Tlmraday, S^tember 19, 1918 THE BREVARD NEWS, BREVARD, N. 0. (Continued from page one) 45 (B 23) any bearded variety .. $1.00 46 (B 24) any beardless variety $1.00 Oats 47 (B 32) any variety $1.00 Rye 48 (B 35) any variety $1.00 Cow Pea* 49 (B 48) any variety $1.00 Soybean* 50 (B 60) any variety (M) . .$1.00 Best stalk any variety .... $1.00 Baled Hay 51 (B 70) Red clover (M)..$2..$l 52 (B 74) mixed grass (M). .$2 $1 BEST DISPLAY AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS; This exhibit will be judged by the following points: Variety farm products .... 35 points Variety garden products.. 10 points Variety fruits 5 points Home industries 10 points Quality 25 points Artistic arrangement 15 points 1st prize $10.00, 2nd prize $5.00 HORTICULTURE PRODUCT Applet First Second Best peck any variety $1 .50 Best plate $1 .50 53 (B 148) any other variety 75 .50 Pears, five specimens 54 (B 157) best plate and variety 75 Grapes 55 (B 159) best collection bunch grapes 75 56 (B 161) best plate bunch type grape 50 General collection of fruit First Second 57 (B 173) best home orchard collection of fruit.$3.50 $2.00 50 (B 175) best collection of dried fruit . . . .$1.00 .75 Truck and Vegetables 59 (B 200) best half bu. any variety sweet potatoes 75 60 (B 207) best half bu. any variety irish pot.. .$1.50 .75 61 (B 221) best four head cab bage any variety . . .75 .50 62 (B 331) best peck any variety onions ... .75 .50 63 (B 333) best ten stalks any variety celery. .75 .50 64 (B 339) best peck any variety turnips .. ..75 .50 65 (B 365) best quart sweet peppers 50 66 (B 373) best half bushel any variety rutabagasC’1.00 .50 67 (B 384) best plate any variety tomatoes 50 .25 Miscellaneous Vegetables: 68 (B 386) best six speci mens stock beets 75 69 <B 387) best specimen table beets one dozen 75 70 (B 393) best and largest pumpkin $1.00 .50 71 (B 395) best peck field beans 75 72 (B 401) best three bunches rhubarb 50 General Vegetables Collection: 73 (B 404) best and most attractive collection vegetables from city or country garden $2.00 $1.00 74 (B 406) best collection dried vegetables from the home garden $1.00 .75 HOME ECONOMICS PRODUCTS: Canned fruits and Tegetables entries to be shown in quart jars: 75 (B 420 peaches 50 76 (B 421) pears 50 77 (B 422) berries 50 78 (B 423) cherries 50 79 (B 425) apples 50 80 (B 426) String beans 50 81 (B 428) tomatoes 50 82 (B 429) sweet potatoes 50 83 (B 431) baby beets 50 84 (B 433) Rhubarb 50 Entries should be in pint jars: 85 (B 434) corn 50 86 (B 435) lima beans 50 87 (B 436) field peas 50 88 (B 437) english peas 50 89 (B 438) Okra 50 90 (B 439) pimento pepera 50 PRESERVES: Entires to be in quart jars. 91 (B 440) peach 50 92 (B 441) Pear 50 93 (B443) strawberries 50 94 (B 444) watermelon rind ....50 Jams Entries sliovld be shown in qt jar*. 95 <B 445) peach 50 96 (B 446) plum 50 97 (B 447) apple liiarmalade ....50 98 (B 448) blackberry 50 99 (B 450) strawberry 50 100 (B 454) huckleberry 50 Vegetables and Fruit Pickles Entries should be in quart jars 101 (B 455) cucumber 50 102 (B 456) slices tomatoes 50 103 (B 457) Dixie relish or peper hash 50 104 (B 458) peach (sweet) 50 105 (B 459) pear (sweet) 50 106 (B 460) watermelon rind (sweet) 50 107 (B 462) beet 50 108 (B 463) onion 50 109 (B 464) chow-chow 50 JELLY 110 (B 465) apple 25 111 (B 467) grape 25 112 (B 469) plum 25 113 (B 470) blackberry or dueberry 25 PANTRY SUPPLIES 114 (B 472) graham broad 50 115 (B 473) com bread 50 116 (B 474) commeal muffin ....50 117 (B 475) biscuit using half wheat flour, half flour substitute 50 118 (B 478) sponge cake not iced 50 119 (B 479) dried fruit pi« 25 121 (B 482) school lunch con sidering balance ration preparation, neatness of pack, kind of container 50 122 (B 486) homemade vinegars .50 123 (B 487) molasses ..$1.00 .50 124 (B 491) section comb honey 75 .50 125 (B 495) best display dried fruits and vegetables to consist of not less than three kinds of one If. each, $1. 126 (B 498) iireless cooker homemade 50 127 (B 499) fly trap (home made) 50 128 (B 503) cap and apron homemade 50 129 (B 504) soap homemaade . ..50 130 (B 505) homemade country butter 75 .50 131 (B 506) homemade cot tage chees 11b 7 5 SPECIAL GROUP DISPLAY 132 (B 507) exhibit of can fruit and vegetables, three quart jars to be selected from the following: String beans, soup mixture, peaches, pears, apples, or berries, 1,$2.50; 2, $1.50; 3, $1.00 133 (B 508) exhibit of preserves in pint jars to be selected from the follow^ing: Fig, pear, straw berry, cherry, 1, $2.50; 2, $1.50; 3, $1.00 134 (B 509) exhibit jams in pint jars, four jars to be selected from the following: Blackberry raspberry, strawberry, peach, damson, 1,$2.50; 2, $1.50; 3, $1.00. 135 (B 510) pickles in pint jars, four jars to be selected from the following: Cucumber, onion watermelon rind (sweet), sliced cucumbers, chowchow, peppaar hash, 1, $2.50; 2, $1.50; 3, $1.00. Department of Fancy Work: 136 Best crocheting 50 .25 137 ” tatting ..50 .25 138 ” Icnitted lace 50 .25 139 ” piece of drawn work .50 .25 140 ” sofa pillow 50 .25 141 ” embroidered piece . . .50 .25 142 ” to well, scarf or table cover 50 .25 144 ” slippers cosheted. . .50 .25 146 ” boudoir cap 50 .25 147 ” silk quilt .50 .25 148 ” calico quilt 50 .25 149 ” work bag 50 .25 150 ” hand painted picture .50 .25 151 ” home made kitchen apron 50 .25 Prizes offered to schools. 152 ” exhibit of art work including crayon, pencil drawing, or paint- $1.00 153 ” exhibit of farm products rais ing, $1.00 154 ” exhibit of sewing and fancy ed by public school pupils . .$1. work made by public school pupils .. $1.00. 155 ” exhibit of cooking and canning work done by public school pupils $1.00. 156 ” exhibit of primary work, $1. 157 exhibit of commercial work by any high school $1. 158 exhibits of maps and charts made by public school pupils, $1 159 " attendance (per cent, of en- rollriient) at county fair in a body by any school outside of Brevard Township $5. 160 general educational exhibit, any high school $1. 161 ” general educational exhibit, any high school $1 161 general educational exhibit, any graded school $1. 162 ” general educational exhibit, any rural school $1. Prizes Offered to Pupils: 163 best map of north Carolina, .25 164 ” ” United States 25 165 ” ” North America 25 166 ” Transylvania 25 1G7 ” specimen! of plain penman ship, not less than twelve lines, $1. 168 ” specimem of plain penman ship, not less than twelve lines by pupil under ten yrs., . .$1.00 169 ” essay on Transylvania County not less than two pages, . . .$1. 170 ” machine made dress $1. 171 ” specimem of tatting 50 172 ” specimem of embroidery, ..50 173 ” specimem of bird cage 50 175 ” half dozen biscuits 50 176 ” loaf of bread 50 177 ” plain cake 50 178 ” layer cake 50 179 ” molasses cake 50 180 ” cern bread 50 181 ” specimem free hand drawing 25 SCHOOL SPORTS For Pupils Above Fourteen 182 100 yord dash $1 183 broad jump $1 184 high jump $1 For Pupils Under Fourteen 185 100 yard dash $1 186 broad jump $1 187 high jump $1 u 11 DEClMp MG GREAT ENGLISH WRITER MADE GLOWING PRE DICTION -WSS- INFORMATION TO MER CHANTS, HOUSEW^IVES Until further notice the Food Administration allows the mer chants to sell to any housewife a fifteen daj^’s supply of sugar, based on two pounds per month for each member of the family. Each housewife is allow^ed to buy not more than a sixty-days’ supply of flour. In buying flour that does not contain the 20 per cent substitutes, our Gov ernment asks that every hotel, boarding house and individual mix with wheat flour not less than 20 per cent of corn meal or some other substitute, as all of the allied nations have agreed to make their bread on this basis, so that you will be eating the same kind of bread in your home that our soldier boys are eating in the trenches. Any further information that any citizen or merchant wishes I will be glad to furnish same. Thos. H. Shipman, Food Admin. Transylvania Co. -WSS- If you are in need of gummed labels, see The Brevard Print. Have demonstrated their ri*?;!!! to be known as the Best All ’Round Spark Plug in America Positive Ignition Cuarar.'ced for 365 day:: Sold os days trial OHE INCH n«NG SUIFACE BREVARD HARDWARE CO. C. M. DOYLE, BreTard, N. C. HAS LONG JINK FULFILLED Reunion Visitors In September at Tul* sa Will See Monument To Irving Who Visited the Spot In 1832. Tulsa, Okla., August.—In the early thirties, the renowned Washington Irv ing came over from England and made a tour of parts of the United States. His tour to the southwest included a stop among the Indians at the pres ent location of the city of Tulsa. Lo cal history has it that he paused on an eminence about a mile northwest of the center of the present business district of Tulsa, and took a compre hensive view of the valley of the Ar kansas spread out before him. The following description of the land scape, and prophecy of the future wealth of the community, appears in his sketches of the American tour: “This seems to me to be the Prom ised Land, flowing with milk and honey. On the rich herbage of the prairies will be fed herds of cattle as innumerable as the sands upon the seashore. And the flowers that bedeck the prairies will be a paradise for a nectar-loving being.” This was written October 13, 1832, about the time of year that the 28th annual reunion of the Confederate Veterans’ Association will be held this jrear at Tulsa. The dates of the re union are September 24-27 inclusive, or some ten days earlier in the fall than the dates upon which Irving wrote his appreciation of the valley Df the Arkansas. Visitors to the re anion will have an opportunity to en joy the same river panorama, made ■nore beautiful and promising by mod- srn enterprise and a city of 80,000 people. The greatest agricultural section of Oklahoma is along the Ar- !cansas, above and below the city of Fulsa, a land now flowing with milk and honey, ful^lling the Irving proph ecy if not discounting it. One of the beauty spots around Tulsa Is Irving Circle, on the crest of a ridge north of the city now beauti- tified by handsome residences. A monument has ben erected there com memorating the visit and prophecy of Washington Irving made more than eighty years ago. The idea was ori.?- Inated and carried out by W. Tate Brady, chairman of the General Com mittee of the Confederate reunion or ganization. In the meantime, the prophecy of the great English writer has been discounted many times. The comparatively ancient settle ments of the Indians around Tulsa and throughout the state are full of in terest. The footprints of the Indian have been obliterated by the march of modern progress, but his name ling ers. Where he formerly had his tent ed villages, or wigwam abodes, cities have been built and towns laid out. His hunting grounds on the Arkansas have been converted into rich and productive farms. Alfalfa has taken the place of prairie grass, and domes tic cattle graze In former haunts of the wild beast. All over Oklahoma prosperous towns and cities have been built. They are laid out along modern lines of city building, and their people are enter prising and patriotic. Tulsa holds first place amoag Oklahoma cities for enterprise and progress. The city has grown more in the past ten years than any other city in the great south west. It is amply able to care for a large number of visitors, such as at tend the annual reunions of the Confederate soldiers. Had it not pos sessed all of the facilities for caring for the reunion, the Confederates would not have been urged to come here with their 1918 meeting. All who come to the reunion will be cared for In most satisfactory manner. UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU DEATHLY SICK Stop Using Dangerous Drug Be fore It Salivates You! It^s Horrible! You’re bilious, sluggish, constipated and believe you need vile, dangerous calomel to start your liver and clean your bowels. Here’s my guarantee! Ask your drug gist for a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If it doesn’t start your liver and straighten you right up better than calomel and without griping or making you sick I want you to go back to the store and get yoiu: money. Take calomel today and tomorrow you will feel weak and sick and nauseated. Don’t lose a day’s work. Take a spoonful of harmless, vegetable Dodson’s Liver Tone tonight and wake up feeling great. It’s perfectly harmless, so give it to your children any time. It can’t salivate, so let them eat anything afterwards.—Ad vertisement. Something to sell means some thing to advertise. WRIGLEYS We will win this war— Nothing else really matters until we do ! LilU-UJ. The Flavor Lasts Ml WHf THE QUICK-LITE AIR- G-L-ANTERN This is our latest and we believe the best all- around gasoline lantern yet put on the market. It lights with common matches. No alcohol torch required. This an advan- tage over other styles that every user of a lantern will quickly recognize. It is even more convenient to have a match lighter lantern than a match lighter lamp because the lantern is taken out where it is often necessary to extinguish it. With the Quick-Lite Air-O-Lantern you do not need to carry a bottle of alcohol or torch to light it again, just the common matches. Another advantage this QL-327 Air-O- Lantern has ove~ cthci" styles is the reflect or in the side of the mica chimney. reflector not only throws the light ahead and protects the eyes of anyone behind ii but through a door in the reflector the lan-^ tern may be lighted in a wind or storm. The Quick-Lite Air-O-Lantern is in ever] respect up to the Coleman standard in ma terial and workmanship. No iron or steel parts where brass should be used. The burner castings, tubes, caps and valves are all brass, brass front, brass ventilator, etc. This is important as cheaper material would shorten the life of the lantern. It has a mica chimney and all parts are heavily nickel-plated. An extra generator, pump, mantles and cleaning pick furnished with every lantern. Packed one in carton. Shipping weight, 6 pounds. Can be sent by freight, express or parcel post. Brevard Hardware Co. Don’t Order C. Doyle Brevard, N. C.

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