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ANNUAL MEETING
OP THE GEORGIA STATE ALLI¬
ANCE IN ATLANTA.
Routine Work of the Conven¬
tion Epitomized.
-—
Promptly at 10 o’clock Wednesday
morning President Livingston called tho
convention to order in Concordia hall,
Atlanta. Nearly every delegate hundred was pres¬ alli
ent, and ab >ut three or four
ancemen, who were present as spectators.
Every available inch of space in the lar^e
room was occupied by the enthusiastic
llhancemen. The convention chaplain. was opened
with prayer by the state Rev.
H- Ii. Davies, of Habersham county.
The first 1 usiness was the report of the
committee on credentials. Immediately
after the reading of the report Rev. J.
G. Gibson, of Oglethorpe county, rose to
a question of personal privilege, but was
ruled out of order by President Living¬
ston. Governor No then then took the
floor and said he believed Mr. Gibson had
a right to be heard. However, the chair
‘still held that Mr. Gibson was out of or¬
der. Governor JNortheu then appealed
from the decision of the chair. A vote
was taken and the house sustained the
president. After this tilt President Liv
ingston delivered lu& annual address.
When he arose great cheering greeted
him. Among other things he said:
"Brethren of the alliance: We are met
to-day under the most auspicious satisfaction circum¬
stances, and have the great
of feeling that we have well performed
the solemu obligations we have taken, and
thus far, and have advanced the great
vital interests of our order. We have
every reason to be proud of our success
and the record we have made. In Geor¬
gia the alliance has had much of valuable
education. Our lecturers have visited
the sub-alliances, and have spoken with
intelligence and enthusiasm, and have
aroused the members to study their
wrongs and to come to a clearer under¬
standing of our principles and to solid
loyalty to our order. Thu consequence is
thatl find our people everywhere through¬
out the state are more confident that we
are right in our methods, and that our
juecess is but a matter of time. Unity,
honor and energy will bring us the
grandest of victories in the not far dis¬
tant future. Speaking for Georgia alli¬
ancemen I feel authorized to say that
they are more determined than ever to
push their battle to the very gates of the
enemy. All the enthroned forms of op¬
pression and robbery must be assailed
with unflagging valor until the last of
them is hurled from place and power,
and the people—the honest restored people—the their
producing people—are and their to homes
birthrights are masters of
accb epitals. Our enemies, meanwhile,
are not idle. They are both alarmed
and active. They have begun to organize
against us in some places, and in nearly
all instances they trust to their ingenuity
and money to produce dissensions and
conflict in our ranks. But they are mis¬
calculating the strength, the honor and
the unswerving faith of the alliancemen.
We can never be misled aud defeated by
such tactics. But what must we do to
continue our success?
1 . We must remain united and culti¬
vate that fraternity of feeling and iden¬
tity of interests which will knit us to¬
gether into an individual body. the
2. We must turn a deaf ear to
carpings and complaints of those who
are on the outside of the alliance, and
to the factious growlings of the disgrun¬
tled who are in our fold.
3. We must stand solidly on our na¬
tional platform. It needs no apology
from any of us. It speaks for itself and
for us. It is the broad basis of our na¬
tional union and mutual interests. It
suits men of our persuasion it in every be driv¬ sect
tion. Let us not abandon nor
en from it. With that creed we con
quer. in plans
4. We must co-operate our
and labors with our brethren in the other
states and sections of the union. This
pledge is part of our Ocala acts, and
must be fairly and fully redeemed.
5. We must prepare for a hard and
bitter warfare against our order and its
principles. No organization seeking
reform of the political and economic
conditions of the United States has ever
been assailed as we have been. But that
which has been done against us is noth¬
ing to what we will have to combat in
the future. We^must set our fl igs for¬
ward, compact our ranks and break our
enemies to pieces upon the solid breast
of Itoked and loyal nllmncemen.
And now I have a fe v words personal
to myself. I have done the best I could
for you and the cause. I have suffered
much without complaining, I have
been true to my obligation and my re
spon-ibilities, aud stand ready to answer
for all my words and deeds.
Our demands are just, liberal nnd in
barmon v with the golden rule. Our or¬
der and platform are becoming more
popular every day, and the greatest ca¬
lamity the toilers of America could suffer
to-day would be failure, from any course,
of this grand and glorious reform gov¬
ernment. it
We are charged with making a suc¬ dis¬
cess, and it would be an everlasting
grace to us if it should fail through our
own follies, mistake or cowardice. I
promise you, on the other hand, a com
plete, brilliant and beneficient victory if
we are but united, faithful and true to
our President opportunities.” Livingston then explained
what the mission of General Weaver, Jer¬
ry Simpson and Mrs. Lease had been in
Georgia. It was not for personal or par¬
ty ends, but they were here on a CHin
paign of education and for the instruc¬
1 '
tioij* '* of Georgians . the clutivation V
and of
fraternity. Ho then reconunended tint
the state alliance |uirchase The Southern
Alliance Farmer, and place it in the
hands Of proper officials selected for that
purpose. He said that the paper cou d
be had for h df the pre-ent price under
that arrangement. He spoke at length
upon this subject, good dwelling upon the lm
portanee of a organ.
He then touched upon the national
labor convention to be held in Cincinnati
Feb uary next. He said that matters of
vital importance were to be settled there,
and said that the decisions made there
•wool I have a great effect the political
future of the alliance. A national con
vention might be found necessary at that
time. It deponded entirely upon the con
lition of things at that time.
The speech was pronounced had by many heard as
being the ablest one they ever
lelivered, and loud and continued ap
plause greeted its close. fixed 9
'I he hours of meeting were at
\. m. to 12:30 o’clock p. m., 3 p. m. to
3 p. m., and 8 p. m. to 10 p. m.
AFTERNOON SESSION.
The afternoon session was more largely The
ittended than the forenoon session.
room was packed and jammed until
landing room even was at a premium,
rhe convention was called to order at 3
/clock.
A telegram from President Evan Jones,
of the Texas State Alliance, was read, in
which he sent greetings to the Georgia
illiancemen, and announcing that the
rexas alliancemen were still on the Ocala
Platform. The secretary was instructed
:o reply for the Georgia alliancemen.
A resolution thanking General Weaver,
Congressman Jerry Simpson and Mrs.
Lease for their labors in Georgia, in be
aalf of the alliance, was adopted. The
resolution provided also for the payment and
of the expenses of Messrs. Weaver
Simpson while in Georgia.
The following resolution was intro¬
duced and adopted with enthusiastic
unanimity:
Resolved, That the state alliance con¬
vention do most unqualifiedly Journal, condemn Macon
the course of the Atlanta
Telegiaph, Savannah News, Cuthbert
Liberal-Enterprise, Albany News and
Advertiser, Dahlonega Signal, Alpha¬
retta Free Press, and all other papers
who have antagonized the alliance.
Resolved further, That all alliancemen
are requested noi to subscribe to or read
these sheets.
President Livingston introduced a re¬
solution requesting the legislature resolu¬ to ac¬
cept the soldiers’ home, but the
tion was defeated. A large number of
delegates were dissatisfied with the fate
of the resolution. The following resolu¬
tion wa 8 also introduced:
Resolved, That our members of con¬
gress are instructed to vote for no man
for speaker of the national house of re¬
presentatives who is not in full accord
with our principles and who does not
stand squarely on the Ocala platform.
On motion it was indefinitely postpon
ed.
Mr. S. F. Duncan, delegate from the
South Carolina alliance, was introduced
to the alliance. He asked that a com¬
mittee from the Georgia alliance be ap¬
pointed to meet the committees from
other cotton growing states in a cotton
growers’ convention, to meet in’ Atlanta
September the 15th, this year.
Felix Corput, chairman of the execu¬
tive committee, then presented his A. re¬ F.
port signed by J. J. Stephens,
Pope, A. W. Ivey and J. W. Taylor,
members of the committee. The report
states that during the bad past fiscal year
sixty-one sub-alliances been organ¬
ized, making a total of 2,271 in the
state. "We find,” says the report, "the
books of your secretary neatly and cor¬
rectly kept. Your present secretary will
not be a candidate for re-election. He
demands the his appointment of an expert he to
investigate books, so that may
have undoubted credit for returning the
trust placed in his hands as clean as
when he assumed charge of the tame.
Your committee concur in this demand,
and suggest that the expense attending
this expert examination be divided be¬
tween Secretary Burks and the state
alliance.” amendment. The report was adopted with¬
out any
Dr. Gibson then introduced the following
resolution: Resolved, That arrangements
now being made looking to the presenta¬
tion of charges against President L. F.
Livingston, and that the election of pres¬
ident be postponed until after such
charges be presented and investigated.
This resolution was also indefinitely
postponed. following committee
The special to
give information to the press was ap¬
pointed: Dr. J. W. Taylor, chairman;
J. II. Wooldridge, Chattahoochee; Rev.
H. R. Davies, Habersham; L. J. Newton,
Butts; M. C. Davis, Newton.
And the following standing commit
tee:
Committee on Good of the Order—Dr.
M. A. Baldwin, W. W. Webb, R.
Asbury, C. T. Zachry, J. J. Barrett,
Grievance Committee—W. E. A. Sear¬
cy, M. L. Everett, W. H. Warner, C. F.
Barry, J. L. Johnson.
trict A resolution ex-officio was adopted making dis¬ the
lecturers members of
state alliance convention. A committee
was old appointed on alliance literature.
The committee on cotton bagging
was re-appointed. Committees on cotton
acreage for 1892 and the insurance of
live stock resolution were appointed. adopted providing
A was
congressional for the appointment district and of one from each the
two from
state at large to attend the national labor
conference at Cincinnati next February.
A large number of other resolutions of
minor referred importance were committees. introduced Just and
the to appropriate arrived
before hour of adjournment
the following resolution was introduced
with Congressman Everett in the chair:
. Resolved, That wo hereby nssert our
utmost confidence in President Living
Btou’s uprightness and integrity. with
The reso ution was endorsed only
one dissenting vote, Mr. Gibson, of Ogle¬
thorpe being the sole opponent to tho res¬
olution. The Thursday. convention then adjourn¬
ed to meet
second Day.— The convention met at
ercises 9 o’clock Thursday morning and the The cx
were of Wednesday’s opened with paryer. read
minutes session were
and approved with one correction. In
the list of newspapers boycotted Dahlonega by the
resolution Wednesday, the
Signal was mentioned. Tho minutes
W cre corrected, and it was made Dahlon
,.g a jyr M gget, instead. President Livings
ton thea made a few remarks concerning
the order and urging the importance of
harmony in the convention. Colonel L.
L p ()lki president of the Nationl Farm
ers’ Alliance, was called to tho stage and
introduced to the convention. He was
tremendously cheered. Senator O. H.
Ellington rose to a question of personal in the
privi ego, regarding a statement in in
Atlanta Constitution placing him a
wrong position. lie made a vigorours
speech condemning the Constitution's
course.
Tho election of officers was then gone
into.
President Livingston retired and Vice
President Everett took the chair. Colo¬
nel Livingston was then placed elected, in the nom¬
ination and unanimously sec
retary casting the vote of the convention.
W. A. Wilson of Sumpter county was un¬
animously elected Vice President A. W.
Ivey, of Thomis, Secretary and Wm. A.
Broughton, treasurer. For the office of
state lecturer the present incumbent, W.
8 . Copeland, was re-elected. Other offi¬
cers elected were: For assistant lecturer
J. L. Gilmer; chaplain, Rev. H. R. Da¬
vies, of Habersham; D. W. Rainey,
doorkeeper; F. M. Wnddell, a^sist-mt
doorkeeper; A. G. Daniel,sergent-at-arms;
Felix C«>rput, W. R. Gorman and A. F.
1 ’cpe were elected members of the execu¬
tive committee. Messrs. Corput and
Pope are old members. Mr. Gorman
was chosen to fill the vacancy earned by
Mr. Ivey following going out. resolution intro¬
The was
duced and unanimously adopted: Re¬
solved, Th«t the convention of the Geor¬
gia State Alliance do hereby request Sen¬
ator elect John B. Gordon, of Georgia, to
define his position in reference to the
Ocala platform, and do so before this
convention adjourns. appoint¬
A resolution providing for the look af¬
ment of a committee erf seven to
ter the put-chare of the stite organ was
introduced. It was amended so as to
have one committeeman fot each con¬
gressional district, and was adopted. the Ten¬
A telegram was received from
nessee Union sending greetings and best
wishes. Return greetings were ordered
to be sent A similar message was re¬
ceived from the Virginia State Alliance,
and an answer ordered sent.
Afternoon SEsstoN.—At the after¬
noon session President Polk addressed
the allianoe for three-quarters of an hour.
The general line of his speech was much
the same as in there he has recently de¬
livered in public at alliance rallies. Hon.
Ed Brown, the well-known mayor of
Athens, was called for, and made a short
speech that was well received. The fol¬
lowing resolution wre adopted:
Resolved, That the Georgia State Al¬
liance has abiding confidence in our na¬
tional officers, President Polk, Dr. Ma
cune. J. H. Turner and others, and most
sincerely thanks President Polk for h’s
able, manly aud timely speech on this
occasion.
Resolutions of congratulation introduced to Mrs. and
Livingston were then
adopted. Also a resolution of thanks to
Hon. W. A. Broughton, of Morgan,
county,for light'the his promptness in bringing to
defalcation of J. O. Wynn,
state exchange business agent.
A resolution was adopted condemning
the course of President Hall, of the Mis¬
souri State Alliance. A resolution pro¬
viding for the appointment of a cam¬
paign committee to raise a campaign
fund was passed. Also, a resolution to
encourage the organization of citizens’
alliances.
Bv the adoption of a resolution, the
Alliance Monthly was included in the list
of papers that were censured or boycotted
as being antagonistic to the order. A
resolution was adopted asking the legis¬
lature to repeal the law giving $25,000
annually for a state military encamp¬
ment, and that the same fund. be apportioned
to the widow’s pension
At the last session of the agricultural
society a resolution was adopted asking
the state alliance to appoint a committee
at act with a like committee from the
agricultural society in regard to the
world’s fair. President Livingston an¬
nounced the following as such committee
from the state alliance: Messrs. Elling¬
ton, Ledbetter, Dr. Stone, Garrison,
Farrow, Zachry and Wilson, A resolu¬
tion providing for the appointment of a
committee of one from each congression¬
al district to nominate delegates to rep¬
resent the state alliance at the meeting of
the supreme council of the Alliance and
Industrial Union in Indianapolis, Novem¬
ber next was adopted. for
The committee on cotton acreage
1892 mnde their report as follows:
"As the price of cotton now is less
than the cost convention of production, of we recom¬
mend that a cotton grow¬
ers be held in Atlanta on the first
Wednesday in October, looking to the
reduction of the cotton acreage, invita¬
tions to be extended to all alliancemen,
agricultural societies, unions and indi
viduals to meet with us, and that the
secretary of this alliance tend a copy of
alliance!” this report to the secretaries of each state
growere* The report convention was adopted, will and
the cotton ° be
National Secretary J. H. Turner read a
very eucouragiog contemn ication from
the national alliance showing the re¬
markable growth of the alliance, as
evidenced in the state of Ohio, Oregot,
Iowa, New Y< rk and Wisconsin. These
states have boen organized since the last
session of the supreme council, and
Washington, Idaho, and Delaware will
be organized before the next session.
Wisconsin had resolved to come into the
pntlonal alliance, If nil these states
come in, thirty-eight states will be
represented at the next session of the
national alliance meeting. A net gain
of over one hundred thousand has been
made in the membership of the alliance
during the past year. The following
resolution mission regarding adopted: the railroad com¬
was
Resolved. That we ask the legislature
to p*ss a bill making the railroad com¬
mission elective, and to increase the
number of said commissioners from three
to five, three of the five commissioners to
belong to the agricultural class.
The executive committee reported that
they had organized, and had elected Fe¬
lix Corput chairman and Dr. J. W. Tay¬
lor secretary. The salaries of the officers
of the state alliance were fixed as follow’s:
President, $1,000; secretary, $1,500;
treasurer, $ 200 ; chairman executive com¬
mittee, $400; state lecturer, $3 per day.
A resolution was adopted providing for
the depositing of $5,000 of the funds of
the alliance in bank, said bank to give
bond for safe keeping of the money. The
treasurer’s bond was fixed at $ 10 , 000 ,
peoretarv’s at. &K non
A telegram was received during the
morning session from the Arkansas State
Alliance, stating that the Ocala platform
had been endorsed in their State conven¬
tion by a vote of 09 to 1. President
Livingston said he wanted to know how
the convention stood on the Ocala plat¬
form so that the Arkansas alliance might
be telegraphed. When be asked all who
were in favor of its demands to rise,
everybody in the house arose, de’egatcs
and visitors. President Polk said that
the man in Arkansas was the only alli
anceman in thirteen States who was not
squarely on the Ocala platform. At 6
o’clock the convention took a recess until
8 o’clock.
NIGHT SESSION—SECOND DAY.
Immediately after calling the night
session to order President Livingston an¬
nounced the following as delegates to the
national alliance convention to be held
in Indianapolis District—W. in November R. Kemp. next:
First
Second District—Dr. M. A. Baldwin,
Third District—Dr. Buchanan.
Fourth District—W. R. Gorman.
Fifth District—W. L. Peek.
Sixth District—J. Tyer. Smith.
Seventh District—A. P.
Eighth District—George U. Murrell.
Ninth D strict—A. J. Monday.
Tenth District—M. I. Branch.
The secretary was directed to make
and transmit to the clerk of the house
copies of ail resolutions passed in the
convention.
A resolution asking the legislature to
memorialize congress to make the Ocala
platform into statutory law was unani¬
mously adopted. Tho resolution adopted
at Macon asking the legislature to make
operative paragraph 4, section 2, article
4 of the constitution, was adopted by the ad¬
convention. The convention then
journed to meet at 9 o’clock Friday
morning.
TRAIN ROBBERS
Hold up an Express Train on the
Georgia Central.
A train robbery as bold and successful
as any ever planned by Rube Burrows
took place in the very heart of Georgia
Thursday night at 7:40 o’clock. The
express car attached to the Regular pas
seger train, No. 13, on the Central rail¬
road, was held up by three masked men,
and a large amount of money was taken
from the safe. Just how much money
was stolen is a matter of conjecture. The
officials are positive that not more than
four thousand dollars was in the safe at
the time the men rifled it; although it
was reported that $5,000 was taken, nnd
later $ 10,000 was said to be the loss.
Until the express officers can go through
their lists carefully and check ud the va¬
rious amounts, it will be impossible to
say exactly how much money the robbers
made way with. The train was in charge
of Conductor Read, and Express Mes¬
senger J. T. Bynes had charge of the ex¬
press car.
The train left Macon, Ga., bound for
Atlanta, on time. A negro womm got
on there and told the conductor she
wished to go to Collier’s. Collier's is a
small way stat'on some thirty-five miles
from Macon. The passenger train does
not usually stop there unless some one
wants to get off. The train slacked up
at Collier’s and the woman got off.
THREE MASKED MEN.
Engineer Smith saw three men stand¬
ing near the platform, but thought noth¬
ing of this, and opened the throttle nnd
pulled board the out. lie observed these three men
train, entering; the door of the
express car. After the train had gone
about half a mile the bell cord was
pulled vigorously by one of the robbers,
and the engineer put on the air brakes us
quickly as possible.
The hichwnymen, at the point of pis¬
tols,, had forced the express messenger to
unlock the safe and give up the express
company’s money. When the train
stopped they jump- d off and made their
escape.
_
•fumbled Into the Sea.
A dispatch . . of . Tuesday, m from San Fran „
cisco, says: A train consisting of an engine
™‘way » n .f twenty-two “ Men ^ oc cars J n ° on ounty the Greenwood jumped
track on a bluff fifty feet high and
disappeared in the Pacific ocean. The
crew escaped by jumping. Tho cars
bei “ g
completely swallowed up.
A Rare Genius.
Jinks—“That man does not look very
smart, and yet you say ho has made a
million.”
Winks—"Smart? He’s a genius. He’s
a great inventor.”
"You don’t say so? What did he in¬
vent?” that
"He invented an apple barrel
won’t hold scarcely anything at all.”
Children Enjoy
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and sooth¬
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a laxative and If the father or mother be cos¬
tive or billons tho most gratifying results
follow its nse, so that it is tho beat family
remedy known and every family should have
a bottle.
A money-made man Is usually as cold and!
hard as the coin that made him.
Ladies needing a tonic, or children who
want building up, should take Brown s Iron
indigestion. Bitters. It iB pleasant to take, cures Malaria,,
Biliousness and Liver Complaints,,
makes the Blood rich and pure.
Do good deeds to-day and evil deeds to¬
morrow.
Van Winkle Gin and Machinery Co„ Atlan
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