CALENDAR Benefit Stew Sale Slated The Macon Rural Fire Department will sponsor a stew sale on Saturday, Oct. 1 at the Macon Firehouse. George Harris will be cook ing the stew, which will be ready by 11 a.m. and will sell for $3.50 a quart. The money from the sale will go to start a Jennifer Henry Fund for her kidney transplant, which will be in the next few months. First PTSA Meeting Planned The Warren County High School Parent-Teacher-Student Associa tion will hold its first meeting of the 1988-89 school year on Tuesday, Oct. 4 at 7:30 p.m. in the theater. Parents, students and friends of the Eagles are invited to attend. Refreshments will be served after the meeting. Basket Weaving Classes Set The Coordinating Council for Senior Citizens will be offering basket weaving classes beginning Oct. 12. The class will meet every Wednes day from 2-4 p.m. for six weeks at the Senior Center in Warrenton. The cost for the class will be $20 for Senior Citizens under 65 years of age and free for senior citizens 65 and older. Everyone has to pay for the materials which will be furnished by the instructor. For more information, contact the coordinating council for Senior Citizens of Warren County at 257-3111. Musical Program Plans Listed The Greater Ashley Chapel Baptist Usher Board will be sponsor ing a musical program Sunday, October 2 at 5 p.m. Various groups have been invited. The pastor, the Rev. Lynne J. Bradley, invites the public to attend. Quilting Classes Will Begin The Coordinating Council for Senior Citizens will offer quilting classes beginning on October 11. The class will meet every Tuesday from 1-4 p.m. for 11 weeks at the Senior Center. The cost will be $20 for Senior citizens under 65 years of age and free for senior citizens 65 and older. Each person will have to furnish all the materials for the class. For more information, contact the Coordinating Council for Senior Citizens of Warren County at 257-3111. Norlina Baptists To Man Store The Warren County Cooperative Ministries clothing store, The Second Hand/Helping Hand Store, will be open for sales and contribu tions on Sept. 30, Oct. 1 and Oct. 7-8 from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Workers will be from Norlina Baptist Church. Revival Services Are Planned Revival services will be held at Warrenton Pentecostal Holiness Church Monday, Oct. 3, through Friday, Oct. 7, beginning nightly at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. Bethea Moore, pastor of Emmanuel Pentecostal Holiness Church in Raleigh, will be the guest speaker. There will be special singing nightly. The public is invited. Yard And Bake Sale Scheduled The ladies' auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 4096 of Norlina will hold a bake and yard sale at the Post Hall on Saturday, Oct. 8. Proceeds from the sale will be used for the Operation Santa Claus Project at Christmas. Anyone wishing to contribute items for the yard sale is asked to call Grace Rudd at 257-4535. Missionary Union Will Convene The Woman's Baptist Church Missionary Union of Warren County will convene at Chapel Hill Baptist Church in the Oine community on Friday, Oct. 7, the Rev. James M. Johnson, pastor, said this week. Vaughan School Work Day Set A Vaughan Elementary School work day has been planned. All parents and friends are urged to come to the campus at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 8. Help is needed to move playground equipment and to do some major yard work. A notice containing further details will be sent home by students. benior Choir To Give Program "The Old Ship of Zion," a program sponsored by the senior choir, will be presented at Pine Grove Baptist Church on Sunday, Oct. 2 at 5 p.m. The public is cordially invited to attend. John Graham Open House Slated There will be an Open House for the parents of John Graham Mid dle School students on Tuesday, Oct. 11 from 7-8 p.m. in the school library. This will be an opportunity for parents to confer with teachers and to pick up their child's six-weeks report card. Narcotics Anonymous Will Meet Narcotics Anonymous meetings will be held on Wednesdays and Saturdays at the community center in Warrenton from 7:30-9:30 p.m., as well as on Thursdays at AMEZ Church in Macon from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Henderson Fair To Begin Run The 71st Annual Henderson Golden Belt Fair, Inc. will be held in Henderson the week of October 3rd through the 8th. Free acts will be held each evening at 7:30 and drawings for prizes will be held at 8:30 each night A bicycle will be given away each of the school nights, Wednesday and Thursday. Wrist Band Days will be held Wednesday and Friday. With the purchase of this band, fairgoers can ride all Lhe rides they wish. The public is invited to enjoy the fun this year at the Henderson fair! Methodist Revival Plans Listed Bethlehem and Shady Grove United Methodist churches will have a charge revival Oct. S through Oct. 5, to be held at 7:30 each even ing. On Oct. 2 and 3, services will be held at the Bethlehem United Methodist Church, while services on Oct. 4 and 5 will be held at Shady Grove United Methodist Church. The Rev. James H. Cole will be the apttker at the rtr, val services. A covered dish supper will be held Sunday night at the Bethlehem Clubhouse at 8 o'clock. TIm oldest Olympic winner WH Oscar G Swahn of Sweden wfio won the gold In the 1*12 Running Deaf team ? hooting competition at 64 yean, 2M day* He won a sHver medal for shooting in tha 1?20 Olympics IL Members of the Warren County Board of Com missioners are shown with the fire plow recently purchased for use by the N. C. Forestry Service in the county. Shown are, left to right, Gary Robenolt, emergency Management coordinator; Bernard Kills and Allen Norwood, both of the forestry ser vice; Commissioner!' J. T. Fleming, George Shearin and Eva Clayton; Charles Worth, county manager; Commissioners Frances Alston and William Skinner; and Ricky Bryant of the forestry service. (Staff Photo by Howard Jones | New Forestry Equipment Goes Into Service In Warren County The N. C. Forestry Service in Warren County recently received new fire-fighting equipment that was much needed. The service now owns a Case Model 1150 diesel actor furnished with a fire plow, along with an In ternational truck-tractor and a "low-boy" style trailer for hauling the equipment. According to Allen Norwood, forest i anger at the local service, the new equipment will help the Forestry Service reduce the time it takes for them to respond to a fire. Until now, the service had to wait for a plow to come from Louisburg. The machinery will be housed behind the local station near the fire tower in liberia off N. C. 58. It can be used to clear a fire line to halt an advanc ing forest or brush fire. It can also be used for con trolled burning applications. Norwood said that the equipment has already been put to use by the serv ice to install fire lanes. The funds for the equipment were appropriated by the 1987 General Assembly. The total cost for all the machinery was estimated at $142,000. Indian Affairs Posts Given Warren Residents Two area residents have been tapped by the N.C. Commission of Indian Affairs for positions of responsibility. James S. Ixrfton, secretary to the commission, an nounced recently. Koland H. Hedgepeth of War renton, chairman of the Haliwa Saponi Tribal Council and mem ber of the board of directors of the Bethlehem Recreation Com mission. has been appointed to the N.C. Commission of Indian Affairs. The conunission provides serv ices for the state's 65,000 American Indian citizens and is an advocate for their rights. Kalph Evans, of Hollister, is one of 11 Indian parents to be recommended to serve as a member of the newly-created State Advisory Council on Indian Education. Established by the General Assembly in July, the council will advise the State Board of Educa tion on ways to effectively meet ^ the educational needs of Indian students u> the state and ad vocate meaningful programs to reduce, and eventually eliminate, low achievement and high drop out rates among the state's In dian students. North Carolina's six tribes Cherokee, Coharie, Haliwa Sfiponi, Lumbee, Meherrin and Waccamaw-Siouan? and three major urban concentrations in Charlotte, Greensboro and Fay etteville, comprise the largest Indian population of any state east of the Mississippi. The Commission of Indian Af fairs is housed in the N.C. Depart ment of Administration. GREAT RATES CEflTHCATES OF DEPOSIT RATE ANNUALIZED VELD ? Q1 Hau PD 7.75% 8.06% $ 500 an uay uu 7,85% a.i7% ^2^000 .R,innthrn 8 00% 8.33% $ 500 6 Month CD 8.20% $25.000 8.30% 8.65% $ 500 12 Month CD 8 40% 8 76% $25.000 1fl Month rrt 8.40% 8.76% $ 500 LL) 8.50% 8.87% $25.000 30 Month CO llll SI $25^ 5 Year CD 8.50% ?.87% ti 500 AllratnavailaNrfurlRAV ? Minimum depmk MOO0O * Yield, arc talculau-d Iwvd upon the * *: chTK u can save 5CW off the price of admission and $2 .75 off the price of a ride book. Order with coupons available at partici pating Hardee's restaurantsand Winn Dixie Stores. Mailorders must be postmarked by Friday, October 7. In addition, from September 23 until October 13, you can get advance admission and ride books in person at the State Fairgrounds from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. Goodness Grows In North Carolina State Fair OL Mat to NC SUir fair. PO Box 33724. Ralriftfi. NC 27636 ? for more information call: (QI9) 821 7400 ROCKY MOUNT: 116South FranklinStreet ? (919)446-9191 Benvenue Plaza Location opening Fall 1988 CARY: 8 31 Kildaire Farm Road ? (919) 467-8156 MOREHEADCITY: 4917 Arendell Street ? (919) 247-6336 PINETOPS: 108 North Third Street ? (919)827-4131 RALEIGH: 4020 Wake Foreit Road ? (919)876-0871 SPRING HOPE: Highway 64 ? (919) 478-3684 WARRENTON: 207 South Main Street ? (919)257-1231 WILSON: Brentwood Shopping Center ? (919)237-1776 TOLL FREE 1-800-682-2706