\ n- SK him. It’san easy matter to prove. Ask him. He knows the wheel that most of the other boys are riding. He knows which bicycle is first up the hill, which coasts ilrthest, which is fastest on the level, easiest riding on the long hike, quickest to get started in the sprints, most per- fectly controlled going down steep hills. Boys who own C-C-M-‘s have "told the world" these things and your boy knows. MASSEY-PERFECT- COLUMBIA CLEVELAND-RED BIRD And Joycycles for Children Summersiile r Ask him" which bicycle has the famous Triplex Hanger, the Hercules Coaster Brake, the Gibson rustproof aluminum pedals, the English seamless steel tubing, the four coats ofdurable enamel, the 20-year nickel-plating, and Dunlap Tires. He'll tell you-A C-C-M~ t 8 8 8 O U NOTE: If you care to take advan- tage of our Easy Payment Ofler, ask the C-C-M- Dealer to explain. R. T. HOLMAN LTD. Charlottetown 0. (l. M. Pllillllllillfll IIISTRIBIITDRS ' ,_ through the Canadian Rockies. ed view oi the , ‘ it 'VP.R Oservatio c... 01...... New Features ph shows the latest type of observation car to be used by the Canadian Pacific RaIlv/uy this r-ummc l! lii F-Rilil-lll)’ I"! Hlhweotlrcr cur. being (lesigucrl so that the traveller may gain a: _ mounhlin scenery even though there might happen to be .1 shower in Pfflfflliii. 'l hi.) ca. “W PlflR 0i the open top can used in past seasons by the Canadian Pacific i:i the lllfllllliilllls. \ Cruelty to-Animsie" o By lllbella orsvdorrl l m‘ run is the nrst or!“ w" “ s. r. c. A. oomvfiilfii°m you Dhlrchemwmilit animals and birdi- Wo should be kind to i-Mm- . |y because they hold) “B m "i many WI!‘- ‘blli- V" ‘mmg {an mom u yo, ourselves, W0“ Among the best loved to be treated, m‘ and most llleilll “mum ‘m A“ dos. cal. 01""- ilm” “m ‘haw’, a flve..as well l8 Min‘ “mum o‘ to be fondled.’ BM P9119‘! b? “m” owners. The farmer studs the horse very useful as a beast of bllfdfill- still, those burdens must not be heavy. The cow suplvlle! 01" m ' butter cheese and meat. The doe i9 very useful on the fsflfl t“! dflvm€ cows -to PREV-UN. ‘$35135 awayilm“ slurs and actins l9 "- llliml- l“ 5°“ eral over the whole ifsrm. M83)’ wonderful $01168 0T9 w“ °t l" ° dogs affection and his ssvins 0 human life. A famous will“! hangs in many of our homes, 0! a with“; do; who has saved a child from drowning. The cat ls said 1x0 he the most lntelliselli 0i dilme“ ° animals. She ls a Emai- mmm“ “s well as b. ismlly Del. Th9" i5 a story of a. cat who 8W8 U19 alarm that nio iiouso was on are. by mew‘; m; 10m“,- at her master s door. Ha this cat not been treated nwiwrlv- 1 don't. slllllili)" 811° “'°“"1' m“ done such a m1“, and the house and most. probably all its occupants mo, would have perished. _ Animals were created for 1118115 use, but never for him to abuse. I consider loadlnB a 3°79” t°° bu“ ily, not feedinx him llrollefly. hous- lug hint in a draitY Mm "<1 °"°“ using a. check rein while he 18 nuullng loads, abuse to this noble animal. lf we lkeell a horse, cow dog, or even a cat around our homes, we should feed, house 811d care for them, JJPODEYlY- The!’ ‘We dumb beasts. and althou8~l1 they ca" not tell us when we are ill-Healing lliein, they suffer l“!!! We "m6 a“ we, when ill-treated. You can easily tell when an animal h“ a- kind “ulster. The w; purrs, the dos wagfl lilii tall and barks joyfully when he sees his master or mistress. The cow, sometimes ‘gives more milk, and nio canary sings moi-osweotly. We must not only be kind to dumb animals, but to our lellow-inen and everyone we come into contact with Wild animals too. are sometime! abused, .by being shut up in cages. taken to different climates from what they are accustomed to, etc- Canai-les often refuse to slug 111°" sweet melodies. when taken from their native llldllllifil, i-‘llllfi Proving that even birds have a. certain amount oi affection iu them. Mi'. Jack Miner, a valued meni- ber of the Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Animals, has his residence in Klngsville, Ontario. lu this place he has an artificial lake and mostly all the wildrgeese" 0i Canada, in their flight from winter to summer lands flock here. This shows the intelligence of birds in knowing their friends from enemies. It common sport among some young meii and boys. l5 l0 9mm‘ at a bird, and,_ perhaps break its wing. They then go avray and for- lget the rpoor sufferer. Often, too, liliey steal tlio eggs from its "e5!- Tliink Fhow disappointed the mother and father bird are. to return to the home nest sud find it empty! About one hundred years ago, a kind-hearted Englishman, seeing liow cruelly the poor ‘animals were being treated, founded a Society for the Prevention 0t these Cruelties. This lSoclety grew so powerful and influential that it hail laws passed, whereby anybody ill-treating an animal was to he fined or imprison- ed. Later, in 1866, another Society was organized in New York by‘ Mr. Henry Bergh. In nearly every State at the present time there are laws to punish anyone who abuses animsls- Nearly everyone loves ani~ mals, and so popular has this So: clety grown, that hospitals have been_ built in some-oi our largest cities to care for sick animals. We have organized a Society in ‘Chill’- lottetoivu of which 1 um a member. l dearly love animals and do not wan‘. to see them abused at any time, lI feel like Cowper the ‘English poet, who says: "l will uot enter on my list of friends. n man who need- lessly sets foot upon o. worm." Em- ily Dickln expreses her ldeaiiron tlils subject in her beautiful poem: "ll l can ease one life the aching, Or cool one pain; Or help one fainting robin Into its nest again, I shall» not live in vain." TYNE VALLEY SCHOOL. F)’; 3. The following is the report tho Tyne Valley school for months of lllarcli and April. Gr do X.-—l, Myrtle Ellis; 2, Real moi riorzoul; . Bodies. 1 Auelaiiil; 4, Carmau NlcNeill. Grade at‘ V -l. llc-lma Ladner; 2, Wendnll 3, Edwin Hansen; 4, Lulu Grade lV.—1. Glenn Willi- on... 2, Ralph Bodies: Llnyd Elm; _-;_ Vincent Mwl .\lf'l)0ll[-','t.lll§ 4, Donald McLean. ' J. A. Stewart Williams, Prin. Mabel E. Millar, Assistant. ._i-<-o-}_____ "Mcltleill; 3. Ruth Ellis: 4. PIVElYILBORIBS; 4, Arthur McAuslaiul. (lratlemlllily ‘Can't you lb?» a 800d- i101???" Ellis; 5, Hilton lllcNelll; 6, Gcorgini lll.--~1, Alvlna Ellis; 2, Clinton Mll- 3, Alexis Wood; Grade ll.-—1, Howutt (lrsde I.—1, Cllifordlio he ll-ke your. Grade Vlll.—-1, ltlu Sker-l Palmer; 2, Eileen Skerry; ll, Waldulrolliinvg." I Phillips. Grails 1X.—1, Dorothy. llguu; Yeo; 2. Mabel Dyment; s. Jean rJi-i Wlllllims. lls; 4, Kathleen Phillips: 5. Mageiel hlr-Aui-ilaurl. Skerry. c. wvBrlnglng Up Father ‘ HlEi l$ A FUNNY TOWN - IN INDIA. WHO EVER - “EMQD o‘: CARRY“, ‘N I ‘$3M? L Scéryrifiil WATER FRQM AVVELL. TH, "Well, Mother, I'll be a nickel." goo-d to 4, Lloyd falblle r, go-cd iTo "Ibm, wlhlo ihad been cutting 3, Jgnnigllll), lilis moltheir vXCllflllTflGd wea-rily: Nlkiulier: "For shhmle, you lougnht far ilf all boys and girls would malt to practice. l am sure all would be kind and thoughtful in their daily living. u -——i-{O>—i-— l 5g uiouu-o run-- Black's secre- r lury. '“Nl0: his pri-viate secretary." "Wlnoivn the difference?" i"A prl-vslte secretary knows more a resonator-imam cuss i , Gina As Viewed this verse their motto and put it in- y. By An Eiiglishwoinan (Toronto Mall and Empire.) ' Ties; His, or Chins. as we West- erners call the country. has' stood as such through thousands of years while other nations-end, indeed. civilizations-have crumbled and dieap‘ ed. Since the open- ln: of the historical period in the reign of ‘Yu Wan: (781-71-1 B. C.) - there have ever been factions, but = until m. n. 1911 they mo: con- tributed to the Son of Hoapltn-ahe Fknperor-aud all hsye ltike of stress presented a units - nt—- eitber passive or active, as advised by those in control of the particu- lar situation. The Chinese have over ssld, “Long united we divide. Long divided we unite." And so it will be in the near future, unless Western action in China should be altered. There has never been com- plete cohesion oflall the people of Chins except when confronted with the possibility of a calamity likely to threaten the continuance of national existence. The unrest in China which all the papers have lieralded—tlils seeming disintegra- tion—lins been present tor thous- ands or years, but it has neverdone any real ‘Larm. ln its apparently very ominous smoke is the ever growing flame oi’ patriotism which —-at the psychological moment (and it may be at the least expect- eii time) will burst out and inciner- ate anything from outside in tho way of a real threat to the continir ed national independent existence 0t‘ the State. Everything written about Chins bristles with contra- dlcllons-ahuse and ridicule on the one hand and ecstacy on the other. l\\"e read yesterday of "the miser- able, abject race under brutal war lord brlgands," and to-morrow we ‘shall probably read or the wonder- lul people whose institutions are based on flllal piety. -1Vll<lwiiy is the lrillli. China's Big Man. What do we really know about the human factors ln China? In China, which ls larger than Eur ope including Russia, with its 540.- 000,000 people, there ls—~for those who know the country, speak some of its languages and have entree to grout men-one dominating per- sonulity~Chang Tso-lin. He is officially Governor-(leneral of Mari churia and at the moment Presi- (lent of the Republic, whose capi- tal is Peking, Peking means "North Court" and the official language ‘is that of this city. ‘In the days when Nanklng, "South Court," was capital. the easy, less guttural language or that city was right and proper. Chung Tso-lin is well ad- vised by shrewd Europesn men of business. lHls mines are admir- ably handled by a. notable engineer and they are mines. This engin- eer's activities extend far inland and are capltallzednt an enormous sum which produces about 100 per cent. per 8flllllXll,_ In other spheres of Chang's work there are other Brltisliers giving him splendid ser- vice. Chau-g Tso-lin is working strenuously for China's salvation and lie is the only real factor which xvii-l count lu the great country, with its marvelous poten- tlaltles and its army 0E 1 1-2 mll~ lioils 0t trained men. Some time ago the some money. It never material- lzed. Chang Tso-lin has sent the left wing or his army, under his son——a. very brlgiht. young inan— south via Kalfeiig, and they wl-ll ‘the , Dominion fi. © Bafloons " HETHERa car is oil/e or otherwise, Dominion Royal Cord Balloons give ' lowest cost. In addition, they lend dis- large or small, expen- finest service at the tinction to the car. an "Reds" oilfered Chang " mi‘.-- .-_t ... - soon he knocking at the heart oi China, which is Hangkow, the “Mouth of EmporlumsW-s mighty elty made of three big cities, two on the left and one on the right hank-of the Yangtse-kisng-“Son or the Sea." The Next President ‘Chang Tso-lin is not interested in secondary things, such as Shang- hai, for the utilitarian and primary affairs are those which are useful. In his entourage ls Chat HsinaPo, who, now adviser i,“ all things oi‘ importance outside military ones. will "become the Premier in the place of Wellington Koo. When this change comes along, we, iwill find that Chang Tso-llii will have something to ssy t0 GieatBrltsln. Not so long ago Chang Tao-tin said tll€l._'lle was. straight, that he ex- pected strslghtness from Great Briusinl and l! he did noinget it. he should act accordingly. He add- ed that lie did not see any ind-lea- tion of anything but belligerent ac- tion 0n the part of Great Brlbaln. and that was long before a soldier was shipped to Shanghai. His powers 0t prescleneo are extraor- dinary. lNot so long ago be told his Minister or Foreign Depart- ment, Ou Sing, to tell Sir Miles Tnampson, the British Ambassador, that "he did not like technical pro- posals especially when they are in- definite and perhaps nebulous. l-le did not like anything which ' indi- cates insincere thoughts on tihe part of Great Britain in regards to the giving up of extra-territorial rights. 'W'llll6' appreciating tlia spirit of Crest Britain iii drawing proposals such as were made, he expected something quite different lii the circumstances existing st land ‘tenlfl lesa."—Bos'bon fPratisci-flpt. months ago. Nothing. therefore. could happen, and, lii effect, Chang Tso-lin turned down in a few WflNlS the proposals which he considered to be “not straight". Ou iSlllg is u kind of diplomat and he translated the words of his master so that they might rend as ‘pleasantly as possible. lChal ‘Hsln-‘Po is an equally clever man who cannuot ill‘ blurted. , d-lo is a slow mover, a typically conservative Northerner, Rely on Chang Mllltarlly. Chane Tso-llii ls the strongest man in China by far. lie has sent one of the wings oi his army right through country which all war correspondents have slated ls against him, and these people have ‘said that Chang's troops are in an inextrieable position. Don't believe it. Chang knows too much about the vulnerability or ‘his flanks and is a flank fighter, for it was this form of warfare which he used to undo Feng Yu l-lsiarig. Now that general ls on his tlsnk, but there is no threat from him or Wu Pei Flt. Sun lChuang Fang l's no back number, as was corres- pondents would have us believe. He is still a power and still s. staunch a-l-ly of Chang's. lclllllllg Kai Shel: is likely to fall out with his Southerners very badly. and when he does s considerable mili- tary power may-upon the fall oi Kangkow to Chang Tao-lin, throw in his lot with t-liis mighty, far-see- ing man. When this happens, what will be the position? The primary things, including the heart of China and the richest and larg- est province-See (lhunn— will this time." That was just three / THAN K COODNEQB. -By George Hollands stand in the roar of the (‘uiilmi- "to mo». lb suits. A ccusrrnw or . MYQTERY NQW l WHIREDiDTHAT v WATER co? DOMINION Rueszre Company- LIMITED -_ are: All nruiu from the lzrefii Mr. Ferguson ls well known "rmww m“ m‘ ‘lmmml "mm °t throughout the Province. Ho will be lhc iaiugtsls, null tile province's greatly missed m the community WlllCll oppose (‘hang 'l‘s0-l'lii will he l leemed suirrcil. mi" lliny t-uuuot lzrow oii- ‘for he was very many e5 and will long be . membered for ou-uli gruiu In fccii thorn for n. r. __ . ., , ._ lils integrity and his kindly 66B iuuiiih. iDl.) (tlurlys it loss, m“ with his ’e“°w_m°n_ l-lo ‘loaves ‘to mourn. besides wide circle of frlondntliree aisle Mrs. Jane Nicholson who resld with ihim, Mrs‘. N. A. Niucfarl and Mrs; Csbhbrine Donalds, lsu’ merslda, and two brothers. Mr. Poi» er Forkuson. ,Grahsm’s lRoad and Mr. Hilgli‘ A. Ferguson, Tucoiiu.‘ IFMEMORIAM MR. ARCHIBALD FERGUSON ~llis Wllll‘. circle oi friends willre- gret to hear ni‘ llic (lentil of M-l'. Arl-‘llillulrl Ferguson, which took wash _ plat-c at his home ’lll ‘Summeitfleld M‘ Fer so“ was 79 yea" o1 on lllillltlily, May ilili- Mr. I-ergusori aim The mew] Wm lake w” had been ill for more than s. month and although his tsontlltion‘ was‘ com sidercd serious. it ivas thought that he Will-l llll[)l‘0\'lll|?, and his iirlends v were quite hopeful for his ‘recov- Vacaition: metlil-nig tlhlsltmfllifl PFY- ~ folks dial-Ike work all who anon. ifrom_ his lube residence st 27-11% oii Wednesday. May 11th. RT Hon. Geo. P. Graham‘ CHAlRMAN sxtcuruvs OWWT"