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GIRL GUIDES ON PARADE


J?>«SS5


COUNCILLOR FOR


" H


THIRTEEN years


Tribute to the conscicntiou„


service of Coun. John Wimam Dinsdale. who lias been a mem­ ber of Bowland Rural Council for 13 years but is not seeking re-election, was paid by the chairman. Coun. R- 'Williamson, when Coun. Dinsdale attended


his last meeting of the Council at Clitheroe on Monday. Coun. Dinsdale was first elec­


ted in June, 1954. to fill the vacancy created by the death of


Mr. James Dawson-Tetlow, who represented the parish of Bol- ton-by-Bowland. A farmer of Alder House,


* A f : ^ i ^ ‘v,vv;i


bled at Clithcroe Parish Church for a service of re­ dedication on Friday even­ ing. The service, which was


North-East Lancashire Girl Guides’ Association assem­


About 800 members of the


held in Clithcroe for the first tijmc, was preceded by 'a parade ' through the town centre. Taking part were guides


and guiders from Blackburn, Burnley, Accrington, Colne, Nelson, Bowl a n d and


Mayor and Mayoress. Coun­ cillor and Mrs. T. Robinson, Miss K. Sharpies, president; Mrs. N. Carter, County Com­ missioner, and Mr. H. Bur­ rows, the Deputy Scout Com­ missioner for North-East Lancashire.


Clitheroc. Among the guests were the


worn by all guides, as a mark of respect for tho late Miss Rachel Kay-Shuttleworth, a former president of the Association, ” n


Black arm bands were


The service was conducted by tho Vicar, the Rev. A. F.


Clark, and the address given by the Rev. Mrs. Kathleen M. Hendry. The lesson was


read by Mrs. N. Carter, County Commissioner. A similar service '-of re-


dedication was held at SS Michael and John RC


Church, for a further 120 guides and guiders.


procession as it proceded from Waddington Road into Railway View.


Our picture shows tho


PARISH COUNCIL CONTESTS


CHIEF interest in the parish council elections in the Clitheroe Rural Area, which take place on Tuesday, May 9, will be at Whallcy, the largest village in the area, where there will be 12 candidates for seven seats.


Among the candidates will_____________ ESSES


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All the best Fertilisers Tools and Equipment For Your Garden


T H E O ’ S GARDEN CENTRE


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T e lep h on e : 2 6 8 8


be County Councillor Basil Greenwood, who retained his scat on the County Council at the recent elec­ tion.


two nominations for four seats at Barrow. The four retiring councillors will be returned unopposed in the Wiswell ward. Tile position in the Barrow


ward is a curious one and the method of election regarding these two vacancies is governed by rule 13 (41 of the Parish Council election rules 1952.


election the two retiring parish councillors who had not been nominated, namely Messrs. W. Hargreaves and W. A. Robin­ son. will automatically be deemed to have oeen re-elected for a further period of three years.


Accordingly, on the date of


cil, Mr. T. P. Rushton, told an “Advertiser and Times” re­ porter that should the two per­ sons concerned not wish to serve for a further term, they would he in a position to co-opt two persons to All the vacan­ cies without having to bring the full elections procedure into action again.


The Clerk to the Rural Coun­


dates for six scats at Chatburn. The full list of nominations is as follows:


There will be eight candi­ IN DETAIL


Parish of Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley.


Ward: Mary Josephine Margaret Brown, 6. The Dene, house­ wife: John Kenneth' Cross, Suth View, Whalley Road, u n d e r g r a d u a t e : William


Hurst Green and Stonyhurst


Arthur Preston. 12 Longridge Road, haulage contractor; Richard Baby Whitaker. Rad- cliffc Cottage, haulier.


In contrast, there are only Cowperlhwaite, Schofield Farm, Pendleton: George Edward


farmer: Ernest Holgate. Higher Standen Hey Farm, farmer: Richard Thistlethwaile, Hay- hurst Farm, farmer: Thomas Whitwell. Pendleton Hall


Farm, farmer Thornley with Wheatley:


John Michael Aircy, Thornley Hall, farmer: Oilvcr Hayhurst. Lower Cookleach. retired road foreman; William Lawson. Cyrtis House, farmer: William Pye, Lime House, farmer and contractor: John William Ross. Arbour Farm, farmer.


director: James Herbert Fell. 7 Limefield Avenue, senior assistant chief male nurse; Basil Greenwood. Clerk Hill, director; Maureen Teresa Grieve. Barcroft. Clitheroe Road housewife; Clara Horsfall, 78 King Street, housewife; Wil­ liam Kinder, 1 Riddings Lane, retired mill manager; Donald Ross Nicholson, 2 Moorfield. mechanical engineer: William Pape. 16 Milton Road, retired asbestos merchant; John Stew­ art Raymond Shaw. 8. Wocd- nnds Dr i ve , schoolmaster James Dixon Slater. 1 Moor- field. semi - retired school­ master; Alary Troop, 12 Mitton Road, housewife: Arthur West- well. 26 Moorficld. bank mana­


Whalley : Brian Landless Cunlitle, Stanley. company


ger.


ven Fold, Mooi'sido Lane, coni' pany director: Eileen Mary Foster, 29 Pendleton Road, housewife; Cornelius Pearce, Crabtree Cottages, company- director; James Thompson Clegg House, farmer. Barrow: William Stephen


Wiswell: Fred Forrest. Cra­


Jacques, 1G Bilsbcrry Cottages, plasterer; John Kay, Green- gore Farm, farmer: Denis Lakeland. 2 The Dene, en­ gineer: Joseph Rider Lynch. Post Office, grocer and sub­ postmaster; Vincent Joseph Wulcock, Bradhurst Farm, Stonyhurst, farmer.


Plantation Farm, farmer Chatburn; Herbert Edward


Chaigley Ward: James Kay,


Boden. 11 Rvdal Place, school­ master: Elijah Bolton, 6 R:b- blesdale View, retired cotton operative; Frank Clayton, Laneside Farm, farmer; Leo­ nard Field, 6 Downham Road, licensed victualler; Edward Frankland, 2 Wood Terrace, builder; Gertude Constance Freeman, 16 Downham Road, retired, clerk; Thomas Hudson 26. Park Avenue cotton opera live: Geoffrey Philip Womcr- sley, Meadow Bank, solicitor's


managing clerk Chipping: Irene Elizabeth


Bee, Edenholmc, Hesketh Lane, kennel proprietor and house­ wife: John Basil Beesley, 16 Longridge Road, joiner; Jack Berry, White House. Whitting- ham Road. Broughton, chair- maker; Hugh Gornal, Highfield, Garstang Road, farmer; Alfred George Gourdin, 22 Longridge Road, shoe salesman; Mark Joseph Hoyle, Beech House. Longridge Road, headmaster.


Bolton-by-Bowland, Coun. Dins­ dale has taken a keen and con­ tinuous interest in the activi­


ties of the area in which he made his home on leaving Cracoe. near Skipton. nearly 38


years ago. , good wishes


Expressing the council's re- f ■n-et that Coun. Dinsdale had


ound it necessary to resign, the


chairman said: ’ We wish him well and hope lus health and that of his wife will improve In


tire future." In reply Coun. Dinsdale


thanked the members tor their co-operation, adding. I have enjoyed my term of office. Everyone has been most help­


thanks for help he had had from the Clerk <Mi . L. D. Tel- ford) find menibers of the staff.


ful and kind.” Coun Dinsdale also expressed


* The Paradox 1 reflected in our Fashions


(wo world wars, have reflected the dogged fight lor feminine emancipation that has not yet gained tor e female sex the victory of equal rights with men.


Women’s fashions, in the years that have succeeded


helped by her eldest daughter. Christabel, began the fight lor women’s suffrage, the style ol the period was as restrictive to a woman’s movements as the male dominance


In 1903 when the widowed Emmeline Pankhurst,


to which she was subservient. Heavy whalebone corsets.


tightly laced, produced the “hour-glass” figures, decked out in floor-length dresses with high necklines, sharply nipped in waists and accentuated hips. The weight of the clothing


By Joan Wright


borne uncomplainingly by large numbers of women who


did not see eye to eye with the suffragettes and tbeir


"unwomanly ways.” Tight lacing and the type


of restrictive clothing that re du ced strong, healthy women into weak, swooning creatures were hall marks of superiority, for they could only be worn by those who had no need to do menial


worn was an added burden,


of skirts to above the ankle during the tirst world war. The war also brought recogni­ tion of women’s usefulness outside the domestic field and their ability to take over men’s jobs in industry, agri­ culture. commerce and the medical services, as more and more men were called to the armed forces, earned them ungrudging


admiration. The fashions of the 1920's,


re s pe ct and


the era of the “Bright Young Thing," the Charleston, the Black Bottom, jazz, wild


r f ® with the good shoe fit


Healthy feet depend on fit. Feet must be comfortable in summertime. That's why Clarks make their famous sandals in 4 width fittings and half-sizes.


parties and feverish gaiety, were a revolutionary leap for­ ward into a future where


woman intended to take 'lier place alongside man. as his


partner, not his chattel. Tire boyish cut of the bodice


width fitttncs in Brown G rain or C o u n t ry Tan Side.


* MOYANCE* 19/11 -3 4 /1 1


figure, with fringe. Trills or feather boas as decorations to add feminine allure, hinted


to give a "straight line"


work for a living. Shortage of material was responsible for a shortening


Death of Miss Rachel Kay-Shuttleworth


THE funeral took place on Saturday ot file Hon. Rachel K a y -S h u t t l ewo r th . whose death occurred at her home. Gaw-


thorpe Hall. Padiham. yesterday week. She was 81 Next Sunday afternoon a 1


public memorial service will be held in All Saints’ Church. Habcrgham. beginning at 3


o'clock. Miss Kay-Shuttleworth was


the daughter of the first Lord Shuttlcworth. who was one o


the last surviving


cillors of Queen Victoria and became a baron m the Corona­ tion Honours of Edward VII


coun


on the Continent when he headed the Royal-woui;p'ss5or! on Canals. She also' agisted him when he was Financial


f She was secretary to hei


Secretary to the A.dml™|^ when Gladstone was in office.


The family had close links with the Liberal Party.


WORLD AUTHORITY


Much of Miss north's life was collecting books and


from all parts of the wm d-a nd she became a world mithoutj on lace - making, h a v in e


mastered most of the


lace-making technique:s. Neicd craft was another of hei out standing accomplishments.


.


When her nephew. the present Lord shuttlcworthMeft


the family home m 19o3. Kay - shuttleworth P’*clc rangements to put


Brown, 10 Trafford Garden, male nurse; Harry Crawford. 8 Sydney Avenue. Whalley. re­ tired insurance agent. Bowland with Leagram:


tion on display at Gawtnoipe Hall.


?


Bowland: John Hoyle. Fence wood Farm, Little Boiv land, farmer: Alfred Edward Leecc, Wardsley Farm, farmer: Fred­ erick Seed, Knott End. farmer. Leagram: Edwin Hoyle, Glen- brook, school teacher; Harry Parkinson. Dairy Barn, far­ mer; Edward Rich, Leagram Mill, farmer.


took a deep and active m^ere in the Guide movement becom ing a county comnnssionei.


s During the first. .P,orl<?


GUIDE COMMISSIONER For more than 50 years she


killed, she played a prominent part, as a member of the Women's Voluntary Service, in


and during the Inst m i . n which two of her biotheis weie


he worked for child welfare


EARLY MORNING RUSH TO CATCH SCHOOL BUS


country. Settle High School starts its day at 8-30 a.m.


Unlike most schools in this


Waddington, West Bradford, and other Yorkshire villages near Clitheroe who attend the school have to leave home early in the morning to get there on time.


And those children from Some of them have to rush THE CAROUSEL OPENING SATURDAY, APRIL 29th at


42 Whalley Road, Clitheroe ★ baby linen


ancl


f r o m b i r t h t o s i x y e a r s Brierleys and others


Leading Agents for - Chi lprufe - Ladybird Rob-Roy


out of the house with their breakfasts in their hand in order to catch the school bus. Councillor R. Williamson


chairman of Bowland Educa­ tion Committee told this to a meeting of the committee on Monday and asked: “Why should Settle school have to open half-an-hour before


other schools?” The Divisional Ed ucation


Officer, Mr. D. Matthew, said that the school had opened at this time for many years, and did so because of the times of bus arrivals in the town.


using the main road to Settle arrived in the town at 8-20 and 9-20. Attempts to persuade the bus company to alter the times had failed, hut further negotia­ tions may take place. Councillor W. Harrison of


He explained that buses


instead of 8-30. Mr N. Lund replied that the


children would arrive home correspondingly later in the evening.Mrs. G.Creigliton, of Queens-


°nd *£


closely associated with All Saints, Habergham. and was a founder member of Blackburn


the evacuation of children. Miss Kay-Shuttleworth was


Cathedral Council. Among those who attended


at a duality of which the avant guard who sported the new styles were becoming increasingly conscious.


Mini skirl


them was manifesting itself in a number of different directions, a paradox that has reached our own age of the mini-skirt and trouser suit and one which is likely to continue for a long time to i come.


onThe desire to be dependent men but independent of


the funeral were representa­ tives of Habergham Parish Church, where a service pre­ ceded the cremation at Burn­ ley, the staff of Gawthorpe


Hall, members of the Guide movement and the Gawthorpe Foundation.


ather and travelled extensively L Family mourners included


the Hon. Mrs. James (sister). Mrs. Janet Young (niece) and Commander Rex Young.


ord Shuttleworth (nephew),


the Rev. S. J. Finch officiated. Tlie Times, in its obituary of


Canon G. A. Williams and


Miss Kay-Shuttleworth. says that much of her life was devoted to her father, until his


death at 95 in 1939. ‘Between the two world wars


she is remembered as an unselfish aunt to a large com­ pany of nephews and nieces who spent many of their holi­ days with her father in West­


morland.


and girlhood had been spent at Gawthorpe Hall, the early Jacobean home of her family, and for Gawthorpe in particu­ lar and for Lancashire in general she had an unswerving lovalty n'nd affection. “She was one of the pioneers


“A part or her own childhood


I As women took over more jobs and entered professions that had previously been exclusively male provinces thev also began to wear the trousers. But to appease their feminity, while they were asserting their rights to enter the masculine domain and wear what clothes they pleased, they adapted male attire to styles that would enhance their own sex appeal. Cocktail pyjamas, slacks and shorts were as much a part of the emancipated woman’s wardrobe as dresses and skirts.


Choice of w id th fitt incs in C h e r ry Red Side o r W h ite Nubuck.


Infants sixes 6—Teens 8 We fit correctly on Clarks Footgauge D. LORD & SON


5 Moor Lane, Clitlieroe Tel. Clitheroe 2488


SOUTHWORTH' FINE FURNITURE


!


Clitheroc 'Advertiser and Times, Friday. 'April 29, 1967 3


hemlines of the post-war "new look.” accompanied by sharply defined waists and rounded hips, reminiscent of Edwar­


short-lived and hem lines were raised once more.


upward” trend was relatively , „ ,


dian days. “ This reversal of the


"new high", with the thin* skirts and dresses, fashioned in a variety of material from nylon to paper.


Now they have reached a


of the Girl Guide movement in the north, being County Com­ missioner for North-east Lan­ cashire for 30 years from 1915. “She was a. member of the


County Youth Committee and of the County Records Com­ mittee and was a Justice of the


Peace from 1934. “Herself a needlewoman ol


distinction, she formed an out­ standing collection of embroi- derv of all kinds, which has been lately accepted by the


National Trust. “She gave up the last to years


of her life to the establishment of her home as a design centre fort he county and tirelessly conducted parties of visitors round the house and the col­


lections."


her mini dress with trousei suits and unusual combina- tions of casual separates: always keeping a weather eye cocked to see what is blowing her way from Mary Quant.


a^c trend setter, alternating


man’s equal, coupled with subconscious, age-old yearn­ ing for man to be still dominant, account for this continuing duality of choice


The desire to be treated as


ing the paradox until the battle for equality is finally resolved, adding zest to the lives or many more genera­ tions of women destined to wear styles that will mirror their content and discontent


Fashion will go on reflect­ with the status quo.


Trend setter The teenager is the space


See E L L IS ’S for all your | Spring Decorating Materials |


VYM


Flic I.C.I. Wallcovering you can scrub. All 1967 designs. Normally 28/- roll.


OUR PRICE 19/11


DULUX Gloss


Normal price 10/3 pint Our price 8/3 pint CLEARANCE SALE


SMOKERS REQUISITES 3 5 ° / O F F


HUNDREDS OF PIPES 8/6 to 120/- TOBACCO POUCHES UP TO 30/-


Waddington. asked why ‘ the school did not begin at 9-30


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way. Waddington, whose 13- year-old son. Michael attends the school, told an Advertiser and Times reporter: “i t means getting up at 6-50 a.m. so that he can have a proper meal before catching the bus at 7-30. He has got into the routine now, and does not grumble about having to get up early. My only complaint Is that the bus does not wait for one minute. I f 'v e are a little late getting up, my husband has to chase after the bus in his car."


F. & J. HAYDOCK 31 KING STREET. CLITHEROE


POLYCELL Normal price 2/8


Our price 2/- KOTINA


for insulating walls Normally 10/* roll


Our price 7/18 roll ELLIS’S


W'HITE EMULSION (Any colour mixed) 30/- per gallon 16/- half-gallon


SUPER QUALITY


9/- auartcr gallon 5/- Pint


. Ellis’s Super Quality. WHITE GLOSS


.12/11 quarter-gallon 8/9 pint


42/6 per gallon ■ 23/- half-gallon


Paint 3/6 half-pint


DUNLOP VYNIL FLOOR T ILES


9in. x 9in. all Colours 6/- per d o z e n


MAGSCOTE Gloss


Normal price 11/6 pint


Our price 9/3 pint j PO LY C E L L


T ILES Normally 16/6


Our price 12/11 per box of three dozen


POLYSTYRENE Ceiling Tiles


5/- per dozen 12in. x 12in.


Clithcroc’s Popular Paint and Wallpaper Store


ELLIS’S 29, MOOR LAME


CLITHEROE Tel. 3882


and war years spent in uniform or overalls was wit­ nessed in the down-d.pped


A surge away from austerity


.],() YORK STREET, CLITHEKOE TEL: 3 1 9 1


Also at 12 NORTHGATE, BLACKBURN Tel: 57733


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