PROGRESS SENTINEL VOL. XXXXV1I NO. 12 USPS 162-860 KENANSV1LLE, NC 28349 MARCH 22. 1984 20 PAGES THIS WEEK 10 CENTS PLUS TAX Public Speaking Contest Held For Duplin 4-H'ers The Duplin County 4-H clubs held a public speaking contest March 15 at the Agricultural Extension building in Kenansville. The contest featured seven county 4-H members from the three age divisions speaking on tonics from friends to Easter chickens. Judges for the event included Mrs. Jo Jones of Warsaw and Jimmy Newkirk of Kenansville, both James Kenan mgn ^ Schl instructors. Participants in the public speaking contest are pictured above, left to right, junior division, third place Mary Starke of the Warsaw Shamrock Gub, first place. Jonathan Fonvielle of the Oak Ridge Ouh and second place Shannon Flowers of the New Horizons Club; senior division, first place Roxane Pearsall of the DECA Gub and second place Garessa Strawn of the Teachey Gub; and clpverbuds division, first place Scott Flowers of New Horizons and second place Tedrick Kelly of the DECA Club. Murphy Farms Buys Feed Mill RALEIGH ? Murphy Farms of I Rose Hill bid $1 million Monday in ' ?rnjptcy auction sale here to buy the bankrupt Watson Seafood ft & Poultry Co. feed mill just south of .tose Hill. The sale was held in the federal bankruptcy court rooms in the old federal building on Favetteville Street Mall Monday afternoon. Bankruptcy trustee Algernon But ler Jr of Wilmington conducted the sale Three bidders appeared. The family-owned Murphy com pany. one of the largest market hog m producers in the country, was repre * S?|ted by Holmes Murphy of Rose (Sil. company president. State Rep. V^ndell Holmes Murphy. D-Dup lin, is vice president of the company. The face-to-face auction followed receipt of sealed bids in the trustee's office early this year and an upset bid that ws received earlier this month Two bids were received in the ini tial round "of bidding. One was for $800,000 from J.C. Howard Jr. of Lenoir County, and Aaron Johnson and Paul K. Phillips of Duplin County, creditors of the bankrupt firm The other was for $650,330 from Murphy Farms. An upset bid of $816,000 was entered early in March by Stephen Loo of Raleigh, who was not otherwise identified. When bidding began Monday. Johnny R. Taylor of Greenville of ? * ? fered $851,000. Butler had asked for bid raises of at least $5,000 After bidding reached S951 .OCfc. raises of as little as $500 were of fered Murphy Farms also operates a mill in Goldsboro. Feed has been produced in the Watson mill for Murphy farms on a contract basis since the Watson company's failure. The mill was built by Ramsey Feed Co. of Rose Hill in 1970. Den nis Ramsey of Rose Hill sold the company to Watson Seafood & Poul try when he retired. The mill can grind and mix 50 tons of feed an hour with an operating crew of four. The property includes 1.200 feet of rail siding, which can accommo _ ? - date 13 cars. It has a 500.000-bushel storage facility The Watson company filed for protection under Chapter 11 of the federal bankruptcy code April 11, 1983. It was unable to obtain fi nancing for a successful reorganiza tion, and the sale of its facilities was consequently ordered Murphy Farms started in 1962 with three employees, only one of whom was paid a salary. Wendell Murphy and his father were the oth er two employees. It now employs 130 people and contracts with some 55 growers to produce feeder pigs and market hogs Candidates And Issues On The Ballot Of The May Primary ^ A constitutional amendment and a 7 slate of national, state and county candidates will be voted on in the primary election May 8 in North Carolina. Registration books will close for the May 8 primary election on April 9 and polls will open on election day at 6:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m. Citizens of North Carolina will be voting on an amendment to the state constitution creating an agency to issue revenue bonds to finance agricultural projects. y In recent years, industrial, manu facturing and pollution control facili ' ties, health care facilities and housing, and public power facilities have all joined the list of proper purposes for state borrowing tnrougn tne issuance ot revenue bonds. The proposed amendment to the constitution would add to this list agricultural projects. The primary will also decide party candidates for the November election of the United States presi dent and senate representatives. North Carolina governor, lieutenant governor, council of state and judicial seats. Democratic candidates appearing on the primary ballot include Jesse Jackson. George S. McGovern, Walter F. Mondale, Reubin Askew. Alan Cranston. John Glenn. Gary Hart and Ernest F. Hollings. Candidates for state and United States senate offices on the Demo cratic ballot of the May primary include. Senator. James B. Hunt Jr.. Harrill Jones and Thomas L. Allred; Governor, D.M. (Lauch) Faircloth, Rufus Edmisten, Thomas O. Gil more, James C. Green, Robert L. Hannon, John Ingram. H. Edward Knox. Glenn Miller, J.D. Whaley and J. A. Baker; lieutenant governor, Stephen S. Miller. Carl J. Stewart Jr. and Robert B. Jordan III; Secretary of State. Thad Eure and Betty Ann Knudsen; Commissioner of Insur ance. Billy Martin and James E. Long; Commissioner of Labor, John C. Brooks. Donald G. Wiseman and Richard W. Barnes; Associate Justine of the Supreme Court, Raymond M. Taylor and Henry E. Frye; Judge of the Court of Appeals. John C. Martin, Meyressa Hughes Schoonmaker and Robert L. Cecil. Republican candidates for state offices in the May Primary included. United States Senator. Jesse Helms and George Wimbish; Governor. Ruby Thompson Hooper and George Wimbish; Lieutenant Governor. Franklin Jordan, Erick Little, Barbara S. Perry. John N. Carring ton and William S. Hiatt. ? Candidates on the May primary ballot for first district Duplin County Commissioner are William J. Costin and J. Frank Steed; fifth district Duplin County Commissioner. George N. Ammons and D.J. Fussell Sr. Duplin candidates on the May ballot for Board of Education district five. Amos Q. "Doc" Brinson Jr. and Lillie F. Sanders; district one. James F. Strickland and Riddick E. Wilkins. Goshen To Recruit Family Practitioner The Goshen Medical Center Board of Directors met March 13 in Faisdn and agreed to begin recruitment of a family practitioner to fill the vacancy left April 1 by the resignation of internist Dr. Jeff Margolis. M.D. According to Goshen Medical Center Administrator Bob Hauck. officials from Rural Health Initiative support the recruitment of a family practitioner for the Faison clinic. ? Hauck also reported an increased number of on-site encounters at the medical center, but reminded the Directors the clinic is still below federal minimum standards. After a brief executive session. Directors moved to renegotiate the "ontract with internist Dr. Ken Lee, M.D., currently under full-time em ployment with Goshen Medical Center but serving half-time at both the Faison clinic and the Plain View _ Health Center in Greenevers. Lee's ? new contract will reflect the physi cian's half-time association with both Duplin medical centers. In a motion by the Directors. Goshen Medical Center will be applying for up to $50,000 in grant funds for health promotion and disease prevention among the area's elderly population. Elinor Ezzell. Goshen Medical Center family coun selor. and Hauch were appointed to prepare the grant for review by the Directors' program and finance committees before submitting at the April 1 deadline. The problem with employees working overtime was brought before the Directors again by Hauck. Under federt I guidelines, grant funds for the operation of Goshen Medical Center cannot be used to pay overtime to medical support staff. Hauck reminded the Board. Directors unanimously passed a motion to limit medical support staff to 15 minutes of overtime after closing at S p.m. except in emergen cies. Collection of fees and additional services will be the responsioimv oi the medical provider after the support staff leaves at closing time. Hauck requested the Directors delay the purchase of a time clock at least 30 days in order to test an alternate plan. Directors agreed to delay the purchase but after 30 days if the alternate plans for keeping time records fails, a clock will be purchased. The new administrator advised the Directors of current work to revise job descriptions for the Goshen Medical Center staff. And, in the future. Hauck suggested the Direc tors base pay raises on job per formance according to the revised description of employment. In order to allow more people access to the medical facility, Hauck suggested to the Directors that a change in working hours of Goshen may be needed. Swing shifts or operating hours during evenings or weekends might be needed to better service the community, uauik pointed out to the directors. Working with staff members. Hauck plans to possibly devise new service hours and present the schedule at the April meeting of the Goshen Board of Directors. Directors also approved the allocation of one hour per month of work time for private staff meetings to discuss medical center operations. Goshen Board secretary Gerald Bell reported plans to have a revised set of medical center by-laws to present at the April meeting of the Directors. A committee of Goshen Directors and Medical Center attor ney Cafol Hawkins are currently working to update the by-laws. The by-laws will be pt%sented for ac ceptance at an annual meeting 30 days after furnished to the Goshen Medical Center membership. Directors also approved a motion to alternate monthly meetings for committee work and regular sessions of the full board. School Board Seeks Migrant Education Program Summer education programs for the children of migrant farmworkers have been conducted at the school for several years. The Duplin County Board of Edu cation has submitted a request for a summer migrant education program at North Duplin Elementary School near Calypso. Summer programs for the children of migrant farmworkers have been conducted at the school for several years. The programs are financed by the federal government, but local school boards must request funding each year. Austin Carter, director of federally funded education programs in the county, estimated that 110 migrant Children would be eligible for the session. A new feature, if the project is approved, will be a pre-school pro gram. Carter said that last year some children could not attend the school because they had to baby-sit at home. If the babies are brought along, everyone may benefit, he said this week. The proposed term would be for children of pre-school age through sixth grade. The application included a budget request of $47,844. The program would hire four teachers, three aides, a coordinator and a recruiter. The school would be free to migrant children. A migrant child is one whose parents moved in or out of the county for agricultural and forestry employment in the last six years. The term would open June 18 and end Aug. 3. School sessions would open at 8 a.m. and continue until 4 p.m. weekdays. Children would re ceive free breakfasts and lunches. Transportation would be furnished. The curriculum would include reading, mathematics, arts and crafts, music, physical education and recreation. Ban On Mobile Homes In Warsaw Rejected The Town Board refused last week to rezonc an area on Fast Hill and East Chelly streets in Warsaw to bar mobile homes. About 60 people turned out for the meeting. The board had received a petition signed by 38 people re questing the zoning change. The crowd was divided on the issue. Commissioner Billy Kennedy made a motion to rezonc the portion of the area in the city from R-6 to R-8 and the portion outside of the city but within the one-mile zoning area from R-6 to R-20. The motion died foil lack of a second. B'he town zoning ordinance allows rniteile homes in R-6 areas ? that is. on V"s of 6.000 square feet. Mobile homes cannot be placed in R-8 areas ? lots of at least 8.000 square feet. There are 45 mobile homes in the area, mostly in J.H. Hines' mobile home park. Hines said that when the zoning ordinance was approved in 1971. the area was zoned to R-6 to allow mobile homes. In other business, the board terminated the Douglas Turner Co. contract on the town's federal Housing and Urban Development housing renovation contract. The board directed Woody Brinson, coordinator of the HUD project for McDavid Associates of Kcnansvillc. to negotiate with other contractors for completion of reno vation work on five Houses. Brinson told the board that Turner had ? s ued on 'he ,* r> eel only two day . nee l",o f-cbruir boar 'Greeting. In its February meeting the hoard allowed Turner 10 days to complete the work or face termination of the contract. The hoard directed Larry Simmons, superintendent of public works, to get eost estimates for laying tile and covering a large drainage ditch. Drainage from Ihc largc paved area around the new Town Hall is causing the ditch banks to erode. Properly belonging to Lucy Benson next to the ditch is also threatened. She said the ditch banks were stable before the hall was built and the parking area paved. Public hearings will be held at 7:30 p.m. March 26 and 2:30 p.m. April 16 at the Town Hall on Community Development Block Grant applica tions. The board voted to pay full hospital insurance premiums for employees who retired with 30 years of service and arc at least 62 years old. Bids To Be Received For Magnolia Depot The days of the old brick railway depot in Magnolia are numbered. , Sealed bids for removing or demolishing it will be received at the town hall until 5 p.m. April 9. The town board will open bids during its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. April 10. The board set the bid deadline during its March meeting last week. Several years ago the town bought the depot from Seaboard System Railroad for S600. The building was | to be moved and converted into a library or museum. Estimates on the , cost of moving it. however, ranged . from $20,000 to'$40,000, and that was considered prohibitive. , Seaboard retained title to the land ( and the right to order the structure , moved or demolished on 90 days' , notice. When the depot was built between 100 and 120 years ago, it was the only brick depot between Wilming- , ton and Goldsboro. Magnolia then served a trading area that covered , much of Duplin and part of eastern Sampson County. In other action last week, thp board: ? VOieU I" dM^ HIV >ldic w "drag" or grade several dirt streets, rhc town would pav the state on a pcr-hour basis. The town's grading machine needs about $6,000 worth of repairs. ? Voted to pave 1,300 feet of Carroll Street between U.S. 117 and McRav Street at a cost of about $5,000. ? Set public hearings for 7:30 p.m. March 27 and 7:30 p.m. April 10 at the town hall on a community block grant application. ? Heard the town had received 518,180 our of $26,000 owed for property taxes last year. Kathryn Pope, town clerk, said she sent out 145 tax bills and received payment m 292. The assessed valuation of axablc property in the town is $4.3 Tiillion ?. ? Received $187.77 from the town's three percent share of Uri vision Cable Television Co. receipts (luring 1983. The service became available late in the year The company reported revenue of $6,259. ? Heard a report that a fish fry will start at 5 p.m. March 24 at the fire station with proceeds to be used to buy firefighting equipment. ? ? ? Auto Kills Man Near Rose Hill A Rose Hill man was struck by a cor and killed around 8:15 p.m. V|> nday of last week on N.C. 11 out fou<- miles east of Rose Hill. Willie Down Farrior Jr., 31, of R iite 2. Rose Hill was standing on the right side of the northbound lane when the oncoming car hit him, the Highway Patrol said. The incident is being investigated by Trooper R.N. Johnson. Information about the car and driver was unavailable.