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t ■ t' T


rhe state, [ring be^


2,


|ves that that in


Isess the Tho shall


ugh the fescertaiii h r their as the time to


] he Oppo-


bne feels It tie waw ppple in pd their I pay ;thej Ithe lini


freakness affair in pds of a jknown


|c battt pn by hd that ling anc


I on ,thi rat it


|lans ir theii


[iger, ol may, o:


Icj attack already


and the was not


•v of the Tof that pmethin'g or trie


rtaifi the


lateh: and Brit


1 )


Speed the development of I oil resources'in j'Canada uclear |power stations .in


future as ah industrial nation andj the speed at which they can be built is controlled by limited steel; Supplies for' which many industries are {competing. Nothing must be allowed to impede the fiowe of steel' for {tankers.. ■


we nbw know it will be months before la passage! through the Sues Canal; is cleared for ships over 10,000 tons.


{ ' i


operating between' Kuwait .and Britain can do,nine trips a year via Suez biitl only,,five via the Cape. I ' ; ■


of ^0,000 tons' or more is'obvious froip the ' fact | that,, tankers


Th;ee importance of bigUankers


oil. reserves in the. non- Copmuniit world situated in the Mid He l[ast; our j.standMd of livir g depends upon(the sjieediest possible nestoratioiij of the oil supplies interrupted, by{ Canil’s closure.


■With t[vo-triirds of the known the


fore aste ol 'the higher cost and ratipnnig Of 1 oil, which on the basiA of a full year . s expected to


Sc far we; have — __ „ only had a


involve the.following ^ditional chprges: j ■ {


Indistry; £2i,200,000.


Agriculture:! £7,450,1)00. • P. ■ M 'I


Goo^ Vehicle Operators:, ' '•;44,900,000. i |


,


|roe? it I first


: to get


hat ^the b3


laganda we ’ in opporj-


us sUlj


|me. j| bildreh


iTipY.


I.E. I onished


ished^a Stanieh same'


j i i I'that Icle b[r |rs, an^


Iditorial pyrlack 1 of the


Dlariop easd^


I cours-i Ut ,that^ marked


prei; wi re'is |a


I circl pi with preseht


ilriinks, I diiriijg


items,


Jfisiting jhe; fell Imay 11 qdlrg


litii tl e I firmly I Jufet


le [Ibcpl |est.


YAIXP. hi).


I winter singly


be mr ity to


ffair IS w


Ipockets' nem oh.


Im Ithe Jing in'


on th^j


throw: sweet


factories, is not to spread to other industries we need an all-out effort to spMd the tankers and the atomic piles. .


Bu; If


unemployment in car


; DOUGLAS GANTER., EGYl^S pllGHT


feel I ought [to have pointed out to Mr.! Richard Fort,' M.P. .for Cli^eroe, trip case'of Egypt; as as Kenj^a and .Cyprus. ,


Sir,—In m^ letter] last week, I repo'tts of c^ualties.


felt a little diffident, how- because of utterly varying


i I am hovi. however; assured from different Md reliable quarters thatj tfie sorrow, priva­ tion land suffering caused by the Friraco-Britisi iilvasion .affiumes distijictly fofinidablj; proportions.


and: immediate attention to this matter as her fesponsibilltyj;


owm particular ? I


any I kind that prior] place ;tp Hi or Cyprus, jj’


i I lurge withOut


In the spirit! in wh —that of goodwill '


■vji ■ luljgary, {Kenya


prejudice of {should hold


{ I norlOpe Mr. {.Fort will take this{ (th it js givail


oodlands, •Vfpddington. i“•L'DDISION."


^55 So(^iety.|


a sigh, to beriolc^n Friday, when, many of l Uiem m^tended the, Tranip Dance ” afiragck by the, j p '^


PARtsinONERS/}%' (kltheroe pdrish Churon {were certainly


order of the iday,] and j laughter was ini the air as prizes;were awfirded to the " best" tramps— Alan Clarke, 'John!fiarber, Betty Rigby and I Audrey {Smith. i


Rags ' arid itatter^ 'were the everywhere BRACHN ES PICKFORDS. (REHOVnU) A .A


PACKED fo'hwjiROEO


Local Ofllce


STANDiSH ; i T(


EMPIRE RANDAL 8 Tel. 447^42. NELSON.


t„ BLACKBURN. 8,' HiriSON RD„ Tel. j 850l 62, ST„ dURNLEY. . 3039. I


DEPOSITORIES, 'V.


Farm revels{ at annual ball ji


A BOUT 650 people afiterided the ! 45th annual ball ] of


the Clitheroe and Bowled branch of the National far­ mers’ Union which was held in the King Lane HaU. Clltheroe,


on Friday. As In previous yp.arslj eve, , { ,{' ;


one joined In the chorus When Mr. J. Balshaw,! a well-known auctioneer at Clitheroe'Auc­


tion Mart, sang r The Fiannk’s Boy.’!


: ! : { !


1 iMri E. w. Gill; the chalrnbn, was chief M.C.[ and he was


i assisted by members of the comirilttee. Music for danc _ was provided by the Airibassa- dors Players, of Morecambe, music during the Int'erval be­ ing played by Mr. J. Esmond-


son, of Fenlscowlss; i THE TAIN PENS and splendid Irid


plways acceptable presents selectuiiori


Pen arid Pencil Sets by leading makers:


SWAN -


STEWART ETC.


prices to suit all' ^ fA R I ^E R


pencils 'Sei


S Pens, alii the'


WATERMAN WYVERN


cketS.


R^'■TRACTABLE BALL-Po n r r Biro,Scroll /and Platignura,


inist writing insiriument { “ ’’—'the world’s


iHtl 3 7 ’ I


A week’s family rinsed and wrung


ijig Ttn O'clock and the wash


II doM


{ Wy(\SHES BY POWER — , SAFELY I WRINGS BY POWER - SAFELY EMPTIES BY POWER SAFELY


£68-130 cludldf tax. H.P. Termi {tnerally ayillible


PARNALL iWASHEa ' / t ^ i


! AVAILABLE FROM:


& TIMES OFFICE PLACE, clitheIroe


Phone ■945


DENNIS GELDARD YOUR I TV SPECIALISTS


39-44 ,WHALLEY ROAD Phone CLITHEROE


945


Wash tt the sink! Wring'and ! Rinse at the si


Eiiipty:lnto sink I


very ■ urgently needed. May I stress that the world looks to the British Government to give prior


Assistance ' of every kind is


>, CoacWs, .Taxis: 13,600,0b0.


rivite Motorists: £22,600,000. I I


TSnkersi are essential to our


PR IN On tliyr \y^ay


Manchester, on Monday.


The dead prl W. Geaney, of


Higham, the! ridge, and tl Cortway, of '


illed, three irp CRASH


0 Requiem Mass


>AR1SH priest of St . Mary’s, Chipping, the Rev. Joseph Highamj was among tlie .victims of a crash in Salford j


One priest' -was killed and .three others'were Injured


when Father! Hlgham’s car deck bus, crashed Into a garden wall ani


st was tne Rev.‘ St. Mary's, 0 ^


baldeston, neai' Blackburn;


The three injured{ were F]r. Rev. Norbeft


Walsh, of St. I Vllfred’s,{ Long- Rey. Robert


Paul’s, Ribchester. {


Peter and {i


their way to Pusholme, MaijL Chester, to alit ;nd a Requlep Mass for ri^onslgnor ;J. p. Cooke, former Vicar General of the Salford dlcjcese. I j;.


The four priests : were o{n


PETROL RATIONING I Because of! petrol rafloning


they were travelling in Father Hlgham’s car. He liad| called for his colleaig ies on the way to Manchester. ■ | i ji Fathers Hlgriam and Walsh,


{was In colllsl(;lh with a double- overturned.


Farmer can


remain ort his 40-acre farm


•A BOLTON-BY-BOWLAND farmer, Mr. James Knowles,


can stay on the 40-acre Middle Flass Farm which he has ten- ante'd for the past 26 years.


This decision was.given by


the Yorkshire Agricultural Land Tribunal at Skipton on Friday when an appeal by the owner, Mr. Thomas Clarke Stables, of Amfofd Farm, Long Preston, against refusal of consent for a notice to quit was turned down.


seriously injur 3d, were takfn to Hope Hospital, Salford, pt. Conway was also ■ tak'en to hospital but was less seriously hurt.


DRIVER’S STOR^i


junction of lEc cles Old (Road, arid Langwortt y Road, Salfo{rd The driver of the Salfoird Corporation pus said' th{at


The crash occurred at the


after the vehicles .hit a standard, the car crashing Into


smrishing It overturned a low


wall. None of the


trie priests. {Pieces of


or the crew o hurt. {Police and fliremen


f»lllslpn concrete


garden


both lamp then after


12 passL the 1buri


re.


ngers were;


p eased


standard tyere front garden o; Mrs; Maifgaret Veitch In Eccle 01d{Ro^d. {She said: “tJsually J{


scattered {damp flung Into tlie


my baby in his pram b the front garden but, fortunately, he was not there this |iiiom- irig because he has measles.” ! Mrs. Frances Naylor salrther


house In .Bangworthy i Rorid §hook when tpe crash hajp- riened. ‘T ran out with blarikrits


arid' water and whlskji,” she said. "Three ot the!men were out of the car-rtwo lay on the floor and one old gentleban was sitting on what bit Of wall was, left—and lifting out the


The, farm was bought by Mr.


Stables last year, Consent was refused by the West Riding Agricultural Executive, acting for the Ministry of Agriculture. Mr.fJ., Bymell, solicitor, of


Clitheroe, said that Mr. Stables claimed that with modern methods, he could farm Middle Flass more efficiently than'the tenant, who was employed as a roadman by Rowland R.D.C. and was only a part-time far­ mer.


Mr. Stables proposed to Im­


prove the farm and buildings up to TT standard and later to amalganlate It with Lower Flass Farm, which he' also owned.


Lee, told the tribunal that during his tenancy Middle


For Mr. Knowles, Mr. R. P.


Flass had been Improved and The County Agricultural Com­ mittee considered It wasi|belng farmed up to the standard of the district.'


The chairman, Mr! E. Daly


Lewis, stated that the tribunal thought Middle Flass was not'


,ln good'Condition, and It'wis extremely doubtful' whether Mr. Knowles would be able to continue to farm It at his pre­ sent standard! because a son who had helped him was no longer available.


But the tribunal had even


flreinen were fourth marl.’’


greater doubts about the pro-; posals of Mr. Stables, particu­ larly over the labour needed, though Mr. Stables himself


was a very efilclent .farmer with considerable resources.


Golf club whist


TjiLEVEN tables were occupied at a whist drive organised


by the Ladles of Clitheroe Golf Club in the clubhouse on Saturday. The ladles’ captain, Miss M. T. Fort, presented the


prizes to: Ladles: 1, Mrs. Seed; 2, Mrs.


Hammond: cons., Mrs. Booth- man and Mrs. Peatfleld. Gent’s: 1, Mr. Mercer; 2, Mr. F. Walker; cons., Mrs. Booth.


£10 from jumble A JUMBLE sale on Saturday


■'^raised nearly £10 for' funds of the Clitheroe Conser.-'i vative Assoqlatlon.


washer A QUIE MOMENT DURING REHEARS.


“We watelied I for fa ^ lia r faces .1 . . w


jgV^RY TV set in Clitheroe.


^ must have ’been switched bn jto! the B.b!c.; wavelength on ^Uturday everiing as the secon'ds ticked away to 8-30.


i_ !


‘1} was watching! the pro­ gramme sitting by lay own fireside with; a number of friends,” writes an ‘Adver- Yis.er and Times” reporter. ■


There was an! airi of excite­ ment as we skw the I'amillar picture that begins the “Saturday Night ,Oi t”: pro- grariame and’


' j


familiar words, “ Outside Broadcasts. ' We’re starting ihpw!”


as we hbard the


:agerly we watched for the first {glimpse of' clltheroe.


Would, we {see anyone we knew{? It turned ojit to be a view of Castle Street. But {where was the, Casfle?


The B.B.C.’s ‘{Saturday


goes into rehearri at the Swaji^ This “on camera” fehot shows [(in proprietor, Mr. Edward Trueman


Through he magjic of televisipn A WITCH flew over Clithetoe cia,stle bn


BACK


United Kingdom] arid in Holland, Belgiuni, Italy and:France. No, Old Mother Demdike {had not suddenly conie W life


Cl,nShe was seen by millions — , „— ,


again. Nor had she! stepped from £. space ship. | Hep appear­ ance was all due to the 20thi-oentiiry witchcrajft of televi­


The witch’s flight signalled} the start of the B.B.O. “^aturj day Night "Out 1


{magicians.' '! | - | - . j The show .m,We .history.;


Not only was it the]first tele-j vision broadcast ifrqm ClitheJ roe. It was also understood to be the first “ mixed ’’ outside television broadcast I from tht? country.-,- ■; ; ' {•[.. ■ | • " ' '


The show moved from Cljth:


erbe , to ! Hollp^ wd:' hackl again at about flye minute in-'! tervals—and also! took In'Brus- sels, where an| {Internationa panel of judges was! watching,


,In ' previous { Wovisior. broadcasts, part}, of j the pro--


gramme has come from each of the countries tajklng part, without the quldfc change-over from-one to the {other.


The Swan arid Rpyal Hotbl


was the setting for the Clithe­ roe part of the!programme. |


show was televised.} ; ' ■ ■ ' ■ ;! I


WITCH APPEARS i i


“ Outside Broadcasts. We’re starting now!” ! were heard. Then millions of British and Continental viewers saw Old Mother Demdike flying over the Castle Keep;


It was I exactly j8-30 ip.m. when the well-known words,


; These! are


That was how It appeared to the viewers. ;| To the hotel


audience It was {rather differ­ ent. They saw B.B.C. men angling their hameras and magicians, getting ready to go


oin. ',■ ' :{ All this In an hoteL festooned


with miles of imbber-covered cables and scores of klleg lamps giving a hot white light brighter than day. ,





men worked calmly and effici­ ently and [With '{a team spirit that gave the clue to the way the programme I was put over smoothly and without' a hitch.


But amid’ It ill the B.B.C. Mr. Herik Vermeyden — a


member of thei Dutch Magic Circle and wartime Resistance Movement fighter—was Intro­ ducing the Clltheroe part of the show from the-ho'tel bar.;


Later, the dining - room A \


• The Parnall Washer gc'u clothes — Including those i “extra-grubby" places — REALLY clean;!


cv j '


ca,mera sisung ; towards the window, .and a group of ’Cllth­ eroe schoolboys were “caught” peeping In. , {


A great ! THRILL “ It was; great} thrill to think


we were }dn; television,” i 14- year-old Roy Scott, of 18 Rail­


way’View, told an '‘Adver{tiser and Times” ; Reporter, iWho watched the snow from' the dining-room. |


</f Queen Street,; Low Moor; Keith Dawes, of The Crescent, Clltheroe;,, Michael 0'’Hagan,


Roy was with Chris Eatough,


of The Crescent!] Keith Taylor, of Ho.dder Grriva; ' and Roy Chatburn, of P^irk Avenue. }


from the hotel lounge. Viewers weie then'’ triken ' back to Amsterdam, but {In the hotel It was aU organised bustle. {:


The next- act] was televised ' In about, 60 [seconds-'flat: a


camera was dismantled' arid manhandled,. d.own the steps into the (Jlnlng!jfoom, where It was hurriedly set .up again.


. Shots Of the dlnlngiroom were seen} b^! viewers, who caught a iliinpse of diners at onetablej-'


j.,' ; . These ' were! i Mr. Edward.


Trueman, the iproprietdr, {and Mrs. Trueman.rMr. Trueman’s father, Mr. G. A! Tr'aeinan, Mr.


Iterris from our I January 11th


yjURING 1906 the ■ glcril'Departmen„ «—„


......... .. 2,029 hours. ' '


Stireet, Clitheroe, satisfied the ; requirefnents of the I General Medlpal Council for beglstra-


tioh-'hs medical |rind dental studerits.


I ' ;|


Sbclety’s testlmorilril to Rotherham at Sabderi llcischobl in recbgnltjioi btavery' in saving: Ipui' pknlop from drowning,


Father Miss bf C: resented the Royal jH


lltheroe, iinane! Ibseph Jatho- bf his {com-


' p rbmoted sergean}t| The Mayor; CounclllcjrlJohn


T.! Whipp' was { elected an aldermriri in successlol^l to the'


'late Alderman Jbseph}Nor- ebbss.


{Cobden' Mills !{at Isab'den vbebe wholly lighted by electrl-


; city.; ' A; partial "'supply; had beeil ln[us3 for some, tlbne. .


; Mr. T. H. Howell Ipor'rest and ivfr. .Edward Forrest, of Church ;


50 YEARS AGO issue of


.. MeWorolo- ^glcril Departmerit at Stony-


hurst College registered 1,392 hours of bright surishine. Tor­ quay headed'the ebun’try with


{ Mr. I and Mrs. A. Longwprth, I


cided to add another, constable to the strength bf 'Clltjhferoe,


The Watch Commlttele de­


Police Force. P.C Leith was - - - - - -


of Clerk Hill, Whalley, riave a danefe In the Whallek Assem­ bly . Rooms to cejebratp the coming of age of their daughr ter,’Mlss Margaret LbrigWbrth.


blitheroe Nursing: Assodiatldn Was £215 17s. Id. [ At the.eAd 'of the year there! was a bal­ ance In the bank of £102 14s,


In 1906 the Income , bf the 7d. •']'


TJECAUSE Of the trade de- presslph decreasing . sub­


Items from our:issrie| of ‘ January 15th, 193?


25 YEARSj!---


scriptions had rnaje it impo^ slble tp continue the Clither'oe


Nursing Assoclatipn as It was then constituted • A publl : nieetlng decided to ask houseL holders to ! contribute; .orie, penny a week in; return ipc free 'nursing for {rill; raeinbe {ofthe.household.il;


( i'


Clltl Mrs! ton Terrace. Shb was 97 afid


; The death , took blace. Jlltheroe’a old


Hannah Tribkley, pf,! had lived during {fb’ar relg: {reside: i


great form; with , cue. Pjaylng at ’Vhalley Con­ servative Clluh he! made suc- cesrive] breriks of In one{ game anc ^. had sutcesslve runs of 167 and


Mr. Ijames Peters was In ^he billiards


143 and 117 lln the next


.210. :l ■ :'' {, In the break i of: 117 Mr.


Peters !scored llljoff the red hall. The 210 secured for him a com'petition. prize for the highest break byjd member of fhe drib. ! ' '1 ■


! Mr.: { John Ford was re elected president! of the P.SA. kr. C.{ Faulkner I was re-elec­ ted secretwy anfl treasufer. {. .


Mr. Hlorns


I Mr. {Percy HolUnrake, .the well-known Bar,row cricketer,


was appointed steward of the District Club; Cl|t|ieroe. .


rted to be j. approaching residents offering 24s. and 25s. {for sovereigns.' G}ue man ob-


repoI MysteflPus strangers were 'i ■ '■' . ‘ ■, '! I' ' '


talnerilSOS. for two coins.; I . I


i .Cllthefofe Child Welfare


■ ■ ' . ' :


Centre celebrated ItS' 15th jahnlvefsary when .the'mothers and children werej entertained


p tea! in; the Ifatlsh Church s'chobl! ■ !


- '4-45 ^7-30 p.m.Y,J 1


MONS, ti FhlS. To TeB. 15 r


'SiiurdaiiJ Iri jAN.; I 3 SHOW9 '


IO hO a.ia.2-30&7'0 pjh. . Mitfm f Saturdays FEB. 2. 9,'16


l /aSQnV >| 2-30:'4; 7-O p.m, . .pLTS; ,10/-7/6 5;- 3/.|


*Aif Seats Aeservea&'oobiable ^(/f Vye(£oit7.JJ/)4


(.flOREN: 7/-,3/64;-,2/[. UtdeH4)' \ SAVE LINO / •


Have your Covered with ROB


0,ld Flagged. FInora; Coloured.AiDhalt by


INSON, HEY8 '& COMTO.. BLACKBUPII.


0 Old Plrmi . Tel. 5342.


viewers { saw Niglt Ojttt” from (jllthei


j shots Lurday


l!dw ird j Fondest, i Cll heroe dentast; I Inspl. W. |Wrife it] of


the Lancashire Constat u! ary, and Mrs. Wrkht, and Mi Ver- meyqenJ


Included the Maybre^, C Crlt ihley; and Mrs


. hotel audlepce.i Iwblch Mayor


unclllpr Jf W Crhcliley,


had a grandstand Vlevi ofj the final item, | whlcp lya^s the hlgtlight'of ithe. Clltheroe end of t ie show.}


[They i saW Robert Harbin


put] his! girl' assistant ;i)to a cabinet ibefore cutting off} her hriad. Atleastthails whatlt lop&d like. :


iti was the first tlirie.he{had,


dbnb the trick In public and It hrilped : Great Britain to; ai


invited audience in( the hotel dining-room, from Where the irialn part of {{thel'Clitheroe


Somec35 people were in an,


Clltheroe and Aihaferdam.'Saturday’s edition was a “ jJattlri of Magic” between}a team of Britip an^ a team of Dutch


’ programme, which ;,was. televised front fOan millinnc Qf; peOplP CR


Saturda3( evening, throughouii the


(extreme right) l ading as “ stand-iris” for the . arid ience,


foregrpund) the and Inspector VV.


arid Royal Hotel,-Glltheroe. hotel


mine tVright


one-point win The score was 6


over t Holla: M l i !


,nd.


1 Th en Henk Veifmeydfen! wineglass raised, was .saying: “Goodnight, frp The powerful


„„„ ______ lights ! w f e


switched off.deiivlngjthe din­ ing-room In iri 'horinal ;wato glow. The crews be'gari oi^-'


mantling the ecuipment. An­ other “Saturdajy, Night'Out” was {ended.


equipment was stowed away In thef B.B.C.- iiantechnlcons, Another van was ijarked In the yard of the StarkieiArms Hotel across the street.;


^4 the ho ,el. |:ourtyard Tne end of the 'Show also


meant the end of days and hours of w6rk by riieri whose shsjre of a half-hqur!sho'w |Was barely 10 minutes. |,The rest of the time was taken up by


Amsterdam and Brussels. , - ’,| i . .


BACK TO NORMAL It'rilso irieant retup do nor-n


{mril for tlie hotel staff. In' the! ! afternoon! they stood In for the ,.audience at the rehearsal, [


commented the chief engln-; eef, Mr. Vic Hajvheswpod. I ; .{


i ^ 0:well-satlsfledi! was Ithe ,mah who presented! the show from CUtheroe, Mr.} Ray Lake-: land! After the {show! he, hurried oft for a brjef visit to{ h^ native Preston before'going; bn to his home in Manchester.'


nal; intention ,: to pclude.a! .stage coach In the prograrpme,{ but this plan^ had ito -be;


i t was Mr. Lakelsdid’s brlgl-,


dropped because of! the high colst of lighting the! street fori thfe pccasion. '


r i |.


would{ have completed { the, sdheme^to pres'ent{ ithe {pro-; gfamine from a typical ,En^-.


[The Inclusion o f , a' coach]


lish coaching fnri! | ; | I ' ENTIRELY MODERNISED The dinlng-rooiii of the


Swan and Royal iHofel! was originally a coach-pom where p e coaches ■were kept; over­ night. Passenger^ {slept In


,tie old Swan Irin.j j 'When It,


rboms above; ■ Y There js little remaining of


became the fewan and Royal Is rbt really known.'j {Thebe is, lowever, a posslbljlty that a member of the Royal -Farally


stayed there while passing t hrough. Clltheroe. { , , [. , The building has; been [cbm-


pletely modernised {andj only the old oak beams] and a few i,nclent invoices a re : among


Ijhe remaining links with’ the last.,


' l,


itables, one undergroundi with’ 'tails for 16 horses'. - But little seen of them.' {: { j .


Across the courtyard are, Mr. Edward Trueman has


jesn the underground stable ho more than twice iln jhe last


I ko years. The rooriis are now rised for storage. !,. { |


ini Clitherqe.” IN A FLASH!


TIHE annoi^ncer. explained that the'. magicians were


about to produce lt.i In a flash we saw the floodlit out­ line { of . tlie : ceritiirles-old keep, but In anqthelr flash It was gone. I ’ : I


-


‘Here it Is again,” said the to- nouncer. And .'we gazed in astonishment as Old Mother Demdike ! herself soared diagonally across the screen.


The .iriaglclans weren’t half doing their! stuff!


The cameras switched to the bar!of theiSwan rind Royal


{where, the'j “Man with the I mike,” Heiik Vefmeyden, in­ i'troduced maglclaii Michael {Bailey, whose dlsrippeaqlng {golf balls were mbst eriter- I talning.


So intrigued were: V I haidly had >tlrae


{the bar was Mf, !a ' well - kribWh- {buslriessinan.'


[cariiera caught I e; group'of I schoolboys, their noses flat,-' {tehed against the window, as j they, tried to steal ri glimiJse p f’the show. , f { , ,


ori the screen! when " the Clltheroe faces


0ne by orie the magicians In Clltheroe and I Amsterdam


WOONE LANE C U t H E I ^ -T E L E P H O N E


: ■


{went: through their paces i Intriguliigi and I baffling us {With'theh; trickery, i


i j 'wasj a pretty chse ,contest I all the way. Everything de- j pended bn thb lart'rict from,


i the dlnlrig-rpbm i f the Swan I and Royal. '! ,(! .■.


, :


As the camera foius'sed; on Mr. ! Vermeyden again, we . saw him i sitting betweeh' Mrs! Shirley Trueman and Mr. Edward ForresLiThen he In­ troduced Robert Harbin.


Mr..H£]rbhi!Showei viewers a


I cabinet In which] he said, he {would cut off the head of j his girl asslstanij.' I}


do sharp]! . i| ■ ■


ripo demonstrate [that he was using a sharp guillotine he


asked Mr. Edward Trueman to hand him a wtato, which he immediately sliced In two.


Yes, the m'ades were sharp all right, and there was no doubt , that- the girl’s heai} moved across the top of the


cabinet .'while 'ller body rs- malned stationary.


'! This wizardry Impressed the, a bne-polnt


I judges jirtt enoifgh for them 1 to give Britain I victory,


The{ flhal shot fr'b: i showed Henk ’ and the: maglbj ii round a{table


I their glasses Jn Itoast.


im; Clithero.’ , Vermeydea ans sitting


{and raising' a farewell


LAST! HAVE A


WriEN DID your! IIRTITOAY?


TO: ENABLE US TO SPEEp THE SERVICE WE HAVE RECENTLY COMPLELED THE RE-SITING OF OUR


HIGH - PRESSURE LUBRjt BATTERY AND AUTOMATIC UiCT


IF YOU HAVE A PROBLEM WHY


STERN § '


W E L UBR jCATlON.


WE ABE STOCKISTS OF IME FOLLOWING LUBRICANTS:


pL - CASTROI — 7ILTRATE [ — I ENERGOL


LGATE CUTHEROE TELEPHONE:! 224


.The I Perfect Milk Subiltitute i No. :Bullihg Water. reaulred I


I For particulars asX:


W. Bambef, : T ‘


I . I ! Blacsbhm.. Tel. 48418. i


jv e r 's " L o b o r Califs i^eM j ' I ' ', ' .,


32, Hairisgreave Drive; > .''i


NOT CONSULT US? MOBILODJ


I CA NADA nee


FARMERS & FARM ' ASSURED EMPLOYMENT


i AND IaCX30MM0DATI0N| OjN’ ARRIVAL


For/jPersonal Interview In your, area \yktei AGRICULTURAL koVlSER


GOVERNMENT OF CAN/jOA IMI^lGRATlbN SERVICE ,(DEPT. AA78), 34. M0I)RFIbLi)8,1 LIVERPOOL! 2.


■ ■ I- I': l |


Quotations on Request Without Obugation ■ 'V ■ ' "I , I ,,


....... i : 7''


e that we to ncttlCe


1 that the man standing ;at Jack Hall, Clltherbe


‘‘Everything went amootlfly,”; SCHOOLBOY FACl


TTOR a feiv seconds, more S PHfVioTvm fanoo


S06I1 PPjP.


PLASTIC PRODUCT MANUFA^URERS SPECIALISTS IN COVERING PLATFORM BODl


ROOFS


ETC. ETC. FIBRE GLASS


;tc.


RE-IbBFORdE®^^ IUDWINGS STANDARD AND HiAVY


DUTY


Panels . Vents . ‘V ETC. ETC.


Clitheroe Advertiser\& Jme's, January 18, 19x ; !' V''-' ! ' . i irn


CARRY THE LARGEST TYRES IN THE KIBBLE COMMERaAL, [ DUMP] car! AnI^ WHEELBAWIOW (jlOVERS AND TUBES


VALLEY FOR R-lTRACrOR


stIocks of WE HAVE Al^O ACQtWD [FU|RTHER s’


PREMISES FOR REPAIRS |TC YEY0R An d LiME-SPREADER


SOLEING AND HFeLING BOOTS (4iDAYS D


CON- BELTS


WELLINGTON Y) I',''


WE ARE ALSO SOLE DISTRIBUTqRS FOR THE FAMOUS VARLEY [bATTIERIES CARRYING A THREE^YEARS WRITTEJ^ GUARANTEE'


TTie Firm that {is Altyajs i(bum,216 I


Enquiries: Ring Opeiij^ead . |''”"i' I "f ■, 'I I


7’: '^ 1


II-


i , .


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