Agriculture - Farm-City activities set Hertford Mayor Bill Cox has proclaimed Nov Z14T as Para-City Week in Among activites slated for the week-long observance are a tour of industsry and farms, as veil u a contest for local scdcxn CDiiorrn Aceordiag to R. L. Stevenson, Farm-City Week Chairman, and W. R. Jester, County Extension Chairman. a tour of Dsa Juan Ooifujf iwl the Hairell Farm will be held on Tuesday, Not. 25. Persons interested in participating in the tour should meet at the Perqaimaas Couaty Ex tefisioo Office at 2 p.m. According to Jester, the purpose of the tour is to give people on the farm and in the town an opportunity to share experiences and develop a better understanding of each other's way of life A potter contest is also being sponsored by the Farm City Week Committee, the Perquimans Agricultural Extension Serviee and Perquimans County Elementary Schools. Jester said the object of the poster contest is to develop the child's concept of the inter dependence of farm and city. Trophies will be awarded to the winners. Market summary A total of 11,671 feeder pigs were sold on 13 state graded sales during week of November 10. according to the Market News Service of the North Carolina Department of Agriculture. Prices were mostly |3 to $5 higher per hundred pounds. US 1-2 pigs weighing 40-50 pounds averaged $76.46 per hundred pounds with No. 3s $56.15; 50-60 pound l-2s averaged $72.47, No. 3s $53.61; 60-70 pound l-2s $65.02, No. 3s $41.39; 70-60 pound l-2s $57.67 per hundred pounds with No 3s $45.34. At weekly livestock auctions held within the state, prices for slaughter cows were steady to $2 higher and feeder calves $1 to $4 lower. Utility and Commercial cows brought $42.25 to $51; Choice Veal 150 250 pounds $61 to $70. Medium frame No. 1 muscle steers 400 500 pounds brought $64 to $76.50 per hundred pounds and same grade heifers 400-500 pounds sold $51 to $50.50. No. 1 muscle feeder cows sold from $40 to $46.50. Baby Calves under 3 weeks of age brought $40 to $100 per head. Market hogs brought mostly $44 to $47.60 per hundred weight and 300-600 pound sows $37.75 to $42. Corn prices were steady to 3 cents lower per bushel and soybeans 7 to 36 cents lower through Thursday, Nov. 13 compared to the same period of the previous week. No. 2 yellow shelled corn ranged mostly $3.52 to $3.76 in the Eastern part of the state and $3.63 to $3.70 in the Piedmont. No. 1 yellow soybeans ranged mostly $6.51 to $6.74 in the East and $8.30 to $6.51 in the Piedmont; No. 2 red winter wheat $4.30 to $4.60. Sweet Potato prices were steady this week. Supplies are moderate to short Demand seasonally good. Fifty pound cartons of cured US No. Is on Nov. 13 were quoted at $9.75 to $10, some $9.50, occasional preferred brand $10.50 to $11. Jumbo $600 to $1.50. Prices paid to growers for No. Is packed out at end of belt $7 to $8 per carton. The broiler-fryer market is higher for next week's trading. Supplies are moderate with some plants short. Demand is good. The North Carolina dock weighted average price is 47.98 cents per pound for less than truckloads picked up at processing plants during the week of November 17. This week $.4 million birds were processed in North Carolina with an average live bird weight of 101 pounds per bird on Nov. 12. Heavy type hens were higher this past week. Sup plies were fully adequate and demand good. Heavy type hen prices were mostly 26 cents per pound at the farm with buyers loading. Egg prices were 2 to 3 cents per dosen higher to those of the previous week. Supplies were moderate, instances of shortage. Demand was very good. The North Carolina weighted average price quoted on Nov. 13 for small lot sales of cartoned grade A eggs delivered to stores was 90.51 Jtt 1 Tree Senice If rte Estimates JOHN MAUCR H ? m/?7-?7 in'ii ? cents per dozen for large, Medium 78.58 and smalls <8.18. For the period Nov. 10 to 14, gross tobacco sales on Eastern Belt totaled 8.8 million pounds and averaged $126.25 per hundred, down $11.*; Old and Middle Belt $1.5 million pounds were sold for an average of 8117.19 per hundred, down $12,88. For this period the Stabilisation Corporation received 30.3 percent on the Eastern Belt and 38.3 percent on the Old and Middle Belt. Market hogs at daily cash buying stations about the state sold SI to $1.25 lower during the week of Nov. 10 and ranged mostly $46.75 to $48. per hundred pounds. Sows 300 600 pounds ranged $33 to $44. CAREER CLUB9 XIS?- /> today's classic . . . the oxford button -down collar WajHAkamaI In r> l< ior me man wno nvors me traoioonai too*. Ciaw Club atylad this handsome oxford weivt, button-down ootar. N't right lor avary ooc? ion and aura to ba yourfavortla. now miduin point ootar in a comfortable, carefree "natural bland" of 60% cotton and 40% Fortrel* polyaalar. parmanant praaa, of oouraa aalact your lavortta cofara today) DARDEN 109 MorthSSSr1 S>"?M-S444 Itailtacd. N.C ^ Perquimans Gardening ?y Jean Wlnslow Check your sprayers for any solution left in them. Throw it away, as it will be ineffective by next growing season, and will possibly corrode the container. Prepare rote beds now. The soil needs to settle before planting during the end of December and into January. It is still too warm to move trees. Wait until they are totally dormant. I've found that a wet January is ideal planting time for seedlings, especially. Susanquas, of the camellia family, are in bloom now, and must be kept watered. Keep leaves raked. They mat, and will kill even the best stands of grass if left to settle. Use them for compost. Check evergreens for iron deficiency. State hor ticulturists suggest checking with our extension office for testing of soil. In this area, soil naturally runs acid, which is what evergreens like, but if, for some reason, the soil becomes too "sweet," correction is in order. TO ADJUST pH ?Use sulphur or ?)?"" famm sulphate to lower pH (make more add); ?Use lime to raise it (make more alkaline). While iron makes up a minor part of the composition o# MO. It to mW to make chlorophyll. B there to too mack calcium or lime, toe This may be ascertained by the green color of tot plant Yellow leaves ipell bad newt One thing to watch tor to the color of plants etoot to hrtek, stuccOj op blocks* Lime to mortar can bo death on plants if tt teaches out over a period of time. "Coastwateh" la a periodical published by the North Carolina Sea Grant College Program, and a good source of information. (I signed op tor It white riaiting the Marine Resources Museum between Manteo and Mann's Harbor.) In the last issue was a report on the progress at the gypsy moth. The larvae of these REAL ESTATE TO BUY OR SELL HOMES. LOTS. ACRES CAU HENRY C. SULLIVAN RSgCUTl BROKER 421-7341 GhMK,, ? rn 49* WEATNERGARD 3M-OM1 lndrp?rxf?nH y Owrfd insects kire killed whole hardwood forests in the North, ?ad bow. signs are, they are The department sat out traps halted with a synthetic sax hormone wMeh attracts ?alt moths. No need for hysteria fat: even though traps In Currituck, Camden, Dare, Perquimans and Paaqwotank yielded over 49M suspected they literally "blew-tn" on strong winds from the north, mainly from the heavily infested Cape May, N.J. area. Since, at that time of the year, females are hopefully too heavy with eggs to be transported by winds, It is ii^i^ llM yet been picked by the gypsy moth for its first major assault oo the South. [-, '' . ' ACE 15 THE PLACE FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING TOYS - SMALL TOOLS ? 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