Burley Tobacco Supports 'To Continue This Season " The U.S. Department of Agriculture's marketing experiment allowing the tale of untied, baled burley tobacco is to be continued for another year. The USDA will extend price support and official grading for limited quantities of the tobacco It and do something ever since. The next morning I got on the phone to Furney and he explained that thee was no known control for it. He came VP and we began testing sprays down on Jack's Creek. Nothing worked very well." '? Furney Todd, a jovial emcee regarded as the fpremost authority on tobacco diseases in the state, stepped |i> the microphone on the damp hillside. "We all have to remember that this is the first epidemic we've ever had in burley. We've had two mild epidemics in flue-cured, in 'S3 apd '64, and I lived through both of them. But this year is a disaster, and it just caught us without warning. ? "Hie good news," he went on, telling everyone to turn to page */ oi uieir mimeographed report, "is Ridomil EC2 You can apply it to the soil and get full tobacco protection. We've got the answer, folks; we've got tie answer!" It all seemed too simple, and I asked Wiley DuVall if I bad heard right. He said yes, Ridomil had not been ap proved for general use yet, jMit it seemed to work. "It was h?ng used to control black shank on this plot here and in two other counties," said DuVall. "No one knew it ?ould have any effect on blue jhold ? that was Just good Sick. This was a discovery made by accident." We left Mountain Heritage with a State Patrol escort, headlights and flashers on, ind sped along to Roy Ammons' farm south of Mars frill, the scheduled stop in Madison County. Roy Ammons and his brother grow 16 acres of tobacco ?long the bottom of a small valley, and I asked him how He was doing this year. "Not too bad, considering," he said. "Last year about this time my plants were above qye level" ? he raised a large hand above his head ? "and this year they're about a foot shorter. But we'll cut it all." ? Wiley DuVall went to the microphone. "Roy started out Here real good," he said, "but dven Roy couldn't dodge it this year. The mold has pretty ^dl has hit every field in the county. We were going to put Ridomil on these plots but the