;glend4R Homecoming Services Set Homecoming services will be observed at Warren Plains United Methodist Church on Sunday, July 15, with Sunday School at 10 a. m. and the worship ser vice at 11 a. m. The guest speaker will be (he Rev. R. Martin Armstrong. The public is invited to these services and the dinner which will follow. Yard Sale Is Scheduled There will be a yard sale at the home of Mrs. Florence Montague near North Warren School in Wise on Saturday, July 14, beginning at 8 a. m. Fur niture, household utensils and appliances, and clothing will be available. The sale will be for the benefit of Mrs. Montague. Observance Is Planned The Busy Bees and the Good News Choir will be celebrating their anniversary on July 15, at 5 p. m. at the Bethlehem Baptist Church in Wise. Guest choirs will include the Locust Grove Youth Choir of Wise and the Providence Children's Choir. The public is cordially invited. Revival Is Continuing Revival services are continuing this week through Friday evening at the Jerusalem Baptist Church, Rt. 2, Warrenton. The services begin at 7:30 p. m. and the Rev. Ben Williams of Hilton Head Island, S. C. is the guest minister. The public is invited. Eagles Club Will Gather The regular monthly meeting of the Eagles Booster Club is scheduled for Monday, July 16, at 7:30 p. m. in the Warren County High School Library. Goopel Sing Is Slated North Warrenton Baptist Church is planning the regular Third Sunday Night Gospel Sing for July 15, at 7:30 p. m. Vocal groups from North Warrenton and other churches will perform. The public is cor dially invited. Special Program Planned There will be a special program at the Russell Union R. Z. U. A. Church in Oine on Saturday, July 15, at 4 p. m. The guest speaker will be the Rev. Nathaniel Bauldwin of the Gethsemane Church in South Hill, Va. The Gethsemane choir will sing. WIC Program Features Outlined For Readers WIC is a supplemental food program for Women, Infants and Children sponsored by the U. S. Department of Agriculture and admin istered locally by the Warren County Health Department. Participants in this program must be in come-eligible and must be certified by one of the WIC staff members. Ap proximately 750 people are now participating in the program, which enables them to have nutritious and iron building foods which normally they would not be able to have. Such foods as cereals, juice, milk, eggs, cheese and dried beans may be given. If you are interested in WIC, please make an appointment or have your doctor refer you to the WIC Office at Warren County Health Department, 540 W. Ridgeway Street, Warrenton, N. C. 27589. You may call 257-2116 for more information. This is an Equal Op portunity Program. If you believe you have been discriminated against because of race, color, national origin, age, sex, handicap, religious or political belief, write im mediately to the Secretary of Agriculture, Washing ton, D. C. 20250. MRS. FLEMING Requirements Met By Mrs. Fleming Dolores A. Fleming of Littleton has completed the requirements for the Graduate Realtor In stitute (GRI). She attended the Real tors Institute in Chapel Hill and the University of North Carolina at Charlotte with courses in real estate law, real estate investment, real estate management, appraisal and tax plan ning. In October, Mrs. Fleming plans to attend the Realtors Institute in Pinehurst in a program to complete the require ments for the Certified Residential Specialist (CRS) designation. Mrs. Fleming is the owner of South Shore Realty on Lake Gaston. Homecoming Service Plans Announced The Chapel Hill Bap tist Church will observe the annual homecoming service on Sunday, July 15, at 11:30 a. m. Following the worship service, there will be a fellowship lunch. According to the pastor, the Rev. John E. Hall, revival services will begin on Tuesday, July 17, and continue through Friday, July 20. The Rev. S. E. Blalock of Raleigh will be the evangelist. Prayer ser vices will begin nightly at7:30p. m. Several visiting choirs will present special music during the week. They are: Tuesday, Spring Street Baptist Church, Henderson; Wednesday, Burchett Chapel United Church of Christ, Manson; Thurs day, First Baptist Church, Norlina; and Friday, Greenwood Baptist Church, Warrenton. While the vacuum is out, use the round brush attachment on base-, boards, sills, moldings and picture frames. It's quicker than dust cloths and doesn't scatter the dust. Miss Frazier Is Given Honor Robin Lynn Frazier, a senior at Warren County High School, has been accepted into the Society of Distinguished American High School Students. Miss Fraiier, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Fraiier of Warrenton, was nominated by the Rev. Clayton J. Shook, pastor of Warren Plains Bap tist Church where she is a member. This year marks the second time Miss Frazier has been nominated and accepted for membership in the society, an honor accor ded only one in five members, according to a society spokesman. Miss Frazier is co captain of the Varsity cheerleaders at Warren County High School and is a member of the Eagle Chorus. She is an honor roll student and received recognition for her scholastic achievement in Accounting I. She is also active in her church youth group and serves as its vice president. Miss Frazier is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett L. Meadow and the late Mildred Meadow and the late Mr. and Mrs. Herrin Frazier. Miss Howerton Made All A's Vanessa R. Howerton, a music education major and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Howerton of Rt. 1, Man son, is one of 275 under graduates at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro who made all A's on courses completed during the spring semester. Altogether, (wo other students from Warren County attained the dean's list during the spring semester. The other students are: Dorine Henderson, a nursing major, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Henderson of Manson; and Robin A. Scott, a sociology major, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. French W. Scott of Rt. 2, Norlina. Won By A Nose The nose of Abraham Lincoln on Mount Rushmore National Monument in South Dakota is longer than the en tire face of Egypt's Sphinx, according to National Geo graphic World. George Wash ington's head would fit a statue 465 feet tall.