V •Vic Clitheroe Advertiser and Times,,Friday. 'August; 12, 1966 . 7
Clitheroe Advertiser and Times
/ FRIDAY,'AUGUST i2,' i965: VIE WiP O t NTs
WHERE COULD BE MADE
T AST week we wrote that-the financial-crisis could-well- prove
to.be the cold douche the country needed, to
shake the people, as well as the Government, out of their complacency.
Andthat.it seems,.is,preciselyjvyhat it has done. Slowly and reluctantly,1 ;the-majority of,people are coming round to the .opinion That'theIprices and incomes standstill is a necessity, albeit a painful one, and they are showing their willingness to accept it, with one important condition . . . that everyone does his-utmost to,observe it.
Bolton-by-BowIand special ceremony
land W.I., Mrs. L. Ir. S. Stott (second es (W.I. treasurer)
o teach in Honduras
This is the really crucial factor, for, people will be
willing to make a sacrifice so long as they feel they are not being singled out and the burden is shared proportion ately among all those able to bear it.. In other words,' they are willing to do their bit but not to be put upon. So not only must the freeze apply fairly, it must , manifestly, be seen to apply to do so.
' There is a general demand, too, that' Government
spending itself must be cut wherever it can be done with out damage to the economy. The most obvious targets, because of their drain on sterling, are our military bases overseas, but this consideration is so tied up with our world role and our moral obligations to other countries that snap decisions would be folly,' and only after serious study and negotiations could any far-reaching changes be made. So it is unlikely that any savings beyond those already announced will be effected.'
No longer needed
cut Government spending are'almost as numerous as the population, for everyone has his own remedies. The most sensible suggestion is that the country should no longer pay out vast sums to subsidise school milk and meals, I drawer although several drawers the bill for which thisyear will amount to £102 million. ^ a
On the home front, views on what should be done to
] about in the office but investi gations so far suggest that nothing of value was taken. An amount of copper, for in stance, was left untouched in a
lises a small window was found to be broken in the office. Vari ous articles had been scattered
dinbe^ S S S ^ o k t ^ t tS
Of this, more than £12 million will go to provide free premises had been entered was milk, the remainder representing a Is. 6d. support for made by a member of the staff every meal, for which parents pay only one shilling, a arriving for work on Saturday
ras to begin a year’s •g under the Voluntary as Service scheme.
TEEN-YEAR-OLD John hillips, of Billington on be flying to British
d, who lives at 4, Lake- lose, has just left the od Comprehensive School Liverpool, where he was
oy.
f the largest towns in Honduras.
ill be teaching geography gineering drawing at a 'gh school at stancreek,
urns from British Hon- he will be going toShore- -achers’ Training College,
resent he has a tem- position as a male nurse erst ones Hospital, When
d is a keen sportsman is represented Lancashire
ilso played rugby for -hire Schools.
curtesy
Driving Contest
DRIVING competition will mark the end of Week on Sunday
competition will be Bankfield Quarries,
The aim of the com- is to show motorists ■tesy on the roads i® cessary and that to themselves they need lid thought behind
’ing.
., who is also hono- cretary and Road rganiser of Clitheroe and Rural District Joint Road Safety
rganiser is Mr. C. Billington Gardens,
re behind the scheme ent. He expressed the many accidents were
e. or Harold Dickinson in charge o f ' the Police said that the
■f sheer lack of con- , and accident figures
id to bo up and up-
itors on Sunday will >r a specified distance
tere will be no timing impetition.
of Clitheroe Rural will ODen the event.
Troop, N ING
orts Jackets, Sports cleared at Greatly
r Suits to Measure items offered are
■tock.
O.LTD. OUTFITTERS.
,, 1THEROE * ’
be observed at differ* :es on the route. being gi ven for
layor of Clitbeioe, - T Robinfion, sup* >y Mrs. M. ■
nder-15’s English Schools Union Competition. He
price that has remained unchanged for 10 years. morine.
This meal subsidy arose out of the immediate post-war i SAFE DAMAGED determination to see that children would not suffer, as
earlier generations had done, from malnutrition, but no ent ^ a s ^ n ead through a one would seriously suggest that such a danger exists to- kitchen skylight, and there is day, or that families, sometimes with incomes in the £40 evidence that an unsuccessful
to £50 a week range, cannot afford to pay a modest 2s. 6d. I attempt was made to break into
for their children’s meals. There is, too, a widespread feeling that any money
available would be far better spent on providing more qualified teachers, so that children might have more in dividual attention, rather than have free milk or cut-price
meals. No child need suffer. Already some 300,000 children .
from extremely low income families are provided with free mid-day meals, and that principle could still apply.
Wider issues Another argument strongly canvassed is that the pres
cription charge should be restored, but this raises the wider issue of a free health service and more fundament ally moral questions than are at first apparent. Under the health service, one can, if it is unfortunately proved neces sary, have a major operation that would cost hundreds of pounds, or have a long stay in hospital that would cost about £30 a week, completely free of charge. In fact, if one were so callous as to “reckon up” at such a time, one could actually save money by being in hospital. Yet at the same time, a chronically-ill person, say an elderly spinster on a small fixed income, needing a regular supply of various types of pills, might be paying six or eight shil lings a.week, unless she were willing to apply for repay ment on the ground of hardship, and many such people, as is well-known, are too proud to makd such application. We ourself would need far more evidence of the abuse
a safe as a certain amount of damage was done to it. The office was ransacked and.
£12 in petty cash and a transis tor radio—valued at 21 guineas
—is missing. A passer-by spotted- the work
shop door open early on Satur day morning and rang the police.
:
FOUR SHOP RAIDS IN ONE
.......... .
Thieves also breakinto golf 'idho
r-‘
ffLITHEROE POLICE ARE MAKING WIDMPREADiiNQUIRIES FOLLOW-; ^ ING FOUR RAIDS ON BUSINESS PREMISES
IN.THE TOWN DURING'
Fr id a y Nig h t . ' The premises which were entered were the car showrooms of Moor Lane Motors
House Furnishing Shop of Mr. H. Kaine, next door, to Mr. Hargreaves’ shop. All the premises are within 200 yards ; of > each . other
in the Whalley Road area, and it is believed they were entered in quick succession. At the premises of Moor
I Lane Motors, an entry was apparently made • through
| the window of a toilet at the rear of the building on the
I ground floor. The office door was locked but this was smashed open and the top
of a desk was ripped off. An Advertiser and Times re
| dow in the showrooms which they were able to open from the j inside.
porter was told that £7 to £8 was missing in petty cash which had been kept in a tin. The thieves probably got out of the premises through a win-
| when the first member of the staff arrived for work. At Messrs Standrings prem-
The discovery of the break-in was made on Saturday morning
a window at the rear was broken and It was discovered
At the shop of Mr. H. Kaine
that an office desk had been ransacked but nothing appeared to have been stolen. There is no great damage
apart from the broken window. I t is possible that the theives
GOLF CLUB
Clitheroe police are also inves tigating a break-in at Clitheroe
on Wednesday evening and entry was gained by forcing a window. The back of a “one-armed
Golf Club. Thep premises were entered
bandit” was removed and the money taken. A small quantity of cigarettes is also missing from the bar.
I t is not thought that any thing else is missing.
%
Chapel’s 150th Anniversary
appointed group minister, will preach in the afternoon and evening on Sunday at Salem Congregational Chapel, Martin Top. Visitors from many parts of the area are expected to attend the services which will be held to mark the chapel’s 150th anniversary. .
THE Rev. John K. Gardiner, of Newton, the newly- MRS. D. Graham, formerly
St. Paul’s Street, Low Moor, has been successful In gaining a Teachers’ Diploma at Alsagon Teachers’ Training College. She will start teaching at Leek in September.
Teaclier’s Diploma Miss Mary Walmsley of 70,
THE WEEK’S OBITUARY Mr. R. G. Clegg
Hendon, Parker Avenue, Clitheroe, died at his home on Friday, at the age of 80. Mr. Clegg was the father of
Mr. Rennie Gilbert Clegg,- of
a Clitheroe , chemist, Mi-. Charles Clegg, and came from Burnley to live in Clitheroe 15 years ago.
founder-member, with his three brothers, of the Burnley, firm of builders and- shopfltters, Messrs H. and R. Clegg.. Ltd.,
A native of Burnley, he was in 1919.
Mr. E. J. 'Blenkinsop I lived in Brunshaw Road Burn- ■nts n i m 1 •
•
of the free system before we could accept the restoration of the charge with an easy conscience though we think one suggestion that has been made is worthy of serious consideration. This is that , there should be two lists of drugs—those that are life saving aiid1 absolutely necessary, such as antibiotics,' insulin and thyroid, and those that ^
and the second type paid for by the patient, and this, it is estimated, could save £100 million. Another way of tailoring the health service without:; causing hardship would be to charge patients; the amount it ,costs to feed them in hospital—about 35s. a week—for this, after all, would be no more than it would cost them at home.
Outdated obsession If it is felt that an entirely free health service is a
luxury we cannot afford, then these suggestions ought to., be considered, and if they were implemented^ there could still be exemptions for the person .of very, low Income. The sacred cow of “ no means, test” must .be seen as an
outdated obsession. The original means, test .was
a.ruthless inquisition under which one was almost required to sell one’s furniture before qualifying for help. The humilia tion was real and vicious and pne can... understand the strong feeling that the-term arouses,fjbutmo one would suggest that such- a shadow would hang. over a modem- type means test, such as is already widely accepted by everyone in such matters as a university grant. We feel, too, that the time has come tofabolish family
allowances, which for many families- represents nothing more than a little extra spending money. Indeed, this allowance should be .the .first thing to go^even. before any tinkering with the health service o r the prespriplion charge, for families arise from choice, and illness doesn t.
Clitheroe link home
■READERS may have been ■*-*' interested in' the new series on BBC 1 entitled “Pride of Place” wherein John Betje man and Arthur Negus visit the Great Houses of England. The first visited was Hardwick.Hall m Derbyshire on August 1. The second, to be visited next Mon day August 15, at 6-30 p.m., will be Belton House Lincolnshire. Of .this, local historian Mr.
Henry Forrest writes: To the Clitheronians of today
this is probably jus t’ another Stately Home—to the Clithero nians of one hundred and fifty
years ago it meant something else. To them it meant “The
Ousts” !
liamentary representation oi (Clitheroe-in “their pockets” up ,to the passing of the Reform ’Bill in 1832......— ........
Ousts and the Curzons were the two families who held the Par
Who were they? Well, the , ■ -
a ( member of each-.-family, or their nominees, were automati cally “elected” to sit for the Bbrough”of Clitheroe. The Cur zons emanated from Whalley, the Ousts, which is the family name of the Earls Brownlow, came from Belton House, Lin colnshire. The same family still own Belton House, the subject of the “Pride of Place” feature. In the Park at Belton there is
with a stately Every Parliamentary Election
well known man in the area, Mr. Eric James Blenkinsop died at his home, 102, Pasture- lands Drive, Billington, on
A retired sergeant and a ueai
r ] jey^ vf,Mvprl some vears aeO: A Freemason, he was a Past
Mr. Clegg who formerly retired some years ago;
are advantageous but not strictly necessary, such as cough Where his father was a ser- medicines and tonics. The first group would be issued free, geant in the police force. He
Monday aged 62. Mr. Blenkinsop was bom at Denton, n e a r Manchester,
______ He
himself served in the police force at Cliviger .near Burn
came to live at Waddow Hall where he had a . part-time occupation.
Afterwards he and his wife spent'a*l0t*of'^hne< on ifis^main I
Master of , Harmony Lodge (288), Todmorden, and a mem ber of the Provincial Grand Lodge and Provincial Grand Chapter, East Lancashire Province.
ley and retired as a sergeant 12,“ '^““' after 17 years’ service.
1
Mrs.S. A member of an old Whalley
Mra Sarah Nmvlands
no°u“ ry keepfnl. teeedin8 ^ atoMrs^Edwarl, ‘^icrort^oi.. Mr. Blenkinsop then moved Lanib Roe, -'yWMUey,;-- (Hed^at
f.n Biiiincton. w h e r e he hsr * home in Bristol yesterday Resided to/two and half yearn week. She was in her 73rd
LanEhcf andC W h a l l ^ a to h rhurches
by his wife, Helen, and his son, she lived in Lamb Roe until her marriage to Mr. Alec New-
Mr Blenkinsop is survived Luke’s Mission, Barrow, and I lands was associated with St. many years, Mrs. New-
of Langho, officiated at the. was 'a^ wounded, soldier, m tonmy«tordlyrViCe ^
wA well - known c {r1*!?l° I daughter,Dorothy,' ” livefc - fin: ^ gout h a m p fo n .; •
M r s A , IM C k P l t Her son, Geoffrey, fives with „ ,
d *■ TV 1 I I band, a son and two daughters. V h £ r'lit-hpvnp I his father in Bristol, and one
oman, Mrs. Alice Duckett of L p s5ich> whJ,- the other, Nora,: 32 Duck Street, died at her
home on Sunday. She was to. The u ewiands moved to Her husband, the ■ late Mr. g r o n jy recently, after liv-
Richard Duckett, was for many inp, jui their 'married.:life? in years licensee of the wateilo0 I Ipswjch. Some ■ members s’of Inn and then the Joiners Arms. Mrs Newiands’ family . still For 16 years the couple kept a ■ jn whailey; Her cousin, fish and chip restaurant in Lowergate until their retire-
ment. J o h n ’s RC Church, where '"“ S n S a v ^ . 1 TheRev. R. Kirkham, Vicar lads,'-whom she met .when he
garet Clegg, and one son, Charles, who lives in Wiswell. The interment took place at Wheatley Lane, Fence, on
He leaves a wife; Mrs. Mar
MANAGING DIRECTOR RETIRES
■ i
entered the premises from the back yard of Mr. Hargreaves’ shop.
(Clitheroe) Ltd.; Messrs R- Standring and Sons, Paper Merchants, Grecnacre Street; The Radio and Cycle Shop in Moor, Lane owned by ,Mr. A. E.,-Hargrcavcs, and the •
Golf
a m '/4 s
'A iiji'
iClitlieroel open - “ / • “ ; ' n % -
'iourballjihad recbrd.enrty
■VXTITHvV’ record number' of ; 316 .for. the openvfoiirball.
" ‘V ?
competition'-at Clttheroe' Golf Club on Saturday, play started at 7-30 am in drizzling rain but the day improved and the sun peeped through before the last
VERY.. TA3NKFUL! Clog-maldiig
proves the answer to ! lepers’ problem
players finished at 9-15 pm. , "With
the.course,in fine, con
COUNCILLOR Richard Turner, of “ Ribbles-
dition, there'^.was'’some good golf. Almost* unique in an open partner, Frank Whittaker, of score was returned by .the lowest hadicapped pair? John. Glover, of Clitheroe-1 (scratch) and his
dale,” Littlemoor Road,
competition;^ the best nett Blackburn (4): "With seven birdies and an eagle on their card their better ball score was only 65’ and this gave them 48 points, ar truly outstanding round in any amateur competi
tion.': :■ !; i.;’"'):;
field and B. Hoyle with 47 points. Third prize was won after a play'ofl on the cards of four - pairs who; tied with 45 points. The lucky .pair in the play off were N. Jones and M. English, of Preston. - ' The Robin. Parkinson prize
Second prize went to E. Had-
tion. Drivers who buy Shell petrol
for the best gross score, was awarded to Bill Hayes and John Taylor. The clubs 2nd best gross prize was won by the brothers G. and D. Thompson, and the 3rd gross by, P . ' Moody and J.
Cowgill.
jUTR. JAMES HARRIS, of Selbourne House, Clith-
eroe, managing director of Seercraft Ltd., who yesterday retired after 20 years’ service with the - company, was pre sented with a silver salver by Mr. E. D. Parks; a director, in appreciation of his ser vices. A well-known Clitheronian
Mr. Harris took over the business of W. T. Searson in 1926 when he left Trutex Ltd., for whom he. had worked for more than 20 years. Mr. Harris will be suc
ceeded as managing director by Mr. Ivan Young.
Taught motor engineering to
from Britain to Uganda,; some 10 months ago, Mr. Vincent Parker (22) of Eshton Ten-ace, Clitheroe, is now back home. Mr. Parker’s visit to Ehugil,
Young Africans ONE of the group of young
men who made the trip
who .played through, the; morn ing rain the captain, Bill Scales awarded prizes to Mr.- Crabtree and his partner for; a brave 44 points, the best during the morning, . T
One.golfer.who didn’t win a
As consolation prize for those 1 i; • ’■ one at the eigth hole. First venue
oured to be chosen for the very first competition organised by the Manchester Regional Hos pital Staff Association held on We d n e s d a y week which
Clitheroe- Golf .Club .was hon
was so successful that another tournament is to be held in
Clitheroe next year. About . 85 competitors, em ployed at hospitals all over
of the Dog Inn, Whalley, near Blackburn, has won £100 in the Shell “Make Money” competi
Landlord Mr. Harry Brown,
are given halves of coupons which can be matched, to win prizes from 10 shillings to £ 100. Mr. Brown was given his win
four years, has a daughter and three grandchildren. In theOphoto Mr. Ireland
area.
ning coupon at the Petre Garage at Langho, where he was ' later presented with the money by Mr. Richard Ireland, forecourt manager. Said Mr. Brown: ” I bought
(left) is' seen- presenting Mr. Brown with his £100. Looking on is Mr. Ken Haime, Shell senior representative: for the
£100 wiriclfaU for Clitlieroe man
some petrol and handed the coupon to my wife, Florence, who was'in the car. I was just about to drive off when she shouted that I had won £100." Mr. Ireland said: “ I handed
prize but had a thrill was Mr. L. Billington ' who holed out in
He added: “This was the first cash prize the garage had
..............
Mr. Brown his coupon and he climbed into his car. But a few seconds later he jumped out again, laughing. I guessed he had won."
paid out." Mr. Brown, who has been
w E g r p r / i landlord at the Dog Inn for
Clitheroe, wh o s e business premises are in Lowergate, has just received a letter from the Kumi Leprosy Centre, Uganda, wh i c h indicates the great value of the work he has done in leaching clog-making to the natives suffering from lep rosy.; ; ’- It will be recalled that
Councillor Turner who went out to Nigeria in 1963, visited . Uganda in January, this year, to help correct the work which had been going on ever since his initial visit to Africa
Councillor Turner went M: winner of £100 in the Shell
R. RUSSELL HAYTON, of Alma Place, Clitheroe,. is
“Make Money” contest. , He bought the petrol that
provided him with the com pleting half of the coupon from P r im r o s e Garage, Cltiheroe, on Monday. .....
Clitheroe Amateur Football League’s
Programme
the Manchester region, took part,, and winner of the cap tain’s putting competition was staff nurse Mr. Bernard Gore, of Calderstones. Winners of the golf trophy
programme will begin on Satur day. September, It was decided at a league meeting yesterday week. , There will be no matches on
riLITHEROE and District ■J Amateur Football League's
was deputy - charge nurse Harry Wharton, of Prestwich. Prizes were presented by
December 24 and 31. This year there are 14 teams
out in January to Kumi at the invitation of .Sister Jane Neville who . made her ppro ach through the
LEPRA movement. The. letter which Coun
cillor Turner has just re ceived is from Miss Mar garet A.. Phillips, who is in charge of the occupational therapy side of the teaching of the natives in Kumi.
The letter reads: “ I am very, pleased to
be able to tell you that the clog knives arrived safely at Kumi on Satur day, and we are hoping to get them to Alupe and Buliiba in the near future. Thank you so much for
, all the trouble you went to to get them to us. Clog-
the captain of Clitheroe Golf Club Mr. W. Scales, who don ated two special prizes In appreciation of the nursing he had at Burnley General Hos pital during a recent illness.
Greens flooded
in Uganda, was sponsored by Joseph Lucas. Ltd., for whom
he has worked for six years. An old boy of Clitheroe
Royal Grammar School, Mir. Parker is the son of. Mr., and Mrs. Edmund Parker of Esh- tori Terrace, Clitheroe. He stayed at the Government
Golf Association also chose to play one of their annual compe titions at Clitheroe yesterday week but a downpour during play flooded the greens and the match had to be cancelled. It was decided' to replay the com petition at Clitheroe on Septem-
The East Lancashire Ladies
trade centre in Enugu and taught motor enginering to 200
African, boys at a school. Keenly interested in Scouting, he became assistant Scout master to' the troop in Enugu, He is well- known in
ber 22. 75th anniversary
are to have their own 75th anniversary competition on Monday, August 22. I t will be an invitation fourball, and
The Ladies section of the club
Clitheroe particularly for his assocation with the local Civil Defence Corps.
there will be a celebration din ner in the evening at the Club
House.
FIVE-A-SIDE FOOTBALL }■} qMPETITJON; -
HTHE draw for the five-a-side foritbaircompetition was
1 made .on Monday.. There are. 74 teams entered, 14 more than last year. The games commence on Monday on the Castle Field, and the finals will be played at the Castle
Fete on September 3rd. F I X T U R E S
Key: denotes'Juniors Section, Y-Youths, S:Seniors- -4 MONDAY, AUGUST 15th:
IS—7-10' Mad 5 v Whalley Wanderers (A) • S—7-30 : Red Star ‘A’ v LCC A (B) . -S—7-50':; Mickleffe’s Chanots v Gnndleton A S—8-10 Dog 5 v Henthorn Horrors (D)
Y—(5-30 Tea Set v Henthorn Horrors (A) Y—6-50 The Hopeless 5 v Silver Streaks (B)
r_6-10 Fiery Wanderers v Blue Falcons (A) TUESDAY, AUGUST 16th:
j_6-X0 Unit 4 + 1 v Waddington Whippets (B) Y—6-30 The Rest v White Tornadoes (C) Y—6-50 Cobblers Union v The Gladiators FC (D) S—7-10 Dumsides Team v Dryden Rangers B (b) S-7-30 -Bowkers FC v DDDBM and. Tich (F) . S-j-7-50 Oil Drippers v Bridge Enders (G). S—8-10 . Angels v Quiet 5 (H).,..,.
- - WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17th:
;yl_6-50. Mayfield 5 v. Little Lost Peas - S—
-7-.ioi Lively :Ones v The 5 Furys (I)
j—6-10 Castleford United v White Midgets (C) Y_6-30 The-Untouchables, v Hodder. United (b)
Sr—Vifr Head Hunters v We Five (J) “ • ‘ S-7-50 The Furies v Us Four S—8:10 Wonder. Who v DSTRT r
Edwar(j Ashcroft, lives ct .Lamb Roe, and her
Mrs. Duckett was . a regular Ashcroft, also live in Lamb worshipper at Ss. Michael and I
aunts, Misses Ada and ,Mary ,,
Requiem Mass preceded the in- g a l le y on Tuesday after a terment at St. Josephs Cem- serviCe in Whalley Parish etery on Wednesday. •
jnterment took place at
Mrs. Duckett’s many friends and her daughter Kathleen
with whom she resided.
„ herd of fallow deer. The ancestors of these animals, no doubt, supplied the venison 'con sumed at the'annual Bailiffs Dinners of the time (the fore runner of the present Clitheroe
Mayor’s Dinners). The former Brownlow Arms
Inn. and Brownlow Street, Clitheroe, a r e th e o n l reminders now of Beltons con nection with the Borough.
ROAD SAFETY SLOGAN THIS WEEK'S
Dream in bed—not on the. road,.
The death occurred on Sun-10f 50, Whalley Road, died on day of Mr. William Edward Sunday, only three
..days, before
Mr. W. E. Ross
Ross, of 22 Chatburn Road. He her 92nd birthday. , - , l . 1 was 62.
Sympathy will be extended to vicar the Rev. h . C. Snape. . „ p i .
| IlHS. L. EfllgC .
A well-known and ’ respected: Sabden woman, Mrs. C. Edge,
lived1 in Waddington most of father being the late Mr. R. his life and came to. live in I Brotherton,, who; founded--jtne Clltheroe 12 years ago. . . . • old Excelsior 'Printing -Works He served during the second over a century ago. Throughout
Bom in Brieifield, Mr. Ross I a very old Sabden family,,-her Mrs. Edge was a member of
Wordl War in the R.A.S.C. and her fife Mrs. Edge was closely was later employed, at Bank- associated with,. St. Nicholas field Quarles.
wife Mary, an d 'a son,’Bryan, the- Rev. ; J.- -McCrell atuSt. The Rev. G. Campbell con- Nicholas Parish Church, ■ prior
ducted the service at Accring- to the cremation at Burn.ey ton Crematorium, yesterday. I yesterday.
Mr. Ross is survived by hlsj -A service, was .conducted, by : parish Church;’-A ; ......... ...................., church, ■ conducted by .. the
J—6-10 ’ Y—6-30 Y—6-50 S—7-10 * S—7-30 S—7-50: S—8-10
A v B C v D
Dryden Rangers ’‘A’ tv: Unit Construction- Commercial Tankards; v.Flintstones /;■
-V ' .
:
Fairies tv LCC ‘B’ Saints v Penguin 5
MONDAY, AUGUST 22nd:
J—6-10 Y—6-30 1 Y—6-50 ' S—7-10 S—7-30 S—7-50 S—8-10,
Y—6-50 S—7-10 S—7-30 S—7-50 S—8-10
C v The Owls E v'4!Nuts and; 1 Cracker . , Invaders v Head- Hunters • ■ Joiners Arms v St. Paul’s ‘A’ Grindlelon ‘B’ v White Lion Bitter Red Star ‘B’ v White Lion Mild
Crimps .v Dakotas* < : TUESDAY. AUGUST 23rd:
j—6-10 Red Streaks v Blue Dynamos Y_6-30 3 Nuts and 2 Bolts v White Dynamos 5 Hawks v The Glumf
St. Paul’s!; ‘B’ v Dryden Rangers C • .
'
A v B - , C v D . v
E v f • WEDNESDAY, AUGUST. 24th:
j-6-10,' Sabden. United v Langshaw.United... Y—6-30 Thunderballers v. Pirates , Y—6-50 3rd’ round Youths
■S—7-50 2nd round Seniors S—8-10 2nd round Seniors
S--7-10 G v H S -7-30 1 v .1
!, j , .
■ ■ ■THURSDAY, AUGUST,18th: - ; j j r: 'A v"B
f,
* ,i .
V ...
FATHER J. C. TRANMAR
---LEAVING-
College, who lias represented Aighton, Bailey and Chaig ley (Hurst Green and Stony hurst area) on Clitheroe Rural Council since Novem ber, 1959, is leaving the district and has written to the Council resigning his position.
JpATHER John Cecil Tran mar, S.J., of Stonyhurst
He is vice-chairman of the Council and chairman of the Public Health and Housing Committee. , > • .
chairman of Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley Parish Council, has taken a prominent part in Hurst Green village affairs, and was actively concerned in the many efforts necessary to raise money for; the building of the memorial village hall which was opened last year.
Father Tranmar, who is
only five representatives . of Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley
Since 1894 there have been
oh Clitheroe Rural Council, and all .of-* them have held th e . post-, tloni of 'Procurator, ,- or , its; equivalent, "at,-the College. .
on the Council Father T. E. Corrigan S.J., who is now the Provincial - of .the Society of Jesus in this country. The rep resentative before Father Cor rigan was Father F. N. Vava- sour S.J., who served- on the Council from 1938 to 1954. Father Tranmar’s letter of.
Father Tranmar succeeded
resignation- will be considered at the next monthly meeting of Clltheroe Rural Council.
’ CLITHEROE AUTO’S Telephone: Clitheroe.110.
d [
'the specialists CASH - H P.
in the league, the two new teams being Clitheroe Parish Church Youth Club and Hurst Green. Two of last year’s teams have changed their names: Clith- eroes Reserves have become the White Lions, and Bashall Eaves are now Grindleton, because their pitch is now is Grindleton, though their team is the same. One problem this season wifi
the Town Council asking for field.................... - ' .
FINED $5
Clitheroe, was fined £5 at Clitheroe yesterday for driving his motor car without due care and attention, and £2 for using a car with certain parts in a dangerous condition. He pleaded guilty by letter.
Lewis Pye, of Mytton View, FOR YOUR
T V AND
RADIO
. making here is going very well and its effects are. already beginning to show. They really do seem to be the answer to the big problem of ulcers of the feet, and we feel now that we can prevent many of these recurring, or occur ring at all. So you can see
that.it has all been very
be that of finding enough'foot-' ball pitches for the teams and most of them have written to
' worthwhile. With all good wishes, Yours sincerely, Margaret A. Phillips”
“ Advertiser and Times ” reporter that the tribal people he had to teach were extremely good crafts men and able to use their hands well but difficulties arose in -teaching them because of their lack of education.
Councillor Turner told an~ w
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