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SUNDAY, JUNE 22
PERSONAL
HELP FOR MEN—VICTIMS OF WEAK
\ ness and debility. “Sexoid” will cure
t/you. Mail $1 box Refunded if it fails. Dr.
Pierce, Seattle. Wash. j 22
HIGH CLASS CORRESPONDING CLUB
of refined ladies and gentlemen, wish
ing marriage, free information for post
age. Ladies give description. Jeane Pe-
Laurette, 11. \Y 4th St., Jacksonville. Fla.
j 22
SECRETS FOR WOMEN—MARRIED OK
about to marry, by Norma Pilgrim; 223
page book. 50c; or with Roland Bane,
Creole Sue and the Siretn Queen —as ad
vertised here—all four for sl. Dr. T.
Pierce, Seattle, Wash. j 22
LADIES: DON’T WORRY WHEN DE
layed or irregular. Use Lady Elgin
Tablets Mailed $2 box; three boxes $5.
Dr. T. Pierce, Seattle, Wash. j 22
RELIABLE FORMULAS—HOME USE
or manufacturer; 20c each; 3 50c; 9 1;
18. $1.75. Hop beer; Orange wine; Grape
wine; Cider; Burn remedy; Artificial but
ter; Ink eradicator; Corn cure; Hair re
mover: Egg substitute: Hair Dye; Blu
ing; Washing Powders; Arnica; Sachet;
Ointment; Tattoo Remover; Wart Re
mover. Lanford Bureau, Box 535, Palat
ka, Fla. , j 22
BACHELOR GIRL, 25, WORTH $120,000,
wishes to marry. B-Box 35, League,
Toledo, Ohio. J 22
YOUR FUTURE FORETOLD: SEND
dime, age, birthdate for truthful, relia
ble. convincing trial reading. Hazel Hause,
Box 215, Los Angeles, Cal. 18,15,22,29
IF YOU WISH A PRETTY AND
wealthy wife, write me. Stamped en
velope for reply. Lillian Sproul, Station.
H. Cleveland, Ohio. suns alO
LADIES! WHEN IRREGULAR OR DE
layed, use Triumph Pills; always de
pendable; not sold at drug stores. "Re
lief” and particulars sent free. Address
National Medical Institute, Milwaukee,
Wls. suns,nov2
YOUNG LADY. 21. WORTH $60,000
cash, cjfy property also, would marrv
honorable gentleman. Mrs. Warn. 221615
Temple, Los Angeles. Cal. j 5.15,22,29
U S. GOVERNMENT WANTS HUN
drens men-women, 18 or over Perma
nent peace positions. SIOOO-SI2OO year.
Paid vacation. Examinations everywhere
coming. List pocitions free. Write imme
diately. Franklin Institute, Dept. 49 R,
Rochester, N. Y. suns,Jly27
WANTED: FIVE BRIGHT. CAPABLE
ladies to travel, demonstrate and sell
l Meal ns $26 to SSO per week. Railroad
Yare paid Write at once. Goodrich Drug
Dept. 255, Omaha, Nebr. j 1,8,15,22,29
YOU ARE WASTING TIME IF YOU ARE
not making $lO to SIOO daily: man or
woman start anywhere: materials cost
you 78 cents, retail for $45. I made $220
one day, $1250 one month. Craycroft.
Fresno, Call. suns.J29
CHURCH NOTICES
EPISCOPAL.
St. Paul's Church.
Rev.. G. Sherwood Whitnev, Rector
HOLY COMMUNION, 8 A. M.; SUNDAY
school, 9:45 a. m.; morning prayer and
sermon, 11:15 a. m.; evening prayer, 6:30
The »v? iclimonr * Academy and the Tub
man High school will be present at the
morning service, for the annual bacoa
laurate sermon. j 22
EPISCOPAL.
Church of the Atonement.
(11th and Telfair streets.)
Rev. F.W.B. Dorset, F.R.G.S., Rector
Rector.
FIRST SUNDAY AFTER TRINITY.
?n°rt y T3ih? Im, ! nion at « a - ra - Sunda v schoni
and Bible class at 10:145 a. m. Morning
P£, a h yer aarmon at 11:15 a. m. Subject®
The Rich Man and the Poor Man."
"Let us for each other care.
Fach the other’s burden bear-
To thy church the pattern give
Show how true believers live."
—Chas. Wesley.
Here Are The One Hundred Novels
Now Being Condensed for Publication Beginning June 23rd in
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
No. I—David Copperfield, by Dickens.
No. 2-4. es Miserable*, by Hugo.
No. 3—Pendennis, by Thackeray.
No. 4—Count of Monte Cristo. by Dumas.
No. s—The Heart of Midlothian, by Scott.
No. 6—Don Quixote, by Cervantes.
No. 7—Robinson Crusoe, by Defoe.
No. B—lvanhoe, by Scott.
No. 9—Gulliver's Travels, by Swift.
No. 10—The Pilgrim's Progress, by Bunysn.
No. 11—Hypatia, by Kingsley.
No. 12—Treasure Island, by Btevenaon.
No. 13—La Let Days of Pompeii, by Bulwer.
No. 14—Kim, by Kipling,
No. 15— Romola, by Eliot.
No. 18—Captains Courageous, by Kipling.
No. 17—The Crisis, by ChurchilL
No. 18—Paul and Virginia, by St. Pisrre.
No. 15—Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Stows.
No. 20—Ben Hur, by Wallace.
No. 21—The Arabian Nights, by the Persian Scheherazade.
No. 22—Sir Nigel, by Doyle.
No. 23—The Legend of Bleepy Hollow, by Irving.
No. 24—Quo Vadis, by Sienklewicz.
No. 25—War of the Worlds, by Wells.
Very likely You may not agree with this list. Opinions differ widely after say 50 Novels are Selected. This List does not pretend to be the One Hun
dred Best Novels or the One Hundred Most Popular Novels;-but rather the Most Representative One Hundred Novels for this Purpose. It is not an Iron Clad
List It is not arranged in order of merit or of publication. Changes may be made. If You care to suggest any changes, just write a Letter to Condensed
ove ,< itor, The Herald, Augusta ,Ga. Also Express Your Opinion of the I’rojcct as an Educational Newspaper Feature. The Editor will be Pleased to
Hear from You.
lor Information About This Fascinating Feature You Should Read The Augusta
Herald From Day to Day
Graduates In
Agriculture at
Clemson College
Clemson College.—A total of seventy
two men have completed courses in Agri
culture at Clemson College this year. Of
this number, ten were members of the
one-year agricultural courses, and sixty
two were graduates of the regular four
year courses in agriculture.
The ten members of the one-year
course completed their work in practical
agriculture on Friday. June 6th. and were
awarded certificates, but not degrees.
The sixty-two members of the four-yeai
degree course graduated on Tuesday,
June 17th. when they received diplomas
which conferred on them thed egree of
Bachelor of Science.
Of the sixty-two graduates in the four
year courses, twenty-three took agronomy
as major work, theirtcen took agricuK
tural chemistry, five took agronomy and
horticulture, six took dairying and ani
mal husbandry, three took horticulture,
three took botany and nine took agricub
tural education.
There were, also, In the class of 1919
fifteen graduates In mechanical-electrical
engineering, six in civil engineering,
seven textile Industry, gve in chemistry,
and four In architectural engineering,
making a total of 99 members of the de
gree courses or a grand total of 109 young
men who completed courses in the insti
tution in 1919.
CLEMSON COLLEGE HONORS
D. C. HEYWARD AND V. W. GERATY.
Clemson College.—For the past five or
six years Clemson College has followed
the custom of awarding at commence
ment certificates of merit to two South
Carolinians w-ho have done notew’orthy
work in some line of agricultural en
deavor. This year the certificates were
PRESBYTERIAN.
Greene St. Presbyterian Church.
9:45 A. M. SUNDAY SCHOOL. A PLACE
for you. Try it. 11:15 a. m.. morning
worship with sermon by Rev. C. M.
Chumbley. 8:30 p. m., evening service
under auspices C. E. Society. Address by
Major Lansing Lee. j 22
BAPTIST.
DR. E. L. GRACE OF THE FIRST BAP
tist church will use as his subject for
Sunday morning: “People Who Live in
Glass Houses’’ and for the night h%
theme will be “Victims Yet Victors of
Faith.” A cordial invitation Is extended
to all st rangers and visitors to* worship
in the First Baptist church. Electric
fans have been placed in the auditorium
making the room cool and attractive.
Mrs. Jackson, soloist, is substituting in
the quartette In the absence of Mrs.
Edward Bryson, who is out of the city.
Special music will be rendered. j 22
METHODIST.
Broadway M. E. Church.
(Cor. Broad and Mills streets.)
Rev. O. M. Hawkins. Pastor.
SUNDAY SERVICES. 11:15 A. M.. AND
8:30 p. m.: Sunday school, 9:45 a. m.;
mid-week prayer service 8:30 p. m. A
cordial invitation to attend all services
is extended the public. j 22
St. John Methodist Church
SUNDAY SCHOOL. 9:45 A.M. MORNING
service, 11:15. Special sermon by pas
tor to young men; subject: “The Four
Square Man—Plain Facts to Young Men.”
Open-air service in the evening at 8:30;
sermon by pastor. Subject: “Owe Noth
ing But Love.” j 22
CHRISTIAN.
First Christian Church.
Allen Wilson. Pastor.
TWENTY-MINUTE SERMON IN MORN
ing. Outdoor service at night. Subjects:
“A Life Worthy of the Gospel;” “A Pen
ny for Your Thoughts.” Sunday-school at
10 a. m. Preaching at 11:15 a. m. and
8:30 p. m. . J 22
LUTHERAN.
St. Matthew's Evangelical Lutheran
Church.
SERVICES AT 11:15 A M. AND 8:30 P.M.
Sunday school will meet in the morning
at 9:45 The evening service will he
upon the lawn. You are cordially in
vlted to all services. J 22
awarded to Ex-Gov. D. C. Heyward and
Mr. John W. Geraty. The following rx
tracta from the recommendation made by
the agricultural faculty calls attention to
the fine work done by these promoters
of agricultural development:
’This honor is conferred upon ex-Gov
ernor Heyward for the work he has done
In re-claiming the rice lands and in util
izing them for general agricultural pur
poses. On a portion of the re-claimed*
rice fields at White Hall. ex-Governor
Heyward has succeeded in growing suc
cessfully as many as forty-five different
agricultural crops, and has gone far
enough with this project to show very
clearly that many of our most important
truck crops and field crops can be grown
successfully on these old rice lands.”
"Mr. John W. Geraty is the son of Mr.
James R. Geraty. who it seems first
started the seedling plant business in
this section of the country. Mr. John
W. Geraty has developed this business,
and by his progressive leadership has
been largely responsible for creating the
tremendous plant business that we have
Genuine Coo! Palm
Beach Suits
An attractive range of patterns,
in the new 11*10 flfl
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“Cool” Crash Pants
In Cream with black hair line
stripe, as a leader. QQ
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Underwear
In the better sheer quality short
drawers and shirts to match.
Perfect fitting;, at 4 ft/t
each J) I iUU
VACATION LUGGAGE— It. al cowhide and fibre eases, also in trav
eling bags, with and without leather (14 m TO mnr nn
lining Sll.oll t>Zh.UU
F. G. Mertins
PHONE 101. 854 BROAD
The Only Men’s Cash Shop That Sells for Less.
No. 26—6 t. Ives, by Btsvenson.
No. 27—The Marble Faun, by Hawthorne.
No.2B—The Choir Invisible, by James Lane A'i
No. 29—The Two Admirals, by Cooper.
No. 30—Teas of the d'Urbervilles, by Hardy.
No. 31—Dombey and Son, by Dickens.
No. 32—The Beloved Vagabond, by Lock*.
No. 33—David Harum, by Wesoott.
No. 34—Trilby, by Du Maurier.
No. 35—The House of Mirth, by Wharton.
No. 36—The Right of Way, by Parker.
No. 37—Adam Bede, by Eliot.
No. 38—Tom Jones, by Fielding.
No. 39—Vicar of Wakefield, by Goldsmith.
No. 40—Far From the Madding Crowd, by Hardy.
No. 41—Toilers of the Bea, by Hugo,
No. 42—Richard Carvel, by Churchill.
No. 43—Coniston, by Churohill.
No. 44—Tom Brown’s Sdhool Days, by Hughes.
No. 45—John Halifax, Gentleman, by Mias Mulook.
No. 46—Tha Awakening of Helena Ritchie, by Mrs. Deland.
No. 47—File 113, by Gaboriau.
No. 48—The Sea Wolf, by London.
No. 49—The Wreck of the Grosvenor, by Russell.
No. 50—Coneuelo, by Band.
THE AUGUSTA HERAL3
in the Southeast today. He grows and
sells more cabbage, tomatoes, boots, pep
pers. etc., than any other firm in the
United States, and distributes these all
over the United States, Canada and Alas
ka. The development of the plant busi
ness has. of eouiise. given trucking and
gardening a tremendous impetus, and it.
to a considerable extent, is responsible for
the great development along these lines
within recent years. It seems, therefor,
entirely proper that the man who has
been the leader in this industry should
be honored in this way by the college.”
A BULL STORY
Mexico City—The Tcatro El Toro, once ;
one of the most pretentious of bull fight (
arenas, is now the home of grand opera
as a result of President Carranza’s de
cree that hull-fights should cease. In
terspersing grand opera, dancers and
concert artists have appeared in the
arena and if is stated that those various
forms of amusement will ho offered until
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No. 51—Vanity Fair, by Thackeray.
No. 52—Prisoner of Zenda, by Hopo.
No. 53—The Story of a Bad Boy, by Aldrich.
No. 54—To Have and to Hold, by Mary Johnston.
No. 55—Kenilworth, by Scott.
No. 56—Mr. Isaacs, by Crawford.
No. 67 —Turmoil, by Tarklngton.
No. 58—Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, by Stevaneon.
No. 59—The Deemater, by Caine.
No. 60—Middlemarch, by Eliot,
No. 61—Rod Badge of Courage, by Crane.
No. 62—Pudd'nhead Wilson, by Twain.
No. 63—A Tale of Two Cities, by Dickens.
No. 64—The Newoomes, by Thackeray.
No. 65—Westward Ho, by Kingsley.
No. 66—Little Women, by Aleott.
No. 67—The Three Musketeers, by Dumas.
No. 68—Twenty Year* After, by Dumas.
No. 69—Count da Bragelonne, by Dumas.
No. 70—Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, by Verne.
No. 71—The Portrait of a Lady, by James.
No. 72—Our Mutual Friond, by Dickens.
No. 73 —Stella Maris, by Locke.
No. 74—The Princess of Thule, by Black.
No. 75 Jan* Eyre, by Bronte.
some definite action is taken as to the
future of bull-fighting.
It was in this arena that what is saitl
to be one of the most remarkable spec'
tacles in the history of the sport .vafl
staged. A bull El Bonito, known as one
of the fiercest fighters, on being boought
into the arena charged and killed three
horses and injured as many men with
out being touched by the estoquo of any
matador.
As the hull stood bellowing defiance
and with no one apparently willing to
attack him. Miguel Ballo. a pieadnr who
was a spectator in one of the boxes, leap
ed unarmed into the enclosure. In ids
outstretched hand lie carried two lumps
of sugar which he nonchalantly offer
ed to toe hull. The animal suddenly
ceased its bellowing and In a few
moments docllelv licked the sugar from
Hallo’s hand. The latter returned un
harmed to his box amid the plaudits of
the spectators.
The Pessimist. *
11 was a mile over Mount Clemens.
The pilot of the plane from Self ridge
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Field was giving a visiting officer his
first air voyage.
He cut off the motor.
“See those people?" shouted the pi
lot, “Fifty per rent of them think we
are going to fall.”
“They’ve got nothing on us," was
the reply that streamed for half a mile
back of the plane: “fifty pier cent of
us do.” Detroit News.
It prevents and cures stomach and
kidney troubles. Try Mertins’ Crystal
Water. Phone 101. adv.
i
When a controversy can’t he settled
without a resort to violence, one side or
the other is unwilling to have peace if ti
must he obtained at the price of doing
the decent thing.
Your back aches caused from kid
neys quickly cured by Mertins’ Crystal
Water. Phone 101. -adv.
No. 76—Last of the Barons, by Bulwer.
No. 77—Master of Ballantrae, by Stevenson.
No. 78—That Lass o' Lowrie'a, by Mrs. Burnett.
No. 79—Hard Cash, by Read*.
No. 80—The Outcasts of Poker Flat, by Harto.
No. 81—Oliver Twist, by Dickens.
No. 82—Henry Esmond, by Thackdray.
No. 83—Anna Karenina, by Tolstoi.
No. 84—The Rise of Silas Lapham, by Howells.
No. 85—Lorna Doons, by Blackmore.
No. 86—The Moonstone, by Collins.
No. 87—The Little Minister, by Barrie.
No. 88—The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, by Blasco
Ibanez.
No. 89—The Lady of the Aroostook, by Howells.
No. 90—The Bcarlet Letter, by Hawthorn*.
No. 91—The White Company, by Doyle.
No. 92—Waverley, by Bir Walter Scott.
No. 93—The Shuttle, by Mrs. Burnett.
No. 94—The House of the Seven Gables, by Hawthorne.
No. 95—01 d Curiosity Shop, by Dickens.
No. 96—Ramona, by Jackson.
No. 97—East Lynne, by Mrs. Henry Woods.
No. 98—Woman in White, by Collins.
No. 99—David Balfour, by Stevenson.
No. 1P0 —The Last of the Mohicans, by Cooper.
REMEMBER ?
Remember your last vaca
tion when you forgot to
have The Herald sent to
you?
Well, you said “never
again!” for you sure missed
the home news.
Well, this year you’d miss
it.
Mail in your subscription or
leave it at the office of The
Herald and
DON’T FORGET!
THREE