Newspaper Page Text
fare of the body politic, which are bat
illegal combinations, formed for the par-
peso of monopolizing articles of com*
mcrce and thereby extorting their own
prices therefor, should go. A little whole
some legislation in this line would do
much toward strengtheningthe Demo*
cratic party in the affections of the great
mass of the American people. With a
few more years of growth the young
lion, that is being fostered in the lap of
industries, will be too powerful for
No, 6, Broad Street, Athens, Ga.
oo* Morov end tUns-v erarpoton ttvuu.-kjt AwKig thim
22 52 50 51
C.40 1 8 P 25 11.05 L've tub!, Vee
7.10 8.42 11,22 I/ve GilUville' L’ve 7.38
7.35 8 50 1136 I/vo Maysville, L've 7 24
8.10 0.13 1163 L’ve Harmony Grove,L’ve 7.07
8.40 9.28 1208 L've Nicholson, L’ve 6.52
9.07 9.38 12.18 L’ve Center, L’ve C.42
9.35 9 65 12 36 A’ve Athens, L’ve C.25
am pm pm pm
Ex Sun Daily Daily Daily 1
Read Down.
BETWEEN CORNELIA AND TALLULAH FAL1
Southbound • - -'tagT' * Nortl
Mixed Stations 1 •'*’* H
’HE UNIVERSITY THREATENED,
Nover before has our University had
greater cause for alarm than at present
We know that her ought-to-be friends
and pretended well-wishers would fain
cry out “peace, be stili,’’and lull us into
quiescence, until our noble old institu*
tion had been shorn of h» locks, made
hoary by the wear of more than three-
quarters of a century. We wish her to
our industries, will bo too powerful for
control, and wlil rule with a despot's
r“P- V : ‘ : '
Of. the reeent reception of Thomas
Nelson Fage at Vanderbilt University it
live on and increase in vigor frith in-
creasing years, sod so sound the alarm of
what we deem a most imminent danger.
We shall rejoice to 2nd that we are in
error, but we shall not believe it while
the indications remain as they are. From
the first we have looked with a Jealous
eye on the establishment of the Techno
logical School in Atlanta. We have
feared, from the beginning, that the off
spring would feed on the vitals of the
parent, not satisfied with being an ad-
junct'and supplement. Who can believe
that our fears were illy founded, when,
at a recent meeting of the Trustees, to
take under consideration measures look
ing to the establiahment and opening of
the School of Technology, it was boldly
asked that said school have unreetricted
power to establish whatever branches of
study it chose t Does that look
like a School of Technology?
Does it not rather look as if
Atlanta, omnivorous In her appetite, was
but taking the initial step toward re
moving the University within her bor
ders, or, what is perhaps worse, having
a college under State patronage, In direot
antagonism to theoneof which Athena
and every Georgian is now so justly
proud—their Univeaaity. Were this
purpose announced there would arise a
cry of opposition that would resound
from the jagged cliffs of Dade to the
sea bathed shores of Glynn, But the
friends of the School of Technology are
not suoh bungling tacticians. They
will go about their work ef dismember
ment In more subtle ways. Many of
them will even come to our commence
ments and swear eternal friendship to
the old alma mater of themselves and
parents; but mark our prediction, the
University of Georgia has attached to her
unwilling breast an offspring that will
be satisfied with nothing short of the
life-blocd of the parent.
(t ia very true the chairs were limited
to seven, striotiy ia the line of mechani
cal arts, but who cannot readily see how
easily that self-imposed restriction can
be thrown to the winds. The next at-
tack will be a bold challenge that the
University is not a school of agriculture
and mechuio arts; which istlje specific
requirement of the (grant of
the Isndscrip fond and that it is there
fore not entitled to that fund. From
this source the University derives about
is said, “As a literary event, it was the
most rvmsrkable occurrence in Southern
history. It was, perhaps, the first time
that ever a literary man received such a
popular demonstration in the South. Our
8.45 L've Tallulah Falls, A’ve 12.45
9.00 L’ve • Turaersville, L’ve 12.28
9.16 L’ve Anandale, L’ve. 12.10 . ’
9.30 L’ve Ularkesville, L’ve 12,00
9.55 A’ve Cornelia, L’vp IL35
am am
Ex Sun ' Ex 8un jj&i
Read down. Read up,
. BETWEEN ATHENS AND ATLANTA VIA. LULA,
•Leave Athens, 6:25 p m ♦♦Leave Atlanta 7:40 a m
•Arrive Atlanta 9:40 pm < ♦•Arrive Athens 12:36noon
•♦Leave Athens 8:50 am ■ ♦.- Leave Atlanta .4t30 p m
•♦Arrive Atlanta 12:20 noon • Arrive Athens 9:55 p m
Ti.ne 30 minutes faster than Athens City time.
L. L. McCLESKEY, Div.Pass. Agt. E. BERKELEY, Supt.
J. L. TAYLOR, 0. P. A.
♦♦Daily-—‘Daily Fxcept Sunday,
wife Outer is*, t,Cu hire
a carry In stock a fu’llino of the
To preface lie eqaaL,
TIMES
people have bung upon the lips of im«
pensioned orators; they have huzzaed
themselves hoarse over renowned war
riors; but no stick ovation was ever be
fore accorded a literary mao. With no
adventitious circumstances he won the
applause, aroused the enthusiasm and re
ceived the homage which have hSwto-
fore been given only to brilliant speakers
and successful soldiers, The time, the
occasion and the place, were eminently
appropriate. Nor was fortune less hap
py in bar choice of the mam A true
Virginian, a genuine son of the old
South, and at the same time in hearty
sympathy and perfect accord with thb
new South and its broader views and
loftier aspirations, Thomas Nelson Page
Ik have bean ee tkle B *j**£'fine lows wife ^juioaUM of*" D °* ta *** 4 * u,,rtlB f th *
LOWER PRICED STOVES
R A1LBOAD8CHEDPLE8.
PIEDMONT AIR-LINE ROUTE.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE. XsSssT
Tt ' s *^sr s rHi
CONDENSED SOHEDULE
In Effect Sept 4,1887.
Trains ran by 75th MaitlUa> tlme-Ona fear
tester than 10th Mrldtontlmn.
Leave A’.iuata.
Arrive Gaines Tills,
M Luia,
'« Toceoi,
“ fcsueea,
H tiulvy,
-
«* 8|> artmohurf,
Leave Buaruubur^
Arrive Tryvu,
•• Baiudsp .
“ Mat Bock.
i‘ hcuderaouTille.
•• AahfcVi.'le,
“ Mot epriDics.
Now the warie on in Athana. The
antla of that town are on the still hunt
itition asking for an
ky question. Well,
Represent best Companies and Insure desirable Pro
* (*«M Mf jM
—
.Bora alt wear tbeW.Ie. DOUGLAS 99 SHOE.
a For sale by W, O. A R. N. SNEAD
election on the wl—, ,
Athens ought to hare some little adver
tisement.—Tribuno of Rome.
Hardly a war, friend, though it might
bo considered such in the quiet village
of Rome; io cosmopolitan Athena it cre
ates scarcely a ripple.
The contract for the erection of the
Hendricks monument at Indianapolis,
willjbe let January L all but $3,000 of tho
$25,000 subscribed for the fund having
been collected. The largest sum con
tributed was $500, given by W. W.
Corcoran, of Washington.
Mr. Carlisle will not visit Augusts. Ilia
buaineaa engagements are too pressing-
How unevenly the work of this world la
distributed. Whiit the Bpeaker ia sweat
ing with a thermometer below 0, scores
of Cengressmea are reveling in the fond
embrace of Bacchus,
party in Athens and vicinity on most favorable terms.
capital. Amirs
$3000.000 $7,802,711
2.000.000 4.703 928
£2.000.000 in U.8. 6.039.780
£2 000.000 in U.8. 3.378.754
3.000 000 8 474.352
1.300 000 8.559.306
1.000.000 2.500.774
1,250,000 5.055.7#
300 000 783.565
;200.000 230.661
OEFICE AT BANK OF THE UNIVERSITY,!
Athens. Ga.
iune27dAwl».
Liverpool and London and Glob*,.,
NorthjBrltishand Mercantile,.. ..
insurance Co. of North America,
New York Underwriters........ '
Germania ol New York,
Hartford of Conn.
Georgia Home
A Fine Farm in Banks County,
FOMALEORRENT,
I WISH/fo sell, or rent, my more firm
in Banka County, known as the “Jack
Freeman place.” Tula farm contains
687)6 acres of good farming Units; 200
acres Is in jtflgnod state of cult'.v tion,
the remainfflnin old field pines cn l orig
Inal forestr On this farm is a jrcod two
story dwelling house with all necessary
outbuildings andjilso four tenant house*.
This farm Vs ty^mlles East o* Harmony
Grove and 10 miles South Of Homer: It
ia convenient to cnurch, J schools and
mills, and ia a very desirable place in
every.respeoff I will rent this farm for
standing rent for one year or longer,
Ortousboru,
Umtville,
Rlclimoid,
tebl7dtf.
UNDERWEAR BAZAAR
bNew York
PhlUdelpbift,
Baltimore..
Washington,
ClurlotlQiTllle,
Lynehhorp,
UNDER WEAR!
with good a
particulars.
Danville,
Otoffm-i-boro,
Uoldaboro,
UNDERWEAR
Ubwi-ue,
Arrive Smr>«»b»tw.
one-half ita annual revenue, What a
fatal itab at ito prosperity weald ita re
moval bat Enough laid to warn ths
Mauds of the University to be on tba
alert
GEORGE WILLIAM CHILDS
Has msdt himself famous aa s bane-
factor and wsll-wlahtr of mankind.
Fortunataly for ths world his soul ssams
»* capacious aa bis brain. Natures like
his are u beautiful as they
Deeoraters and Dealers inWallPannr.
Athens, Georgia.
Teitphoam 174. 49 Clarion 8 fra a
Arriv ipMt»ntwir>,
Now la the time to get your Underwear in Styles, Price*) snd Qt
LADIES I
Da Tour owa Dyilarf
PEERLESS
WKfirgf ‘
VSH
SttlTtAHaaSh 111 *’
SLEEPING GAB 8EBVICS.
INFANTILE
SIP
his art ss beautiful aa they an rare.
They ars shining mark* on th* too gen
erally dark page of human character.
Meteer-llke they now and than shoot
athwart th* skies, illuminating our glob*
with tho brilliance of their shining.
Such * character is Georg* W. Child* of
ATHENS, GEORGIA.
Suthen Mutual Inannoni Gonoaij
Athens, Georgia.
TOUltO L. e. HAREiq. Paastsin
> RI7DS THOMAS, 8MBR1SV
Resident Dirootor*:
S o L. O. Rinat,, 8nvasaTaou»
H. Nswtos, 1* H. Caassottmsa,
■sauFmaiiT, J.8. IlSttSM,
MAScaztcs Bti,l.:t, Cdwabd&Ltssow,
Philadelphis, snd we delight to do him
honor on account of. both bis msrlts snd
s desire to stimulate emulation of his
kindly sets. Of his truly ganarou* and
noble nature it is said: “Every Christ-
mss bt deals out to bis asaodstss In ths
conduct of the Ledger, under th* gnls*
of Chnatmao presents, a certain per-
TmWECTr-6ttKmt*.W.t»smMtpt w .|T
’ ISth Inn mi, the Inflow
will operate on Ihlt toad
irldlan timn-sa minutes
emtage on tho year 1 * profits and th* ro-
cipicnU’ invested labor. Sums from ten
dollars to one thousand an ssnt each ]
, member of the group that produces his i
great journal. This socialism is in a
form so practical that if generally adopt- ,
ed we should hear no more of anarchy
or the woea of the Georges.” j
In answering tho question, “Shall th* 1
republican party look backward or for- j
ward?” the Star strikingly lays: “th* {
party is doing neither. Ilia like an an- •
fortunate character in Ut* extravaganza
of “Evangeline,” who,when ha turnz hi* J
Represents Following Reliable, Prompt Fayipg Companies:
vllle. 4:47 n u
la Pi 6:tO p.tn
iu'u 8.16 pm
.$6,148,273 $2,341.64
. 6.333.172 857.08
4.830,131 2.329.52
1.483.064 652.49
000.821 425.07
1.076.093 ‘740.90
• 1.887.175 638.03
5.230.981 1374.85
109.000 5.12
*14,000,000
of Liverpool.
Western of Toronto
Queen of England.
Phoenix of Hondo•,.......
Continental of New York..
—•rnrnw VO IWAU.S.4.AJ.I
ATTORNEY AND COUNBCLLOR AT LA
. HARMONY GROVE, GEORGIA.
, Maoon of Macon 0*.....
r Also UanhatUn Life Insnrance
face toward a certain point, apparently
trias to walk there, but every atop takes
him backward. So the Republican par
ty have turned their faces forward, but
ovary move lakes them back to the old
. ■**> uastga su. f.as't
Tralu nuiuMra? win Stop M >uu r
EUGENE BRYD1E.
Aubted bj
LeiriWaJkir udJu. BJosog,
BARBER SHOP
Vfill M . Ithsaa a.
reniug News says August*
whisky.' In other words she
i more like her lister, Athens,
as was as quiet and dry aa a
ATTORNEY AT IA'