,1 A Ij1"P3 Jl M J I 11 & O THE INDUSTRIAL AND EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS OF OUR PEOPLE PARAMOUNT TO ALL OTHER CONSIDERATIONS OF STATE POLICY. Vol. 6. RALEld-H, N". O., JANUARY 5, 1892. No. 45 , THE NATIONAL FARMERS' ALLI ANCE AND INDUSTRIAL, UNION. president L. L. Polk, North Caro iina. Address, Atlantic Building, F St N. W., Washington, D. C. Vice President H. L. Loucks, Huron, South Dakota. Secretary-Treasurer J. H. Turner" iJJoreia- Addressr239 North Capitol gV N. W., Washington, D. C. TiOCturer J. H. Willetts, Kansas. EXECUTIVE BOARD. j. V. Macune, Washington, D. C. Alonzo Wardall, Huron, South Da- sjaF. TillmaiL, Palmetto, Tennessee. JUDICIARY. A. A. Cole, Michigan, B. W. Beck,. Alabama. M. D. Davie, Kentucky. NATIONAL LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE. L. L- Polk;v Chairman. 0. W. Macune, Washington, D. C. Mann Page, Brandon, Va. L. P. Featherstone, Forest City, Ar kansas. W. F. Gwinn, White, , Tennessee. ORTH CAROLINA FARMERS STATE ALLI ANCE. President Marion Butler, Clinton, N. C. t t Vice-President T. B. Long, Ashe Mo, N. C. Secretary-Treasurer W. S. Barnes, Kaleigh, N. C. Lecturer J. S. Bell, Brasstown, N.C. Steward C. C. Wright, Glass, N. C. Chaplain Rev. E, Pope, Chalk Ijevel, N. C. Door-Keeper W. H. Tomlinson, ayetteville, N. C. a Assistant Door-Keeper H. L. King, Peanut, N. C. 3ergeant-at-Arms-J. 3. Holt, Clialk i,evel, N. C. 1 r State Business Agent W. H. Worth, tialeigh, N. C. ttt Trustee Business Agency Fund- -W. a. Graham, Machpelah, N. C. CXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE TORTII CAROLINA FARMERS' STATE ALLIANCE. ' S. B. Alexander. Charlotte, N. C, Jhairman; J. M. Mewborne, Kinston, C. ; J- -S. Johnston, Ruffin, N. C. -TATE ALLIANCE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE. Elias Carr, A. Leazer, N. M. Cul treth, M. G. Gregory, Wm. C. Connell. TATE ALLIANCE LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE. R. J. Powell, Raleigh, N. C. ; N. C. English, Trinity College: J. J. Young, Polenta; H. A. Forney, Newton, N. C. Mortti Carolina Reform Press Association. OjficersJ. L. Ramsry, President; Marion Butler , Vice-President ; W. S. Barnes, Secretary, PAPERS. .'rogresfiive Farmer, State Organ, Raleigh, N. C. Caucasian, Wli1 v W RaralHome, mwS' Farmers' Advocate, Tarboro, Mountain Home Journal, AsheviUe, N . C. Alliance Sentinel, ,?0?8,V2' n Oountry Life, Trinity ( llege, N. C. yrrnrv Hickory, . U. BitSer Whitakers, N. C. Agricultural Bee, . Goldsboro, N. C. Columbus Weekly .evvs, hiteville, C. Each of the above-named papers are requested to keep the list standing on 1 the first page and add others, provided they are duly elected. Any paper fail ing to advocate the Ocala platform will be dropped from the list promptly. Our people can now see wliat papers are published in their interest. A PLAN OF CO-OPERATION. Mr. Editor: In presenting this plan of co-operation I do so with the wish that othera may improve upon it, or that it may suggest something which has not been presented here by me, my only motive being to benefit the people. If each reader will carefully read this article he will find that even the craven subterfuge of 4 class legislation" can not be applied to it, as it is as much to the interest of the mechanic to em brace it as for the farmer to do so. By this plan every monopoly can be broken down, the political parties routed, a better system of production and distribution adopted, and idleness banished. ' . Al I aim to present no Utopian theory, nor to change anything. I have noth ing to do with social problems, imprac ticable theories, or impossibilities, but to simply point out how easily, and how effectively the Alliance can solve its own problem without asking the aid of Congress, or by seeking sym pathy from any source. The power and the right is in its possession, and it requires only the lighting of a match to cause the light to blaze up and dispel darkness Brethren the age of co operation is here. Let us discuss it. You can help yourselves, and you can do it long be fore you can secure aid from legisla tion. TILE ROCHDALE SYSTEM. The Rochdale system is what is known as distributive cooperation, and is the sy.-jtem practiced in England. To briefly explain it, I will state that it has hundreds of retail stores, all organized delegates meeting annually. They buy by the ship load and the train of cars load, doing all their wholesale business. They have nearly half a million of members, and their business amounts to millions of dollars. The plan is simple. (Capital is almost ignored in the profits. Each member hold3 only one share, on which he re ceives an annual interest. This interest i oil v.o iTifAl receives. It is the "fcii- feuctv - wages of capital, and it is the discharge of all obligations to capital. The profits are divided among those who buy, the person buymg tne largest umuuuu ut goods receiving the largest proportion f profits. Non members receive twe tbirdsof the profits on their purchases, which is a wise provision, as the larger me number of purchasers the smaller the proportionate expense to each, for as each assists in giving a profit, so each shares the expense. This is the whole system in a nutshell. It is not industrial cooperation, however. In America the most successful Rochdale store is at Hammonton, New Jersey, known as the "Fruit Growers Union," composed mostly of fruit growers. This Union not only buys all the goods for its members, gives them a profit, but makes contracts for shipments of fruits to tho large cities, has its own tracks and sidings, secures advantages in transportation, protects against unre liable merchants, and saves the shipper from loss of crates, etc., all of which not only costs tho tn embers nothing, but gives each a share of the profits every year, and the annual business transacted is enormous. CO-OPERATION Ilf HOMES. These association are known as build ing and loan associations To explain it we will draw an illustration. Sup pose 200 men band together, each pay mg $5 per month, or ?1,000 per month for all. At each meeting this $1,000 is loaned to the one bidding the highest premium, the buyer giving a mortgage as security. After he receives the money he pays $5 per month for the principal, $5 for the interest, and also pays the premium, which may be $2 per month, or $12 total. This he pays every month; until the value of the shares reach $1,000, which is usually about ten years. Of course, the interest he pays goes into the treasury, and assists him as well as others, as he may pay only $1,200 for the use of the $1,000 for ten years, or really only 2 per cent, interest. This plan of co operation varies iu its details in many places. It will be noticed that if 200 men draw each $1,000, a business of $200,000 will be transacted in ten years, yet at no time will the treasurer have but a fraction over $1,000 in his posses sion at any one month, as it i3 always being sold to the members, hence, if he should abscond, each member will lose but $5. This demonstrates the safety of co-operation. PROFITS TO CAPITAL. If I borrow $10,000 from a bank and pay (5 per cent, interest, and engage in business, making a large profit, does the bank ask me for any of the profits. No; it considers itself amply remuner ated when it receive the interest. When I pay the bank $600 I have dis charged my duty to it, for the interest is the waes due to capital, and if I make $10,000 with the money of the bank, in addition to the sum borrowed. 1 can return the bank its $10,000, pay the int rest due, and keep the other $10,000. This shows that labor, not capital, should have the profit, as capital is paid when it receives its interest, which proof I have just de monstrated, for any man can borrow money, make all the profit he is capable of. pay interest, and keep all the profit himself. PROFITS TO LABOR. Now apply the same principle to labor. If 1 borrow $10,000 and emnlov men to work for me, each at a salary of $600 per year, how many men does my capital or $10,00(J represent &ome would say, ' Why, your $10,000 capi tal represents more than 16 men, at $G00 each per year." Not so; my $10,000 capital will represent only one man. If a man earns $600 a year he represents $10,000 capital to his family, as his wages (interest) represents the interest (wages) of $10,000 at C per cent, per annum, for I pay him $600 per year, just as much as 1 pay $500 to the bank per year. If I have risks of loss so does he. He may die, be injured, and his family lose its income as well as I would should I lose my capital. Now. who is entitled to the profits? As I may have worked, in handling the biibi ness, I am as much entitled to a salary for my ivork as is the laborer, though nothing more than is just, but, as to the money, it e iras nothing of itself. It is not even mine, but borrowed, and hired at a certain price, just the same as the laborer is hired; hence, if by extraordinary exertion on my 'part, twaiatorl hv bibor. I secure a verv large sum, I am not entitled, in justice, to more than a fair snare oi mat pront. I know that ray position may be some vpA to von who have been brought up from the cradle to submit to anything, even violations or. morai law, by using the word "business," but I ask you to weigh the subject fairly and let justice decide if I am not right on the position I hold in regard to the true relations of capital and labor. Bear in mind there is a wide difference between "capitalist and Inhnrpsr " and "caDital and labor." Capitalist and laborer can never be one and united, but capital and labor can he nnitftfl. thouerhonlv when the laborer has the capital in his own pocket. As long as one man controls tne capital, and another the labor, their interests are not mutual, for each will be striving to secure the best bargain possible, despite all theories and attempts to prove that they are one ana mseparaDie. LABOR IS CAPITAL. If 100 men unite, and each can save $600 per year, it equals tne sum ot ro nno nr the interest of a million dollars. In co-operation this labor is a mighty factor, uapicai oniy sets mis labor m mouon. j-auor is mw pru a unino- rurcmt It crives the additional value to the raw material, changing unsaleable substances into valuable articles. It is the true weaitn oi au d it nrfifttes mital. for caDi- tal is only the accumulated results of labor. I Industrial co-operation is that system ui co-operation oy wnien men of in dustry unite to produce articles by their labor. In nearly all cases failures have resulted. Why is this the case? Simply because if one man cannoteom pete with capital by his labor neither can one branch of industry compete. t i t t ueuuusu uapiun wui crasn xne lite out of any class of tradesmen that attpmnts to stand alone and aloof from the other trades. To succeed, the tradesmen must have the "backing." To succeed in co operative industry the market must be ready, and each customer must be interested with the workers. There must be an interest in tho affair yes, a selfish interest and we must spell "business" with a capital B. No sentimentality, sympathy, or friend ship is here annealed to. Nothiner but pure selfishness a selfishness that com Eeis every mm to love his neighbor as imself because it pays to do so. AN ILLUSTRATION. As I stated in the above paragraph. no class of mechanics can succeed with out the 4 -backing," if I may use the expression. Suppose 500 shoemakers should combine to make shoes, and co-operate for business. The capitalists would combine against them. The 500 shoemakers could not wait to build up a trade. They would starve before they found their customers, and even Alliance farmers would not pay them $2 for a pair of shces if the capitalists could sell the same make of shoes for $1 50. Self interest always rules, all sentiment to the contrary. But sup pose instead of 500 shoemakers, the 500 men were composed of shoemakers, hatters, tinners, tailors, printers, plumbers, cabinet-makers, etc., all working- in one building, and selling their articles in a store connected therewith, the one class would support the other. There need be but a propor tion of shoemakers, (say ten), and the ten shoemakers would have 490 custo mers to begin with, and they would I also be purchasers, hence the hatters j and others, would also have 490 custo mers. In other words, they will only have to sell over and above that which they consume themselves. A co-operative store would not only sell the articles made, but could supply groceries, and everything else, thus giving a profit both in selling and in buying. CAPITAL REQUIRED. As mentioned before, it is well known that thousands of people pay $5 per month in building associations, for ten years, only to own a home, and they are not free from wages slavery (a slavery just as oppressive as chattel slavery). Now, if 500 men will con tribute $5 per month for only two years, they wrill have a cash capital of $60,000 to begin with, or they may be&in when only a portion of the capi tal has been paid. I give the above by way of illustration. Of course the capital required is a matter demand ing consideration according to circum stances. MANAGEMENT. The management should be in the hands of a board of directors. Each stockholder should have only one share of stock, but it is not out of place to allow those desiring to assist, to hold twenty shares, with the proviso that all extra shares may be purchased at any time, beginning with the, highest number held by any one, until reduced to one share. Above all, never vote on stock. Each stockholder should have one yote. Interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum should be paid on all capi tal owned by the stockholders. Ail who work should receive wages, just tho same as if working for any employer. Those not employed will of course receive the interest on their in vestment. All who b ly goods from the store will receive their share of the profits of the store on their purchases, as under the Rochdale system. DIVISION OF PROFITS. If, after all expenses have been paid, which includes interest, wages, salaries, etc., and a profit is made, it is paid out by declaring a dividend on tvages not on stock. If one man has worked two daj-s and another only one day, the man performing twice as much work receives twice as much dividend, be cause he has really produced more. This rewards industry and checks idle ness ; hence the industrious man need give himstlf no concern because some other man is lazy, as he will receive all that he earns. WHOLESALE OPERATIONS. If retail, or local co operative associa tions are formed in the different towns or communities they can combine to gether to sell and purchase by whole sale. In fact, the system can extend over a whole State, or several States, and no capital on earth could then face it, or stand in its path. Not only would there be a combination of capital and labor (the capital owned by the laborer) but the customers would be at each door, interested customers, bound by self-interest and 4?elf preservation. I supposed 500 men, each contributing $120 capital in two years, or $60,000. Now let 20 associations, of like num ber, combine, and the united capital is $1,200,000. Put those men at work, and at $600 a year wages for each, the capital invested in the shape of labor, annually, will be $6,000,000. Let every county m North Carolina have but one association only, and the capital will be enormous. This, too, for only a be ginning. A HUGE BUSINESS ON SMALL CAPITAL. Bear in mind that the amount of capital invested does not indicate the amount of business done. Goods may be bought and sold every week, or every day, and the capital will be coming and going, 4 4 turned over daily, " and a large business done with a small sum. A grocer with only $1,000 capi tal may do a business of $5,000. in o year, because he buys more goods" as fast as he sells those in sto ;k . It is the labor, the produce, that makes the r?al mass of wealth. HOW IS THE FARMER BENEFITTED. The farmer finds a market for his produce, buys his supplies at less cost (receiving a share of the profits of the store), finds factories making all kinds of goods at his door, and finds also that there i3 much that a farmer can secure. There i3 nothing to prevent the making of cheese, butter, packing pork, grinding wheat, baling hay, and his produce may be shipped for him to the market by" the association, even cotton and tobbacco being managed to his interest, as he can be just as in terested in co-operation as the mechan ics. His boys will learn trades, and many avenues will be opened to women. THE SAFETY OF CO OPERATION. No funds will be held in the hands of any one to a great extent. Material will be constantly coming in and goods going out. Any excess of capital can e held by each member subject to assessment when required. The mem bers are the treasurers, for outside of the purchase of material the bulk goes into their pockets as wages. No bud-" ness should be conducted, however, without business safeguards. FORCING MEN TO JOIN. Ah, under -the Rochdale system, the nonmembejT receives a share of the profits, so should it be in industrial cooperation. If a man is unable to take a share of stock he can be allowed to buy at the store, or may be given work if necessary, for epry member gained is additional strength, and as the non member will justly be entitled to his share (usually two thirds that of full members) he will soon be able to become a member, and at no cost to him except to bestow his patronage. Truly this is demonstrating that a man can love his neighbor as himself, and the more he loves him the more will he, himself be the gainer by so doing, while a new field will be opened to the widow and the orphans. CONTROLLING THM MARKETS. By wholesale co-operative the owners of the cotton, tobacco, corn, and other staple crops, can control its sale. They can crush every attempt of the grain gamblers to affect prices, and precipi tate " Black Fridays" upon them at pleasure. Gould, Sage, Vanderbilt, and Rockefeller, combined, could not compete with the united capital arid labo ipspecially when labor is also the principal customer of itself, aiid posses sing greater purchasing power, and with more demands and pleasures to gratify. MONEY IS CREATED. A co operative association may use its own. money, printed for itself, just as railroads use tickets. This money can be receivable at its stores, and will be accepted by the workers as wages. It will possess all the power of money because the wealth of the association is behind it, and because it is redeemable at the store. Thus co-operation will solve a financial problem, by giving the association the use of its own money (may be due bills on the store) while its real capital will be used for outside business. GOVERNMENT AFFECTED. Self-interest will compel the members to vote for their business interests. No coaxing or urging will be necessary to taach them how to vote, nor will political mountebanks have any field in which to work. In fact, co operation is edu cational. for it will compel each and all to guard his own interests, thus afford ing mutual protection. It willlestroy race prejudice, lessen the hours of labor, increase the weajth of each indi viduil instead of enriching a few, solve the financial problem, increase the sales of articles produced, facilitate ship ments, and even contrortransporta tion, as well as legislation. ! NOTHING NOVEL IN IT. I have presented nothing but what is soen every day only I have gotten rid of the "boss" the employer. I have only imagined a number of men, of different trades, putting their little sums together, working in ' a shop, keeping a store, all buying from the store, and each selling his goods in the store. They simply work for them selves instead of for an employer. Only this and nothing more. No com munism, no severance of family rela tions, no feasting at a common tablev no ' ' higher life " theories, but a simple business system,' based cn selfishness, by which one man is willing to help others because he himself is helped. No one is wronged, for all can join. Brothers, please catch "an idea" from this. Gkxi bless the man who will improve upon my suggestions. P. H. Jacobs. Hammonton, N. C. AN APPEAL. Lowell, N. C. Mr. Editor : Our Alliance, No. 1431, of Gaston county, N. C, earnestly pe tition every Sub-Alliance in our State to contribute some small amount to our worthy brother, H. R. Elmore, who had tne misfortune to lose his barn by fire, with all his provender, on the night of November 12, 1891. His loss is estimated at four hundred dol lars. Any assistance to him will be duly appreciated by him and his neigh bors. Send to L. H. Stowe, Lowell, Gaston county, N. C. J. N. Hanna, L. H. Stowe, H. S. Adams, . Committee. THAT ADDRESS. The Intent of it and the Result Non partisan to go Into Democratic, but no Other Party. Mr. Editor: I see in flaming head lines in the Wilmington Star what that paper is pleased to call a joint ad dress of Democrats and Alliancemen. That paper quotes the action of the State Alliance Lecturer last week in declaring that Alliancemen are not par tisan, that it must steer clear of parties, even if old parties or new parties adopt the Alliance platform in toto. In other words it must pteer clear of the Repub lican or People's party, but it is not non partisan to issue a joint address and affiliate with the Democratic party. If there is any other object in thus address than to tie up the Alliance sentiment of North Carolina so it can't assert itself in 1892, the writer of this article, a life long Democrat, can't see it. If that address is to be regarded as an Alliance and Democratic address jointly, then the Alliance should have named its five members of that com mittee and not Mr. Ed. Chambers Smith or anybody else. Who delegated any such authority to any body of Alliancemen to do such work as that? If the Star and other partisan papers puts the right construction on the words of Alexander, Carr and others of that committee, the writer of this communication a county lecturer, as before said a life long Democrat, a Confederate soldier who took part in the first and last fight of the war, an Allianceman who thought we were organized to promote principles and measures and not parties and never feels badly over it. He feels that pure, non-portisan Allianceism has received a dangerous stab at the hands of its members. He feels after having ridden hundreds and hundreds of miles with his own conveyance and by rail and never having received a dollar for it, if the rejoicings of the Star and other papers that have fought us at every step we have taken is right, then his work and his effort is all in vain. We do not object to the Allianceism that crops out in that paper, but we object to "partyizing" this movement which inevitably leads to sectionalizing it. If Alexander, Carr and others have a right to do this sort of work with a set of Democratic politicians then Ben Clover and Jerry Simpson have a right to do the same work- with a set of Kansas Republicans, and when that is done, the Topeka Capital, the Wilmington Star and News and Observer will be happy, for they wrill have accomplished exactly wnat tney nave oeen wording for i. e., to party ize and sectionalize this movement, and the old saying will come in. "If so soon it is to be done for, the wonder is what it was begun for." But to be sure these brethren cannot have intended it in the light it appeared, in the light the partisan press regard it. If so, Allianceism in North Carolina will condemn it; if so, my own Sub-Alliance, every one of wThom always voted the Democratic ticket, is ready to condemn it overwhelmingly. The address states or implies that the Democratic party must be kept in tact in order to defeat a future force bill. If the party had been the only thing in the way that iniquitous measure would be a law of the land to day. The Re publicans had the President, had the Senate and had the House. Senator Gorman gets the credit of doing more to defeat it than any other man. He said the independent Alliance senti ment of the country defeated it. A resolution from Democratic and Re publican Alliancemen went up from Ocala in opposition to it, and Plumb, Teller and other Republican Senators in defference to tho feelings of a Re publican Alliance constituency voted with the Democrats and defeated it, and when you drive these Republican Alliancemen back into partison Repub licanism as this address is calculated to do, then Republican and Democratic money power - win resume us unim peded onward march. Fraternally, J. M. Cutchins, Lecturer Edgecombe County Winfall Sub-Alliance, No. 1.108, Winfall, N. C. Mr. Editor: Fridav. the 11th ult.. was a field day for the Perquimans County Alliance. Men who were pres ent to near the speeches of Hon. J. S. Rell. of Clav cbuntv. State Lecturer. J. T. Brinson, Esq,, of Pamlico, district Lecturer, and b, utno vvnson, or tai eigh, and they were well repaid for thpir trouble, for a eouDle of more in teresting speeches have not been heard here in a long time. The speaking was at Hertford, l snouid nave saia. Mr. Brinon snoke in the forenoon. delivering a very good speech, which was carefully iistenea to. non. 10m. Skinner said it was the best he had hoard aloner that line. In the person of Bro. Brinson the First district has a lecturer in the field who we are sure will save entire satisfaction. About 1 o'clock Mr. Bell arrived and addressed the audience. As he arose he looked tired and wearv. and no one exnected much of a speech. But as he faced the crowd calm, poised, una bashed, it was apparent that he was master of the situation. The audience was electrified. He poured fourth elo quence, wit and pathos. A young man about 30, large dull blue eyes, but as he warmed up they grew with the brightness of imagination and with a native eloquence born of the eternal hills from which he hails. He seems to have caught an inspiration from the everlasting peaks. Oh ! it was interest ing pure Alliance doctrine flashing over the audience like meteoric showers. Long may Bell and Brinson live, shed- ding the light of their countenances all over this State, promulgating truth and knowledge, kindling the fires of enthusiasm in the sacred thresholds of a thousand and otie homes, disseminat ing the principles of the National Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union from Manteo to Murphy. 0 Bell and Brinson one from th rlmid rorTWT peaks of Clay, the other from the golden shores of Pamlico. mt. uson spoke in the secret meet ing, explaining: the workings of the busint se department. My fellow coun- trvmen. Ipt lis rnntimiA in Kon t in mlnA the motto, 44 United we stand: divided we ian. .F raternal lv. A. W. Jordan. RESOLUTIONS. At a regular meeting of Woodard's Alliance, No. 1174, held December 5th the following preamble and resolutions were unanimously adopted : whereas, Different partisan papers of the country have attempted to mis represent and slander the name of President L. L. Polk and other national leaders, and as we are led to believe that it is intended to break down our Order and an insult to every member of the National Farmer 's Alliance and ' Industrial Union of America. Resolved, That we cordemn in the strongest language the course as un patriotic and dishonorable and intt nded to defeat the honest purpose of our Order. 2. That we believe President Polk and co-laborers to be patriotic gentle men, and the superiors of any who have indulged in any such abuse. 3. That we heartily renew our allegi ance to our demands as set forth in the Ccala platform and heartily endorse the action of the State Alliance in re gard to said demands; we also endorse the action of the National Convention in re electing L. L. Polk to the highest officer in our Order. 4. That a copy of these resolutions be t sent to The Progressive Farmer for publication. J. J. CUTLER, W. H. Brady, C. C. N. Cutler, Committee. BE TRUE TO THE CAUSE. Bro. Alliancemen : 44 Sleep on your arms tonight." 4 4 Put none but true . men on guard." Our enemk s have de termined to destroy the reform move-.t ment at all hazzards. No stone is to be left unturned. The spy is within' our ranks. We are to be destroyed by dissensions ceverly 'engineered. Vic ious and brutal attacks are being made all along the line upon all our faithful and trustworthy leaders. Accursed villains are perjuring their very souls by swearing to hellish lies to break down the character of men true to the reform cause. The same being heralded from the Atlantic to the Pacific by the associated partisan press, and taken up by old moss back partisans haying their names enrolled as Alliance men, but are such just about as much as Judas was a Christian, or Benedict Arnold a patriot ; a fair specimert may be found right here in Forsytb county. Bogus dispatches, damna&Ie lies, in cendiary speeches, insinuations, inu endoes, and everything low and vile is taken up by them and for all it is worth. Brethren, eternal vigilance is the price of liberty." Whenever any member shows a disposition to provoke . dissensions to discourage attendance, or oppose tho fundamental principles of our Order, fire him out at once. Retain no man whom you know to be a dirty trickster for the old party ma chine. Let it be understood that treachery will be dealt with an iron hand. Pay no attention to the lies and rumors of old party papers. Believe nothing aginst any leader on such author fly. Beware "of all old hacks, who are trying to keep their order in line for the old parties. For God and humanitv 's sake, don't let the lickspittle of Wall street and the money power play a b!uff game on us again. E. A. Coward, Sec'y. ALLIANCE PIC-NIC IN CLEVE LAND. Beams Mills, N. C. Mr. Editor: An Alliance Union, composed of three Sub-Alliances, viz : Pleasant Grove, Rock Cut and Roe3 Grove, met with tho Pleasant Grove Alliance, Cleveland county, on the 15th inst. ilajor W. A. Graham wa present, by invitation, and delivered a grand and highly interesting speech, brimful of good things from beginning to end. 2: Dinner was then announced. The table was one hundred and forty feet long, and was loaded from end to end with good things to eat. Elder. T. Dixon asked a blessing; then all did eat and were filled. The number was estimated at from four to five hundred men, women and children and there was enough left to have fed them all again. In the afternooa Dr. L. N, Durham held the audidence spellbound for about one hour. Tnen Elder T. Dixon made some good remarks. The best of order prevailed throughout the day not a single drunken man was to be seen. So much for prohibition in old Cleveland, mainly brought about bv the Farmers' Alliance.' We think all returned to their homes much benefited by hearing the gocd speeches of the day. . ,' We clcse by saymg Eucces to The Progressive Farmer. R. W. Gardner. : 1 1