i tlier oe lier
>rates 91st
belay recently ccle-
st birthday at s well-known
roe area as a lie years which followed the
William Wilson, so named Wil- Mytton View
whose grandson, Ison, followed in er's footsteps— liner, and even- iprictor of tile in Well Fold,
1 by the Higson before joining
ic first war Mr. mployed for a
Clitheruc Advertiser and Times, Friday, September 15, 1961 5 WOMAN TO WOMAN
WRITING AND HOUSEWORK
of peaceful stillness and solitude.
though she has a great admir ation for the work of many poets, her favourite among
Harrison has loved to read and write poetry, and al
Since she was a child Mrs.
lie Army. When ior wrote home mid shortly be iraft leave his cd with tlie son's call-up
. Whalley. son, William,
work at Calder- have loved to continue her edu-
them is Byron. As a girl she would dearly
ws proved such rs. Wilson that 1 ill and died rds. As a result Mr. Wilson was raft.
•ears after the Tied, remaining ir a few vears to Cleveleys,
ley resided in AGAIN
ted for several I is second wife
cation at a Grammar Sohool, writing dominate her hfe, first and won a scholarship which and foremost she is a mother, entitled her to do so. but union- and her sympathy and^under- tunntcly, financial circum- standing for children and young stances at the time prevented people is reflected in a number her taking advantage of it. I t of her verses, is little wonder that she places A11 m0(jlcrs will readily agree so high a value on the educa- with tho sentiments expressed tional opportunities which are
C U lW U lU C 11CI c u u - Mrs. Harrison does not let her iV U S . j r - i a m o . . . ~ ------- -------
olTered to the young people of today, for she has furthered her own education by self-imposed ellort, which has included ex tensive reading about many subjects.
taught her much, and Mrs. Harrison is now in the course of writing her first novel which, she says, will be fiction based u p o n her own experience.
Fiction Life and experience have also
Several chapters are already
flic ago of 65, on found liim- .ich leisure time ■ct up in busi er oil his own
•e lie has since or a year which
d his business t to live at the el, Park Lane,
id helping the s possible,
rated his 90th in hospital Mr. most active upon making
ospital, during
nils reasonably find retains the an of far fewer :s regularly to theroe—who is weekend—and
Oil.
daughter. Mi's, who lives at
g fines
grove (28), of Clithcroc. was
had liis licence litheroe vester- driving a car licence.
■mg fines in- Charles Watts
, of Brennand ileton, £3 for vehicle in con-
•thome Place, for driving a direction other and Geoffrey
, trade or busi- tlian under a
e. and £3 lor used motor van
i, of Curzon ffitheroe yester- £10 and had
.rous Burnley man,
irsed for using a road with a a dangerous
iar without an instrument.
fined £5 and endorsed fol
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drafted and she will not be completely satisfied, or fulfilled as a writer, until she has writ ten finis to the final one. Mrs. Harrison has to garner
carefully tire moments of leisure in which to write. A widow, with
four sons, she has plenty to keep her occupied.Her eldest son, Paul, aged 19. is an apprentice tinsmith with a Clitheroe firm. Laurie, aged 16 is an art student at the
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young girt growing into woman hood;
“What message do you (ling across the room?
Toss your hair across your eyos.
Provocative thigh— Shy demeanour would deny.
Tempting titilation of the senses refute the wanton lie.
Smoky blur of light— Conceal what you may foci. .. Toss the ’hard stuff! Dim the fear! Untouched by passion! Savage beat and rhythm threaten to consume.
Lost in some wild dream, . pt;
Accrington. College of Art. Clive, aged 13, is a pupil at Settle High School, and ten- year-old Martin attends Gis- biirn primary school.
appreciate drug danger to youth
The attitude of many women’s organisations to
Poetic inspiration does not always come when one is in “vacant or in pensive mood,” or m some idyllic toner . .
For Mrs. Elsie Harrison of Hollins Croft, Rimington, it frequently conics when she is in i h c 0 ' J "
household chores. Then she will break off from the washing up, or halt her c eamng and1 po .slung to_»rab ^ piece of paper and set down her thoughts and impressions before they elude her. The mpulse to wntc momcnian > satisfied, she continues with her more prosaic tasks,.until a new idea comes to interrupt hci steady loutmc.
the peril which threatens , young people who indulge in unpresenbed and indis
criminate drug-taking is crystallised in the words of Mrs. E. A. Smith, the Pre siding Member of the Whalley Rural Deanery Mothers’ Union, m an interview with an Advcr- . tiscr and Times reporter. Mrs. Smith explained
that, while the Mothers’ Union was not usually regarded as a militant body, on (he issue of drug addiction all lively minded
members were aware of the deterioration and dis tress brought by addiction,
and wanted to do some
thing about it. She went on: “This
sense, of urgency to inform members of a situation new to many of them is set out in the Mothers’ Union own pamphlet “Drugs and Yo u n g People,” by Sister Patricia, C.S.M.V., Sister Superior of Spclthorne St. Mary. The author is a nun in the Church of England, and is in charge of a home for y o u n g drug addicts. Already 30,000 copies of this pamphlet have been sold.” The popular image of
AND DISTRICT SHOULD KNOW THE TRUE FACTS ABOUT [H E m i l UL HELL* TO.WHICH JOURNEYING ON THE DOPE ROAD LEADS TIIL
EVERY PARENT AND EVERY YOUNG DRUGI *N CLITHI^OL it there is no official evidence, at the moment, that in areas
like ours this self-destructive habit has obtained a grip. I t is also true t a ic p are keeping a vigilant watch to prevent such a situation arising._______ But before young people can be subjected to the ■
temptations which can lead to drug taking they should be made aware—by presenting the true facts to them in a down-to-earth way—of the risks to which they would expose themselves in giving in to the urge to experiment
There is no glamour ■Skis ' :>:!)»- i i l "airs h a r r Tson"
the school holidays she is now thinking of taking up part-time employment-, if she can find suitable work within easy dis tance of her home.
worked until recently at Seer- craft. Clitheroe. With the end of
Supper Dish -
Dance — not touching, not looking—
Provoking only, Unfulfilled the premise that you flaunt.”
memories creep into the words of:
kittering dead and restless Leaves scrape at the door
Lold, sharp rain, S emory-of pain;
Like souls adrift Now you are gone. Jo y I know no more,
ike the purple shroud you M wore
“Autumn . mists ' across the C moor.
le v n o r th e rn fingers blowing
Sadness and the ache of .
lo lessen tedious preparuton time in the kitchen, 1 am positive that the days of a hot and dishevelled cook have passed for ever. I was remin ded of this when buying not only ready-cooked, but rcacly- peelcd baby beetroot the
So much seems to be done
other clay. This is one vegetable that
W wildither the bud: Curlew, mocking my sorrow. ‘Come back, come back’, he
Borne on the wind All my tomorrows.”
cries;
Mrs. Harrison made Rimington her home two year's ago. after living for a year in Clitheroe. She came to the area, from Rawtenstall. three years after
Bom at Swinford. near Rugby
sausages with a good old- fashioned taste that were fried to serve with savoury beetroot. 1 lb. pork sausages, 1 oz. butter, 1 small chopped onion, 1 small cooking apple; 12 oz. cooked beetroot; 2 level tea spoons brown sugar, salt and
has unique qualities of colour, texture and flavour and goes well with many meals. I particularly ■ liked some
l.
the dope road, only pain and heartbreak, however much the jnnorant. the immature and The "kinky” might try to fool young people into thinking differently, as an excuse for their own weak ness. And once the craving wliich taking drugs creates has grown to addiction, the addict is powerless to free
himself from this habit, which holds and manipulates
him.For addiction reduces a human being to a puppet re acting only 'to the impetus or his taughtened nerves which clamour for the drug that has become the controlling force of his existence.
taking drugs for “kicks," then they find they can't "kick" the habit. Their first step on the dope road is taken, quite often, because they mix with a set who con sider it the “imthing" to do and they are fearful of being thought the odd one out.
Teenagers usually begin
Joan Wright looks at
be different from the rest of the crowd they so about with, they arc firmly convinced that in one aspect, at least, they will be different from the others. For they firmly believe —or kid themselves into thinking—that thev will be
But. although they fear to k-esents one of
initial dangers. I» bonds
F pepper.ry sausages in a little melted lard over medium heat for about 20
minutes.Melt butter in a saucepan, add onion and apple and cook slowly without colouring until tender. Add beetroot, sugar, salt and pepper, stir thoroughly and
her husband’s death. A machinist by trade, she
this
them—beyond a n
them in bondage to a terrible marriage for the heroin addict, .................— -----
thi uiiuuuuii. direction, craving that will lead them to
heat through. Serve beetroot in a dish and
arrange sausages on top. Sprinkle liberally with chopped parsley and serve with brown bread and butter for supper.
d rm n VAQri ic C
the depths of degradation. And life - ---------- "''■'•I'-i-i oririic- wc must convince them, before Piuvviv uc
unmoi .. ic.™,, 0f au overdose, acHJHg „
are sellin l SVlftrt. (MIA + i o l 1 + 1 JVC
they reach the crossroads, that WUH ooys iLllU 4-1-.«
the’ dope road is a short one potentialities, leading directly to broken Addiction also brings .a- health—even death—during narrowing down of all interests their springtime years which into the desire for one thing and one thing only, with the
the joys of children-or family are pleasures which addic- tion puts out of reach, for both boys and girls lose their sexual
septicaemia, she explains, There is no hope of normal ad ii
'
consequent loss of all pleasure in nature, music, thc .theatre, the arts, or any other pursuits
people victim,
loll”- theh
ihe more pitiful, is the stunt- known t0 everybody .on both | 'V
_____ the more obvious, ana jj1.jyje_(jry. wisecrack, better uue Jiiwc
younger t T I t was Lady Peel, that splendid
reveal another risk, which applies particularly to young “The younger
or hobhics. The author’s next words
he “ ing of
who have been rescued this
normality lost and
the to
slavery uphill
in all but age. appear two are or Immature,
adolescent years; so that tnose Beatrice Lillie. „.i._
the growth during the tirtAii
and made climb
tne immature sj^es
found to have three
which they are, alas only too experienced.”
the one sphere that to .Hen,leiey - on - Thames a 0(;tober
Assuming that parents will -Thoroughly Modern ■ Millie want to pose the question “how
should I know if my child were Mary Tyler Moore, Carol
lion dollar comedy with music stars Julie Andrews,
-xjViS is Universal’s 12. six mil
taking dnigs?” Sister Patricia c ilanning, James ■ Fox, John has supplied the answer in her Gavjn and Miss LiiTie herself pamphlet, which also deals who has a key role as Mrs. with manly other aspects of the Reel's, a
white.slave traffickci.
drug problem.
She writes: “Adolescence is a time of moods, but a. teenager
unduly after a “fix.”
Unkcmpi in tilings I f J O N IC . --
taking drugs will be moody far Mi£s Lillie and Julie have beyond the normal; depressed ^ .ta in ironic links. When and restless when craving, and fuming in Hollywood Aiiss ---- elated immediately Lillie showed .Julie a copy oi “Mnrv Poppins” which the author, P. L. Travers, had, autographed: “This .is. for you! _I have you in mind:” ; Walt Disney, however,
, other signs are that they wifi be dirty and unkempt— although this is normal up to a point—and will lose interest
lntei'
estedUiem.Thevivni
They1 \rifi not which is the story of Gertrude Lawrence, and it is interesting
. if hi„v ire selling a surplus, was once Bea Limes unuu L v wifi have considerably study during the highly success- mey win * v. .h'ouiH
pookelf money^or^^ternn-tively, to knew •that ^ ful Chariot revues m London
■' “ A ftef tn miecHon the pupils and the U.S.A.. in the .^ventie^ ' nf the eves will change, becom- Miss Lillie recalled. On oriel
occasion I pretended to have a
"" "prickmarks along the fever so that G^'tnide ^ ' t veins of the inner arm, or rence could go on.
small bruises where the veins I went to another theatie to
have bled, are completely see a performance of Chu rnnrin^ivc* thev may even Cliin^Chow and bad the bad
Her final message is to evciy- me paj a fi.ic.
use he win. on thTback of luck to sit next to. my revue ia . hand or the feet," producer Andre Chariot! stressed the author
|
chose Julie who wont on to win an Academy Award , for her performance in that film;. Julie now is making “Star”
I
New faithfulness of fit New richness of colour
SEAMED SEAMFREE CAristoc S T R E T C H ’" "He was furious and he made
MAUREEN. C00KS0N LTD. 2154
47 KING STREET, WHALLEY TELEPHONE: .
C7-- of vears,
happen to anybody.” To whom was he reffenng
* ^liivino1 Till ft . . _ z. Li-_ A *-1« — Atlantic rescued f Iriomom back
the < t«hi« ic
]ady of t flilre deadpan visage and rwiiuwn tu v.»
\n*-,r rt t rfpjirinfl visase
lor RaJ1^ organisation theatre is, g(. Mru-tln's Lane, London, on in
the new in
stai.ting publicity on her latest I , p wjflCh opens at
■ «Miss Lillie is in England for long rest y
at her home bef ociore i ^||| at | l i l l III
a certain star: “If I loathed her with every quivering fibre of my being (which at certain dress rehearsals I have) I should still have (o admit that » visit with this lady is one of the most enchanting things that could j
Noel Coivard once said of
an embolism, or
:igc
If we want to people walking
petil we must headlong
the “pushers” who peddle them drugs, and the so-called friends who egg them on to experiment 0r in. uus
all doubt—that prove
young into
to rifUSS/'
a modern problem
able to give up taking the stuff conviction ferns from
any time they want to do so. • i t is this total absence of belief that they can become /.dddeted to
fiicatest'
once seemed
promise.In her pamphlet “Di-ul Young People,’’ Sister Patricia is convincing enough, and her — her
filled with ; and
experience of running a home
for young • addicts. • “Slavery to a syringe’ is
with excitement, who got a “kick” was quite false. The end product of such indulgence was despair, a crippled mind and a broken body. “We are concerned
about our young people, our own flesh and blood, and realise wc cannot bury our heads in the sand hoping it will not happen to us,” said Mrs. Smith, adding: “That is why wc recommend this pamphlet, price 6d., to the public.” The pamphlet is obtain
the addict as a 'bright, witty teenager, bubbling
able from Mrs. Smith, on application to her home address, 26, St. Mary’s Street, Clitheroc. Tel. Ciitheroc 3199.
THE WISDOM HERBS
The earliest medicines known to man, long before the
use of mineral and chemical substances, were herbs; but in ancient times since everything in nature was thought to be ruled by magical laws, a great deal of mystery and sutcrsii-
also magicians and astro logers, and believed that the ruling planet of each herb dictated the best limes of the year, week and day, when it should be gathered. Herb gathering was itself a sort of
lehgious rite, a pe
tion was involved in gathering and use of them. Medicine men were often
accompanied by prayers anct name century. Astrologer-pharmacist Cut- ldno.,s_ .
nprrnrnnnee. ceous in the warding-off of witches, which gave it'its folk-■
power Being very beneficial to epileptics if they carried the herb about them, or put 'it In their shoes. Saffron, it was con sidered, should be gathered be fore sunrise, accompanied by the chanting of a charm; and St. John’s wort was most effica-
incantations—and many of saffron also had a cosmetic ap- these ideas persisted right up plication for nobles at the
0£ the Devil."
in the end of the 18th court of Richard the Lion to me enu u
Heart used it to make then- fiair blonde like their warrior
peper wrote in 1640 of the herb Yarrow was attributed with Mullein (or Hedge-taper) that
cl 1“ 11JUJv jam hair the hede being bathed r ,.
—champion poultry feather of St. John, a garland of this !
hat milker of Great Britain ™d ’then burnt, would conifer ami Ireland for lhc last nvo upon the-wearer, it was bclcivcd vcars—perform the hat trick immunity from illness for a l.v a pain winning the supreme whole year; and young maidens
Will Mrs. Nellie Murphy medicinal ones, for on the Feast, c r 1 4 n
L h am p iO l l • *•
wort, too, was considered to have powers other than purely
herb worn around the waist, by again winmug me =
one who wants to put an end to the addictive craving for drugs that is reaping too large a harvest in human misery and Itl.v suffering.
duce a climate of opinion m llomCi Thc Lodge, St. Finnbars Heart,sease got their names i which experimenting with un- cemetery. Glashcen, County prescribed drugs is regarded as Covk But silc wm find the ‘ mental
“Everyone can help to pro- hel. 19g7 ■collection’ at her
head.gear, i .s already working on indicated use
poultry -
“
theatrical gesture of a neuro ic or
Tv>„ntn than ‘kink,’ kink.
responsible one. Pointing out that most teen
immature the
daring act a the person,
eurotic this year. Hundreds of amateur save of
silly competition tougher than ever
agers who have drifted into thc wrong set have done so because they have had too much time on their hands and too much money in their pockets, she urges that children should be encouraged to widen their interests with hobbies “of whatever sort.” Any talk about “heightened
and chickens. TWO CLASSES feathers ----- ------^ -.------
swoony ^p.-, sn;lpe medjcinol
js . d f J jaupdicc,
termined to wm one of the annrem. ^ many prizes of cash, tmkeys
award m the 1967 1 oultry _n the month 0{ May, if they Feather Hat Contest.
> I ^ d tQ drink tea from it
Nellie, a genius at converting There was a theory lhat the .. in..t..o
were to keep their good looks. colouring of a plant how Lugwort and
. , exarnpic a plant with flowers, or one which.
- vcllow juice was con- ^
.
rather hat makcrs all over thc British slc^ vd° the end'of the 18th Isles arc already at work with — the era o£ scepticism poultry feathers and glue, do-
r Qf more ‘scientific’
J d maPY herbal rc- abancloned. m
drugs; and only now- are (natural herbal remedies really
coThere are two classes in the coming back into favour, both
perception” through the use of drugs she dismisses as “hot air.”
“Everyone can help by taking trouble to be informed, and by letting their M.P. know of their backing in appropriate
Let M.P. know In conclusion, she states:
legislation. At . they can question a prospec tive candidate as to his views on this subject. Above all, no body must be misled by apparent smallness of pub lished numbers. What is really frightening is the increasing steepness of the rise in num bers, together with the lower ing of the aze of the children getting involved, and the fact that by the time figures are published they are already out dated and overpassed. “Unless this problem is
leads a life domuiated_ by feai that the next dose might not be to hand when it is needed, but runs the ever-present risk
only a fractional part of the frightening p i c t u r e she paints of the prospect facing a heroin-addict unless he can be persuaded to accept treat ment to break the habit. A heroin-addict not only
similar gear. The contest sponsored by the
mpetition: one for fashion £oi-medicinal and cosmetic pur-
hats, and another for zany hats poses. In fact, according to and other garments — feather
cm.inent research chemists, boas, bikinis, sporrans and there seems little reason to sup-
„ ormronviHip November and displayed at the election P time International Poultry Show thc
International Poultry Show, is open to all and there is no limit to thc number of entries. Judg ing will be by a famous milliner and flic pick of the entries will be paradyd at the Annual Poultry Feather Hat Festival at the Cafe Royal, London, in
election time lolJowlns month. Closing date for the contest
is November 3. Full details, an entry form and instruc tions on how to make feather hats can be obtained from Room 516, Dorset House, Stamford Street, London, S.E.1.
Sh o e s -
• situation to develop which will open the doov to underground ti-atnc. by creating a need that must be satisfied by fair means
tackled by efficient legislation soon, we shall have allowed a
or foul.” Lillie1! Link with Made better
to fit better — OBTAINABLE FROM —
Braithwaite's
THE FOOTWEAR SPECIALISTS 48 WHALLEY ROAD, CLITHEROE GOOD PARKING WHILST YOU SHOP
pose that certain herbal remedies will-ever be bettered.
VENETIAN BLINDS
Estimates Free and without obligation Special Reduction
For Limited Period Area Agent:—
Tel: Clithcroc 2228
, T , ' 1- I'm- . n
“It should be gathered when ^ djvjnali0n and the casting the sun is in Virgo and tne o£
Moon in Aries,” this balance 01 a;nd £or opcn WOunds; it was -------------also written that yarrow
. powers, and was used 11Sj t0 stop nose-bleeding
“stayeth the shedding of the with a decoration of it." Mug-
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