TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL YEAR BOOK— PART III 147 



Mr. Clark: I think so; I don't know much about the pig clubs. 



Mr. Cameron : I want to commend Mr. Clark on that paper. 

 If the boys and girls of today have got to be the future fellows 

 to keep the fair work going, it is to our interest to train them. 

 While we have this boy's and girl's club at the state fair, and 

 while the county fairs are in position to stress that very thing, 

 this paper of Mr. Clark's presented to us this morning lays out 

 to my mind the best proposition that I have ever heard along 

 that line, and I would like to see a copy of that paper sent to 

 every farm bureau agent in the state of Iowa. I think it would be 

 a grand thing, it would be a great incentive, because there are a 

 lot of county agents and a lot of fairs that have not gone into 

 this, and coming from Mr. Clark and coming from a county fair 

 in which we are all interested, in which we are all honored, I 

 think it would be a great thing to boost this calf proposition if 

 we could have that paper sent to every county agent in the state, 

 who could then get in touch with the county fair secretary or 

 manager, and I don't think there is anything that would boost 

 that proposition more than to have a copy of that paper sent to 

 every county agent and fair secretary in the state of Iowa. 



The President: That is a good suggestion. The Homestead 

 and Successful Farming have already asked for this paper. I 

 don't know whether Mr. Clark has copies of it, or not, and the 

 Register is also going to publish it, and it will be published in 

 our proceedings. Of course, that is a year coming to us. I think 

 it will be wise for us to entertain a motion that the Fair Mana- 

 gers association go to the expense of having this printed and 

 mailed out to the fair secretaries of Iowa, the farm bureaus, and 

 such other organizations as might be interested. I think it would 

 be a very wise thing for this Fair Managers association to do this 

 and bear the expense, which won't be much. 



Mr. Shipman: I expected to see Mr. Clark and ask him for a 

 copy of that. I want it for our county agent, but I will make the 

 motion that our association bear the expense of having this paper 

 printed for distribution. 



Mr. Bailey (Black Hawk) : Second. 



Motion presented and unanimously adopted. 



The President: I will say this, that the secretary will have it 

 printed immediately and will mail it out to the Farm Bureau 

 secretaries of the state and the secretaries of the fairs, and if you 



