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North Carolina State Library
bRTH CAROLINA
N.C
Doc.
RALEIGH , OCTOBER 12-16
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
State Library of North Carolina
http://www.archive.org/details/northcarolinasta37nort
North Carolina State Fair
A DIVISION OF THE
State Department of Agriculture
RALEIGH
OCTOBER 12 TO 16, 1937
W. KERR SCOTT Commissioner of Agriculture
D. S. COLTRANE Assistant to Commissioner
Board of Agriculture
MRS. L. L. STEVENS.___ .Indiantown M. L. ADERHOLT Lexington
C. S. YOUNG ..Shelby CHAS. F. CATES .....Mebane
D. R. NOLAND Clyde W. G. HARGETT ...Richlands
T. G. CURRIN Oxford LIONEL WEIL Goldsboro
J. H. POOLE West End W. I. BISSETT Grifton
STATE FAIR COMMITTEE
Mrs. L. L. Stevens W. I. Bissett C. S. Young
DIRECTOR OF PUBLICITY
Louis H. Wilson
DR. J. S. DORTON Manager
CHAS. W. MANGUM Asst. Manager
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
Governors Office
RALEIGH
Clyde R. Hoey
Governor
A MESSAGE TO ALL NORTH
CAROLINIANS
Greetings :
Never before has the North Carolina State Fair
been as important to the development of our State as
it is today. The new Fair can, and I believe will, play
a most important part in our effort not only to adver-tise
North Carolina to the world, but also to make it a
better and a happier place in which to live and work
and play.
To accomplish our purposes we must have better
crops and better prices for them; more industrial em-ployment
and greater returns for industrial employees
and employers alike; and a greater development and
use of our incomparable recreational facilities. No
agency can play a more important part in this general
development, and in the program of "selling" North
Carolina to both itself and to the world, than our State
Fair.
I wish for the 1937 State Fair every possible suc-cess,
and as Governor of our State, I call upon all North
Carolinians to cooperate in the effort to make it the
most successful fair in our history.
UJ. KERX SCOTT
Gomjrjssioner cfAgriculture sranLEv imnBORXiE
Utilities @oifimjssione>r'
Department Directors
F. E. MILLER, General Director of Exhibits,
State Department of Agriculture, Raleigh, North Carolina
Department Page
FIELD CROPS AND FARM EXHIBITS A 31
J. W. Hendricks—R. J. Harris, Directors.
HORTICULTURE PRODUCTS B 49
Dr. Chas. Dearing—H. R. Niswonger—Robert Schmitt, Directors.
BEEF CATTLE AND SHEEP C 69
J. E. Foster—L. I. Case, Directors.
LIVESTOCK DEPARTMENTS:
Dr. Wm. Moore—J. A. Arey, Directors.
DAIRY CATTLE ,- D 78
Dr. C. D. Grinnells—A. C. Kimmery, Directors.
SWINE E 84
H. W. Taylor, Director.
POULTRY F 89
C. F. Parrish—T. T. Brown, Directors.
WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT G 98
Miss Ruth Current, Director.
Mrs. H. H. Roacb—Mrs. G. R. Woodall
—
Mrs. L. I. Case, Associate Directors.
BOYS AND GIRLS 4-H CLUB H 111
L. R. Harrill, Director.
Miss Francis MacGregor, Associate Director.
BEES AND HONEY I 128
C. H. Brannon, Director.
C. L. Sams—P. G. Craddock, Associate Directors.
VOCATIONAL EDUCATION J 130
Roy H. Thomas, Director.
Miss Katherine T. Dennis—George W. Coggin, Associate Directors.
HORSES AND MULES K 132
Earl Hostetler, Director.
EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT L 134
Clyde A. Erwin, Director.
A. B. Combs—Jule B. Warren—E. N. Peeler, Superintendents.
Jno. C. Lockhart—C. F. Gaddy—Horace Grigg, Associate Directors.
FINE ARTS—ARTS AND CRAFTS M 136
Miss Katherine Morris, Director.
Miss Francis Barbour—James McLean, Associate Directors.
FARM MACHINERY AND TRACTORS N 138
David S. Weaver, Director.
FEDERAL DEPARTMENT EXHIBITS ....
R. W. Shoffner—Robt. M. Gantt, Directors.
5
m.L. QDEKHOLDT
110HEL U3E1L
BOdRD OF
QGRICULTURI
commissionERs
T. 6. CURRin.
CHQRLES F. CCITES
W. I. B1SSETT
C. S. VOUT1G
OF aGRI CULTURE
VD KEH.K. SCOTT
6
State Departments and Institutions Exhibits
NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
W. KERR SCOTT, Commissioner
STATE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION
CLYDE A. ERWIN, Superintendent
NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION
AND DEVELOPMENT
R. BRUCE ETHERIDGE, Director
NORTH CAROLINA STATE HOSPITAL
DR. JULIAN W. ASHBY, Superintendent
NORTH CAROLINA STATE HIGHWAY AND PUBLIC
WORKS COMMISSION
FRANK L. DUNLAP, Chairman
NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
AND ENGINEERING
STUDENTS' AGRICULTURAL FAIR
DEAN I. 0. SCHAUB, Director
NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE FORESTRY
EXTENSION
R. W. GRAEBER, Superintendent
WPTF RADIO STATION
RICHARD MASON, Director
NORTH CAROLINA STATE HEALTH DEPARTMENT
DR. C. V. REYNOLDS, State Health Officer
NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
MAJOR A. L. FLETCHER, Commissioner
BOY SCOUTS
CLAUDE HUMPHREYS, Scout Executive
LIBERTY LIMESTONE
CORPORATION
ROCKY POINT, VIRGINIA
Manufacturers of
HIGH GRADE LIME
Magnesium Agricultural Lime
(Dolomitic)
54% CaCo3 43% MgCo3
CaCo3 Equivalent 105.2%
and
Murat Lime Carbonate
96% CaCo3 1.5% MgCo3
SEND US YOUR INQUIRIES
1937 NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR
With the issuance of this booklet a cordial invitation goes
forth to all North Carolinians to visit and exhibit at their new
North Carolina State Fair.
Ambitious farmers, industrious housewives, capable and pro-gressive
breeders of fine livestock and poultry, energetic and
enthusiastic 4-H Club members, Vocational students, aggressive
Industrialists, and all others who wish to lead and excell in their
field of endeavor will grasp the opportunities offered here to dis-play
and demonstrate their superlatives.
From cover to cover, in every division, the Premium List for
1937 bears convincing testimony to the fact that this State Fair
is pledged to the aid and advancement of those interests to which
our great State owes so much—Agriculture, Industry, Educa-tion.
This State Fair, owned and operated by the State of North
Carolina as a division of the Department of Agriculture, is
worthy of the support of every North Carolinian who cherishes
the ambition to have all of her State Institutions rank with the
best in the Nation.
With these idealistic principles in mind, the Management
solicits your interest and cooperation.
J. S. DORTON, Manager,
North Carolina State Fair.
THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR
Will Present to Their Guests
The finest array of Grandstand and Race Track Attractions that
it is possible to secure. Time, effort, thought, research, and
money have been no object. All have been spent freely with
the one ambition that you might be wholesomely enter-tained.
Our Revue will be one of outstanding genius ivith the most bril-liant
ensemble ever to be presented an audience in North
Carolina, with a cast of performers unequalled on any stage
in America. Featuring one of the finest Concert Bands on
tour, playing current and classics; light opera and sym-phony.
On the Race Track: Tuesday, October 12; Thursday, October
14; and Friday, October 15, Harness Horse Racing. Some
of the finest trotters and pacers from many famous stables
throughout the United States and Canada will be seen in
action at the State Fair. Many famous horses with their
equally famous owners will be present to contest for the
liberal purses offered in the "Sport of Kings."
Fireworks: Each evening your State Fair presents the most
original fireworks display ever witnessed in the South.
Three complete displays, under supervision of three pyro-technic
experts firing in unison the two lateral displays
firing into the center display. This in turn accentuating the
two in height, color and noise. A veritable three ring circus
in Fireworks, under the personal direction of Mr. A. Tony
Vitale, President, Ohio Display Fireworks Company, New
Castle, Pa.
SPECIAL EVENTS
WEDNESDAY ONLY—OCTOBER 13
"Lucky" Teter and His Hell Drivers
Legion of the World's Greatest Daredevils
We do not think it good business to repeat any attraction,
but the public has been so lavish in their praise of "Lucky" Teter
and his Hell Drivers that we have made an exception in this
Great Attraction.
"Lucky" is not a daredevil, but a precision driver. One whose
business it is to be "Perfectly" Reckless. His driving is Per-fection.
His timing of all of his stunts is to a split second. See
him do his whirl-wind spiral roll-over, the "Head-on Crash"
(drivers remaining in cars), automobile doing a Truck Leap,
"The Race of Flaming Death," leaping a car off a ramp through
space, into and through a solid wall of fire. "Lucky" driving
his car in Reverse Spins, Triple Ski Jumps, Truck Jumps, and
dozens of other spine tingling and thrill-giving performances.
CALF SCRAMBLE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15th—OPEN TO 4-H CLUB MEMBERS
ONLY
Five calves are turned loose in enclosed track in front of
grandstand. Ten 4-H Club boys are given halters. One calf has
a tattoo mark in ear, known only to the referee.
Object: At the signal from referee each boy tries
to catch and halter calf and lead same from
the arena.
10
Rules: Only one boy must have hold of calf at any
time. Should calf get loose, he is then open to
any boy who can catch him. Boys must not
assist each other.
The boy catching calf with tattoo mark in ear and leading
same out of arena, receives ten dollars ($10.00) in gold as prize.
AUTO RACE DAY
SATURDAY ONLY—OCTOBER 16th, 1:00 P. M.
Professional Automobile Races. (A.A.A. sanction.) Per-sonal
direction of that dean of all A.A.A. Race Promoters, Ralph
A. Hankinson, bringing together for these races some of the
foremost dirt track drivers of America.
Carolina
Hardware Co
Wholesale and Retail
RALEIGH, N. C.
233-35 SOUTH WILMINGTON STREET
TELEPHONES 233 AND 2506
li
THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR
PROGRAM
Tuesday, October 12, 1937
WAKE COUNTY SCHOOL DAY—All school children admitted
on School Ticket Free this day.
Gates Open at 8 A. M.
Judging begins in all Departments.
Exhibit Buildings open at 10 A. M.
Grandstand opens at 12 :30 P. M.
Horse Races begin at 2 P.M. : 2 :19 Trot
2:16 Pace
Free Attractions at 2:15 P. M.
EVENING
Grandstand opens at 6:30 P. M.
Spectacular Revue and Grandstand Show begins at 7 : 30 P. M.
Fireworks Display at 9 :30 P. M.
The Great World of Mirth Shows of 22 Rides and 20 Shows on
the Midway.
Wednesday Only, October 13th
"LUCKY" TETER AND HIS HELL DRIVERS.—Legion of the
World's Greatest Daredevils.
"Lucky" is not a daredevil, but a precision driver. One whose
business it is to be "Perfectly" Reckless. His driving is
Perfection. His timing of all of his stunts is to a split
second. See him do his whirl-wind spiral roll-over, the
"Head-on Crash" (drivers remaining in cars), Automobile
doing a Truck Leap, "The Race of Flaming Death," leaping
a car off a ramp through space, into and through a solid wall
of fire. "Lucky" driving his car in Reverse Spin, Triple
Ski Jumps, Truck Jumps, and dozens of other spine-tingling
and thrill-giving performances.
EVENING
Grandstand opens at 6:30 P. M.
Spectacular Revue and Grandstand Show at 7 :30 P. M.—Includ-ing
many outstanding Feature Attractions.
Fireworks Display at 9 : 30 P. M.
The Greatest Midway in America. The Great World of Mirth
Shows—22 Rides—20 Shows.
12
Thursday, October 14th
Gates open at 8 A. M.
Vocational Judging Contests at 10 A. M. (Open to all Vocational
Schools.)
Grandstand opens at 12 :30 P. M.
Horse Races begin at 2:00 P. M. : Free-For-All Pace
2:15 Trot
Free Attractions at 2:15 P. M.
EVENING
Grandstand opens for Evening Show at 6:30 P. M. Presenting
the Revue in an Entire Change of Program and Costumes.
Fireworks Display at 9 :30 P. M.
Then to the Beautiful World of Mirth Midway.
Friday, October 15th
YOUNG NORTH CAROLINIANS' DAY—All School Children
in North Carolina admitted FREE. 900,000 Free Tickets
will be issued through School Superintendents. Special
Children's Program and Fireworks Display at Grandstand
Free at 10 A. M.
Gates open at 8 A. M.
Grandstand opens at 12 :30 P. M.
Horse Races begin at 2:00 P. M. Free-For-All Trot
2:20 Pace
CALF SCRAMBLE—Open to School Boys 16 years and under.
EVENING
Grandstand opens at 6 : 30 P. M.
Revue and Grandstand Show follows.
Fireworks Display at 9 :30 P. M.
MIDWAY GOODNIGHT.
Saturday, October 16th
A. A. A. AUTO RACE DAY.
Gates open at 8 :00 A. M.
Grandstand opens at 12:30 P. M.
Time Trials begin at 12 :30 P. M.
Races start at 2 :00 P. M. sharp.
Some of the fastest dirt-track drivers in America will be seen in
action. These races are A. A. A. sanctioned, and are under
the supervision of Ralph A. Hankinson, Inc.
EVENING
Grandstand opens at 6:30 P. M.
Revue and Grandstand Show follows.
Fireworks Display at 9:30 P. M.
MIDWAY UNTIL MIDNIGHT .... GOODBYE.
13
DIZE AWNING AND TENT
COMPANY
Dize quality awnings look better,
last longer.
Manufacturers, tents, tarpaulins,
furniture pads, Venetian blinds.
Rentals of all styles and size tents
for special occasions, fair ex-hibit
purposes.
Largest manufacturers of canvas
products in the South.
If it is made of canvas, we have it.
DIZE AWNING AND TENT
COMPANY
1512 S. Main Street
WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
14
General Information
It is anticipated that the attendance at the North Carolina State Fair
this year will approximate a quarter of a million people. To serve this
vast throng, it is necessary to have on the Fair Grounds, comprising over
two hundred acres, a modern city, fully equipped, to make Fair visitors
more comfortable.
PUBLIC SERVICES
The Southern Bell Telephone Company will maintain complete service,
and toll pay stations at convenient points.
The Western Union and Postal Telegraph Companies will maintain
offices and complete service on the grounds.
INFORMATION BUREAU
An Information Bureau is maintained at the main office, where infor-mation
will be given, cheerfully and reliably. We will be happy to have
you use this service.
ADMISSION TO GROUNDS
The general admission is 50 cents for adults. Children under 12
years of age 25 cents, with the exception of School Day, Friday,
October 15th, when all school children in North Carolina are admitted
free on special tickets they will secure from their respective School Super-intendents.
Over 900,000 free school tickets will be given to all children
in school in North Carolina, and a special invitation extended to visit their
State Fair.
PRESS BUREAU
A Press Bureau and News Headquarters will be located in the main
office building, with an experienced newspaper man in charge. All news-paper
men and representatives of all publications are cordially invited to
make this office their headquarters. It will be a pleasure to furnish
authentic information of news value to all newspaper men, and to render
any service and courtesies possible.
OPENING AND CLOSING
The North Carolina State Fair will be formally opened, Tuesday,
October 12th, at 8:00 A.M. and will close ^Saturday, October 16th, at
11:30 P.M.
FIRST AID STATIONS, EMERGENCY HOSPITAL AND LADIES
REST ROOM
All of these services are conveniently located on the grounds, with
competent attendants in charge at all times.
TRANSPORTATION ~7
All car load shipments by freight, for exhibition purposes, should be
billed as follows: For exhibit, North Carolina State Fair, Camp Polk,
15
*BUILD
* PLANT
* MODERNIZE
ORDER FROM
THIS LIST
Lawn Seed
Garden Seed
Farm Seed
Fertilizers
Cole Planters and
Distributors
Plows, Planters
Distributors
Plow Castings
Wagons, Harness,
Sprayers
Spray Materials
Tools of every kind for every Rubberold
etc.
purpose
Leigh Old Dominion Cement
U. S. Gypsum Plaster Board
Metal Laths
Plaster and Plaster Material
Roofings
Galvanized 6-V
Composition Slate
Surface
Wood Shingles
Nails
Staples
Wire Fencing, Fence Posts,
Sewer Pipe, Drain Tile, Flue
Linings, Wall Coping.
Heavy Groceries and Animal
Feeds.
Quick Deliveries.
THE W. A. MYATT COMPANY, INC.
Cor. Blount and Martin Phones 83-84 Raleigh, N. C.
HEALTHY HOGS
Iflake Rapid(jainA. inJVeu/ht!
FeedWATCH DOG
LYE
A
3\i
"-*\'
Feeding
Directions For
Thoroughly
dissolve a tab eP
Water and mix wei HALp
hogs or thoroughly * barrel
aTd
n
Sti"eutn^eed night and
of feed. Stir weii
thorough-ly
dissolve HALl
. ! f drinking
ss.
LV4c:ts-—
*
Hogs eat better when a little
WATCH DOG LYE is mixed
with their feed—and you know it takes
appetite tomake meat and fat.WATCH
DOG LYE also tends to reduce acidity
of feed—helps build up resistance of
hogs to certain diseases and helps tone
them up. Thin, scrawny, sickly hogs
usually improve quickly when fed
WATCH DOG LYE—even healthy
hogs do better. Costs little to feed—1 20
feeds in every can—pays for itself
many times over.
For years hog raisers have been feeding
WATCH DOG LYE—they know what
it will do. Profit by their experience
—feed your hogs WATCH DOG LYE.
Sold by Grocers, Druggists, Feed Dealers
E. MYERS LYE CO.
Established 1888 St Louis, Mo.
WATCH DOG LYE
N. C. Care S. A. L. Railway. Exhibits so billed, will be delivered to
grounds without extra switching charges.
The Tariff Rules, governing the shipment of articles for exhibition at
Expositions and Fairs, provide for a free return of such exhibits when
accompanied by a certificate from the Secretary of the Fair, certifying
that such shipment was on exhibition and the ownership of the same was
not changed. Intending exhibitors should consult their local agent for
particulars governing Fair shipments, as some kinds of exhibits are not
returned free, and other conditions enter in if shipment is not returned
direct. If your agent is unable to give you full particulars, write the
Secretary of the State Fair.
Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards
GENERAL.
1. The Management of the State Fair reserves the right to rule on all
questions not covered by these rules.
2. In the event of conflict between the general rules and the special
rules governing the various departments, the special rules will take preced-ence.
3. Disregard of any rule or misrepresentation by exhibitor or conces-sionaire
forfeits all premiums, rights and privileges, without recourse.
4. The management will use diligence to insure the safety of live-stock
and articles entered for exhibition or display after their arrival
on the grounds, but under no circumstances will it be responsible
for loss, injury, theft, or damage by fire, lightning, wind, or any
other agency, to such livestock or article on exhibition or display.
5. Exhibitors must place all exhibits under the direction of the Superin-tendent
in charge, and in no case can they be removed until the close of the
Fair.
6. Promiscuous advertising is strictly prohibited. Exhibitors may ad-vertise
and distribute from their places of exhibit only. The distribution
of advertising matter that conflicts in any manner with a concession sold
by the management is prohibited.
7. No peddling, hawking or selling of any kind will be allowed in the
buildings or on the grounds, except by Special Licenses obtained from the
Secretary.
8. Drunkenness, quarreling or the use of profane or obscene language
will not be allowed on the ground.
9. The Fair will use every possible means to protect property,
BUT WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR CARS OR ARTICLES LEFT IN
CARS.
10. No begging will be allowed on the grounds.
11. No article or animal will be entitled to space until proper entry has
been made. After an article has been entered for a premium, it cannot
17
Drink
For
YOUR
Stomach's Sake
SEVEN-UP BOTTLING COMPANY
PHONE 5085 520 Fayetteville St.
18
RALEIGH, N. C.
be removed until Saturday, October 16th, at 4:00 P.M., without permission
from the Secretary or the Director in charge of the department; and if
any person removes an article without such permission, he forfeits all
claims to premiums, even if same shall have been awarded.
12. No booth will be entered until it is completed, or vouched for by the
Director of the Department.
13. Each department will be under the special charge of its Director.
They will oversee the arrangements of all articles offered for exhibition in
their departments and have control of space assigned to them. They will
receive all exhibits, take personal charge of them and deliver the articles
on presentation of check at the close of the Fair.
14. All judges will be instructed to disqualify articles entered under
wrong classes.
ENTRIES
1. Competition in All Departments is limited to North Carolina.
2. Entries will be received at the office of the Secretary any time after
October 1.
Entries in the various departments close on the following dates:
Livestock, Saturday, October 9th.
Poultry, Wednesday, October 6th.
Flowers, Wednesday, October 13th, 1:00 P.M.
All other departments, Saturday, October 9th, 6:00 P.M.
In order to have the records ready for the judges, it is important that
entries in all departments be made at the time designated above.
3. Entries in all departments must be made on printed forms provided
by the Secretary for that purpose, and must be in full compliance with the
printed instructions on same. These forms are mailed with copies of the
Premium List. Exhibitors should study the list carefully, and when de-cision
has been made in which classes to enter, they should fill out the
entry blank with class number, premium list number, and name, as they
appear in the Premium Book.
Entries must be made at the office of the Secretary, in person or by mail.
Remember that articles must be entered before being sent in for exhibit.
No entry will be taken at the time of the Fair, unless there has been some
mistake in copying the original entry, in which case correction can be
made only in the office of the Secretary.
If records are altered and do not conform with the entries on file, pay-ment
of premiums will be withheld.
The right is reserved to reject any entry offered.
4. All entries must be made in the name of the bona fide owner. In
order that a permanent record be on file, it is essential that the name and
record number or record number and ear-tag number be given of all ani-mals
entered. Entries will not be accepted unless this information is
furnished at time of making entry. All animals in the Cattle, Swine and
Sheep classes over 6 months old, must be recorded and appear in the name
of the exhibitor on the records of their respective associations. In the
case of young animals the date of birth and name and record number of
sire and dam must be given.
19
International
Harvester
Farm Operating
Equipment
Tractors
Power Units
Threshers
Horse Drawn Machinery
International Motor Trucks
INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER
COMPANY, Inc.
224 So. Cedar St.
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
20
All livestock including cattle, swine and sheep must be owned by the
exhibitor not less than sixty days prior to the opening of the State Fair.
6. Misrepresentation as to breeding and irregularity in showing will be
exposed, and any premium won by such exhibitor will be withheld.
6. A firm, to be entitled to exhibit as such, must have been organized
for a time not less than thirty days preceding the closing of entries,
and such firm must be organized as a bona fide firm for the purpose of
producing or buying and selling the animals or articles they propose to
exhibit in the name of such firm. A firm will be regarded as one exhibitor.
7. Incomplete entries will be returned for correction if there is time to
do so. Exhibitors are urged to enter early and to use great care in filling
out entry blanks, being particular to give all the information requested on
the blanks, in clear terms, easily understood. This will save work and
annoyance for both exhibitors and management.
8. All exhibits must be in place by 10 o'clock a.m. Tuesday, October
12th. Grounds will be open to receive exhibits one week before the Fair
opens.
9. Collections and displays must be made up of specimens other than
those entered in single classes, unless otherwise provided for.
10. All livestock on exhibition must be cared for by the exhibitor. All
stalls and pens will be well bedded before the Fair, free of charge. There-after
exhibitors will be required to furnish their own bedding. Feed and
straw will be on sale on the grounds at reasonable prices.
11. All articles and livestock must be delivered to the grounds. No
charge for transportation, express, freight, or drayage will be paid by the
Fair.
EXHIBITS
1. The same article cannot compete for two or more premium numbers,
except sweepstakes, or when otherwise stated in the head notes in the de-partment
in which it is exhibited.
2. All entries must be numbered and recorded in the books of the
proper department and class, and corresponding tags will be issued, which
must be attached to exhibit before such can be placed on exhibition.
3. No person will be allowed to see the entries or have access to the
entry book, until after the awards have been made.
4. Exhibitors must see to the delivery of any articles or livestock on
the grounds, and to the proper care of the latter, as no charges for trans-portation
or drayage will be paid by the Fair.
5. SPECIAL NOTICE—All exhibits must be in place and fully installed
by Monday, October 11th, 1937, to receive attention from the awarding
judges. Exhibitors can have the use of the halls and grounds for any
reasonable number of days before the opening day proper, for the ar-ranging
and placing of their exhibits, hence there is no good reason for
delay.
6. Exhibitors should make themselves acquainted with the Premium List
and Regulations, and be sure in what department and class their entries
belong.
21
MlGET A t|?I WITH A
CAMELf/
COSTLIER
TOBACCOS
22
7. The original entry card must in all cases be attached to the exhibit
except in the case of animals, when the card may be conspicuously dis-played
upon the stall or pen.
8. All exhibits sent by freight or express must be prepaid, and all plainly
marked to "Secretary State Fajr, Raleigh, N. C." It must also have the
shipper's name and address on them and accompanied by bill of lading,
that they may be properly cared for.
9. All exhibitors expecting to enter booths are urged to report same
to Secretary, not later than September 25th, that proper space may be
reserved for same.
10. Entries made in wrong classes may be reclassed at the request of
judges, provided the reclassification is approved by the director of the
department.
11. Where there is only one entry in a class, it will receive second
premium, unless otherwise stated elsewhere.
PASSES
Passes are issued only to exhibitors who must be in constant attendance
on their exhibits. Or, as a courtesy for some service rendered the State
Fair for which we are unable to pay. To these we are grateful, and ask
that you confine the use of this pass to the person to whom it is issued.
PATRONS
Patrons are requested to report any discourtesies from any gateman or
employee, also to make any constructive criticisms or offer helpful sug-gestions
toward bettering any part or department of this—Your State
Fair. If for any reason, there is a misunderstanding about admissions at
gates, on passes or otherwise, please pay the gateman the regular ad-mission
asked, take a receipt for same, and come direct to the Secretary's
office. This will save you time, and avoid unnecessary blocking of traffic
at the gates, which is always heavy. Remember that the men on the gates
are working on strict orders from the office, and are not allowed to vary
from them.
INSTRUCTIONS TO DEPARTMENT DIRECTORS
1. No director of any department will be permitted to employ help with-out
written permission from the Management. An order for all supplies
must be obtained from the Management. All bills must be obtained at
time of delivery by department head and O K'd by them.
2. Directors will receive all property entered for exhibition and see that
tags are securely attached, and arrange such property in a suitable and
attractive manner.
3. They will also see that property is not removed before appointed
time, and that the checks are detached from property when removed, as
a means to prevent frauds and mistakes by such removals.
4. They will see that their departments are kept clean and orderly at
all times.
5. Directors are POSITIVELY forbidden to make suggestions or inter-fere
with the judges in any way whatsoever.
23
A BRIDGE TO OPPORTUNITIES
A BANKING CONNECTION AT THE FIRST-CITIZENS
BANK CAN BE OF DISTINCT VALUE TO
YOU.
A CHECKING or SAVINGS ACCOUNT will help
you build a Cash Reserve that will enable you to take
advantage of opportunities that arise.
An officer of this bank will be glad to explain to
you, at your convenience, the financial services that may
be useful to you or to your business.
FIRST-CITIZENS BANK & TRUST
COMPANY
SERVING EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA
SMITHFIELD
ANGIER
BURGAW
FRANKLINTON
LOUISBURG
HIGHLANDS
NEW
ACCOUNTS
INVITED
RALEIGH
BENSON
CLINTON
JACKSONVILLE
MOREHEAD CITY
ROSEBORO
FAYETTEVILLE
BEAUFORT
DUNN
KINSTON
NEW BERN
SPRING HOPE
COMMERCIAL
SAVINGS
TRUST
SAFE DEPOSIT
Complete Banking and Trust Facilities
24
6. Directors and others connected with the State Fair and their im-mediate
families are prohibited from exhibiting in their respective de-partments.
JUDGES
1. The Judges of Awards, when ready for duty, shall be furnished, by
the Secretary, with a list of all entries in their respective departments,
and books in which their awards are to be recorded.
2. Judges are especially instructed not to award premiums to any
animal or article, because of its presence. It must be individually worthy.
It is not the policy of this Fair to encourage indifferent production of any
kind, or to distribute premiums equally among exhibitors, and no prem-iums
should be awarded to any animal or article that does not possess high
intrinsic merit.
3. The Director in charge shall attend the Judges when making the
examinations in his respective department, and furnish them with any
desired information. Premiums will not be paid parties having exhibits
where it is proven that they accompanied the Judges when awarding the
premiums. As the awards are made, the Director will attach the ribbon
indicating the award.
4. Decisions of Judges will be considered as final and no appeal will be
considered except in cases of protest in writing, with strong evidence of
fraud or violation of the rules of the Fair, which may be filed with the
Management before the premiums have been presented.
5. Reports must be signed by each Judge in his own handwriting, but
Judges cannot award premiums to articles not in the regular Premium
List.
6. The exhibition of articles or animals not mentioned in the regular
Premium List is solicited. These will be properly judged and reported on
by the judges, and ribbons attached, but no money will be awarded.
7. With the permission of the director, judges may have wrong entries
reclassed.
8. Judges will award second premiums on all single exhibits, unless
otherwise stated.
FEES
1. All applications for stalls and pens must be noted on entry blanks
at time of filing. Exhibitors must indicate on the blank the number of
animals or birds they will exhibit. This request is important, that ample
provision may be made to properly house the exhibit.
2. Reservations will not be made unless accompanied by the required
fee. Assignments will be made by the Superintendent in charge.
3. The following fees will govern, and remittances covering same should
accompany entry:
Cattle, each animal (regardless of age) $1.00
Swine, pen 1.00
Sheep, pen 1.00
Poultry, single bird, special class .25
Poultry, trio, special class .75
Poultry, single bird, regular class .25
If more than one stall is used for any animal, an additional charge must
be paid.
25
"I CANNOT FARM WITHOUT
PROGRESSIVE FARMER"
THE GOLDEN RULE PRESS
WILLIAM H. JORDAN, Pres.-Mgr.
EFLAND, N. C.
Dr. Clarence Poe, President,
The Progressive Farmer,
Raleigh, N. C.
Dear Dr. Poe:
I have recently visited over 500 homes
in Central North Carolina, and find it still
true that "You can tell by a man's farm
whether he reads the Progressive Farmer
or not." I visited a home a few days ago
and saw a well-worn copy of the Bible and
a copy of the Progressive Farmer on the
center table. The farmer said, "I cannot
live without my Bible, and I cannot farm
without Progressive Farmer." I was not
surprised when a neighbor said, "This good
man has given over $2,000 for a new stone
church building in our section."
Fraternally,
WM. H. JORDAN.
"IN THE RURAL SOUTH, IT'S
PROGRESSIVE FARMER'yy
26
AWARDS
1. Awards will be made by single judge system.
2. No unworthy animal or exhibit will be awarded a premium.
3. Where there is no competition in any class or exhibit in any depart-ment,
only half premium will be awarded unless in the opinion of the
judges and superintendents the exhibit is sufficiently meritorious as to
justify the full award as provided for.
4. The following colors will be used to designate awards:
Champion Royal Purple
Reserve Champion Lavender
First Premium Blue
Second Premium Red
Third Premium White
Fourth Premium Pink
Fifth Premium Yellow
Sixth Premium Dark Green
Seventh Premium Light Green
Eighth Premium Tan
Ninth Premium Gray
Tenth Premium Light Blue
RELEASE
1. All livestock and poultry exhibits will be released at 4 o'clock p.m.,
Saturday, October 16th.
2. All general exhibits will be released after 8:00 p. m., Saturday, Octo-ber
16th.
3. All exhibits are under the direct supervision of the directors in
charge, and are on exhibition as a part of the Fair's attractions.
It is agreed by the exhibitors in making their entries that they will
comply with the rules of the State Fair. The directors must see that all
exhibits are in place until time for removal, as designated above.
PROTEST AND APPEALS
1. Protests must be made in writing and filed with the Secretary by
noon of day following award, accompanied by a protest fee of $5.00, which
will be retained by the North Carolina State Fair if protest is not sustained.
2. All protests will be considered at a time set by the Management of
the State Fair, and all parties interested will be notified.
3. The North Carolina State Fair has adopted the rules of the Inter-national
Association of Fairs and Expositions governing appeals.
SPECIAL HERDMAN'S PRIZE
These prizes will be awarded to the herdsmen who keep their animals
and that portion of the barn in which they are quartered in the best and
most attractive condition. Three judges will be selected to make these
awards.
In The Cattle Barn
First prize—$7.50 Second prize—$5.00
Di The Swine and Sheep Barn
First prize—$7.50 Second prize��$5.00
27
LIVESTOCK PARADE
A parade of prize winners in the different livestock classes will be held
in front of the grandstand, beginning at 2:00 P.M. Thursday, October 14,
1937.
The livestock directors will arrange with the exhibitors to have their
animals in readiness for this review. The animals will be led in a single
line past the grandstand, and as each animal passes in review, the name
of the owner, and the name of the animal and class award will be an-nounced
over the public address system.
VETERINARY SUPERVISION
Livestock Inspection
The Veterinary Division, State Department of Agriculture, will gladly
co-operate with all livestock exhibitors in giving information and advice
in regard to the requirements for entries at the State Fair.
Arrangements will also be made to assist exhibitors in preparing the
necessary certificates, in accordance with State and Federal regulations,
when shipping from the State Fair.
Owners desiring to exhibit livestock should read carefully the health
regulations appearing under the various livestock departments. These are
made for the protection of your livestock and they must be complied with.
A temporary office will be maintained in a booth near the Livestock
Buildings for the convenience of exhibitors.
Very respectfully,
Wl. MOORE, State Veterinarian.
I
SAFE!
Over 5,000,000 Passengers transported in over seven (7) years
without a single passenger fatality.
CONVENIENT!
No expense has been spared in arranging schedules to make
CAROLINA COACH service second to none.
ECONOMICAL!
Many fares as low as 1 J4 C per mile.
THE ONLY BUSES SERVING THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE
FAIR DIRECT TO THE GROUNDS
CAROLINA COACH COMPANY
28
ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER
Application for electric light and power must be made in writing, and
payment must be made when service is installed.
Where outside wiring is necessary, a fixed charge of $3.00 will be made
for each 50 feet or fraction thereof for making connection.
If located inside of building where wiring exists, any additional labor
or material must be paid for by the applicant.
No service will be given for less than minimum charge of $2.00.
On all motors with capacity of one h. p. or over, even horsepower will
be the unit for fixing charge. Motor charge based on not more than 10
hours service per day for the six days of the Fair.
The current is alternating single phase, 60 cycles, 104 voltage.
On all meter readings a charge of 10c. per kilowatt hour will be made.
The charge for light based on six days service will be as follows:
Tungsten Lamps
25 Watt $ .75 150 Watt $1.50
40 Watt .80 200 Watt 2.00
60 Watt .85 300 Watt 2.50
75 Watt .90 500 Watt 3.50
100 Watt 1.00 750 Watt 5.00
The charge for electric current for power will be as follows:
Vs H. P. Motor $1.00 % H. P. Motor $4.00
% H. P. Motor 1.50 1 H. P. Motor 4.50
V2 H. P. Motor 3.50
Electric stoves, grills, percolators, waffle irons, and all electrical equip-ment
will be charged for at the regular rate.
FEED
A Feed and Forage Concession is located on the North Carolina State
Fair Grounds, where all kinds of feed may be had at prevailing prices.
St. Mary's School and Junior College
MRS. ERNEST CRUIKSHANK, A.M., President
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
CURRICULUM: 10th, 11th, and 12th grades of high school; 2
years Grade A college. All Academic Courses accredited by
the Southern Association.
Excellent Courses in Art, Business, Expression, Home Economics
and Music Departments with Tuition Included in General Charge
Twenty-Acre Campus—Field Sports—Gymnasium—Tennis
Indoor Tiled Swimming Pool—Horseback Riding—Golf
ANNUAL SESSIONS—MID-SEPTEMBER TO JUNE
PROVIDE THIRTY-FIVE WEEKS OF CLASSROOM WORK
Write A. W. TUCKER, Business Manager, for Catalougue and View Book
29
"ARMOUR'S stays with my crops
all the way says the Veteran Armour User.
Experienced growers rely on ARMOUR'S Big Crop
Fertilizer to carry their crops through the long growing
season because they know ARMOUR'S Fertilizer is de-pendable.
More than forty years' experience in the manufacture
of fertilizer assures a balanced ration of the major foods
in every bag of ARMOUR'S Big Crop. But part of the
value of ARMOUR'S Fertilizer lies in its rich content of
important minor and secondary elements—so necessary
in bringing the crop to healthy maturity.
ARMOUR FERTILIZER WORKS
GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA
WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
30
FIELD CROPS AND FARM EXHIBITS
Department A
DIRECTORS
J. W. Hendricks, Piedmont Experiment Station, Statesville, N. C.
R. J. Harris, Central Experiment Station, Raleigh, N. C.
Amount offered in this Department $1,300.00
Entries in This Department Close Saturday, October 9, 6:00 P. M.
Entries in all departments must be made on printed forms, provided by
the Secretary for the purpose, and must be in full compliance with the
printed instructions on same. Exhibitors should study the list carefully
and, when decision has been made in which class to enter, they should
fill out the entry blank with class number and name as they appear in the
Premium Book. Do not send in your articles for exhibit without first hav-ing
them entered.
In sending exhibits by parcel post, express, or otherwise, address each
package plainly to State Fair, DEPARTMENT A, Raleigh, N. C. Each
package should be plainly marked with name and address of exhibitor.
Note the above date for the closing of entries in this Department.
Products in this Department are confined to the State of North Carolina.
Exhibits in this Department will be classified and exhibitors will be
directed by the Superintendent in the placing of their entries.
No premium shall be awarded in any of the classes or exhibits in the
Department when, in the opinion of the judges, the exhibits are not meri-torious
in variety, quality, artistic arrangement, and educational value.
Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards, pages 17 to 27.
31
Are you enjoying the
full benefits of
Cheap
Electricity?
Are you using it to bring greater Comfort,
Convenience and Happiness into your
home ... to save time, labor and money
in cooking, water heating, refrigerating
... to provide Better Light ?
Are you using it to simplify work on your
farm ... to lessen the manual labor re-quired
... to improve methods and in-crease
the productiveness of your efforts ?
Your Electrical Dealer will be glad to ex-plain
the many ways in which CHEAP
Electricity can serve you in your home and
on your farm!
CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT
COMPANY
Now CHEAP ELECTRICITY is Cheaper Still!
32
FARM DISPLAYS
Judges: Robert Schmidt, Miss Anna Rowe,
S. C. Clapp, Frank Jeter
Class A
1. Live-at-Home Farm Exhibits:
1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th
$135 $100 $80 $75 $65 $60 $55 $5i
Premiums to be awarded the farms which show by exhibit of field crops,
garden crops, fruits, and home industry products, well labeled, the best
display representing a Live-at-Home program.
Each Farm Exhibitor is required to make affidavit before 10 A. M. Mon-day
of Fair Week, and file with the Secretary of the Fair, that the products
exhibited were grown on the farm represented, during the current year, in
accordance with the requirements given herein.
Judging in Class A will start at 10 A. M. Tuesday, October 12th.
IMPORTANT
GENERAL RULES GOVERNING CLASS A
The following scale of points shall be used by the judges in placing
awards on Class A: Field Crops, 20 points; Garden Crops, 15 points; Home
Industry, 15 points; Fruits, 15 points; Educational Value, 20 points;
Artistic Arrangement, 15 points.
IMPORTANT: All Exhibitors in Class A are requested to be at their
exhibit at the time of Judging, Tuesday, October 12th, 10 A. M.
In making awards in this class, special emphasis shall be given to the
quality of the field and garden crops, fruits, and to the excellence and
practical utility of the home industry exhibit.
The educational value of the exhibit shall be construed to mean practical
lessons that may be drawn from it by farmers and others with reference
to certain methods of handling, marketing, growing, and selecting seed of
the different crops; for instance: samples of corn might be exhibited show-ing
the effects of a systematic, intelligent system of seed selection upon the
quality of corn, as well as its yielding powers. Again: an exhibit showing
the effect of spraying apples as against unsprayed would have educational
value. The effect of growing leguminous crops upon crop yields might be
shown concretely or graphically. This, too, would bring out a most valu-able
lesson to those farmers who might study the exhibits. Many other
exhibits of this nature might be devised which would have great value from
an educational standpoint.
Each exhibit for Class A shall not contain more than two varieties of
any one field or garden crop, except for decorative purposes. Only the best
varieties for the different sections should be exhibited.
Home Industry includes canned goods, not to exceed 35 cans, no two
alike; and not more than 15 cans of preserves, jellies, and pickles, no two
alike; fifty cans in all; also meat, dairy products, eggs, etc., but not fresh-cooked
articles or baking.
A neat sign 8 feet long and 18 inches wide should.be placed above each
exhibit, in line with the requirements to be given by the Director. For
Class A, give the name of the Farm and County in which it is located.
33
DELICIOUS
When at the Fair
ENJOY
THE PAUSE
THAT
REFRESHES
Drink
(faa
In Bottles
REFRESHING
CAPITAL COCA-COLA
BOTTLING CO.
RALEIGH, N. C.
34
Plain neat labels or placards should be placed on every group in each
exhibit.
No exhibit material entered in Class A will be eligible to compete in
other classes.
All those who wish to enter exhibits for premiums in Class A should
notify the Secretary of the State Fair, Raleigh, N. C, not later than
OCTOBER 1, 1937. Space for this class is somewhat limited, and ex-hibitors
will be assigned space in the order in which the applications are
received and until all space has been allotted.
SPECIAL PRIZES
SPECIAL PRIZES OFFERED IN DEPARTMENT A
These Premiums, or Orders For Same, Will Be Distributed at Close of Fair
First, Live-at-Home Farm Exhibit—Prize, One Chattanooga two-horse
reversible plow, No. 54-55—donated by International Harvester Co.
Second, Live-at-Home Exhibit���Prize, three months' subscription—do-nated
by Raleigh Times.
Third, Live-at-Home Farm Exhibit—Prize, three months' subscription
—
donated by Raleigh Times.
Fourth, Live-at-Home Farm Exhibit—Prize, three months' subscription
donated by Raleigh Times.
Fifth, Live-at-Home Exhibit Prize, three months' subscription—do-nated
by Raleigh Times.
Sixth, Live-at-Home Exhibit—Prize, three years' subscription—donated
by Southern Agriculturist.
Sweepstakes Corn Exhibit, Classes 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9—Prize, four hundred
pounds Arcadian Nitrate of Soda—donated by The Barrett Company.
Sweepstakes Exhibit of Yellow Corn—Prize, four hundred pounds "Plan-ters
Controlled Fertilizers"—donated by Planters Cotton Oil & Ferti-lizer
Company.
Best Exhibit of seed cotton (one inch or more in length)—Prize, four
hundred pounds Davco Granulated Fertilizer—donated by Davison
Chemical Corporation.
Best Exhibit of Cotton Seed (1 peck)—Prize, two hundred pounds cotton-seed
meal—donated by Buckeye Cotton Oil Company.
Sweepstakes Wheat Exhibit—Prize, one hundred pounds Nosoca Flour
donated by Statesville Flour Mills.
Sweepstakes Exhibit of Rye—Prize, four hundred pounds small grain
fertilizer—donated by Virginia-Carolina Chemical Corporation.
Sweepstakes Exhibit of Barley—Prize, one years' subscription—donated
by Progressive Farmer.
Sweepstakes Exhibit of Cowpeas—Prize, four hundred pounds complete
3-8-3 fertilizer—donated by Planters Fertilizer and Phosphate Com-pany.
Best Legume Hay Exhibit—Prize, three tons Mascot lime—donated by
American Limestone Company.
First Tobacco Display—Prize, three ounces N. C. Certified Tobacco Seeds
(Recipient may choose variety he wants)—donated by Job P. Wyatt
& Sons Co.
Second Tobacco Display—Prize, two ounces N. C. Certified Tobacco Seeds
(Recipient may choose variety he wants)—donated by Job P. Wyatt
& Sons Co.
Third Tobacco Display—Prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—donated
by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
35
lbOLBS.Nft"
Poultry
** tlTB*ci MOT LESS fg* \.
J^^m^
TALCO
DAIRY AND POULTRY
FEEDS
Ask your A & P
Manager about this
money saving
line of Feeds.
Sprinkle Gasoline
It is Independent petroleum product
;
It is sold to you direct from $ervice $tation, from where
it has been delivered by transport truck from Sea-port.
It is Anti-Knock quality, having been originally refined
so without ever having been doped.
It is sold to you at fair price.
It will give your motor perfect performance.
H. L. $prinkle Service Station
14 Mile West WPTF Radio Tower Highway No. 1
Also available in:
BURLINGTON, N. C. GREENSBORO, N. C.
SANFORD, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
36
Fourth Tobacco Display—Prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—do-nated
by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Fifth Tobacco Display—Prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—donated
by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Lemon Wrappers—First prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes —donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Lemon Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigar-ettes—
donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Orange Wrappers—First prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes —donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Orange Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigar-ettes—
donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Dark Mahogany Wrappers—First prize, one carton Chesterfield
Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Dark Mahogany Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chesterfield
Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Light Mahogany Wrappers—Firse prize, one carton Chesterfield
Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Light Mahogany Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chester-field
Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.
Class O—Cutters—First prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated
by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class O—Cutters—Second prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated
by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class O—Smokers—First prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated
by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class O—Smokers—Second prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated
by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class O—Light Fillers—First prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes —donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class O—Light Fillers—Second prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes —donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Lemon Wrappers—First prize, one carton Half and Half Smoking
Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Lemon Wrappers—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half
Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Orange Wrappers—First prize, one carton Half & Half Smoking
Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Orange Wrappers—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half
Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Cutters—First prize, one carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco —donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Cutters—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half Smoking
Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Smokers—First prize, one carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco —donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
Class P—Smokers—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half Smoking
Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc.
37
HIGH POINT COLLEGE
HIGH POINT, N. C.
WHERE CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT IS NOT
SECONDARY TO SCHOLARSHIP
A Four-Year, Co-Educational, Liberal Arts College
High Point, N. C.
A faculty of wenty-six Christian men and women with degrees
from the best universities in America. A broad and inclusive
curriculum. Enrollment of over three hundred students from
various parts of the country. Fifty-two-acre campus, beautifully
landscaped.
Total student charges for school year are $412.00. Con-cessions
to ministers' children and candidates for the
ministry.
THE
CHAMPION PAPER AND FIBRE
COMPANY
(CANTON DIVISION)
CANTON, NORTH CAROLINA
MANUFACTURERS OF
Chemical Wood Pulp—Book, Bond and Envelope Paper
—
Postcard, Stencil and Bristol Board—Tannic Acid
—
Caustic Soda—Turpentine—Bindex (Adhesive)
The products of the Champion Fibre Company are essentially
raw materials for other industries and offer an inducement to
many industries, such as the publishing business, manufacture of
envelopes and other paper products, to locate in North Carolina.
The Champion Fibre Company buys cordwood from farmers
for cash and in this way the farm and the factory are brought
together to their mutual advantage.
38
2d 3d
2.50 $2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2.50 2.00
2d 3d
;i.oo $0.50
1.00 .50
1.00 .56
FIELD CROP EXHIBITS
Judges: J. L. Rea, Jr., R. E. Currin, W. H. Rankin,
P. H. Kime, Dr. G. K. Middleton
No exhibitor shall be allowed to enter more than one exhibit of any
variety in the following classes.
CORN
Best Ten Ears (Unnubbed)
Class B 1st
2—Cocke's Prolific $5.00
3—Weekly's Improved 5.00
4—Biggs 5.00
5—Latham's Double 5.00
6—Southern Beauty 5.00
7—Holcombe Prolific 5.00
8—Jarvis Golden Prolific 5.00
9—Highland Horsetooth 5.00
10—Any other variety (Yellow Corn) 5.00
10y2—Any other variety (White Corn) 5.00
Class C 1st
11—Five heads of Broomcorn $2.00
12—Ten ears of Popcorn 2.00
13—Sorghum, five stalks, heads attached 2.00
COTTON
Most prolific and best exhibit of the following varieties of cotton, con-sisting
of 50 open bolls mounted on cardboard.
Class D 1st 2d 3d
14—Cleveland Big Boll, %" to 15/16" $4.00 $2.00 $1.50
15—Cleveland, 1" to 1 1/16" 4.00 2.00 1.50
16—Mexican Big Boll, 1" to 1 1/16" 4.00 2.00 1.50
17—Farm Relief 4.00 2.00 1.50
18—Carolina Foster, 1%" 4.00 2.00 1.50
Seed Cotton and Lint
1st
19—Seed Cotton, 1 lb., %" to 15/16" $2.00
20—Seed Cotton, 1 lb., 1" to 1%" 2.00
21—Exhibit Lint, 1 lb., %" to 15/16" 2.00
22—Exhibit Lint, 1 lb., 1" to 1%" 2.00
WHEAT
To be shown in pecks. Exhibits containing a mixture of other grains,
onions, or cockle will be disqualified.
Class E 1st 2d 3d
23—Fulcaster $2.00 $1.50 $1.00
24—Leap's Prolific 2.00 1.50 1.00
25—Purple Straw 2.00 1.50 1.00
26—Redheart 2.00 1.50 1.00
27—Peck of Buckwheat 2.00 1.50 1.00
28—Best sheaf of Wheat, above varieties only 2.00 1.50 1.00
39
2d 3d
$1.00 $0.75
1.00 .75
1.00 .75
1.00 .75
The Greatest Testimonial of Them All
TONS OF
EXPERIENCE
Back*bf every Bay,
Jj OR more than 40 years, good
farmers have been growing good
crops with V-C Fertilizers.
Year after year these splendid
fertilizers have given good results
in the fields of farmers who grow
Wheat, Corn and other small grains;
Cotton, Tobacco and Peanuts; Po-tatoes
and other vegetable and fruit
crops, and Citrus.
Faithful adherence to the prin-ciple
of making honest goods has
been rewarded by the appreciation
and confidence of thousands of the
best farmers. This preference en-ables
us to offer you, through reli-able
agents, the fertilizers with more
than 35 million tons of experience
back of every bag. See our Agent
and place your order now.
VIRGINIA-CAROLINA
CHEMICAL CORP.
GREENSBORO, N. C.
WILMINGTON, N. C.
NORFOLK, VA.
40
OATS
To be shown in pecks. Exhibits containing a mixture of other grains,
onions, or cockle will be disqualified.
Class F 1st 2d 3d
29—Lee $2.00 $1.50 $1.00
30—Fulghum 2.00 1.50 1.00
31—Appier 2.00 1.50 1.00
32—Norton 2.00 1.50 1.00
33—Best sheaf of Oats, above varieties only 2.00 1.50 1.00
RYE AND BARLEY
To be shown in pecks. Exhibits containing a mixture of other grains,
onions, or cockle will be disqualified.
Class G 1st 2d 3d
34—Common $2.00 $1.50 $1.00
35—Abruzzi 2.00 1.50 1.00
36—Tennessee Hooded Barley 2.00 1.50 1.00
SOYBEANS
Peck to be shown in containers which will be furnished.
Class H 1st
37—Mammoth Yellow $2.00
38—Virginia 2.00
39—Tokyo 2.00
40—Laredo 2.00
41—Herman 2.00
42—Otootan 2.00
43—Biloxi 2.00
44—One stalk, any above varieties for seed 2.00
VELVET BEANS
Peck to be shown in containers which will be furnished.
Class I 1st 2d 3d
46—100-day Speckled $2.00 $1.00 $0.50
VETCH
Class J 1st 2d 3d
47—Quart Hairy Seed—Container furnished $1.25 $1.00 $0.75
48—Quart Common or Spring Seed—Container fur-nished
1.25 1.00 .75
COWPEAS
Peck to be shown in containers which will be furnished.
Class K 1st 2d 3d
49—New Era1 $1.50 $1.00 $0.50
50—Brabham 1.50 1.00 .50
51—Whippoorwill 1.50 1.00 .50
52—Taylor 1.50 1.00 .50
53—Crowder 1.50 1.00 .50
54—Black 1.50 1.00 .50
55—Clay 1.50 1.00 .60
56—Groit 1.50 1.00 .50
57—Black Eye 1.50 1.80 .50
58—Iron 1.50 1.00 .50
41
2d 3d
1.00 $0.50
1.00 .50
1.00 .50
1.00 .50
1.00 .50
1.00 .50
1.00 .50
1.00 .50
Q Q
POTASH STARVED
PLENTY OF POTASH
GET IT WITH POTASH
When extra profits are returned, it is like getting money free.
Use more potash to make your cotton crop pay extra profits.
Rust damage on plats receiving insufficient pot-ash
lowered the yield and reduced the quality
of fiber to such an extent as to lower the value
of the crop $1 5 to $25 per acre in work done by
the North Carolina Experiment Station. » » Most
experiment stations in the South recommend
400-600 pounds per acre of a fertilizer con-taining
4-6% nitrogen, 8-10% phosphoric acid,
and 4-10% potash. Where rust has appeared
use 8-10% potash and a nitrogen-potash top
dresser if necessary. The right fertilizer to use
will vary with soil and cropping conditions
» » Consult your county agent or experiment
station on your soil requirements. See your fer-tilizer
manufacturer or dealer about fertilizer;
high in potash. Write us for further information.
AMERICAN POTASH
INSTITUTE, INC.
INVESTMENT BUILDING WASHINGTON, D, C.
SOUTHERN OFFICE: MORTGAGE GUARANTEE BLDG., ATLANTA, GA.
PEANUTS
Each single exhibit shall consist of one peck of peanuts. Peck con-tainers
will be furnished.
Class L. 1st 2d 3d
59—Virginia Runner $1.50 $1.00 $0.50
60—Virginia Bunch 1.50 1.00 .50
61—Jumbo Runner 1.50 1.00 .50
62—Spanish 1.50 1.00 .50
63—North Carolina or Wilmington 1.50 1.00 .50
64—Valencia 1.50 1.00 .50
Sweepstakes—Classes 59 to 64 2.00
CliOVER AND LESPEDEZA
One quart seed to be shown in container which will be furnished.
Class M 1st 2d 3d
65—Bur Clover $1.25 $0.75 $0.50
66—Red Clover 1.25 .75 .50
67—Alsike Clover 1.25 .75 .50
68—Crimson Clover 1.25 .75 .50
69—Sweet Clover 1.25 .75 .50
70—Korean Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50
71—Tennessee No. 76 Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50
72—Common Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50
73—Kobe Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50
HAYS
Each hay exhibit shall consist of one bale, not less than fifty pounds
and not more than one hundred pounds in weight. Unbaled hay will be
disqualified.
Class N 1st 2d 3d
74—Peanuts $1.25 $0.75 $0.50
75—Cowpea 1.25 .75 .50
76—Red Clover 1.25 .75 .50
77—Crimson Clover 1.25 .75 .50
78—Soybean 1.25 .75 .50
79—Alfalfa 1.25 .75 .50
80—Mixed Oats and Hairy Vetch 1.25 .75 .50
81—Timothy 1.25 .75 .50
82—Sudan Grass 1.25 .75 .50
83—Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50
84—Mixed Hay with Legumes 1.25 .75 .50
TOBACCO
Growers' Contest
JAMES F. BULLOCK, Tobacco Experiment Station, Oxford, N. C,
Superintendent
Judges: E. G. Moss, Andrew Jamieson
Not less than three pounds or more than three pounds to be shown in
each class or of any grade in display.
For Old Belt Types
Class O 1st 2d 3d 4th
85—Lemon .Wrappers $12.00 $7.50 $5.00 $3.00
86—Orange Wrappers 12.00 7.50 5.00 3.00
87—Dark Mahogany Wrappers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00
88—Light Mahogany Wrappers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00
89—Cutters 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00
90—Smokers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00
91—Light Filers 8.00 4.00 2.00 1.00
43
GREEN GRILL
Back of County Court House
Say . .
BAMBY BREAD
MEETS U. S. GOVERNMENT STANDARD
FOR MILK BREAD
"There is a full glass of milk in every loaf of Bamby"
ASK YOUR GROCER
Royal Baking Co. . Raleigh, N. C.
FIREPROOF STREET PARKING
METROPOLITAN SERVICE
AND ACCOMMODATIONS
THE BLAND HOTEL
V. ST. CLOUD, Manager
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
Rates: $1.50 and up One Block from Bus Station
44
For New Belt Types
Class P 1st 2d 3d 4th
92—Lemon Wrappers $12.00 $7.50 $5.00 $3.00
93—Orange Wrappers 12.00 7.50 5.00 3.00
94—Cutters 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00
95—Smokers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00
TOBACCO DISPLAYS
Class Q 1st 2d 3d 4th
96—Display of Bright Wrappers, Cutters
Smokers, and Fillers by one producer
(this must not include any entry for
single premium) $20.00 $15.00 $10.00 $5.00
CONSIDERATION IN JUDGING QUALITY IN CROP SEEDS
Corn
CONSIDERATIONS DISQUALIFICATIONS
Sample infested with live weevil.
1. Maturity (ear) Evidence to deceive as to true
(a) Color (ear and shanks) ,.,
(b) Starchiness quamy
(c) Weight in proportion 0ne off-colored cob in sample of
(d) Firmness (ear) ten ears -
More than two off-colored kernels
2. Seed Condition (kernels) in sample of ten ears.
(a) Luster of kernels
(b) Blisters
(c) Breaking out of kernels
(d) Disease and insect damage
(e) Shape and plumpness of
kernels
3. Uniformity and trueness to type
for variety and region where
grown
Oats
1. Maturity and Seed Condition Sample infested with live weevil
(a) Color Evidence to deceive as to true
(b) Relative weight quality. (Bleaching.)
\l\ Srinseir'mechan,- *•« ff "» >«—-**» -
cal disease variety.
2. Purity of variety Presence of noxious weed seeds or
3. Foreign material any other objectionable matter.
4. Percentage of hull
TO SERVE YOU BETTER WITH FINER FOODS
AT THE MOST ECONOMICAL PRICES
PEI1DER QualityJoodStoteA- -
THERE'S A STORE NEAR YOU
45
Do you buy the best
fertilizer (or
Your Soil?
Since 1892 the RICHMOND GUANO COM-PANY
has specialized in manufacturing fertilizer to
fit the needs of Virginia and North Carolina agricul-ture.
Long experience, combined with the results of
the technical school experiments, assure you of the
best results when you use RICHMOND GUANO.
"Gilt Edge and Richmond Brands"
Richmond Guano Company
Richmond, Virginia
46
Wheat
CONSIDERATIONS
1. Maturity and Seed Condition
(a) Weight per bushel
(b) Damage; insect, disease,
mechanical
(c) Color and luster
(d) Plumpness
2. Milling quality
(a) Hardness and color of
grain
(b) Uniformity and plumpness
of kernels
(c) Weight per bushel
3. Uniformity and purity of
variety
4. Foreign materials
(a) Weed seeds
(b) Other crop seed
(c) Inert matter
DISQUALIFICATIONS
Sample infested with live weevil.
Evidence to deceive as to true
quality. (Treated, scoured,
washed.)
Mixed as to class or more than two
per cent mixture of variety.
One or more bulblets of wild onion
per 1000 grams.
Smutty wheat.
Barley
Same as for Oats, adding to No. 1
"Closeness of threshing," and
omitting No. 4.
Sample infested with live weevil.
More than two per cent mixture of
variety.
Presence of noxious weeds or any
other matter.
Rye
Same as for Wheat, omitting No. 3. Sample infested with live weevil.
More than two per cent mixture of
variety.
Presence of ergot or other objec-tionable
material.
Large Seeded Legumes (Soybeans, Cowpeas, etc.)
Sample infested with live weevil.
Any mixture of variety.
Distinctly low quality.
Presence of morning-glory seed.
1. Maturity and Seed Condition
(a) Color and luster
(b) Plumpness
(c) Damage, mechanical, in
sect, and disease
2. Purity as to variety
(a) Color and color marking
(b) Size and shape of seed
3. Foreign material
Small Seeded Legumes (Clover, Alfalfa, etc.)
2.
Purity
(a) Other crop seeds
(b) Total weed seeds
(c) Noxious weed seeds
(d) Inert matter
Seed Condition
(a) Luster and plumpness of
seed
(b) Damage; mechanical, in-sect
Uniformity, size, shape, and
color
Presence of noxious weed seeds (1
per 1000).
(Dodder, Buckhorn, Canada This-tle,
and Dock.)
Samples should be 99.5 per cent
pure seed by weight.
47
FREE SOIL ANALYSIS
WITH THESE FAMOUS FERTILIZERS
Hit or miss methods do not make
for profitable farming. There's
always gamble enough with the
elements at best. * But you can
be sure of one thing when you
buy fertilizer from Eastern --you
get the exact food elements
needed for your crop and soil.
* Eastern chemists analyse your
soil free of charge. We prescribe
for your soil as your physician
prescribes for you. Buy Eastern
fertilizer and
know that your
soil gets what it
actually needs.
The Many Purpose Fertilizer
Davco 20% Granulated Super-phosphate
costs less per unit; con-tains
no filler; free-flowing; always
drillable. More phosphoric acid
available to plants. Use for rein-forcing
manure and top dressing_
pastures.
EASTERN FERTILIZER DIVISION
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
48
HORTICULTURAL PRODUCTS
Department B
CHARLES DEARING, Director
Coastal Plain Experiment Station, Willard, N. C.
H. R. NISWONGER, Director
State College, Raleigh, N. C.
ROBERT SCHMIDT, Director
State College, Raleigh, N. C.
Amount offered in this Department $700.00
Note for Exhibitors: It will avoid confusion and add to the exhibitor's
convenience if, so far as possible, entry blanks covering each exhibit to
be entered for premiums be filled out in advance and mailed to the Secre-tary,
North Carolina State Fair, Raleigh, N. C. When this is done the
entry tags are made out in advance ready for the exhibitor on arrival.
This avoids much writing. These entry tags should be secured at the
Secretary's office and be presented to the superintendent of the horticul-tural
department or his representative at the same time exhibits are de-livered
to the department. Entry blanks and catalogs listing the pre-miums
classes can be secured upon application to the Secretary. Read
rules Governing Entries, Exhibits and Awards, Pages 17 to 29.
49
NORTH CAROLINA EQUIPMENT
COMPANY
3116 HILLSBORO STREET
RALEIGH, N. C.
Phones—Local 2119 BRANCH—No. 1 London Rd.
L. D. 1183 Biltmore, N. C.
Phone 411
Handling Such Well Known Lines As
—
Elgin Pick-up Street Sweepers
Galion Motor Graders, Road Machines and Rollers
Galion Hydraulic Dump Bodies and Hoists
F. W. D. Trucks
McCormick-Deering Crawler Tractors and Power Units
Jaeger Concrete Mixers, Pumps, Hoists, Etc.
Barco Gasoline Paving Breakers
Aeroil Heating Kettles, Etc.
DeWalt Portable Saw Rigs
Champion and Telsmith Crushers
Northwest Shovels, Cranes and Draglines
Cleveland Rock Drills and Paving Breakers
Euclid Trac-Truks, Bulldozers, Scrapers, Etc.
Georgia Sand Pumps
American Preformed Cable
Kinney Distributors
Dowflake
Wiard Rooter Plows
Schramm Air Compressors
A complete stock of Road Machine Blades, Push Brooms, Broom
Fibre, Toledo Torches, Scarifier Teeth, Wheelbarrows, Hand
Shovels, Timken Rock Bits and Other Miscellaneous
Supplies and Accessories are carried in our warehouse
50
FRUITS AND NUTS
Judge: M. E. GARDNER, Horticulturist, State College, Raleigh, N. C.
Entries Close 12:00 Noon, Monday, October 11th, 1937
Entries open to individual growers and orchard companies of North
Carolina.
IMPORTANT. Each exhibitor should read the following carefully:
As far as possible, it is desirable that horticultural exhibits be brought
in and set up by the growers. Where this is not possible the Superintendent
will be glad to receive and place on exhibit all suitable horticultural prod-ucts
sent in. However, the Superintendent will not pack box, basket, or
barrel entries for exhibit. These must come in already packed. All
exhibits competing for premiums must be grown in the State.
In sending in fruit for exhibition, select only those specimens that are
perfect in form and color, and free from all insect and fungus blemishes.
Do not knock or shake off the fruit from the tree, but pick each specimen
by hand, taking care not to pull out the stem.
Fruit should be exhibited as nearly as possible in its natural state, and
i'0 preference will be given highly polished fruit by the judges.
Fruit to be exhibited in trays, and in plates, should be carefully
wrapped and packed. Each fruit should be wrapped separately in paper
and packed firmly in box or barrel, taking care to avoid bruising. Label
each variety plainly and put in papers to keep varieties separated. Do
not use hay, fodder, excelsior, or any other dusty material in packing.
Nail up firmly.
IMPORTANT—READ
Address each package plainly to "State Fair, Department of Horticul-ture,
Raleigh, N. C." Each package should be plainly marked with the
name and address of the exhibitor. Each package should be plainly
marked giving the class in which contents are entered.
PLATES. Plates for the variety exhibits of fruits will be furnished
free by the Fair. A perfect plate of fruit should contain five specimens,
and no more, characteristic of the variety, with stems attached, of high
color, uniform, marketable size, free from cuts and bruises and all insect
and fungus blemishes. If additional specimens are sent in by growers,
the Superintendent will select and place on exhibit the best possible plate
to be made from all the specimens submitted.
TRAYS. The dimensions of the trays are 11% x 18 x 3 inches inside
measurements. The exhibitor should make a tray of the required dimen-sions
and pack each variety to be displayed in this class, in order to know
how many apples are needed. Four or five extra apples per tray should be
sent in order to allow for rot and damage in transit.
BASKETS. Commercial basket apples should be graded to uniform
size, high color, freedom from bruises, insect and fungus blemishes. They
should be properly packed and ring faced in standard bushel baskets.
GENERAL. RULES. A premium offered for a general collection of
fruit will not be awarded to a mere pile of apples, or other fruit, but
must be for a real collection, arranged on plates and all correctly labeled,
and no fruit will be counted in a collection unless it is a fair specimen
of the variety. No trashy fruit of any kind will be counted merely to
51
So good
it's used
daily
in
1,500,000
cars
Carbide
CARBIDE
OF HIGHEST
QUALITY
" •
National Carbide
Corporation
Lincoln Bid q.New York
*eParate$ **
Sep-Ro-Siv
By merely changing one of the 4 stainless steel
sieves you have a perfect food chopper, a meat
grinder, a mixer, an excellent food grater all
in one. Sep-Ro-Siv actually removes seeds,
skins, cores, stringy particles and gristle from
the pulp and juice of fruits, vegetables and
meats. You need one now and the cost is small!
TIME SAVER
For FREE catalog describ r p HOWFT I
in, SEPROSIV paste ad 4 '' ^' UVWCLL
on card and send to: McKinney. Texas
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
RemovesDandruff-StopsHairFalling
Imparts Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c. and $1.00 at Druggists.
Hiscox Chem. Wks. Patchoeue. N. Y
make up a collection. A premium for the best collection of grapes,
peaches, or any other fruit will not be awarded for a mere number, but
to the quality of the exhibit mainly.
The Superintendent may withhold premiums in any case where the
article is not worthy.
No article entered for competition in any one class will be permitted
to compete for a premium in any other class, excepting sweepstakes. An
exhibitor cannot compete for more than one prize in any class.
No attention will be paid by the Committee to any fruit or other
exhibit that is not arranged in accordance with these rules.
All fruit must be shipped or brought in so as to arrive at the Fair
Grounds not later than Monday at 10 a.m., of Fair Week, charges prepaid.
The awards for fruits will be made as soon as possible after the opening
of the Fair.
No exhibitor will be allowed to discuss exhibits with the Judges, or to
interfere in any way while the Judges are at work.
All fruits shown for premiums must remain in place until the close of
the Fair.
In the nomenclature of fruits, the names adopted by the American
Pomological Society shall rule, and no variety will be accepted that has
not been admitted to their catalogue, except in the case of seedlings never
before exhibited.
Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards, pages 17 to 29.
APPLES
Class A 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
97—Commercial display $50.00 $30.00 $20.00 $15.00 $10.00
Consisting of twenty trays—five trays each of four different standard
commercial varieties from following list, fruit to be unwrapped:
Albemarle, Arkansas Black, Bonum, Buckingham, Ben Davis, Delicious,
Grimes, Gano, Kinnard, Limbertwig, Mammoth Black Twig, Golden Deli-cious,
Rome Beauty, Stayman, Virginia Beauty, Winesap, York Imperial,
and any other (one) variety.
Class B 1st 2d 3d
98—Best five-bushel baskets of any one of the
following standard varieties: Bonum,
Grimes, Golden Delicious, Ben Davis, De-licious,
Red Limbertwig, Stayman, Winesap,
York Imperial, and any other (one)
variety l $20.00 $10.00 $5.00
99—Best five trays of one of the following
standard varieties: Albemarle, Bonum,
Buckingham, Delicious, Golden Delicious,
Grimes, Stayman, Virginia Beauty, Wine-sap,
Red Limbertwig, and any other (one)
variety 15.00 10.00 5.00
53
Our Twelve Offices
Elm City
Fayetteville
Goldsboro
Kinston
New Bern
Plymouth
Selma
Trenton
Wallace
Warsaw
Williamston
Wilson
Our twelve offices are ren-dering
a service that has
been of help in the sound
and substantial develop-ment
and progress in East-ern
North Carolina.
WE INVITE
NEW ACCOUNTS
and are always glad to
render any service to our
customers that is commen-surate
with the principles
of sound banking.
Branch Banking &
Trust Company
HOME OFFICE: WILSON
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
54
$2.00 $1.00
3.50 2.00 1.00
3.50 2.00 1.00
3.50 2.00 1.00
3.50 2.00 1.00
3.50 2.00 1.00
3.50 2.00 1.00
3.50 2.00 1.00
Sweepstakes
100—Best bushel of apples, quality and packing
considered $10.00
101—Best tray of apples, quality and appearance
considered 5.00
Best tray of the following varieties:
Class C 1st 2d 3d
102—Albemarle $3.50
103—Bonum
104—Delicious
105—Golden Delicious
106—Rome Beauty
107—Stayman
108—Winesap
109—Any other variety
Single Plate—Five Apples
Class D 1st 2d
110—Delicious $2.00 $1.00
111—Bonum
112—Starking
113—Golden Delicious
114—Grimes
115—Rome Beauty
1 1 6—Stayman
117—Winesap
118—York Imperial
119—Any other variety
120—Best plate collection of not less than ten named
varieties 10.00 5.00
Quality and Rating Score Card
The quality of the different varieties in basket and tray classes will be
judged according to the following rating:
Albemarle, Delicious, Grimes, Spy, Golden Delicious and Stark-ing
100 points
Bonum and Stayman 90 points
Buckingham, Kinnard, Mammoth Black Twig, Virginia Beauty,
and Winesap 80 points
Arkansas Black, Royal Limbertwig, and York Imperial 70 points
Rome Beauty 60 points
Ben Davis, Gano, Red Limbertwig 50 points
Premiums for apples in bushel baskets will be awarded according to the
following score card:
Uniformity (size and color) 30 points
Freedom from blemish 30 points
Pack 20 points
Quality 20 points
Premiums for apples in single plates will be awarded according to fol-lowing
score card:
Freedom from blemish , 30 points
Uniformity 20 points
Color 15 points
Form 15 points
Size 15 points
55
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
2.00 1.00
Since 1881-
IMPLEMENTS
HARDWARE
PAINTS
ROOFING
SPRAYERS
DUSTERS
INSECTICIDES
BULBS Free
SEEDS Catalog
JOB P. WYATT & SONS CO.
325-327 S. WILMINGTON ST.
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
The News and Observer
"THE OLD RELIABLE"
Foremost in
NEWS, FEATURES, SPORTS AND
ADVERTISING
Over 55,000 Copies Daily Josephus Daniels, Pres.
56
Premiums for apples in trays will be awarded according to the following
score card:
Size 15 points
Form 15 points
Color 20 points
Uniformity 20 points
Freedom from blemishes 20 points
Quality 10 points
Total 100 points
In judging the commercial display the score cards given above for bas-kets
and plates will be used.
Baskets and plates will be given a value of 40 and 20 per cent each in
the total.
PEARS
Plate, Five Each
Class E 1st 2d
121—Keiffer $2.00 $1.00
122—Any other variety 2.00 1.00
GRAPES
Plate
Class F 1st 2d
123—Any bunch variety (plate of 5 bunches) $2.00 $1.00
124—Scuppernong, or other "white" variety of Muscadine
grape (1 pint berries) 2.00 1.00
125—James, or other "black" variety of Muscadine grape
(1 pint berries) 2.00 1.00
OTHER FRUITS
Plate, at Least Five Each
Class G 1st 2d
126—Japanese Persimmons $2.00 $1.00
127—American Persimmons 2.00 1.00
PLATE PECANS
One Pound
Class H 1st 2d
128—Stuart $2.00 $1.00
129—Schley 2.00 1.00
130—Any other variety 2.00 1.00
OTHER NUTS
Plate, One Pound
Class I 1st 2d
131—Native chestnuts $2.00 $1.00
132—Hickory nuts _2.00 1.00
133—Black walnuts 2.00 1.00
134—Collection native nuts (3 or more varieties, 1 lb. each) 3.00 1.50
57
AT YOUR PLEASURE!
WORLD'S GREATEST,
GAYEST MIDWAY
World of
Mirth Shows
WITH
40—Sensational New Shows and Rides—40
Including
Swingtime Revue Octopus Ride
New 1937 Ripley Odditorium
Miss America Flying Flea
Bolero, with Lady Godiva from Havana
Auto Speedway Gay Nineties
Lion Motordrome Sensations
Tiny Town Theatre Rhythm Club
Temple of Mystery
Life Bughouse
Monkey Speedway Two-Headed Baby
Jungle Monsters Seminole Indians
22 Thrilling Riding Devices 22
AMERICA'S PROGRESSIVE MIDWAY—NEW AS
TOMORROW
N.CState Fair
RALEIGH
OCTOBER 12-13-14-15-16, 1937
58
VEGETABLES
Judge: L. P. WATSON, Extension Horticulturist
State College, Raleigh, N. C.
Exhibits Must Be Grown in North Carolina
Entries Close 12:00 Noon, Monday, October 11th, 1937
IMPORTANT—READ
If exhibit is shipped in, address each package plainly to "N. C. State
Fair, Department of Horticulture, Raleigh, N. C." Each package should
be plainly marked, giving the class numbers in which contents are entered,
and name and address of party making entry.
Entry blank covering the shipments should be addressed to the Secre-tary
of the Fair and be mailed, preferably, in advance of shipment.
All varieties of vegetables entered for premiums should be well selected
as to uniformity, freedom from blemishes, and trueness to type. Premiums
offered for the best collection will not be awarded for the greatest number
of varieties, but mainly for the quality. The Superintendent may with-hold
premiums in any case where the article is of inferior quality. All
exhibits must be in place and arranged in the space assigned to this
department by 10 a.m., Monday, of Fair week.
SWEET POTATOES
Sweet potatoes will be judged according to uniformity, smoothness, true-ness
to type, freedom from blemishes, and marketable size.
Standard tray: Inside dimensions 18 x 11% x 3 inches, holding about
one-third to one-half bushel.
Tray
Class A 1st 2d
135—Nancy Hall $3.00 $2.00
136—Porto Rico 3.00 2.00
137—Big Stem Jersey 3.00 2.00
138—Any other variety 3.00 2.00
139—Best display of Nancy Hall or Porto Ricos, 5 trays 10.00 5.00
IRISH POTATOES
Irish potatoes will be judged according to uniformity, smoothness, free-dom
from blemishes, shallowness of eyes, and marketable size.
Tray
Class B 1st 2d
140—Irish Cobbler $3.00 $2.00
141—Green Mountain 3.00 2.00
142—Any other variety 3.00 2.00
143—Best display of Irish Cobblers or Green Mountain
(5 trays) 10.00 5.00
CABBAGE
Three Heads, Trimmed For Market
Class C 1st 2d
144—Copenhagen $2.00 $1.00
145—Flat Dutch 2.00 1.00
146—Any other variety 2.00 1.00
59
Statesville
Feeds
Statesville Feeds are produced by
a NORTH CAROLINA mill to
meet the requirements of NORTH
CAROLINA feeders.
We manufacture a full line of
Poultry, Dairy and Stock Feeds,
and in addition are producing the
North Carolina State Formulae as
a Special Dairy Feed.
STATESVILLE FLOUR MILLS
COMPANY
60
ONIONS
Plate—Five Each
Class D 1st 2d
147—Prizetaker $2.00 $1.00
148—Yellow Globe Danvers 2.00 1.00
149—Any other variety 2.00 1.00
PEPPERS
Class E 1st 2d
150—Sweet Bell Peppers, any variety (5 specimens) $2.00 $1.00
151—Pimento Pepper (5 specimens) 2.00 1.00
152—Hot Pepper, any variety (12 specimens) 2.00 1.00
TOMATOES
Five Each
Class F 1st 2d
153—stone $2.00 $1.00
154—Marglobe 2.00 1.00
155—Any other variety 2.00 1.00
TURNIPS
Five Each
Class G 1st 2d
156—Purple Top Globe $2.00 $1.00
157—Rutabaga 2.00 1.00
MISCELLANEOUS
Class H 1st 2d
158—Any other meritorious vegetable exhibit or novelty 2.00 1.00
PLANTS AND FLOWERS
Judge: J. G. WEAVER, Asst. Prof. Horticulture
State College, Raleigh, N. C.
Exhibits Must Be Grown in North Carolina
Entries Close 12:00 Noon, Monday, October 11th, 1937
Exhibits should be carefully packed and shipped or delivered to the
"State Fair, Department of Horticulture, Raleigh, N. C." (See Note for
Exhibitors.)
POTTED PLANTS
All plants must be in place by 4 p.m. Monday, of Fair week.
Class A . 1st 2d
159—Specimen foliage plant $2.00 $1.00
160—Specimen flowering plant 2.00 1.00
161—Finest collection foliage plants (12 specimens) 10.00 5.00
162—Finest collection of flowering plants (12 specimens) _10.00 5.00
CUT FLOWERS
Cut flowers must be ready for exhibition Tuesday of Fair week at 12:00
o'clock, soon after which they will be judged. In bringing flowers to the
Fair, especially dahlias, they should be carefully packed in boxes without
crowding in order to preserve the petals against injury. Damage to petals,
especially in the case of dahlias and roses, may affect the score when judg-ing.
Flowers should be kept from automobile drafts as much as possible
when transporting. In judging classes B-163 to 170, inclusive, conside-
61
AIR CONDITIONED RESTAURANT
RADIO GARAGE
CIRCULATING ICE WATER
RALEIGH, N. C.
HOTEL SIR WALTER
A ROBERT MEYER HOTEL
ROLAND A. MUMFORD, Mgr. RATES $2.50
Your Hotel Headquarters When in Raleigh
THE HOTEL SIR WALTER
DINE WITH US WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE
Two of the Best Eating Places in Raleigh— Delicious Foods— Digestible Prices
DeLUXE DINER DIXIE DINER
514 Hillsboro St. Tele. 375 123 W. Martin St. Tele. 3716
62
ration will be given to the following points: (1) The artistic arrangement
of the flowers in the container—60 points; (2) The quality and condition
of the flowers—40 points. Emphasis will not be placed on the rarity of
the flowers exhibited. In these classes the exhibits must conform to di-mensions
or conditions stated. The dimensions refer to flowers, basket,
basket handle and any ribbon or other attachment. In other words, the
dimensions over all. In classes 166 to 168 the exhibit should be appropriate
both as to breadth and height over all, including container, for the size
of table stated. The judges will consider whether the exhibit is appro-priate
for its class as well as considering the artistic arrangement of
flowers in the container and the quality and condition of the flowers. Ex-cept
in classes B-163 to 170, inclusive, all cut flowers will be exhibited
in vases.
Class B 1st 2d 3d
163—Basket cut flowers, large (over 18 in. di-ameter)
$5.00 $3.00 $1.00
164—Basket cut flowers, intermediate (between
8 and 18 in. diameter) 3.00 2.00 1.00
165—Basket cut flowers, small, dainty (less than
8 in. diameter) 3.00 2.00 1.00
166—Floral centerpiece for large dining table
(formal dinner 12 people) 5.00 3.00 1.00
167—Floral centerpiece for small dining table
(luncheon for six people) 3.00 2.00 1.00
168—Floral centerpiece for small table (2 to 4
people) 2.00 1.50 1.00
169—Floral arrangement for invalid's breakfast
tray 2.00 1.50 1.00
170—Artistic arrangement of flowers, fruits or
foliage, or combinations, suggestive of
autumn and the harvest season, exhibit
to be within maximum of 30 in. over all 5.00 3.00 1.00
171—Cut roses, collection (1 bloom each, 6
varieties) 3.00 1.50 1.00
172—Cut roses, any variety (one specimen) 2.00 1.00
173—Cut dahlias, collection, decorative type (1
bloom each, 5 varieties) 4.00 2.00 1.00
174—Cut dahlias, decorative type, any variety
(1 specimen) 2.00 1.00
175—Cut dahlias, collection, cactus or hybrid cac-tus
(1 bloom each, 5 varieties) 4.00 2.00 1.00
176—Cut dahlias, cactus or hybrid cactus, any
variety (1 specimen) 2.00 1.00
177—Cut dahlias, miniature type, collection (2
blooms each, 5 varieties) 3.00 1.50 1.00
178—Cut dahlias, miniature type, any variety
(1 specimen) 2.00 1.00
179—Cut dahlias, collection, ball or pompom type
(2 blooms each, 5 varieties) 3.00 1.50 1.00
180—Cut dahlias, ball or pompom, any variety
(1 specimen) . 2.00 1.00
181—Cut chrysanthemums, large exhibition type
(6 blooms) 3.00 2.00
182—Cut chrysanthemums, pompom (12 sprays
of 3 to 5 flowers each) 2.00 1.00
183—Cut chrysanthemums, single, hardy (6
sprays at least 5 blossoms each) 2.00 1.00
184—Cut cosmos (2 doz. sprays of 3 to 5
flowers each) 3.00 1.50 1.00
185—Best Exhibit Cut Flowers of kind not listed
above 3.00 1.50
63
C. A. DILLON G. L. DILLON
DILLON SUPPLY COMPANY
MACHINERY—MILL SUPPLIES
MODERN MACHINE SHOP
Distributors for MYERS Deep and Shallow Well Pumps
ROCKY MOUNT RALEIGH DURHAM
PATENTS PRESCRIPTIONS TOILETRIES
222 FAYETTEVILLE STREET RALEIGH, N. C.
"CREATORS OF REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"
FOUNTAIN and LUNCHEONETTE SERVICE
BUCKEYE Uniform Full Weight
Bolted Cottonseed and Cottonseed Products
COTTONSEED
MEAL
The Buckeye Cotton 03 Company
For All
Livestock
Local Phone 3037 Long Distance Phone 9900
RALEIGH, N. C.
EASTERN CAROLINA'S FINEST DINING PLACE *WV
THE BEST FOODS AT POPULAR PRICES
COMFORTABLY AIR CONDITIONED
64
Bulbs and Tubers
Bulb collections must consist of at least six varieties. The variety
should be distinctly labeled by exhibitor and each variety displayed on
separate plate to be furnished by Superintendent of Department. Plate
should consist of the following number of bulbs:
Narcissus (6)
Iris (12)
Tulips (12)
Gladiolus (8)
Class C 1st 2d
187—Best collection Narcissus bulbs $5.00 $3.00
188—Best collection Tulip bulbs 5.00 3.00
189—Best collection bulbous Iris bulbs 5.00 3.00
190—Best collection Gladiolus bulbs 5.00 3.00
191—Best collection bulbs and tubers other than those
named in above four classes 5.00 3.00
Miscellaneous
This class is for the purpose of stimulating new interest. Entries
should be in place by 4:00 p.m. Monday of Fair week. Dish gardens
may be arranged on plates, platters, trays, or dishes of any reasonable
size. They will be judged on the basis of the craftsmanship of the
exhibitor, the artistic qualities of the exhibit and the quality of materials
used. The exhibits may represent Japanese gardens, landscapes, farms
properly planted, homes, or any other feature. Plant materials should
predominate, but any kind of material can be used. To the extent neces-sary,
materials such as mirrors, rocks, ornaments, wood, etc., may be
used. It is suggested that the exhibitor limit his exhibit to reasonable size
and no exhibit should have any dimension greater than 36 inches.
The foregoing suggestions apply also to terrariums. The type of ex-hibit
desired in this class is much like the dish gardens, except that
slightly different materials should be used, the materials being placed
inside a glass container covered for the purpose of maintaining moist
conditions and plants preferring such moist conditions, such as mosses,
ferns, etc., should be used. Credit will be given by the judges to the
craftsmanship, the condition of plant materials, the number of kinds of
plants in the exhibit, and the general artistic values of same.
Under the entry for meritorious novelty or floral exhibit any plant or
flower or other related novelty can be exhibited. Each will be judged first
as to its merit or quality in such a class and if considered meritorious by
the judges will then be judged in competition with any other meritorious
entry.
Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th
192—Best dish garden $10.00 $5.00 $3.00 $1.00
193—Best terrarium 5.00 3.00 1.00
194—Any other meritorious novelty or
floral exhibit 5.00 3.00 1.00
NEW FRUITS, FLOWERS AND VEGETABLES
The Fair solicits exhibits of new horticultural fruits, flowers or vege-tables.
These should be entered the same as other exhibits in this De-partment.
They will be examined by the judges and if considered suffi-
65
HERE'S POWER THAT
TURNS UP FARM PROFITS
Farming is a tough job. To stand the gaff, the fuel
and oil used in farm machinery have to be mighty good.
Esso Marketers fuels were developed by the world's
leading oil organization for just such use. Thousands of
farmers have found them as powerful, thrifty and de-pendable
in the field as on the highway.
They know, too, that the oils and greases sold at the
Esso sign assure safe and lasting lubrication. When it
comes to taking punishment, they are the sturdiest team-mates
that ever worked for you.
There's an Esso sign near you. Drive in today—find
out why generations of farmers have depended on this
organization for all their fuel and oil requirements.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
OF NEW JERSEY
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
OF LOUISIANA
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
OF PENNSYLVANIA
COLONIAL BEACON OIL
COMPANY, INC.
66
ciently meritorious will be judged in competition with any other similar
exhibits classed as meritorious. Entries should be in place ready for
exhibition and judging Tuesday of Fair week at 12:00 o'clock and will be
judged soon thereafter. It is suggested that the exhibitor furnish a
written statement giving the name of the exhibit and a brief statement
explaining the nature, source and important qualities of same. While it
is preferred and intended that this class is for service and reward to
bonafide originating parties or agencies, it is not necessary that the
exhibit be entered by the originator. It is necessary, however, that it
must be both new and meritorious and at least closely related to the fruit,
flower or vegetable families.
Class A 1st 2d 3d
195—Best meritorious new fruit, flower or
vegetable $5.00 $3.00 $2.00
SPECIAL PRIZES DEPARTMENT B
Offered by Job P. Wyatt & Sons Co., of Raleigh, N. C.—For largest and
best pumpkin displayed in Department B the Job P. Wyatt & Sons
Co. offer a special prize. This prize to be one No. 2242 Myers iy2
gallon Compressed Air Sprayer.
Offered by Lindley Nurseries, Greensboro, N. C. For most artistic arrange-ment
of home grown flowers in North Carolina pottery the Lindley
Nurseries of Greensboro, N. C, offer nursery stock for beautifying
the home grounds as follows:
First prize—$5.00 in nursery stock listed in Lindley Nurseries catalogue.
Second prize—$3.00 in nursery stock listed in Lindley Nurseries catalogue.
IIS0N0US*
ROTENONE-SULPHUR
DUSTING MIXTURE 1
Mechling's
Controls Mexican Bean Beetles
—also Cabbage Worms, Cabbage
Loopers, ond other insects attack-ing
Vegetables. Ask your dealer
or write us for descriptive folders
and control calendar. -MECHU1ND
BROS- CHEMICAL'S
DIVISION OF DCNERAU CHEMICAL COMPANY
CAMDEN* NEW JERSEY-
AUTOMATIC
Ccrtrke/L for..
Economical Cannini
euicL 'rf
Healthful;:
Cookinq
Two sizes: "U-2"
has 1 1-qt. capac-ity;
"CS-1," 18-
quart. Both are equipped for canning and
cooking. It's a real pressure cooker buy
you can use day-in-day-out for years. It
assures economical and satisfactory can-ning.
Furthermore, you can prepare a
-whole meal at one time in it!
TheQuick
WCUf
-fc-Canl
Use the Automatic
Master Can Sealer. A
child can operate it!
Seals, opens, reflanges
and reseals 3 sizes of
cans.
NEW Canning Equip-ment
Booklet . . . Send
coupon for your free copy.
J. P. DO WELL
McKinney, Texas
i Send me new, free booklet describing your
AUTOMATIC Pressure Cooker—the Auto-matic
Master Sealer and other Automatic
•' Name .
. Address
' P. O State
Tm tiot LUCKY
~Jt&. sSSW
"I harvest more
wheat, barley,
|
oats— because'
I treat seed grains with
New Improved CERESAN"
Want to reduce disease losses—
get bigger grain yields —better
profits? Then treat seed with New
Improved CERESAN1 Proved effec-tive
by experiment stations of most
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stinking smut of wheat, oats smuts,
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wheat yields an average of 6%
for 3c an acre; barley, 6% for 4c;
oats, 18% for 5c! Cereal Pamphlet
free from the Bayer- Semesan Co.,
Inc., Wilmington, Delaware.
68
BEEF CATTLE AND SHEEP
Department C
J. E. FOSTER and L. I. CASE, Directors, State College Station,
Raleigh, North Carolina.
Judge: Kenneth E. Litton, Blacksburg, Va.
Entries in this Department are limited to North Carolina.
Amount Offered by Fair for Beef and Dual Purpose Cattle $1,547
Entries in This Department Close October 9th, 1937, at 6:00 P. M.
Make Your Entries Early
Exhibitors must state on entry blank exact number of animals entered.
Stall fees: One dollar for each animal entered. If more than one is
used for any one animal, an additional fee must be paid.
See General Rules under Entries.
All cattle must be accompanied by a health certificate and tuberculin
test chart issued by a qualified veterinarian and approved by the State
Veterinarian showing the animals to be free from tuberculosis and Bang's
disease. If the entire herd has been tuberculin tested within a year of
the opening of the Fair and no untested cattle have been added, cattle
from such a herd may be shown without further tests. Otherwise the
cattle for exhibit shall be tuberculin tested within 60 days of the Fair.
Cattle from a herd, all of which have been tested for Bang's disease within
69
the year without reactors and no untested animals have been added, may
be shown without further tests. Otherwise the cattle for exhibit shall be
tested within 30 days of the Fair. The certificate and test chart must
accompany the cattle, and they will not be permitted to enter the barns
until the certificate and test chart is submitted to the Director or his
authorized representative.
The Tuberculin test must have been applied within a reasonable time
preceding the opening date of the Fair. The right is reserved to reject an
entry or to remove same after entered, should our Veterinarian find the
animal is affected with a communicable disease.
Full information concerning the above may be secured by addressing the
State Veterinarian, Raleigh, N. C.
SPECIAL RULES
All females thirty-six months of age must have produced a living calf,
and entries must be accompanied by affidavits of date of birth of last calf,
or give satisfactory evidence of being in calf.
Any bull, thirty-six months old or over on the first day of September of
year in which shown that has not dropped to his service during the twelve
months preceding said date one or more living calves will not be eligible
to show.
TOBACCO GROWERS,
TRUCK GARDENERS!
We introduce the Greatest Planter of all time
MASTERS' NEW IMPROVED
1937 PLANT SETTER
Plants,
Covers and
Waters
NO TIRESOME STOOPING
PAYS FOR SELF IN A DAY
Masters built the first practical automatic plant set-ter
over forty years ago. Since then it has been contin-ually
improved. Our new 1937 model is the last word —it has no competition. Others may imitate but never
equal Masters' efficiency and durability. Tobacco
buyers say they can tell when a crop has been
Masters' planted by its uniform high quality. They
gladly pay highest prices for this finer yield. Masters'
Improved Plant Setter is guaranteed to give perfect
satisfaction in planting
Tobacco, Tomatoes, Cabbage,
Sweet Potatoes and other plants
Nearly all first-class hardware and implement dealers
handle, recommend and sell Masters' Improved Plant
Setters. Ask your local merchant to show you this
newest and best device of its kind. If your dealer
doesn't have it in stock, write for full information
direct. Don't wait until planting time. ACT NOW.
MASTERS PLANTER CO.
Makers of Fine Implements
4914 West Grand Ave. Chicago, U. S. A.
^*
70
All applications for entry of cattle must be accompanied by the name of
the breeder, name, number, age and date of birth, and name and number
of sire and dam of the animal to be exhibited.
All animals exhibited in this Department must be recorded with their
respective associations.
Special Herdman's Prize Page 27.
All animals entered for exhibition must be in place not later than 10:00
o'clock a. m., Tuesday, October 12, 1937.
Exhibitors will be required to have blankets removed from all exhibits
between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., each day of the Fair.
When on exhibition in the ring, each animal must be under halter and
in charge of owner or employee.
Only first premium animals in individual classes will be eligible to
compete for championships.
The Director or ring clerk shall obtain names and record numbers
of all animals composing herds and groups, where regularly entered or sub-stituted,
that such data may be included in report of awards.
When an award is made, special attention should be given to see that
same is correctly entered in the award book.
Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards pages 17 to 29.
BEEF CATTLE
SHORTHORNS
Amount Offered for This Breed $308.00
Class A 1st 2d
196—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30,
1935 $15.00 $10.00
197—Yearling bulls, calved between July 1, 1935, and
August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00
198—Bull calves, calved between September 1, 1936, and
April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00
199—Senior Champion Bull, calved on or before Decem-ber
31, 1935 7.00
200—Junior Champion Bull, calved between January 1,
1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00
201—Grand Champion Bull, classes 199 and 200 compete 15.00
202—Group, two bulls owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00
203—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30,
1935 15.00 10.00
204—Yearling heifers, calved between July 1, 1935, and
August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00
205—Heifer calves, calved between September 1, 1936,
and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00
20 6—Senior Champion Female, calved on or before De-cember
31, 1935 7.00
207—Junior Champion Female, calved between January
1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00
208—Grand Champion Female, classes 206 and 207
compete 15.00
209—Get of Sire, four animals, any age, both sexes to
be represented; owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00
210—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class 197 and one
heifer from Class 204 15.00 10.00
211—Pair Calves: one bull from Class 198 and one heifer
from Class 205 15.00 10.00
71
HEREFORDS
Amount Offered for This Breed
Class B 1st
212—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved
before June 30, 1935 $15.00
213—Yearling bulls calved between July
1, 1935, and August 31, 1936_ 15.00
214—Bull calves, calved between Sep-tember
1, 1936, and April 30,
1937 15.00
215—Senior Champion Bull, calved on
or before December 31, 1935 7.00
216—Junior Champion Bull, calved be-tween
January 1, 1936, and
April 30, 1937 7.00
217—Grand Champion Bull, classes 215
and 216 compete 15.00
218—Group, two bulls owned by exhi-bitor
15.00
219—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved
before June 30, 1935 15.00
220—Yearling heifers, calved between
July 1, 1935, and August 31,
1936 15.00
221—Heifer calves, calved between Sep-tember
1, 1936, and April 30,
1937 15.00
2d
$10.00
10.00
10.00
$378.00
3d 4th
;6.oo
6.00
6.00
10.00 6.00
10.00 6.00
10.00 6.00
10.00 6.00
5.00
5.00
BE SURE TO SEE THIS INTERESTING
TWO-IN-ONE DEMONSTRATION
AT THIS YEAR'S STATE FAIR
THE NEW
COPPERIZED
SILO
A silo that will make you
more profit for years to come.
All metal, practically indes-tructible.
Lightning proof.
Fire proof. The walls are
non-absorbent and are leak-proof.
Built in any size.
Easy to erect or dismantle
and move to a new location.
They are guaranteed for 20
years.
AND
MOLASSES SILAGE
This silo will be filled with Molasses Hay Silage
and located near the cattle barns at the State Fair.
Be sure to see this faster, easier, more profitable
way to save your hay crops. Demonstrates how
your Silver Shield will give you year 'round
service . . . year 'round PROFITS.
SOUTHEASTERN REPRESENTATIVE
F. E. YOUNG OXFORD, N. C.
Manufactured By
LAMNECK PRODUCTS, INC.
416 DUBLIN AVE.
""pHIS means steady auto service to 800
1 families. While similar well-established
routes earn up to >I00 a week, beginners must be satis-fled
with smaller earnings. No experience necessary
but man selected must be reliable, industrious, age 25-50.
The right man will become an authorized Rawleigh Dealer
for 200 home necessities, started on our capital; trained
the 48 year old Rawleigh way
now used on over 8,000
Rawleigh Routes. Write now.
RAWLEIGH CO.
Dept. 3772-NCF
Freeport, III.
Most Profitable Cows
MILK.
Big Milkers - • Hardy Rustle
Good Grazers • Perfect Udders
W,.i< lo. 8ooU.ii
Ayrshire BreedersAssociation
COLUMBUS, OHIO
72
222—Senior Champion Female, calved
on or before December 31, 1935 7.00
223—Junior Champion Female, calved
between January 1, 1936, and
April 30, 1937 7.00
224—Grand Champion Female, classes
222 and 223 compete 15.00
225—Get of Sire, four animals, any age
both sexes to be represented;
owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 6.00
226—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class
213 and one heifer from Class
220 15.00 10.00 6.00
227—Pair Calves: one bull from Class
214 and one heifer from Class
221 15.00 10.00 6.00
ABERDEEN ANGUS
Amount Offered for This Breed $378.00
Class C 1st 2d 3d 4th
228—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved
before June 30, 1935 $15.00 $10.00 $6.00
229—Yearling bulls, calved between
July 1, 1935, and August 31,
1936 15.00 10.00 6.00
230—Bull calves, calved between Sep-tember
1, 1936, and April 30,
1937 15.00 10.00 6.00 5.00
231—Senior Champion Bull, calved on
or before December 31, 1935 7.00
232—Junior Champion Bull, calved be-tween
January 1, 1936, and
April 30, 1937 7.00
233—Grand Champion Bull, classes 231
and 232 compete 15.00
234—Group, two bulls owned by exhi-bitor
15.00 10.00 6.00
235—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved
before June 30, 1935 15.00 10.00 6.00
23 6—Yearling heifers, calved between
July 1, 1935, and August 31,
1936 15.00 10.00 6.00
237—Heifer calves, calved between Sep-tember
1, 1986, and April 30,
1937 15.00 10.00 6.00 6.00
238—Senior Champion Female, calved
on or before December 31, 1935 7.00
239—Junior Champion Female, calved
between January 1, 1936, and
April 30, 1937 7.00
240—Grand Champion Female, classes
238 and 239 compete 15.00
241—Get of Sire, four animals, any age,
both sexes to be represented;
owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 6.00
242—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class
229 and one heifer from Class
236 15.00 10.00 6.00
243—Pair Calves: one bull from Class
230 and one heifer from Class
237 15.00 10.00 6.00
73
BEEF STEERS
Amount Offered in this Class by Fair $175.00
Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
244—Light weight steers $15.00 $12.00 $10.00 $8.00 $5.00
245—Medium weight steers 15.00 12.00 10.00 8.00 5.00
246—Heavy weight steers 15.00 12.00 10.00 8.00 5.00
247—Grand Champion Steer 25.00
DUAL-PURPOSE-BREED—RED POLLS
Amount Offered for This Breed $308.00
Class E 1st 2d
248—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30,
1935 $15.00 $10.00
249—Yearling bulls, calved between July 1, 1935, and
August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00
250—Bull calves, calved between September 1, 1936, and
April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00
251—Senior Champion Bull, calved on or before Decem-ber
31, 1935 7.00
252—Junior Champion Bull, calved between January 1,
1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00
253—Grand Champion Bull, classes 251 and 252 compete 15.00
254—Group, two bulls owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00
255—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30,
1935 15.00 10.00
256—Yearling heifers, calved between July 1, 1935, and
August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00
257—Heifer calves, calved between September 1, 1936,
and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00
258—Senior Champion Female, calved on or before De-cember
31, 1935 7.00
259—Junior Champion Female, calved between January
1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00
260—Grand Champion Female, classes 258 and 259
compete 15.00
261—Get of Sire, four animals, any age, both sexes to be
represented; owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00
262—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class 249 and one
heifer from Class 256 15.00 10.00
263—Pair Calves: one bull from Class 250 and one heifer
from Class 257 15.00 10.00
74
SHEEP
Amount Offered in this Section $749.00
Amount Offered by Fair $674.00
Amount Offered by Specials 75.00
Do not make entries in Championship classes.
Exhibitors must specify on entry blank the number of animals entered
and the number of pens wanted.
Pens, $1.00 each.
All animals entered for exhibition must be in place not later than 10:00
a. m., Tuesday, October 12th.
All animals over three months old must be recorded and appear in the
name of the exhibitor on the records of their respective associations. Ani-mals
recorded in individual names cannot be shown in name of firm or of
the farm, but must be shown exactly as they appear on the records. This
rule is fair, and will be strictly enforced. See Rules.
Exhibitors must be prepared to show certificates of registration if called
for.
The judges are requested to give special attention to actual merit and
in order to avoid mistakes it is their duty to inquire as to time of shearing,
manner of fitting, age of lambs, etc.
Misrepresentation in any form on part of exhibitor or agent forfeits all
premiums awarded.
A breeder's flock shall consist of one yearling ram, two yearling ewes,
and two ewe lambs, bred and owned by exhibitor.
Get of sire shall consist of pen of four lambs under one year, either
sex, and get of one sire, bred and owned by exhibitor.
All sheep entered must be in apparently healthy condition. The right
is reserved to reject an entry or to remove same after entered should our
veterinarian find that the animal is affected with a communicable disease.
The clerk of awards must take special pains after an award is made to
properly enter it on the records. It is absolutely necessary that the name
of animal, registry number, date of birth, and ear tag number be given for
all animals awarded prizes.
75
In case a substitute animal is shown, or in case this data was not given
and recorded in judge's book at time entries were made, it must be sup-plied
by the clerk. Records of awards must be complete in every detail
or premiums will not be paid.
SHROPSHIRES
Amount Offered for This Breed $148.00
Class F 1st 2d
264—Ram, one year old or over $ 9.00 $7.00
265—Ram, under one year 9.00 7.00
266—Ewe, one year old or over 9.00 7.00
267—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00
268—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00
269—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00
Champions
270—Champion ram 10.00
271—Champion ewe 10.00
Groups
272—Breeder's flock 9.00
273—Get of sire „ 9.00
HAMPSHIRES
Amount Offered for This Breed $230.00
Class G 1st 2d 3d
273%—Ram, two year old and over $9.00 $7.00 $5.00
274—Ram, one year old and under two 9.00 7.00 5.00
275—Ram, under one year 9.00 7.00 5.00
275%—Ewe, two year old and over 9.00 7.00 5.00
276—Ewe, one year old and under two 9.00 7.00 5.00
277—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00 5.00
278—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00 5.00
279—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00 5.00
Champions
280—Champion ram 10.00
281—Champion ewe 10.00
Groups
282—Breeder's flock 9.00 7.00 5.00
283—Get of sire 9.00 7.00 5.00
SPECIAL. PRIZES
Special prizes offered by the American Hampshire Sheep Association,
at North Carolina State Fair to be held in Raleigh for 1937, under the
following rules and conditions.
1. These specials open to members of the American Hampshire Sheep
Association only.
2. All sheep competing for these specials must be bred and owned by
exhibitor; must be recorded in this Association and carry the Association
labels in their ears at time of showing.
3. No special prize money will be paid on sheep artificially colored.
4. The Secretary of the Fair, or Superintendent of the Sheep Depart-ment,
must certify to all winnings, giving the Association registry numbers
of the winning animals, with the name and address of the winner.
5. Prizes to be paid direct to the winner from the Association office, if
proper certification of the award is received within 90 days after the close
of the Fair.
6. Only one prize will be paid any Exhibitor.
76
FOR PEN OF THREE BEST RAM LAMBS
1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
$25.00 $20.00 $15.00 $10.00 $5.00
Secretary, American Hampshire Sheep Association.
72 Woodland Ave., Detroit, Mich.
SOUTHDOWNS
Amount Offered for This Breed $148.00
Class H 1st 2d
284—Ram, one year old or over $9.00 $7.00
285—Ram, under one year . 9.00 7.00
286—Ewe, one year old or over '. 9.00 7.00
287—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00
288—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00
289—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00
Champions
290—Champion ram 10.00
291—Champion ewe 10.00
Groups
292—Breeder's flock 9.00 7.00
293—Get of sire 9.00 7.00
DORSETS
Amount Offered for This Breed $148.00
Class I 1st 2d
294—Ram, one year old or over $9.00 $7.00
295—Ram, under one year 9.00 7.00
296—Ewe, one year old or over 9.00 7.00
297—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00
298—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00
299—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00
Champions
300—Champion ram 10.00
301—Champion ewe 10.00
Groups
302—Breeder's flock 9.00 7.00
303—Get of sire 9.00 7.00
77
LIVESTOCK
DIRECTORS
Dr. Wm. Moore—-J. A. Arey
DAIRY CATTLE
Department D
Judge:
Dr.
PROP.
DIRECTORS
C. D. Grinnells—A. C. Kimery
J. P. LaMASTER, Head Dairy Department
Clemson College, S. C.
Judging schedules as indicated under each breed.
Director reserves right to change this schedule should unusual circum-stances
warrant such change in any of Dairy Classes.
Amount Offered in This Section $2,235.00
Entries in this Department close October 9th, 6:00 P. M.
Make your entries early.
Entries are limited to North Carolina.
Exhibitors must state on entry blank name and registration number of
every animal entered and date of birth.
Stall fees: One dollar for each animal entered. If more than one is
used for any animal, an additional fee must be paid.
See General Rules under Entries, Pages 17 to 29.
Do not make entries in Champion Classes.
In Dairy Breed Classes
A Senior Yearling is one dropped between July 1, 1935, and January
1, 1936.
78
A Junior Yearling is one dropped between January 1, 1936, and July
1, 1936.
All calves dropped since July 1, 1936, and over four months of age,
shall be shown in the Calf classes.
Graded Herd shall consist of one bull, two years old or over; one cow,
3 years old or over; one heifer, 2 years old and under 3; one yearling
heifer and one senior heifer calf.
Yearling Herd shall consist of one bull, 1 year old and under 2, and two
yearling heifers. Females must be bred by exhibitors.
Calf Herd shall consist of one bull and two heifers, all under 1 year old
and all bred by exhibitor.
Get of Sire shall consist of four animals, any age, the get of one sire.
Get need not be owned by exhibitor.
Produce of Dam shall consist of two animals, any age, the produce of
one cow.
The ages of all animals in two-year-old class and those older, as well as
senior yearlings and senior calves, shall be computed to July 1st, while
the ages of juniors will be computed to January 1st. Cows 36 months old
or over on July 1st of year in which shown, to be eligible to the show,
must have produced a calf carried to maturity within 18 months preceding
said date. Any bull 36 months old or over on first day of July of year
in which shown, that has not dropped to his service one or more living
calves during the 12 months preceding said date, will not be eligible to the
show.
Complete information must be given on the entry blank. Registration
certificate for every animal entered must be submitted to the Superin-tendent
or his assistants upon request.
All cattle must be accompanied by a health certificate and tuberculin
test chart issued by a qualified veterinarian and approved by the State
Veterinarian showing the animals to be free from tuberculosis and Bang's
disease. If the entire herd has been tuberculin tested within a year of the
opening of the Fair and no untested cattle have been added, cattle from
such a herd may be shown without further tests. Otherwise the cattle
for exhibit shall be tuberculin tested within 60 days of the Fair. Cattle
from a herd, all of which have been tested for Bang's disease within the
year without reactors and no untested animals have been added, may be
shown without further tests. Otherwise the cattle for exhibit shall be
tested within 30 days of the Fair. The certificate and test chart must
accompany the cattle, and they will not be permitted to enter the barns
until the certificate and test chart is submitted to the Superinendent or
his authorized representative.
All cows in the Dairy Breeds, to be judged in the morning, shall be
milked at 6:00 P. M., on the day previous to being judged. Dairy cows
to be judged in the afternoon shall be milked at 6:00 A. M., of the same
day. The judge may, at his option, require any cow to be milked while in
the ring or before the awards are made.
Special Herdman's Prize Page 27.
79
JERSEYS
Judging begins Tuesday A. M.
Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00
Individuals
Class A 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
304—Bull, dropped before July 1,
1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
305—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to
June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
306—Bull, Senior yearling (dropped
July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31,
1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
307—Bull, Junior yearling (dropped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30,
1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
308—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
309—Bull, Senior champion 10.00
310—Bull, Junior champion 10.00
311—Bull, Grand champion 10.00
312—Cow, dropped before July 1,
1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
313—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to
June 30, 1934 inclusive __ 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
314—Cow or heifer, dropped July 1,
1934>vto June 30, 1935
inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
315—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped
July 1, 1935 to Dec.
31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
316—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June
30, 1396 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
317—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
318—Female, Senior champion 10.00
319—Female, Junior champion 10.00
320—Female, Grand champion 10.00
Herds
1st 2d 3d 4th
321—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00
322—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
323—Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
Groups
1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
324—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
325—Produce of dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
GUERNSEYS
Judging begins Wednesday, A. M.
Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00
Individuals
Class B 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
326—Bull, dropped before July 1,
1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
327—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to
June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
80
328��Bull, Senior yearling (drop-ped
July 1, 1935 to Dec.
31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
329—Bull, Junior yearling (drop-ped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June
30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
330—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
331—Bull, Senior champion 10.00
332—Bull, Junior champion 10.00
333—Bull, Grand champion 10.00
334—Cow, dropped before July 1,
1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
335—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to
June 30, 1934 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
336—Cow or heifer, dropped July 1,
1934 to June 30, 1935
inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
337—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped
July 1, 1935 to Dec.
31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
338—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June
30, 1936 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
339—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
340—Female, Senior champion 10.00
341—Female, Junior champion 10.00
342—Female, Grand champion 10.00
Herds
1st 2d 3d 4th
343—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00
344—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
345—Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
Groups
1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
346—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
347—Produce of dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
AYRSHIRES
Judging begins Wednesday, P. M.
Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00
Individuals
Class C 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
348—Bull, dropped before July 1,
1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
349—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to
June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
350—Bull, Senior yearling (drop-ped
July 1, 1935 to Dec.
31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
3 51—Bull, Junior yearling (drop-ped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June
30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
352—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
81
353—Bull, Senior champion 10.00
354—Bull, Junior champion 10.00
355—Bull, Grand champion 10.00
356—Cow, dropped before July 1,
1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
357—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to
June 30, 1934 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
358—Cow or heifer, dropped July
1, 1934 to June 30, 1935
inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
359—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped
July 1, 1935 to Dec.
31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
360—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June
30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
361—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
362—Female, Senior champion 10.00
363—Female, Junior champion 10.00
364—Female, Grand champion 10.00
Herds
1st 2d 3d 4th
365—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00
366—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
367���Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
Groups
1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
368—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
369—Produce of dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
HOLSTEINS
Judging begins Tuesday, P. M.
Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00
Individuals
Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
370—Bull, dropped before July 1,
1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
371—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to
June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
372—Bull, Senior yearling (drop-ped
July 1, 1935 to Dec.
31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
373—Bull, Junior yearling (drop-ped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June
30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
374—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00-
375—Bull, Senior champion 10.00
376—Bull, Junior champion 10.00
377—Bull, Grand champion 10.00
378—Cow, dropped before July 1,
1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
379—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to
June 30, 1934 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
380—Cow or heifer, dropped July 1,
1934 to June 30, 1935
inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
82
381—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped
July 1, 1935 to Dec.
31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
382—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped
Jan. 1, 1936 to June
30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
38 3—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1,
1936 to June 30, 1937
inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00
384—Female, Senior champion 10.00
385—Female, Junior champion 10.00
386—Female, Grand champion 10.00
Herds
1st 2d 3d 4th
387—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00
388—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
389—Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00
Groups
1st 2d 3d 4th 5th
390—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00
391—Produce of Dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3 00
83
SWINE
Department E
H. W. TAYLOR, Director, State College, Raleigh, N. C.
Judge: Paul Swaffar
Amount Offered in This Department $1,777.00
Entries close October 9th, 1937
To avoid switching charges and delay, bill hogs as follows:
"For Exhibit, North Carolina State Fair, Camp Polk, N. C, care Sea-board
Air Line Railway."
Entries are limited to North Carolina.
Exhibitors must specify on entry blank the number of animals entered
and the number of pens wanted.
Reserve pens, $1.00 each.
Only two entries allowed to the class.
SEE RULES
Age of animals shall be reckoned from March 1, and September 1.
An aged animal is one farrowed prior to September 1, 1935.
A senior yearling is one farrowed between September 1, 1935 and
March 1, 1936.
A junior yearling is one farrowed between March 1, 1936 and Septem-ber
1, 1936.
A senior pig is one farrowed between September 1, 1936 and March
1. 1937.
A junior pig is one farrowed between March 1, 1937 and September
1, 1937.
84
All animals over six months old must be recorded in the name of the
exhibitor on the records of their respective associations.
All sows two years old or over, eligible to show, must have produced
living offspring.
Boars over one year old must have their tusks removed before showing.
Get of sire shall consist of four swine, any age, the get of one boar.
Produce of dam shall consist of four swine any age, the produce of one
sow.
Breeder's young herd shall consist of one boar and three sows, under
one year old, bred and owned by exhibitor.
Exhibitor's herd shall consist of one boar and three sows, over one year
old, all owned by exhibitor. »
All animals entered for exhibition shall be in place not later than 10:00
A.M. Tuesday, October 12, 1937.
Section 10 of the Regulation No. 3 of the Livestock Sanitary Laws and
Regulations of the North Carolina Department of Agriculture is as
follows:
"All swine exhibited at any Agricultural Fair, or other exhibit within
this State, must be accompanied by an affidavit from the owner, certifying
that such swine are apparently free from any symptoms of a contagious
disease; that they are from premises where no known contagious diseased
swine exist, and that they have been properly inoculated with serum alone
not less than seven days, nor more than thirty days, or with the serum
and virus not less than thirty days immediately prior to being placed
on exhibit."
All entries must comply with this section. The right is reserved to
reject an entry or to remove same after entered, should our veterinarian
find that the animal is affected with a communicable disease.
The Superintendent or Ring Clerk shall obtain names and record num-bers
of all animals composing herds and groups, where regularly entered
or substituted, that such data may be included in report of awards.
Spotted Poland Chinas will be shown in the class with Standard Poland
Chinas.
Do not make entries in Champion Classes.
Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards pages 17 to 29.
POLAND CHINA AND SPOTTED POLAND CHINA
Amount Offered on Above Breeds $356.00
Class A 1st 2d 3d 4th
392—Boar, two years old and over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00
393—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
394—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
395���Boar, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
396—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
397—Sow, two years old or over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
398—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
399—Sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
400—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
401—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
85
402—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
403—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
404—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
405—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
Champions
406—Senior champion boar $5.00
407—Junior champion boar 5.00
408—Grand champion boar Ribbon
409—Senior champion sow 5.00
410—Junior champion sow 5.00
411—Grand champion sow - Ribbon
DUROC
Amount Offered on This Breed $356.00
Class B * 1st 2d 3d 4th
412—Boar, two years old or over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00
413—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
414—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
415—Boar, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
416—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
417—Sow, two years old and over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
418—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
419—sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
420—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
421—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
422—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
423—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
424—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
425—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
Champions
426—Senior champion boar $5.00
427—Junior champion boar 5.00
428—Grand champion boar Ribbon
429—Senior champion sow , 5.00
430—Junior champion sow 5.00
431-—Grand champion sow Ribbon
HAMPSHIRES
Amount Offered on This Breed $356.00
Class C 1st 2d 3d 4th
432—Boar, two years old and over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00
433—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
434—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
435—Boai, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
436—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
437—Sow, two years old or over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
438—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
439—Sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
440—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
441—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
442—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
443—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
444—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
445—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
Champions
446—Senior champion boar $5.00
447—Junior champion boar 5.00
448—Grand champion boar Ribbon
449—Senior champion sow 5.00
450—Junior champion sow 5.00
451—Grand champion sow Ribbon
86
BERKSHIRE
Amount Offered on This Breed $356.00
Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th
452—Boar, two years old and over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00
453—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
454—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
455—Boar, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
456—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
457���Sow, two years old or over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
458—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
459—sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
460—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
461—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
462—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
463—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
464—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
465—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00
Champions
466—Senior champion boar $5.00
467—Junior champion boar 5.00
468—Grand champion boar Ribbon
469—Senior champion sow 5.00
470—Junior champion sow 5.00
471—Grand champion sow Ribbon
FAT HOG SHOW
Amount Offered on This Class $353.00
BARROWS AND GILTS
Class E 1st 2d 3d
472—Pen six barrows or gilts, average weight
175-200 $25.00 $15.00 $13.00
473—Pen six barrows or gilts, average weight
201-225 25.00 15.00 13.00
474—Pen six barrows or gilts, average weight
226-250 25.00 15.00 13.00
475—Pen three barrows or gilts, average weight
175-200 15.00 10.00 8.00
476—Pen three barrows or gilts, average weight
201-225 15.00 10.00 8.00
477—Pen three barrows or gilts, average weight
226-250 15.00 10.00 8.00
478—Single Barrow or gilt, average weight
175-200 9.00 7.00 5.00
479—Single barrow or gilt, average weight
201-225 9.00 7.00 5.00
480—Single barrow or gilt, average weight
226-250 9.00 7.00 5.00
481—Champion pen three barrows 10.00
482—Champion pen three gilts 10.00
483—Champion barrow 6.00
484—Champion gilt 6.00
87
SPECIAL
The Bulletin-National Spotted Poland China Record will pay the fol-lowing
cash special prizes in the Junior gilt class, providing the winning
animal is recorded in The National Spotted Poland China Record at the
time shown. One prize only to each exhibitor.
1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 6th
$10.00 $7.00 $5.00 $3.00 $3.00 $2.00
88
POULTRY
Department F
Twenty-first Official State Poultry Show of North Carolina,
Held in Connection with the North Carolina State Fair
T. T. BROWN and C. F. PARRISH, Directors, in Charge, Poultry
Department, State College Station, Raleigh, N. C.
Judges
MR. B. F. RICKETS, Zanesville, Ohio, Licensed A.P.A. Judge of all
varieties. To Judge Standard Classes
PROF. N. W. WILLIAMS, State College Station, Raleigh, N. C.
To Judge Standard Production Classes
Amount Offered in This Department $2,019.00
Entries in this Department close Wednesday, October 6, at 6:00 P. M.
Entries must be made on printed forms provided by the Secretary for
that purpose and must be in full compliance with the printed instructions
on same. Study the list carefully, then fill out the entry blank with sec-
89
tion number, class, book number, premium list number, and name of breed
and variety as they appear in the Premium List. Do not send in your birds
for exhibit without first h
Object Description
Description
| Title | North Carolina State Fair |
| Other Title | Premium list |
| Creator |
North Carolina. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. |
| Publisher | Raleigh, N.C.: The Fair,1937- |
| Digital Characteristics-A | 144 p.; 8.07 MB |
| Pres File Name-M | pubs_statefair_serial_premiumlist1937.pdf |
| Pres Local File Path-M | \Preservation_Content\StatePubs\pubs_statefair\images_master |
| Full Text | North Carolina State Library bRTH CAROLINA N.C Doc. RALEIGH , OCTOBER 12-16 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from State Library of North Carolina http://www.archive.org/details/northcarolinasta37nort North Carolina State Fair A DIVISION OF THE State Department of Agriculture RALEIGH OCTOBER 12 TO 16, 1937 W. KERR SCOTT Commissioner of Agriculture D. S. COLTRANE Assistant to Commissioner Board of Agriculture MRS. L. L. STEVENS.___ .Indiantown M. L. ADERHOLT Lexington C. S. YOUNG ..Shelby CHAS. F. CATES .....Mebane D. R. NOLAND Clyde W. G. HARGETT ...Richlands T. G. CURRIN Oxford LIONEL WEIL Goldsboro J. H. POOLE West End W. I. BISSETT Grifton STATE FAIR COMMITTEE Mrs. L. L. Stevens W. I. Bissett C. S. Young DIRECTOR OF PUBLICITY Louis H. Wilson DR. J. S. DORTON Manager CHAS. W. MANGUM Asst. Manager STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA Governors Office RALEIGH Clyde R. Hoey Governor A MESSAGE TO ALL NORTH CAROLINIANS Greetings : Never before has the North Carolina State Fair been as important to the development of our State as it is today. The new Fair can, and I believe will, play a most important part in our effort not only to adver-tise North Carolina to the world, but also to make it a better and a happier place in which to live and work and play. To accomplish our purposes we must have better crops and better prices for them; more industrial em-ployment and greater returns for industrial employees and employers alike; and a greater development and use of our incomparable recreational facilities. No agency can play a more important part in this general development, and in the program of "selling" North Carolina to both itself and to the world, than our State Fair. I wish for the 1937 State Fair every possible suc-cess, and as Governor of our State, I call upon all North Carolinians to cooperate in the effort to make it the most successful fair in our history. UJ. KERX SCOTT Gomjrjssioner cfAgriculture sranLEv imnBORXiE Utilities @oifimjssione>r' Department Directors F. E. MILLER, General Director of Exhibits, State Department of Agriculture, Raleigh, North Carolina Department Page FIELD CROPS AND FARM EXHIBITS A 31 J. W. Hendricks—R. J. Harris, Directors. HORTICULTURE PRODUCTS B 49 Dr. Chas. Dearing—H. R. Niswonger—Robert Schmitt, Directors. BEEF CATTLE AND SHEEP C 69 J. E. Foster—L. I. Case, Directors. LIVESTOCK DEPARTMENTS: Dr. Wm. Moore—J. A. Arey, Directors. DAIRY CATTLE ,- D 78 Dr. C. D. Grinnells—A. C. Kimmery, Directors. SWINE E 84 H. W. Taylor, Director. POULTRY F 89 C. F. Parrish—T. T. Brown, Directors. WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT G 98 Miss Ruth Current, Director. Mrs. H. H. Roacb—Mrs. G. R. Woodall — Mrs. L. I. Case, Associate Directors. BOYS AND GIRLS 4-H CLUB H 111 L. R. Harrill, Director. Miss Francis MacGregor, Associate Director. BEES AND HONEY I 128 C. H. Brannon, Director. C. L. Sams—P. G. Craddock, Associate Directors. VOCATIONAL EDUCATION J 130 Roy H. Thomas, Director. Miss Katherine T. Dennis—George W. Coggin, Associate Directors. HORSES AND MULES K 132 Earl Hostetler, Director. EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT L 134 Clyde A. Erwin, Director. A. B. Combs—Jule B. Warren—E. N. Peeler, Superintendents. Jno. C. Lockhart—C. F. Gaddy—Horace Grigg, Associate Directors. FINE ARTS—ARTS AND CRAFTS M 136 Miss Katherine Morris, Director. Miss Francis Barbour—James McLean, Associate Directors. FARM MACHINERY AND TRACTORS N 138 David S. Weaver, Director. FEDERAL DEPARTMENT EXHIBITS .... R. W. Shoffner—Robt. M. Gantt, Directors. 5 m.L. QDEKHOLDT 110HEL U3E1L BOdRD OF QGRICULTURI commissionERs T. 6. CURRin. CHQRLES F. CCITES W. I. B1SSETT C. S. VOUT1G OF aGRI CULTURE VD KEH.K. SCOTT 6 State Departments and Institutions Exhibits NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE W. KERR SCOTT, Commissioner STATE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION CLYDE A. ERWIN, Superintendent NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION AND DEVELOPMENT R. BRUCE ETHERIDGE, Director NORTH CAROLINA STATE HOSPITAL DR. JULIAN W. ASHBY, Superintendent NORTH CAROLINA STATE HIGHWAY AND PUBLIC WORKS COMMISSION FRANK L. DUNLAP, Chairman NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND ENGINEERING STUDENTS' AGRICULTURAL FAIR DEAN I. 0. SCHAUB, Director NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE FORESTRY EXTENSION R. W. GRAEBER, Superintendent WPTF RADIO STATION RICHARD MASON, Director NORTH CAROLINA STATE HEALTH DEPARTMENT DR. C. V. REYNOLDS, State Health Officer NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF LABOR MAJOR A. L. FLETCHER, Commissioner BOY SCOUTS CLAUDE HUMPHREYS, Scout Executive LIBERTY LIMESTONE CORPORATION ROCKY POINT, VIRGINIA Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE LIME Magnesium Agricultural Lime (Dolomitic) 54% CaCo3 43% MgCo3 CaCo3 Equivalent 105.2% and Murat Lime Carbonate 96% CaCo3 1.5% MgCo3 SEND US YOUR INQUIRIES 1937 NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR With the issuance of this booklet a cordial invitation goes forth to all North Carolinians to visit and exhibit at their new North Carolina State Fair. Ambitious farmers, industrious housewives, capable and pro-gressive breeders of fine livestock and poultry, energetic and enthusiastic 4-H Club members, Vocational students, aggressive Industrialists, and all others who wish to lead and excell in their field of endeavor will grasp the opportunities offered here to dis-play and demonstrate their superlatives. From cover to cover, in every division, the Premium List for 1937 bears convincing testimony to the fact that this State Fair is pledged to the aid and advancement of those interests to which our great State owes so much—Agriculture, Industry, Educa-tion. This State Fair, owned and operated by the State of North Carolina as a division of the Department of Agriculture, is worthy of the support of every North Carolinian who cherishes the ambition to have all of her State Institutions rank with the best in the Nation. With these idealistic principles in mind, the Management solicits your interest and cooperation. J. S. DORTON, Manager, North Carolina State Fair. THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR Will Present to Their Guests The finest array of Grandstand and Race Track Attractions that it is possible to secure. Time, effort, thought, research, and money have been no object. All have been spent freely with the one ambition that you might be wholesomely enter-tained. Our Revue will be one of outstanding genius ivith the most bril-liant ensemble ever to be presented an audience in North Carolina, with a cast of performers unequalled on any stage in America. Featuring one of the finest Concert Bands on tour, playing current and classics; light opera and sym-phony. On the Race Track: Tuesday, October 12; Thursday, October 14; and Friday, October 15, Harness Horse Racing. Some of the finest trotters and pacers from many famous stables throughout the United States and Canada will be seen in action at the State Fair. Many famous horses with their equally famous owners will be present to contest for the liberal purses offered in the "Sport of Kings." Fireworks: Each evening your State Fair presents the most original fireworks display ever witnessed in the South. Three complete displays, under supervision of three pyro-technic experts firing in unison the two lateral displays firing into the center display. This in turn accentuating the two in height, color and noise. A veritable three ring circus in Fireworks, under the personal direction of Mr. A. Tony Vitale, President, Ohio Display Fireworks Company, New Castle, Pa. SPECIAL EVENTS WEDNESDAY ONLY—OCTOBER 13 "Lucky" Teter and His Hell Drivers Legion of the World's Greatest Daredevils We do not think it good business to repeat any attraction, but the public has been so lavish in their praise of "Lucky" Teter and his Hell Drivers that we have made an exception in this Great Attraction. "Lucky" is not a daredevil, but a precision driver. One whose business it is to be "Perfectly" Reckless. His driving is Per-fection. His timing of all of his stunts is to a split second. See him do his whirl-wind spiral roll-over, the "Head-on Crash" (drivers remaining in cars), automobile doing a Truck Leap, "The Race of Flaming Death" leaping a car off a ramp through space, into and through a solid wall of fire. "Lucky" driving his car in Reverse Spins, Triple Ski Jumps, Truck Jumps, and dozens of other spine tingling and thrill-giving performances. CALF SCRAMBLE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15th—OPEN TO 4-H CLUB MEMBERS ONLY Five calves are turned loose in enclosed track in front of grandstand. Ten 4-H Club boys are given halters. One calf has a tattoo mark in ear, known only to the referee. Object: At the signal from referee each boy tries to catch and halter calf and lead same from the arena. 10 Rules: Only one boy must have hold of calf at any time. Should calf get loose, he is then open to any boy who can catch him. Boys must not assist each other. The boy catching calf with tattoo mark in ear and leading same out of arena, receives ten dollars ($10.00) in gold as prize. AUTO RACE DAY SATURDAY ONLY—OCTOBER 16th, 1:00 P. M. Professional Automobile Races. (A.A.A. sanction.) Per-sonal direction of that dean of all A.A.A. Race Promoters, Ralph A. Hankinson, bringing together for these races some of the foremost dirt track drivers of America. Carolina Hardware Co Wholesale and Retail RALEIGH, N. C. 233-35 SOUTH WILMINGTON STREET TELEPHONES 233 AND 2506 li THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR PROGRAM Tuesday, October 12, 1937 WAKE COUNTY SCHOOL DAY—All school children admitted on School Ticket Free this day. Gates Open at 8 A. M. Judging begins in all Departments. Exhibit Buildings open at 10 A. M. Grandstand opens at 12 :30 P. M. Horse Races begin at 2 P.M. : 2 :19 Trot 2:16 Pace Free Attractions at 2:15 P. M. EVENING Grandstand opens at 6:30 P. M. Spectacular Revue and Grandstand Show begins at 7 : 30 P. M. Fireworks Display at 9 :30 P. M. The Great World of Mirth Shows of 22 Rides and 20 Shows on the Midway. Wednesday Only, October 13th "LUCKY" TETER AND HIS HELL DRIVERS.—Legion of the World's Greatest Daredevils. "Lucky" is not a daredevil, but a precision driver. One whose business it is to be "Perfectly" Reckless. His driving is Perfection. His timing of all of his stunts is to a split second. See him do his whirl-wind spiral roll-over, the "Head-on Crash" (drivers remaining in cars), Automobile doing a Truck Leap, "The Race of Flaming Death" leaping a car off a ramp through space, into and through a solid wall of fire. "Lucky" driving his car in Reverse Spin, Triple Ski Jumps, Truck Jumps, and dozens of other spine-tingling and thrill-giving performances. EVENING Grandstand opens at 6:30 P. M. Spectacular Revue and Grandstand Show at 7 :30 P. M.—Includ-ing many outstanding Feature Attractions. Fireworks Display at 9 : 30 P. M. The Greatest Midway in America. The Great World of Mirth Shows—22 Rides—20 Shows. 12 Thursday, October 14th Gates open at 8 A. M. Vocational Judging Contests at 10 A. M. (Open to all Vocational Schools.) Grandstand opens at 12 :30 P. M. Horse Races begin at 2:00 P. M. : Free-For-All Pace 2:15 Trot Free Attractions at 2:15 P. M. EVENING Grandstand opens for Evening Show at 6:30 P. M. Presenting the Revue in an Entire Change of Program and Costumes. Fireworks Display at 9 :30 P. M. Then to the Beautiful World of Mirth Midway. Friday, October 15th YOUNG NORTH CAROLINIANS' DAY—All School Children in North Carolina admitted FREE. 900,000 Free Tickets will be issued through School Superintendents. Special Children's Program and Fireworks Display at Grandstand Free at 10 A. M. Gates open at 8 A. M. Grandstand opens at 12 :30 P. M. Horse Races begin at 2:00 P. M. Free-For-All Trot 2:20 Pace CALF SCRAMBLE—Open to School Boys 16 years and under. EVENING Grandstand opens at 6 : 30 P. M. Revue and Grandstand Show follows. Fireworks Display at 9 :30 P. M. MIDWAY GOODNIGHT. Saturday, October 16th A. A. A. AUTO RACE DAY. Gates open at 8 :00 A. M. Grandstand opens at 12:30 P. M. Time Trials begin at 12 :30 P. M. Races start at 2 :00 P. M. sharp. Some of the fastest dirt-track drivers in America will be seen in action. These races are A. A. A. sanctioned, and are under the supervision of Ralph A. Hankinson, Inc. EVENING Grandstand opens at 6:30 P. M. Revue and Grandstand Show follows. Fireworks Display at 9:30 P. M. MIDWAY UNTIL MIDNIGHT .... GOODBYE. 13 DIZE AWNING AND TENT COMPANY Dize quality awnings look better, last longer. Manufacturers, tents, tarpaulins, furniture pads, Venetian blinds. Rentals of all styles and size tents for special occasions, fair ex-hibit purposes. Largest manufacturers of canvas products in the South. If it is made of canvas, we have it. DIZE AWNING AND TENT COMPANY 1512 S. Main Street WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 14 General Information It is anticipated that the attendance at the North Carolina State Fair this year will approximate a quarter of a million people. To serve this vast throng, it is necessary to have on the Fair Grounds, comprising over two hundred acres, a modern city, fully equipped, to make Fair visitors more comfortable. PUBLIC SERVICES The Southern Bell Telephone Company will maintain complete service, and toll pay stations at convenient points. The Western Union and Postal Telegraph Companies will maintain offices and complete service on the grounds. INFORMATION BUREAU An Information Bureau is maintained at the main office, where infor-mation will be given, cheerfully and reliably. We will be happy to have you use this service. ADMISSION TO GROUNDS The general admission is 50 cents for adults. Children under 12 years of age 25 cents, with the exception of School Day, Friday, October 15th, when all school children in North Carolina are admitted free on special tickets they will secure from their respective School Super-intendents. Over 900,000 free school tickets will be given to all children in school in North Carolina, and a special invitation extended to visit their State Fair. PRESS BUREAU A Press Bureau and News Headquarters will be located in the main office building, with an experienced newspaper man in charge. All news-paper men and representatives of all publications are cordially invited to make this office their headquarters. It will be a pleasure to furnish authentic information of news value to all newspaper men, and to render any service and courtesies possible. OPENING AND CLOSING The North Carolina State Fair will be formally opened, Tuesday, October 12th, at 8:00 A.M. and will close ^Saturday, October 16th, at 11:30 P.M. FIRST AID STATIONS, EMERGENCY HOSPITAL AND LADIES REST ROOM All of these services are conveniently located on the grounds, with competent attendants in charge at all times. TRANSPORTATION ~7 All car load shipments by freight, for exhibition purposes, should be billed as follows: For exhibit, North Carolina State Fair, Camp Polk, 15 *BUILD * PLANT * MODERNIZE ORDER FROM THIS LIST Lawn Seed Garden Seed Farm Seed Fertilizers Cole Planters and Distributors Plows, Planters Distributors Plow Castings Wagons, Harness, Sprayers Spray Materials Tools of every kind for every Rubberold etc. purpose Leigh Old Dominion Cement U. S. Gypsum Plaster Board Metal Laths Plaster and Plaster Material Roofings Galvanized 6-V Composition Slate Surface Wood Shingles Nails Staples Wire Fencing, Fence Posts, Sewer Pipe, Drain Tile, Flue Linings, Wall Coping. Heavy Groceries and Animal Feeds. Quick Deliveries. THE W. A. MYATT COMPANY, INC. Cor. Blount and Martin Phones 83-84 Raleigh, N. C. HEALTHY HOGS Iflake Rapid(jainA. inJVeu/ht! FeedWATCH DOG LYE A 3\i "-*\' Feeding Directions For Thoroughly dissolve a tab eP Water and mix wei HALp hogs or thoroughly * barrel aTd n Sti"eutn^eed night and of feed. Stir weii thorough-ly dissolve HALl . ! f drinking ss. LV4c:ts-— * Hogs eat better when a little WATCH DOG LYE is mixed with their feed—and you know it takes appetite tomake meat and fat.WATCH DOG LYE also tends to reduce acidity of feed—helps build up resistance of hogs to certain diseases and helps tone them up. Thin, scrawny, sickly hogs usually improve quickly when fed WATCH DOG LYE—even healthy hogs do better. Costs little to feed—1 20 feeds in every can—pays for itself many times over. For years hog raisers have been feeding WATCH DOG LYE—they know what it will do. Profit by their experience —feed your hogs WATCH DOG LYE. Sold by Grocers, Druggists, Feed Dealers E. MYERS LYE CO. Established 1888 St Louis, Mo. WATCH DOG LYE N. C. Care S. A. L. Railway. Exhibits so billed, will be delivered to grounds without extra switching charges. The Tariff Rules, governing the shipment of articles for exhibition at Expositions and Fairs, provide for a free return of such exhibits when accompanied by a certificate from the Secretary of the Fair, certifying that such shipment was on exhibition and the ownership of the same was not changed. Intending exhibitors should consult their local agent for particulars governing Fair shipments, as some kinds of exhibits are not returned free, and other conditions enter in if shipment is not returned direct. If your agent is unable to give you full particulars, write the Secretary of the State Fair. Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards GENERAL. 1. The Management of the State Fair reserves the right to rule on all questions not covered by these rules. 2. In the event of conflict between the general rules and the special rules governing the various departments, the special rules will take preced-ence. 3. Disregard of any rule or misrepresentation by exhibitor or conces-sionaire forfeits all premiums, rights and privileges, without recourse. 4. The management will use diligence to insure the safety of live-stock and articles entered for exhibition or display after their arrival on the grounds, but under no circumstances will it be responsible for loss, injury, theft, or damage by fire, lightning, wind, or any other agency, to such livestock or article on exhibition or display. 5. Exhibitors must place all exhibits under the direction of the Superin-tendent in charge, and in no case can they be removed until the close of the Fair. 6. Promiscuous advertising is strictly prohibited. Exhibitors may ad-vertise and distribute from their places of exhibit only. The distribution of advertising matter that conflicts in any manner with a concession sold by the management is prohibited. 7. No peddling, hawking or selling of any kind will be allowed in the buildings or on the grounds, except by Special Licenses obtained from the Secretary. 8. Drunkenness, quarreling or the use of profane or obscene language will not be allowed on the ground. 9. The Fair will use every possible means to protect property, BUT WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR CARS OR ARTICLES LEFT IN CARS. 10. No begging will be allowed on the grounds. 11. No article or animal will be entitled to space until proper entry has been made. After an article has been entered for a premium, it cannot 17 Drink For YOUR Stomach's Sake SEVEN-UP BOTTLING COMPANY PHONE 5085 520 Fayetteville St. 18 RALEIGH, N. C. be removed until Saturday, October 16th, at 4:00 P.M., without permission from the Secretary or the Director in charge of the department; and if any person removes an article without such permission, he forfeits all claims to premiums, even if same shall have been awarded. 12. No booth will be entered until it is completed, or vouched for by the Director of the Department. 13. Each department will be under the special charge of its Director. They will oversee the arrangements of all articles offered for exhibition in their departments and have control of space assigned to them. They will receive all exhibits, take personal charge of them and deliver the articles on presentation of check at the close of the Fair. 14. All judges will be instructed to disqualify articles entered under wrong classes. ENTRIES 1. Competition in All Departments is limited to North Carolina. 2. Entries will be received at the office of the Secretary any time after October 1. Entries in the various departments close on the following dates: Livestock, Saturday, October 9th. Poultry, Wednesday, October 6th. Flowers, Wednesday, October 13th, 1:00 P.M. All other departments, Saturday, October 9th, 6:00 P.M. In order to have the records ready for the judges, it is important that entries in all departments be made at the time designated above. 3. Entries in all departments must be made on printed forms provided by the Secretary for that purpose, and must be in full compliance with the printed instructions on same. These forms are mailed with copies of the Premium List. Exhibitors should study the list carefully, and when de-cision has been made in which classes to enter, they should fill out the entry blank with class number, premium list number, and name, as they appear in the Premium Book. Entries must be made at the office of the Secretary, in person or by mail. Remember that articles must be entered before being sent in for exhibit. No entry will be taken at the time of the Fair, unless there has been some mistake in copying the original entry, in which case correction can be made only in the office of the Secretary. If records are altered and do not conform with the entries on file, pay-ment of premiums will be withheld. The right is reserved to reject any entry offered. 4. All entries must be made in the name of the bona fide owner. In order that a permanent record be on file, it is essential that the name and record number or record number and ear-tag number be given of all ani-mals entered. Entries will not be accepted unless this information is furnished at time of making entry. All animals in the Cattle, Swine and Sheep classes over 6 months old, must be recorded and appear in the name of the exhibitor on the records of their respective associations. In the case of young animals the date of birth and name and record number of sire and dam must be given. 19 International Harvester Farm Operating Equipment Tractors Power Units Threshers Horse Drawn Machinery International Motor Trucks INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY, Inc. 224 So. Cedar St. CHARLOTTE, N. C. 20 All livestock including cattle, swine and sheep must be owned by the exhibitor not less than sixty days prior to the opening of the State Fair. 6. Misrepresentation as to breeding and irregularity in showing will be exposed, and any premium won by such exhibitor will be withheld. 6. A firm, to be entitled to exhibit as such, must have been organized for a time not less than thirty days preceding the closing of entries, and such firm must be organized as a bona fide firm for the purpose of producing or buying and selling the animals or articles they propose to exhibit in the name of such firm. A firm will be regarded as one exhibitor. 7. Incomplete entries will be returned for correction if there is time to do so. Exhibitors are urged to enter early and to use great care in filling out entry blanks, being particular to give all the information requested on the blanks, in clear terms, easily understood. This will save work and annoyance for both exhibitors and management. 8. All exhibits must be in place by 10 o'clock a.m. Tuesday, October 12th. Grounds will be open to receive exhibits one week before the Fair opens. 9. Collections and displays must be made up of specimens other than those entered in single classes, unless otherwise provided for. 10. All livestock on exhibition must be cared for by the exhibitor. All stalls and pens will be well bedded before the Fair, free of charge. There-after exhibitors will be required to furnish their own bedding. Feed and straw will be on sale on the grounds at reasonable prices. 11. All articles and livestock must be delivered to the grounds. No charge for transportation, express, freight, or drayage will be paid by the Fair. EXHIBITS 1. The same article cannot compete for two or more premium numbers, except sweepstakes, or when otherwise stated in the head notes in the de-partment in which it is exhibited. 2. All entries must be numbered and recorded in the books of the proper department and class, and corresponding tags will be issued, which must be attached to exhibit before such can be placed on exhibition. 3. No person will be allowed to see the entries or have access to the entry book, until after the awards have been made. 4. Exhibitors must see to the delivery of any articles or livestock on the grounds, and to the proper care of the latter, as no charges for trans-portation or drayage will be paid by the Fair. 5. SPECIAL NOTICE—All exhibits must be in place and fully installed by Monday, October 11th, 1937, to receive attention from the awarding judges. Exhibitors can have the use of the halls and grounds for any reasonable number of days before the opening day proper, for the ar-ranging and placing of their exhibits, hence there is no good reason for delay. 6. Exhibitors should make themselves acquainted with the Premium List and Regulations, and be sure in what department and class their entries belong. 21 MlGET A t ?I WITH A CAMELf/ COSTLIER TOBACCOS 22 7. The original entry card must in all cases be attached to the exhibit except in the case of animals, when the card may be conspicuously dis-played upon the stall or pen. 8. All exhibits sent by freight or express must be prepaid, and all plainly marked to "Secretary State Fajr, Raleigh, N. C." It must also have the shipper's name and address on them and accompanied by bill of lading, that they may be properly cared for. 9. All exhibitors expecting to enter booths are urged to report same to Secretary, not later than September 25th, that proper space may be reserved for same. 10. Entries made in wrong classes may be reclassed at the request of judges, provided the reclassification is approved by the director of the department. 11. Where there is only one entry in a class, it will receive second premium, unless otherwise stated elsewhere. PASSES Passes are issued only to exhibitors who must be in constant attendance on their exhibits. Or, as a courtesy for some service rendered the State Fair for which we are unable to pay. To these we are grateful, and ask that you confine the use of this pass to the person to whom it is issued. PATRONS Patrons are requested to report any discourtesies from any gateman or employee, also to make any constructive criticisms or offer helpful sug-gestions toward bettering any part or department of this—Your State Fair. If for any reason, there is a misunderstanding about admissions at gates, on passes or otherwise, please pay the gateman the regular ad-mission asked, take a receipt for same, and come direct to the Secretary's office. This will save you time, and avoid unnecessary blocking of traffic at the gates, which is always heavy. Remember that the men on the gates are working on strict orders from the office, and are not allowed to vary from them. INSTRUCTIONS TO DEPARTMENT DIRECTORS 1. No director of any department will be permitted to employ help with-out written permission from the Management. An order for all supplies must be obtained from the Management. All bills must be obtained at time of delivery by department head and O K'd by them. 2. Directors will receive all property entered for exhibition and see that tags are securely attached, and arrange such property in a suitable and attractive manner. 3. They will also see that property is not removed before appointed time, and that the checks are detached from property when removed, as a means to prevent frauds and mistakes by such removals. 4. They will see that their departments are kept clean and orderly at all times. 5. Directors are POSITIVELY forbidden to make suggestions or inter-fere with the judges in any way whatsoever. 23 A BRIDGE TO OPPORTUNITIES A BANKING CONNECTION AT THE FIRST-CITIZENS BANK CAN BE OF DISTINCT VALUE TO YOU. A CHECKING or SAVINGS ACCOUNT will help you build a Cash Reserve that will enable you to take advantage of opportunities that arise. An officer of this bank will be glad to explain to you, at your convenience, the financial services that may be useful to you or to your business. FIRST-CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY SERVING EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA SMITHFIELD ANGIER BURGAW FRANKLINTON LOUISBURG HIGHLANDS NEW ACCOUNTS INVITED RALEIGH BENSON CLINTON JACKSONVILLE MOREHEAD CITY ROSEBORO FAYETTEVILLE BEAUFORT DUNN KINSTON NEW BERN SPRING HOPE COMMERCIAL SAVINGS TRUST SAFE DEPOSIT Complete Banking and Trust Facilities 24 6. Directors and others connected with the State Fair and their im-mediate families are prohibited from exhibiting in their respective de-partments. JUDGES 1. The Judges of Awards, when ready for duty, shall be furnished, by the Secretary, with a list of all entries in their respective departments, and books in which their awards are to be recorded. 2. Judges are especially instructed not to award premiums to any animal or article, because of its presence. It must be individually worthy. It is not the policy of this Fair to encourage indifferent production of any kind, or to distribute premiums equally among exhibitors, and no prem-iums should be awarded to any animal or article that does not possess high intrinsic merit. 3. The Director in charge shall attend the Judges when making the examinations in his respective department, and furnish them with any desired information. Premiums will not be paid parties having exhibits where it is proven that they accompanied the Judges when awarding the premiums. As the awards are made, the Director will attach the ribbon indicating the award. 4. Decisions of Judges will be considered as final and no appeal will be considered except in cases of protest in writing, with strong evidence of fraud or violation of the rules of the Fair, which may be filed with the Management before the premiums have been presented. 5. Reports must be signed by each Judge in his own handwriting, but Judges cannot award premiums to articles not in the regular Premium List. 6. The exhibition of articles or animals not mentioned in the regular Premium List is solicited. These will be properly judged and reported on by the judges, and ribbons attached, but no money will be awarded. 7. With the permission of the director, judges may have wrong entries reclassed. 8. Judges will award second premiums on all single exhibits, unless otherwise stated. FEES 1. All applications for stalls and pens must be noted on entry blanks at time of filing. Exhibitors must indicate on the blank the number of animals or birds they will exhibit. This request is important, that ample provision may be made to properly house the exhibit. 2. Reservations will not be made unless accompanied by the required fee. Assignments will be made by the Superintendent in charge. 3. The following fees will govern, and remittances covering same should accompany entry: Cattle, each animal (regardless of age) $1.00 Swine, pen 1.00 Sheep, pen 1.00 Poultry, single bird, special class .25 Poultry, trio, special class .75 Poultry, single bird, regular class .25 If more than one stall is used for any animal, an additional charge must be paid. 25 "I CANNOT FARM WITHOUT PROGRESSIVE FARMER" THE GOLDEN RULE PRESS WILLIAM H. JORDAN, Pres.-Mgr. EFLAND, N. C. Dr. Clarence Poe, President, The Progressive Farmer, Raleigh, N. C. Dear Dr. Poe: I have recently visited over 500 homes in Central North Carolina, and find it still true that "You can tell by a man's farm whether he reads the Progressive Farmer or not." I visited a home a few days ago and saw a well-worn copy of the Bible and a copy of the Progressive Farmer on the center table. The farmer said, "I cannot live without my Bible, and I cannot farm without Progressive Farmer." I was not surprised when a neighbor said, "This good man has given over $2,000 for a new stone church building in our section." Fraternally, WM. H. JORDAN. "IN THE RURAL SOUTH, IT'S PROGRESSIVE FARMER'yy 26 AWARDS 1. Awards will be made by single judge system. 2. No unworthy animal or exhibit will be awarded a premium. 3. Where there is no competition in any class or exhibit in any depart-ment, only half premium will be awarded unless in the opinion of the judges and superintendents the exhibit is sufficiently meritorious as to justify the full award as provided for. 4. The following colors will be used to designate awards: Champion Royal Purple Reserve Champion Lavender First Premium Blue Second Premium Red Third Premium White Fourth Premium Pink Fifth Premium Yellow Sixth Premium Dark Green Seventh Premium Light Green Eighth Premium Tan Ninth Premium Gray Tenth Premium Light Blue RELEASE 1. All livestock and poultry exhibits will be released at 4 o'clock p.m., Saturday, October 16th. 2. All general exhibits will be released after 8:00 p. m., Saturday, Octo-ber 16th. 3. All exhibits are under the direct supervision of the directors in charge, and are on exhibition as a part of the Fair's attractions. It is agreed by the exhibitors in making their entries that they will comply with the rules of the State Fair. The directors must see that all exhibits are in place until time for removal, as designated above. PROTEST AND APPEALS 1. Protests must be made in writing and filed with the Secretary by noon of day following award, accompanied by a protest fee of $5.00, which will be retained by the North Carolina State Fair if protest is not sustained. 2. All protests will be considered at a time set by the Management of the State Fair, and all parties interested will be notified. 3. The North Carolina State Fair has adopted the rules of the Inter-national Association of Fairs and Expositions governing appeals. SPECIAL HERDMAN'S PRIZE These prizes will be awarded to the herdsmen who keep their animals and that portion of the barn in which they are quartered in the best and most attractive condition. Three judges will be selected to make these awards. In The Cattle Barn First prize—$7.50 Second prize—$5.00 Di The Swine and Sheep Barn First prize—$7.50 Second prize��$5.00 27 LIVESTOCK PARADE A parade of prize winners in the different livestock classes will be held in front of the grandstand, beginning at 2:00 P.M. Thursday, October 14, 1937. The livestock directors will arrange with the exhibitors to have their animals in readiness for this review. The animals will be led in a single line past the grandstand, and as each animal passes in review, the name of the owner, and the name of the animal and class award will be an-nounced over the public address system. VETERINARY SUPERVISION Livestock Inspection The Veterinary Division, State Department of Agriculture, will gladly co-operate with all livestock exhibitors in giving information and advice in regard to the requirements for entries at the State Fair. Arrangements will also be made to assist exhibitors in preparing the necessary certificates, in accordance with State and Federal regulations, when shipping from the State Fair. Owners desiring to exhibit livestock should read carefully the health regulations appearing under the various livestock departments. These are made for the protection of your livestock and they must be complied with. A temporary office will be maintained in a booth near the Livestock Buildings for the convenience of exhibitors. Very respectfully, Wl. MOORE, State Veterinarian. I SAFE! Over 5,000,000 Passengers transported in over seven (7) years without a single passenger fatality. CONVENIENT! No expense has been spared in arranging schedules to make CAROLINA COACH service second to none. ECONOMICAL! Many fares as low as 1 J4 C per mile. THE ONLY BUSES SERVING THE NORTH CAROLINA STATE FAIR DIRECT TO THE GROUNDS CAROLINA COACH COMPANY 28 ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER Application for electric light and power must be made in writing, and payment must be made when service is installed. Where outside wiring is necessary, a fixed charge of $3.00 will be made for each 50 feet or fraction thereof for making connection. If located inside of building where wiring exists, any additional labor or material must be paid for by the applicant. No service will be given for less than minimum charge of $2.00. On all motors with capacity of one h. p. or over, even horsepower will be the unit for fixing charge. Motor charge based on not more than 10 hours service per day for the six days of the Fair. The current is alternating single phase, 60 cycles, 104 voltage. On all meter readings a charge of 10c. per kilowatt hour will be made. The charge for light based on six days service will be as follows: Tungsten Lamps 25 Watt $ .75 150 Watt $1.50 40 Watt .80 200 Watt 2.00 60 Watt .85 300 Watt 2.50 75 Watt .90 500 Watt 3.50 100 Watt 1.00 750 Watt 5.00 The charge for electric current for power will be as follows: Vs H. P. Motor $1.00 % H. P. Motor $4.00 % H. P. Motor 1.50 1 H. P. Motor 4.50 V2 H. P. Motor 3.50 Electric stoves, grills, percolators, waffle irons, and all electrical equip-ment will be charged for at the regular rate. FEED A Feed and Forage Concession is located on the North Carolina State Fair Grounds, where all kinds of feed may be had at prevailing prices. St. Mary's School and Junior College MRS. ERNEST CRUIKSHANK, A.M., President RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA CURRICULUM: 10th, 11th, and 12th grades of high school; 2 years Grade A college. All Academic Courses accredited by the Southern Association. Excellent Courses in Art, Business, Expression, Home Economics and Music Departments with Tuition Included in General Charge Twenty-Acre Campus—Field Sports—Gymnasium—Tennis Indoor Tiled Swimming Pool—Horseback Riding—Golf ANNUAL SESSIONS—MID-SEPTEMBER TO JUNE PROVIDE THIRTY-FIVE WEEKS OF CLASSROOM WORK Write A. W. TUCKER, Business Manager, for Catalougue and View Book 29 "ARMOUR'S stays with my crops all the way says the Veteran Armour User. Experienced growers rely on ARMOUR'S Big Crop Fertilizer to carry their crops through the long growing season because they know ARMOUR'S Fertilizer is de-pendable. More than forty years' experience in the manufacture of fertilizer assures a balanced ration of the major foods in every bag of ARMOUR'S Big Crop. But part of the value of ARMOUR'S Fertilizer lies in its rich content of important minor and secondary elements—so necessary in bringing the crop to healthy maturity. ARMOUR FERTILIZER WORKS GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA WILMINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA NORFOLK, VIRGINIA 30 FIELD CROPS AND FARM EXHIBITS Department A DIRECTORS J. W. Hendricks, Piedmont Experiment Station, Statesville, N. C. R. J. Harris, Central Experiment Station, Raleigh, N. C. Amount offered in this Department $1,300.00 Entries in This Department Close Saturday, October 9, 6:00 P. M. Entries in all departments must be made on printed forms, provided by the Secretary for the purpose, and must be in full compliance with the printed instructions on same. Exhibitors should study the list carefully and, when decision has been made in which class to enter, they should fill out the entry blank with class number and name as they appear in the Premium Book. Do not send in your articles for exhibit without first hav-ing them entered. In sending exhibits by parcel post, express, or otherwise, address each package plainly to State Fair, DEPARTMENT A, Raleigh, N. C. Each package should be plainly marked with name and address of exhibitor. Note the above date for the closing of entries in this Department. Products in this Department are confined to the State of North Carolina. Exhibits in this Department will be classified and exhibitors will be directed by the Superintendent in the placing of their entries. No premium shall be awarded in any of the classes or exhibits in the Department when, in the opinion of the judges, the exhibits are not meri-torious in variety, quality, artistic arrangement, and educational value. Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards, pages 17 to 27. 31 Are you enjoying the full benefits of Cheap Electricity? Are you using it to bring greater Comfort, Convenience and Happiness into your home ... to save time, labor and money in cooking, water heating, refrigerating ... to provide Better Light ? Are you using it to simplify work on your farm ... to lessen the manual labor re-quired ... to improve methods and in-crease the productiveness of your efforts ? Your Electrical Dealer will be glad to ex-plain the many ways in which CHEAP Electricity can serve you in your home and on your farm! CAROLINA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY Now CHEAP ELECTRICITY is Cheaper Still! 32 FARM DISPLAYS Judges: Robert Schmidt, Miss Anna Rowe, S. C. Clapp, Frank Jeter Class A 1. Live-at-Home Farm Exhibits: 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th $135 $100 $80 $75 $65 $60 $55 $5i Premiums to be awarded the farms which show by exhibit of field crops, garden crops, fruits, and home industry products, well labeled, the best display representing a Live-at-Home program. Each Farm Exhibitor is required to make affidavit before 10 A. M. Mon-day of Fair Week, and file with the Secretary of the Fair, that the products exhibited were grown on the farm represented, during the current year, in accordance with the requirements given herein. Judging in Class A will start at 10 A. M. Tuesday, October 12th. IMPORTANT GENERAL RULES GOVERNING CLASS A The following scale of points shall be used by the judges in placing awards on Class A: Field Crops, 20 points; Garden Crops, 15 points; Home Industry, 15 points; Fruits, 15 points; Educational Value, 20 points; Artistic Arrangement, 15 points. IMPORTANT: All Exhibitors in Class A are requested to be at their exhibit at the time of Judging, Tuesday, October 12th, 10 A. M. In making awards in this class, special emphasis shall be given to the quality of the field and garden crops, fruits, and to the excellence and practical utility of the home industry exhibit. The educational value of the exhibit shall be construed to mean practical lessons that may be drawn from it by farmers and others with reference to certain methods of handling, marketing, growing, and selecting seed of the different crops; for instance: samples of corn might be exhibited show-ing the effects of a systematic, intelligent system of seed selection upon the quality of corn, as well as its yielding powers. Again: an exhibit showing the effect of spraying apples as against unsprayed would have educational value. The effect of growing leguminous crops upon crop yields might be shown concretely or graphically. This, too, would bring out a most valu-able lesson to those farmers who might study the exhibits. Many other exhibits of this nature might be devised which would have great value from an educational standpoint. Each exhibit for Class A shall not contain more than two varieties of any one field or garden crop, except for decorative purposes. Only the best varieties for the different sections should be exhibited. Home Industry includes canned goods, not to exceed 35 cans, no two alike; and not more than 15 cans of preserves, jellies, and pickles, no two alike; fifty cans in all; also meat, dairy products, eggs, etc., but not fresh-cooked articles or baking. A neat sign 8 feet long and 18 inches wide should.be placed above each exhibit, in line with the requirements to be given by the Director. For Class A, give the name of the Farm and County in which it is located. 33 DELICIOUS When at the Fair ENJOY THE PAUSE THAT REFRESHES Drink (faa In Bottles REFRESHING CAPITAL COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. RALEIGH, N. C. 34 Plain neat labels or placards should be placed on every group in each exhibit. No exhibit material entered in Class A will be eligible to compete in other classes. All those who wish to enter exhibits for premiums in Class A should notify the Secretary of the State Fair, Raleigh, N. C, not later than OCTOBER 1, 1937. Space for this class is somewhat limited, and ex-hibitors will be assigned space in the order in which the applications are received and until all space has been allotted. SPECIAL PRIZES SPECIAL PRIZES OFFERED IN DEPARTMENT A These Premiums, or Orders For Same, Will Be Distributed at Close of Fair First, Live-at-Home Farm Exhibit—Prize, One Chattanooga two-horse reversible plow, No. 54-55—donated by International Harvester Co. Second, Live-at-Home Exhibit���Prize, three months' subscription—do-nated by Raleigh Times. Third, Live-at-Home Farm Exhibit—Prize, three months' subscription — donated by Raleigh Times. Fourth, Live-at-Home Farm Exhibit—Prize, three months' subscription donated by Raleigh Times. Fifth, Live-at-Home Exhibit Prize, three months' subscription—do-nated by Raleigh Times. Sixth, Live-at-Home Exhibit—Prize, three years' subscription—donated by Southern Agriculturist. Sweepstakes Corn Exhibit, Classes 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9—Prize, four hundred pounds Arcadian Nitrate of Soda—donated by The Barrett Company. Sweepstakes Exhibit of Yellow Corn—Prize, four hundred pounds "Plan-ters Controlled Fertilizers"—donated by Planters Cotton Oil & Ferti-lizer Company. Best Exhibit of seed cotton (one inch or more in length)—Prize, four hundred pounds Davco Granulated Fertilizer—donated by Davison Chemical Corporation. Best Exhibit of Cotton Seed (1 peck)—Prize, two hundred pounds cotton-seed meal—donated by Buckeye Cotton Oil Company. Sweepstakes Wheat Exhibit—Prize, one hundred pounds Nosoca Flour donated by Statesville Flour Mills. Sweepstakes Exhibit of Rye—Prize, four hundred pounds small grain fertilizer—donated by Virginia-Carolina Chemical Corporation. Sweepstakes Exhibit of Barley—Prize, one years' subscription—donated by Progressive Farmer. Sweepstakes Exhibit of Cowpeas—Prize, four hundred pounds complete 3-8-3 fertilizer—donated by Planters Fertilizer and Phosphate Com-pany. Best Legume Hay Exhibit—Prize, three tons Mascot lime—donated by American Limestone Company. First Tobacco Display—Prize, three ounces N. C. Certified Tobacco Seeds (Recipient may choose variety he wants)—donated by Job P. Wyatt & Sons Co. Second Tobacco Display—Prize, two ounces N. C. Certified Tobacco Seeds (Recipient may choose variety he wants)—donated by Job P. Wyatt & Sons Co. Third Tobacco Display—Prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. 35 lbOLBS.Nft" Poultry ** tlTB*ci MOT LESS fg* \. J^^m^ TALCO DAIRY AND POULTRY FEEDS Ask your A & P Manager about this money saving line of Feeds. Sprinkle Gasoline It is Independent petroleum product ; It is sold to you direct from $ervice $tation, from where it has been delivered by transport truck from Sea-port. It is Anti-Knock quality, having been originally refined so without ever having been doped. It is sold to you at fair price. It will give your motor perfect performance. H. L. $prinkle Service Station 14 Mile West WPTF Radio Tower Highway No. 1 Also available in: BURLINGTON, N. C. GREENSBORO, N. C. SANFORD, N. C. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. 36 Fourth Tobacco Display—Prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—do-nated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Fifth Tobacco Display—Prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Lemon Wrappers—First prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes —donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Lemon Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigar-ettes— donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Orange Wrappers—First prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes —donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Orange Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigar-ettes— donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Dark Mahogany Wrappers—First prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Dark Mahogany Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Light Mahogany Wrappers—Firse prize, one carton Chesterfield Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Light Mahogany Wrappers—Second prize, one carton Chester-field Cigarettes—donated by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Class O—Cutters—First prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class O—Cutters—Second prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class O—Smokers—First prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class O—Smokers—Second prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes—do-nated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class O—Light Fillers—First prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes —donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class O—Light Fillers—Second prize, one carton Lucky Strike Cigarettes —donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Lemon Wrappers—First prize, one carton Half and Half Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Lemon Wrappers—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Orange Wrappers—First prize, one carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Orange Wrappers—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Cutters—First prize, one carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco —donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Cutters—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Smokers—First prize, one carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco —donated by American Suppliers, Inc. Class P—Smokers—Second prize, one-half carton Half & Half Smoking Tobacco—donated by American Suppliers, Inc. 37 HIGH POINT COLLEGE HIGH POINT, N. C. WHERE CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT IS NOT SECONDARY TO SCHOLARSHIP A Four-Year, Co-Educational, Liberal Arts College High Point, N. C. A faculty of wenty-six Christian men and women with degrees from the best universities in America. A broad and inclusive curriculum. Enrollment of over three hundred students from various parts of the country. Fifty-two-acre campus, beautifully landscaped. Total student charges for school year are $412.00. Con-cessions to ministers' children and candidates for the ministry. THE CHAMPION PAPER AND FIBRE COMPANY (CANTON DIVISION) CANTON, NORTH CAROLINA MANUFACTURERS OF Chemical Wood Pulp—Book, Bond and Envelope Paper — Postcard, Stencil and Bristol Board—Tannic Acid — Caustic Soda—Turpentine—Bindex (Adhesive) The products of the Champion Fibre Company are essentially raw materials for other industries and offer an inducement to many industries, such as the publishing business, manufacture of envelopes and other paper products, to locate in North Carolina. The Champion Fibre Company buys cordwood from farmers for cash and in this way the farm and the factory are brought together to their mutual advantage. 38 2d 3d 2.50 $2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2.50 2.00 2d 3d ;i.oo $0.50 1.00 .50 1.00 .56 FIELD CROP EXHIBITS Judges: J. L. Rea, Jr., R. E. Currin, W. H. Rankin, P. H. Kime, Dr. G. K. Middleton No exhibitor shall be allowed to enter more than one exhibit of any variety in the following classes. CORN Best Ten Ears (Unnubbed) Class B 1st 2—Cocke's Prolific $5.00 3—Weekly's Improved 5.00 4—Biggs 5.00 5—Latham's Double 5.00 6—Southern Beauty 5.00 7—Holcombe Prolific 5.00 8—Jarvis Golden Prolific 5.00 9—Highland Horsetooth 5.00 10—Any other variety (Yellow Corn) 5.00 10y2—Any other variety (White Corn) 5.00 Class C 1st 11—Five heads of Broomcorn $2.00 12—Ten ears of Popcorn 2.00 13—Sorghum, five stalks, heads attached 2.00 COTTON Most prolific and best exhibit of the following varieties of cotton, con-sisting of 50 open bolls mounted on cardboard. Class D 1st 2d 3d 14—Cleveland Big Boll, %" to 15/16" $4.00 $2.00 $1.50 15—Cleveland, 1" to 1 1/16" 4.00 2.00 1.50 16—Mexican Big Boll, 1" to 1 1/16" 4.00 2.00 1.50 17—Farm Relief 4.00 2.00 1.50 18—Carolina Foster, 1%" 4.00 2.00 1.50 Seed Cotton and Lint 1st 19—Seed Cotton, 1 lb., %" to 15/16" $2.00 20—Seed Cotton, 1 lb., 1" to 1%" 2.00 21—Exhibit Lint, 1 lb., %" to 15/16" 2.00 22—Exhibit Lint, 1 lb., 1" to 1%" 2.00 WHEAT To be shown in pecks. Exhibits containing a mixture of other grains, onions, or cockle will be disqualified. Class E 1st 2d 3d 23—Fulcaster $2.00 $1.50 $1.00 24—Leap's Prolific 2.00 1.50 1.00 25—Purple Straw 2.00 1.50 1.00 26—Redheart 2.00 1.50 1.00 27—Peck of Buckwheat 2.00 1.50 1.00 28—Best sheaf of Wheat, above varieties only 2.00 1.50 1.00 39 2d 3d $1.00 $0.75 1.00 .75 1.00 .75 1.00 .75 The Greatest Testimonial of Them All TONS OF EXPERIENCE Back*bf every Bay, Jj OR more than 40 years, good farmers have been growing good crops with V-C Fertilizers. Year after year these splendid fertilizers have given good results in the fields of farmers who grow Wheat, Corn and other small grains; Cotton, Tobacco and Peanuts; Po-tatoes and other vegetable and fruit crops, and Citrus. Faithful adherence to the prin-ciple of making honest goods has been rewarded by the appreciation and confidence of thousands of the best farmers. This preference en-ables us to offer you, through reli-able agents, the fertilizers with more than 35 million tons of experience back of every bag. See our Agent and place your order now. VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL CORP. GREENSBORO, N. C. WILMINGTON, N. C. NORFOLK, VA. 40 OATS To be shown in pecks. Exhibits containing a mixture of other grains, onions, or cockle will be disqualified. Class F 1st 2d 3d 29—Lee $2.00 $1.50 $1.00 30—Fulghum 2.00 1.50 1.00 31—Appier 2.00 1.50 1.00 32—Norton 2.00 1.50 1.00 33—Best sheaf of Oats, above varieties only 2.00 1.50 1.00 RYE AND BARLEY To be shown in pecks. Exhibits containing a mixture of other grains, onions, or cockle will be disqualified. Class G 1st 2d 3d 34—Common $2.00 $1.50 $1.00 35—Abruzzi 2.00 1.50 1.00 36—Tennessee Hooded Barley 2.00 1.50 1.00 SOYBEANS Peck to be shown in containers which will be furnished. Class H 1st 37—Mammoth Yellow $2.00 38—Virginia 2.00 39—Tokyo 2.00 40—Laredo 2.00 41—Herman 2.00 42—Otootan 2.00 43—Biloxi 2.00 44—One stalk, any above varieties for seed 2.00 VELVET BEANS Peck to be shown in containers which will be furnished. Class I 1st 2d 3d 46—100-day Speckled $2.00 $1.00 $0.50 VETCH Class J 1st 2d 3d 47—Quart Hairy Seed—Container furnished $1.25 $1.00 $0.75 48—Quart Common or Spring Seed—Container fur-nished 1.25 1.00 .75 COWPEAS Peck to be shown in containers which will be furnished. Class K 1st 2d 3d 49—New Era1 $1.50 $1.00 $0.50 50—Brabham 1.50 1.00 .50 51—Whippoorwill 1.50 1.00 .50 52—Taylor 1.50 1.00 .50 53—Crowder 1.50 1.00 .50 54—Black 1.50 1.00 .50 55—Clay 1.50 1.00 .60 56—Groit 1.50 1.00 .50 57—Black Eye 1.50 1.80 .50 58—Iron 1.50 1.00 .50 41 2d 3d 1.00 $0.50 1.00 .50 1.00 .50 1.00 .50 1.00 .50 1.00 .50 1.00 .50 1.00 .50 Q Q POTASH STARVED PLENTY OF POTASH GET IT WITH POTASH When extra profits are returned, it is like getting money free. Use more potash to make your cotton crop pay extra profits. Rust damage on plats receiving insufficient pot-ash lowered the yield and reduced the quality of fiber to such an extent as to lower the value of the crop $1 5 to $25 per acre in work done by the North Carolina Experiment Station. » » Most experiment stations in the South recommend 400-600 pounds per acre of a fertilizer con-taining 4-6% nitrogen, 8-10% phosphoric acid, and 4-10% potash. Where rust has appeared use 8-10% potash and a nitrogen-potash top dresser if necessary. The right fertilizer to use will vary with soil and cropping conditions » » Consult your county agent or experiment station on your soil requirements. See your fer-tilizer manufacturer or dealer about fertilizer; high in potash. Write us for further information. AMERICAN POTASH INSTITUTE, INC. INVESTMENT BUILDING WASHINGTON, D, C. SOUTHERN OFFICE: MORTGAGE GUARANTEE BLDG., ATLANTA, GA. PEANUTS Each single exhibit shall consist of one peck of peanuts. Peck con-tainers will be furnished. Class L. 1st 2d 3d 59—Virginia Runner $1.50 $1.00 $0.50 60—Virginia Bunch 1.50 1.00 .50 61—Jumbo Runner 1.50 1.00 .50 62—Spanish 1.50 1.00 .50 63—North Carolina or Wilmington 1.50 1.00 .50 64—Valencia 1.50 1.00 .50 Sweepstakes—Classes 59 to 64 2.00 CliOVER AND LESPEDEZA One quart seed to be shown in container which will be furnished. Class M 1st 2d 3d 65—Bur Clover $1.25 $0.75 $0.50 66—Red Clover 1.25 .75 .50 67—Alsike Clover 1.25 .75 .50 68—Crimson Clover 1.25 .75 .50 69—Sweet Clover 1.25 .75 .50 70—Korean Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50 71—Tennessee No. 76 Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50 72—Common Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50 73—Kobe Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50 HAYS Each hay exhibit shall consist of one bale, not less than fifty pounds and not more than one hundred pounds in weight. Unbaled hay will be disqualified. Class N 1st 2d 3d 74—Peanuts $1.25 $0.75 $0.50 75—Cowpea 1.25 .75 .50 76—Red Clover 1.25 .75 .50 77—Crimson Clover 1.25 .75 .50 78—Soybean 1.25 .75 .50 79—Alfalfa 1.25 .75 .50 80—Mixed Oats and Hairy Vetch 1.25 .75 .50 81—Timothy 1.25 .75 .50 82—Sudan Grass 1.25 .75 .50 83—Lespedeza 1.25 .75 .50 84—Mixed Hay with Legumes 1.25 .75 .50 TOBACCO Growers' Contest JAMES F. BULLOCK, Tobacco Experiment Station, Oxford, N. C, Superintendent Judges: E. G. Moss, Andrew Jamieson Not less than three pounds or more than three pounds to be shown in each class or of any grade in display. For Old Belt Types Class O 1st 2d 3d 4th 85—Lemon .Wrappers $12.00 $7.50 $5.00 $3.00 86—Orange Wrappers 12.00 7.50 5.00 3.00 87—Dark Mahogany Wrappers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00 88—Light Mahogany Wrappers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00 89—Cutters 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00 90—Smokers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00 91—Light Filers 8.00 4.00 2.00 1.00 43 GREEN GRILL Back of County Court House Say . . BAMBY BREAD MEETS U. S. GOVERNMENT STANDARD FOR MILK BREAD "There is a full glass of milk in every loaf of Bamby" ASK YOUR GROCER Royal Baking Co. . Raleigh, N. C. FIREPROOF STREET PARKING METROPOLITAN SERVICE AND ACCOMMODATIONS THE BLAND HOTEL V. ST. CLOUD, Manager RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA Rates: $1.50 and up One Block from Bus Station 44 For New Belt Types Class P 1st 2d 3d 4th 92—Lemon Wrappers $12.00 $7.50 $5.00 $3.00 93—Orange Wrappers 12.00 7.50 5.00 3.00 94—Cutters 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00 95—Smokers 12.00 6.00 3.00 2.00 TOBACCO DISPLAYS Class Q 1st 2d 3d 4th 96—Display of Bright Wrappers, Cutters Smokers, and Fillers by one producer (this must not include any entry for single premium) $20.00 $15.00 $10.00 $5.00 CONSIDERATION IN JUDGING QUALITY IN CROP SEEDS Corn CONSIDERATIONS DISQUALIFICATIONS Sample infested with live weevil. 1. Maturity (ear) Evidence to deceive as to true (a) Color (ear and shanks) ,., (b) Starchiness quamy (c) Weight in proportion 0ne off-colored cob in sample of (d) Firmness (ear) ten ears - More than two off-colored kernels 2. Seed Condition (kernels) in sample of ten ears. (a) Luster of kernels (b) Blisters (c) Breaking out of kernels (d) Disease and insect damage (e) Shape and plumpness of kernels 3. Uniformity and trueness to type for variety and region where grown Oats 1. Maturity and Seed Condition Sample infested with live weevil (a) Color Evidence to deceive as to true (b) Relative weight quality. (Bleaching.) \l\ Srinseir'mechan,- *•« ff "» >«—-**» - cal disease variety. 2. Purity of variety Presence of noxious weed seeds or 3. Foreign material any other objectionable matter. 4. Percentage of hull TO SERVE YOU BETTER WITH FINER FOODS AT THE MOST ECONOMICAL PRICES PEI1DER QualityJoodStoteA- - THERE'S A STORE NEAR YOU 45 Do you buy the best fertilizer (or Your Soil? Since 1892 the RICHMOND GUANO COM-PANY has specialized in manufacturing fertilizer to fit the needs of Virginia and North Carolina agricul-ture. Long experience, combined with the results of the technical school experiments, assure you of the best results when you use RICHMOND GUANO. "Gilt Edge and Richmond Brands" Richmond Guano Company Richmond, Virginia 46 Wheat CONSIDERATIONS 1. Maturity and Seed Condition (a) Weight per bushel (b) Damage; insect, disease, mechanical (c) Color and luster (d) Plumpness 2. Milling quality (a) Hardness and color of grain (b) Uniformity and plumpness of kernels (c) Weight per bushel 3. Uniformity and purity of variety 4. Foreign materials (a) Weed seeds (b) Other crop seed (c) Inert matter DISQUALIFICATIONS Sample infested with live weevil. Evidence to deceive as to true quality. (Treated, scoured, washed.) Mixed as to class or more than two per cent mixture of variety. One or more bulblets of wild onion per 1000 grams. Smutty wheat. Barley Same as for Oats, adding to No. 1 "Closeness of threshing" and omitting No. 4. Sample infested with live weevil. More than two per cent mixture of variety. Presence of noxious weeds or any other matter. Rye Same as for Wheat, omitting No. 3. Sample infested with live weevil. More than two per cent mixture of variety. Presence of ergot or other objec-tionable material. Large Seeded Legumes (Soybeans, Cowpeas, etc.) Sample infested with live weevil. Any mixture of variety. Distinctly low quality. Presence of morning-glory seed. 1. Maturity and Seed Condition (a) Color and luster (b) Plumpness (c) Damage, mechanical, in sect, and disease 2. Purity as to variety (a) Color and color marking (b) Size and shape of seed 3. Foreign material Small Seeded Legumes (Clover, Alfalfa, etc.) 2. Purity (a) Other crop seeds (b) Total weed seeds (c) Noxious weed seeds (d) Inert matter Seed Condition (a) Luster and plumpness of seed (b) Damage; mechanical, in-sect Uniformity, size, shape, and color Presence of noxious weed seeds (1 per 1000). (Dodder, Buckhorn, Canada This-tle, and Dock.) Samples should be 99.5 per cent pure seed by weight. 47 FREE SOIL ANALYSIS WITH THESE FAMOUS FERTILIZERS Hit or miss methods do not make for profitable farming. There's always gamble enough with the elements at best. * But you can be sure of one thing when you buy fertilizer from Eastern --you get the exact food elements needed for your crop and soil. * Eastern chemists analyse your soil free of charge. We prescribe for your soil as your physician prescribes for you. Buy Eastern fertilizer and know that your soil gets what it actually needs. The Many Purpose Fertilizer Davco 20% Granulated Super-phosphate costs less per unit; con-tains no filler; free-flowing; always drillable. More phosphoric acid available to plants. Use for rein-forcing manure and top dressing_ pastures. EASTERN FERTILIZER DIVISION NORFOLK, VIRGINIA 48 HORTICULTURAL PRODUCTS Department B CHARLES DEARING, Director Coastal Plain Experiment Station, Willard, N. C. H. R. NISWONGER, Director State College, Raleigh, N. C. ROBERT SCHMIDT, Director State College, Raleigh, N. C. Amount offered in this Department $700.00 Note for Exhibitors: It will avoid confusion and add to the exhibitor's convenience if, so far as possible, entry blanks covering each exhibit to be entered for premiums be filled out in advance and mailed to the Secre-tary, North Carolina State Fair, Raleigh, N. C. When this is done the entry tags are made out in advance ready for the exhibitor on arrival. This avoids much writing. These entry tags should be secured at the Secretary's office and be presented to the superintendent of the horticul-tural department or his representative at the same time exhibits are de-livered to the department. Entry blanks and catalogs listing the pre-miums classes can be secured upon application to the Secretary. Read rules Governing Entries, Exhibits and Awards, Pages 17 to 29. 49 NORTH CAROLINA EQUIPMENT COMPANY 3116 HILLSBORO STREET RALEIGH, N. C. Phones—Local 2119 BRANCH—No. 1 London Rd. L. D. 1183 Biltmore, N. C. Phone 411 Handling Such Well Known Lines As — Elgin Pick-up Street Sweepers Galion Motor Graders, Road Machines and Rollers Galion Hydraulic Dump Bodies and Hoists F. W. D. Trucks McCormick-Deering Crawler Tractors and Power Units Jaeger Concrete Mixers, Pumps, Hoists, Etc. Barco Gasoline Paving Breakers Aeroil Heating Kettles, Etc. DeWalt Portable Saw Rigs Champion and Telsmith Crushers Northwest Shovels, Cranes and Draglines Cleveland Rock Drills and Paving Breakers Euclid Trac-Truks, Bulldozers, Scrapers, Etc. Georgia Sand Pumps American Preformed Cable Kinney Distributors Dowflake Wiard Rooter Plows Schramm Air Compressors A complete stock of Road Machine Blades, Push Brooms, Broom Fibre, Toledo Torches, Scarifier Teeth, Wheelbarrows, Hand Shovels, Timken Rock Bits and Other Miscellaneous Supplies and Accessories are carried in our warehouse 50 FRUITS AND NUTS Judge: M. E. GARDNER, Horticulturist, State College, Raleigh, N. C. Entries Close 12:00 Noon, Monday, October 11th, 1937 Entries open to individual growers and orchard companies of North Carolina. IMPORTANT. Each exhibitor should read the following carefully: As far as possible, it is desirable that horticultural exhibits be brought in and set up by the growers. Where this is not possible the Superintendent will be glad to receive and place on exhibit all suitable horticultural prod-ucts sent in. However, the Superintendent will not pack box, basket, or barrel entries for exhibit. These must come in already packed. All exhibits competing for premiums must be grown in the State. In sending in fruit for exhibition, select only those specimens that are perfect in form and color, and free from all insect and fungus blemishes. Do not knock or shake off the fruit from the tree, but pick each specimen by hand, taking care not to pull out the stem. Fruit should be exhibited as nearly as possible in its natural state, and i'0 preference will be given highly polished fruit by the judges. Fruit to be exhibited in trays, and in plates, should be carefully wrapped and packed. Each fruit should be wrapped separately in paper and packed firmly in box or barrel, taking care to avoid bruising. Label each variety plainly and put in papers to keep varieties separated. Do not use hay, fodder, excelsior, or any other dusty material in packing. Nail up firmly. IMPORTANT—READ Address each package plainly to "State Fair, Department of Horticul-ture, Raleigh, N. C." Each package should be plainly marked with the name and address of the exhibitor. Each package should be plainly marked giving the class in which contents are entered. PLATES. Plates for the variety exhibits of fruits will be furnished free by the Fair. A perfect plate of fruit should contain five specimens, and no more, characteristic of the variety, with stems attached, of high color, uniform, marketable size, free from cuts and bruises and all insect and fungus blemishes. If additional specimens are sent in by growers, the Superintendent will select and place on exhibit the best possible plate to be made from all the specimens submitted. TRAYS. The dimensions of the trays are 11% x 18 x 3 inches inside measurements. The exhibitor should make a tray of the required dimen-sions and pack each variety to be displayed in this class, in order to know how many apples are needed. Four or five extra apples per tray should be sent in order to allow for rot and damage in transit. BASKETS. Commercial basket apples should be graded to uniform size, high color, freedom from bruises, insect and fungus blemishes. They should be properly packed and ring faced in standard bushel baskets. GENERAL. RULES. A premium offered for a general collection of fruit will not be awarded to a mere pile of apples, or other fruit, but must be for a real collection, arranged on plates and all correctly labeled, and no fruit will be counted in a collection unless it is a fair specimen of the variety. No trashy fruit of any kind will be counted merely to 51 So good it's used daily in 1,500,000 cars Carbide CARBIDE OF HIGHEST QUALITY " • National Carbide Corporation Lincoln Bid q.New York *eParate$ ** Sep-Ro-Siv By merely changing one of the 4 stainless steel sieves you have a perfect food chopper, a meat grinder, a mixer, an excellent food grater all in one. Sep-Ro-Siv actually removes seeds, skins, cores, stringy particles and gristle from the pulp and juice of fruits, vegetables and meats. You need one now and the cost is small! TIME SAVER For FREE catalog describ r p HOWFT I in, SEPROSIV paste ad 4 '' ^' UVWCLL on card and send to: McKinney. Texas PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM RemovesDandruff-StopsHairFalling Imparts Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60c. and $1.00 at Druggists. Hiscox Chem. Wks. Patchoeue. N. Y make up a collection. A premium for the best collection of grapes, peaches, or any other fruit will not be awarded for a mere number, but to the quality of the exhibit mainly. The Superintendent may withhold premiums in any case where the article is not worthy. No article entered for competition in any one class will be permitted to compete for a premium in any other class, excepting sweepstakes. An exhibitor cannot compete for more than one prize in any class. No attention will be paid by the Committee to any fruit or other exhibit that is not arranged in accordance with these rules. All fruit must be shipped or brought in so as to arrive at the Fair Grounds not later than Monday at 10 a.m., of Fair Week, charges prepaid. The awards for fruits will be made as soon as possible after the opening of the Fair. No exhibitor will be allowed to discuss exhibits with the Judges, or to interfere in any way while the Judges are at work. All fruits shown for premiums must remain in place until the close of the Fair. In the nomenclature of fruits, the names adopted by the American Pomological Society shall rule, and no variety will be accepted that has not been admitted to their catalogue, except in the case of seedlings never before exhibited. Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards, pages 17 to 29. APPLES Class A 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 97—Commercial display $50.00 $30.00 $20.00 $15.00 $10.00 Consisting of twenty trays—five trays each of four different standard commercial varieties from following list, fruit to be unwrapped: Albemarle, Arkansas Black, Bonum, Buckingham, Ben Davis, Delicious, Grimes, Gano, Kinnard, Limbertwig, Mammoth Black Twig, Golden Deli-cious, Rome Beauty, Stayman, Virginia Beauty, Winesap, York Imperial, and any other (one) variety. Class B 1st 2d 3d 98—Best five-bushel baskets of any one of the following standard varieties: Bonum, Grimes, Golden Delicious, Ben Davis, De-licious, Red Limbertwig, Stayman, Winesap, York Imperial, and any other (one) variety l $20.00 $10.00 $5.00 99—Best five trays of one of the following standard varieties: Albemarle, Bonum, Buckingham, Delicious, Golden Delicious, Grimes, Stayman, Virginia Beauty, Wine-sap, Red Limbertwig, and any other (one) variety 15.00 10.00 5.00 53 Our Twelve Offices Elm City Fayetteville Goldsboro Kinston New Bern Plymouth Selma Trenton Wallace Warsaw Williamston Wilson Our twelve offices are ren-dering a service that has been of help in the sound and substantial develop-ment and progress in East-ern North Carolina. WE INVITE NEW ACCOUNTS and are always glad to render any service to our customers that is commen-surate with the principles of sound banking. Branch Banking & Trust Company HOME OFFICE: WILSON Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. 54 $2.00 $1.00 3.50 2.00 1.00 3.50 2.00 1.00 3.50 2.00 1.00 3.50 2.00 1.00 3.50 2.00 1.00 3.50 2.00 1.00 3.50 2.00 1.00 Sweepstakes 100—Best bushel of apples, quality and packing considered $10.00 101—Best tray of apples, quality and appearance considered 5.00 Best tray of the following varieties: Class C 1st 2d 3d 102—Albemarle $3.50 103—Bonum 104—Delicious 105—Golden Delicious 106—Rome Beauty 107—Stayman 108—Winesap 109—Any other variety Single Plate—Five Apples Class D 1st 2d 110—Delicious $2.00 $1.00 111—Bonum 112—Starking 113—Golden Delicious 114—Grimes 115—Rome Beauty 1 1 6—Stayman 117—Winesap 118—York Imperial 119—Any other variety 120—Best plate collection of not less than ten named varieties 10.00 5.00 Quality and Rating Score Card The quality of the different varieties in basket and tray classes will be judged according to the following rating: Albemarle, Delicious, Grimes, Spy, Golden Delicious and Stark-ing 100 points Bonum and Stayman 90 points Buckingham, Kinnard, Mammoth Black Twig, Virginia Beauty, and Winesap 80 points Arkansas Black, Royal Limbertwig, and York Imperial 70 points Rome Beauty 60 points Ben Davis, Gano, Red Limbertwig 50 points Premiums for apples in bushel baskets will be awarded according to the following score card: Uniformity (size and color) 30 points Freedom from blemish 30 points Pack 20 points Quality 20 points Premiums for apples in single plates will be awarded according to fol-lowing score card: Freedom from blemish , 30 points Uniformity 20 points Color 15 points Form 15 points Size 15 points 55 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 2.00 1.00 Since 1881- IMPLEMENTS HARDWARE PAINTS ROOFING SPRAYERS DUSTERS INSECTICIDES BULBS Free SEEDS Catalog JOB P. WYATT & SONS CO. 325-327 S. WILMINGTON ST. RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA The News and Observer "THE OLD RELIABLE" Foremost in NEWS, FEATURES, SPORTS AND ADVERTISING Over 55,000 Copies Daily Josephus Daniels, Pres. 56 Premiums for apples in trays will be awarded according to the following score card: Size 15 points Form 15 points Color 20 points Uniformity 20 points Freedom from blemishes 20 points Quality 10 points Total 100 points In judging the commercial display the score cards given above for bas-kets and plates will be used. Baskets and plates will be given a value of 40 and 20 per cent each in the total. PEARS Plate, Five Each Class E 1st 2d 121—Keiffer $2.00 $1.00 122—Any other variety 2.00 1.00 GRAPES Plate Class F 1st 2d 123—Any bunch variety (plate of 5 bunches) $2.00 $1.00 124—Scuppernong, or other "white" variety of Muscadine grape (1 pint berries) 2.00 1.00 125—James, or other "black" variety of Muscadine grape (1 pint berries) 2.00 1.00 OTHER FRUITS Plate, at Least Five Each Class G 1st 2d 126—Japanese Persimmons $2.00 $1.00 127—American Persimmons 2.00 1.00 PLATE PECANS One Pound Class H 1st 2d 128—Stuart $2.00 $1.00 129—Schley 2.00 1.00 130—Any other variety 2.00 1.00 OTHER NUTS Plate, One Pound Class I 1st 2d 131—Native chestnuts $2.00 $1.00 132—Hickory nuts _2.00 1.00 133—Black walnuts 2.00 1.00 134—Collection native nuts (3 or more varieties, 1 lb. each) 3.00 1.50 57 AT YOUR PLEASURE! WORLD'S GREATEST, GAYEST MIDWAY World of Mirth Shows WITH 40—Sensational New Shows and Rides—40 Including Swingtime Revue Octopus Ride New 1937 Ripley Odditorium Miss America Flying Flea Bolero, with Lady Godiva from Havana Auto Speedway Gay Nineties Lion Motordrome Sensations Tiny Town Theatre Rhythm Club Temple of Mystery Life Bughouse Monkey Speedway Two-Headed Baby Jungle Monsters Seminole Indians 22 Thrilling Riding Devices 22 AMERICA'S PROGRESSIVE MIDWAY—NEW AS TOMORROW N.CState Fair RALEIGH OCTOBER 12-13-14-15-16, 1937 58 VEGETABLES Judge: L. P. WATSON, Extension Horticulturist State College, Raleigh, N. C. Exhibits Must Be Grown in North Carolina Entries Close 12:00 Noon, Monday, October 11th, 1937 IMPORTANT—READ If exhibit is shipped in, address each package plainly to "N. C. State Fair, Department of Horticulture, Raleigh, N. C." Each package should be plainly marked, giving the class numbers in which contents are entered, and name and address of party making entry. Entry blank covering the shipments should be addressed to the Secre-tary of the Fair and be mailed, preferably, in advance of shipment. All varieties of vegetables entered for premiums should be well selected as to uniformity, freedom from blemishes, and trueness to type. Premiums offered for the best collection will not be awarded for the greatest number of varieties, but mainly for the quality. The Superintendent may with-hold premiums in any case where the article is of inferior quality. All exhibits must be in place and arranged in the space assigned to this department by 10 a.m., Monday, of Fair week. SWEET POTATOES Sweet potatoes will be judged according to uniformity, smoothness, true-ness to type, freedom from blemishes, and marketable size. Standard tray: Inside dimensions 18 x 11% x 3 inches, holding about one-third to one-half bushel. Tray Class A 1st 2d 135—Nancy Hall $3.00 $2.00 136—Porto Rico 3.00 2.00 137—Big Stem Jersey 3.00 2.00 138—Any other variety 3.00 2.00 139—Best display of Nancy Hall or Porto Ricos, 5 trays 10.00 5.00 IRISH POTATOES Irish potatoes will be judged according to uniformity, smoothness, free-dom from blemishes, shallowness of eyes, and marketable size. Tray Class B 1st 2d 140—Irish Cobbler $3.00 $2.00 141—Green Mountain 3.00 2.00 142—Any other variety 3.00 2.00 143—Best display of Irish Cobblers or Green Mountain (5 trays) 10.00 5.00 CABBAGE Three Heads, Trimmed For Market Class C 1st 2d 144—Copenhagen $2.00 $1.00 145—Flat Dutch 2.00 1.00 146—Any other variety 2.00 1.00 59 Statesville Feeds Statesville Feeds are produced by a NORTH CAROLINA mill to meet the requirements of NORTH CAROLINA feeders. We manufacture a full line of Poultry, Dairy and Stock Feeds, and in addition are producing the North Carolina State Formulae as a Special Dairy Feed. STATESVILLE FLOUR MILLS COMPANY 60 ONIONS Plate—Five Each Class D 1st 2d 147—Prizetaker $2.00 $1.00 148—Yellow Globe Danvers 2.00 1.00 149—Any other variety 2.00 1.00 PEPPERS Class E 1st 2d 150—Sweet Bell Peppers, any variety (5 specimens) $2.00 $1.00 151—Pimento Pepper (5 specimens) 2.00 1.00 152—Hot Pepper, any variety (12 specimens) 2.00 1.00 TOMATOES Five Each Class F 1st 2d 153—stone $2.00 $1.00 154—Marglobe 2.00 1.00 155—Any other variety 2.00 1.00 TURNIPS Five Each Class G 1st 2d 156—Purple Top Globe $2.00 $1.00 157—Rutabaga 2.00 1.00 MISCELLANEOUS Class H 1st 2d 158—Any other meritorious vegetable exhibit or novelty 2.00 1.00 PLANTS AND FLOWERS Judge: J. G. WEAVER, Asst. Prof. Horticulture State College, Raleigh, N. C. Exhibits Must Be Grown in North Carolina Entries Close 12:00 Noon, Monday, October 11th, 1937 Exhibits should be carefully packed and shipped or delivered to the "State Fair, Department of Horticulture, Raleigh, N. C." (See Note for Exhibitors.) POTTED PLANTS All plants must be in place by 4 p.m. Monday, of Fair week. Class A . 1st 2d 159—Specimen foliage plant $2.00 $1.00 160—Specimen flowering plant 2.00 1.00 161—Finest collection foliage plants (12 specimens) 10.00 5.00 162—Finest collection of flowering plants (12 specimens) _10.00 5.00 CUT FLOWERS Cut flowers must be ready for exhibition Tuesday of Fair week at 12:00 o'clock, soon after which they will be judged. In bringing flowers to the Fair, especially dahlias, they should be carefully packed in boxes without crowding in order to preserve the petals against injury. Damage to petals, especially in the case of dahlias and roses, may affect the score when judg-ing. Flowers should be kept from automobile drafts as much as possible when transporting. In judging classes B-163 to 170, inclusive, conside- 61 AIR CONDITIONED RESTAURANT RADIO GARAGE CIRCULATING ICE WATER RALEIGH, N. C. HOTEL SIR WALTER A ROBERT MEYER HOTEL ROLAND A. MUMFORD, Mgr. RATES $2.50 Your Hotel Headquarters When in Raleigh THE HOTEL SIR WALTER DINE WITH US WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE Two of the Best Eating Places in Raleigh— Delicious Foods— Digestible Prices DeLUXE DINER DIXIE DINER 514 Hillsboro St. Tele. 375 123 W. Martin St. Tele. 3716 62 ration will be given to the following points: (1) The artistic arrangement of the flowers in the container—60 points; (2) The quality and condition of the flowers—40 points. Emphasis will not be placed on the rarity of the flowers exhibited. In these classes the exhibits must conform to di-mensions or conditions stated. The dimensions refer to flowers, basket, basket handle and any ribbon or other attachment. In other words, the dimensions over all. In classes 166 to 168 the exhibit should be appropriate both as to breadth and height over all, including container, for the size of table stated. The judges will consider whether the exhibit is appro-priate for its class as well as considering the artistic arrangement of flowers in the container and the quality and condition of the flowers. Ex-cept in classes B-163 to 170, inclusive, all cut flowers will be exhibited in vases. Class B 1st 2d 3d 163—Basket cut flowers, large (over 18 in. di-ameter) $5.00 $3.00 $1.00 164—Basket cut flowers, intermediate (between 8 and 18 in. diameter) 3.00 2.00 1.00 165—Basket cut flowers, small, dainty (less than 8 in. diameter) 3.00 2.00 1.00 166—Floral centerpiece for large dining table (formal dinner 12 people) 5.00 3.00 1.00 167—Floral centerpiece for small dining table (luncheon for six people) 3.00 2.00 1.00 168—Floral centerpiece for small table (2 to 4 people) 2.00 1.50 1.00 169—Floral arrangement for invalid's breakfast tray 2.00 1.50 1.00 170—Artistic arrangement of flowers, fruits or foliage, or combinations, suggestive of autumn and the harvest season, exhibit to be within maximum of 30 in. over all 5.00 3.00 1.00 171—Cut roses, collection (1 bloom each, 6 varieties) 3.00 1.50 1.00 172—Cut roses, any variety (one specimen) 2.00 1.00 173—Cut dahlias, collection, decorative type (1 bloom each, 5 varieties) 4.00 2.00 1.00 174—Cut dahlias, decorative type, any variety (1 specimen) 2.00 1.00 175—Cut dahlias, collection, cactus or hybrid cac-tus (1 bloom each, 5 varieties) 4.00 2.00 1.00 176—Cut dahlias, cactus or hybrid cactus, any variety (1 specimen) 2.00 1.00 177—Cut dahlias, miniature type, collection (2 blooms each, 5 varieties) 3.00 1.50 1.00 178—Cut dahlias, miniature type, any variety (1 specimen) 2.00 1.00 179—Cut dahlias, collection, ball or pompom type (2 blooms each, 5 varieties) 3.00 1.50 1.00 180—Cut dahlias, ball or pompom, any variety (1 specimen) . 2.00 1.00 181—Cut chrysanthemums, large exhibition type (6 blooms) 3.00 2.00 182—Cut chrysanthemums, pompom (12 sprays of 3 to 5 flowers each) 2.00 1.00 183—Cut chrysanthemums, single, hardy (6 sprays at least 5 blossoms each) 2.00 1.00 184—Cut cosmos (2 doz. sprays of 3 to 5 flowers each) 3.00 1.50 1.00 185—Best Exhibit Cut Flowers of kind not listed above 3.00 1.50 63 C. A. DILLON G. L. DILLON DILLON SUPPLY COMPANY MACHINERY—MILL SUPPLIES MODERN MACHINE SHOP Distributors for MYERS Deep and Shallow Well Pumps ROCKY MOUNT RALEIGH DURHAM PATENTS PRESCRIPTIONS TOILETRIES 222 FAYETTEVILLE STREET RALEIGH, N. C. "CREATORS OF REASONABLE DRUG PRICES" FOUNTAIN and LUNCHEONETTE SERVICE BUCKEYE Uniform Full Weight Bolted Cottonseed and Cottonseed Products COTTONSEED MEAL The Buckeye Cotton 03 Company For All Livestock Local Phone 3037 Long Distance Phone 9900 RALEIGH, N. C. EASTERN CAROLINA'S FINEST DINING PLACE *WV THE BEST FOODS AT POPULAR PRICES COMFORTABLY AIR CONDITIONED 64 Bulbs and Tubers Bulb collections must consist of at least six varieties. The variety should be distinctly labeled by exhibitor and each variety displayed on separate plate to be furnished by Superintendent of Department. Plate should consist of the following number of bulbs: Narcissus (6) Iris (12) Tulips (12) Gladiolus (8) Class C 1st 2d 187—Best collection Narcissus bulbs $5.00 $3.00 188—Best collection Tulip bulbs 5.00 3.00 189—Best collection bulbous Iris bulbs 5.00 3.00 190—Best collection Gladiolus bulbs 5.00 3.00 191—Best collection bulbs and tubers other than those named in above four classes 5.00 3.00 Miscellaneous This class is for the purpose of stimulating new interest. Entries should be in place by 4:00 p.m. Monday of Fair week. Dish gardens may be arranged on plates, platters, trays, or dishes of any reasonable size. They will be judged on the basis of the craftsmanship of the exhibitor, the artistic qualities of the exhibit and the quality of materials used. The exhibits may represent Japanese gardens, landscapes, farms properly planted, homes, or any other feature. Plant materials should predominate, but any kind of material can be used. To the extent neces-sary, materials such as mirrors, rocks, ornaments, wood, etc., may be used. It is suggested that the exhibitor limit his exhibit to reasonable size and no exhibit should have any dimension greater than 36 inches. The foregoing suggestions apply also to terrariums. The type of ex-hibit desired in this class is much like the dish gardens, except that slightly different materials should be used, the materials being placed inside a glass container covered for the purpose of maintaining moist conditions and plants preferring such moist conditions, such as mosses, ferns, etc., should be used. Credit will be given by the judges to the craftsmanship, the condition of plant materials, the number of kinds of plants in the exhibit, and the general artistic values of same. Under the entry for meritorious novelty or floral exhibit any plant or flower or other related novelty can be exhibited. Each will be judged first as to its merit or quality in such a class and if considered meritorious by the judges will then be judged in competition with any other meritorious entry. Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th 192—Best dish garden $10.00 $5.00 $3.00 $1.00 193—Best terrarium 5.00 3.00 1.00 194—Any other meritorious novelty or floral exhibit 5.00 3.00 1.00 NEW FRUITS, FLOWERS AND VEGETABLES The Fair solicits exhibits of new horticultural fruits, flowers or vege-tables. These should be entered the same as other exhibits in this De-partment. They will be examined by the judges and if considered suffi- 65 HERE'S POWER THAT TURNS UP FARM PROFITS Farming is a tough job. To stand the gaff, the fuel and oil used in farm machinery have to be mighty good. Esso Marketers fuels were developed by the world's leading oil organization for just such use. Thousands of farmers have found them as powerful, thrifty and de-pendable in the field as on the highway. They know, too, that the oils and greases sold at the Esso sign assure safe and lasting lubrication. When it comes to taking punishment, they are the sturdiest team-mates that ever worked for you. There's an Esso sign near you. Drive in today—find out why generations of farmers have depended on this organization for all their fuel and oil requirements. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF LOUISIANA STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA COLONIAL BEACON OIL COMPANY, INC. 66 ciently meritorious will be judged in competition with any other similar exhibits classed as meritorious. Entries should be in place ready for exhibition and judging Tuesday of Fair week at 12:00 o'clock and will be judged soon thereafter. It is suggested that the exhibitor furnish a written statement giving the name of the exhibit and a brief statement explaining the nature, source and important qualities of same. While it is preferred and intended that this class is for service and reward to bonafide originating parties or agencies, it is not necessary that the exhibit be entered by the originator. It is necessary, however, that it must be both new and meritorious and at least closely related to the fruit, flower or vegetable families. Class A 1st 2d 3d 195—Best meritorious new fruit, flower or vegetable $5.00 $3.00 $2.00 SPECIAL PRIZES DEPARTMENT B Offered by Job P. Wyatt & Sons Co., of Raleigh, N. C.—For largest and best pumpkin displayed in Department B the Job P. Wyatt & Sons Co. offer a special prize. This prize to be one No. 2242 Myers iy2 gallon Compressed Air Sprayer. Offered by Lindley Nurseries, Greensboro, N. C. For most artistic arrange-ment of home grown flowers in North Carolina pottery the Lindley Nurseries of Greensboro, N. C, offer nursery stock for beautifying the home grounds as follows: First prize—$5.00 in nursery stock listed in Lindley Nurseries catalogue. Second prize—$3.00 in nursery stock listed in Lindley Nurseries catalogue. IIS0N0US* ROTENONE-SULPHUR DUSTING MIXTURE 1 Mechling's Controls Mexican Bean Beetles —also Cabbage Worms, Cabbage Loopers, ond other insects attack-ing Vegetables. Ask your dealer or write us for descriptive folders and control calendar. -MECHU1ND BROS- CHEMICAL'S DIVISION OF DCNERAU CHEMICAL COMPANY CAMDEN* NEW JERSEY- AUTOMATIC Ccrtrke/L for.. Economical Cannini euicL 'rf Healthful;: Cookinq Two sizes: "U-2" has 1 1-qt. capac-ity; "CS-1" 18- quart. Both are equipped for canning and cooking. It's a real pressure cooker buy you can use day-in-day-out for years. It assures economical and satisfactory can-ning. Furthermore, you can prepare a -whole meal at one time in it! TheQuick WCUf -fc-Canl Use the Automatic Master Can Sealer. A child can operate it! Seals, opens, reflanges and reseals 3 sizes of cans. NEW Canning Equip-ment Booklet . . . Send coupon for your free copy. J. P. DO WELL McKinney, Texas i Send me new, free booklet describing your AUTOMATIC Pressure Cooker—the Auto-matic Master Sealer and other Automatic •' Name . . Address ' P. O State Tm tiot LUCKY ~Jt&. sSSW "I harvest more wheat, barley, oats— because' I treat seed grains with New Improved CERESAN" Want to reduce disease losses— get bigger grain yields —better profits? Then treat seed with New Improved CERESAN1 Proved effec-tive by experiment stations of most important grain states against stinking smut of wheat, oats smuts, covered and black loose smut and stripe of barley. Has increased wheat yields an average of 6% for 3c an acre; barley, 6% for 4c; oats, 18% for 5c! Cereal Pamphlet free from the Bayer- Semesan Co., Inc., Wilmington, Delaware. 68 BEEF CATTLE AND SHEEP Department C J. E. FOSTER and L. I. CASE, Directors, State College Station, Raleigh, North Carolina. Judge: Kenneth E. Litton, Blacksburg, Va. Entries in this Department are limited to North Carolina. Amount Offered by Fair for Beef and Dual Purpose Cattle $1,547 Entries in This Department Close October 9th, 1937, at 6:00 P. M. Make Your Entries Early Exhibitors must state on entry blank exact number of animals entered. Stall fees: One dollar for each animal entered. If more than one is used for any one animal, an additional fee must be paid. See General Rules under Entries. All cattle must be accompanied by a health certificate and tuberculin test chart issued by a qualified veterinarian and approved by the State Veterinarian showing the animals to be free from tuberculosis and Bang's disease. If the entire herd has been tuberculin tested within a year of the opening of the Fair and no untested cattle have been added, cattle from such a herd may be shown without further tests. Otherwise the cattle for exhibit shall be tuberculin tested within 60 days of the Fair. Cattle from a herd, all of which have been tested for Bang's disease within 69 the year without reactors and no untested animals have been added, may be shown without further tests. Otherwise the cattle for exhibit shall be tested within 30 days of the Fair. The certificate and test chart must accompany the cattle, and they will not be permitted to enter the barns until the certificate and test chart is submitted to the Director or his authorized representative. The Tuberculin test must have been applied within a reasonable time preceding the opening date of the Fair. The right is reserved to reject an entry or to remove same after entered, should our Veterinarian find the animal is affected with a communicable disease. Full information concerning the above may be secured by addressing the State Veterinarian, Raleigh, N. C. SPECIAL RULES All females thirty-six months of age must have produced a living calf, and entries must be accompanied by affidavits of date of birth of last calf, or give satisfactory evidence of being in calf. Any bull, thirty-six months old or over on the first day of September of year in which shown that has not dropped to his service during the twelve months preceding said date one or more living calves will not be eligible to show. TOBACCO GROWERS, TRUCK GARDENERS! We introduce the Greatest Planter of all time MASTERS' NEW IMPROVED 1937 PLANT SETTER Plants, Covers and Waters NO TIRESOME STOOPING PAYS FOR SELF IN A DAY Masters built the first practical automatic plant set-ter over forty years ago. Since then it has been contin-ually improved. Our new 1937 model is the last word —it has no competition. Others may imitate but never equal Masters' efficiency and durability. Tobacco buyers say they can tell when a crop has been Masters' planted by its uniform high quality. They gladly pay highest prices for this finer yield. Masters' Improved Plant Setter is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction in planting Tobacco, Tomatoes, Cabbage, Sweet Potatoes and other plants Nearly all first-class hardware and implement dealers handle, recommend and sell Masters' Improved Plant Setters. Ask your local merchant to show you this newest and best device of its kind. If your dealer doesn't have it in stock, write for full information direct. Don't wait until planting time. ACT NOW. MASTERS PLANTER CO. Makers of Fine Implements 4914 West Grand Ave. Chicago, U. S. A. ^* 70 All applications for entry of cattle must be accompanied by the name of the breeder, name, number, age and date of birth, and name and number of sire and dam of the animal to be exhibited. All animals exhibited in this Department must be recorded with their respective associations. Special Herdman's Prize Page 27. All animals entered for exhibition must be in place not later than 10:00 o'clock a. m., Tuesday, October 12, 1937. Exhibitors will be required to have blankets removed from all exhibits between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., each day of the Fair. When on exhibition in the ring, each animal must be under halter and in charge of owner or employee. Only first premium animals in individual classes will be eligible to compete for championships. The Director or ring clerk shall obtain names and record numbers of all animals composing herds and groups, where regularly entered or sub-stituted, that such data may be included in report of awards. When an award is made, special attention should be given to see that same is correctly entered in the award book. Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards pages 17 to 29. BEEF CATTLE SHORTHORNS Amount Offered for This Breed $308.00 Class A 1st 2d 196—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 $15.00 $10.00 197—Yearling bulls, calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00 198—Bull calves, calved between September 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00 199—Senior Champion Bull, calved on or before Decem-ber 31, 1935 7.00 200—Junior Champion Bull, calved between January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 201—Grand Champion Bull, classes 199 and 200 compete 15.00 202—Group, two bulls owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 203—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 15.00 10.00 204—Yearling heifers, calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00 205—Heifer calves, calved between September 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00 20 6—Senior Champion Female, calved on or before De-cember 31, 1935 7.00 207—Junior Champion Female, calved between January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 208—Grand Champion Female, classes 206 and 207 compete 15.00 209—Get of Sire, four animals, any age, both sexes to be represented; owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 210—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class 197 and one heifer from Class 204 15.00 10.00 211—Pair Calves: one bull from Class 198 and one heifer from Class 205 15.00 10.00 71 HEREFORDS Amount Offered for This Breed Class B 1st 212—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 $15.00 213—Yearling bulls calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936_ 15.00 214—Bull calves, calved between Sep-tember 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 15.00 215—Senior Champion Bull, calved on or before December 31, 1935 7.00 216—Junior Champion Bull, calved be-tween January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 217—Grand Champion Bull, classes 215 and 216 compete 15.00 218—Group, two bulls owned by exhi-bitor 15.00 219—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 15.00 220—Yearling heifers, calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936 15.00 221—Heifer calves, calved between Sep-tember 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 15.00 2d $10.00 10.00 10.00 $378.00 3d 4th ;6.oo 6.00 6.00 10.00 6.00 10.00 6.00 10.00 6.00 10.00 6.00 5.00 5.00 BE SURE TO SEE THIS INTERESTING TWO-IN-ONE DEMONSTRATION AT THIS YEAR'S STATE FAIR THE NEW COPPERIZED SILO A silo that will make you more profit for years to come. All metal, practically indes-tructible. Lightning proof. Fire proof. The walls are non-absorbent and are leak-proof. Built in any size. Easy to erect or dismantle and move to a new location. They are guaranteed for 20 years. AND MOLASSES SILAGE This silo will be filled with Molasses Hay Silage and located near the cattle barns at the State Fair. Be sure to see this faster, easier, more profitable way to save your hay crops. Demonstrates how your Silver Shield will give you year 'round service . . . year 'round PROFITS. SOUTHEASTERN REPRESENTATIVE F. E. YOUNG OXFORD, N. C. Manufactured By LAMNECK PRODUCTS, INC. 416 DUBLIN AVE. ""pHIS means steady auto service to 800 1 families. While similar well-established routes earn up to >I00 a week, beginners must be satis-fled with smaller earnings. No experience necessary but man selected must be reliable, industrious, age 25-50. The right man will become an authorized Rawleigh Dealer for 200 home necessities, started on our capital; trained the 48 year old Rawleigh way now used on over 8,000 Rawleigh Routes. Write now. RAWLEIGH CO. Dept. 3772-NCF Freeport, III. Most Profitable Cows MILK. Big Milkers - • Hardy Rustle Good Grazers • Perfect Udders W,.i< lo. 8ooU.ii Ayrshire BreedersAssociation COLUMBUS, OHIO 72 222—Senior Champion Female, calved on or before December 31, 1935 7.00 223—Junior Champion Female, calved between January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 224—Grand Champion Female, classes 222 and 223 compete 15.00 225—Get of Sire, four animals, any age both sexes to be represented; owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 6.00 226—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class 213 and one heifer from Class 220 15.00 10.00 6.00 227—Pair Calves: one bull from Class 214 and one heifer from Class 221 15.00 10.00 6.00 ABERDEEN ANGUS Amount Offered for This Breed $378.00 Class C 1st 2d 3d 4th 228—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 $15.00 $10.00 $6.00 229—Yearling bulls, calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00 6.00 230—Bull calves, calved between Sep-tember 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00 6.00 5.00 231—Senior Champion Bull, calved on or before December 31, 1935 7.00 232—Junior Champion Bull, calved be-tween January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 233—Grand Champion Bull, classes 231 and 232 compete 15.00 234—Group, two bulls owned by exhi-bitor 15.00 10.00 6.00 235—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 15.00 10.00 6.00 23 6—Yearling heifers, calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00 6.00 237—Heifer calves, calved between Sep-tember 1, 1986, and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00 6.00 6.00 238—Senior Champion Female, calved on or before December 31, 1935 7.00 239—Junior Champion Female, calved between January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 240—Grand Champion Female, classes 238 and 239 compete 15.00 241—Get of Sire, four animals, any age, both sexes to be represented; owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 6.00 242—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class 229 and one heifer from Class 236 15.00 10.00 6.00 243—Pair Calves: one bull from Class 230 and one heifer from Class 237 15.00 10.00 6.00 73 BEEF STEERS Amount Offered in this Class by Fair $175.00 Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 244—Light weight steers $15.00 $12.00 $10.00 $8.00 $5.00 245—Medium weight steers 15.00 12.00 10.00 8.00 5.00 246—Heavy weight steers 15.00 12.00 10.00 8.00 5.00 247—Grand Champion Steer 25.00 DUAL-PURPOSE-BREED—RED POLLS Amount Offered for This Breed $308.00 Class E 1st 2d 248—Bulls, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 $15.00 $10.00 249—Yearling bulls, calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00 250—Bull calves, calved between September 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00 251—Senior Champion Bull, calved on or before Decem-ber 31, 1935 7.00 252—Junior Champion Bull, calved between January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 253—Grand Champion Bull, classes 251 and 252 compete 15.00 254—Group, two bulls owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 255—Cows, 2 years old or over, calved before June 30, 1935 15.00 10.00 256—Yearling heifers, calved between July 1, 1935, and August 31, 1936 15.00 10.00 257—Heifer calves, calved between September 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 15.00 10.00 258—Senior Champion Female, calved on or before De-cember 31, 1935 7.00 259—Junior Champion Female, calved between January 1, 1936, and April 30, 1937 7.00 260—Grand Champion Female, classes 258 and 259 compete 15.00 261—Get of Sire, four animals, any age, both sexes to be represented; owned by exhibitor 15.00 10.00 262—Pair Yearlings: one bull from Class 249 and one heifer from Class 256 15.00 10.00 263—Pair Calves: one bull from Class 250 and one heifer from Class 257 15.00 10.00 74 SHEEP Amount Offered in this Section $749.00 Amount Offered by Fair $674.00 Amount Offered by Specials 75.00 Do not make entries in Championship classes. Exhibitors must specify on entry blank the number of animals entered and the number of pens wanted. Pens, $1.00 each. All animals entered for exhibition must be in place not later than 10:00 a. m., Tuesday, October 12th. All animals over three months old must be recorded and appear in the name of the exhibitor on the records of their respective associations. Ani-mals recorded in individual names cannot be shown in name of firm or of the farm, but must be shown exactly as they appear on the records. This rule is fair, and will be strictly enforced. See Rules. Exhibitors must be prepared to show certificates of registration if called for. The judges are requested to give special attention to actual merit and in order to avoid mistakes it is their duty to inquire as to time of shearing, manner of fitting, age of lambs, etc. Misrepresentation in any form on part of exhibitor or agent forfeits all premiums awarded. A breeder's flock shall consist of one yearling ram, two yearling ewes, and two ewe lambs, bred and owned by exhibitor. Get of sire shall consist of pen of four lambs under one year, either sex, and get of one sire, bred and owned by exhibitor. All sheep entered must be in apparently healthy condition. The right is reserved to reject an entry or to remove same after entered should our veterinarian find that the animal is affected with a communicable disease. The clerk of awards must take special pains after an award is made to properly enter it on the records. It is absolutely necessary that the name of animal, registry number, date of birth, and ear tag number be given for all animals awarded prizes. 75 In case a substitute animal is shown, or in case this data was not given and recorded in judge's book at time entries were made, it must be sup-plied by the clerk. Records of awards must be complete in every detail or premiums will not be paid. SHROPSHIRES Amount Offered for This Breed $148.00 Class F 1st 2d 264—Ram, one year old or over $ 9.00 $7.00 265—Ram, under one year 9.00 7.00 266—Ewe, one year old or over 9.00 7.00 267—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00 268—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00 269—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00 Champions 270—Champion ram 10.00 271—Champion ewe 10.00 Groups 272—Breeder's flock 9.00 273—Get of sire „ 9.00 HAMPSHIRES Amount Offered for This Breed $230.00 Class G 1st 2d 3d 273%—Ram, two year old and over $9.00 $7.00 $5.00 274—Ram, one year old and under two 9.00 7.00 5.00 275—Ram, under one year 9.00 7.00 5.00 275%—Ewe, two year old and over 9.00 7.00 5.00 276—Ewe, one year old and under two 9.00 7.00 5.00 277—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00 5.00 278—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00 5.00 279—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00 5.00 Champions 280—Champion ram 10.00 281—Champion ewe 10.00 Groups 282—Breeder's flock 9.00 7.00 5.00 283—Get of sire 9.00 7.00 5.00 SPECIAL. PRIZES Special prizes offered by the American Hampshire Sheep Association, at North Carolina State Fair to be held in Raleigh for 1937, under the following rules and conditions. 1. These specials open to members of the American Hampshire Sheep Association only. 2. All sheep competing for these specials must be bred and owned by exhibitor; must be recorded in this Association and carry the Association labels in their ears at time of showing. 3. No special prize money will be paid on sheep artificially colored. 4. The Secretary of the Fair, or Superintendent of the Sheep Depart-ment, must certify to all winnings, giving the Association registry numbers of the winning animals, with the name and address of the winner. 5. Prizes to be paid direct to the winner from the Association office, if proper certification of the award is received within 90 days after the close of the Fair. 6. Only one prize will be paid any Exhibitor. 76 FOR PEN OF THREE BEST RAM LAMBS 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th $25.00 $20.00 $15.00 $10.00 $5.00 Secretary, American Hampshire Sheep Association. 72 Woodland Ave., Detroit, Mich. SOUTHDOWNS Amount Offered for This Breed $148.00 Class H 1st 2d 284—Ram, one year old or over $9.00 $7.00 285—Ram, under one year . 9.00 7.00 286—Ewe, one year old or over '. 9.00 7.00 287—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00 288—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00 289—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00 Champions 290—Champion ram 10.00 291—Champion ewe 10.00 Groups 292—Breeder's flock 9.00 7.00 293—Get of sire 9.00 7.00 DORSETS Amount Offered for This Breed $148.00 Class I 1st 2d 294—Ram, one year old or over $9.00 $7.00 295—Ram, under one year 9.00 7.00 296—Ewe, one year old or over 9.00 7.00 297—Ewe, under one year 9.00 7.00 298—Three ram lambs 9.00 7.00 299—Three ewe lambs 9.00 7.00 Champions 300—Champion ram 10.00 301—Champion ewe 10.00 Groups 302—Breeder's flock 9.00 7.00 303—Get of sire 9.00 7.00 77 LIVESTOCK DIRECTORS Dr. Wm. Moore—-J. A. Arey DAIRY CATTLE Department D Judge: Dr. PROP. DIRECTORS C. D. Grinnells—A. C. Kimery J. P. LaMASTER, Head Dairy Department Clemson College, S. C. Judging schedules as indicated under each breed. Director reserves right to change this schedule should unusual circum-stances warrant such change in any of Dairy Classes. Amount Offered in This Section $2,235.00 Entries in this Department close October 9th, 6:00 P. M. Make your entries early. Entries are limited to North Carolina. Exhibitors must state on entry blank name and registration number of every animal entered and date of birth. Stall fees: One dollar for each animal entered. If more than one is used for any animal, an additional fee must be paid. See General Rules under Entries, Pages 17 to 29. Do not make entries in Champion Classes. In Dairy Breed Classes A Senior Yearling is one dropped between July 1, 1935, and January 1, 1936. 78 A Junior Yearling is one dropped between January 1, 1936, and July 1, 1936. All calves dropped since July 1, 1936, and over four months of age, shall be shown in the Calf classes. Graded Herd shall consist of one bull, two years old or over; one cow, 3 years old or over; one heifer, 2 years old and under 3; one yearling heifer and one senior heifer calf. Yearling Herd shall consist of one bull, 1 year old and under 2, and two yearling heifers. Females must be bred by exhibitors. Calf Herd shall consist of one bull and two heifers, all under 1 year old and all bred by exhibitor. Get of Sire shall consist of four animals, any age, the get of one sire. Get need not be owned by exhibitor. Produce of Dam shall consist of two animals, any age, the produce of one cow. The ages of all animals in two-year-old class and those older, as well as senior yearlings and senior calves, shall be computed to July 1st, while the ages of juniors will be computed to January 1st. Cows 36 months old or over on July 1st of year in which shown, to be eligible to the show, must have produced a calf carried to maturity within 18 months preceding said date. Any bull 36 months old or over on first day of July of year in which shown, that has not dropped to his service one or more living calves during the 12 months preceding said date, will not be eligible to the show. Complete information must be given on the entry blank. Registration certificate for every animal entered must be submitted to the Superin-tendent or his assistants upon request. All cattle must be accompanied by a health certificate and tuberculin test chart issued by a qualified veterinarian and approved by the State Veterinarian showing the animals to be free from tuberculosis and Bang's disease. If the entire herd has been tuberculin tested within a year of the opening of the Fair and no untested cattle have been added, cattle from such a herd may be shown without further tests. Otherwise the cattle for exhibit shall be tuberculin tested within 60 days of the Fair. Cattle from a herd, all of which have been tested for Bang's disease within the year without reactors and no untested animals have been added, may be shown without further tests. Otherwise the cattle for exhibit shall be tested within 30 days of the Fair. The certificate and test chart must accompany the cattle, and they will not be permitted to enter the barns until the certificate and test chart is submitted to the Superinendent or his authorized representative. All cows in the Dairy Breeds, to be judged in the morning, shall be milked at 6:00 P. M., on the day previous to being judged. Dairy cows to be judged in the afternoon shall be milked at 6:00 A. M., of the same day. The judge may, at his option, require any cow to be milked while in the ring or before the awards are made. Special Herdman's Prize Page 27. 79 JERSEYS Judging begins Tuesday A. M. Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00 Individuals Class A 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 304—Bull, dropped before July 1, 1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 305—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 306—Bull, Senior yearling (dropped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 307—Bull, Junior yearling (dropped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 308—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 309—Bull, Senior champion 10.00 310—Bull, Junior champion 10.00 311—Bull, Grand champion 10.00 312—Cow, dropped before July 1, 1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 313—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to June 30, 1934 inclusive __ 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 314—Cow or heifer, dropped July 1, 1934>vto June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 315—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 316—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1396 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 317—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 318—Female, Senior champion 10.00 319—Female, Junior champion 10.00 320—Female, Grand champion 10.00 Herds 1st 2d 3d 4th 321—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 322—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 323—Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 Groups 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 324—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 325—Produce of dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 GUERNSEYS Judging begins Wednesday, A. M. Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00 Individuals Class B 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 326—Bull, dropped before July 1, 1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 327—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 80 328��Bull, Senior yearling (drop-ped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 329—Bull, Junior yearling (drop-ped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 330—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 331—Bull, Senior champion 10.00 332—Bull, Junior champion 10.00 333—Bull, Grand champion 10.00 334—Cow, dropped before July 1, 1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 335—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to June 30, 1934 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 336—Cow or heifer, dropped July 1, 1934 to June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 337—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 338—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1936 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 339—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 340—Female, Senior champion 10.00 341—Female, Junior champion 10.00 342—Female, Grand champion 10.00 Herds 1st 2d 3d 4th 343—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 344—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 345—Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 Groups 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 346—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 347—Produce of dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 AYRSHIRES Judging begins Wednesday, P. M. Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00 Individuals Class C 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 348—Bull, dropped before July 1, 1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 349—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 350—Bull, Senior yearling (drop-ped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 3 51—Bull, Junior yearling (drop-ped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 352—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 81 353—Bull, Senior champion 10.00 354—Bull, Junior champion 10.00 355—Bull, Grand champion 10.00 356—Cow, dropped before July 1, 1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 357—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to June 30, 1934 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 358—Cow or heifer, dropped July 1, 1934 to June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 359—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 360—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 361—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 362—Female, Senior champion 10.00 363—Female, Junior champion 10.00 364—Female, Grand champion 10.00 Herds 1st 2d 3d 4th 365—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 366—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 367���Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 Groups 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 368—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 369—Produce of dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 HOLSTEINS Judging begins Tuesday, P. M. Amount Offered for This Breed $560.00 Individuals Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 370—Bull, dropped before July 1, 1934 $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 371—Bull, dropped July 1, 1934 to June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 372—Bull, Senior yearling (drop-ped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 373—Bull, Junior yearling (drop-ped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 374—Bull, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00- 375—Bull, Senior champion 10.00 376—Bull, Junior champion 10.00 377—Bull, Grand champion 10.00 378—Cow, dropped before July 1, 1933 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 379—Cow, dropped July 1, 1933 to June 30, 1934 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 380—Cow or heifer, dropped July 1, 1934 to June 30, 1935 inclusive 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 82 381—Heifer, Senior yearling (drop-ped July 1, 1935 to Dec. 31, 1935 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 382—Heifer, Junior yearling (drop-ped Jan. 1, 1936 to June 30, 1936 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 38 3—Heifer, Calf (dropped July 1, 1936 to June 30, 1937 inclusive) 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3.00 384—Female, Senior champion 10.00 385—Female, Junior champion 10.00 386—Female, Grand champion 10.00 Herds 1st 2d 3d 4th 387—Graded herd $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 388—Yearling herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 389—Calf herd 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 Groups 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 390—Get of sire $10.00 $8.00 $6.00 $5.00 $3.00 391—Produce of Dam 10.00 8.00 6.00 5.00 3 00 83 SWINE Department E H. W. TAYLOR, Director, State College, Raleigh, N. C. Judge: Paul Swaffar Amount Offered in This Department $1,777.00 Entries close October 9th, 1937 To avoid switching charges and delay, bill hogs as follows: "For Exhibit, North Carolina State Fair, Camp Polk, N. C, care Sea-board Air Line Railway." Entries are limited to North Carolina. Exhibitors must specify on entry blank the number of animals entered and the number of pens wanted. Reserve pens, $1.00 each. Only two entries allowed to the class. SEE RULES Age of animals shall be reckoned from March 1, and September 1. An aged animal is one farrowed prior to September 1, 1935. A senior yearling is one farrowed between September 1, 1935 and March 1, 1936. A junior yearling is one farrowed between March 1, 1936 and Septem-ber 1, 1936. A senior pig is one farrowed between September 1, 1936 and March 1. 1937. A junior pig is one farrowed between March 1, 1937 and September 1, 1937. 84 All animals over six months old must be recorded in the name of the exhibitor on the records of their respective associations. All sows two years old or over, eligible to show, must have produced living offspring. Boars over one year old must have their tusks removed before showing. Get of sire shall consist of four swine, any age, the get of one boar. Produce of dam shall consist of four swine any age, the produce of one sow. Breeder's young herd shall consist of one boar and three sows, under one year old, bred and owned by exhibitor. Exhibitor's herd shall consist of one boar and three sows, over one year old, all owned by exhibitor. » All animals entered for exhibition shall be in place not later than 10:00 A.M. Tuesday, October 12, 1937. Section 10 of the Regulation No. 3 of the Livestock Sanitary Laws and Regulations of the North Carolina Department of Agriculture is as follows: "All swine exhibited at any Agricultural Fair, or other exhibit within this State, must be accompanied by an affidavit from the owner, certifying that such swine are apparently free from any symptoms of a contagious disease; that they are from premises where no known contagious diseased swine exist, and that they have been properly inoculated with serum alone not less than seven days, nor more than thirty days, or with the serum and virus not less than thirty days immediately prior to being placed on exhibit." All entries must comply with this section. The right is reserved to reject an entry or to remove same after entered, should our veterinarian find that the animal is affected with a communicable disease. The Superintendent or Ring Clerk shall obtain names and record num-bers of all animals composing herds and groups, where regularly entered or substituted, that such data may be included in report of awards. Spotted Poland Chinas will be shown in the class with Standard Poland Chinas. Do not make entries in Champion Classes. Read Rules Governing Entries, Exhibits, and Awards pages 17 to 29. POLAND CHINA AND SPOTTED POLAND CHINA Amount Offered on Above Breeds $356.00 Class A 1st 2d 3d 4th 392—Boar, two years old and over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00 393—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 394—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 395���Boar, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 396—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 397—Sow, two years old or over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 398—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 399—Sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 400—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 401—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 85 402—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 403—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 404—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 405—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 Champions 406—Senior champion boar $5.00 407—Junior champion boar 5.00 408—Grand champion boar Ribbon 409—Senior champion sow 5.00 410—Junior champion sow 5.00 411—Grand champion sow - Ribbon DUROC Amount Offered on This Breed $356.00 Class B * 1st 2d 3d 4th 412—Boar, two years old or over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00 413—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 414—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 415—Boar, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 416—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 417—Sow, two years old and over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 418—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 419—sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 420—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 421—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 422—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 423—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 424—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 425—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 Champions 426—Senior champion boar $5.00 427—Junior champion boar 5.00 428—Grand champion boar Ribbon 429—Senior champion sow , 5.00 430—Junior champion sow 5.00 431-—Grand champion sow Ribbon HAMPSHIRES Amount Offered on This Breed $356.00 Class C 1st 2d 3d 4th 432—Boar, two years old and over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00 433—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 434—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 435—Boai, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 436—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 437—Sow, two years old or over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 438—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 439—Sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 440—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 441—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 442—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 443—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 444—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 445—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 Champions 446—Senior champion boar $5.00 447—Junior champion boar 5.00 448—Grand champion boar Ribbon 449—Senior champion sow 5.00 450—Junior champion sow 5.00 451—Grand champion sow Ribbon 86 BERKSHIRE Amount Offered on This Breed $356.00 Class D 1st 2d 3d 4th 452—Boar, two years old and over $10.00 $7.00 $4.00 $3.00 453—Boar, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 454—Boar, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 455—Boar, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 456—Boar, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 457���Sow, two years old or over 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 458—Sow, senior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 459—sow, junior yearling 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 460—Sow, senior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 461—Sow, junior pig 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 462—Aged herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 463—Young herd, owned by exhibitor 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 464—Get of sire 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 465—Produce of dam 10.00 7.00 4.00 3.00 Champions 466—Senior champion boar $5.00 467—Junior champion boar 5.00 468—Grand champion boar Ribbon 469—Senior champion sow 5.00 470—Junior champion sow 5.00 471—Grand champion sow Ribbon FAT HOG SHOW Amount Offered on This Class $353.00 BARROWS AND GILTS Class E 1st 2d 3d 472—Pen six barrows or gilts, average weight 175-200 $25.00 $15.00 $13.00 473—Pen six barrows or gilts, average weight 201-225 25.00 15.00 13.00 474—Pen six barrows or gilts, average weight 226-250 25.00 15.00 13.00 475—Pen three barrows or gilts, average weight 175-200 15.00 10.00 8.00 476—Pen three barrows or gilts, average weight 201-225 15.00 10.00 8.00 477—Pen three barrows or gilts, average weight 226-250 15.00 10.00 8.00 478—Single Barrow or gilt, average weight 175-200 9.00 7.00 5.00 479—Single barrow or gilt, average weight 201-225 9.00 7.00 5.00 480—Single barrow or gilt, average weight 226-250 9.00 7.00 5.00 481—Champion pen three barrows 10.00 482—Champion pen three gilts 10.00 483—Champion barrow 6.00 484—Champion gilt 6.00 87 SPECIAL The Bulletin-National Spotted Poland China Record will pay the fol-lowing cash special prizes in the Junior gilt class, providing the winning animal is recorded in The National Spotted Poland China Record at the time shown. One prize only to each exhibitor. 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 6th $10.00 $7.00 $5.00 $3.00 $3.00 $2.00 88 POULTRY Department F Twenty-first Official State Poultry Show of North Carolina, Held in Connection with the North Carolina State Fair T. T. BROWN and C. F. PARRISH, Directors, in Charge, Poultry Department, State College Station, Raleigh, N. C. Judges MR. B. F. RICKETS, Zanesville, Ohio, Licensed A.P.A. Judge of all varieties. To Judge Standard Classes PROF. N. W. WILLIAMS, State College Station, Raleigh, N. C. To Judge Standard Production Classes Amount Offered in This Department $2,019.00 Entries in this Department close Wednesday, October 6, at 6:00 P. M. Entries must be made on printed forms provided by the Secretary for that purpose and must be in full compliance with the printed instructions on same. Study the list carefully, then fill out the entry blank with sec- 89 tion number, class, book number, premium list number, and name of breed and variety as they appear in the Premium List. Do not send in your birds for exhibit without first h |
| OCLC Number-Original | 13694212 |
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