipeg; Cpl. R. R. Luttrell, Toron- who entertained thousands of can- . Germany. Shown with the British llew Peak Reached Lethbridge. ainuiln Busingss Great West Life WINNIPEG. Feb. 6-Great-West total business in force reached 5l.89l,fXkl.GCO at the end of very well." Hcrlitsrlf and crashed in flames in a l95l, H. W. Manning. Vicc-Prcsl- dent and Manning Director. an- nounced to the sixticth annual meeting here today. More than s29:i.o0o.ooo of new rlife insurance and annuities was lplaced (llll'illf.I the year. Assets now total S-i.l.'l.000,0(i0 and represent the lresourrcs of 515.000 policy-holders. lhurlng 1051. the Company paid !si.i.ooo,ooo to policyholders and ibenrificlarics. i "The very favorable mortality experience among the Companyls ipollcyliclders continued dfiringthc iyezir," Mr. Manning dcclarecl, "and -actually showed a slight improve- iment over the level of 1950." He also reported that the gross ra-ie iof interest rnse during the year and reached .'l.82 per cent. This represents the tllilrd consecutive year in which the interest rate has risen. Joseph liarris. in his President- pial address. commented on the iproposed extension of government ianniritles and said. in part. "The .Canari:an Government. operating in a field that is already well .served by private enterprise. has ibeen offering annuities to the pen- icral public which in no way re- flect the true cost that is bcin: in- curred. Both the costs of admin- lls-'.r:itioii mid the substantial oper- ntilig losses have been met from public funds. This in itself would suggest elimination of such a Junction. not. extension. increasing ithe illnlis available would further aggravate this condition." i i Growing Stature Mr. Harris welcomed the eliinln-l ation of fnreign exchange controls and said. "It indicates the growing financial stature of Canada. and .......- i The sale of group insurance anal group annuities was :2 per ceiiti higher than inst year and totallrdi slt)'7.000.Ga0. Group business in: force kept. pace with this cxpaiis-' ion of new business and rose to S462.COC).0fl0 at tho and of the year. Group business now forms over 24 per cent. of the Company's total business in force. The Company adniinistcrs the welfare plans of 1.500 org1ni7.ations. who. together. have more than 250.000 employees. Assets increased sax 000.000 dur- in: the year and now total 541.1.- 000.000. The Conip:iny's holdings of corporate securities increased 320.000.0021 during the year and now total Sl25.000.000. These in- vestments were made after a careful screening to determine the degree to which they support our economy. increase production. or sircniztlicn our defense industries. This policy-a voluntary one-is finan- cial groups and is aimed at com- bating inflation by strenszthening our productive Capacity. in commenting on the rise in the zeiicriil interest rate level. Mr. Manning stated. "This heartening rise comes after a long period 'of artificially depressed interest rates and is most welcome since it will. in time, have an important cum- ulative effect upon the cost of in- Believes Russians Massacred 10,000 Polish Soldiers WASHINGTON. Feb. 5-(AP)- Col. John H. Van Vliet. author of a long-missing secret report on the Kaiyn Forest massacre in the Second World War. testified to- day he believes the Russians themselves slaughtered upwards of 10.000 Polish soldiers in a Soviet prison camp in 1940. Soviet propaganda has long sought to pin the blame for the moss ntrocity on Hitler": Nazi German armies. Along with the current: inquiry. some question has arisen whether Col. Vnn Vlietfs original report was deliberately hushed up. Testifying before a special House of Representatives committee. Van Vliet. said his five years of silence on the subject were imposed at his own request. The witness told the committee Ihilt as a prisoner of war in Germany he wns taken under guard to the Katyn Forest in May. 1943. to "inspect" the massacre scene. He said he saw the bodies of the slain Poles stacked in eight layers "like sardines in a can" in a mass lzrnvc 12 feet deep. Van Vlict said he went. into the Forest convinced that the Ger- mans had committed the crime and were Ir) in: to blame the Rus- lsiniis. But he noticed that the uniforms and boots on most of the bodies were new and showed few signs of wear. That. convinced him. he said. that the Poles had been murdered shortly after the Russians took them prisoner in 1940. rather than after the Germans nverran the lintyn Forest. 33 miles west. of Smolensk. in Western Russia, three years later. Van Vlict said he reached that conclusion because his own exper- ience in prison pimp had taught him that clothing and shoes of live prisoners wore out rapidly to be replaced. Van Vliet. railed home from army duty in Japan to testify. told the lawmakers he submitted his orirzlnal report on the ninssacre Iiiny 22. 1045. Following the disappearance of flint report. he Sliitl. he wrote in May. 1950. a second report contrain- lni: the some major facts and con- cliislcns. The coloncl's second report was eventually released by the Defence Department at the insistence of the House inquiry committee. T. Thaddeus Rom:-r. Polish Am- bassador to Russia in 1943 at the time of the break in Russo-Polish relations. will testify before the committee tomorrow. He now is a professor at McGill University lnvliiontrenl. surancc to our policyholders." T-he Companysltotal income was S'i'4.000.000-an increase of l2 per cent over 1950. Both premium in- conle and investment income were up substantially. Total income has more than doubled in the past eight years. ONCHAN. Isle of wight-(OP)- Miss Hiphsibah Heap. 97. wore shabby clothes and used candles to save electricity. she was known locally as a woman who had seen better days. After her recent death, her will disclosed bequests of :21.- . phy is awarded annually to the Seven Entries In N. S. Regional Drama Festival HALIFAX. Feb. 0 -- (OP)-Two one-act plays by Canadian auth- ora will be among the seven en- tries in the Nova Dootla Regional Drama teatival opening here Thursday. t "Incident On The Border” by Donald Wotmora. of Halifax. a romantic spy drama of the Maine- New Brunswick border in the days of the American civil war. will be staged by the Lunenburg Little Theatre. Mr. Wetmore's play was last year's winner of the second annual Nova scotia Drama League play writing contest. Dalhousie University players will present "God Caesar". by Marjorie Price. comedy winner of the air Barry ' ' Trophy several years ago. The tro- best Canadian one-act play in the Dominion Dram; Festival. An English exchange teacher. Moire Well-rd. will play the title role in the Truro Ooinmunlty Play- ers' production of Henrik Tbae.n's tragedy "Hedda Gabler." A theatre-in-the-round group D the Robert Alban Players of Hal- ifax - will present Oscar Wilde's comedy of manners "Tho Import- ance ot Being Earnest." Another Halifax dramatic organiaatiori. the Halifax Theatre Arts Guild. will line Philip Bari-y's Broadway hit "second Threshold. The Festival's third one-act play, "Dirk Brown" by Philip Johnson, will be done by the Annapolis Royal Drama Group. TWO Plays by British authors will round out the three-day festival schedule. The New Glasgow Thea. tre Guild will present J.B. Priest. 1537'! "The Linden Tree" and the Shearwater Players. from Dart. mouth. will stage the London com- edy hit "Grand National Night" by the Christies. This year's festival. to be ad. indicated by London stage star Phllip Lefevre. will be held in the gymnasium of H.M.C.S. Scotlan, It the Naval Dockyard, Romance Brings tl.Z. llaval Man i To Dutch Title l Auckland, N.z., Feb. JCPK Able Seaman Desmond Thomp- son of Auckland will soon become a Dutch Baron as a result of a romance that started with ”pen' pal" correspondence. l A shipmate of Thompson aboard a New Zealand frigate servingi off Korea wrote to a magazinel seeking pen pals, and Thompson? was one of the seaman who soon entered into regular correspon- dence with a girl in Australia. The girl was a Dutch immigrant Miss Helen Coops. After months of wirespondence she and Thompson became engaged. and they were married at Perth, Australia, when he returned fromi service in Korea. 1 Only after the marriage dldi Thompson learn his bride wasi. heiress to an ancient Dutch Bar-i ony. Under Netherlands customs. in the eldest child of a. titled fam- ily is a girl. she may pass the title to her husband when she isi 21 provided the family agrees. Mrs. Thompson is 21 in February and her family is anxious that the title be passed on. . The Barony consists of two major houses. the house of Kcp-' pet and the house of Battenburg. a branch of the same house asi that to which th; Duke of Edin- burgh belongs. One of Mrs. Thompson's uncles. a naval cap- tain. is bringing the title trans- fer papers to Auckland for signa- ture after her birthday. At present the couple are liv- ing in a caravan in Auckland while looking for a house. Thomp- ' son plans to leave the sea when- his term in the Navy expires and take up farming. Meanwhile their caravan flies the Dutch- flag and bears the Keppel coat! of arms on the well. ; Mrs. Thompson's father was a. naval captain and while his. wife and daughter were in at concentratlon camp in Java. dur- ing the war, he served in the Pacific with the Dutch Forces. at one stage in company with the New zealand cruiser Leander in 000, largely for charities. USE THERMOGENE C EST 0 Tninmoosm: Medicated vides soothing. penetrating "The Warmth that soothes." In hale Tuamooams Rub , BUY today at your druggiat. THERMOGE applied at the first sign of a chill pro- inetantly. So clean and easy to use. Help relieve the misery of colds and pain of sore throat, bronchitis, neural- IIQ. lumbago, sciatica and rheumatic pains. Countless Canadians say that: Tnaiuroosns Medicated Wool is truly Mediated ' a companion product, quickly help relieve hood colds. MEDICATED WOOL Mroicnieif iiidoi FOR DEEP SEATED COLDS Wool hear to NE which able-seaman Thompson was serving. Mra. Thompson's grandfather is Admiral W. Kamp. of Holland. The young couple have decided to carry on the fam- ily tradition and send any sons they may have to the Naval Aca- demy in Holland. GIIINIILL SCHOOL ...... Report for January. Grade K: 1. Ella Smith: 2. Fair- ley Dumvllla; 3. Lillian Phillipa. Grade Ix: 1, Ernest Wood. Grade VIII: 1. Freda McMillan; 2. Audrey Dumvllle; 3. Ralph Mc- Williama. - Grade VII: 1. Raymond McWll- 1. Ina llams. Grade VI: smith: 3. Evan Mcnousall. Grade Ill: 1. Linda Mcwilllams. Grade ll: 1. Sherlll Darwin; 2. Erwin Phillipa. Mrs. E. Griffin. Teacher. KINE EIILE IT A I i Vloaian itontonarlan A Prairie Pioneer manuanv 1. 19,, ;-p Refrigeration duals and sunvica aepalnfro all sin... morons Rewinding and Repair. uoaru astsaiesno im a L. I. STIVINSON Crunch IN y , Manager . I40 RICHMOND ST. AROOLA. bask. Mb. -(OP)- Mra. John Begga of Arcola is one of Canada's oldest women. She is 104 Born Lavinia Burwash in Pres- cott Oounty. ont.. in 1043, she honieeteaded with her husband two miles east or the present site of Arcola in IQ. their log house was completed. At tint she was frightened by the hrhoush now lunsble tone or Egg.” In” om” um. '0 tn. BLEOIBEOAII p oar. very we 1, "Grandmother ..' g B-as-'2 we is -motion-i-iv....'.3l.'l.ill.1l&?'3...”l7.h:.'..'i.l.i."l'....5 ""'s'”'”" known here, retains an interest in man”. ..I W” du W "G um gems" activities around her. she lives with her only living son and his wife on the original family hom- stead. Mrs. Beggs was the first woman in the Arcola settlement and when her son was born in 1883 he was the first baby; She recalls living in I tent until squawa come as there was no white woman I could talk to." Mrs. Beggs believes in hard work and says pioneering never hurt anybody. "when you work you're ready for your meals and it's good to have a hearty appetite." she said. -Palmer Electric PHONE 1444 I 3?? . . ,'nC'b'35ti.i.rL':'ifil. - - ' ' ' Stay within your budget-and have plenty to spare for your- self-by getting all your food needs at C0-OP SUPER MAR.- ll l(ETl We make every price a low price every day and that means it takes less money to fill your basket when you shop at our market. So don't rob your piggy bank when your shop- ping list is long. Buy everything here and fatten it up with the EXTRA SAVINGS our super values put into your hands. The Better Kind Lynn Valley - 15 oz. FLUFFO SHORTENING. PEAS. 2 tins . . . . 29: 3 lbs. . B9: Heinz g 20 0,. With 2.Free B8134 OZ. BUTTER”-Hnnnc 2tins..........33c Lealand - 24 oz. Orange & Grapefruit STRAWBERRY JAM. BLENDED JUICE. ecich............47c 2l'ins.......... 23: -1 Special Offer - 45 Bags lipton's Tea Bags-. pkg. 49c Flu-O-Ray Fluorescent light Bulbs. each ... 29c Regular Price 55c and 656 FROM HEAD T0 T0! c NEW JET BLOWN lllX 2 Lge. Pkgs. Regular 846 for 59c EXTRA SPECIAL THE BEST MEAT SPECIAL IN 5 YEARS seer TEtlllERL0lll 89o lb. Dog-Gone -- 15 07.. Dog Food. 2reg. tins We The Tenderest Steak You Can Eat Machine Sliced Bacon. lb. . . ...... .496 Piece or Sliced Bologna. lb. . I. . . . 49: Loin - Butt - Shoulder Roast Pork. lb. . . 49: use Green Iceberg E3 Lettuce. ed. . ..... 196 Green Pascal Celery. 2 sticks . . 35: Green or Yellow Fresh Beans. lb. .. 25: Long Green Sweet Pickled . Cucumbers. 2 for 29: Picnics. lb. . . . . . . 45: For Juice Grade "A" Roasting Oranges. 2 dos. .. 69: Capone. lb. ......--. 558 Carton of Icy Water Tomatoes. ea. . .. 25: Fresh Slnelts. I5. .. 30: ioannns for last year, so you Will SHARE It is now necessary to bring liryour slips participate in our dividends. (Membership is open to ALL-Get partiouhra from our Mauser) .44 V illtliirkef s i E!" ,wik”A:"