i S y l i i i i f c M S i ^ ^
New Entrants totton
Sir,—
readers interest, politica: betwMr q'uent “ E.B."
attacks
■ jike many more of your I have followed with
the Weekly exchanges of banter in j’our columns, ♦wo of your most fre-
' Postbag ’’ contributors, and " Watclimaii.”
Disregarding “ Watchman’s ’ W S W ^ S iA
....... . at ’■[E.B.’s ’’ - ’’ 50-year prejudges,’’ I find his arguments no longer ring true. The many Tory propagandists, with, .whom man ’’ must be classed,
onger.capable of convin'c- e man-inrthe-street that victory !has not Been
’• Watcl are no ing a mor gained by “ E.B.’’ and hi^'kind.
Following., the annour^cement
by the Minister of Housing him self that the Tory promise of.
300,000 houses in 12 months could not possibly be fulfilled, comes
\ the warning that; food subsidies I'.will be I unmercifully .slashed be- I’fore the year is out! Remember ♦he crj’ in the pre-election'days of 'that! fateful October of 1951: “ No cuts id food subsidies!’’ ? ' The blind Tory followers Who still maintain that the Conserva tive Government are making the best of: a. bad'job, and '■will yet lead the country tb prosperity,
M m
■ : * p ■ ■ ■
Five To Return To Day Nursery
' i . i f t i ‘
■1 ■
* i i m■ f
CO-OP MEETING O1 'wing to the lack of a
■ m
!;t S 5t
■ le
quorum :'of 20—only 18 people were !present—the quarterly meeting of the ; Clitheroe Equitable Co-operative and Industrial Society Ltd., wlrich should! have been held at the Guild Room on > Monday, had to be postponed. ; The mget- ing will be held in th^ GuUd Room-next Monday. '
'■piVE of the 20
i.cliiidren who were taken' away from
Bright-street .. Day , Nurstiry, Clltheroe, by , their' parents, following the increase--last month! in charges; of sending children to day nurseries,’ are
'expected to return shortly: The I new charges!,are five ■
.shillings per day for' the Apt child and 3s. ,6d. ber day jor the seqond or any| subsequent children. They camei into ■effect ,bn December 1st, , and
5 immediately resulted in pro tests from parents, as pre viously the charge was .'tiWo shillings per dayj per child.
Bright-street Nursery has
accommodation p r some '55 children, arid ■ |at prespt there |are 24 on; the -register.
The first breakrln'was at
the office of! the Abbey Mill, Bil lington, during last Friday „jTln, when drawers wen ‘ransacked,
-a safe force!
open, and between : £100 and £200 stolen.;
Some time between. Tues
day night 'and Wednesday morning, Sun-ptreet; Mill and Salford Bridge Mill — both
situated In the same; block ^oE buildings—were . also broken The robbery, at the Abbey;
have no longer a leg; to! stand on. i Shou’d ■’Watchnian” or one
of his kind deign to: reply, might I point out that the excuse that
f S i » a s i #
. the Tory Government are having to make cuts as ' a ! result of Labour; incompot-ence and mis management, however cleverly it is disguised, has worn a little thin lifter ■ being ceaselessly charited for the past 16 months.
I ■ Clitherijie. ■ !OBSERVER.
Saturday morning, w!heri yirs Hall, wife of the weaving manager, entered the office and found t^vo axes, the;safe broken oper^' and drawers of the desk rarisacked.!
Mill I ; CASH MISSING She immediately., informed;-
her husband. The alarm; was raised, land it:was found' that a sum of money between' £100 and £200 was missinig from the sa-fe. ■ .
A five day week Is wo.rked
at the mill! -which Is owned by Messrs. Green iBros., Ltd., and as the] operatives do not work on Saturdays, It was- only when jMrs. Hall went to the mill -thatlthej theft was discovered.'- '
j When Mr. J. ^'Aubih,'- the
shed-manager a t . Mr. W. Turner’s | Sun-street Mill, ' went to work at I 7 a.m.- on Wednesday, he ‘ found the general office had been ransacked! and drawers and papers strewn all over the room. The adjoining oflfices belonging; to the, manager and to :Mr.. Turner hipiself had also been entered and a small - steel safe;; containing the mill! records and other valuable books was missing.
Mr. Turner and the police
were immediately -informed of the break-in.
Less damage was caused at
the adjoining premises of Messrs. - W. Westhead and Sons, where the engine room appeared to have' been the only place entered.
PRISED OI^EN A desk In the engine room
had been prised |open and fonie £6 in savings stamps belonging
to , the m i l l engineer,' were missing. . ,
Mr. Turner -told an “Adver tiser and Times’] reporter bn
-Wednesday that:-the missing' .safe contained'! books and other records. Th'ere was no cash in the safe,; but it woulfi be very Incpnveriient for him- If the books' were not
;recovered. The intruders,! he said, had
apparently gained Entrance
' to the mill from the Marl- borough-street end of the
i mill yard into Westhead’s boilerho'use, and from there
i'll d
Village Gifts To Worston Licensee
A WELL-KNOWN Rlbbles- dale hotelier, -Mr. John
Parker yesterday ■ left the Calf’s Head Hotel, Worston, after nearly a quarter of a century as licensee.
During their 23 years at 4,
the hotel, he and his wife have b e c o m e known to. hundreds of visitors to the village; which Mr. *'Parker represented on the Clitheroe Rural District Council for a period of three years until last year. Residents of Worston' said
Hescrvo
INCbMI TAX PAID BY THE .j
SO.CIETY
Head- bfflce: High Street, Sklpton. j Telephone .487/8.
. j . ; Local Agents: i ^BSSRS. EDWjARD CHESTER & ^ON
36; Ring Street, Clitheroe Telephone;-19,
farewell to Mr. and Mrs. Parker : at a presentation e'eremony at the hotel on Tuesday night.
RESIDENTS’ REGRETS Mr. R. Lawson -thanked Mr.
and Mrs. Parker for their services and expressed the residents’ regrets that they, were leaving the . village.' ’
On behalf of the villagers, SILVER 3T BRITAIN, 1949/50/51/52 Children do give a tarpet a beating
i FOOTBALL BOOTS. LINED kHOES AND ELECTIONS, RICES.
!
■ reTONS tN STOCjc. VICE.
SOi j ^ ; Established 1910
I -but a B M K can take it! That’s i thanks to the tough, springy wool of the Scotch Biackfaced sheep, blended with; other fine,wools.
Mothproof fbr-cver! All BMK* carpets and rugjs are made perm anently mothproof. Even dry- cleaning, \vashing and wear-and- tear won’t affect the mothproofing.
I ! mothproof CARPETS & RUGS
OBTAINABLE FROM OF CLITHEROE 58, WHA
itLEY RD. - 31, CASTLE ST. Tel.' 136 I 1
he -then presented Mr. Parker with ah electric blanket, and Mrs. Parker was presented with a similar gift, also on behalf of residents, by Mrs. A. Walmsiey. Mr. T. Hanson presented Mr. Hiirtley Parker, father of Mr. Parker, with a pair of gloves and a scarf.
NO LIGHTS
pOBERT SUTHERS (46), a representative, of Carle-
ton; was fined £2 at Bowland Magistrates’ Court on Mon day, for driving a -car at Gisburn without lights. P,C. Sanderson said the defend-^' ant’s car was .showing-a fog- lamp and a headlamp but no
'sidelights. He examined the Iswltch and., the lights, came 'oh but as soon as the engine I was started, they went out.
was I discovered. on
Thefts At I Clitheroe And Biilit^toh ^
One Safe Rifled,' RemovM
Another
rrilREE local mills have been brokln t ,veek and between £100 and £20|0 in cash, some £G
into during the past
in sivinss stamps, aiid a small steel safe containing records ;,nd books. Have been stolen:
they went Into the warehouse at Suji-street Mill. They did not appear! to have touched
anything j in the warehouse ^tself, I but jto have gone to ■the manager’^ office, where they ;fouhd !a- key to the general office.
This office, said Mr. Turner,
had been j completely ran sacked, and drawers had been 'emptied of their con tents, i -which ' were scattered about i the room.'
At.Salforil Bridge Mill, Mr.
F. Westhe^ said the . In truders ; had s e e i p l n g l y smashled a' window to gain entrance' tb the mill and had' then entereid the engine room
' through the door which was unlocked..! ; Their -activities seemed -to
have been confined to prising open the engineer’s, desk and taking the savings stamps that were inside, added Mr. Westhead. 1
, -
Statistics Show 193 Rainy Days
AL’T^OUGH Clltheroe. and “^.district .had rain on ;193
days bn '1952', the year’s rain fall was appreciably less than that of 1951']!
Thb story of the year’s
weather Is told In statistics complied by Mr. E. P. Alders- ley, headmaster, from dally readings at Chatburn School. Total rainfall for the- year was i 40.52 inches against
49.88 j inches In 1951, when there were 218 days! of rain. The, iyear’s wettest day ,wa,s September 25th when a fall of 1.^3 Inches was recorded, but the, rainiest month was August with a fall of 6.25 in. Driest'month was-February, with lonly 1.39 in. of jrain.
Clitheroe’s annual 'summer
holiday coincided with the warrhest day of 1952, the year’s , highest temperature being 85 deg. F. on July 25th. •A temperature of lO jdeg. F. on January 26th, was the lowest bf the year. i
■Mr. 'Aldersley reports .that
the latter! half of 1952 was the dampest, with a rainfall of 22,94 i inches compared with 17.58 inches from January to June-
' EXTRA TRAIN
■jbEGINNING to -1 morrow. ^ nigl|t,.-E
. „ 5,.„,.-an extra train will
rlih heween Blackburn and (Clltheroe on S a t u r d a y
eyenlngi. . , j-. j I The train will leave Black
burn at' 6-52 p.m. and arrive at Clltheroe at 7-16 p.m.. returning 7-40 p.m.
to Blackburn
5,000 FLOCKED
TO- aiTHEROE PANTOMIME
■j^ORE than .5,000 people ■■^'^^ have seen -the Clltheroe pantomime “ Jack and the Beanstalk,” which had Its 13th i and final performance at The Hall, Lowergate, on Monday night to conclude a record success by the Catholic Pantomime Society.
The pantomime opened-on
December 20th, and played to a packed house at each per formance. So heavy was the demand for seats that an
I iextra performance had to be given on Monday night.’
This year’s production had
been seen by people from as far afield as Sheffield, and coach trips have been run from Sklpton, Burnley and Accrington.
,
BOUQUETS AND GIFTS At the close o f Saturday’s
performance, Fr. A. B! d’Andrla made -presentations to the ca'st of about 60 artistes. Bouquets were pre sented to ladles of the company and. -gifts were handed -to the children taking part. Mr. E. Cambien, who, with Mrs. J. Sherliker, was the producer of the show, responded on behalf of -the company. ;
Although! the pantomime
season in ]Clitheroe Is now elided, members of the society will only j have about a month’s respite before prep arations are begun for next year’s-presentation.
The biggest job this year is
to Convert ;the present plat form Into a revolving stage, which will give the' society the distinction of being the
first In the Clltheroe district to -possess:.a stage of -this nature.
'
Clitheiroe Man In Montej Carlo Rally
- A ' MEMBER of a Clitheroe '•’^•family; Cffief Inspector
I Richard Bibby. ’of -the Lanca- 1 shire County Police, who is
'the son of Mrs. Blbby and the late Mr. Sam Blbby, of Chat-
j burn-road, Clltheroe, will 'use ! his annual leave this! year to ' drive in ! the Monte Carlo Rally. He sails from this
[country oii,January 16th and will start i from Lisbon four days later.
Mr. Blbby and Mr. Robert
II worth, a •; Burnley manufac- ^ turer, who was joint winner
Dixon, son of a Carlisle garage owner, will be; co drivers to Mr. Edgar Wads-
|; in -the 2,()00 c.c. class of the Alpine Rally last year.
! They will drive one of three Vanguards sponsored by the
; Standard | Motor ' Company. ! Last year, they completed the Monte Carlo course ‘ in a Vanguard.
This will be a busy month
for . Chief, Inspector' Blbby. On Tuesday he left the County C.I.D. at Hutton to become ; second-in-command of the Lancaster Division of the Force.
’ i.B.E]' After 33 Years’ Army Service
FORMER Commanding Officer of the famous
Yorkshire regiment — T h e Grepn Howards— ■ Lt.-Col. Campbell 'W. D. Chads, of Slajdburn House, Slaidbum, has] been awarded the M.B.E.'
(Military). native of Hampshire, Col.
Chids retired in July of last ye£]r .after completing 33
years’ Army- service. I i Prance, and later In
Norway, Col. Chads
w.as cpnd-ln-command of tjae
Gf-;en Howards, and it was on-
return from Norway that was appointed command-
officer. While in Normandy: during
the last iwar, CpL Chads was mentioned in despatches, and latbr he commanded the Iniantry Training Corps at
Rifehmond. Recently, Col. Chads saw
the fe-formatlon ; of the second battalion of the Green Howards, which he first joined as a Subaltern in Ire
land. ' Col. Chads and Mrs. Chads,
whose family formerly lived Newton Hall, went to live Slaldburn last year after
p u r c h a s i n g the former Rbetory.
lire Greets The f
[unt At Downham ASSEMBLING at Downham
. ,
^ Hall for their first meet of 1953, members of the P mdle ! Forest and Craven Hunt received a New Year’s m y welcome frqm Sir Ralph Afesheton, the S q u i r e of Downham, w l| o - recently celebrated his 92nd birthday, apd from his soh, Mr. Ralph ssheton, M.P. for Blackburn .P^est, who was I u p .
Coronation Display
Collector Needs Coin To Bridg Four Centuries
(ANLY: one more co ^ now needed before M: Clarke, of 140, 'Woone Clltheroe, /completes ' collection of coins repri Ing every reign from beth I to Elizabeth II he hopes -to display ii Clltheroe P u b l i c L idurlng Coronation Week June
issued' by Oliver 'Cro -but Mr. Clarke has hopes of obtaining one next June.
One
illn is' [r. H. lane, h is
:dse'nt- iCllza- ■\lvhlch the
library next
The missing link is £ coin
iijiwell, high
liefore From the hundreds of coins:
' A white -world of liee and snow 1 greeted r these early Clitheroe arrivals la<>t week end. They are; twin lambs
borabn.Sunday an by Mr. J! N. Lund, |of Pages Fnrm,|Clitherpei
' Pictured here wi;h their
mother in a frosty setting on Monday, they i must have found; th6 business; of secur ing their first] fopthold a
precarious, one, but despite the cold there was sufficient zest in their antics to prompt
at lealst one hopeful “ Can Spring be far
TREE CRASIM, GHOST IS DUE!
ACCORDING to legend, a ghost
appear in the Chipping at any
blown down in'
gale. And, accerding; to local superstition, whoever he may bt , to appear as socn as! the tree died, was blpwn dowri_ or ■was felled,
NOliHING SEEN
But nothing has l?een seeii yeti reports Mrs. R; J. Brad ley: wife of the- iei Wolfen Hall Farm.!
Perhaps the ghost duly perturbed, hoped that It niay yet be possible; If the roots are not damaged, to pull the tree back Into position.
If the treb goes, hojvever, ong 'o f the [oldest parlsheis In! the country will have! lost one of oldest landmarks. For the*yew, situated In an orchard just a hundred yards from -the Hall, Is at least 400 years ok.. Mr. John Procter, whose family were tenants of the that- according
the tree was theiq In 1623 for the
■: first day' after !an attack of Influenza
One of the joint masters
vjas Major John Yorke. who Sir Ralph’s’ son'-lii-taw,
.id with him was Mr. J. R. llndley, of Glsburne. Park, [ho has been selected as
o[ne of the three riders to ‘present Britain at
t iree-day event In April. t!|ie
u r 0 p e a n international AnrH !
The' youngest guest was iree-year-old Michael John
Dixon Robinson, the latest of X generations of the Robln- 3n family, whom the squire as welcomed to Downham
Ball. , Stole Spruce Tree
1 IjiOR [ stealing a spruce tree valued at '£1 15s., the
iroperty of Lady Worsley- Taylof, from a plantation at Bashall' Eaves, George W Grundon (32), welder; of 1 White; Ash Estate,' Oswald- twlstle, was, fined £2 , anc jrdered to pay 12s. 6d. costs at lowland Magistrates’ Court ■
qn.Monday.'
' , |
Fewer Fire In Clithe
Is due vlilage
-A massive yew tr^e In the grounds of Wolf(-u Hall was
he 'has acquired during half a century’s collecting,' he has selected . a l l , but three shoijlng every reign bt the -two Elizabethan ai
coins
tween es. 'j
- The three he'had h'ot got were the Cromwellian coin and coins of ,-the rel^s of James I and James Ilj
Recently, however, Mr.
Clarke obtained _ the!, from a well-known London firm dealing In British and foreign coins.
lattet I.'. ,'L) -i:''.: y k : c The James I coin' .is A
silver shilling about the size of a-pfesent florin, hut much thinner, while the James II coin Is a half-crown.
ABOUT 40 COINS When C o m p l e t e d, Mr.
Clarke’s display, which he plans to exhibit In a home made case with each exhibit fully labelled, will comprise ■ about 40 coins.
For the information of any
person who might have some old coins, the Cromw:ellian period was from 1653-1658 and ! Mr. Clarke would naturally be pleased to hear from anyone who might have a coin bearing a date] within that period.
The r e l^ of Queen Eliza
beth I extended from; 1558[to her deaih In 1603, and to He able! to produce a cbllectlon Incorporating each! reign that time Is no me
The only , other difficulty
experienced by Clitheroe’s numlsmatologlst in compiling his collection was the absence of an Edward VIII coin, but in -this respect he was helped by another'Clltheroe man, Mr. N., M. Adamson, ,'of LIttlemoor-road, who pro vided him with a West iffrican penny of that reign.
Beacons To Be Lit On Coronation iNigbt
t>OY Scouts in Clitheroe and district are [to pro
vide a link in a nation-wide chain of beacons on ;Corona- tlon night, similar | to ftftfi Jubilee fires on May 6th, 1935, commemorating -the! Jubilee i 'of King George V. “
jroe
pLITHEROE, Fife Brigade received 41 calls for
assistance during 1952—a de crease of 13 on the; previous year. ■ The calls -were mostly to small outbreakjs, and the; largest fires dealt at Chalgley hi January, when; a storeroom at C.W.S. Dairies was destroyed and parked In a gar damaged, and at
two lorries age,i badly Paythome
In. July, when more than 900 pullets, battery hens, a motor wagon, about 10 tons of hay, a cuantity of wool and an electric ~g8ner-[ atbr were destroyed.
cages for Vfhen the Scout movement
last undertook this spec tacular task In 1935, 1,755 beacons "Were lit and the chain covered the country side from John O’ Groats to the Channel Isles and from the . coast of Yorkshire -to the westernmost points of
! Northern Ireland. The final decision as |to
where the Coronation beacons will be lit has not yet been made, but it is possible they will be held at points where the Jubilee fires blazed. I ; |
In the Clitheroe area [they
burned^ on Pendle jHlll, Kemple. End and Waddihgtbn Fell. ■'
FROST
M.DE CUTHEROE PROCEED WITH CA JTION
TZEEN frok I'ollowing a slight snowfi 11 on Mon-I
] It was stated that whil^
looking through the windovf, cf his home, Mr. James Hewj lit saw defendant climb over gate into a field.
His'suspicions aroused, Mii
Hewitt went to the field and ’ound Grundon with a sprucq ,ree In his hahd. Grundon
ihrew the tre'e away as soon as he saW Mr; Hewitt. Hb said he did not;
know.it was private property and offered to pay .for -the treb^ he' had ' pulled out- of the ground. ;
Watchman Hurt
W H EN Mr!. J. Hargreaves, of Barrow-, a night watch
man ' at Whalley Abbey Print Works, was maMng his roundg of the works’ yard early: on Saturday morning, he found a fellow watchman,' 'IM^. Robert Edward Hlorns (60), of 79, Brownlow-street, Cllth eroe,' lying on the ground
Ah ambulance was called
Accrington Victoria Hosplt with; a suspected dlslocatlcn of the! right -hip after having apparently slipped and fallen.
and Mr. Hlorns was taken to ,al
day Imorning turned roads !and footpaths in , (Jllitherde and district, into sheets of ice and
cau.sed people to walk with extreme; caujion.
.[
In spite of thp had conr dltion of the roads, however,.
no a c c i d ' e n t s In. the
immediate Clitheiroe district have been reported, although many motorists ’ at;, times found thelf vehicles travelling in different directions -to that intended,
th' r - ougj i
skidding on [the-icy surface.! The snowfall hlgan late on
Sunday night arid continued throughout Monday morning, covering the' grqund with a layer some two In depth. ■;
SHEETS OF ICE ! Constant ■ t
throughout the the day turped snow Into slush the night keen formed the s sheets of morning.
Ice The- jauntlnes
from the walk ol and the older p ticular, clutched that! would help on their feet warily on the g resembled on; ice
ampl 1 n g
][emalnder of much of, tile hut durliig frost trans-
irfaces • Into by Tuesday
was gone most people
itjople. In par-' at anything keep' them they, trod
as
•ound. which -rink. ■ : (
I nches or -so ' ' . i!- ' ■
S T A M P G G L L '
i ECTOF ILLUSTkATEE)'A ILBUMS: l/k iS /e
r e q | i r e :m :
( .1
ILLUSTRATED LOOSEi LEAF: ALBUMS: 15/-. 23/6, 26/6!
I ' .
ENTS 6/ 6, 8/6] 12/6 17/-. 17/6,
BLANK-PAGE! LOOSE, LEAF: !.6/-.' 18/-, 21/-. |27/2, 51/6.- !l! •
PACKETS OFlS'TAMPS: 100-for 1/-, 250 2/6, 5( 11,000 10/-,: '2,000 25/-,, 3,000 45/-, 5,000
JSOO.Brltlsh Colonials:7/-,1500 15/-, 1,000,45/-.
CATALOGUES:! iGlbbons’ iSlmi5:ifled (in stock) jGlbbonsVK.G.6‘ (ffi;kock) 4/-.
Magnifying and] Reading! Glasses, Wallets,; Outfits, Books, ([llgqrette Carp, .Gift Tokeps,
24/6,
0 5/-. 105/-,
Twiezers, 18/6;
58 DARWEN ] STREET Ev'en so, a number,; ;of
bumps and bruises -bear ivltness-to the bad’ condltio'ns, and it Is more by good;luck than p o d management jlthat more serious mishaps,did p t occur.'
.]; I . Corporation workmen ;we’re
out early spreading grit!; dnd other materials In an effort to ease the situation at some of the more dangerous spots In the town.
, :i A bitter ,wind did not'help
matters, but by- Wednesday morning it was obvious; that the thaw had set in. ;'The roqds had, to a large extent, cleared, and only where the f r o z e n snow’ had !;been trampled solid was therkany indication of the severity of
-the wedthbr of .the previous two days. •
!.'. ■; Much .the same conditions
prevailed - In , the outlying districts, a'nd in the Slaldburn find Tosside areas tKe iroads were reported to foe -unflt for traffic- .ea'rliif'. in the jweek. Here; 'tod,'' Thy'etfbrts' of'-thC roadmen -'sboh’ ‘made, travel .possible.
■ . !.
, By mld-mornlng.' o.n Wed nesday -a bright "'sun' had added the finishing touches to the clearlng-up and a few isolated patches of; Ice; wor,e all that remained to remind people of one of the colpst spells of the winter.
, „ l
■You must reach th't maximum whether ! you/ ate adyertlii
,
AUDITED NET SALES tho
PCL
i 8,000 edpiesi which nleans & Times is read by qt hast
week C OM P L E T E C O V E R i^G E of . CUtieroeF!an4 ,the C'litMro, I lit -----)-------J
Districts lis"assured. Insist on knowing what-you pay fori In .the important-matter of qlrculatibn by flJidli^ldutlhe’ Certifled Net Sales of the napersi lh which you advprtls^ and-he surq that your advertisement appears in the
ltiieroeF hd!.,the . (flltMrqe ; and ;Bo'fvland
C U t l ) t r o t t Sc
fl|ead office: ^ ^ ^
6,; MARKET PLACE, CLITHEROE ■■! ■! TEL. 407/ 3' (Two Llnesi.
# !
services or events. To do economical , lyay. It is essentia] exactly how|,mu(jh publicity !ls costing.
are the dnly; certain guarantee accounfonts I guarantee you
number of . ing tnerchai
ligand copies FIGURES tli;
of yoiir cdsts. weekly net s lat- the Adv. 25,000: people
■i Our
j£le of >eHiser
each
;hls in the i that you; find
people idise, most out
your
TO GET .BEST L from
RESULTS
HARlOLi) STROUD ' i BLACK 3URN
START ik NEW ■]
MAKP A RESOliUTION
TO BUY THIS GOOD BREAD
it'
VEGET—the favourite i bread of j thousands ‘of_ East^ Lancashire,: families id now available to; housewives! In '
111 * i J ^
C L I T H E R O AND DISljRI
Be sufe to ask your
VEGETj^—to-day. You you did!
[CT. E
'ocer for | be glad;
' I
48, WHALLEY Rd I ■
L I T H E R O DON’T DELAY-rOR YO]U MAYt BE TOO; LATE.
Clitheroe Advertiser & Times January 9, 1953: THE Q u fS T iM > IN G iA kG A iN S
Oddments . ; Iproin
Oddments
in BREWTT SHOE$ 85/-..
79 /f to
Salk Trice 35/- and 40/-. in NORVIC SHOES
[F^m 63/-1 to 69/9. ^Sale [ Price 35/- and 40/-.
' , |; .PHO^E BRING X ftyR I|4pAIRSj-F(|R BE'TTER .R^SUL'
^ATIONA
BEN WORSLEY L’p : ; NORTH j EflD BAKERY, DiiRWEN il :i;
.'/'I''
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