SIXTH ANNUAL YEAR BOOK — PART X. 10l5 



not less than five nor more than one hundred dollars for every such 

 offense. During the time the fair is being held, no ordinance or resolu 

 tion of any city or town shall in any way impair the authority of the 

 society, but it shall have sole and exclusive control and management 

 thereof. 



Sec. 1665. Fraudulent entries of horses. No person, partnership, com- 

 pany or corporation shall knowingly enter or cause to be entered any 

 horse of any age or sex under an assumed name, or out of its proper 

 class, to compete for any purse, prize, premium, stake or sweep-stake 

 offered or given by any agricultural or other society, association, person 

 or persons in the state or drive any such horse under an assumed name 

 or out of its proper class, where such prize, purse, premium or sweepstake 

 is to be decided by a contest of speed. 



Sec. 1666. Penalty. Any person convicted of a violation of the preced- 

 ing section shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a period of not 

 more than three years, or in the county jail for not more than one year, 

 and be fined in a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars. 



Sec. 1667. Entry under changed name. The name of any horse, for 

 the purpose of entry for competition in any contest of speed, shall not be 

 changed after having once contested for a prize, purse,, premium, stake 

 or sweepstake, except as provided by the code of printed rules of the 

 society or association under which the contest is advertised to be con- 

 ducted, unless the former name is given. 



Sec. 1668. Class determined. The class to which a horse belongs for 

 the purpose of an entry in any contest of speed, as provided by the printed 

 rules of the society or association under which such contest is to be 

 made, shall be determined by the public record of said horse in any such 

 former contest. 



REPORT OF AGRICULTURAL CONDITIONS BY 

 COUNTIES. 



ADAIR 



J. S. CAVIXESS, GKEEXFIELD, OCT. 5, 1905. 



General Condition of Crops, etc. — The season has been one of general 

 prosperity for the farming class. While the season, as a whole, was too 

 v/et and cold for the very best results, the county was free from devastat- 

 ing storms of hail, wind or cyclones, and the extremes were not such as 

 to interfere materially with crop conditions. 



