of the Exchequer’s Budget mpst have had one 4
all possible- neip irom xne Conservatives if they had had
a policy.
Taxpayers “Prisoners In The Treadmill”
Bright holiday all-occ isioa prii t dr ’.ss hjf Charie
and dt that jaunt/ carefree look. Butler,
'cublefrill £3
claimed I Mr. F. J. Erroll, M.P. for Altrincham, at a public meeting at the Grand Cinema on Friday
rpHE J Socialist Party could be divided ini o three categories ■ ‘ -llhe mad men, tjie bad nien and the sad men, de
arranged by the
Square neck basque have
/ // .5880 LTD. 19. LORD STREET, BLACKBURfiJ
Were those wild .................. - nleft, fill of strange ideas for
of the party men of the
creathig a paradise of Social ism. The bad men were those rich Socialist hypocrites who llvedi oh large unearned in
ationalising everything and comes,! I the profits of their
;hard‘ j ' working forefathers, iand i spent their time and money] running down the very
'system that had enabled them to llVei in comparative ease. ■ Then: there were the sad men! of the party, the dis-
CUthei'oe Division Conservative Association .The mad men
organisation. Without lnter_ ifering too drastically with the industry, thw Intended to bring into it a breath of Con servatlve vigour and enter
prise.
Thby would find this great industry in the hands of a
rigid bmeaucracy, but would 1 decentralise it
respoiisibility to make de- cisioni getting rid of la- officials who ran
I .he spot power and
' ' , ' iWatef ShoK*
i Onlq“ I 4C01
,-5 „B0
8oW.Tou; ^ l;
Co.rourna"'e"t^^^„,.3,*V
Jolor'ou.F'o'-r® S.P.» *Sp.:t^“ '‘'|&EXC.T«NO
jillusloned radicals' who saw ! the end of their ideals. What ! was 'once a great fiery'passion 'wasiriqw a dimly- flickering candle i of pale | Socialism. : “ I t I is only your belief and enthusiasm which can win
land;the free,” j dared.
_in motor-cars doing
the ! next election and this I country a Tory Govern ment I of the bold, the brave ■ ■ “ Mr. Erroll de-
'jfHREE-PART POLICY
: It' liad often [been suggested, he said, that, the great Tory ! Party ! had no policy, but
developments, sUch as that of; fuel oil, believing that compe tition would act as a spur to, the Coal Board to increase its,
goodness knows what. ---* ,
'ftSe***''***' efficiency. IIUICIIL/Jf.
‘ could not de-nationalise —- the electricity supply industry not
For the reasons that applied the] coal industry, they
, •
COUIU uu the
restore freedom to road trans^ wmcn W
railways, but : nothihg could be further from I admlnistrathn. K A] Ey^HM and
J BEkunrtlME»(,CUlDE--Y6ur«% 6d. stamp \ /iWmnC Porter,. T9OT;JlRlli.vflorocaroy^
VIHERE THE SEA WAVES TO THE MOUNTAINS DAY n'
A^^S^^?ERED r iO N S
i n t h e ?!•
i l i-
^ W H E R E T O
* virheiiiE; iro ^ H O W T O A R R A N G E I T
O r d e r J o u r c o f y tO '^ d u y
well publicised, i i t could roughly be divided
Cotto !
iand their third task would be !tb clean up the mess Socialism :had left behind. ' iThe' policy framework was cbiitalned In the Industrial
liitb ; three parts, the first being 1 the! policy framework whlchi ■ would I be the main basis'!of the] detailed pro- gfainme. The second was that they' ioflered ' good manage ment 'Of I the nation’s affairs,
'and agricultural ch arters, iwhlch were complementary to
ieach other. i jLt had often been said, Mr. iErroll went on, that there iwere jonly two fo rm s] o f ! government—good and bad. lAt I present we were certainly i getting a dose of the latter.
: , Conservatives considered it jwab Essential that a govern- Imbnt! should be a good ad- imlhlstrator, and handle the 'day -{to - day affairs; of the 'nation wisely and sensibly, I that jtHe Cabinet should be a igrbup of good day-to-day ImanAgers who could handle (detailed problems as well as 'worklout long-term policy.
I^He suggested the^present] Government’s handling of !day - to - day affairs had [frequently been amateurish
I And inept.
,, [Now that one could look [back on bread rationing, how 'many could say It was ever i necessary? Conservatives were
t'thb . first to agree after the ! war ! that clothes rationing
I' wAs necessary, but when it i became clear that the system
IS SWIMMING I
Take and, heart, rheunj colds cveryW
aticpainsjf^tigucjtoothaches ]
nd *flu. CjfiPHOS is sola here, Powders or Tablets.
CEPHOS ^ acts quickly Xely. Does not harm the a Also splendid for neuridS)
'ns NcmoM I doses 1/6d, 21 doses 3/7id*
ITEMS QF SPECIAL . . ALL
In
VEB GR
VEF w
with The: S' law Siiigle dose] S|<L (iac. tax).
SCO ALL-ELECTRIC fWAl [BB EL
,fe!CTRIC iWASHER •mostatic Control
EKclo AUt PYE
NTEREST IN STOCK 'ER .:. ...
& BOILER
th Hand Agitator ..i ... OtATICi RADIOGRAM
Sole A gents for Pye, Ekeo Vactnc Service
VACTRIC C .EANERS,
THE EUTE d X
l i i l i t ICO e4ectric- washer & BOILER AUTOMATIC RAPIOGRAM •t- HEAUACHE is mostilikely the cause I
1; was I no' longer needed the . Socialists would not part with
'-lt.l ! ' ' They accused the Tories of a
| . carded because of the sheer pressure of events, which the
political stunt but In the end the system had to be dls-
Ccjnservatlve Opposition had h k the ability to foresee.
produced nothing short of a ' treadmill ” budget. He had made it plain that the nation was icommitteed to heavy ex penditure on social services, dmence and food subsidies, and! that the money could ohlyl be found by taxation all
PRISONER’S TREADMILL 'Sir Stafford Cripps had
;roi'und.
£62 18 0 £37 15 6 £28' 8 10
£180 12 0 £104 18 10
and Philco Radio. Agents'.
CYLINDER & UPRIGHT MODELS. m
CASTLE GAT CLITHEROE ^IjXXjlXl-rX
TELEPHONE jCLITHEROE 214 ; I
Choicest Selection A^I
.■yi/hat a Selection! 'What'a C THE FINEST POSSIBLE
0\JER £20,000 OPiUPHQLST ' ' “MODERN* TO !jTHE
of i Furniture! “CREDIT TERMS’;’ IN
LANCASHIRE. mice!
All 1949 Designs.
ERYi^ND FURNITURE. ' minute” a t -
O p 0 0 ijy Edmondson's Ltid. for Credit Terms.
DARBRIDGE & CO. DARWKNI; STREET ' Ontn Evininn t
I S a s t e r
3HOICE SELECTION IN A WIDE /ARlBTYi OFt PRICES BY ALL LEADING MAKERS
A dvertiser ^ Times Office 6 l^RKET PLACE, CLITHERbE
, SEE. WINDOWS
BRIDGE, BUCKBURN. I I7 b>m-
treadmill,” Mr. Erroll added, “iTread, tread, tread, and no ptoshect of any improvement, grinding out the taxes neces sary! to pay for subsidised fSod, free spectacles and a
I “We are the people In the , , _
conscript army.” [Sif Stafford had offered no
: enterprise and energy to create new processes, new factories and new sources of wealth:
mien working for just re wards could give us our prosperity, our social ser vices,'and lighten the bur den of taxation which was well high intolerable to-day.
The power drive of free
hf the Budget was that the ChAncellor had made no reference to | extravagance ip Government 'departments. He had said there was to be no additional Expenditure, but there had been no suggestion •hat p r e s e n t expenditure ihduld be cut down.
■The most depressing aspect GREAT TASK
ihey wojild caiise
hen the Tories came td' joijver; Mr; Erroll continued.
uauoc of [ ‘
nationalised industries was bulte clear! They could not de-
fask—cleahing up the mess Soiiialism had left behind. Their policy towards the
. be very busy be- their third great
0-----
h ill -Atlonallse every Industry be cause nationalisation had so
changed their structure that It [was not practical politics to |go back to the old system. This particularly applied to
coal, and Conservatives would concentrate on Improving the
bb found' In the- Tory policy, because Tories believed In, tne (ireatlon of wealth.; They believed .that new prosperity cbuld be created by allowing ‘leii to use their initiative,
xiope of any relief from the prisoner’s treadmill. But there as!a way out, and It wa- to
‘ port, 'which wouldUCUU luuo
ments used by the Socialists to establish
mission were that under old
arket. the
Cotton
that under mission
would ]get what and the
stabllikd sykem prices
prices wo u l d and that
qualities The
the'truth. Their policy was] Conservatives were_ deter- 1& i well
come the spur to the railway prices and small rations.; ,
they would thus
be
and mffibd to restore the Liver^^^^^^^ fv,tfnn Market,
argUr
argu] Com
the Cotton Com bp
fluctuated, the
they wanted and
spinners types
they preferred. In Actual fact, the Cotton
Commission had provided a poorer! range and price fluq- tuations had been far, more severe than before. The Colj- ton Ccimmisslon had therefoije plearlj' failed in the task for which it was created.
tore freedom to civil aviation, a new and expanding industry least suited of all industries selected by the Socialists to l)e bound down by a rigid bureau cratic policy. DREAMY DOGMA ,
They also intended to res |
.were detbrmlned to. national-, ise tills Industry, not because it would make it more efficient —it was achieving record out put to-day—and not because it w£.s incapable of modern ising Itself. Socialists had befen unah.e to suggest any Im provement on the industry’s own development plan. It wAs certa&ly not because the wanted natlonallsa-
the House of Commons was still being waged over the future of the iron and steel industry.' Faithful as ever to thelir dreary dogma. Socialists
At present the battle in consequences. S
Act, they and men
Sh
there was abundant that they feared sation and' all Its j
iron ahd steel were basic and should be nationalised, an^d so they wou l d [be n^ionalised, he said.
o c i a l i s t s wanted |to ionalise the industry be- se it was in the party k. It was written that
j ;
ould the Bill became ah they would repeal it! if were returned to power,
it'eficlent
cern men
that the peak was reached under the Socialists in 1931,
Answering a question con- iing pre-war unemploy- l iL Mr. Erroll pointed out
ljVj X ---—----;-----
and although they were a m 1 :i 6 r 1 1 y government the
leave the industry to the who now ran it and kept. !
would also give full] ;ement to important;
1 , j'
The plain fact was that they had -no policy unemployment,
were fortunate In that Conservatives
and
years before the w . far. " I
during do so badly, in view of the submit GO so UaUl^, 111 V Y vx
world conditions, |n d that iff We are returned, at the next election we shall draw uhon our experiences ahd do eyen
ICY
Service; Mr.' ErrO 1 said |the Conservatives would retain it but’Would Improve it out of all recognition.
better,” he asserted. Questioned about the Health
GOOD OMEN
Mr. Richard Foilt, prospeci conservative candidate,
| congratulated Clitheroe. | on
returning Miss Garnett to- the Lancashire County Council with an increased majority.. In England , as a whole,' he said, C' o n s e r v a t i v e s j h a d broken the power of Labour in the| County Councils, andjthis was a good ompn for ! the municipal elections.
, In his Budget, skid Mr. Fort, Sir .Stafford Crlppt had shown that he had learned some of the economic fkets o f ! life’ from past C 0 n sj e r v a tii v e criticism.
i
going to hit old aAe pensliiners. ■ ‘n sinall fainllles
Some of the pr:o:posals were
who were already finding nvillg uimuuib ucoauac yx ;
living difficult because of high Referring to the present
1 '^
was a world demand for our g o o d s .
towards to-qay th,ere
gradually reduced unemploy ment
had
elglft • dlfllcult that we did not
v l&brj cpiimrj'i
.w6r d '“ free'’ when we talk so much about the supposed behe- fife we receive from an imijiense /Miety of social servlet. i
I, land the■the rank and file of the ...^es g,^aerally, will ccfise 0 play with that blessed-cursed
have all to be paid fori And you aiid I, not the rich exclusively, e' paying for them, i We are [ying a heavy price for them.
Jeneflts, yes; free, no. ^ e y me Member of Parliament'-
afe not overwhelmingly blinded by wearing only too effective pkrty blinkers, that red light has b0n visible some time.
lid he was glad the present lancellor, instead of leaving it a future Chancellor, had seen le “ red light.” "Tb eitizens who
! I t is -the'height of absurdity
that four years after the last shot ]as fired, we are still budgeting ; if the war was yet to be won. ’e are now at very nearly! three id a-half thousand millions as
oUr yearly target, just as lif the chsh fell from the clouds. |
filings of amazement when 'our anual Budget first exceeded a lousand mlliion pounds, and
.''When some of us recall ^our
..nought we had just , about Cached the limit, how many of ^ would have apprehended that mfore very long we shoiild be
CAREY LORD’S REVIEW
spending three and a hal' times ,hat colossal amount ?
meat shortage, Mr. Fort j said difficulties with the Argentine were not the only reason. We were producing about '40 per cent, less meat at home [than before the war, and I that s i t u a t i o n could not be remedied at once. It would take at least three years to re build our'cattle herds, but we pro- iding
could raise pigs vidlng we had stuffs.
quickly the fe
of feeding stuffs was an important poinjt of the'Con servative policy for farming.
Greatly increased imports
stuffs now existed in the ijvorld. Last season theije had been a record maize crop In' the United States, ahd ther$ had also been a surplus iii the Argentine.
Maize and other feledlng
promised time and again to spend dollars on provender, but they had not bought nearly enough.
The G 0 V e r h m e n.t, had I |
tions between the Ministries of Food and Agriculture; Mr. Fort stressed another point of Conservative policy fob far mers. His party,! he said! con sidered that' the minimum quantities on whidh the[ Gov ernment paid g u a r a n t e e d prices should be laid down by law Instead of! being deter mined each year by civ|l ser vants in the] Ministry of Agriculture.
After referring to| the[ rela | [
job in increasing milk! pro duction during! the past few years. He was absolutely con vinced that given th e ! right encouragement [and increased feeding stuffs,las demanded In the Conservative! policy, they would do an equally fine job in producing more meat. Coun. J. DriVer, who pre- that in the election! cam-
Farmers had! done a fine [ '
sided, recalled County Council
,!should be called—'!You [both have your cake and I—before we get into real of yielding to national
ruptcy. I The Socialist section who are
willing to go on straight ahead with reforms, caring not [one jot or tittle where the money comes from, are precisely the same section'of citizens who have no regard for the Nationa.1 Debt, which is equivalent to[ saying that money doesn’t' matfer, that you can pile up the National Debt as high as you like 'and I t ,makes no more difference to national prosperity than the proceeds of the tuck shop just round the
comer. ' j
presume that no m0 (or woman) gets into Parliament unless he or she is endowed with a. more than average intellect.
of the Exchequer has pulled them up sharp. We are accustomed to
When we contemplate the
Members of Parliament' as a- whole, we , should certqinly say
' liiey are a cut above thejordinary man in the street in-the matter of common intelligencej What are we to think, then when one of them suggests to the Chancel lor that he should jput the
I National Debt under a!morator ium.
,'
readers might well'put in, “many of us would abolish the: National Debt altogether.” (Suite iso; many would, no doubt. ': But'they are
“ That is nothing,” one of my
minus' all sense of' responsibility, and have still less; of that horse sense, a particle of whkh we are all supposed to possess. | ,
palgn the local Labour [Party had said thete should! be
llalson between the County and Borough Cbuncils. In that event, he said, I every Socialist should support Miss Garnett on May 12. Coun. Driver replied Also to
expressed by chairman of Conservative Garnett.
Socialist criticism of thb Con servative leaflet outlining eight points for electors. Thanks to thq speakers were
year on that National! Debt. Who gets it ? Well, I get' pone of it and I do not suppose | many, if any, of my readers get more. But it goes to all quarters o f ' the globe, directly or indirKtly, and a moratorium would have about the same effect as! people emerg ing from the Bank of’ England and shouting down the street to
We are paying £500 |miUion a
Mr. A. [Noble, the Divisional arty, anfi Miss
PEEPS INTO THE p YEARS AGO
Extracts from our issue of April 18,1924 i damnable Act that
put on the Statute Book-” was Couaclllor G. Hargreaves’ deSc riptlon of an Act ! of Parliament which permitted a lane lord to evict a tenant. Couaclllor Hargreaves, who seconded the minutes of the Housing Committee at Clith eroe Town Council Meetihg,
should never have been
tenant of a houselin lYaddlhg- ■ton-road arid said, “ If I eyp felt ashamed to" belong' to Clitheroe I felt so to-night when I went to look at;'the
referred to thcieylctlon of the o'en Wn
furniture in the street.” || The Rev. T. W. Castle, Rector
all and sundry: ,' The Bank of England has ceased to [pay." In other words, to call a mora
torium on the National Debt would be equivalent to | announc ing to all the world that Britain was broken, that Britain was down and out. f Even “ Uncle
50 YEARS AGO
Extracts from our issue of April I 4, 1899 |
In the annals of Low Moor, and marks an epoch In Its history that will long be remembered. The decorations are! on a
Garnett and Sons have been “ established 100 years” ;and this Is the test of the'rejoic ings In the [little “ Cotton opolis” on the Ribblei Alto gether about 11-100 villagers are- 'celebrating the centenary. The celebrations began with
'The firm of Messrs. Thos. I of St. James’s Church, was
elected a member of the Royal Asl;itic Society in recognition of his research into Ethnology
E. Driver, P. Wilson, C. Isher wood. A: Smalley, J. Robinson, T. Rlshton, R. J. Chester. Scores were; Chatburn 684, Cll'heroe Parish Church 585. Mr B. E. 'Jones, Parish Church captain, won the League President’s (Mr. E. Bradley) Cu;j for the highest break'
Cud was; W. Smith (captain), ---------
1, c . Ish(
A ( ibituary.—Mr. William S. Ai?ey (74), chairman'] of Wl Alley Parish Council, a g p t for Sir Henry Worsley-Taylor, and secretary of Whalley Agri cultural Association; [Mr. Thbmas Stuttard (80), heqd of James Stuttard & Sons, cptton spinners and manufacturers of Sapden; Selina Cornwall (66), Franklin-street,
of
team which won the Clitheroe and District Sunday School
Chatburn Village Billiards ii
of the Indians of the American Continent.
a service at Low Moor [Church
In which the Vicar, the Rev. J. B. Waddlngton, Mr. I James Garnett and the Rev. Richard Garnett took part. The beau tiful brass lectern vfas also used for the first tim,e. This
' ,
“ rfO-DAY, Friday, April 14 1899, is a red-letter day
really magniflqent scale!, every house having Its gay flag, and indeed, the village Is one mass of colour.
! Joe ” would sit up and rub his eyes, wondering whether He still had command of his senses.
"MO wonder the Chancellor ignored this [ startling sug
gestion', which must have sur prised him when! it came from^ the floor of the: ' House of Commons of all placei
we have to get it baep into our heads that what jwe c p get for nothing is nothing;, if we want " summat ” we shall have to pay for it. Our social
aot.vities and benefits are at least thrice what they used to be. ; But all to be paid forJ
But when all is said and done, they have
tells us we have] to, daU a halt, it is because we cannot reach the moon in one jump. Put other wise, we are in danger of having bitten off more than we can
If in effect Sir [Stafford Cripps chew. !
was presented by Mr. [WUliam and Mr. James Garnett in
memory of their father and motheh It weighs about 4cwt. and cost £60.
' Newstead Garhett wltfi a silver cup, and Mr.]George]Whalley
tation took place outside the post oface.. Mr. Simpson pre sided and Mr. John prmerod presented an address to Mr. Thomas Garhett aijd sons. Mr Charles Dickinson, oldest overlooker, [presented Mr.
After the service, ai presen
presented a
simllar.glft to Mr. William Garhett, junior. '
(74), of Low] Mooif; ! George •Llghtfoot (B5). of Waddington; Therz 'Whittaker ' (19),i of Grindleton; Sarah Thompson (64), of Clitheroe,
Obituary.—Isabella'! Gamer
School Canteen For Gisburn
mittee on Monday, I Mr; E. B. Nelson, Divisional [Education
A T the monthly meeting of Bowland Education' Com
Officer, reported ithfit the Ministry of Works haci begun the construction; of the can-- teen for Gisburn School and that it was expected;' to 1 be completed by [the end j of September.
' i
: The committee Interviewed candidates for positions ! as teachers at Rivei r s'm e a d Modern School andl appointed Miss J. Walker, of Nonhanton, Yorkshire; and Mis^ J. Jji'vesey, of Burnley, subject to con firmation by the West Biding County Authorities.! ';
' ‘y " " " ’' “ 'J R Q S B R
IWILLIAM BRAITHWAITE & SONS 1 !
48, WHALLEY; | ROADl; CLITHEROE '
Phohe [48:> 1
24, K I o'pin'9 to
I IG S.-Thursdl
bnythen^ ■I I for
I I style*
I This at ractiveNorvics(nglc-cyelct tic model Is made in brown glace kid. Also ivailable in black and blue.
price iSS/] &N0RVIC) 15 jewelledI
[Gentlemel Ladles’] ALL
sa
A ^maU' qq'an WRIST WAI leajther stpap
Whole or!part loads of furniture, f |T»aueni iiooi ui ■ohp
THE EASTER
PARADE OF EW SEASON’S; DRE^S MATERIALS' is w o j r th y o u r s p e c i a l ' v i s i t .
O u r i r a n g e o f sm a r t , ] g o o d f lo o k in g C lo th s : i s g r e a t — a n d v e iy , r e a s o n a b l e m ; p r i c e .
Style a n d G n h l lh r i
YOU WILL GET FULL SAWPACTok AT- Dress. ^
sd
Victoria Market, Market Place, BLACKBURN WILDINGS'WAREHOUSE LTD.
; I
SOUTH, tnay bo sent with idvant'age by STUBBS. Frequent sa iCOs
REMOVALS land STORAGE o
r
ervioe. Mpdern fleet of wane and. «port packers. STUBBS’ DEPOSITOR
y CEDAR 8T]REET, BLACKBURN. !
ES LIMITED Telephone 6718 & 7040.
, ^ cutlery
' wiped— -----1- gteasy [i^isbesj'glaj
chinp 8larkle without being Mt
or soft
woollens -Really good witll ':|wat'er-|-le|
< celi& fori and p ^ t l
tidemark on hM
piNir BOTTLE
D iAIso I " !
.ioSOAPLiSI (I
, JSSWASHIN bbtalriablci'onlyf'
I^Z . PACgE i/'. I t is well that the Chancellor
pome time. If he had not, he would not have taken the risk of ^looking his party jas a whole, 'and splitting it into |more[ or less 'even halves as to whether a halt
Obviously Sir Stafford Cripps las been seeing the red light for
cannot
eat it.". danger ' bank-
hnanciaUy ’th'an they either imagined or beUeved. Perhaps at long last you, and
l imiucij, »uai« wv| iaiiicij, * a‘b ••''I
. I _ « . ' . — -----------
«---
i .. _1 11. _ -
j; envelope (this despite that in some industries there is a lag in comparison lyith others)—and so retain these rather than by striving -to achieve! too much, in too short a time,'! bringiilg the whole edifice toppling ' down, amongst us.
what we have already got—I am referring to National Health, the marked iiriprovement in national 'Education, the great increase in the average worker’s pay
It is better to make good with
powers that be is aiprolonged and serious attempt to reduce the
What is wanted from the
cost of living, not! onlyi in food stuffs but in taxation. If instead of eight shillings in the pound of all our incomes being required by the State, we could reduce the
sum to five shillings there would be more left in our pockete to
j. pay for food, though .fills is no argument fot the Continuation of
high food prices. !
I (reduction (at ti]e two ends, present wages would go a good deal farther than they do now
On the contrary, if we had a
1 and would enable our industries the better to compete in the world’s markets,! which are rapidly ' changing from the
i ' . ■ •
yobr ohildren [ taka the- ^eaw irit or any lob that may'
V »i■ wiBieajevee . hot be ! content to ...
_. offoriitl '■"to’"' them. Think arltely ' ol their
future., A ooursa of trainlnk now at. QuetU’ will ensure their ranlil- advanoement to a luo- oenful Business or Civil oak eer. Take' advantage oh our Advisory Borvios. WHto or oall for Oollsss ProsoMtuo! of oourssi and careers fro^
jng a team at Olphamloi ’ Vf JA
JWIOU, |Oi VAUAWgl JXW I I
GUEST’S COLLEGE Ptifiw; rs. F;f!ViBr,|
BjCom.(LondBn) exchange Street,
Blackburn
OOTWEAR treads in i the
footsteps of coihfor^ _ ; I
Ag'ents for “Dlana”t “k ” Shoes- And “Portland”
Sh o e s p e c ia l is t s FOWLER
1 seller's 'market to, the, buyer's market. • :
, TIP our British gopds are to have ' a chance everywhere on earth we shall have to remove the world-wide grouse about our extremely high pHces.
tion as if we were still waging war, not (jrily makes us poor but will keepl'iis poor. Many back-- bench Socialists were stupifled to find thatj nothing was done to lower the {cost of food prices; that I on the contrary the price of some
The maintenance of our taxa
of the moist indispensable articles of food wCTo increased.'
rid of bhlk buying, which is a twin evill': YoUj are not only landed in higher'costs, as in the case of Argentina’s, meat, but taking the' countries from which you buy as a whole, you are boimd
to.acceptithe goods, food stuffs or otherwise, they can send
To remedy that, we must get R e l ie f
and in some 1 cases the old merchants who did our buying
and selling in the old days would not liave it at any price.
oranges we had'about Christmas time ? Beautiful to look at, but as Sour as lemons. The old British merchants would not have taken them as a gift, but' when you are |)Ulk buying, or making reciprocal deals With other nations, you just^ ha-fe to take what they, can send and lump it.
Do you remember those .
, ;No wonder we had,a sombre; and disquieting Budget.
Nelghbi^ur said “Take Doan’i Pilb” YjfHY PUT UP with needless
sluggi^
FRdMBAOKACHE diScomflMf ftom 'backach^
(beumanc pains, lumbago, i stim aching muscles and , joints or the oommoi urinary disorders due to
might { et happy rdlefl Man;r thousands of healthy
action when you
jeople bless the day they took DoSn’s Battache' Kdney Pills.; ’This it tell known' diuretic and urinary antiseptic helps slug^h kidtiej^ to carw out their function of tidd: ng the blood of excess uric
tdd and other impurities harmful w to heal; h. GratefitiTeopI®*
their ffiends and neighbours. S w D O A N ’S 0 > ’
here, recominend Doan’s Pills to
Bas^cE,' BLACKBURN LOANB
iLoan^. Losms. Loans. ilo to £1,000 ^ ^ ]|ieigh & District
i BY or
THIS SOCIETY : VmBOlJT SECTOITT.
Call Write or Pbon^ 8492.
Lendpg Sodety Ltd. IT.. BLACKBURN.
-travelled withe Itlie tean. ji^tTeel well enough t(j pla ,tb complicate | naaitters.
hkm I was taken __ ,__ journey and spei.t the aft] wfaPPfi'l ni .overcoats i | coach. ., [Those were tlje main )r Cutheroeli
.-CJec leti ,al £
. the breach notasiy. proved 'a useful tempera
'side left, while .had previously! _____ .forward, insicle-right,! lel| rightrhalf, sho'WM his]ver
fgured at Brenna
.bV playing a mnd game back.' !
-considerable pq ri, he kq place ;in itiinutes hunt
play was held up for a shoj vthile he receive i atteptlo ithe trainer.
' FULL peogeamd;
'days. ; To-moi Southport, an' fiiey will ent( Shaw Bridge, 1 ] On Monday .turn home mat(
programme ove: The 'team is,
aced with! the Etsta
'tit 6-30 p.m., ai ^lliheroe jouri' Teamk will be following plai McCrea, Brennan, Pos ^ n , ' WaJmsle; ders, , Purcell,!
T
£t 3T5 p.m. i ELUSr
ilklnson and At Shaw I' Burnley “A”
certain of -tiu the Sunday S jjet to obtain; which will sea Saturday they Old I Boys but ihatches to;pla; Bolton-by-BoWland,
Hurst Green]
^ndi C.R.G.S.0 iWning for se leagjie. I SWidburh
^ecohd point 0: expense of 'Batiirday.
1 ' '.CEAVI
Inglebbrough. ■ •'blitheroe at 1-
j* c . /\UCT10NEER & V^ll
STANLEY HOt ' CLITHEROE
Sales of Propel j , 'Uh'" Valuations
T'll. 400 rty anc
dirtaken. lor all p
N urd ,, 'ham,
i on Yfeoi ,ey : to elected 'ers:
rtain Baij ,ok-ofl 3-lq ey .play . with SoJ
ow fiieyl on [Sef
received la nasty kiJ after. the fesu the
another blow., ■ half-time Sau iders j i l medical attentlqp for . a I bjruised wrist,]
Pate, however, :''l
had reser Shortly
I ut althou attack,
teorge.'Akers, aiaiough.o: ‘tired, hardly jn isses ;a g. spectator. ..ani on volunteered to! play.
:eshuflle
q l jtHBR/OE je icounterel ~expecteti dificultleS
Gue^f ( College
mm
■tethwaitti , Thomtis,| Shorropk,!
meet POINT
iool lea^d hat eluslvl the Isiuef
champld
lost to] still hail
ond place! P!,l
obtaineiil the season .rlsh- chu
'[-British Railiyi: dieap day exet on 6atuitiay_f(i hnai between"
'(jrslOn :to! ■' . the GfaV
N CUP. ,ys are ru
The trab p.m.
HobinsoiL.I ridge to-i Bootif
:
W'“' i ■ ■ ■ m m
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