PRO GRESBT? 1 4 THE -INDUSTRIAL AND EDUCATIONAL INTERESTS OF OUR PEOPLE PARAMOUNT TO ALL OTHER CONSIDERATIONS OF STATE POLICY. RALEIGH, N. O., DECEMBER 6, 1892. No. 43 j lilMEIl "!IT " ' fAL FARMERS' ALLI 'AS Wit rn INDUSTRIAL A UNION. -w-II. L. Loucks, Huron, ! SSl&t--ri- Butler, Clin- f 1 s4 ?:,o-Treasurer-L. K. Taylor, SJE5t-B Terrell, Seguin,Texas. -.tt -r- 4 TT Itrd. Ii? rwin. Pennsylvania . a Cole, Michigan, rt Alabama. .D.' Davie, Kentucky. ,i-rvff LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE. a L Loucks, Chairman. P W. Macune, Washington, D. O. UT-nnHnn. Va. P. Featherstone, Forest City, Ar- W. I1 Or win II, " v-v,.. ,j8TH CAROLINA FARMERS' STATE ALLI- ASU President Marion Butler, Clinton, Vice-President T. B. Long, Ashe- 'Sretory-Treasurer W. S. Barnes, urerC. W. Thompson, Rich- lands. N. C. - j- OhaDlaiu Rev. Jno. Ammons, Madi- wnCo., N. C. ttii;,-.,- Door-Keeper a -v. uemj, .ijc.y, N. C. t-T T7I TTi Assistant Door-Keeper . r. Juug, v n 3ereant- at-Arms J. S. Holt, Chalk Ttatesiaees Agent W. H. Worth, taleigh, N. C. Trustee Business Agency Fund Vv . Graham, Machpelah, N. C. IIEX7IVE COMMITTEE OF THE NORTH CAROLINA FARMERS' STATE ALLIANCE. 3 B. Alexander, Charlotte, N. C, Jhairman; J. M. Mewborne, Kins ton, S. C; J. S. Johnston, Ruffin, N. C. TATE ALLIANCE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE. EJias Carr, A. Leazer, N. M. Cul Dreth, M. G. Gregory, Wm. C. Connell. 'TATE ALLIANCE LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE. R. J. Powell, Raleigh, N. C. ; N. C. itaglish, Trinity College: J. J. Young, Polenta: II . A. Forney, Newton, N. C. Korth Carolina Reform Press Association. Ojjlcera ,7. L. Ramsey, President; Marion Butler, Vice-President ; W. S. Barnes, Secretary, PAPERS. .-regressive Farmer. State Organ, Raleigh, N. C Cnea?ian. Clinton, N. t The Workinginan's Helper, Pinnacle, N . C Wfctchmnii, Salisbury, N. C. Tinners' Advocate, Tarboro, N. C. Country Life, Trinity College. N. C. Mercury, Hickory, N. C. Rattler. Whitakers, N. C. -CTicultural Bee, Goldsboro. N. C. Alliance Echo. Monctire, N. C. Special Informer. Raleinh, N. C. Carolina Dispatch, Hertford, N. C. Each, of the above-named papers are requested to keep the list standing on the first jxige and add others, provided ihey are duly elected. Any paper fail ing to advocate the Ocala platform will be dropped from the list promptly. Our people ran now see vltat papers are published in their interest. EVILS THAT THREATEN THE LIFE CF OUR REPUBLIC. A Terrible Arraignment from the Lips of s the Eloquent Divine, T. De Witt T -Image. Frnra a spiinon delivered in Brooklyn, Nov. 6, we puUi-h the following: The first evil that threatens the an nihilation of our American institutions is the fact that political bribery, which once was considered a crime, has by many come tbe 'Onddered a tolerable virtue. There is a legitimate use of money in elections, in the printing of political tracts, and in the hiring of public halls, and in the obtaining of campaign oratory ; but is there any ho munculu, who supposes that this vast amount of money now being raisf d by tte political parties i3 going in a legiti mate direction! The vist majority of t will go to buy votes. Hundred an 1 thousands of men will have set before th em so muc h money for a Republican ro e and so much money for a Demo cratic vote, and the superior financial wdaoemeni will decide tho .action carrvT0 kU which Part morf, f dTUbtful States da af ter to- SKJ wk11 teli you the party mmoT lthH mo8t moner- Thi3 rnent, hilelBpeak, the peddlers eouT Kld from Wal1 6treet from Third street, gold from State 6 o! ' &nd Kold from the Brewers' As ociation, are in all the political head- out I ' lhedouful States, dealing t .he infamous inducement. Ihere used to be bribery, but it held Us head m shame. It was under the SiTT atu many yeara aS a co7rn Tm7 the Wis hed f u1"6 and maQy othr pub- f thfi rnth!State- Governor the State at that time received $50,- aLL u Senate reived $175,000 ong them in bonds. Sixty member ff L Loucks Chairman; L. Leon utoviti PflfrA Virerima: I. Hid-fiiri . in oil - - ry ' cj . ew x ui , - v o' the other house received from $5,000 "'$10,000 each. The Lieutenant Gov ernor received $10,000. The clerks of the House received from $5,000 to $10,000 each. The bank comptroller received $10,000. Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars were divided among the lobbyists. You see, the railroad company was very generous But all that was hidden, and only through the severest scrutiny on the part of the legislative committee was this iniquity displayed. Now, political bribery defies you, dares you, is arro gant, and will probably decide the election next Tuesday. Unless this diabolism ceases in thi3 country, Betholdi's statue on Bedlow's island, with uplifted torch to light other nations into the harbors, had better be changed, and the torch dropped as symbol of universal incen diarism. Unless this purchase and sale of suffrage ehall cease the American Gov ernment will expire, and you might as well be getting ready this moment; for another dead nation, and let my text inscribe upon it these words: "Alas! alas I for Babylon, that great city, that mighty city, for in one hour is thy judgment come." My friends, if you have not noticed that political bribery is one of the ghastly crimes of this day, you have not kept your eyes open. Another evil threatening the destruc tion of American institutions is the solidifying of the sections against each other. A solid North. A solid South. If this goes on we shall, after awhile, have a solid East against a solid West ; we shall have solid mid lie States aga-nst solid Northern States, we shall have a solid New York against a solid Pennsylvania, and a solid Ohio against Kentucky. It is 27 years since the war closed, and yet at every presiden tial election the old antagonism is aroused. When Garfield died, and all the States gathered around his casket in sympathy and in tears,- and as hearty telegrams of condolence came from New Orleans and from Charles ton as from Boston and Chicago, I said to myself: "I think sectionalism is dead." But alas 1 no. The difficulty will never be ended until each State of the nation is split up into two or three great political par .if s. This country cannot exist unless it exists as one body, the national capital the heart, sending out through all the artries of communication warmth and life to the very extremities. This nation cannot exist unless it exists as one family, and you might as well have solid brothers against solid sisters, and a solid bread tray against a solid cradle, and a solid nursery against a solid dining room; and you might as well have solid ears against solid eyes, and solid head against foot. What is the interest of Georgia is the interest of Massachusetts; what is the interest of New York is the interest of South Carolina. Does the Ohio river change its politics when it gets below Louis ville? It is not possible for these sec tional antagonisms to continue- for a great many years without permanent compound fracture. Another evil threatening the destruc tion of our American institutions is the low state of public moral3. What killed Babylon of my text? What killed Phoenecia? What killed Rome? Their own depravity; and the fraud and the drunkenness and the lechery which have destroyed other nations will destroy ours unless a mer ciful God prevents. To show you the low state of public moral3, I have to call your attention to the fact that many men nominated for offices in different States at different times are entirely unfit for the positions for which they have been nominated. They have no more qualification for them than a wolf has qualification to be professor of pastoral theology in a flock of sheep, or a blind mcle has qualification to lecture a class of eagles on o Jtics, or than a vulture has quali fication to chaperone a dove. The mere pronunciation of some of their names makes a demand for carbolic acid and fumigation! Yet Christian men will follow right on under these political standards. I have to tell you what you know already that American politics have sunken to such a low depth that there is nothing beneath. What we see in some directions we see in nearly all directions. The peculation and the knavery hurled to the surface by the explosion of banks and business firm are only specimens of great Cotopaxis and Strombolis of wickedness that boil and roar and surge beneath; tut have not yet regurgitated to the surface" When the heaven-descended Demo cratic party enacted the Tweed ras cality it seemed to eclipse everything; but after awhile the heaven descended Republican party outwitted Pandemo nium with the Star Route infamy. My friends, we have in this country people who say the marriage institu tion amounts to nothing. They scoff at it. We have people walking in polite parlors in our day who are not good enough to be scavengers in Sodom I I went over to San Franc tsco ten or fifteen years ago that beautiful city, that queen of the Pacific. May the blessings of God come down upon her great churches and her noble men and women ! When I got into the city of San Francisco the mayor of the city and the president of the board of health called on me and insisted that I go and see (he Chinese quarter, no doubt so that on my return to the At lantic coast I might tell what dreadful people the Chinese, are. But on the last night of my stay in San Francisco, before thousands of people in their great opera house, I said: "Would you like me to tell you just what I think, plainly and honestly?" They said : " Yes, yes, y es !" I said : "Do you think you can stand it all? They said: "Yes, yes, yes!" "Then," I said, my opinion is that the curse of San Francisco is not your Chinese quarter, but your millionaire liber tines." And two of them sat right before me Felix and Drusilla. And so it is in all the cities. I never swear but when I see a man go unwhipt of jus tice, laughing over his shame and call ing his damnable deeds galantry and piccadillo, I am tempted to hurl red hot anathemas and to conclude that if, according to some people's theology, there is no hell, there ought to be. There is enough out and out licen tiousness in American cities to day to bring down upon them the wrath of that G 3d who, on the 24th of August, 79, buried Herculaneum and-Pompeii so deep in ashe that the 1813 subse quent years have not been able to com plete the exhumation. There are in some of the American cities to day whole blocks of houses whicn the au thorities know to be infamous, and yet by purchase they are silenced, by hush money, so that such places are as much under the defense of government as public libraries and asylums of mercy. These ulcers on the body politic bleed and gan grene away the life of the nation, the pu )lic authority in many of the cities looks the other way. You cannot cure such wounds as these with a sdken bondage. You will have to cure them by putting deep in the lancet of moral surgery, and burning them out with the caustic of holy wrath and with most decisive amputation cutting off the scabrous and putrefying abominations. As the Romans were after the Celts and as the Normans were after the Britons, so there are evds after this nation which will attend its obsequies unless we first attend theirs. Superstition tells of a marine reptile, the cephaloptera, which enfolded and crushed a ship of war; but it is no superstition when I tell you that the history of many of the dead nations proclaim to us the fact that our ship of state is in danger of being crushed by the cephaloptera of national depravity. Where is the Hercules to slay this hydra? Is it not time to speak by pen, by tongue, by ballot-box, by the rolling of the prison door, by the hangman's halter, by earnest prayer, by Sinaitic detonation? A son of King Crcesus is said to have been dumb and to have never uttered a word until he saw his father being put to death. Then he broke the shackles of silence and cried out: "Kill not my father, Cr casus !" W hen I see the cheatery and the wantonness and the manifold crime of this country attempting to commit patricide yea, matricide upon our institutions, it seems to me that lips that heretofore have been dumb ought to break the silence with canorous tones of fiery protest. I want to put all of the matter before you, so that every honest man and wo man will know just how matters stand, and what they are to do if they vote, and what they ought to do if they pray. This nation is not going to perish. Alexander when he heard of the wealth of the Indies, divided Mace donia among his soldiers. Some one asked him what he had kept for him self, and he replied : "I am keeping hope." And that jewel I keep bright and shining -in my soul, whatever else I shall surrender. Hope thou in God. He will set back these oceanic tiles of moral devastation. Do you know what is the prize for which contention is made to day? It is the prize of this continent. Never since, according to John Milton, when " Satan was hurled headlong flaming from the etheral skies in hideous ruin and combustion down," have the powers of darkness been so determined to win this continent as they are now. What a jewel it its a jewel carved in relief, the cameo of this planet ! On one side of us the At lantic ocean, dividing us from the worn out governments of Europe. On the other side the Pacific ocean, dividing us from the superstirions of Asia. On the north of us the Arctic sea, which is the gymnasium in which the explorers and navigators develop their courage. A continent 10,500 miles long, 17,000, ODO square miles, and all of it but about one seventh capable of rich cultiva tion. One hundred millions of popu lation on this continent of North and South America one hundred millions, and room for many hundred millions more. All flora and all fauna, all grains and all fruits. The Apalachian range the backbone and the rivers the ganglia carrying life through and out to the extremities. Isthmus of Darien the narrow waist of a giant continent, all to be under one government, and all free and all Christian, and the scene of Chriit's personal reign on earth if, according to the expectation of many good people, he shall at last set up His throne in this world. Who shall have this hemisphere? Christ or Satan? Who shall have the shore of her inland seas, the silver of her Nevadas, the gold of her Oolorados, the telescopes of her observatories, the brain of her universities, the wheat of her prairies, the rice of her Savannahs, the two great ocean beaches the one reaching from Baffin's bay to Terre del Fuego, and the other from Behring straits to Cape Horn and all the moral, and temporal, and spiritual and everlasting interests of a population vast beyond all computation save by Him with whom a thousand years are as one day ? Who shall have the hemisphere ? You and I will decide that or help to decide it, by conscientious vote, by ei.rieet prayer, by maintenance of Christian institutions, by support of great philanthropies, by putting body, mind and soul on the right side of all moral, religious and natural move ments. Ah ! it will not be long before it will not make any difference to you or to me what becomes tf thi3 continent, so far as earthly comfort is concerned. All we will want of it will be seven feet by three, and that will take in the largest, and there will be room to spare. That is all of this country we will need very soon, the youngest of us. But we have an anxiety about the welfare and the happiness of the generations that are coming on, and it will be a grand thing if, when the archangel's trumpet sounds we find that our sepulcher, like the one Joseph of Arimathea provided for Christ, is in the midst of a garden. By that time this country will be all paradise, or Dry Tortugas. Eternal God, to Thee we commit the destiny of this people. FORAGE vs. STARVATION. Our Station being engaged in prepar ing, among other things, heroarium specimens of the sundry varieties of the Southern cow pea for the Chicago show, got to day a specimen of the va riety called the "Unknown" pea, which is largely grown in many parts of the South. Without any intention to per petuate a pun, I may say that the specimen brought to-day is "largely grown " Though I did not measure it accurately, I feel warranted in saying that the growth is over ten (10) feet long. Whh a mass of vines like this standing, or spreading, is it any won der that the cow-pea is valued as for age plant; and when we find that the nitrogen fixing tubercles are plentiful upon its roots, can we wonder that great results in soil improvement come from sowing these peas: And all this great growth is made in two or three months, on soil where clover would not make such a mass of growth in three years, until the cowpea has brought it into good heart. Northern writers, who kno w nothing of the conditions of Southern agriculture, and who do not realize the rapidity by which an ap parently exhausted soil can be brought up by an intelligent use of this plant, are disposed to criticise the efforts we make to spread the use of the Southern pea, in the improvement of Southern lands. Not long ago, an editor of a Grange paper, printed in Pennsyl vania, came down " like a thousand of bricks" on the Prof essor of the N. C. Station, whose " specialties, " he said, were crimson clover, cow peas and soja beans, all plants, which, he said, have been tested and found useless to farm ers as substitutes for the common clover. The "farmers," in the ideas of this narrow gentlemen being, I sup pose, the Dutchmen in the valley where his paper is printed. He seemed to think it impossible that a man could write on agricultural topics for a big ger circle of readers than are shut in between his two rows of mountains, or that a man in North Carolina, who is working might and main to help North Carolina farmers, would care a "con tinental " whether a practice on a crop which he urged as best for North Caro lina farmers suited the Pennsylvania Dutchman or not, inasmuch as he has never recommended it for them. The aforesaid Pennsylvania editor probably never saw either of the three crops growing, much lees made a test of them, and yet he accuses the North Carolina Professor of shooting off " half -learned information," though the aforesaid Professor was probably farming and studying these things be fore the fledgling editor in the Cumber land Valley was born. Now, I have serious doubts as to the value of the annual crimson clover north of Maryland and Delaware, and I doubt if soja beans and field peas will be as valuable there as here ; but that our Southern peas will be of value a long way further north than now used, I have not the slightest doubt. In fact, the finest field of cow -peas I ever saw, North or South, grew in a limestone valley, almost in sight of the Pennsyl vania line, and not a great many mil? s south of where this editor prints his little paper. But I am not writing to advertise his little sheet ; but to draw a comparison between such a splendid growth of for age aa would be represented by a field of these gigantic "Unknown" peas, and a field in broomsedge hay. The on9, while furnishing winter food for half a dozen cows for a month, has been adding fertility to the soil; the other, while possibly keeping one cow from absolute starvation for the same length of time, is still a vile weed and a blot upon the landscape, making the soil no better, except by shading and preventing washing. And yet gentle men, with stobk to feed, propose to try to get the food out of broomsedge where peas, clover and corn can be grown. Is it not enough to make one pull his gray hairs in despair, to find that, after spending a good part of his life in earnest efforts to aid the cause of agri cultural advancement, men seriously propose to step backwards and give up the effort to grow anything better than the weed, which nature merely used as a last resort to hide her nakedness, when man had robbed her of every thing else? And a State Agricultural Society offers premiums for a crop, the gettiag of which means a deferring of the improvement of the soil, the pro motion of which i3 thought to be the leading object of such Societies. I am happy to say that the broom sedge craze seems confined to Virginia. N3 North Carolina farmer has yet spoken in favor of it. W. F. Massey. TOMATO DISEASES. Tomato plants have been troubled with fungi this season, and consumers are complaining of the high price and poor quality of tho fruit. In some lo calities the young plants were destroyed or much weakened by the bacterial dis eases known as the Southern tomato blight. This has been followed by the old leaf enemy, Cladosporium fulvum, which produces a light brown, almost olive, mould upon the under side of the foliage. Plants with much of this fungus usually bear inferior fruit, and frequently the same enemy appears upon the fruit while it is green and less than half grown ; the blossom end turns brown and decay sets in. Tho newest enemy, and one of no saiall importance, is an anthracnose, Colletotriclium Lycopersici, which was first observed by Prof. Chester, at the Delaware Experiment Station, last sea son, and described by him in the Tor rey Bulletin for la t December. This fungU3 produces sunken spots in the fruit, which become soft and dark. It quickly destroys the tomato, and for this reason and by its peculiar appear ance it is usually recognized as differ ent from any other known tomato rot. Several times my attention has been called to the ravages ol- this parasite by growers who observed that it was a new enemy. The same fungus is to be found upon the foliage when it causes brown, irreg ular spo3. At this time, when the fruit is well advanced and frosts are expected daily, there is little or nothing to be done, except to see that the vines are finally gathered and burned. There is no question about the contagiousness of the anthracnose. The spores are numerous, and should be destroyed at the close of the season, if not before. Byron D. Halsted, in Garden and Forest. m THE SECRET BALLOT LAW. Columbia, S. C. Mr. Editor: I am satisfied there is a move among the oliga chists in this State to have a secret ballot law passed that would disfranchise a great many. Look out for the same move in North Carolina. A secret ballot with pro visions to protect the illiterate in their present rights is what we should have. Its practical effect would be to cause many of the most worthless, who now vote only under some bad influence, to lose interest in voting, but this would be a benefit to all and at the same time not destroy the right of any honest and worthy man who cannot read and write. Some men who cannot read andL write are good citizens and well qualified to vote. I find the rank and file of the Alli ance element in this State, so far as I have come in contact with them, all right. They cannot be side tracked much longer. Geo. E. Boggs. AN APPEAL'. To the brethren of the N. C. Farm ers' Alliance: Brother J. P Hawkins had the misfortune to lose his barn by fire on the 14th of November, with all his hay, fodder, shucks and fifty bushels of corn, the loss amounting to one hundred and fifty dolfars. Mr. Hawkins is a memberof Wilson Alli ance and is a worthy member, and has an invalid wife and mother-in law to maintain. We, the members of Wil son Alliance, No. 1,415, will raise half the amount, and we ask the brethren to raise the other $75 by contributions. Please send all money to W. C. Sofley, Secretary of Wilson Alliance, Martin dale P. O., Mecklenburg Co., N. C. THE CONTEST OVER. The Alliance in Buncombe County. Jupiter, N. C. Mr. Editor: The great political contest of 1892 has been fought, and has no w become a part of our coun try's history. All the bitterness and unpleasantness of this great battle will doubtless be forgotten and only tha more pleasant memories will be re membered. This, I think, is right and proper. We are Americans; we are all North Carolinians, besides we are all brethren. We all love to learn by ex perience, and this is a great school to learn in, even if we have to pay dear for our learning sometimes. The cam paign we have just gone through will not ba forgotten soon. True Alliance principles will live as long as old mother Time lasts, and the more our laboring classes read and think for themselves, the better they will be able to understand the true principles of our government The Alliance has done more to teach the farmers of this Southland of ours the needs of just and wholesome laws than all the poli ticians combined. .The v truth is our people are getting their eyes opened and begin to see their way, and in the next four years they will learn as never before. The Alliance in Buncombe county is rather at a low ebb at this time, but I believe ere spring rolls round we will be in better working order than any time since the Alliance was organized in the county. All we need in North Buncombe is some good speakers to visit our Sub-Alliances to stir up our brethren on the great importance of the Alliance. ;We need a good Alli ance paper inAsheville, a paper not afraid to advocate our cause, aad I do hope some good brother will see the great field to work in Western North Carolina and come to Asheville and publish a good Alliance newspaper for our brethren in this part of the State, and now is the time to start an enter prise of this kind, for our farmers will have the money to pay for a paper this winter and next spring. I am well pleased with your paper, and I hope every Allianceman in this section of the country will become subscribers to it. . I. A, Harris. An easy way to pay for your Pro gressive Farmer for next year. Pay up to date and send in four new one year subscribers before January 1st, 1892. That will do it. . : f