Editor's Note: Our slide show features a photo of a vendor flying a Trump flag next to a Clinton (for prison) flag. That is not the same vendor who was expelled for flying a Nazi flag. That vendor had already been kicked out of the fair.

A Nazi flag on display next to a Trump campaign flag on Monday became the main attraction at the Bloomsburg Fair.

Fair officials expelled the vendor on Monday, who in addition to selling a Nazi flag with a swastika in the center, was selling bumper stickers with hate-filled messages.

Paul Reichart, Bloomsburg Fair president, said the vendor was asked to leave because the message from his booth was not consistent with the fair's family values.

"We didn't like his products," he said. "We felt it was not family oriented and it's not the proper place to have those kinds of products."

Pictures of the Nazi flag at the booth spread across social media over the weekend after one Facebook user posted a message and a photo about it.

The Facebook post, written by Chloe Winters, a Pennsylvania resident who visited the fair, wrote:

"I was absolutely shocked and appalled when I saw this Nazi flag hanging at the Bloomsburg Fair yesterday," Winters wrote on Facebook. "This flag represents the brutal and horrific genocide of innocent people. It stands for the hatred and destruction of a religion I feel blessed to be a part of. It's 2016 and the world is still full of SO MUCH hate. When is it going to end? I'm sad to say that I'll never go to the Bloomsburg Fair again, but it looks like I'm not wanted there anyway."

Reichart confirmed that the vendor was a registered sex offender.

Reichart said a fair official who reviews "things of this nature" had informed him of the fact. He stressed, however, that the vendor was expelled on grounds of the offensive flag - not his sex offender registry.

Lawrence Betsinger

Reichart showed PennLive a photo of the vendor's booth showing, in addition to the Nazi and the Trump flag, bumper stickers with hate-filled messages, including some targeting the LGBTQ community. He also sold lighters, knives, belt buckles and hat pins.

"It came down to where we asked him to leave," Reichart said.

A screen shot of the photo that has circulated across social media of Nazi flag on display next to a Trump flag at the Bloomsburg Fair.

He would not release the name of the vendor.

PhillyMagazine on Monday published an article in which they quoted the vendor, Lawrence Betsinger.

"I've been doing this ---- for 45 years," he told the news outlet. "I can't see where it would be some tragic thing just because somebody bitched and moaned about it."

According the the state Megan Law registry, Betsinger is 71 years old and a white male.

Across the fair, which on Monday was packed with the over the 65-crowd for Seniors Day, vendors talked about the Nazi flag booth.

Jared Aigeldinger, who mans a booth selling Trump-Pence flags, T-shirts and yard signs, said he took great objection to anyone associating his candidate of choice to the Nazi Party.

"We don't support that. We don't believe we in that," he said. "That's not the message we want to support."

Aigeldinger's booth was clearly busy on Monday with steady stream of customers picking up yard signs for $10 as well as T-shirts.

"We are not here to push buttons or cause any controversy," Aigeldinger said. "We believe Trump-Pence is the future of America and that's the way we want to go."

He said that on Sunday, after news of the Nazi flag being displayed next to a Trump flag, his booth was vandalized by supporters of Hillary Clinton, who, he said, threw milkshakes at one of the life-size carton cutouts of the Democratic challenger.

Still, Confederate flags were on high display across the fair with scores of booths from among the 1,200 vendors, displaying the flags in close proximity to the Trump flags.

One vendor who declined to give his name said the Trump and Confederate flags were his best sellers. He flew them both prominently in his booth close to each other.

"It's just the way we set them up," he said. "You don't want to put a best seller in the back."

He said the customers who were buying the Confederate flags were not racists, but rather "redneck rebels."

"It has nothing to do with racism," he said.

At the other end of the fair, Shay Butasck was helping staff a Hillary Clinton booth. Butasck said that as a Jewish woman she was deeply offended by the Nazi flag. She blamed Trump for fueling messages of hate.

"To me that represents hatred," she said. "And to me the Trump campaign has stirred up these same kinds of emotions."

She excoriated Trump for fueling hate against immigrants, Muslims, Hispanics and the LGBTQ community.

"He's just as reprehensible as the Nazis were," Butasck said.

Throughout his campaign, Trump has been trailed by controversy surrounding his refusal to reject white supremacists and white nationalists who have come out in support of his campaign, including members of the Klu Klux Klan.

David Duke -- a former Ku Klux Klan leader and a current U.S. Senate candidate from Louisiana -- has encouraged white Americans to vote for Trump, saying that "voting against Donald Trump at this point is really treason to your heritage."

In an article in The Washington Post in August, the chairman of the American Nazi Party, Rocky Suhayda, identified Trump as the one political figure who could restore white nationalism in the country.

"Now, if Trump does win, okay, it's going to be a real opportunity for people like white nationalists, acting intelligently to build upon that, and to go and start -- you know how you have the black political caucus and what not in Congress and everything -- to start building on something like that," The Post quoted Suhayda as having said on his radio program.

But plenty of Trump supporters visiting the Bloomsburg Fair on Monday decried anyone who would associate their candidate with the Nazi Party.

"It's extremely deplorable," said Robert Palushock, Sr., a Hazleton area resident. "I wouldn't even link Hillary Clinton to them."

His son, Robert Palushock Jr., said that making a connection between Trump and such movements was simply wrong.

"I think it's wrong to link something like that with Donald Trump," he said. "We don't need a bad association and things from the past influencing the future. It's a whole different thing...Most people would agree there's no connection between the two."