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The Cliihcwe Advertiser & Times, November 21, 1964 5 FOR INDAY


Iciay went the previous lby mistake.


Iinday the visitors were Id by seeing quite a 1 of salmon in the river.


Iiythornc Bridge watch- get a perfect view of


|ton as they make their the upper reaches of


Ir to spawn. ■on Sunday before the J the motor car attract- litscers in wagonettes Inany Lancashire and lire towns. ■ of the visitors used to


liieir meals, known as Is" on the river bank.


RRIED YEARS


(mail party at the Duke of | mo1. Grindieton. were marred at New- In-Pendle in 1914.


|nd Mrs. Joseph Brough- rtibble Avenue, Grindte- eclebrating their golden anniversary tomorrow,


linmghton was a magis- (ciitheroc for a number of j chairman of Burnley Ion the Nelson branch of lu . . and was chairman of le Parish Council.


|-med at Graystones Farm (or many years,


louplc have a son. Mr. V. Ion. who farms at Inirst Farm. West Brad- Id two daughters. 3roughton formerly Mary


■haw. and her husband, 1 Newchurch-in-Pendle.


OPINION SPLIT AT EDUCATION ■ MEETING ■


y^CLASH over the question of appointing executive represen­ tatives to a working party which will look into the vary­


ing comprehensive education schemes which will do away with tiie “Eleven-Plus” in the division, occurred at the monthly meeting of No. 5 Divisional Education Executive, held at Whalicy, on Tuesday. It was finally decided to defer the matter to the next


County Hall, Preston, at which the chairman. Mr. T. H. Seed and vice-chairman, Mr. E. Whnliey. attended, the Divisional Education Officer. Mr. G. Haigh s r i a working party comprising of teacher representatives and executive representatives would have to be .established to look into the four possible systems to see which one would best suit tlie division. The four schemes are : l. Full comprehensive school


meeting. . Reporting on a meeting at


represents us will have an idea of what fellow teachers in the division think of the schemes,” he stated. He added, " I am surprised


Appeal


to night drivers


rJ1HE RAC, who along with more than 700 London


taxicabs have had part of their fleet of service vehicles fitted with the new “dim-dip” head­ light system, appeal to motorists not to flash their ■ headlights when approaching ■ vehicles equipped with the


that this committee arc not going to say what they think about it so that the people who are on the working party will have an idea of what the com­ mittee thinks.” County Coun. F. Ainsworth


system. London taxis arc taking part


in a controlled road safety experiment in the well-lit streets


said he agreed with the chair­ man. “ X feel that if we had a dis­


from 11 to 18. possibly using more than one building; 2 Primary schools until 11,


junior high schools until 13. senior high schools afterwards: 3 Comprehensive schools from


11 to 10, followed by sixth form colleges. 4 i which they can choose only


of Central London during the dark winter nights. An RAC spokesman said this


cussion at this stage it would be like mandating someone to repre­ sent us. I t would be better if they went with an open mind so that they could come to a con­ clusion on the facts as to what will be the best scheme for this


area.” The Rev. W. Edleston said he


If the lirst three cannot be implemented in their area). At 13 or 14. parents will choose whether their children should go to grammar schools, aided by a teacher’s report.


CHAIRMAN'S VIEW % i1


opinion as to whether the whole body should consider this vast problem before selecting their representatives to tile working party cr whether they should wait until the working party’s report was given to them. Tlie chairman. Mr. Seed, said


The Executive was split in


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New features include all- synchromesh gearbox and diaphragm clutch. £587.12.1 (C485 plus p.t. £102.12.1).


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TABLE CLOTHS and NAPS. SETTEE SETS, etc.


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agreed with Mr. Berryman that it would be valuable to have the views of the members on the


problem. Mr. Berryman remarked that


the t e a c h e r representatives would have a meeting and hear the views of other teachers and he thought the executive should do likewise. “After all what is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gan­


der,” he declared. I t was finally agreed to put


they would be acting against the wisiics of the County Education Authority if they discussed the matter fully before selecting representatives to the working party. "The best time for a discus­


the question of the selection of representatives to the working party on the agenda for the December meeting when it was hoped that they would know how many t e a c h e r s had been appointed to the sub-committee.


BIG VICTORY


sion on this is when a report of tlie sub-committee is received. We probably all have views on what we would like to see done, but time will only be wasted if members express their views without the full information,” Mr. Seed declared. Mr. J. C. Berryman, of Padi-


FOR SCHOOL C.R.G.S. 9, Bury G.S. 2


THIS was another splendid have now won 11 of their 15


victory for tile school, who


games. The school were well held by


ham said he disagreed. "As teachers we shall have a get to­ gether and appoint teachers to meet i epresentatives of this executive. We shall have a meet­ ing and then the teacher who


GIVE LINENS i


Bury until the last 20 minutes of their match at High Moor. Apart from the rather slippery pitch, conditions were ideal and as usual, the match provided both goals and entertainment. Bury were by no means a weak side, having been beaten only once previously this season, and during the entire first half, they held their own. Brown scored the only first half goal for the school, but just before tile interval, a slip by Howden gave Bury the chance to grab the equaliser. The half-time score was C.R.G.S. 1, Bury G.S. 1. The school scored a beautiful


week: "Now that the evening rush hour is in darkness, a lot motorists are automatically in­ clined to flash cars using the new system without realising that, in fact, the lights are not strong enough to dazzle oncoming


traffic." The experiment involves the


use of the dim-dip system devel­ oped by the Road Research Lab­ oratory of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Re­ search I t incorporates a simple device which operates the dipped headlamps at one tenth of their normal power when the engine is running and the sidelights


switched on. The RAC is studying the sy-


tem on its own vehicles in order that first-hand views may be submitted to the Ministry of


complv with the advice given m the Highway Code, which is in no wav altered by this experi­ ment, to use dipped headlights at night in built-up areas unlep the street lighting is sufficiently


Transport. The club urges all drivers to


bright. ___ ^ ■A." .


i nriilT £150 was raised at a sale of work for Pendleton AH Saints Church h


>ai iT on S i 011 Saturday. u day buttonhole'to Mr. Ward and the Vicar.


Clarion cyclists at Yordas Cave


TYESPITE a rather dull morning wc had quite a pleasant run ^ by way of Forest Becks to Settle, where wc halted for a while to refresh ourselves, and thence over Buckshuw Brow to Clapham and Ingleton for lunch From Ingleton the first mile


to Thornton-in-Lonsdale was


quite easy, but the following two miles were in a different category as the road climbed steeply up Kingsdale and foot- sloaging was the order ot me day for quite long stretches.


u Then the road ‘dPPetj s alongside the Kingsdale Beck


way to the tree shaded grotto on our left winch hid the entrance


for a while until we came to the foot of the last hill where \\e parked our bikes and made out


Big problems for sheep farmers


rjnh e ever increasing cost of wintering the ewe lambs sent down 1 from the hills to the lowland farms has caused many sheep farmers to think of alternatives. One method is to house the lambs in sheds on the mountains and in some areas this practuc


-


goal, engineered by Lewis and Dobson and finished oft by Brown. Bury had several narrow escapes, an excellent example being when Dobson headed against the post. Against the run of play. Bury scored a second equaliser. But this only caused Clitheroe to raise the tempo of their game, and the last half hour saw almost one­ way traffic towards the visitors’ goal. Using Brown and Dobson as twin-strikers, and with this pair receiving plentiful ammuni­ tion from the defence and the


do. adequate ventilation is of the utmost importance. If a framed building is to be used, one method of forming the mlet ventilation is to fix tlie top half of the wall cladding on the external face of the stanchions and to fix the lower half to the interior, thus forming a horizon­ tal gap of about 6 in. along both sides. The outlet can be provided bv omitting the ridge. 'Ventilation has been provided


the wayside. Though almost any shed win


* o » m — ‘ K


beams, and these in turn aic supported by concrete blocks set on end. making the depth of the


pit about 2ft. FEEDING RACK


link-men, the Bury defence crumbled time and time again. Brown completed his hat-trick and Dobson scoring yet another (one of his three being a brilliant individual dribble along the touch-line followed by a fierce


time to wander into the middle and score two goals, and Wad- dington completed Bury's misery with a 35-yard shot which a by now bemused and bewildered goalkeeper, allowed to trickle over Iris hands and into the


shot). Right-winger Helliwell found


ing players in the school team, as ali 11 players gave a fine all­ round team performance. Clitheroe’s team : Howden;


net. There were no really outstand­


Roberts. Holmes: Waddington, D. V. Parker, Nuttall; Helliwell, Brown, Dobson, Lewis leapt.),


Wymer.


ing. 50's, was asked what he wanted most for Christmas. Glancing slyly at my mother, who was busily knitting, he sa:d, • 'I ’d like a gorgeous girl, about 19, blonde and curvacious and


Father, who is in his fat, bald­


in some existing sheds by remov­ ing most of the cladding from the one side, and in its place stout galvanised wire has been fixed. Whatever method is adop­ ted the need is to give plenty of ventilation to prevent the in­ terior becoming hot and stuffy. Coming a close second in im­


portance is the construction of the floor, as foot troubles can soon arise if insufficient thought is given to this particular item. Some claim that they have


wintered lambs quite satisfac­ torily on bedding over a solid floor, but evidence sliws that many troubles have arisen by adopting this practice, and the general consensus of opinion is that it is always prudent to pro­ vide a slatted floor, which per­ mits the dung to drop to a pit


below. The slats should be ljin. wide


wide and 1 tin. deep and three shapes are in common use. The first type has splayed sides and a double chamfered top, the sec­ ond a slightly rounded top, while the too of the third is quite flat. All work well, but the third type has then advantage of being a little cheaper. The spacing between slats is


cheap and efficient feeding rack can be formed by hanging wire netting in the shape of a U from the roof members. These racks are not only cheap, but hv hanging them high enough to allow lambs to pass undernetli they do not take up any floor space. On the other hand, if hay and concentrates are to be fed. portable bay racks fitted with a small trough are the answer. They should be placed in rows 6 ft. apart down the length of the shed, not only to permit feeding from both sides, but to prevent obstruction of the perimeter of the shed where the lambs, follow­ ing their natural instinct, tend to lie after feeding. A trough length of 7in. to 9in. per lamb, depending on the breed, is ade­


If hay alone is to be fed, a


quate. The floor area which will be


needed is partly dependent on the breed, and though 41 sq. ft- is enough for small Welsh moun­ tain sheep, up to 6 sq. ft. is required for the larger hill breeds. The economics of erecting win­


to Yovdas Cave. Small wonder that, in earlier ages when super­ stition was common, this cave acquired the legendary distinc­ tion of being the home of the giant Yorda who found young children a tasty morsel, for after making one's way down the steep muddy slope from the en­ trance it is to find oneself in a vast cathedral-like cavern, the silence only broken by the sound of the waterfall at the far end. So huge is the cave that our torches barely seemed to make any impression on the gloom though we were able to pick out some of the stalactite and stalag­ mite formations which form ivierd patterns on the walls. Back in the air a hurried count assured us that at least none of our members had been eaten, and stamping the mud from our siloes we re-mounted our bikes for the run back to Ingleton, the earlier toil of tlie afternoon now seeming well worthwhile as we coasted easily downhill. By the time tea was over it was


in the vil- Pictured arc Mrs. W. F. Cummins, Mr. F. Forre st Forrest , the treas-


“ h n^nedThe sale, Rev.W. F. Cummins, Mrs. Ward, Mr. W. Wood, the Peoples War- who P


SOBER BUT


UNSAFE


Tj ;AST Christmas became a time of tragedy for many


families because of motorists who drove after a couple of drinks. They were not “drun­ ken” drivers, who are rela­ tively rare, but ordinary “drinking” drivers, who arc


the blood becomes a factor in causing accidents at concentra­ tion as low as .03 per cent— which can result from one beer or cocktail: it slows down reac­ tions. creates false confidence, impairs concentration and atfects vision Some years ago. Dr. Leon­ ard Goldberg, or Sweden’s Caro­ line Institute, tested a group of skilled drivers, aged 20 to 45. to see how they would react to a concentration of alcohol in their blood averaging .049 per cent. On three tests, lie found that their ability was impaired on tile average by 41.8 per cent.


almost numberless. Studies show that alcohol in


lighting-up time, and so with the pencil beams from our lamps picking cut the route for us wc pedalled hack by way of Lawk- land to Giggleswick. and then ora- the road taken in the morn­ ing back to Clitheroe. On Sunday we leave Woonc


Ap*tinv events for next year, and to elect our Union officials.


Lane at 9-30 a.m. for a run to Roughlee and Dimpenlcy where we shall join other Clarion Scc- tws from this area for a short meeting to arrange social and


‘ GEARS." SUCCESS


JpREMIER student in the third year at Lincoln College,


Oxford, is Michael L. Sinnoit, whose mother is from a well- known local family in this area, the Newsams. Formerly Miss Ivy Newsam, Mrs. Sinnott is living with her husband and son at 41. Oxford Road. Birkdale, her brother Mr. J. E. Newsam farms at Waddington and her sister Miss Phyllis Newsam is a promi­ nent worker for the St. John Ambulance and Blood Donors


in this area. Michael, who went to Lincoln


College, from Merchant Taylor School, with a State and Sidg- wick open scholarship, is now in his third year of the Gibb scholarship, which makes him premier student of his year. He is studying science for post­


graduate studies, and is sergeant at arms of the debating society, and a member of the Oxford Union debating society.


driver can’t be solved by neat slogans such as " If you drive don't drink "—writes Don Whar­ ton in Hie December Reader's Digest. Obviously, it’s all right lo drive after drinking if the alco­ hol has disappeared from your system One expert says that, to be sure of avoiding impairment, a driver should wait half an hour after one. drink (whisky, cocktail bottle of been, two hours after two drinks, four hours after three, six hours after four, eight hours after live. This Christmas many of us will neither abstain, nor wait before starting home. Yet, wc would be wise to respect the evidence that alcohol does impair driving efficiency, so that we can take intelligent precau­


The problem of lhc drinking


tions. Under the 1962 Road Traffic


Act. a driver now commits an offence if "his ability to drive properly is for the time being impaired.” The quantity of drink that gives tills dangerous con­ centration of alcohol in the blood varies from person to person and from time to time. But experts


say that it could be reached after one and a half pints of beer or three small whiskies.


to friends who run a secondhand shop. The next year I received it, back, with inv name crossed nut and replaced with: “From your secondhand dealer.”


One Christmas I sent a card —Reader’s Digest.


' As he paused searching for the right adjective, Mother put a quick end to his reveries. “ Short-sighted?” she sug­


gested. —Readers Digest.


critical. I t should be kept to five- eighths of an inch. As a material soft wood serves tbe purpose well, but it should be treated with a preservative under pressure. The slats should be nailed to 4 in. x 2in splayed joists, and the whole floor should be made up in portable sections, each about 8 ft. x 4 ft., for easy removal when cleaning out. The portable sections are laid on timber


tering sheds tell an interesting story. The costs of erecting wintering sheds will vary, depen­ ding on locality, etc., but records show that two or three years ago some sheds were erected for as little as £3. 15s. per lamb. This capital outlay spread over the useful life of the sheds, plus the annual cost of feed, could well compare with a charge of about 35s. per lamb per season made for wintering off the hills. Space only permits a n outline


T. ROBINSON LID.


LOVi’ moor GARAGE AND filling station


Diesel and Commercial Specialist T e l. C lith c ro c 17


MOTOR AND BODY REPAIRS


of this subject of wintering sheds, but detailed advice on all matters relating to them, and .grants available, can be obtained from officers of the Agricultural Land Service at divisional offices of the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food.


is your town


ALWAYS A STOCK OF GOOD QUALITY USED CARS—BACKED BY A SEVEN DAYS SERVICE


— ,


» £ Raymond Ward, of Fence, who leaches bakery at Nelson Technical School and . sevcn.ycar-old Denise Moran, who attends the church day school, presented


_______________


Clothes for the Life you Live visit


JACKIE 22-21 KING STREET


CLITHEROE PHONE 1042


Wc have an extensive range of day and cocktail wear from which you can make your choice at leisure.


Church sale raises £150 M O R T O N S Now displaying lovely selection gilts


WATCHES - CLOCKS - JEWELLERY FANCY GOODS - CUTLERY


have a large slock of all leading makes of BRIIISH. SWISS, RUSSIAN'and JAPANESE SHOCKPROOF WATCHES. Agents for 1NGERSOI.I.. TIMEX. SERVICE, SMITHS,


Select your watch now before iho price Wc


INVENTTC. ORIS, HENTIMA. RONE. ROAMER, AVIA. Lovely ranuc of Ladies’ and Cicnts UXCALIBUR GOLD WATCHES'with no cenlrc fastener bracelets TOY DEPT.-MECCANO NEW BUILDING SEES.


BAYKO. dozens of AIRE1X KITS lo choose Irom, AIRFIX RACE SET'S. HORNBY TRAINS. MAGNETIC SOCCER. SUBUTO SOCCER. All the latest TOYS. GAMES,


ANNUALS, etc. SHOP EARI-Y AT :— MORTONS 18, MOOR LANE, CLITHEROE. T elephone 420.


CHAMPION SHOE REPAIRERS OF GT. BRITAIN NEW INSTANT COLOUR


CHANGE IN 20 COLOURS


FOR FABRIC MESH AND LEATHER FOOTWEAR ALSO HANDBAGS TO MATCH


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"THE BALLET SHOP (Mrs. M. C. MERCER) PLEASE NOTE NEW ADDRESS


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* Soil Toe Shoes


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LARGE SELECTION OF EVERY TYPE OF DANCE AND KEEP FIT WEAR


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Pcr.-mml attention a t showroom or prompt, postal service. I I


WHAT TO DO ABOUT NOW


When you feel it's about time to get your Christmas cifts together that's the time to walk round your iron- moneers. Browse over all the things to be had at half a crown or half a guinea. Examine the attractive, reliable, useful gifts on display—kitchenware by PRESTIGE, CROWN MERTON. BURCO. SWAN. LANCAS1RIA. glassware by PYREX. PYROS1L, CONA, food con­ tainers by EKCOWARE. stainless steel carving dishes, tea sets, toasters by OLD HALL. CHICHESTER, electric fires, hair dryers, toasters by HOOVER, G.E.C., MORPHY RICHARDS, electric razors by REMING­ TON. PHILIPS, garden tools by WILKINSON SWORD, SPEAR & JACKSON, carpet sweepers and shampooers by HOOVER. EW.BANK. ADDIS. BEX BISSELL, handyman’s tools by BRIDGES, WOLF. BLACK & d eck er .


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