WEDNESDAY. oxford university Will Investigate Student Suicides OXFORD. lklaland (6') Thirty first-year students at (Rford Unl- vsnnty are to undergo physical gnd psydiologieai tests as part of an invest-lgacion into iihe reported high nte of suicides among under- 'me inquiry is being made by I eommim-e set. up M. the request of Sir Maurice Bowra, vioe-chan- cellar of Oxford. 'I!lough the com- mittee b primarily concerned with oxford. concern also has been publicly expressed about the num- ber of suicides at oamix-idse Unl- verolty, The eommitt:-e is also expected to study financial problems of stu- donta. Its report will probably be made public in the summer. No statistics on the number of suicides have been made available by the univr-rsltlcs. A fellow at St. Catherine's college. Oxford. wrotc that intellectuals commit iwiilrddo about six times as fre- quentlv as mcmparalble in-ouiae of athletes of the same age. Vifhlle some blamed the suicide rate on attempts to impose unl- vei-sity training on persons who lacked the intellectual equ-pment to cope wirill it. a student of Gon- vllo and Caius. Cambridge. wrote to The Times dismissing the prob- lrm on the ground that. no figures were available to mHi8ll're the rate of suicide. Tho problem of student suicides way also dismissed in an article in The New Statesman and Nation. producing A number of letters from readers who advanced vary- ing explanations Provinces Solve Angling Problem QUEBEC, (CPi - Ontario and Quebec have solved a problem that has long been a nuisance to anglers. Game and Fisheries Minister Pnliliol of Quebec. announced ar- rangements for exchanging fishing privileges on that portion of the Ottawa River serving as an inter- provinclal hoimclary. An angler with an Ontario li- cerice can now fish any part of the Oii.-uva to where it turns off into Quebec alter bordering the two provinces for about 2'75 miles. Similar privileges are extended the Quebec angler. Until now. fishermen were re- stricted to their own side of the river. The provinces are now negotiat- ing for a uniform agreement on the sire of catches. TO SING TN ABBEY KTNGSTON. Ont... IOPS --- The P,i'l0lY' of St. George's Cathedral ho-re has accepted an invitation to SIT"! in Westminster Abbey this slimmer. The dean and chapter of Westminster invited the choir to sing daily services in the abbey during: August. WHEI PAII STRIKES At the am ewingr of vheumaiic mint- take Tcmplolon's T-R-iZ'a. Over a mil- lmn T.R.l”.- llsPd every month. for sperviv fPlif'l imm pain caused hy rheu- matism. arthritis. neuralgia. llimhagonnd sciatica. Why suffer needlel-alv? keep T-R-C's on hand. and use them promptly. Only 65c. Si .35 at drug counter; T-I43 COMPLETE VISUAL REFRACTIOZZ AND ANALYSIS G. F. HUTCHESON 8: SON Optometrists 53 Grafton Street Refrigeration SALES dz SERVICE Ropairs To All Makes MOTORS Rewinding and Rcpairs ELECTRICAL APPLIAN CF18 Repairs Palmer Electric Phones 8548 - IBM TIIAIIE Yiillii SKATES For Lovely new II or Pleasure Linanar. mannin ALTDWANCE Bryenton & I.adles' and .Mea'a and Boys' Hockey Sets. ITIIESTIONE DIALBHV mI'lXFLA'fS Dark Lightning p llelen Topping Miller lynopsis Guy Tallman. young petro- leum engineer from Ain'- Iniaaed his bus to San An- tonio. Mona Mason, wife of I entlic rancher, gives him a lift. Gary is injured when her car crashes into I ditch, and the Muons nurne him buck to henlth. He falls in love with Mrs. Muon'I twenty-one-yeah old daughter. Adelaide, but. unliu-rused by lack of funds. feels that. he must be on his way to Mexico. Gary suspects there is oil on the Mason land and Harvey Mason has test: mode vfhh-.h prove Gary is right. Determined to get a. Job and earn enough to repay the Masons, Gary Itnrts on foot to town to see about trains. He refuses to let Adelaide drive him. CHAPTER ix f with his hands jammed in the pockets of his khaki trousers. Gary slogged along the sun-washed road to tiown. Before he had gone far he realized that his phys- ical strength was sulll far be- low pm, but his moody anger at life drove him on. And then a car swiahed to ii. Ittop in the dust. close to his elbow, and Adelaide said briskly. "Get in. silly. Un- lass you feel that you've simply got. to pout some more." Gory was too tired to argue. He got in. Sweat. was cold on his forehead and his eyes felt hot cnd dizzy. "You could have telephoned from the house, you know, and found out all about the trains in five minutes." she Wall. on. looking straight ahead from un- der the brim of the new sports hat. "That is - if you have to find out about trains." "Listen. my girl." Gary's law was so stiff that the words clipped off like lengths of wine. "Can't I make you understand that I can't be under obligations to your fam- ily any longer? I'm I. man - I've got to work - pay my own way-- get somewhere on my own...." "Oh." she said flatly. "'I'ho.t's the reason, is it?" "That's the reason." Equally flat, knowing that he was telling only half the truth - les than half. to be mathematlcall about it. Knowing that. the other half - the other three-fourths -- could not be told. Not till he owned more worldly goods than could be oar- ried in one battered suitcase. ”We may as well go back." Ade- laado turned the car around with one impulsive swoop. "Grace and Oliver are coming to dinner." "I thought you had to go for your mother." "Dad sent Sllim after Mother. They passed us s mile back there. Didn't you see them?" . ”No. I didn't." The Kimballs arrived, Oliver very jaunty in a new spring suit. and Grace with all her curls in place and her eyebrows arched to look like the latest Hollywood sensation. And immediately Har- vey brought out the map and the geophyaicsta report and began ex- pansively to tell evelything that had happened. Adelaide slipped out and clutch- ed at Gary, in the hall. "Oh. dear! ; He's telling Oliver! And I wanted jhlm not to. He never could keep 3 a thing. poor Dad. Now the fire- l works will begin. You listen." l "They'll have to know. sooner or 1 lal.c.l'." i "I suppose so," she sighed. "Go i on in, Gary -- keep Oliver from ,l'uiniing everything if you can." . "I haven't. any right. -" l "Oh. go on, stupid!" But. Oliver had already taken c M1 of the situation, abet- yted and prompted by Grace. He pxvaa advancing arguments against lwildicattlng an oil well, dilating A SINGLE SIP TELLS WHY Iucxilm niirnia: is cauaon unm snlmo armor IO! Coughs l COLDS - ASTHMA - IRONCHITIS NOT A IVIVP IUCKIIVT IIXTUIE i. locum chbbcui phlegm. I. M00500 and label Ivviwl 519.1 and bronchial Nehru?” .E uloiisilvy ro- tlhtpa nuns noun! qwindleaovsbulawgbandsoideloel. 5N Everywhere -Double Sin lid iBlKKlEY'S MIXTURE l I 4 i FIIIESTOIIE STIIIIIIEII SNOW TIRES 2570 IiSii0llii'l' Maeliay co. lacuna ii i. . highly -...ii.-mi uni-rm-l OTTAWA. (OP)-The ROAI. ll well as the army. is having trouble establishing an adequate ruerve. it was revealed Tuesday at. the uinuai convention of the Royal Culadian Flying Clubs As- soclation. Member clubs of the anoeiation have embarked on a plan to train 600 RDAF reserve onlccrs as fly- ing instructors. so far, however. only 120 officers have been trained and the association said there has been "discouraging progress" dur- ing the last. year and a. half. Air Vice Marshal J. G. Kerr. air officer commanding. Training Command. told the ISOCilbl0fl that the RCAF would have to rely on a. trained "pool" of 600 flying instructors in the event of war. RCAF recruiting isn't what it might be either, Air Vice Marshal Kerr indicated. ”The three armed forces are in a. buyers' market." he said. He acid he questions the com- mon ataiemant. that. Oe.nula's youth is air-minded. Clubs Can Help The air force needed 860 new trainees a year. so far. it had been able to attract enough re- cruits to fly its aircraft but a "large proportion" of these were ”not really air-minded." Air Vice Marshal Kerr suggested that the greatest. contribution the Flying Clubs Association could make to Canadian defence would be to try to make the country's youth more air-minded. Among the Air Vice Marshall listeners were Air Marshal Roy Slemon, chief of air staff; Vice Admiral E. R. Malnzuv. chief 0! naval stab: and Ll--G8-ll. GUY 5' mondscllief of army 6939751 5””- Lasi. week. Gen. simonds dis- cussed wlih top reserve army Om- cers problems besetting that ser- vices reserve. The focus of discus- lon was a secret reP0l'i- 0" me 3'' serve prepared at the request Of Gen. Simonda. The report is illi- derstood to contain recnmm lun- datlolis for a more closely co-ordi- nated reserve. lopping off some Shearwater Base Garage collapses HALIFAX -(OP) - Two walls and part of the roof of s new 3.320.000 garage at the navy'a near- by Sliearwatcr base collapsed Morn- drly nlgfht, Several naval men nar- rowly escaped in.lu'I'y. The roof of a navy bus in the garage. was crushed and several passenger cars were badly dam- aged. Navy officials said cause of the collapse was not known but that an official inquiry would be open- ed. The garage. considered one of the most modern on service bases in eastern Canada, was opened two weeks ago. A .?n upon the advantages of selling leases. and for once Gary found himself agreeing with Oliver though he was too respectful to sneer and be superior like Oliver. "I think Klrmball's right, Mr. Mason." he said. "Of course he's right," Grace put in. "Oliver knows the on business - anyway. he ought to. Has worked as it ever since he left school.” ”How do you know," Oliver marched around making flat.-hand- rd gestures. "how deep you'll have to go? You may not get oil at three thousand feet - maybe not at five thousand. Suppose you have to go rlonn eight or ten thousaild feet? Any idea what a well like that costs?" "Got the figures right: here," said Harvey promptly. bringing out a notebook with a little flour- ish. "Got. figures on everything." "You can hire men to spend your money, if that's what you wallt." "Well, it's my money. I made it. I can make some more." Oliver got out a little book him- self. "Now, on a twelve per cent royalty-" he went on and on. and Grace chimed in. Gary said noth- ing more. He could see by the cant of Hiilyey Mason's law that it would be useless. that any ad- ditional argument from him would be only an impertinence and an lrritatloii. T i But Adelaide stood in the door. her eyes blazing, ”Why don't you all let. Daddy alone?" she de- manded. "He knows what he's de- mg." "I wonder!" Grace was sci-castle. "well, you can all come and eat dinner. anyway." sighed Mona Lee. "They're not going todig for oil today - and the rolls are getting cold." Adelaide edged Gary into a cor- ner as the family trooped into the dining room. "That was shabby- ag-reelng with Oliver." dis snap- ped. "I thought you'd stick with Dad and me." "I agreed with him because in this lmtnnes he hnppvna to be right." Gary amid quietly. At the table. Once looked across at Gory. "When on you leaving? Mexico, lift it." she ltd coolly. (Continued) Xclcl icii lll3rib;(ilmlll lilll Ii. 0. A. F.iieports Delay In Establishing Reserve I THE OUARDIAN. CHARLUITETOWN ...h.............n....n. unite whore Ltteaiidanos is low and merging them with larger ones. The navy is also paying atten- tion to the reserve problem. It was disclosed at the association meet- ing that the senior service plus to establish two more reserve air aquedsona-at Quebec and Cal- ary. Reserve squadrons have ai- resdy been formed at Victoria. Kingston, ont.. and Toronto. Czech industry And Transport Paralyzed By Richard 0'llegn.n VIENNA. Austria. (AP) winds from Russia plus critical shortages have broiuht partial paralysis lo Czechoslovak industry and tnnmort plus freezing homes to millions of cuechs. Prague newmapers disclose. Official newspapers of the Com- munist government in recent days have appealed to the pqnilatlon to help relieve .t.hc "critical situa- tion." Extreme cold and water abort- ages have frozen up or or-igoled most of the nation's water-driven electric plants-and these are the main source of 'ndustri.l ' and domestic power. The result is a. partial break- down of industry. Westerners in Vienna say the affect Czech economy must be pu'i.iculnr- ly severe because it. is busy switch- ing from its immense plans for heavy industrialization to the -,u-oductlon of consumer products- along the lines of the ”new look" in the Communist world. Coal Shortage ' On top of a. power shortage. Prague neiwmapers report a crit- ical lack of coal The Siberian temperatures apparen-tly have in- creased the use of hard fuel and newspapers indicate miners are not eager to work. The coal shortage, the nswqia.p- era iridlcate. also means less fuel for homes. insufficient for factor- ies. and I critical shortage for the railways. Exiperta here say the transporta- tion criais can be expected to have an effect on industry that will add to the complications of the pow- er shortage. It means that the output of state-run factories will be held up while they wait for the delivery of parts from other state plants. In the Communist society, industrial production has to run according to plan. A breakdown in one part means a collapse or the whole. ' Terrorists Are Bound By Oath By Ronaiif Baichelor NAIROBI. Kenya, (Reuters) - Mau Mnu terrorism which has swept this colony for the last. 15 months. causing thousands of deaths and maimings. is-rooted in one of man's oldest and most abid- ing conventions-the oath. Only recently have the authori- ties managed to obtain anything like. a comprchensivc picture of the ontlls and the influence they exert on the minds rind actions of the. nvei'age. member of tile Kikuyu trihe, But they now know that Mnu Mail has three distinct groups of oaths. with grades with- in each group. Most Klkllyus believe that to break a sworn with means death. eiiller supernaiiirally or at the hands of the oath administrator and his "priests". The first grade oath, which n!- ficinls any has been administered at one time or another to about 90 per cent of the 1.250.000 Kikuyu tribcsmen. requires the oath-taker to pass through A banana-leaf arch seven times. swearing to obey the orders of HIP Mau Mau So- ciety "or may this oath kill me." To Ensure Security A "sci-nnd grade" oath, accord- ing to intelligence sources here. is later administcred with much the same ceremonial to fully ”gradiiaieri" members of a local committee. with the object. of en- suring scclirily. Penalties threat- encvl to nmone lirnaking this type nf onth ini-iudc disiigiiratinn. fol- lowed by dcaill. Another type of oath is reserved for Kikuyu political leaders. But the core of all Mau Mau oaths today is the "forest oaths" taken by terrorist leaders and the Mau Mau shock-troop! in the mountainous forests. These oaths involve and sexual bestiality so designed that the oath-taker will commit any act of savagery to which his loaders order him without the slightest feeling of revulsion. depravity I ESCAPE BOAT BLAII SANTA BARBARA. Olilif.. (AP) -Five-man crew who set. out in a dory when tkiek fishing boat caught me landed nfcb Monday as miln north of hue, Die dior- iff's office root-ted. A dwuty said hehadnoword utothefatoof the fishing boat. the Sea Lion. re- ported earlier to be adrs from sum tostnm. GOUZENKO IN MASK - Igor Gouzenko, former employee of one Russian embassy in Ottawn whose ulsclosure cracked a spy ring in Canada in 1946. appears in public for the first time.,Wea.ring a hood covering his face Gouzenko appeared in e film interview with United states columnist Drew Pearson. The film was scheduled on I. 173. tele- vision network. The interview was filmed "somewhere in Canada." (C? from AP) Sharp Air Engagement Near The Korean Coast WASHINGCION, (AP) - The United states Air Force said today U. 3. planes and MiG-15 jet. fight- ers fought a sharp engagement near the Korean coast only 10 days ago, after a U. 5. reconnaissance bomber was attacked. No American aircraft were lost, but one of the Russian-made jets was shot down. An air force spokesman here, who had only terse information on the incident, said so far as is known in Wash- ington there Were no U. S. casual- ticr nor plane damage. As for the nationality of the MIG pilots. he said only. "It. is safe to assume they were Com- Hllullsll." This was the first known clash between U. S. and Communist planes since the Korean armistice was signed July 27. Whether by coincidence or not. it occurred on a day of considerable tension- Jan. 22 was the day on which United Nations officials released to civilian statue prisoners of 'war who refused to be repatriated to Red-held territory. The Commun- ists had insisted they must be kept in neutral custody. Luge Iud Formation The air force gave this account of the plane incident: A U S. RB-45-a light, Jet.-pro- pellcd bomber fitted for recon- naissance work-was flying a re- cunnalasance mission Jan. 22 over international waters northwest of Sok-to island, off the west. coast of Korea. wheli "a large formation of Mig-16 jet fighters" attacked it. F-BS jet lighters guarding the bomber opposed the attack and in the ensuing fight shot. down one MiG. The clash apparently took place north of the 38th parallel, the old dividing line between North and South Korea. ranauaav ii. 11 Tax Cuts Unlikely For Cana, di-ans 3! llanld IIITIIOI - (Canadian Prue Staff Writer) OTPAWA, (CF) - The men who advise the govmuno t on budlet piuinlng have concluded that though the Canadian economy shows some signs of weakness. this is not the time for I switch to deficit financing. Informant: said that if trans- lated into policy by the govern- ment thia likely will mean no ta: cute for Canadians in 1 . Deficit financing is sometimes employed by central governments to stimulate the flow of money and goods during deflatlonarylpep iods. To increase consumer pur- chasing power. the government cuts cues to a point where its income in loss than its expendi- tures and borrows to pay its way. thus increasing the national debt. The current outlook is that the government will require another 54.500.000.000-similar to the 153- 54 outlay--to pay its way In the 1964-55 fiscal year April 1. 'i'he official estimate: likely will be tabled in the common: at the and of next week. Though the estimates may show a small drop In 1954-55 defence spending. this may be balanced by heavier requirements for civil sar- vlce salaries. interest charges. pay- ments to provinces, pensions and family allowances. Revenue Barely Enough Experts believe that based on the current level of taxes, govern- ment revenues next year will here- ly cover expenditures. leaving no room for tax cuts. unless the gov- ernment goes in for deficit financ- ing. There still is some hope that national production-on which rev- enue forecasts are based-will in- crease again from the 1953 high of 524.200.000.000. But the increase is expected to be small. much less than the S2.- 200,000.000 increase in 1953. Even an increase of two or three per cent in national production will hardly warrant any worthwhile tax cut, one official said. Fear Industry Reaction If the government suddenly switched to deficit financing. some officials say, it might lead to "re- cession conditioning." Industrial leaders might believe the govern- ment expecied a heavy recession end curb industrial expansion. i The government has been main- taining a pay-as-you-go policy since the end of the war. Budgetary surpluses, built up year after year. have been applied to reduce the national debt. The net debt cur- rently is about 511.000.000.000. down from the peak of Sl.'i,400.000.000 in In 1954-55 IIIIII. Barber Elm siiiootli Shem Viitli B-lncli Spills Iy Itswarl IMIAII Pnu It-Iff Writer sr. JOHN'S, Nlfld. (OP)-Al, mg huber. can give you a better show here with s six-inch spike lhu; most barber: would with I new super-deluxe ruor. - ' hi his Oower street borbor mop Al Bkiffington still shaves the oc- ' I culto with the lmpro. vlzsd ranor. now in use for is yggn and still providing I unooiih nm, for the toughest boards. Al was harboring in Iishi-ip's rlalls when he obtained the uniqu. near. The lute Garrett Kelly .1 Gumbo. near Gander. then a war. ker in Labrador. walked into Al's shop one day to get his rasor honed. Blaekalnltlhh Onttion "Well," Al sxplans, ”I didn't know what to say when he hauled out this spike, but I told him 1 would do what I could with it. "Kelly then told me the history of the razor. He was working in the Labndor and had no raw, so being a blacksmith by trade in decided to make one. He got 3 spike, hammered part. of the aide; flat. hollow-ground it on one side and tempered it with pickle brine.” Kelly then shaved himself before skeptical onlookers. "When I saw the rum." son. tlnued Al. "I was kind of fusin- aied by it, and since I wll going to the United State: the next year. I thought I would like to have it as a souvenir. so 1 made a trade with him, giving him a new rawr." After is years of practice A! knows how to use the implement and he has no trouble whisking off the whiskers. But give it to another barber and anything could happen. The spike loses its edge flslsl than a factory razor snd if AI doesn't. stop it. after every two or three strokes. the customers get that dental chair expression. "That's its biggest fault," he says. "but if I put a handle on it. covering the rest. of the splits. it would lose its value." "This way. it shows that a New- loundlander can do when he'I stuck." MANY INLETI Because its ahoi-ea ore deepl indented Japan has a coastline 1946. more than 17,000 miles. Do Your Teeth add years to your Face ? my: log, maria-. Your dentist will tell you that rush lose their youthful whiteness as they grow older. Far too often however people allow their teeth to ' become dull and dingy before they should. adding years to the appearance of their faces. If your mirror tells you your teeth aren't as ' white as they should he, try Popaodent. Dental Cream -- Impartial laboratory tests prove that Pspsodsnt Dental Cream gives you whitest teeth-whifcr than other leading toothpastes. Brush your tooth regularly with Pepsodeat and in just 3 weeks, use the whiter, younger looking appearance of your teeth. Andremember-white tooth anelcantesth and clean teeth help tooth O GET WHITER, YOIINGER-LOOKING TEETH IN JUST 3 WEEKS WITH PEPSODENT an voiiil comer - even In" less taotiiiiodsdeooQl-"400'iY Tifgliliit-'”Iooxq.o-tanis-alcs.u'sI ssnenlli Your own mirror can tell you. See if old- looking teeth are robbing you of your youth each time you smile. ' -mu, younger bnulilng with Psprdsno. Get for yswnlf. pgsvsois