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\RmpLAR omfRiBlITORS OF DUNLOP, GOODYEAR^ FIRESTONE, \


E s h t o i i T e r r a c e , C l i t h e r o e Itelephone 252!


II. . ■! - . M J


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1 > J m For! Personal Use i i h’t ^' M


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A D V E R 6, MA


& TIMES OFFICE i^ T | PLACE, CLjrHEROE ' i l l I l i


f y}ur. .:.iii 'A ' I


I


l^OUOT^IN PENS an^ are always acceptable


presents I


PENCILS I ' '


have i ia splendid select Ion I of; Pens.


'enbils,iand Pen and Pencil fiets by all the leading makers:


IfARKBR COl'IWA^


Ihe ■A


- i SWAN -


i STEWART 'btc. j


at prices to | sk


WATERMAN WYVERN


suit all'jockets.


Neiw RETRACTABLE BALL-POINT BEljlS i by i Biro, Scroll ai d Platignum/


to seelthe Pr4i?K£/?;‘ 57 finest writing instrument.


”—the world’s '■ ii\ \ efi^ B


I'i! iiV I' l ?'i


1


R a z o r s : Rolls 47/4; Gillotte from 16'6i Rcm- ineton Electric 38/10/'


,


Pocket Kjiivcs; Rodsers from 4/3.


I


Scissors;. Komfibuti Rod> gersJ j ' 1


Flashlights; . Ever Roady from 3/8.


I For the Table


Rodge r s Table land Dessert Knives 6/G, forks 4/6, isnoons 4/6.


' and ihot water, jugs ■ 12/61


Crown Merton cooking utensils Kitchen scales


I Talal cannisters . Prestige knives. Presitige fish si I


I egg whisks: 26/6 1 pressure: cookeri 67/61 ■


■ i I


I Skyline kitchen I each.


. .. !


Teal Sets: Swan GarJtbn 50/6; chromium tea D( fre


For the Kitchen


Kitchen . itimcn front 17/6] 1


from 21 doc


L 4


Hot! Water ' Bottl es : Dunloo 6/S.


. 1 ' i


For Generiil Use- itwork


Hobbles frbt ifrom 12/6.


Exacto craf 3/6.: I All


Engineer's Tools. . .O arn e sets tools from ......... .n lor s and : 1 1


11 Thermos flaiks and jugs | Mfrom.5/-v r;,! . . . . |


Garage Pros: Lamps from 1 i:S/6. 1 I ,


I'i 1 1


For the Garden i. I •]


Wilkinson 1 runers from | 12/6,1'


|.


Wheelbarrows, 1 :m 0 ta I ! from [£3/18/6. M


. . Nevorbond stainless steel spades SS/*


. Neverbend spades 21/6


Coffee percolators - from 18/. I


I 8 from


IS Iji/p: Prestige


Pyrex and:Phoenix glass 1 ovemware. 1 1


tools |2 ■


' i' ' i


CamVad metal ironing boards £4/18/6. '


i


Gaihvad, wood . irontns boards fronf 24/8.


|


tilloy paraffin! radiators £4/4>. . ^ '


Aladdin, pAraffin £2/17/6.


li. lamps


I bowls from 13/9; buckets 127/6.' . '


Electric I irens Ifrom 45/- Be XI coloured plastic


Arthur W. Whitake I I


I - IRONMONGERS- 14„ CAS^B ST.J CLITIlteoE


Ewbank carpet sweepers from 1G6/3. T "


!


Stainless steoli trowels 1 and handfo ks, ipair 33/- 1


alu n. > Household Appliances '


1


INDIA AND MIGHELISS TYRES. • '.,1 i' i'


' MOIKRN MnNODS:


, „THE BASIS OF GOOD 'IWORK | I ,| AND QUICK SERVICi


Til n il,


at! no extrX cost we give better •4-MORE<


t i l l ' I li s MODERN TYRE I S15RVICE


OUR SERVICE STATibM IS ^QUIPPED TO DEAI^A]d) l0]^L PROPERLY-fWITH ANY POSSIBLE SOR|t of tyre ifOJl; THE MOST MC'DER]^ ' PLANT IS lEMPLOYED AND! THI :! OiPERATORS CHOSEN FOR THEIR SpEOALlISED KNOWLEDGE WE GUARANTEE A FIRST-CLASS ALL TIMES.


i I


' . ■|i . MAKE SURE! YOU GET THE BEST 1


HANDS - I '


|


!i 'i ' i i'i^ ! k!'i !l> 1


1. -I


ig I Qlitheroe Ai ‘veriisef ^ Times,\Decemher 11,


1953


W E S L E Y f F A Y R E I S I S H O W € ^ E


£ 86;


EMBERS Wesley Methojilsti Church


I of I CUtheroe held their annuali Chrlhtmaa


fayre In l. the |schoolroom on Saturday]; when j a total, of ;£279 waa raised [ for the Wesley Trust iFund^ an In-' crease ofi. £86i on ilast year’s event," ; ■ I- | |


- ..| , ■ The result tewarded con­


j church. Membbrs of the cqn- j gregatlon! acted! las' stall- i holders a ^ were/kept busy! In looping with • a ibi;isk trade I I stimulated, by [the' i varied


selection of goodslon view. |


i Trlbutei to the iwork, of the I people, concerned In prepdr- Ingifor the fayreiwas paid by


I! THUS, i ' JOB AT !


i Miss Gladys Parkinson, of IChatburn] when [she lopened theieventi .. M '


I


I Paying trlbuWlx). the i organ-: lisation, Miss I’arklnson skid ! they should think of. the wprk 1 that tjhe people of Wesley had I done 'in I preparing 1 for ihe L fayre, and remember tMt 1 months of work hlad gone into I Its iprep^ation. I j ■'


I


BY MAKING lY


fiV ll USE of usiuhrough OUR I LOCAL GARAGE. ■iWHAljuiY ■


I Mr. 5. Kenybn, I of 1 Whalley, I presided In pla :e of Mn Harry Thacker,.|W


be present owi ng [to Indisposi­ tion. The He'r,- F. A. 1 Payne, Superlntendeni, Minister, ebn-


ho Wfjs unable!to


|dbcted the openlpg devotljms land expressed thanks:to the 1 opener and chairman for I their services.


I ibers of I (general),! [ !


] The stalls we're.|:un by: mdm- I the I men’s;


The 1 ladles isectlon Sunday 1 1 School


i (general), I ladles (pakes, hand- Ikerchieves anq general stalls),' land the Girl Guides (Ices ar I minerals)j


nd


I had charge of ihe irefresh- Iments.





I shows were held for thp c I dren.


During the


I The fayre cbneiuded! in I evening with


jsented by “ I Wesley Choi: 1 School, MF; Sunday iSchlool 1 presided.


! ■ afternoon, 'film


hll- the


a Concert prer


Jembers iiof Ithe dnd iSunday Ijlewton Bell, Secretary,


i C h a t b u r n I P r o t e s t O v e r R i v i r r a t h s f K


I YILLA(3!eR£ • 1 .nl o I w


! the; bottofii of 1 which contlilues bank of 'ihe


i used as such for more than 60 years. The oiyner^ of the land,


[Smithies [Bridge, I footpath because


however, ktatp thkt the loot- .path Is a fisherman’s iiath, [ land the|! Chathurn j . Parish Council are now io protect to


i the.Clltheroe Rural Council on the! grounds that phe foothath is a public path by usage.


I This was ['agrped at the meeting of tlje Parish Council in the Village Hall pn Monday night, when |CounclUor E, A. Parkinson presided.'• 'I


PLAYING FIELD | 1 J 4 ^


I wording of plaques which are I to be Installed at ',he entijance jto the village, s playing jfidld at .Kenyon Cjroft.


! j


, . One of toe rolaqi .es will be In commemoktjon of the|Cpron-


lation, and other will 'Com- imemorate the late Miss Wlce Robinson, 1 who died from In­ juries recelvdd when her home was hit by a| bomb durlilg an air raid oif the village lnjl940.


■ A . 'sub-epmm: ttee | was appointed|. to decide , on the


jilso


siderable i preparation by the various j sections I of . fjhe


WaddingtoD


T' Tjwas a Iriendlylgesturje, on_ ' the''.part , of ' Waddi^tori^ Drama Players to stage tbeir current production at Clithf:


erod Parish Church schbpil bh behalf of church funds,land the local Old Peoplfi/s .Welfjaie Fund; still friendlier of tbern. to bribag ai play ; which radiates as much Christmas warmtlb as


: any! Yule log. ■>■:: ■ I


:'.j [,.....


intrusion Into family . fnls- understanding “The HbUy land ■


. Wynard Bro'wne’s deUgfitfuF It has


the merit of a seasonable set- tlngl and a plot which; 'gets ; ; close: to; the family ties |and the I spiritual message'which


lies |at the root of the C/htlst- mas! festival.


i- , ! |. FAMILY GATHERING,


Itialsij) has that formidable' challenge presented to |


any


.around him for a family Chrlstmlas at the Vicarage


society tackling a play which relies, |on characterlsaltion rather than action. The is|tory of |thel kindly ; Vicar who gathers |hls grown-up children


'Only, toj find. how Uttlel he really knows; about them] re­ quires the sure touch of shund acting and .alert production to c|iptijire Its many mojm,|ents of revedlng drama and quiet humour,


, ; }. | -


larly lii the last act which moiVingjy symbolises | the' Chrstraas spirit in the spec- tacl; ofj a re-united'family, a


. F^om the start, and particu­


.tale ited cast of eight plajyers pro\ ed pot only equal- to the task, -but confidently at 'ease /wlth'lt.l • ,


'! i The result was a play as


smootbl^ acted :as any I Clith­ eroe has seen on Its amajteur stagle. f(|r some time ;; well- rehqarsqd—there'was no ifiore than ope noticeable; prompt all t!he evening—and produced wltll a eyeful eye to detail. ■ ;


GRAND STDDY And It had the additional Cl)atturn


claim that a footpatlii at Chi.rch Mea|dow along the


River Ribble to 'is all public it has' been


merit not only of eight distinct and I well-drawn chaijacters, but iof one really oUtttupdlng one.| Raymond Hopwdod’s study o)[ the tolerant,-] klpdly Vicar, was a sheer delight, restrained and, yet filling the stage wl|th Its quiet .power/ Gentleness can be dull. In


Inexpert I hands, but herei the touch was always sure and the gentleness anything but dull. Ease of gesture and.movement and! clear diction whlphilost nothing by having to sustain a convincing: Irish, action were used skilfully to .forge ^ char-


acter s appeal. Marjorie


udy! of , irresistible I


Whlttem as the


Vicar’s elder daughter, torii' between conflicting loyalties to her father and the man she wishes to marry, gave an assured, | beautifully-• spoken ■portrayal, v]hll6 Betty, Entr, wistle as the younger'daugh­ ter, I whose misfortunes' pro-, vide] the I most drarhatlp moments, i


. ,


A


Fine “ I W i t h C f i t h e r o e j i P i o d b c t i o i i o l “The


,Was; at, iiiimedi.ate succesb /ln .'baptjnin'g,:;•toe : ■ jl.nt t r e,


troutlaa i qharacteilsticsrtf a dlflficult role.





iBriato'/jEntwikte made/ thb todsli df ■


ab'.eniertalni'h^^^ stfidy


.aS' toel'yicariAillkeable yqurig son land pvas.[equally at home to Iwth dramatic jahd comic; sltuatlbns.' Pliyllk CaJyejrley


.was, a,;-,toorougWy. Ptoa; ant! Aunt Lydia Md Ann Sykes as


Thej Ivy” was a happy choice hm i^ s i | for their visit on Friday , and ^spe llringiw ' m Saturday evenings.


cap!


world fam Malcolm’s; flrin elde:’


,the, kicpnd; Aunt , invited i'Cl^stoaS; kafi lrasiMnsiblffl, , _ somejof tMe'fuiinle^ttoeidenta ig:j^!.th.e;:/fprtlir ght. of, ' : ttie f rol& arid ogue


speakjtagjwlth an Irish brt yoii, could have cut with a i knife.


■Wplllamj Hartley’s: under­ standing] ■ portrayal I of , 'V/isei cx-silldler


— I daughter’s I perplexed


Ijl!, friend, and' Alexander actin'g as the


;sweett:eaft| ' completed ah accomplished, grou efl^t ive studies.......................


^^'Producrtloh by Mrs. G'eta' Wilklpbon] Reflected ; a ' leen appieclatlc n of the dramitlc highlights ' livel


ISEFECITIVE SETTING I' ■' i I


tempo' i ;w! excellence of use )f ^d,.,preserved, a


; stagb li'settlng] i arid; tlye '


gent'


:...j A^lstance scenes Berily


allowed either the pace'or totefestto flag* Het atten to detjkl was indicated by " ' 'a delightful ■ ■- the


In-


effemye way In whichich int :lli-. lerrriiirilncri


grouping I mpde fu [the stage.


andiRdiia l|rvi/ln, si the;


was given' by „ [behind.


Ruth age


mariaqers; jDorothjj'. Walmsley


lirompter;' pllce Lawson, pro- hertle^; Evelyn* Hopwood land


; members of the, class, make­ up; /Hildai Malcolm, music;.


; Geoffrley Broaden | and staff, lighting;. /Mary .Bargh and


.Joyce BoWers, [wardrobe; B. Sykes and, members of the dramei class,' decor.!


. All can be complimented for their help' |in kndlng Cllth- eroe ;a, play that Serves as a delightful Christmas card from its Yorkshire neighbours.


‘Winlndg’ Ljghts At li


lOLiXH^OE’S five “zebra” crossings are!; this week


: being equipped'with ‘winking’ lights,. which, lit; day and


toght,;Vlll give motorists and Other drivers'ample warning.


: Thej five crossings in" the


town a|/e:; Across York-street Sduth ipf its juhctlon with


i ’^Cll-tebrace; across York- i street ^oirth of Its Junction [ with wellpte; across Castle- ; street * touth- of Its Junction with King-street; across Whalley-rpad north of Its


: jjinctlon with Turner-street; and across .Well-terrace we^t of Its! junction with York- street.:!


,j


^SlippU My Mm^ l I


WERNAkD ROBINSON (22), labourer,' of; Lower ;Bray-


'Under thp terms lof her I will, Miss Robinso'n bequeathed the residue ofihilr estate, up to a imaximumlof £1]000, itc the Council for the purchase or [equipment! cm' land in! Chat-


burn to I be I used | and 1 main­ tained as


iground. |


Children's 'i


N e w l j O iu r c h |F o r O ld I C iit h e r o n ia n


and secbiid | son of Mrsi and the I late! Mr. W. I G. Parker, formerly! |


AN ol^l boy of Clitheroe [ Roj|al Grammar iSchool


. ! i I i ol| Chepter-avenue,


Clitheroe; I the Rqv.. Cecil W. Parker ]vas inducted by the Bishop of iChelmspbid as first minister! of ;he new church of St. Anne, Colchester, on Mon­ day. ^el'ylll become Vicar when the [new church 1$ con-, secratedj as ja Parish Chjirch.


Clitheroe Ifmlly, j Mr. Ifarker was foimerly prominejit In the Boy Scout movement In the: Clitheroe district, i After five yeais Atmy service In the last wair, ih'e trained f/jir the chqrch I at | colleges to 1 the South of .! England: anil was •ordalneji lti| 1948.1 ' I.


In-chargelbf the mew church district of |St. Anne at Col­ chester for Ithe na'si >wol years-


Mr. Parker has jbeen itrlest- play


shaw Farm, Tosslde, was fined £1 and ordered to pay £1 2s. costs, at Bowland Magistrates’ Court, on Monday, for failing to report ■ an accident within 24 hours. I A summons' of fall­ ing to stop after an accident was dismissed.


, Geoffrey Robert Seed, |of


Woodendf Cottages, Dunspp Bridge, said that he was driv­ ing la ;,’bjis along Sialdburn- road, Bolton-by-Bowland, in the direction of Slaldburn, and had come to a left-hand bend, when he noticed a vehicle coming In the opposite direc­ tion/ ' . I 'As: the [other vehicle pa^ed.


hlm,j It hit the off-side rear mudguarq of the ’bus. He stopped and walked back to the ibendl but there was no one there ' !P.(p. Ca|:man said that when


he [interviewed defendant, Roblnsonj said, " I would have stopped, but the ’bus kept go­ ing. I I intended to report it, but It slipped my mind.”


A meihber of al well-Sknown Christmas Extension


'pxjrENklONS of hours'from - i0[;p.m. .to 11 p.m..on


December 24th (Christmas Eve)] December 26th; (Boxing Day) and December 31st (New Yeail’siEve) were granted to 24 Bowland | licensees by Bplton- by-^owlolnd Magistrates,' at Grlndleton, on Monday.


.. [Mr. .D;If . Peacock,[Solicitor,


of Settle, made the: applica­ tions on/behalf of the licen-i ■sees. .


.'..‘.I .: !• ': ! The Christmas Prize Show


at Cll|theroe Auction Mart this . yew attracted more Interest than ever before,


j


Accident Report | L-SAYS DRIVER.'


! ; An plHclal of the Borough : Surveyor’s, department stated on Tuesday that it was ex­ pected ! that ' all the. lights would]be *lnstalled and work­ ing this -week. ; :, '


' Altho'igh these are the first


;'“zebras’ in Clitheroe to be ;'fitted ivlth ' “winking” lights, they ar; not the first In the district. .The first lights we're


. Installed jlocally In May on p crossing situated on the malfi, Whallejt-Blackburn road neat the eiitrqhce to Langho rail­ way station.


),


PEEPS INTO YEARS AGO j


its from our issue of !; edmber 14th, 1928


A MASS meeting of mem-


, bers ! and i supporters of Clitheroe! Labour Patty were addressed on Wednesday by Aid. W. I Dobble, prospective Labour! candidate for Cllth- croe. ai|id| lan ex-president of


the Natlpnal Union of Rall- waymen. I . . .


l Mr. Alfred Taylor presented


Police Sergeant John Chlney, who has been In .charge of Whalley Police Station for 20 years, with a solid gold watcll and a ichesterfleld. suite sub- scHbediby Whalley residents] Sgt. c lhiney has recently retired ifrom the Force,


At |the Archbishop of


Canterbury’s enthronement, last week] Mr. Hugh Wallis, second Ison of Canon and Mrs! Wallis, lof Whalley, was among those who took the canonical


oath of obedience. In hli capacity of King’s Scholar anc a member of the Cathedral body.


never Ifile lion the


.1 : . 'I''' f' ■ I • .


Game Licence


(^ffenc08: Rowland Fine8 tdt^ £120


gUMMONSES .brought under , >the Game Licences Act of


I860 cost six men a total of £120 in addition to other


fines, at Bipliiin-by-Bowlaifd h^istrates’iCpnrt aiiUrindle-


on. Monday. ' Jolto RL Wllkihson (31),


labourer, of no’-fixed abode,, and Richard Dixon (4fi), deal­ er, also of no fixed abode,. were fined: Ifis; .'each—a total of £1 each---dii,si«niabnses of


Jototl^ trCspasstokini pursuit of game, Game/jAdt, 1831; and. with jointly MUtog game .on a ' Sunday, i They w?erE'also fined £20; eaidi 'for killing, game withiiut a] game [licence.


’^ey also iiad'to pay £2 2s.


advocate’s-; fee each and 15s. costs each.,


Mr. Harry-Walker, a farmer,


of Newton, said that'he saw" Wilkinson and Dixon In one of his fields.;They were walk-'' Irig about 20 yards apart and had!two dogs with them, one of them a greyhound which put up a hare. ^ One of the m'en later picked 'up the hare. Witness telephonedilfor P.C.


Roberts, who discovered.!a rabbit and two hares In the cab of a loriw parked near to a caravan occupied by one of . the men.


.


defendants pleaded guilty. AT WADDINGTON


Two Hasltogden men,


George •,Johnson, cotton carrier, of Hlllslde-road, arid Thoirias Beardswrirth, breaker of Lilac-street, pleaded guilty to ; similar summonses Pri which they were,fined a simi­ lar, amount |to the previous defendants. ' Inspector J. Sherwin said


that tlie two men were found a t ; an • outbuHdln'g at Buck- stalls . ' Parm,:-.ncWaddlngton.' They had! a fioublef-barrelled gun, and also Initheir;posses-, sloniwere a freshly killed hare


' and- a' half-grown rabbit,! AT BASHAU. EAVES


Sion was a fretoly'killed, hare.


' gariiekeeiber: killing game on William R., Warn'e, .miner, of Ullswater-road,Worsthorne, wm7 each flried £20 for!


•kintog game without a game; licence and were"'also fined 10s. each on each of the'fol­ lowing .summonses: jointly trespassing in; I pursuit of game; trespassing. In pursuit: of: game and . not giving a correct, name Snd Address .to gaimekeeper;- Wiling game on a Sunday; and. In the case! of Wafne, dlscharglrig a. firearm within 50 feet of the centre of the Highway, arid RatcUffe * with aiding and abetting this; offence.


.They .also had .to pay 5a. * each costs and advo9ate’s fee of £2 2s. each.


.


sing, and trespassing in pur-; suit of. garite suminorises. Mr, T. U. Llddle',!: of Clitheroe. said that defendants were traced


/ Prosecuting on. the trespass­


'oy P.C. Hai|7ls ' after Mr. G. R,lcketts, a* gaippkeeper, had heard a shot fired' near Wit- ham’s Clough on the Whlte- well-Cllther!o;e ; ’ibad, near W h:l tew C'i.l, on, , Sunday, October'llth.


Winning Pigeons


Pigeons',which ;opened at toe Horticultural Hall, Westmin­


A MONO the winners at the : ! National I Show of Raclpg


ster, ,bn Friday, 'were Messrs. ■ B. W.iand A.j W. 'Gqoperi of 1, Church Bypw*, Clitheroe, They gained thirq r'lace in a


special' limit ] selling clasd for hen. pigeons, j ♦! | ,


T H E f A S i r 50 YEARS AGO


Extracts from ou^ issue of December nth, 1903


London ' and Chaplain to - King Edward VII, preached at Evensong on Sunday, at Cllth-' eroe Parish Church. Appeal­ ing for support to the Queen Victoria Clergy Fund, Arch­ deacon Sinclair said that many. of the: clergy • were so poor that the education of their children was neglected and some were even reduced to accepting second-hand clothing to keep, up. appear­ ances.


’’I1HE Venerable' Archdeacon Sinclair, / Archdeacon of


TABLETS OR POWDERS


1 w m \ . 1 , ; ■ I ' r


Easy-tO'takcOephot will give you i 11 have taken youri


powders for a cold In m/' head, 1 m


i i Another notable event in


the religious illfe ^ Clitheroe was the re-opening of Water­ loo Methodist Church after Its" recent, enlargement and re- decoratlon. i


' A Blackburp J.P, threatened


, public property or knock down a policeman I ibecause he felt sure our justices would oe ready and willing to -oblige him.


his fellow'justices this week that unless they,sent him to gaol for a term because he was a passlveireslster he would come to Clitheroe and damage


, ‘ . I "


Rdfl/ liftii'ie ". *. ! : ! / . !


BECAUSE SURER


: 'T' ' - lliO^U GET SWIFTER, SAFER


0 E L IE F WITH CEPHOS! CEPHOS LTD


A C K B HAl


i f ' I s


’ r '/ :


resul^jdf ybiir product j and now obtain regular I supplies from m Chemix'u.”


entirely satisfied with^the I / t 1 ' ' !


ust uy I am j t '


y .local I :


1


I Mn.S. W.C., Preston. * ■ ■ r ■ ’ '


double relleffromacold. It breaks up the attack, soothes, gets tem­ perature down,, and counters jtlie depressing after-effects that often


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heart or upsetting the digestion. 1 Cephos is on sale everywhere


In both tablet and powder form, 1 dose ,(2v tablets or 1 powder) 2|d., 8 doses i1/7d., 21 doses 3/9d.


m . ■ m it TAKE . In a letter to the Court, BY


da ys I ; during *; the past, fort- nljht for the great d]eba;e on ompetltlve t?levlsloii. H Lord'Hailsham, who we re--


riTHB House ,of Lords wa s the centrb' of; drama f011 two


m itober In the House^of 3om- m jns as' QulntlnHogg, oj lened" the debate byjioppdSng com-


p to o n \flth,:toe;'B]£.C. I He' cnose witty-phrasetf and 60m- parlsons Iri rep!eatlife(iliu ^ell- - kijown arguments, l^ery Con- Bbmtive: poyernmont h lid to,' the past refiisbd to allow com­ petition with' the,: Bt • be- • sapse broadcasting ] wjs a public service * like] the Post Offleje. He ! fearecl| that! thq standard' • of ‘ : prqgrarimesr e^clally those for ilMdren,', would ■ be lowered If they dmjended upon Inbome from advertlslrij. He thbught that the! ;b :b .O’s ; difficulties, about fli|dlng thb mbriey' for jmorov-' ingi Its ' televlslori : CcUllil .oe overcome by a small /Increase in the licence' fee arid re ;urn-


,lng [ the money' thb Go rerni nimt hadjtaken frorii it a*few yeiars ago.] !■' [; !■.


i


'I |;i LAST'.speech ■ I- He also ; made [ the last


speech In I the debate. Then hb spoke anally against hose Who, favoured' Competlt ioi i. Hfa wbrds, arid . even liricre- his toriE, offended! .Some w he had ' not madejup trielr mlndj;. So thloje who ;/opposed the Government’s '! proposils for comrietitlye television lost the vote by over!: two to l one, dqsplte the eriiinence of many


.spefakers /jwho I supported! the opposition, .' Including * the •Archbishop of Canterbriry.


'jThe- tiyo'ibutsta/ndllng


speeches In favour of ilcoiripe-;, tl|ipn were! Imade by Lord, Slmdnds, the Lord jChancellor. arid Loj]d ' SaltsDury, ; the Leader of the' Conservative Government in* the House of ‘


P e o p l e W e r e


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Installed at CUtlieroe’s P^la- dlum' Cinema! tlils week-^eM, where technicians will replace


cinema projection Is being j developmen't In


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!


new' equipment to . the new! “Cinemascope” three-dimensional


It Is; hoped to adapt the,


system of* projection


as films become ■'


■brought Into use


cinema for - the Monday night.


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LETTER FjlOajlj'WjB^tMlNSTER


Controversy FORT, M.P.


<|f the [Lor4' S The Lord Chancellor


spoke-very movingly when hp denied I that the! bad alwavs drives , put the ,good. He be­ lieved, that iour, people ought tO: . hd've ,' fteedorii ' to choose whatf,they„.pM,,on television undej'.ith'e. safeguards against downrlghtTIad !taste which . the Goyernment has put for-


■warai i ■ 1 '■ I Lord - Salisbury criticised


those, who did, not like com- petittvs telieyistori for trying lo work; up i]a hysterical opposi­ tion to! f t ' ; Thby seemed lo take jthe lUnb 'that those who favoured it should, not defend


themselvps as; bbst they can Those who did not, want to change!-the present.arrange­


ments showed th'elr dislike of new Ideas merely were inew!


because they The debate ; wals a splendid


first apt of the d^ama. I hope w6 shall contlmle It. worthily


when' pur turn for debate arrives.: ' ,


wo mi| le a d !


e.dimini it-dltch; I


the mu . ■


Cooper: imualty ‘ had saluj


::abig—andl •cup-tie.’zesj


,-2i2 I ■


was S'I draw 'I


eroe’s first[ ■ n': point ea


; .ence and -- " 'hy-f superio j


. Judged


-Clltheroe. point . aga pool side upper -ha]


[ True; tn| of asoen


1 before. ‘ Born'e" fine


, Palmer,' i


I speedy. Bll bain ass|


I "but they match'the


'’^peed ! oi wingers.


L ■ Basil; division ; Shaw Bri| only real,f


that' at covering ^ to over-v'J


referee first fiite


/a ssi-ic


a.nd it firm hani the visitf later,


•trieir . cl] ^almer, ow fron


. ressive -


I'iAgalnsi goal d-]sa| fierce;


. issedrved hen it i


-lyhicji! hi ;! There'/


-first seef within I


;Lei


L.ANCA3 I [ [■


goalmout) entertam| produced!


•in the 1|


was a c| Palmer ■evaded.


Despite|


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