. I pi . ' ' rj : ' -.- . - ' ' - HE IHDHSTBIAL AHD EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS 0F--0UB PEOPLE PAEAIIOUTT TO ALL OTHER COrilDESJlTIOHS.pPTATS J'OLlCri:;. ' ? : f-t J M .... ' ... '" i ' ' 1 RALBIGH, JST. Q, SEPTBIIBBR.31889.- ;i;:4. :-;, No. 30 - 1 J- 4. i w - - z I DIRECTORY OF FARMERS OR GANIZATIONS. RORTH CAROMKA rABUXBS STAT1 ALLIAKCX. 'President Elias Carr, Old Sparta, w.U Yice-President A. H. Hayes, Bird town, 0. Secretary L. IV Polk, Raleigh, N.; O Treasurer J. D. Allen, Falls, ,N. G. Tnror 'f hoft. Bs Lonff. Assistan?Lectorer R. B. Hunter, Char lotte, N. C. . T J. RcotL Door Keeper W. H. . Tomhnson, Fay- etteville, N. C ' - Assistant Poor . Keeper H, E. King, Sergeant-at-Arma J. S. Holt, Cnalk Level, N. 0. State Business Agent W. H. Worth, Raleigh, IN. C. ' . HEOUTIYE COMMITTEE Or THI K0RTH CARO LINA FARM EES STATE ALLIANCE. S.' B. Alexander, Chariot e, N. C. Chair uan; J. M. Mewborne, Kinston N C; J. S. Johnston, Ruffin, N. C. OEPICERS OF THE VIRGINIA STATE ALLIAXCE. President G. T.Brbee, Bridge water, Ya. . Yice-Pres'dent iaj. Marm Page T?rjmdon. Vfl;' Secretary J. J. Silvey, Arnissille, Va. Treasurer Isaian .rnntz, oconyman, Va. ' " . ' lecturer J. D. Shepperson, Smithville, Assistant-Lecturer P. H. Strode, Step hen City, Va. Chaplain Win. M. Rosser, Luray, Va. Doorkeeper R Frank Beahen, Kim ball, Ya. . . . Assistant-Doorkeeper, G. E. Bnibaker, Luray, Ya. Sergeant-at-Arms Milton Pence, For- ' estville, Ya. State Business Agent S. P. A. Bniba ker, Luray, Ya.- - ' " Ch'mn Ex. Com. E. - T. Brumback, Ida, Ya. . " - NEWS FROM WAYNE. Walter, "Wayne Co N. C, Aug. 19, '89. Mr. Editor i I feel like I had done but a part of my duty. I have not seen anything from this point in your paper.. I take it for granted that no one has written anything for !youio publish. Since my visit over to Fayetteville and having met so many, of the good brethren there, and havings had the pleasure of shaking the hand of that great, noble man, President Macune, and hearing his lecture,4 we have grown several degrees in self-alliance estimation. Our visit was not only pleasant but profitable. "Werhad the pleasure to tramp over the same old streets that our grandfathers trod a century ago. The old city of Fayetteville where Presbyterianism was preached two hundred years ago and where its doc trines are still taught a Mecca to every North Carolina Presbyterian. We wended our way up to Hay Mount, one mile out of town to the west. There we saw the remnants of cruel war. One evening in March, 1865, Sherman's cannons frowned down over the city from this point and the sun of Fayetteville's Confederacy went down to rise no more - forever. We stood and "listened and looked while an old colored man pointed to where once the different parts of the old United States Arsenal stood, and tell how Mr. Sherman scattered things in a lively way. He told us that, he was on that same hill when the earth quake came, and he said that it was more terrible than Sherman's army. A good view of Fayetteville to the east can be had from this point as it overlooks the whole of the city. Crops along the line of the railroad to Fayetteville are very poor, or they look that way to us. Nearly every kind of crop has suffered by the con tinued rains, and are in bad condition, grass excepted. Corn crops in . Wayne county are generally better than they have been in several years, but not so good as was expected. On stiff, clay "lands there is finer crops lof corn; on light, sandy soil the corn crops are very dif f erent. The large amount planted will insure a full -supply for home iin , wusumpuon. w neat - crops were good: oats (fall seedinerV were fine: spring seeding, light." Potatoes prom ise well; the pea crop was never bet- wjr; ixui nas oeen nearly a loss, - rot ted by the rains. Cotton, oh kins:, wiiaw oi. mee. mere is some very uue neias oi cotton on stiff, clay land, while that on light, sandy soil is far below an average. Cotton is fully three weeks late and shows but little matured bolls, and has not taken on a full crop of blooms. The yield de pends very much on what the next 5? as t0 SettinS a faU crop Should it rust like last year the crop will be a very short one. The Alliance is booming. It has .become very popular and is often consulted by those outside. - Good Alliance men know how to answer such inquiries. If yon are friendly to the Alliance come inside; viU not a friend just stand from under. The Alliance has sat down to stay. Home Alliance, No. 512, has 70 members on its roll, evary one solid No jute "in ours; not as a gift. On the 7th of Aritrust, Home Alii ance held a barbecue ;pinic. Now, brother, i? you had nevarbeen at one f these Alliance dinners, we would tell you . sotnething tttrout it. . You may rest assured that Home Alliance does not do things by halves, and you can guess as ,to tn result, a success, socially, which means a fulfil ment of the first part of our order. We have not said anything about the State Alliance; we tnougnt inax, Bro. L. L. Polk would lino w . how to fix that part of the proceeding in his happy style, and send it to trie world through his. paper. When we say world we mean the -whole earth and the rest of mankind." If they do not all read your , valuable . paper they ought to. May your shadow never be less until rings and trusts are no more.' Your3 fraternally, . - - Ji-H." Caldwell. JUTE BAGGING IN GREENE. We, the committee of the different Alliances of Greene county, having assembled -together to .consult the best interests of the farmers of said county in regard to the trust on jute bagging, be it - Resolved, That we reaffirm our de termination to conform to the resolu tion of the Birmingham Alliance Con vention; that we will use no covering for cotton except the cotton cloth, and we request all farmers, whether mem bers of the Alliance or not, to use1 no jute bagging. Besolved further. That all merchants in the county be requested not to buy any jute bagging for their trade, -and we urge all members of. the Alliance to patronize thpgiemerchants who buy no jute bagging in preference to those who do, and- we-s Alhancemen will give the merchants, and farmers who are not Alliancemen all the aid in our power to produce the cotton cloth. PRACTICAL SUBJECTS BY; A PRACTICAL FARMER. Wake Forest, N. C, Aug. 2, '89. Mr. Editor: Will you, or some of your farmer readers, with practical experience, give us an essay on the benefits and utility of annual clover, more broadly known as crimson clover or German clover? I have experience with it of only one year. On last September I sowed three acres : on land too poor to grow the common red clover; the last of April this year 1889 I had an abundance of fine clover two feet high or higher wbich was cut and let lay in "the mow one day and then put into small shocks and let it stand two or three days and then put 'four or five of them to-. gether in larger shocks and let stand two or three days and then hauled to the barn. It makes excellent hay and makes it early enough for the same land to be planted in corn ori cotton or tobacco. My opinion is from a short experience, that it might be sowed on all our farming-lapd in September and get off. an abundance of feed in time to plant the three crops corn, cotton and tobacco on the same 'land and have all the stubble and clover roots as a fertilizer for the crops. - The crimson clover seed will come up if sown over the corn field or clover field or wheat field or cotton without plowing. The seed will come up thrown out on the hard yard; indeed, think they would come up if sown on a flat rock, if in a - moist time. Am satisfied we are not making the most of it, and would like to learn of those with more experience, such farmers as Jesse Taylor, who, I understand, has several years' experience with it and is improving his land with it. I forestalled your chapter of ad vice on the cultivation of the turnip, and had broken an acre well, fertil ized Well, harrowed twice over with a two-horse harrow, sowed , and then rolled with a; "hand roller. By July 30th I had a stand (in three days) and shall -expect to raise turnips enough to feed eight or ten head of cattle,-hogs and mules in winter. I have one acre well prepared and manured and rich compost enough to broadcast it, and will, in September, sow in lucerne. My experience With all the grass family, rye, oats, clover , and all grasses, sow in September," it gives it a better crop by putting-ahead of weeds in spring. ' . -: ' "S. M. Stone. FROM FORSYTHE. LawisTiLLB"'ALLiAjrCE; No. 943, : ; ; ; Aug. 12, '89. Mr. Editor: As I have not seen anything ii your most excellent paper from our. Alliance, . 1 will undertake to give you a few dots. We had quite an - interesting county ' meeting and considerable business , was done notwithstanding " the weather was very" unfavorable. We endorse the action, of the legislature in regard to the incorporation and also the action of the Birmingham convention, the consolidation - of . the Alliance and Wheel. We do not believe in many resolutions but keep steadily march ing on to rneet the enemy and resolve to conquer or die. This is. the grand est effort the farmers have ever made. Organize, I say, and let us plan for ourselves and - stop having so-called sharpers to dictate .for U3. " Let us pull together; pull -long and steady and we will reach the top before a great while. - We heed more good lecturers in every - community and The Progressive Farmer t in every family would -be conducive of much good in turning men from their evil ways. Our lodge numbers 49 mem bers. We have contributed $3(1 to the business agency fund and sent it to Bro. Graham sometime ago, but have not . received our certificates Will try and do more in the future; would like to see the State Exchange established and in , good . working orders ' : ?'? We have had rain, rain. Water courses have been higher than they have been for years. Great damage to crops, mill property and bridges. With much .success to Tps Progres sive Fabmer,'! am, . ' - Fraternally yours," o - . J. R. Hacser. GRANVILLE RESOLUTIONS. Ridgeway Alliance, No. 132, ..t, Aug. 17, 1889.; ..i Mb. Editor: I take up my pen as Corresponding Secretary, of our Alli ance to let your numerous readers know that we are not' dormant, but alive to. all the. important interests of our noble order. We concur with the action of our conventions and pri mary assemblages that have so firmly made known their sentiments in con demning the various .trusts and com bines of the moneyed power, and do earnestly request each member of our numerous order to undergo some sacrifices to unite and .refuse to pat ronize them by using the articles so greatly and unnecessarily advanced in price as the best means of defeating them." - - ... At our last meeting the following preamble and resolutions were unani mously, passed and ordered to be pub lished in The Progressive Farmer: Whereas, We learn from different sources of a large combine or trust, entered into by wealthy manufactur: ers of tobacco, which we consider detrimental to the interests of both producer and consumer of- tobacco. and a flagrant violation of our decla ration of principles and the spirit of our free government, as it gives the few power to control the -many, and thereby increase their power and strengthen their cords of anarchy and oppression. Therefore be it. Besolved. That'we as farmers and producers will not calmly submit to such gross, violation of our rights; that we. will use all honorable means to' subdue the monster : before he binds us - tight by. the strong arm of his moneyed power.. Resolvedy That we consider the inter nal tax on manufactured tobacco and the tariff on merchandise shipped to us by foreign powers the first items that require . our best efforts to have repealed or greatly modified. v nesoivea. l nat we insist ana ear nestly request our representatives in the" Congress of the . United States from this State, at its ensuing session, to renew their attacts and use their best efforts to consumate this import ant object, and- greatly relieve the oppressed and diminish the great source from which the oppressors re ceive their power.' ; Besolved. That we pledge ourselves as members' of the Farmers Alliance,- and earnestly request that all of our order in this State and all oppressed by these combines refuse to patronize these mammoth factories in any re spect ; that we discard their manufac-' ured articles and urge our order to he importance of establishing and maintaining as many factories as pos sible, and the consumers of tobacco to sustain them by using their " article: Be united, my brethren, and success will crown our eflorts. A. M. YKAZKy Sec'y. ; CONVICT LAHOX. Some months e'to, in . an article I wrote tor The Progressive Farmer, I undertook - to show how convict labor could be jnadftvaluable to us. I then stated that if the Convicts were divided pro rata " among the counties, and the County Commissioners, direct the labor, and hare . them jrcpsir: our roads and build? embankments ;long our rivers and" creeks. andi,deepen them, the value of such 'abor could not be estimated in dollars and cental - I shall not go ; over the- Atguments, maae toenj ; not submit ? the data? or statistics ! then gave ;but in thus .last six weeks, I . h$ve been as. far west as Morgan tonir as far.east as the Atlantic, and from the' northern border as far south as Fayetteville. and I have seen .the lands along the -rivers and creeks flood ed ; . the crops :in many places en tirely destroyed in others so badly damaged .- that: i the-yir crops ti are abandoned v ii-i o'w- ?ri!.t'i-w? J The real l .ss is ) hard v to estimate. Time, labor, capital. all goneV and corn will have to be bought and shipped to us irora other btates.;i.i qtqe. t ; This, buying; abroad- -impoverishes us. Suppose for the sake, qf:: illustra tion s that only 100,000 acres of our" pest land has been overflowed.; i -At a low estimate that means 3, 0 0 0, 0 0 Qi bushels of corn, : and you all know what that aa worth We are not, only poorer by . not having the crop, but all the time bestowed on. the crops, the feed andnseed, all! .this i is gone, worth.; the ? crops. In ; other. word3 we.aroi pooreri by , 4,000,00 (jf for every .100,000 crea ; of ubottom lands so overuowecL-u ?t :$ ttr2piM I- think it is - about time twquj$ donating oonvict labor torailroadicor,? porations. ;;TheyJare : growing rich, t Lour expense htfenw iui.-n,t'i ;. We donate the j right of way, wo contribute of ;pur; means to -buildthe road 4 and, furnish the laboi: and:Pifter. we have done all this they, -' charges you two prces rf or brineins corn into the State.viien" w& are almost on the vcrg of starvation. . If the Mississippi river can be banked successfully 1 cam sure our little rivers and creeks can be. It has been suggested that we use our convict labor to -make guano. That looks like a railroad "scheme to nift. Who is to make it ? The State. We ?ave had enough of State work mdividuals then what benefit will accrue to us ? - About the same that comes to us from letting them work for railroad companies. Besides no one will contend that if work cost nothing, that guano4 could be made cheaper than it can be made now. Steam-power beats convict labor, even when you pay nothing for the labor, only having to Jeed and clothe it. " Besides the hard labor on a ton of guano is less than $2 per ton, so that at the best it would amount to $125, 000 for our State annually. It would only be necessary to re claim 4,000 acres of bottom land to amount to as great a saving as to manufacture all the guanos "used 4 in our state. . Let me illustrate ihe idea further: If our rivers were banked as the Mis sissippi Riyer is, the bottoms that are now comparatively worthies 3 would grow more corn yearly than we ever have to bring into the Stated Thou sands of other acres that are cultivated yearly, but frequently at a great loss, would raise hundreds of thousands of bushels of wheat,- oats and com and supply us with all the nay we need. r If you will thin of the. vast amount of J; money that yearly is sent outside the State for wheat or flour, for seed oats, for corn or meal, and for hay, you. can readily see why we are kept poor. .1 have said so much about im porting mea that I am almost ashamed to mention u again. . v ; Is not this of sufficient importance to arrest our. attention ? ' ': ;. I would make the following sugges tions, and' hope that our influential politicians, who love the dear people so much, will act on them, but I have but little faith m them: Let our Congaessmen and our Sena tors (who it was said could get appro priations so easily) ' instructed to ask of -Congress an appropriation for levees" instead of having dredges to move out sand-bars. - Build the Ievees"ahd the rivers will clean themselves. - ;v Take your ditches where they are confined they cut deeper and deeper; when they are shallow and overflow, he water runs more sluggishly and fills up quickly 3 ; ; r . The writer had the pleasure or be ing with CapC Eads at Granny, where ihe Captain was interested in raining galena, and was told by Capt. Kads hat he had gotten his ideas of deep ening streams by noticing the -action of theat-cuttiB Granbyi' Houccessf ally carried out the idea in tho jetties "ih'the Missis sippi Rivef.: r?yy&: - ' Ikt : us have? an appropriation for levees if iTfcnner leaves any thing rin the Treasury, r and ' when our Legisla ture meets, let us put pur , convicts ,to work reclaiming the wast places, n 5;; "Sr rl iv -;,;-.:. -.;. r-Old Foot. v"t.'-i;;:--' 1 !;;, -. ;-:'.; - ; Mr , Editor: My letter in The Pb6g r essi ve .Farmer - of July 30th has drawn out considerable comments on the same and some contradictions.. Two peanut buyers told me that there wasf profit 'enough on : peanuts atj the present, prices. Another trust peanut buyer said three, cents per pound was the value i of pound of peanuts & and all they ought to briDg. r - , : ; ; So with your. ind ulgence, I thought I would give the cost of planting and housing janjacrojqf jjeanuts as near as. lcar from my, own personal : expert en ce.: r. I thave pui the la'bqrjlpw, even onClthe? Pauper labor; veiof. these parts, and I have the average prod uc, tion as high, as possible and higher than the present, average production, t have not iratih for, ploughing the )urid hxi once and most , aU good farmers treat it twice; have . said nothing about roplanting ;which often is one-half a inucbr touble ;as" the plangjNeUhehare said br madec ahyjallowance f or -oxtra trouble and ;lbor,off nor have 1 1 allowed anJtMgor;v lim ing the lah'd tmd'ail peanut knd must limed neither; rhay e' w'af'en in cphsiertB6n that.' but teams 'ail; tiier Jamd extra teirKsr'&s lietf'ihef'lr for thmto wortJffieo; gone over once evey:to xveeks. So you can see that peanuts at three cents per- pound - meahs I6s?"to the farmer everyitimeH And peanuts at 4. cents y per pound: means about pay for his i work "nd that is alL And 'evenrthese prices-are more-thaDths aristocratic monopolies are willing that we should make. : r The Southampton County Farmers' Alliance at i a call meeting held at Courtland on Aug. 16th, decided by a unanimous vote to put them up a steam peanut cleaner, and took steps to. put the resolution into immediate action. Fraternally, ., A r'. :;'" . R. M. Stennett. NOTES FROM LENOIR. Charity Alliance, No. 449, Institute, Ni C, Aug. 19,"89. -Mr. Editor: It seems .to me that it is a reproach to our . members of this lodge to read the number : of glowing letters from other sections of our grand old State, but .ne ver see anything from home. - l ' ; - We are. holding our? own pretty well, I think, but, brethren, don't you know, that . you cannot attend your meetings in the fall and winter only and be .good Alliance men ? . No, m deed, you can not. - And again don t expect when you join the order to carry your ug and mealsack; we havn't got any "Alli ance'" molasses or meal on hand to furnish you with at the'present. I admonish you, brethren, pay your quarterly dues promptly. How can you expect your Secretary to make a good report when you' have so signal- ly failed to do your duty ?.A : y ; Do you not Know, mat li. you piant your crops and say that is an " Alli ance " . crop it will never arrive at goal for which you intended it. Be cause .. - ' "'' : He that by the plovr would thrive, ; ' Himself must either hold or drive. Brethren the taxes are indeed very heavy, and if those laid on by the gov ernment were the only ones we had to pay we might more easily discharge them, but we have many, otners, and much more grievous to some of us. We are taxed twice as much by our idleness, three times as much by - our pride and four'times as much by our folly; and from these taxes the com missioners Cannot ease - or deliver us by alio wins an abatement. If .we are industrious we shall never starve, for at the - working man's house hunger ooks m but dares not enter. Into this our ereat undertaking my friends some of the beat talent in our land has been employed not only by he men alone has pur success been achieved thus far, but noble women have taken hold with us as every per- son should know. - There a is -, in ! -every true woman's heart a spark of heavenly fire which les dormant in. the daylight of pros perity, but which kindles vup and blaze3 in the dark hours of adversity.. More anon. " 6,13,8. 1$.? FARMERS .AND THE DAG- UIX1G TRUST. Special to the AteocUred Prew.1 - Raleigh. N. C.. A no-. k1 - Coj. L. L. Poik, President of he Inter-State Farmers Association, re turned, here to-day from the meeting of that body at Montgomery. ' Jn an swer to an inquiry as to the status of the fight between the farmers and the jute bagging trasy the Colonel said: "It is approaching a crisis. The Alii ance is encouraged- by the friendly . action of the American -Cotton Ex-"changes--by a constant accession of " mills that are going to manufacture the cotton' bagging and by the una nimity and determination of the farm- -ers throaghout the South to fight it out to the bitter end. The Inter-State Association, not an Alliance brgaoiza tion, is solidly against the jute - trust which has an active, shrewd, and zealous ally ;in the cotton speculators or gamblers in futures. They have sold large quantities of cotton to be -delivered in the early fall,, and they m.dreadfuUy.. being, held back by . farmers and the price is advancing,; and to-day, it is a singular fact thatjhe spot. cottons are actually selling at higher figures than their , contract prices. These men must have cotton or they are hope-; lessly, wrecked. , They have sold and they .must deliver; hence they are put; ting forth 1 powerful efforts : to force cotton onVthe . market, v; It' is. ludicrous; ibreadftfe bogus - letters, , now - crQwding- the CojmWofthe daily papers. 7 They!' magnify .th; growing j Grop f' and hold up presehf prices, and claim, that theyi must decline! v They parade the non action ot the Liverpool Exchange and" positively assert, that it will not recog-! nize the cotton . bagging. If the Liver pool xchangejhasjso declared, I have failed if see the bjEcial announcement We : da not "expect the co operation of, Xiiyerpool until it is f orced, ; English; capital,' English shipping and English manufactures -im tors,- of course, are all interested in" the perpetual use of jute; but all this commotion in the cotton circles in Amerfca; is the work of gamblers in -futures, who have millions at stake Lalid who are now standing face to face with financial ruin. They donot care how cotton is wrapped, for the terrible Teality stares them in the face, that they must have sufficient cotton . to fill their contracts and they must have it quick So desperate have the speculators become, that they already have sgents travelling from farm to. farm in jsome Southern States, offer ing to buy cotton, and advance money.' This.isa struggle, not for a temporary triumph, over the bagging trust, but one for a great principle, and we will not relinquish the fight." FROM OLi) GASTON. Pleasant Ridge, N. C, Aug. 26, ,'39. Mr. Editor: I write tct, inform you that Pleasant Ridge Alliance, No. 1,207, is moving along with the faith fufr We began September, 1888, "with five members; we have now thirty two of the best of ' members. We have .all contributed liberally to the State agency fund. We have a seal and are doing business in a business like manner. We are establishing a Farmers' Alliance store and expect to hire a business man to run it for us. We are also establishing a cotton, ex change and hope to elevate the price of cotton this fall. We had a grand Farmers' Alliance picnic on August 24th, and speeches from the following gentlemen r Dr.. W. H. Wilson Milt, O. Arrowood, Beaty Smith and Jonas ' Stroup. Music for the occasion by the Clover Cornet Band. The speakers addressed the audience wi th great power and effect. The audience con sisted of about five . hundred , men, women and children. After the speaking was over we all partook of a bountiful dinner and took up of the fragments several baskets full. . ' Crops look fine in this section o tne country and we are like a bobtail Shanghai on a rickety hen roost looking around for better- times. Wishing- you and your paper aoun- dant success, I am, Fraternally, ; i: . M. G. Kincaid. Every Subscriber to this Paper is re quested to read a short article on our Second Page addressed to " Our Subscribers.,, - -