“Farm Festival Brings 2,000 to State College” as published
in Extension Farm-News.
Grand marchers at the
45th Farm and Home Week are part of the 1,720 farm men and women who
registered. The 82nd Airborne furnished the music.
For the first time, this year’s “vacation-education” at Farm
and Home Week was held in June (8-11) to avoid a conflict with harvest.
On the opening night, delegates honored Chancellor and Mrs.
J.W. Harrelson with gifts and a reception in Reynolds Coliseum.
Tuesday, classes for men and women began. Among the classes
were those taught by famed Home Economists Beth Peterson of Dupont, Wilmington,
Del., Kathryn Niles of the Nation Egg and Poultry Board, Chicago, and Mrs.
Mildred Seaber, Duke Power. Home demonstration specialists and club members
taught other classes.
The classes for men featured demonstrations by the Agronomy
Department in Williams Hall and the Plant Pathology Department in Gardner Hall.
Tuesday evening, D.S. Weaver, Extension director, urged
North Carolina’s farmers to take advantage of their opportunities and raise the
state’s per capita farm income. Entertainment was by the famed Echo Inn
Cloggers and Pandhandle Pete of Henderson County, the Dixie Melody Boys of Nash
County, and the Pitt County Quartet. State Recreation Leader Lonnie Powell led
the delegates in games and square dancing each evening.
Wednesday morning the classes and demonstrations for men and
women were repeated.
On Wednesday afternoon pioneer farm leaders led in
celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Extension Service. Among
those appearing on the program were Miss Wylie Knox, president of the State
Home Agents Association; S.L. Lowery, farm agents’ president; Director Weaver;
I.O. Schaub, former dean and Extension director; L.Y. Ballentine, commissioner
of agriculture; State Home Agent Ruth Current; Mrs. Eugenia P. VanLandingham,
president of the national Home Agents Association; R.E. Jones, State Negro
agent; Bobby Parker, 4-H’er of Macclesfield; Mrs. H.M. Johnston, past president
of the Home Demonstration Clubs; and C.S. Bunn of Spring Hope. F.H. Jeter,
extension editor, had charge of the program.
Wednesday night, Phillip Aylesworth, assistant to the
Secretary of Agriculture, filled in for J. Earl Coke, assistant secretary, who
had been scheduled to address the group.
All day Thursday, some 300 farm men attended a Swine Day at
the State Fair Arena. The Department of Animal Industry stressed economical
production of pork in its program.
Meanwhile 1,200 women attending the 27th annual
meeting of N.C. Federation of Home Demonstration Clubs were hearing Mrs. Ivy B.
Priest, United States treasurer, and electing officers. Mrs. Charles Graham,
Linwood, Route 1, is the new president; Mrs. E.P. Gibson, Laurel Hill, first
vice-president; Mrs. J.C. Berryhill, Charlotte, second vice-president; Mrs.
Charles Benson, Pantego, recording secretary; Mrs. L.J. Cannon, Canton,
corresponding secretary; and Mrs. J.B. Wooten, Princeton, treasurer.
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“The Colonel” is not an honorary title. It is one that State
College Chancellor J.W. Harrelson earned—like he earned the thanks that rural Tar
Heels gave him during Farm and Home Week. He won his military rank in the
service of his country, this “thanks” in the service of his farm people. Wherever
farm families went on State College’s campus this month, they saw the best in
brains, building and equipment, all at work to give rural North Carolinians a better
life. The Colonel was responsible for much of what they saw. He retired
September 1, but he told his farm friends to look for him around the General
Assembly in ’55, where he will “probably be lobbying for agriculture.”
Photo Captions:
RECEPTION, tree and
luggage for the Colonel and his lady on opening night, Ruth Current, left, and
Bob Shoffner, right, do the honors.
FARM officers are
W.A. Connell, president; F.S. Sloan, secretary; Loy Howard, vice president.
E.V. Vestal, second vice president, and F.H. Jeter, publicist, not pictured.
TREASURER of United
States Mrs. Ivy B. Priest, left, poses with outgoing state HD president Mrs.
R.L. Yancey and new President Mrs. Charles Graham, right.
VACATIONING at Farm
and Home Week, Mrs. Lillie McDougold, Lumber Ridge, Route 1, selects a post
card.
POPULAR class was
this one in crafts. Mrs. Roy Lee, Murphy, shows Mrs. Henry Sawyer, Currituck,
and Mrs. J.W. Davis, Randolph County, how to make a doll.
PORK was king at
day-long program. W.L. Brown shows carcass quality.
GOLDEN anniversary of
farm demonstration work was celebrated in a Wednesday afternoon ceremony.
Pioneers in North Carolina Extension, the 82nd Airborne Band, and
massed chorus made the afternoon memorable.
CONSERVATION is the
subject of USDA’s Phillip Aylesworth’ Wednesday night presentation.
PANHANDLER Pete and Echo
Inn Cloggers had the crowd shouting for more.
COOKING by a
professional, Kathryn Niles, Chicago home economist, gives Withers Hall classes
a high goal.
AGRONOMIST N.T. Coleman
explains new soil conditioners as farmers see for themselves in Williams Hall.
FARM editors Miles
Hughley, Charlotte Observer, and Bill
Humphries, Raleigh News and Observer,
cover the four-day event.
MASSED Home
Demonstration Chorus sings at Women’s Federation Day program. Lenoir and
Richmond Counties were awarded the top prizes in WPTF’s choral contest. Lenoir
was judged the best women’s group and Richmond the best mixed-voice choir.
Second places went to Mecklenburg and Pitt.
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