I newsprint ‘has Covers Prion Edward Island hlko the new "’“NI.xhc-* every week-day morning: in lfih k'l‘Ill(‘.E sires: Ch-riolleto\vn. I-’.l:J.l., by the Thomson Company Ltd. Ian A Burnett. Publislicr and General hlanager Frank Walker. Editor- Member (ianarlian Daily News.-papcx . - Publishers Association Member of The fanarlian Press Member Aduh Bureau of Circulalmng drawn offices at Summerside. Montague and Alberton Kcmesented Nationally by Thomson Newspaper!- ’ Advertising Service 4 ll King "Street West, Toronto, Om, 640 Llallican Si. Montreal inso West (lcnrzia Street, \'.'-mcouver 5) Carney Charlottetown, Summcrside $13.00 per an- llllm Elsewhere in P.E.l $9.00 Other Provinces and Us. 212.00 per annum. , CI __The strongest memory 1.3 wet:/.‘er than the 1.vcr.1]r.cst 1.n/r." ' PAGE 4 MONDAY, -MARCH 17, 1958 - A Serious Problem Mr. Joseph C. Campbell, member for Third King’s, rendered a valuable C‘ public service by calling the attention of the Legislature to the pulpvirood situation. As he pointed out, there is manifestly something wrong when ‘the price paid for the wood is $5 a cord ‘less than it was five years ago, while in the interim the price of, increased several times. ‘If, as is reported, the price paid in this Province is much lower than that paid on the mainland,‘ all the more reason why an investigation should be made into the whole busi- ness. It is to be hoped that the mat- ter will be-taken up in earnest and plans made for a thorough explora- tionat this session of the Legislature. While they are inquiring into the price situation, legislators might also consider this matter of wholesale cutting of our limited wood resources from another angle. It is estimated that, by the way things are going now, there will be no wooclleft in another 30 or 40 years, unless a policy of reforestation on a large scale is put into effect soon. Surely, no one needs to ‘be reminded of-- the bad effects that will have on the Island’s agriculture economy. There just won’t be any farms worth anything—-/ that’s. the frank way of putting it. ‘Erosion, which even .now is a serious problem,. willhave taken over com- pletely. ’, _ , It's’ no answer to the problem to say that nature. will look after the neces- sary-reforestation; for it is simply . not true. ..::The Key Province Here is how the election prospects are summoned up in a leading Liberal newspaper, the‘ Winnipeg Free lPres_s_: R ‘~‘—Quebec is the key provincefln this J e1e¢.ii9n.... number ofQ'u;e.l9. ...s ‘ ' swing "Tory then" the Dienljiib forces ' will likely sweep back 1n't'o’g r power. If , Quebec remains largely; " . Liberal then Canada may again be foraperiod of minorityv government; “The Liberals won 63 seats irl Que- bee. in the last election. The Conser-r vatives scampered off with nine. There were three independents. In this __ election Tory organizers are bragging that they will more than double the number ‘of Conservative members from Quebec. Some Conser- vatives —-perhaps carried away by their election enthusiasm — are fore- casting the party will take 30 seats in that province. ' '- "‘Such alclaim is scoffed at by vet- eran Liberal workers there. They acknowledge that the Union ‘Nation- ale is openly throwing its support to the Diefenbaker party and conse- quently strengthening the Conserva- tive chances. But the Grits are con- vinced they can depend on Quebec to remain loyal. Some Liberals concede the Conservatives 10 or 11 seats in, Quebec, but no more.” , The mostinteresting part of this :forecast is that it offers no hope of a Liberal victory. The only result that Quebec “loyalty” to Liberalism could achieve would beanother stalemate. That is not likely to appeal strongly to Quelgecers any more than to voters in other parts of the country. Mystery Still Unsolved ’ Some days ago we referred to strange goings-on in a house at Sea- ford,,' L. I. -—-bottles popping, furni- ture leaving one place and settling in another, objects flying up and down, stairs, and so forth. Well, a later report says that psy- chologists who were called to the scene have been unable to find an answer to the mystery. First, they thought that a member of the family, 12-year old Jimmie, might have had something to do with it; but they dismissed that possibility wh.en a coffee table shifted its position in the living room at a time when Jim- mie was fast asleep in bed. Anyway, although 12-year old Jimmies are sometimes inclined to mischief, they don’t usually have the desire or the physical strength to toss lfurniturc about when no one is looking. The psychologists are now working on a. theory known as “psychokin- objects by mental power. Here. too, Jimmie is under surveillance: for, according to the experts, this power, if it exists at all, is more likely to appear in children than in adults. Goodness knows what tests Jimmie will besubjected to before the case is closed, if it ever is. He may be having the time of his life, for all that; since to a 12-year old the infer- ence that he is somehow involved in great happenings is something to brag about. It is to older per- sons, too, for that matter; although most of us would prefer to be in- volved in less mysterious goings-on. Defence Expenditures Word from Ottawa is that, accord- ing to present plans——they may be changed later—-an estimated $80 million will be spent by the Defence Department in 1958 for new construc- tion and for maintenance, alteration and ‘repair. In defence estimates for the fiscal year ending March 31, $160 million were allocated for these purposes. Reductions inthis phase of defence expenditures .began soon after the Conservative Government assumed office last June. They do not mean, however, that the overall defence burden of $1,725,000,000 will be greatly affected. As Defence Minister Pearkes pointed out at a recent press conference, it is difficult to see how there can be any slackening of this country’s defence effort until such time as a satisfactory disarmament plan is in-operation. Presumably, the reasoning behind the proposed re- ductions is that Canadian military establishments have now reached the money is needed for constructidn pur- poses and a greater amount of the ap- propriation can be used for the pur- chase of modern arms. _' ‘ Nevertheless, a 50 per cent reduc- tion in construction funds is bound to have an effect on the employment situation. It is right, oflcourse, that _unnecess'ary expenditures be avoided i-EDl,TORlAL” NOTES ancial problems. But they are dimin- ishing, steadily-.' The -"gold ‘and dollar reserves in February rose _,$135 mill- ‘"r§:igiie*§i"‘sif.ae,j§ii:i:y“1955. ‘- Soon, 5Am’er'icans. visiting Canada » will have-no cause to Acomplain about high postage rates here. Congress ‘re- x increaseis_ expected to bring in more than $1 billion ‘annually-. ‘ I -I t w _ There is this to be said ‘about’ the troubled situation in Indonesia: the rebels are trying to force the Jakarta authorities to adopt a domestic sys- tem ' 1 of government. President Sukarno is to a large extent under the influence of the Commun- ists, if one may accept his own state- ments concerning the situation. * 1- in ‘ Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is coming to the United States on June 8 to receive_an honorary degree and have a chatpwith President Eis- enhower. He would be a much hap- pier man on. that occasion if in the meantime his party could win a by- election. He has been having hard luck lately. ‘ * Q’ ‘I * . . The Executive Board of the United Nations Childrens Fund recently ap- proved allocations of $71/_;million for child-aid programs in 43 countries and territories. It is in projects of this kind-—a large number of them-— that the "UN. is doing its best work. They do not receive as much publicity as is given to political questions which come before the organization, but they contribute a great deal more to human betterment. The view that too much effort is sprint in growing potatoes on this Island may be open to question. For many farmers it is ‘the main source of income; and, despite bad years in the industry, on the whole it has been fairly lu rativc. But, as Mr. R. C. Parent has pointed out, there would seem to be no good reason why “the shelves of Island stores should be‘ filled with vegetables canned in other parts of Canada”. Nor is there any reason why the production of beef to meet the requirements of neighbour- ing 'l'll£Il"l(el’S should not be stepped up considerably. ln each field a great deal more could be done without in- terfering in any way with the potato C $ ¢.s_i.s’?_, the ability to niovs physical business. stage of development where less, in all departments; but it is a little - unfortunate that this particular re- duction had to come at this time. '1 It Great Britain still has plenty of fin- ' gm--,to'a total.-of s2,539,ooo,ooo, the , , WE, ,;At present, f . ‘THE Resuurs ' 01: ‘THE LAST TRQP 13 -me so/«M7 -( .l WINTER SPORTS [OTTAWA REPORT‘ Ottawa: The short - term ob- jective of combatting unemploy- ment has provided the chief inter- panty controversy in the election campaign to date. Prime Minister Diefenbaker be- lieve that this can be achieved most quickly by accelerating con- struction of necessary govern- ment buildings, roads, bridges , similar public works. And in fact many workers have already been put back to work, and more daily are obtaining jobs, under the Con- servative govern-m‘ent’s present emergency program. Liberal leader Lester Pearson, , on the other hand, says that the most effective crash program to provide jobs would be the “Pear- Rusuc FORUM This column 510 open to the discus- sion by correspondent: of question of interest. The Guardian does not neces- sarily, endorse the opinion of cones- . . pondents. ' THE uinnuti BUDGET , sir,—-one of the outstanding condemnations of -the late Dieteti- ~ -~ _ ,; ‘Isak LG‘ t _ it refu- cently passed a. bill authorizing a 5-“ ' er ovemmen was S cent-an-ounce "rate for non-local let-.¥ . V ters and 4 cents for local matter. The ' sal-to submit the Budget to the House of Commons and the na-' tion before tiheend of its first and last session of Parliament, despite the insistent urging of all the" Opposition partiesln the house. The _word Budget, as electors , know, but for emphasis I shall repeat, is thefinancial statement which it is the duty oftbe Minis- ter of Finance to read in the House of Commons before the dis- solution of Parliament. For this refusal -to read -the Budget, Prime Minister Diefenbaker is to blame and ‘must be held -responsible. This financial statement con- tains a view of the Revenue and Expenditure of the Government to date showing ,2 surplus or a ' deficit or a balanced budget, and, at the same time presenting an estimate of the probable income and expenditures for the follow- ing year so that the tax payers may know the financial condi- ' tion of the nation, the same as a farmer or merchant should know how he stands’ at the end of each year. In fact, it is more important to -the individual elector to know how the business of his country is being handled than in the case of his own affairs, because, by his vote he has entrusted the man- agement of the affairs of Can- ada to a certain political party over which he has no control, whereas, should he fail in his own business he can try to do better next year. There is absolutely no excuse for any Government which falls get before the end of a session is not a sign that a' surplus can be shown, but rather a positive indication that the financial af- fairs of the nation, if placed be- fore Parliament in the form of a Budget, would show a serious deficit. Otherwise no Government should be afraid or ashamed to submit, its financial position to the electors before the end of each sesson in the form of a Budget. Now, Mr. Diefen-baker cannot blame the intelligent electors of Canada for feeling, as most of them do, that there must be some- thing radically wrong with the financial affairs of this country, otherwise he should have no fear of allowing the Budget to be read by the Minister of Finance in the House of Commons before disso- lution of Parliament. * It is not necessary to point out that the Minister of Finance does not prepare the Budget himself. It is prepared every session of Parliament by the experts of his department who are civil ,sc.i7- vanlg, so, that ii takes only an hour or so of the Minister's time to read the Budget in the House of Commons. 1 am, Sir, etc., THOS. V. G-RANT Monl agile. or refuses to bring down the Bud- ' of Parliament,» as such refusal U Rival Emergency Policies 7” I By Patrick Nicholson Special Correspondent for The Guardian son Plan” to cut taxes by $360; , 000,000 a year. The rival claims of the two ri- val political leaders, especially as embroidered by some of their fol- lbwers, have given campaign crowds some interesting ideas to mull over. ‘ PEARSON AND TAXES The “Pearson Plan” could not begin to operate until Parliament had acted: say in June of this year. It's full effect would not be felt until some months after the end of March ‘of next year, when the promised tax saving would reach its peak. That peak would amount to exactly 40 cents per Canadian per week. 1 The theory behind the Pearson Plan, its originator has explained, is that each taxpayer would spend that tax saving on buying goods in the stores, which would then have to cider more goods from- the manufacturers, and this in ‘ turn would ensure more jobs for Canadans in “ our ‘factories’ That is a theory which looks empty and unpmmising to any unemployed worker in Oshawa or Windsor, Hamilton or Quebec. How may goods will 40 cents buy? Might not many Canadians fail to notice such a modest sav- ing, and fritter it away on non- durable consumer goods, thus pro viding merely extra work for cof- fee-growers in Brazil? What guar- antee have the voters that the Pearson Plan would not merely transfer money from govern- ment expenditure. inside Canada to the creation of jobs in other countries which exports to Can- ada? How many Canadian unem- ployed this month will get immed- iate jobs from tax savings which will not be felt until April of next year? . In contrast, the Diefenbaker p r 0 j e ct has already provided. ,many jobs. Plans have been ac- celerated so that many neces- sary ‘public works scheduled for 1958 ;and even 1959 were actually speeded up to start in» 1957. And emergency steps were taken to retain in work men who might otherwise have been laid off. FORECASTS WERE GLOOMY Months ago, economists here were predicting that unemploy- ment would soar to at least 750,- 000 this winter. Last week, Lab- our Minister Starr said that he February total would probably be about 600,000 and that-thereafter, instead of rising through March as in other years, the total of workless would fall. This Pte-sea- sonal upswing in work, as well as the unexpectedly low total of unemployed at winter’s peak. re- flect the immediate results ‘of the -Conservative program. Years ago the former Liberal government. a.n.nouoced that it had GRA-NDFATHEKR CLOCK iPatriarcih of every clock- -‘Constant companion to the room, It stands a useful ornament Repeating ryhmes of muted talk, W-a-gging, a long-stem-med pendu- lum , V -With every rhyt;hm_ spent. ’ Expressionless, the honest face Is time itself, unc-han-ged. Held in a changing mood, Each hour ‘-retains‘ a lease On numerals where hands are hinged. . The chimes themselves are soft, subdued, ‘ Apportioning the hours. A cherry tree that made the case As house for cogs and springs Flowers continually, endures With more than wood in use Or seasonal burgeonings. Heretic the constant mi_n=ute-tak- er . .. Of hourly meetings, daily rounds Fitted to weeks and months and years. .Here is an orator, revered speak- er G-esturing with commands. Marvels mesh with polished gears While metered music strides Measuring time through dark and - light. Indifferent to taking sides - ' Ticking with truth, early, late. --Wcllllam Vincent Sieller In ‘the,Cll1-ristian Science Monitor. stockpiled a “shelf" of public works projects which could be commenced at once to provide jobs if serious unemployment should threaten. S u c h serious unemployment was threatening for this current winter. Economists repeatedly warned the Liberal government, in the early months of last year, that unemployment would be ser- ious this winter. But the Liberal government then in office ignored the warningsand took no steps to ensure jobs for hungry Canad- ians. _ When the Conservatives took over government, the “shelf” was bare. But so effective has been the immediate and aggressive ac- tion taken by the Diefenb-alter go- vernment that Canadt is already over the hump of the current un- employment upsurge. ’ The Pearson Plan, designed to reach its full effectiveness after April of next year, 1959, would have left a lot of Canadians very hungry for a very long time. p i Columbus’ Lost Islcincl New York Times We have long known who dis- covered America —- omitting, to be sure. the Norsemen and Bas- que fishermen who may have been here but kept quiet about it. What has never been quite cer- tain is exactly where Columbus made his first landfall. Tradition makes it Watling lis- land in the Bahamas, which the great Admiral called by the love- lier name of San Salvador. Sam- uel Eliot Morison, Emeritus Pro- fessor of History at Harvard, fol- lowed the course of the Pinia and her sister ships, as described in the Las Casas journal, some years ago, and wound up at the same spot. Now come Mr. and Mrs. Ed- win A. Link, of Biughampton, N. Y., who in 1955 made their own tour over the reported course and stake in claim for the Caicos Is- land 200 miles southeast of Wat- ling. ' The links are not alone in re- je(:t.in_g Mailing and turninrg south or soutlieast. Acklin Island, a fa- vorite of some historians, is a- bout half way down the map from Wailing to the Caicos. The Grand Turk or Turks Island in the Cai- cos neighborhood has been fre- quently Mentioned. The trouble seems to be that the great navigator faked his log on the way over so that his crew would not know how very far theywere from home. He may also have been set this way or that by currents unknown to him -- through both. Professor Morison and the Links must have taken account of this factor. Does all this matter too much? Per- haps not, enchanting as such spec- ulations always are. What matters, and what. we can not do anytliing about. is that Columbus persisted. in behaving that if he could get past the is- lands he could reach Cathay. No explorer in history ever dis. covered more and found out less about it. But he is worth honoring and remembering: if somebody puts up some new statues to him in the Caicos Islands none of us should object. GREI-_‘.N()(‘l<. :4-cntland (AP?-- Hugh Deneese, 38, former Scot.- tish champion weight-lifter, was fined £2 Friday for stealing chunks of metal weighing 140 pounds. He said he needed them for practice. " Moke Regular Dental Vi-sits By Herman N. Buiidesen. M. D- "you have often. been told lo see your dentist at least twice a year. These regular visits to his office might do a lot more than protect. you from a toothache. They may even save .V0u1‘ life- Many, many persons fre- quently blame such bo«_’1.V fills‘ orders as ‘dizziness, migraine. head pains and swelling Of the face and neck on tooth trouble; And they hurry off to their den- tist to find out what is wrong. PROPER TREATMENT If the cause of the dif-ficulfty is not the teeth -— and it very often is not —- the dentist will send the patient to a physician for examination. thereby speed- ing proper treatment. , Periodic examination of the mouth, face and neck is essen- tial in discovering any cancer these areas. Here again, your dentist can ‘play a vital role in detecting early symptoms and possibly help to save your life. COULD BE PREVENTED Ii/is estimated that about 80 percent of the deaths caused by cancer of the mouth could be prevented if the lesions were recognized early ynough and treatment was begun promptly. Your dentist is in an excellent position to spot such cancer in the early stages. It is easy for -him to examine your face and mouth, and. prob- ably your neck, too. Many den- es for their patients. During a three - year period, sicians for biopsies. you visit his office that he in spect the following sites for pos sible symptoms: illary salivary glands; the mouth. , INTRAORAL EXAM lowing in-traoral examination: 'M~ucous membranes of the and hard palate, posterior pharyngeal wall; . examination‘ is especially portant for those in‘ the 65 - 69 age group. QUESTION AN-D ANS-WEB any paint that is lead-free? - boisoning from_ the paint, , Answer: Almost used for interiors of houses at now lead-free. I when might be developing in fists throughout. the country are performing such valuable servic- for example, about one - third of the practicing dentists in Texas discovered 382 cases of cancer ‘by performing their own biop- sies, and an additional 557 cases_ by referring their patients to phy- Perhaps your dentist already is on the alert for any indica- . tions of cancer. If he isn’t, you V might suggest to him next time‘ The face: parotid and submax- . submaxi- -llary. and submenta-1 lymph nod- es; Jaws a.nd temporom-andibular joints; neck and cervical lymph, nodes and the lips and corner—of He might also make the fol- lips and cheeks; .tongue and floor of -the mouth; tonsils, soft and uv-ula; gin- giva and retromolar area, and the alveolar bone and the teeth. Since about 85 per cent of oral cancer develops in males, this im- men, partcularly D. T.: I am thnking of paint- ing my baby’s furniture. Is there ‘am afraid he might get lead all enamels NOTES BY ‘rHFvW All husbands may not he ama- teur detectives. but they know when friend wife has been using their razors.—-Stratford Beacon - Herald . .. ‘ L A man whose loci in three arm- ed robberies was $51 has been sent to penitentiary for 15 years. His cash return for these ven- tures lnto_ crime thus works out at about 35 cents a week.--Ottw ws Journal A jiidge in Dublin. Ireland. has awarded £144 damages to a male plaintiff in a breach of promise action. The man complained that his giril friend had kept postpon- ing the date for their’ wedding for eleven years.—Brantford Expos- tor ~ Making her first flight, an old lady stopped the stewardess as she passed her seat. “Will you give a. message to the pilot, please." she asked. ‘Certainly’, “Then. pleaseask him not to-go faster than sound because We want to talk on the journey."——' - Galt Reporter ‘ Moscowreports clothes are be- ing glued rather than stitched. This is a new pitch, but makes us wonder if it never rains in Russia. Glué. in any man's coun- - try is messy stuff when subject- ed to water, unless. of course, the Russians, in their‘ highly exalted superiority, have perfected rain- proof glue'.—Niagara Falls Re- view l V These coddled youngsters and adolescents are our citizens~to-be, -If they are spared these plines at home and in school by nominally responsible a d - 1t 5, what chance will they h ve of breasting the storms of a funda- mentally competitive way of life whenthey take their place in it? -—Regina Leader-Post. I . Every good newspaper is to . some degree -a local newspaper, Not even the London Times and the New York Times are free of the obligation to,wr-ite specifical- ly for and about the people and problems of London and -New York. A newspaper which has no personality of its own is . not worth having. And a newspaper .without a mind of its own is of no use at all.,— Peterborough Examiner ‘ I There is a horse out in Califor- nia tbat is attracting a good deal of attention lately. His name is Silky Sullivan, and his owner who has a weak heart, can’t bear to watch him run. Because this horse has a habit of spotting the field some 30 or 35 lengths and then coming on in the stretch either to win by approximately lialf-a-length or to lose by much the same distance. This is very trying to people with defective bearts.—0tt'awa,. Citizen I New Brunswick has its own m.iss_ing ani species. Thegreat, tmes although not ‘extinct. every-\ where until‘ 1841. Our last timber wolf was recorded in 1860 and the The‘Age Old Story I will feed my flock, and I will cause them. to lie down. saith the Lord God. I will seek that which was lost, and bring again that . which was drivemaway, and will. -bind up that which -was broken; was taken in the Bay of Fundy -ten. years later. Our moose at this moment are apparently slowly re- versing the trend to oblivion, and the panther, once thought to have left our forests entirely, is evi- dently still lurking in the far- ther réaches.—Saint John Tele- ‘for’ order and auk vanished here"in"'pre‘histor¢ “ .wor1d’s last known Labrador duck ' . chen in Bu Abuse: :1 It I “"~< . invented. Griiiliigjfl ,llds.],%% ili'§“i‘ =°‘ “W-who so “"11. ‘S’ " I‘l . ' — . Journalp Wm‘ theI_n“Ed.l1la Those c t ' . contests i§n3e_l(1?i$'ull'°- . . provinces 1y .. hiding ii...ir"i°...3§ after March 31:1.-.. ald Boston Ear-bog when. so~easny,- * 05 like glories .' ’ mute evidencg cg Herald Queen lip are so fond‘ they are When not. dining can turn'out.m'ea1g . 1y to the 1 " The mag qhou ers to .aecept that no man’ ’ is slower than.yo_ug - Expositor-. - ' TWENTY-FIVE YE (March 17, may -The annual report of mi ities of the Royal -ted Police in .thei‘p‘m" dressed by Inspector, ’-t was tabled in the I.egi51agm~y-an terday. Tlhetreport sl:.§tes‘tlia ‘ ‘ Provincial Police_dut-leslw C en over on May 1, 19521 ‘ the Force comprisedfig ’ - for, Staff Sergeant, two -. V three corporals and fourteen‘ ‘ stables, making a‘ tota1 0; W ty-one. ‘ I . I Q l .3. . Potato shipments , Edward Island this wintgg, '5. though on a par with tboseof. Year. are far below l:he’1egg1.-‘ ~ taiblished in 1929. In‘!-ecenl:"“ the potatoes have B'eern'c ' rail to Halifax, then shipped by, water to ports in _thIg~U *‘ States. - :1 _ mu YEARS'_A'(;03"" , (March 17, 1948);" 3 Only “auton“c;meius" trade‘ 5 I011’-S b inst,- in P.E.I. under,»lie1-ilrlsof which received ,second‘r the Legslature yesterday‘ opposition members had; censured its provisions, ., 1 that it was d.ictator'léll and ‘l: set a dangerous precedentln adain ‘ I i ,. -.v_.‘-, d .. 7:7‘ -5 «still It has been”le_arne’d‘1ll5ct'a"‘ ‘f frost-‘proof, warelious]e,viilllie on the Riiilway at Suit, merside. An item of‘-,9ll.000.000 included in the tori!” pair of the railway ed that tltis,-‘ineafiiiffrosf-3lluohli!' one ‘of th£"1)0I1all§'9t0Pag€“WBII'*' houses located here. ‘N I 1’=’_"* H g. ., Lite. is. >-an». brie me. It is 3 sort cl ‘spllldl torch which I-have,"50ll!Q1dll1 for the moment, andl want it make it burn ss,bnghllY {, possible ”before"l1andin8 ll? °“'l"“ graph-Journal ., future generations. . was sick. T5,! at E QANK THAT LQOKS K. R. MACDONALD; Manage’ Queen a Kent Sts. Brand‘ helpful eyes We get many letters from customers, expressing their appreciation for some particularly. helpful advice or service they’ve had from Toronto-Dominion pe0P1f- _ -Some tell us of advice that has helped to further their. careers or improve their business prospects. Others have been able to realize their plans because of financial _ assistance from The Bank. Still others have been assisted in everything from filling out deposit slips to dealing ’ with foreign exchange. We greatly appreciate» hearing about things like this‘ . I because we at the Toronto-Dominion have always made a special point of offering helpful, friendly service t ' our customers, new and old, in every way we can- TORQNTO-DOMINION AHEAD . BAN K ;..-...i-4.5-. . 0 all