Talent Contests Featured During Farm, Home Week One of the many entertainment features oi the 1949 Farm and Home Week at State College August 8 to 11. will be a series of daily talent contests offering prizes totaling $160. says John W. Goodman, assistant director of the State College Extension Service. There will be no limit on the kind of talent entered, Mr. Good man said. He suggested such things as choruses, solos, musical instruments, ballads, recitations, folk dancing and stunts. The North Carolina Farm Bureau j Federation is donating the funds j for the talent contest. Any farm group or individual ! may enter Elimination contests each day will screen entries down to four to be heard on the evening programs of August 8. 9 and 10 The winners of each evening show ' will compete for final honors and | prizes on the evening of August 11 | A first prize of S25 and a second j prize of SI .3 will be at stake each evening, including the final eve- ' ning. Entries must be in by Aug ust 1 Persons interested should notify M E Starnes, Extension Division. State College Station, j Raleigh. V C. Several other entertainment features have been planned for the week. Among these is a quiz show to be emceed by Bob Hawk, nationally known radio quizmaster. Daytime programs at Farm and Quality Milk means Better Health For Pasturized Grade A Milk Call HALL'S DAIRY Phone 185-W Land Preparation Show Is Planned One of the highlights of Farm and Home Week, which is to be held on the State College campus I in Kaleigh August 8-11, will be a gigantic land-preparation demon ' st ration during which approximate 1 ly 30 tractors and tillage machines will be used on a 50-acre field at t lie same time, according to H. M Ellis, agricultural engineer for the State College Extension Service. Representatives of 10 major farm machinery manufactures will dem I onstrate all of their land-prepara tion machinery at 2 p. m. Thurs day, August 11. on a field just north of the State Fair grounds The field, which is typical of land that might be prepared for pasture 1 seeding in the Piedmont, will be divided into five-acre plots, El lis said. Dealers will draw lots for location and each will then put from two to seven tractors and pieces of equipment to work. Equipment to be demonstrated includes bottom plows, disc plows, tillers, bush and bog, single and tandem discs. ^ubsoiJers, heavy duty field cultivators and at least one piece of heavy earth-moving equipment. The demonstration will be continous from 2 to 5 p m. Farm and Home Week visitors will board buses on the State Col lege campus beginning at 1 p. m. Buses will operate in shuttle runs all during the demonstration to accomodate those who cannot stay the full time. Refreshments will be available at 'he demonstration site. An added feature of the event will be drawing for valuable priz es including a plow valued at $300. Visitors will be given numbered tickets as they enter the demon stration area Drawing will take place at about 5 o'clock. Ellis hails the demonstration as an unprecedented opportunity for farmers to compare all the differ ent brands of maehihnery in actual operation. For three days prior to the demonstration. Farm and Home Week visitors will be able to see this and other equipment on dis play at the exhibit grounds across the street from the State College library. Home Week will be devoted to talks and demonstrations on all phases of farming and homemak in4 Among the featured speak ers are Secretary of Agriculture Charles F. Brann in and North Carolina's own Harold D. Cooley, chairman of the House Agricul tural Committee. . . .