VHE WORLD'S GREATEST EXPOSITION NEARING COMPLETION Splendors of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition Reveal ed by Its Present Progress. SUPERB WORKS OF SCULPTURE AND ART IN COLOSSAL EXHIBIT PALACES FOR AMER ICA'S PANAMA CANAL CELEBRATION. LINTS of gold from vast oriental domes, Venetian blue on minarets, pro-' I digious works of sculpture aud tbe arrival of notables from all parts of the globe give glimpses of the great Panama-racific International (Exposition as it will appear wben Its gates awing open to tbe world n Feb. 20, 1915. Not for many years will the world be enabled to enjoy so marvelous a collection of the works of contemporary sculptors. Tbe World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago first proved that the greatest talent might be engaged to produce work of even temporary vulue. Since then more and more atten tion has been given at each succeeding exposition to sculpture as a form of ecoration, and the great Panama-Pacific International Exposition at San Francisco promises to surpass even Chicago's exquisite display, j Every phase of the exposition is far advanced. Thirty-three of the world's latlons will participate with government displays, Argentina leading with a ;overnment appropriation of $1,300,000 gold. - r -1 - " N AIRSHIPS WILL RACE AROUND THE GLOBE FROM SAN FRANCISCO IN 1915. A ERONAUTS from all the civilized nations of the globe with every standard type of air craft driven by motors will participate in jpjL an aerial race around tbe world, which will be a feature of the sporting events to be held during the Panama-Pacific Interna tional Exposition at San Francisco In 1915. The race will start from the grounds of the Exposition in May, 1915, and will end there. Three hundred thousand dollars has been hung np in prizes for this stupendous world girdling contest. A number of the world's greatest aviators have signified their intention of entering the races. The recent flight of Stoefiler, ending at Mulhausen, Ger many, In which he covered 1,375 miles, convinces aviators that long flights are a matter of adequate supply stations. The above photograph shows tbe route around the world and the various supply stations. 1 3 7 fa Iiiillw 11 I'L 1 XJI wiiiiii Copyright, 1913. by the Panama-Pacific International Exposition Co. J "SUNSHINE" AND "SPRING" AT THE PANAMA-PACIFIC IN- i TERNATICNAL EXPQSIIIUN, SAN l-KANUSUU, I a io. THE large group at the right is "Spring," by Furio Pieclrrilli, one of the groups In the Court of the Four Seasons at the Panama Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. At th left is "Sunshine," by A. Jaegers, who has created a companion Utue, "Kaln," if i v CALOMEL IS A FORM OF DEADLY MERCURY is H;V'ciiirjnti!(lil That Vni 'Hike Ml.s n's IJver iTw for t obsti pation. Dcrlscn's Liver Tone was made to taake the place of calomel. Calomel is a fcrni of mercury, a mineral and & pcison. Dodson's Liver Tone is an all vegetable liquid never harmful. What calomel does unpleasantly and often with danger for consti' uation and sluggiish liver, Dodson's Liver Tcne does for you sat'elv and pleasantly, witl f ro pain and no gripe. It does not interfere in any way with your regular business habits or diet. You feel good after taking it. The great success and wide sale of Dcidscn's Liver Tcne are the re sult of what it dees for people. Its n-.eiit is acked up by a guarantee of "satisfaction or your money bafk." as the. Standard Drug Co. will tell you. Dodscn's. Liver Tone was Intend ed from the start to take t.;e place of caalomel. The label on ;t1ie ttttle always has said so, be ginning with the fiii-t bcttle sold. Dodson's Liver Tone "livens the liver." overcomes -constipation agreeably and anakes you fetl good and "if you are not satisfied com pletely with it the Standard Drug Co. ill hand back the purchase price (50c.) to you with a smile. .When you go to buy a family remedy, don't fail to jude be tween the plain, simple truth about Dodson's amd the laud claims' of its imitators. That the public does so recounts for the enormous increase in the sales of Dodson's Liver Tone month, after month. SHEEP RAISING. Xegletcted Opportunity-. Thie Philadelphia Record ls( of the opinion that the Sciith is net properly taking advantages of its opportunities as a cattle gfjwing Icountry, and The Record is right. it says that Soutitrn farmers "who have get rid of their scrub cattle jand given their, attention to rais ing improved breeds with a view t profit from .the sale of beef are making money hand over fist. The highlands and a great -part of the lowlands of the middle South are splendidly adapted to the business o' stock farming. There would be X need to go out of the country for our roasts or tteaks if the ctt- tle-raising iindustry were once es- tablLshed on what are now esteemed worn-out or 'cut-over' lands, which are no longer profitably productive the usuaJ farm staples. The comparaative cheapness with which, awing to milder climatic .conditions, cattle can be wintered in Southern latitude is an advantage against whiciv the cattle raisers in -the North cannot successfully contend." Our Philadelphia contemporary seems to have a correct view1 of the situation, but is a little off in one particular. There is little if any worn-out land in the South. "Worn out land" was a .term used when tlhe farmers were in the dumps, and that was before the cotton fac tory and" the oil mill took the crop in hand, compounding its value and Enabling the farmer to buy fine stock and improved machin.ery and to restore whatever of worn-out Jand he may have possessed.-While land of the sort The Record speaks of Is scarce, tfhere is an abundance of the best kind lying idle a. stand ing appeal for the .cattle raiser to set to work on an easy! and sure money-making Job. Charictte Ob server. , Tlio giuth Wits (A-eait Opportuni ties for This Indus. i v. Atlanta. Ga.. April 23. To en courage Soutlern farmers to takp up sheep raising, the live stock department cf the Southern Kail way hap issueed a booklet tellinj; of the advantages of the South for this industry and giving informa tion in regard to the care and man agement of sheep under conditio ns cbtainirg in the South. A copy1 of the booklet will be mailed to an.'; farn-.er cn reques-t by Live Stock Agent F. L. Word. The booklet reproduces an article cn sheep-raising by R. S. Curtis, an authority r.n live stock connected with the North Carolina Experiment Station, who says in his introduc tion of the adaptability of the South to s.neep-raising; "The 6hp industry of the South as now conducted represents one of the most backward and the lean profitable lines of live stcck hus bandry followed. A large part of the waste land in this section could be used profitably for sheep raising Much of the rough and oth w:se unused land now. covered with coarte grasses and fcrett under- Igrowth would furnish' ia large amount of pasture and at the siinie time tlie scil would be greatly im proved in agricultural value by the money invested and the quantity of me of sheep.. For the amount of feed required sheep will generally return a greater net prctit than .'-est any other kind of live stock that may be growing in the South." ACT QUICKLY lelay Has lietii Hance-ous In A.slie-Ixi-o. Do the right' thing at the right time, Aci quickly in time of danger. In time of kidney danger iDoan's. Kidney Pills' are most ef fective. Plenty of evider.ee of their worth . G. H. Ivey, High Point St.. Ran dleman. N. C. says: "I suffered a great deal from pains throu.gh the small of my back and I also had trouble with the kidney secretions. Finally I used DoanVKidney Piills and my health esreatlv Imnroved. The cure Doan's Kidney Pills made In my case overt three years ago has been permanent." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, Newi York, sole agents for the Urflted States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. How to Overcome a Bad Constipation The Scientific American offered prizes1 fl'or enumerations of the ten' greatest inventions during the past' 26 years and the first award goes to this list: Electric furnace, steam turbine, automobile, moving pic tures, aeroplane, wireless, induction coil, linotype, electric welding, cya nide process of gold extraction. In vestigation. Jn most cases on the heels cf new scientific discoveries, has never before gone forward at so rapid a rate. Every one of the 'prize-winning list is more impor tant to contemporary civilization t'han all the Seven Wonders of the ancient .world are. even though we add the Seven Wonders of the Mid dle Ages for good measure. In addi tion, we have been given such scientific onders as radium and the Roentgen X-ray. Will the next quaarter of a century equal this reteordi?. It should give us -still more- and it doubtless will. Char iot Observer. There ls a Mild Liviitive That Will lSrinjj Satje urol l'lgnajit llltf Over .tteUt. It is only -natural, that the sim plest of ailments should be the) mo t Ecrm-al, and sc v hr.vc a wfco?e r:i ticn .suffering irom coni-tipatioa anJ indigestion, for tl.ey are closely al 'ied. But common as constipation is knery people do not seen to know tney have rt. They 'will complain of headache, drowsiness or bilious ness, all unconscious of thee cause of the trouble. You should have a full and frve movemeiit at leatt once a day. If you pass a day ytu are ccns-til ated and the result will be that you w ilL catch a cold easily or have a more serious ailmert. To cure the con stipoalicn and forestall Kill graver trouble take a dose of Dr. Caldwell 3 Syrup Pepsin lit llicl.t before rMr- tlr.g and by morning relief will come, without disturbance freni: sleep or any inconvenience. j Legics nof people use it regular ly in such emergences, some of them formerly chronic invalids who uaci sintered from conttipatlicn all their lives. airs. X. Fra.ntz. (;7 Eighltth St.. Salem, Ohio, took ali, without much avail . Finally, she began to take Dr. Caldwell's Svrun B ej'tin and today she is no longer troubled and eats what she likes. -Many ol ters iwll tell you that they 1 have tried most things recommend ed for thliifs purpose but have ofund Syjcwp (Pepsin the enly one always , reliable. A bcttle can be obtaiined ' at any drug store for fifty cents or W V J 1 ,!A ,V f vV-" MRS. N. PRAXT2. s xi 1 one dollar, the latter size being bought by families already familiar with its merits. Syrup Pepsin is mild, pleasant tasting and ncn-grlpiing. Mothers give lit to tiny infants, and yet it is effective in grown-ups. It is for everyone who sufffers from any form of stomach- liver or bowel trouble, constipation, dyspepsia, bil iousness, etc. Its action will so de light you thlfct you will forever avoid harsh cathartics, purgatives, pills and salts. Families wishing .to try a free sample bcttle can obtain it postpaiid by addressing Dr. W. E. Caldwell, 419 Washington St., Monticello. III. A postal card with your name and address em it will do. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORI A AiiecdStfes of. the Late Govrnj r Vance, There have leen a- number of amusing aneedctts related cf the1 late Governor Vance. j He was a small boy at this time away back in the old "ante bellum" days, , attending a little countiy school near Ms heme in the Blue Ridge Mountains of liis native State! Hi teacher, a man of about 60 years cf age. had a lean, lank face, sugestive of strength and determi nation ,but there was kindness and patkree. too. In every line. Young Zeb was a favorite with the entire school, the irresistible personal magnetism which distinguished him as a man being palpable even at that tender age. His cue fault was swearing. Jhjs his preceptor had endeavored to correct but on this particular day when the school chil- , dren at the dinner recess were hav ,ing fine tpoit on the playgrounds, jthe teadher's attention (from his j seat under the trees) was suddenly 1 arrested by great peals of laughter land little Zeb's voice distinctly au Idillle above all in the delivery of a speech which was emphasized by lone oath right after another. The 18CI100I master paused In his reading I and suppressing a smile said stern ily. "Zebulon vance walk into tlie schoolhouse." His mandate was im mediately obeyed, the ether boys and girls timidly following. Zeb with his beaming countenance, soon realizing what his offense was said; "I knew sir I cursed a little. We were all playing soldiers, and I was George Wasihington making a speech and was just about to catch up with those d Tories. Oli do excuse me sir I did not want to curse. I just forgot, sir." "Well Zebulon." replied the teacher, "I liave told ycu so often about curs ing and I ought to tUrash, jjou, but I will do this. There is a mouse thafi comes up In this hole right here in the hearth. New sit down there and catch that mouse before the recess expires. If you fail in this I will be compelled t whip you." "All right sir.' answered Zeb taking his seat at the spot indicat ed, his playmates gathering closely Ground him. In a vew moments, true enough young Zeb raJsed up and advanced towards the teacher wit'ii the mouse suspended by th tail in his hand. WitU. the most in nocent exultation, lie exclaimed. "Well sir. I'll be d d if I didn't get him." The children roared and the teacher passed out of the door vainly trying to restrain his smiles. When "Governor Vance again re ceived th nomination for Governor of North Carolina in 1876 (his last term in that office) as usual his prospects for re-election were be ing generally discussed and One nigh at home his wife and him self were talking the matter over wl;en his little boy raised up. say ing, "Papa, if you get beat this tilne, will you be ungoverned?" With his eyes twinkling mischiev ously, the Governor's ready reply was, "No .my son. never ungovern ed while your mother lives." 1 On another occasion at some po litical imeeting when Gov. Vance 'was called on for a speech he duly ascended the speakers stand, which consisted of a platform in the open afr, gohie five or six feet high. Be coming: very much absorbed in dis cussing the issues of the day sud denly and without warning the whole structure collapsed whirling him unceremoniously to the ground. There was. of course, a rush to his assistance.when he nimbly recovered his feet, saying, quietly, "DonT be alarmed, gentlemen, when I make a speech I always bring the house down." h , ill r'tfo String." I 5-1 . ' .w- 71'' n . . im fpr i'W f fez? sP aa m JKi J$ 1 Cry LI L iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiFl' . A tobacco that is instantly distinguished from all others by its fragrance. The first time you get a whiff of STAG, you'll go buy some. In the pipejn the tin, indoors, out doors, its natural lasting fragrance will win you at once and forever. Convenient Packages: The Handy Haif- Size 5-Cent Tin, the Full-Size 10-Cent Tin, the Pound and Half-Pound Tin Humidors and the Pound Glass Humidor. For Pipe end Cigarette. CVER-LASTING-CY GOOD P. Lorillard Co. Established 1760 I r jniniiiiiii v eJWm r wax- V i pi! 0' $ .