9’" @119 '(fiuurdiun 5"" Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow ‘. ‘ w. J. Hancox. Publisher H” Burton Lewis Frank Walker 3‘ Executive Editor Editor ’ \ Published every week day morning (one 1 Sun- ‘m daya and statutory holidays) at 165 Prince Street. ' . Charlottetown,'P.E.l., by Thomsor. Newspapers Ltd. Branch offices at Sumrnemde, Montague, Alban ‘ ton and Souris. *_.. I Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers ‘ Toronto, 425 University Ave. ‘ Empire 3-8894; Montreal, 640 Cathcart Street. ‘ UNiversity 6-5942; Western office, 1030 West l‘ Georgia Street, Vancouver (MA 7037). H Member Canadian Daily Newspaper Publishers 1. ‘Assodation and the Canadian Press. The Canadian Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repub' this "' " Advertising Service: 1, ,tars, and also to the local news published here ... in. All rights on republication of special dispatches herein also reserved. Subscription rates: Not over 35: per week by carrier. ' 11.00 a year by mail or rural routes and areas l'lOl serviced by carr‘ r ‘ $14.00 a year all Island and UK. $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere ouisida Briliah Com- : monwealth. I Not over 7r. per single copy. Member Auclii lit-lean oi Circulation. EAGE 6 TUESDAY. APRIL Zhvlfi. 1 Liberals Take Over "The old order .changeth, yielding place to new." It is a law of nature, and when manifested in political af- _ fairs it is well that. it should do so i with the dignity and decorum that prevailed at Ottawa yesterday. All the amenities were scrupulously observed. The incoming Prime Min- ister first, went alone to see the Gov- ernor General and take the oath of office. then presented His Excel- lency with his list of cabinet mem- bers for approval. The ceremony was a reminder that we are living under democratic rule, and that for victor and vanquished alike in elec- toral contests. it is the people’s decision alone that counts. Prime Minister Pearson is for- tunate in having around him a nuc- leus of men with previous cabinet experience, and others of proven ability—men like Mr. Martin. for example, who now steps into Mr. Pearson's, old role of external affairs ' minister; Mr. Chevrier. new minis- ter of justice; Mr. Hellyer, minister of defense; Mr. Pickersgill. secre- tary of state, who will also act as government House leader; and Mr. Gordon. who. as anticipated, takes over as finance minister. There is a strong representation of cabinet ministers from Quebec, r. .,.,.s ‘ . Harte) "0 9-9:?”“1 ’ G O. I .2" many of them close to the Lesage f l government. The precedent set by the Diefenbaker government of hav- ing a Woman in the cabinet has been followed in the appointment of Miss Judy LaMarsh as minister of health. It is pleasing to note, too, that .Prince Edward Island will have an able and experienced parliamentar- ian in the cabinet in the person of Hon. J. Watson MacNaught, solicitor general. This, too, follows the ex- ample of the outgoing Conservative administration in which Hon. J. Angus MacLean held the portfolio of fisheries. Mr. MacLean was the first native Islander to hold rank as minister at Ottawa for many years. and it is to be hoped now that the practise will be continued :by suceeeding governments. That, of course, will depend on the calibre of the representatives gwe send to Ottawa. There is no ob- :ligation on any federal government to follow this rule as a matter of course. It cannot make bricks with- out straw. In Mr. MacNaught's case, as in Mr. MacLean's, the appoint.- ment was made on its merits. We congratulate the Prince County member most warmly on this recog- gition of his service in public life, find are confident that. he will ren- a good account of himself. In- deed, we should have had something ' quite different to say about the new setup had his claims been ignored on this occasion. ‘7? ‘ A Neat Comeback Government departments at 0t- l flows have come under fire from a . royal commission for being poor é hands at running their own busi— peas. Waste and extravagance have been scored, and examples have been 9" I avail that have made headlines acroaa the country. Scathing com- ‘ments on the subject have been “made in Parliament. Reforms have ~ 2 been promised. Everyone seemed ' m that it was time the bureau- and were brought finder control, conducted themselves more the lines followed by private and eommmial enter- il’ “m Yap-rhea by’thé ‘ ' Is Still going ‘A ' ligand-5mm in, l with fresh attacks on governmental inefficiency. But in the meantime the bureaucrats have refused to re- main in the doghouse. They’ve taken the slump in a. book issued by the Trade and Commerce Department to show how business should be com ducted. Nor. their business, but pri- vate business. The work has come out in a slick paper-back which markets at 50 cents and covers business from beginning to end, from organizing to bankruptcy. Both English and French editions will be sold. The industrial promotion branch of the department hopes the book "will encourage new business ven- tures and increase efficiency in old ones.” It appears to be a very com- petent piece of work, and it may well achieve these aims. The items covered include tax laws, insurance regulations, choice of location, type of business. retail policies, accounts, credit business regulations and em- ployee and employer relations. 0n the other side. placed immediately before the bankruptcy chapter is a. section dealing with combines and monopon regulations, explaining them in easy but precise terms. The title of the book? “How to Run a Business.” Let’s hope a copy will be sent to that nosey royal commission that has been so free with its criticism about govern- mental business, with the compli- ments of the staff, and the follow- ing sentence from the book’s key- note message neatly underlined: “Weight the evidence carefully be- fore reaching a decision 1” Copenhagen Conference Canada, along with other Com- monwealth nations, has a stake in the talks which opened last week in Copenhagen between B ritis h and Danish government spokesmen. Both countries are members of the European F r e 9 Trade Association (EFTA). Both Sought to join the Common M a r k e t (the European Ec o n om i c Community, or EEC). Neither could. Each has toward the other the greatest goodwill, but their difficulties as they seek to reach a fresh agreement cast a long shadow over the future. After the breakdown of the Com~ mon Market talks, the EF‘TA set out to prepare a bold program of ac- tion to eliminate tariffs by 1966, and to include “arrangements re- lating to trade in agricultural goods and fishery products.” Denmark, which is in the main an agricultural. country, is asked to open its small home market for industrial goods before 1967 to the full and advanc- ed productive power of Britain. Un- less its own exports can be increas- ed, it faces a severe double trade squeeze. Therefore it is asking, u r g e n t l y, for “Commonwealth status” in the British market for its agriculture. A key item is butter. As well as running butter quotas, Britain has a tariff on butter for non-Common- wealth countries. This gives the latter, notably New Zealand and Australia, a preference of 15 shill- ings ($2.10) a hundred weight. Be- sides asking to share this prefer- ence, Denmark also urges duty-free entry for cheese. boned ham. and canned ham. . Denmark points out that removal of preferences would not injure any other trades where quotas still exist. But Britain's major difficulty is that the preference is of such a kind that Denmark cannot be given duty- free access u nless the Common- wealth countries involved give their consent. This the Commonwealth countries are unwilling to do unless they have some kind of compensat- ing advantage elsewhere in their trade. With other agricultural items the incomes of Britain’s own farm- ers, too, become a. major concern. Meanwhile Denmark has put a lZ-mile fishery limit around the Faroe Islands, 51 major British middle-distance fishing ground; and Norway, another EFTA m e m b e r, wants British tariffs taken off fish like herring and haddock and off lobsters and prawns. EDITORIAL NOTE A decline in the landings of no fish and shellfish in the Atlantic Provinces in March of 11 percent, to some 37,612,000 pounds from 42,310,000 in the same month last year, is reported by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. However, land- ed value roae five percent to $2,- 284,000 from $2,181,000. w WHEN I THINK WHAT IT COST 100 I D .0. . O f r ,///;/,r////'/ /, ' POST-EASTER REFLECTIONS OTTAWA REPORT by Patrick Nicholson Awaiting Spring’s Symphonies In Color This National Capital has been I enjoying the most spectacul a r i display of crocuses ever seen around the National War Mem- orial. and on the nearby “Laur- ier Slopes“ of Parliament Hill. After one of the most consis- tently cold winters anyone can remember. the brilliant carpets of yellow and blue and white blooms gave an exhilarating lift to a morosely cheerless popula— tion of Ottawans. And the us~ ually short - lived Spring t'low- ers seem to have lasted longer than ever in this late and long- ed - r relief from winter. y own garden I boast what are probably the very first floral harbingers of Spring: . masses of those delicate little white Snowdrops hanging bell-1 like from their short stalks. the crocuses of Capital Hill. r literally brightening the earth almost the day after the warm- ing sun bared it of snow. So on Easter Sunday. while show still lay banked in shelters of north- I ern aspect, my Snowdrops were I: celebrating their third Sunday,‘ FESTIVAL TO COME In a month. Ottawa will once 1 again be celebrating its annual Tulip Festival. which now at-. tracts tourists from other parts of Canada and from across the border. Cars and buses parked along the Scenic Driveway bear licences from the northern Stat- es and from Quebec. while their . occupants kneel to photograph' the prize blooms donated by 1 D the grateful Queen of the Ne\h- ‘ erlands. as a "thank you" for the welcome accorded to her and her ChlldI‘C'l here during the. war. when her own country was i overrun by the Germans. So with the tardy advent of warmer weather. Ottawans are beginning to forget the rough.. tough winter which sent our oil bills soaring. . From Europe to Florida. in Japan as in New England. it has . been a savage winter marked by newspaper headlines on rare and bizarre happenings. Yet ‘ oddly enough the statistics in 01- ; tawa don’t make this out as‘ such an outrageous winter. The ‘ lowest temperature recorded was ; nineteen beiow on February 4: i 64 inches of snow to date are 22 ‘ inches below the average lb ut more may come). We have had over 100 inches of snow in a re- cent winter: in we have had PUBLIC FORUM nu. column is open lo the diacuslurn hy correspondents o lei-ea. The G sarily endorse the opinion at corr oondente. All lettera published are aura Joel I in. and condensation when nausea" Ian la unable tr- r v concern to la . In; teller-a auhmltted. POOR INSPIRATION Sin—Last year a replica of the P.E.I. House of Legislature was seen and admired by many I Cmadlana In other Provlnces. I wonder what those same Ca-n- radians would think if they could see and hear what has been so- ing on In this same "House" dur- ing this session of the Legisla- ture? Mam rlsluc to their feet (out of order) and going on with the moat sarcastic and stupid lines of dialogue that I’m 5 sure any House has ever wit-l neased. A u n t v e r a a1 complalnt w 1- II ed with raapaet for om «Parlia- meat. Let‘s make on- vdcee heard it mull. pullout oedure. and whoever vogd die "Speaker" for to Mn write "'3" sake and “light to remit-ad! i That may not be quite the slo- , tender way. The door is open. ‘ get as much time and space as ‘ ready smile, temperatures of 39 below. But. this winter we had. as every; country in the northern hemis- l phere had. :1 persistent and bit- l ter north wmd whose chill fac- . tor frequently dragged our tem- perature :quivalent way way down. it New Year's Eve. for 5 example. it was fifteen below! by normal measurement: but the wind of 35 miles per hour pro- duced a wind chill factor mak- ing it as cold as sixty-six below in still air. MAKE WAY FOR SPRING So it is with especial joy that. Ottawa is putting away its snow tires. raccoon fur coats. and those striking looking men's fur “wedges” or hats. and looking forward to mellow summer come the opening of our 26m Parlia- . . ment next mont eanwhile. with our heartsj lightened by the gay sea of col- ‘ our of those crocuses climbing up the grassy slopes surmount- ed by the statue to the great ‘ M Prime Minister. Sir Wilfrid Laurier. we should think on the memory of a popular Membe of Parliament with gratitude. For the late Rodney Adamson. "1 ‘ who was killed in the air liner crash at Moose Jaw nine years ago, initiated that wild prolifer- ation crocuses sprouti n 3 through the grass. ‘ Mr. Adamson, wearing khaki uniform 19 years ago although M.P.. sharrd the soldiers' strong feeling about conscrip- tion. He ventured into Ottawa's Byward Market. purchased a sack of mixed crocus bulbs, and diligently in the dark of night planted them along the . grassy slope beneath the Laur- ' ier statue. The sun of S p r i n g ‘ later spelled out the wo rd "Conscription" in yellow andi blue and white blossoms ragged- : ly forming the letters. The mul- ‘ tiplied progeny of those Adam- ‘ son flowers of protest today form a solid carpet. i Becomes Sym pathetic Montreal “Paying taxes can be fun." gan that the US. Internal Re- venue Service ithe Income Tax Departmentt has adopted. But it is making a big publicity ef— fort to give the tax-gatherch a better public image. The idea is to make them ap- ear as “friendly folk." ready to talk over taxes with the citi- zen in a soothing and almost it is said. Just drop in any old time and have a chat. You‘ll find how nice we really are. An effort is being made to possible for those who will speak to the people about the Service. Each representative is to try to make himself Into a beloved public personality — “Mr. Re- venue." He is the man with the understanding approach. the ' the sympathetic touch. The Internal Revenue Service Gazette has also tried to gel the Post Office Department to put out a; may postage stamp. for use all over? the nation, commemorating the, 100th anniversary of the Inter-' nal Revenue, The Post Office Department was not receptive to the idea, so Internal Revenue had to fall back on issuing a commemorative revenue stamp O .—.. ILS own. This attempt by the tax - za- therer to show tender sympathy for the tax-payers, before they are devoured, is rather too grim to be agreeable. It is rath- er like Lewis Carroll's Walrus. as he. with kindness. sorted out the oysters for his dinner: “I weep for you," the Walrus said: “I deeply sympathize." With subs and tears he sorted ou Those of the largest slze. Holding his pocket - handker- chie Before his streaming eyes. Volcanic Ouibursts National Geographic Society Searing lava. spewing from ‘ Mount Agung brings death to Bali. Hot ashes from lrazu burn j crops in Costa Rica. 0n the is- ; land of Paramushir. in the Rus- sian Kuril chain. Mount Ebeko erupts after 35 years of inac- tivity. Those are the news items; But what's going on? Business as usual on the earth’s great "Circle of Fire,” the geologists answer. On this vaat'clrcle, which gir- dles the Paclflc Ocean. lie 400 of the more 600 volcanoes classified as active or recently active. Among them are such famed volcanoes as sacred Full Japan; lolly Popocatepetl .In Mexico: legendary Manna Lou and Kilauea on Hawaii: Merapt. the the mountain of central Java; and steaming Mount Erebua in Ice - covered Antarc- tlca. . MANY ERUPTIONS 0f the world‘s 41 major vol- canic eruptions recorded since .- 5 E :5 z 3 E. > 2 a an 5 2 h a .=r 003 a talus Ire highest concentration at volouoea In the world. There have been 70 volcanic upheav- als In Indonesia within historic time, Including the cataclysmic of Krakatau almost ,tsunaml, destroyed a thousand , 36.000 human beings to western the l . Kllaue ‘ taln as "dark red -- the red of bee P - Volcanic dust carried on into The explosions were heard as far away as western and sou- thern Australia. Ceylon, Thal- nd. and the Philippines. Par- ticles of dust from the eruption were borne by winds around the world. Awesome tidal waves, or .— 3 villages and drowned more than Java. SOME ARE TAMED Not all volcanoes unleash their power with such sudden fury. In many areas of the world man has learned to employ the [town I er of steam generated In under- ground volcanic llaults. ew Zealand has bulll a power station at Walrakel, tap- ping underground steam to turn power < generating turbines. Sl- mllar efforts have been m e in Mexico, Centnal America.~ It- aly. and Iceland. ‘ Maori villagers in New Ze land's thermal region use tzh natural hot water and steam to bathe and wash, eve cook and heat homes. Eruptlng volcanoes can be fearful sights. One witness to 959 eruption of Howell'- a dcacnbed lta llery loun- ta —— and It hurled Into the alt massive blocks the else at anoa." the atmosphere" dllhtaaa ti: o sun's rays to create heauttl ul sunsets. Spectacular a n It a e t a Increase In TB Alerts Officials By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellea TUBERCULOSIS la a moo - able disease and health author. ltlea become alerted when there is a sudden Increase In the number of cases in a certain community. This took place 11 upstate New York in 1958 when the rate Jumped to 184.4 per 100,000 of the population. "The national average was an 19.7) The increase was confined to one school district and it was obvious someone with active tu- berculosis was passing on also ' tion to others. According to Dr. Evelyn F11. Rogers of the New York department of health, the culprit turnedout to be the driver of school bus No. l 11. I The 226 pupils who rode this i vehicle attended five of the se- l ven schools in the district. Vi- tal statistics revealed that 32 ; per cent or these youngsters . had a positive tuberculin to st and 19.5 per cent had active tu- berculosis. This was in contrast to the outcome of the children who rode other buses. 01' these, the tubercllin rate was 1.8 per I | l l i cent and active tuberculosis was present in only 0.1 per cent. i What about the bus 'drlver? 3 The school district requires a! chest X-ray of e v e ry person I seeking employment for this I job. The man had contracted a l respiratory infection eight t months before his employment. I X-rays at that time showed a .- shadow that was considered 10‘ pneumanitls. Several X-raysl were taken at monthly inter- I vals, which indicated a progres- sive clearing of the lesion. It i was completely gone by the I time of his preemployment X- 5 Five months later. the driver : mug and veloped s w c a t s, latigahility. cough. and weight loss. But he wait another six months be- fore seeing his physiclan and having an X-ray. new sha- dow was present and tests of his sputum were positive for tu- bercle bacilli. He «has been suf- fering from the disease for sev- eral months and drove the chil- dren around. unaware of the i true nature of his chest condi- ‘ t. In addition, he may have failed to use good judgment in taking care of himself. A chest X-ray is a must for anyone who develops a cough that progres-l ses or persists more than three weeks. H.W. writes: Would it be ad-l visable for an elderly person to have an operation for dropped kidney or is it better to let it alone? REPLY Let it alone unless the condi- tion is causing pain. Relief .of- ten isobtainod by wearing a corset or gaining weight. The added fat holds the kidney in p1 WALLEYED WOMAN ‘ HP. writes: Can walleye in a woman of 60 be operated on successfuly? REPLY I assume you mean cross-eye If so. the operation will correct the appearance of the eyes but the vision in the weaker eye not improve because of disuse over the years. LCER AND PREGNANCY R.Z. writes: It a woman with peptic ulcer becomes pregnant, will her nealth or the baby’s be endangered? REPLY Not unless there are ulcer complications such hemor- rhage or perfonation. Pregnan- cy may reactivate the lesion if it leads to toxemia or emotion- al stress. NEURITIS IN ALCOHOLICS N. , writes: Is alcoholic neuritis due to poisoning or to bad eating habits? EPLY Both are Implicatcd. Send a stamped. self-addressed enve- lope for leaflet on alcoholic neuritis. TODAY'S HEALTH HINT— Don't kiss anyone when you have a cold. Our Yesterday’s and educational qualifications. NOTES BY THE WAY It’s no longer enough to build I a better mousetrap. The price has to be low enoufli to meet. world competition. Edmu- taon Journal. Children all share one load habit. They do not go about showing pictures of their grand- parents. Stratford Beacon— Herald. Visitor — “What became of that other windmill that was here last year." Native —“There was only enough wind for one, so we tookit down." -— Ham- ilton Spectator. You can't stop progress: Bal- var Mantel. an electronics ex- pert, has succeeded in condo» in: condensed milk. He can now 1 offer it in pills the size of a headache tablet. —— Berlingsk idende. ? I answer it'wfnether ‘ not. —- Montreal Gazette 30'“ man The most annoylu about a practical Selig“; his belief that those who do not laugh at his pranks have no sense of hum. — Stratford Beacon - Herald. “Since he lost hta money, his friends don't know ha" ..Boea:. You. feel. psychiatry really helped you? Secretary; Yes, a few months no I was so timid I was afraid to answer the phone when it rang. Now, it rings or No Early Ho Canadian Preaa Britain and France have: taken the first tentative steps towards patching up their Com- mon Market quarrel, but the happy ending may be a long way off. The meeting in Paris be- tween President Dc Gaulle and the Earl of Britain’s foreign secretary, represents a welcome improvement in rela- tions. and encouragement can be gleaned from the bumper crop of British tourists bent on spending Easter in the French capital. But there are diplomats in Paris who shake their heads sadly when asked about Brit- ain's chances of gaining admit- tance to the Common Market club. They argue that there will have to be a sharp change In the political climate first. MUST WAIT YEARS It used to be said that Brit- ain's negotiations to join the European Economic Commun- ity were “doomed to succeed,” reflecting a French feeling that much as it was ‘lo be deplored. Britain would find a way in somehow. Now the French are saying that things will be "ripe" for British entry in another three to five years. Among foreign diplomats in Paris. there some Scepticism about this. “The fact is, you know. that the British and the. French just \ hissing and the spitting is sure Ending don't like each other very much," one informant said re cently. “There is a lot of jealousy and suspicion on both sides." The two countries, some say, are basically as different as ‘a cat and a dog. There may be periods of uneasy peace, but the my to break out sooner or later. LIKE WALLS Recently a high French of. ficial. seeking to explain to a visiting Canadian minister the underlying incompatibility temperament. c use the ex- ample of dflering attitudes to- wards the landscaping of gar- ens. The Englishman, he said, likes to have his garden neatly laid out in a classical. symmeh rical style. It may well be in- distinguishable from 1,000 other gardens in 1,000 other suburbs. The Frenchman, on the other hand. prefers to improvise, draw his inspiration from no lure. to have something differ- ent than his neighbors. And then he throws a high, impenetrable stone wall around the property. The analogy may seem f fetched, but British negotiations will at least confirm that French attitudes, before and alter the breakdown of the Brussels dis- cussions. have certame been impenetrable. Grey Owl The last most Canadians who, remember him at all heard of, Grey Owl was that he was a; fake, no Indian but an English- l man named Archibald Belaneyl who had carried off. as the Lon- f don Times termed it. "one of l the greatest masquerades In lit- ‘ erary history." Grey Owl died 25 years ago this month. Since that time he has been exposed as a fraud. Almost immediately a f t e 1' he died. the full story of the man calling himself an Ojibway Ind- ian who snowshoed out of the wilderness of Eastern Quebec in 1929 to mail his first manu- script to Country Life magazine in London was revealed. Those who have been deceiv- ed do not easily forgive. Men and women who read his books or heard his lectures on wild life and conservation felt they h ad been cheated. T h I a man h 8 even carried off his great de- ception on the Royal Family. He stayed in Buckingham Palace for four hours one after-non talking with the little princess- es. Elizabeth and Margaret, Queen Mary. King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. He left calling the King "mybrother." But now alter 25 years there are signs that a new generation which wasn‘t fooled is looking 25 Years After laws Journal Ojibway who could play Chopin. more sympathetically at Grey Owl. The American magazine Sports Illustrated has just pub- lished a flattering account of Grey Owl. calling him a “m sterious genius of nature lore.” Grey Owl could not have asked for better. The old romanticism ls re- turning. The magazine article concludes with the view that Grey Owl‘s “mystical feeling of kinship with nature and the abiding value of life, human and animal. was not false. and he became an Indian. not from a desire to perpetrate a fraud but to, signallze a break for- evcr with a past that meant nothing to him." Perhaps someone better bring his books back to print and the National Film Board should take his films from out of Its vaults. By the 50m anniversary of his death Grey Owl might be a real Canadian hero again. if not an , The ’ FLYIIIG IIII'I'BIIMAII RESTAURANT “Your Island Steak House” -AAAAAAA vv'vvvvvvv (From the Guardian Files) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Aprll 23. 1938 Clarence Sample, of the Dos mlniou Department of Agricul- ture at Charlottetown, was pre- sented with a remembrance gift and address by co-workers in the Department office yester- day afternoon. Mr. Sample has been transferred to Winnipeg and leaves today to take up his duties in the Western Capital. Reginald MacDonald, St. Pet- ers. was elected president of the Prince Edward Island Teach- ers' Federation, yesterday. Oth- er ofl‘lcers included vice - pre- aldent. Jack Matthews. Alberq ton; recording secretary. . Doucette, Sourla; and secretary treasurer, Miss Mathe- aon, Prince Street School. 'I'EN YEARS AGO April 28. 1058 Hon. A. W. Ma eaon. Minia- ter of Health and Welfare. re- plied to the brief presented to the Provincial Government by the Cerebral Palsy Parent Group Mien he addressed the group at their rnonlllly meeting at the YMCA Tuesday evening. Mr. Matheaon in stressing the need of speech gigoccupatlonal the- WIIII the BMW were seen around the world for I I I Texaco Warrior. a 87-foot otter. 30x3; law an ' "Y “milled It “Idiot Sam- . ' . bout Is [it mm“ mm a m as u an 00M! M mm mm“ . Many of the 85.” inhabitants ohm Friday nllht. St. Law- ol the Death Faeroe Islands. met away olllcl me the 4m miles west at Norway, de- up vessel we no in. acaud from Norse settlers eta medlm dancer. Water was he- mo man no. i III has It: hold. EASTERN TRUST Large and small depositors save for the EASTERN TRUST. Eastern Trust your savings earn 4%, with interest calculated on the minimum monthly balance. Steady Eastern Trust Interest payments add to your account . future with and help you to things you need. 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