Clilheroe Advertiser and Tinics, Friday, 'August JO, 1968
Objects d’art at jumbles
You have heard before
that I have a weakness for jumble sales, and the odd
and unusual items it is oc casionally possible to find at these very Lancashire
i all parts of the country, but nowhere else do they seem quite so prolific as in the
institutions. I suppose they are held in
THROUGH A WHALLEY WINDOW
County Palatine, and in recent months we have had a spate—almost a torrent—of them in Whalley.
rnr
that they are one of the easiest ways yet discovered of making a substantial sum of money with the minimum of effort, and it is true to say that quite a number of our local organisations would be financially in a very sorry plight but for the periodic cash transfusion of the quar terly jumble sale.
I t must be freely admitted ' 'ft
f : / V- • ■ ' • > r
cover this time? No, not an old book, although a quick rummage through the tat tered volumes is always my first objective when I surge forward with the crowd. There are still quite a num ber of books on local affairs, now out of print, that I would like to see on my shelves, but this time it was a little brass ornament.
Well . . . what did I dis
ature grandfather clock, un doubtedly a piece of late Vic torian or early Edwardian brick-o-brac, and probably of very little intrinsic value, but what memories it revived.
I t is shaped like a mini 1 Y Y - Y * • • ; .
ted in my youth where a dis play of gleaming brass and
Of country cottages I visi
copper was always the pride of the housewife—candle sticks, candlesnuffers, horse- brasses, alewarmers, warming pans, and what have you. For a period these seemed
i;wY?;- ; X - III'! ::;:V$i;rj£ .
• 4 M .& J . !V!nV> i I::' i f ; :;*•,<! fe - . l . i ; :;• AND ABOUT
Wc spoke lo an artist the other day. A woman artist tucked away in the
tage. Sawley began her career in a bank in Blackburn but it is easy to see that nei
secluded village of Sawlcy. Mi's, Prudence Kunzei of Friends Cot
rather strange one might think when she is surrounded by glorious countryside. “The colours are marvellous to an indus
real talents lie in painting. She paints industrial scenes mostly—
peramental and finds it impossible to paint
depth.” said Mrs. Kunzei. Being an artist, she is of course tem
trial scene. I tried but I couldn’t get really interested to portraits. There isn’t enough
while her family are around. They too are all interested in art. Mrs.
Kunzel’s elder daughter, Anna-Marie is studying housecraft in Ilklcy and 14-year-old Rosemary is a pupil of Ackworth Boarding
with Quis
COUNTRY DIARY
Fells are flushed with a carpet of purple heather
Each year at this time
when the first tints of autumn touch the chestnut I experience a desire to have known what inter pretation Wordsworth or Keats would have given to i he inspiring display so gloriously presented on
School iii Pontefract. A technical translator, Mr. Kunzei lias
been involved with textiles all his life and is therefore interested in colour and fabrics. Surprisingly, Mrs. Kunzei does her paint-
in oils. Good light is a must. In January. 1960, Mrs. Kunzei exhibited
School of Fine Arts. It gave amateur painters an opportunity
In her presentation but tills year her munificence sur
our surrounding fells. Nature is never niggardly
ings in the kitchen—“you don’t need splendid facilities to be an artist” she says—and paints
an industrial landscape at the fifth annual amateur art exhibition at the Heatherley
by the Society of Women Artists to London. But she doesn’t believe to sending paintings for exhibit unless she thinks they will do well.
to show their work to a London gallery under professional conditions. One of her industrial scenes was accepted
door to the cottage is the Friends Meeting House, where Quakers living to the district meet every Sunday. On one of her walls, Mrs. Kunzei has a
The Kunzei family are Quakers. Next „ t Mrs. Prudence Kuniel of Friends Cottage Sawley with one
beautiful paiting by Sheila Fell, who has been described as one of the most brilliant women painters in the country.
Proud collection of Lowry paintings While we’re on the subject
twice a year, and has no social commitments as his presence is only known to a few, the sight of an elderly man busily sketching on Moor Lane probably passed unnoticed.
paintings, we recently came across private collection of five or six canvasses
of a
scenes of Clitheroe, done on various visits to
by L. S. Lowry. They were all, apart from a portrait,
the town. One, a view of the junction of Moor Lane
and Lowergate, has since been used by him for one of his large paintings and has the typical Lowry figures rushing busily to and
fro.The others include a couple of views of Church Brow and one of a building in Duck
Street Naturally enough, to the owner these can
vasses are priceless and wouldn't be sold at any price.
He arrives in the district unheralded about . ,
Act gives security to caravanners Protection against harassment and
eviction are given this week to 200,000 residential caravanners by the Caravan
Housing and Local Government, has drawn the attention of local authorities to 'the Act. which, except for the part covering gypsies, came into operation on Monday. Its effect is to give a measure of security,
Sites Act 1968. Mr, Anthony Greenwood, Minister of
paintings. vanners with the intention of making them
leave. Although that part of the Act which
makes it a duty for county councils to pro vide caravan sites for gypsies is not yet being implemented, authorities are warned not to drive gypsies out of their areas “to become the responsibility of neighbouring
race, but as "persons of nomadic habit of life, excluding travelling showmen, or
authorities.” Gypsies, incidentally, are defined not by
circus people.” On existing sites, gypsies pay up to £2
a week in rent. If you have them-
wear them! Wc passed a woman learning to drive
in an official driving school car the other
similar to that given to householders by the Rent Act, ito people who live to caravans and who rent pitches on caravan sites, or who
rent both caravans and pitches. The Act makes i t unlawful, without the
sanction of the courts, to evict or harass cara
day.Although the car was fitted wth seat belts, neither she nor her instructor were
thought.
wearing them. Not a very good example, one would have
passes everything as we sec acres of fell carpeted ^ in purple heather. On Wadding- ton, Burn, Birket, Croasdale Staple Oak and to the Trough the hillsides are alight and flushed with deep purple.
G lo r io u s
each season has its own peculiar charm and there are many who will have some difficulty to deciding which has the greatest attraction. But when you consider, even high summer cannot surpass the magnifi cent splendour of the fells. In summer you have hedg-
And so we find, once again,
thornthwaite radiant. You will agree. If the con
are s imp l y August gives way to Sentry hor
bcr.
ditions are favourable, that beyond all others this is a spectacle of unrivalled mag
nitude. Take a closer look and you
will marvel at the number of ever so tiny flowers which go to make up a few inches of each heather stalk. Then multiply this with the area and you will realise the astronomical numbers con tained to a few square yards
of ground. Of course, the heather has
many more attributes than what at first meets the eye. For do we not now see row upon row of bee-hives placed in the more sheltered places convenient to the carpet of purple? The beekeeper, fully aware
su - — ------- ful freshieii
has" its"” wonderful”*----^ must
Spring, wo
of flowers but which of the.v can, for sheer mass J colour match the felts ca'
mmer its arrav and vaE
will have difficulty in ask sing the values of each son. Each has its ran chant and appeal. But or one thine I am certain, we shall ven soon be witnessing a chance which will set the rood lands alight with all varied shades of gold aid reds.
peted in heather? Perhaps, like myself, m
“green robed senators of lie mighty woods” the elm
will soon captivate the eye as they turn from yellov t0 brown.
The majestic oak and it, s
of its value, takes his bees where the heather blooms offer an attraction and a good supply of honey. Ribblesdale in particular is
All too soon we notice change to prepare it seem
rows tipped with purple- vetch, willow herb and fox glove. By every lane we have primroses, bluebell and cel andine, all in their season, but never do any of these dominate the landscape as does the heather. I t is as if to one glorious
well known for its bee k e e p e r s both past end present and the late Mr. J. H. W. Fishwick, an authority on such matters, was always eager to talk of the value of the modest bee and its products. He once told me of its
for decay. And so the cr* goes on as we again !oo> forward to spring. One thin for sure it is never dot On the contrary there s always something of im
s
tance taking place in the countryside.
po--
finale, summer bows, to give way to autumn. A prelude
indeed to that pageantry of glowing tints soon to be seen throughout Ribble and
Hodder valleys. Take a look as you must,
just at the top of Wadding- ton fell near the quarries. Here you will see a beauti ful stretch thickly covered in rich purple.
B e au ty
magnificent spectacle then I suggest you take a run to the Trough of Bowland and return to late afternoon when the sun sets the mas sive flanks of these fells aglow. Morshaw and Haw-
Or if you desire a more
to suffer an eclipse. The necessity of constant polish ing did not appeal to the housewives of the ‘twenties and early ’thirties and the influx of cheap, plated, mass- produced imitations did noth ing to enhance the popularity of the lovely craftsman-made
articles.
in tremendous demand once more, and there is no more attractive sight in the home than a display of brass or cop per with that rare patina only produced by many years of zealous care and burnishing. Nowadays too, we se e
Now these lovely tilings aie . . ; X : ;v;.j ;
chest, filled with an array of summer flowers and reflect ing every ray of light. Glori ous, they looked.
P re c io u s
a coffee grinder—older read ers will remember the type— a cast iron base, with a round brass container for the coffee beans, and a central handle to make the machine func tional — now displayed as a
In yet another home, I saw
articles that were at one time purely functional now dis played for their decorative value alone. In one house re cently I saw a pair of brass sc&lcs, identical with those found in every grocers* shop in mv youth, now standing in the 'hall atop an old oak
, . ,;y ; i . 'r i i, ■'_*$» y if i
? r |i L ’lti 1 .m&mt . :,r \A I*;' - ’Tr.f M M ;|X £ p - r j l ' 1 r-Ji?
hfMMtm^mAi ■lift
.a »?•■.■ v i'S*
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T FOWLER
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177 CHOllLEY HOAD CLEANING SPECIALISTS
We clean floors in new or old houses.
Carpets cleaned at home or taken away.
Suites cleaned. Floor polishing.
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NOW OPEN PETER FIELD
16 Casllegatc, Clithcroe Tel: 4246 (daytime)
Tel: Chatburn 462 (evenings)
C a s t lc g a tc A n t iq u e s In Clithcroc
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Anything Old and Interesting
CHIMNEY SWEEP
Brush and Vacuum Home Cleanings—Carpets B. BRIDGES?
2 Woonc Lane, Clitheroe Tel: 2807 5 p.m, to 8 p.m.
A
Lower Eanam Wharf. Blackburn S A V E L IN O
ROBINSON. HEYS & CO. LTD. The Old Firm.
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WANTED FOR CASH THE ANTIQUE SHOP
Barrow, near W Halley. Tel: Whalley 3511.
W. FORSTER General Carrier and Light Furniture Removals
116, BAWDLANDS, CLITHEROE — Tel: 3356 CONCRETE
BUILDING BLOCKS (LOAD BEARING)
18 x 9 x 9 with halves 1 8x9x6 8 x 9 x 4
PAVINGS AND PATH EDGINGS
Concrete Fuel Bunkers from £6-18-6
Screen Concrete Blocks
D. & A. B. FRANKLAND Sabden Print Works, Whalley Road, Sabden
Telephone: Padiham 72811 (Home) Clitheroe 4293.
CATERER TO THE MUSICAL PROFESSION
E. J. APPLETON
EXPERT PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING
Please note change of address 21, WOODLANDS RISE,
HAWORTH, KEIGHLEY. Tel: Haworth 3519
(24 hour telephone answering, service) REPAIRS TO ALL MAKES DEREK LEIGH
Television and Appliance Service Engineer
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;New Sets supplied to ordei
For Prompt Attention Phone: Chatham 461
Why put up with damp uneven Floors ?
WHEN YOU CAN HAVE
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JAMES BOLTON & Son (ASPHALTERS) LTD.
LOWER EANAM WHARF, BLACKBURN
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Telephone: Blackburn 59438. Evenings: Blackburn 5S342.
precious heirloom. It certainly makes one rea
lise how the years are flying by when objects that were in common domestic use in childhood days are now es teemed as (almost) objects
d’art. In a city gallery a few
weeks ago, I saw glass ‘pop' bottles — those with a glass
marble to the neck, which were so familiar forty years ago. and now offered as curios at 12/6 each. So were tire good old out-dated 'flat irons,’— ‘box’ irons were double the price—and 7 lb. stone jam jars were priced ait 7/6.
it?
dozens of those bottles as tar gets for stones when we were short of ‘ marbles.’ and scores of those old jam jars must have found their way to the
Makes you think, doesn’t As lads we must have used
municipal ‘ tip.’ I t occurs to me that those
few acres of land on the banks of the Calder might be a much more rewarding area for excavation than many an ancient British or Roman
camp site. I must ask Owd George to
bring his spade along! J.F. Last Saturday we travel
led by coach to Bleasdale Post Office five miles be yond Chipping, where we began our ramble. Our party numbered 39 as we off for Admarsh and location of Bleasdale
set the
Circle. We took to the fields a few
on the right of the road and followed the smooth metalled road past the pleasantly situated Bleasdale school, the road was much different to the time I first trod it several years ago then it was a rough and stoney way.
yards beyond the post office
to this country from Asia long ago and in. the olden days was strewn on the floors of churches, it does not seed to western Europe but grows from the rhizomes or root- stock. A walk of about half a mile
This plant was brought Hidden
was at one time a great marsh which (he Garnetts of Bleasdale Tower had drained and cultivated, bringing hun dreds of acres of wasteland into use. there are still pat- dies of sphagnum here and ■there. We reached the copse where die circle Is sited hidden
Where St. Eadmors’ stands
Ancient wood bronze age circle of special importance
34 feet across, the posts had been sunk to a depth of about 4 feet.
was a mound to which there was a rectangular grave or burial two feet by three feet filled with wood ashes, in these ashes two ums were found upside down containing burnt bones and ashes, they had been made from local boulder clay stiffened with coarse grit and well fired. One of the ums had a pigmy cup in its neck.
Within this ring of posts Imagine
brought us to the church of St, E a dm o r at Admarsh
of this bronze age monu ment but thanks to the Ancient Monuments Society one can imagine to some extent what the place was like in 1933 the society appealed for funds for the preserva tion of the circle and the area was cleared of scrub, and concrete blocks placed where the posts had been. The ums are to -the Harris museum at FIreston where
Little remains to be seen UiUOVJUtrt* U * 1* —
away among the scrub, bir ches and conifers, it is shel tered from the north winds
PRIZE CROSSWORD
by the Bleasdale and Bolland fells, and from the cast by Parlick Pike. Here in 1899 Mr. Thomas
ACROSS
5. Device for clamping down on wickedness (4).
KcLsail who lived a t Higher Fairsnapc discovered this ancient bronze age circle less than half a mile from the farm. Exclamations revealed a
7. and 4 Down. IS She barely ■visible when doing her act (5-5, 6).
timber circle belonging to the later stages of the bronze age of northern Britain. Later discoveries to Europe
10. Fenced not far away in the end (8).
gave more information regar ding timber circles and en hanced the special import ance of Bleasdale, it was the first to be found and the only one in which the tiimbers had not perished with time.
Horse shoe
outer circle which had a dia meter of 150 feet, this was to the form of a wooden pali sade made up of 32 tree stumps each three feet to diameter and sunk to a depth of about five feet to the ground and spaced about 13
The “circle” consisted of an
feet apart. B e tw e e n these smaller
trunks were placed side by
, shape ,°f a horseshoe, It was four feet wide and four feet
eight inches to diameter. To the south west two large stumps marked the entrance to the circle. Well off centre to the outer circle was a ditch in the
side to form a hind of stockade, these were about
8. Go head first into a place of ill-repute (4).
1L I ’m to send letter for a 1 levy (6).
14. The man to charge of press-cuttings? (6).
2. Look on when red rag is tom to pieces (6).
16. Pieces of camping equip ment round the East — they should be strongly
31. What the story-telling cotton - worker d o e s (5,1,4).
DOWN
1. The editor is after us — not' allowed: to be idle (4).
3. Busy way to which a good man holds timber (6).
2. Fail to be emergency equipment for sailors (4-4).
4. See 7 Across. 5. Don’t allow some of the native totem-poles (4).
6. Famous—-held a victory party (10).
deep, the bottom was lined with poles of birch mid
19. Bundles of notes for wes tern advertisements (4).
17. He puts the score right for the players (8).
held (6).
22. The lady's ring for a brave man (4).
20. A term from some of the theorems to Euclid (4).
18. The unplaced horse ran after tills (4).
do some chastising (6).'
8, Thumb-nail: 9, Get; 10 Robin; 12, Monster; 13, Hecate; 14, Masliie; 17, Bow line; 19, Moped; 21, Tee; 22, Part-timer; 24, Tally; 25,
Last week’s solution: Across: 1, Bisects; 5, Poles;
name and address in the space provided and. send i t to this address: marked “Crossword’’ to the top left
hand.comer of the envelope.
Advortiser and Times, King Street, Clltheroe.
almost encompassed an inner circle which consisted of 11 large posts each 30 inches to diameter, this circle-measured
13. Criminal band having methods for use when the ship docks (8).
: i s Half of them headstrone
9. Fm getting the fashion price — it's unreasonable (10).
15. Recapture one in shock ing anger. (6).
Cabinet; 4, Swarms; 5, Pylon; 8, Lightship; 7, Set free; 11, Back-wheel; 13, Habitat; 15, Ammeter; .16, Beards; 18, Imply; 20, Dirge; 23, Men.
Strange. Down: 1, Biter; 2, Sou; 3,
last week’s crossword, opened on- Tuesday ■
The first correct solution to fill a flhAVh n.rrtSAwrtrri fill
sent to by Mrs. M. Beattie, 8, Chester Avenue, Clltheroe. When you have completed
morning was that Address
post next Tuesday manning. No entries will be checked before then and the sender of (Jhe first correct solution opened will be awarded a 15s postal order.
Entries must readh- us by first Name
they can be seen along with a description of the circle. Leaving this relic of two
and a half thousand years ago we headed to the direc tion of Holme House and
then followed an old track under the slopes of Fairsnape fell to the 17th century farm of Higher Fairsnapc where we saw a coat of arms over the door bearing the initials of Robert Parkinson and the date 1637.
Lower Fairsnape and then to the river Brock which comes off Fairsnape fell above Fosters wood, reaching the ford and footbridge wc had tea by the river.
From here we made for
to Blindhurst an old disused road covered with water pepper, at the farm we were attracted by the fine building and its wide doorway with pillars and splendid a stone above the door
Off again we made our way
thick arch, gave
=__ the erection of the house as 1731 a.d.
Following the road out of - llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll>>ll'1lllll,lll1lllllll1Hllllll,llllll,llllll"llllllllllll'lllllllllllml111111111 11111111
the farmyard we came to a footpath a c r o s s a lush meadow of fog grass which we crossed to a fine stone wall about five feet in height, built into the wall was a really good example of a style.
Interest
again at Lower Coles and making our way past Wood- gates with Parlick rising to 1416 feet on our left. At the road junction we took to the fields again and made for Fish House Farm where some members refreshed them selves with milk fresh from the cow, the last part of our ramble took us by fieldpatli to within a few hundred yards of Chipping.
Soon we were on the road
lavoured with grand weather. The next ramble will be in
Once a g a i n we we r e
the Bashall area on Sept; 7th, 1-54 bus Well terrace.
Rambler.
medicinal attributes and of the finest beekeepers of the old school—a Mr. Thomas Tittertagton, of West Brad ford, who, he said, was 25 years ahead of contemporary beekeepers and was known as a bee master in all the villages of mid-Ribblesdale from 1850 to 1870. All these beekeepers of the
life? All of our summer vis-, tors have gone and some re think this is bound to irf. cate a dead season but te are now on the threshold o' a far more interesting hn- sion as we welcome os winter visitors. Indeed, come to think of 1 I am convinced, as the m
Again, what of the bid * lil-'
GCE 01 The following pupils Clitheroe Grammar Scho
for Girls have passed t) Northern Universities Gene: Certificate of Education e
animations at Ordinary lev Susan Margaret Ashe, T,
M, P, N; Ann Bradley, E, H, f ' M, P, N; Christine Franc Calvert, E, EL, H, T, D, F, Anne Patricia Carpenter, J5L, H, T, X, L, F, G, M.
X L, F, G, M; Patricia A: Coldwell, E, EL, H, T, X, L, M; Linda Anne Coxon, E, 1 H,’ T, F, M; Linda Marga: Cullen, E, EL, D.
Gillian Chadwick, E, EL,
H, X, L, F. G, M. N; V. Elizabeth Foster, E, EL, H, T,
Susan Beatrice Filing, E,
G, M, P, N; Yvonne Keates, E, H, T,
Kay Patricia Moorhouse, E, T, D, N.
F N; Rhona Vernon Nelson,f EL H, T, X. L. F, G. M,
Patricia Ann Morris, E. H,|
Susan Margaret Nuttall, E, L F M, P; Christine Pustelnil E EL, H, X, L, F, G.
I
old school were convinced of the value of heather honey and v a r i o u s were the methods employed in the making of Mead. A few glasses of the special
ing chill Increases and th* days shorten so the wild fori —the most colourful of or visitors—come to our water ways and rivers to
r.tt added delight to the bird watchers.
orn NATURALIST.
brew, well matured over a period of six or 12 months, was enough to free the tongue of the most hardened country man.
Thouglitlcsness
food and sustenance for the red grouse. This, I consider should be bom in. mind by the increasing number of people who tear up the entire plant for decorative pur poses. The practice is becoming
The heather has other uses and the young shoots provide
This was News . . .
75 YEARS AGO
wrote:—"A worthy gentleman at Clitheroc writes to me n indignant terms respecting a decision of the County m
September 8, 1893 The editos- of ‘-Trail
trates there. Two engineers were to
more and more common each yeas: and the number of cars which carry h u g e clumps of heather fixed in the radiator grill is evidence of the thought! esness of the so-called country-lover. Visitors to our fells con
agis
for emitting steam from s traction engine on the high way. The offence was proved by Col. Starkie who, w
tinue to increase and to a few more years if everyone takes more and mo r e heather, then the time will come when the heather—par ticularly in the accessible places—will recede. This will lead to the spread
driving a dog cart, met the engine which, besides emit ting steam, was making a great noise and traveltn: along the middle of the road The traction engine, i;
hile
of bracken which to turn can only mean a deterioration of
Starkie and the Bench de serving of severe condemna tion as a wanton interference by “squires" in the intereS
ol
our fells. There is also another very
of trade and commerce. I differ from him anj .or
popular flower which has never, to my experience been so plentiful or prolific. You will not have failed to notice the numerous colonies of harebells, again on the higher ground. Never have I seen such
gine on the highway is. der any circumstances, j
once find myself on the sic* of the squires. A traction en
nuisance and a danger, aw the regulations let to ing cannot be too strffigaM. enforced.”
wonderful displays of this— the bluebell of Scotland. With each bell-like flower delicately suspended on a hair-like stem its b l u e matching the deepest sum mer sky i t has no rival for grace and colour. And so I am sure you will
season. We are so accustomed to
50 YEARS AGO in Bowland was severely w.
September 6, 1918 The conditions of the
cised at a meeting > Council, when •» «»*£, of £ 1,000 was made tows-
agree, there is just as much to ‘rave’ about to August or September as at any other
hearing the poets call about the English countryside now that April is here, that we are apt to overlook the glory of what I call—this pre-
their repair. 25 YEARS AG
O
September 3) 1 ^ o Methodists fr0™jL!fs!
f the distort assemble C the Methodist
hurch, Clitheroe, for t™ • mnAl rircilit
BWMWCmwe
T D, L, F, M. N; Kathll Javne Seed, E, EL, T, X, N, II Judith Dorothy Sharpies, E. I D M; Jacqueline Vernon Shi E. H, T, F, DS.
Audrey Hazel Rush ton, E, .
Kathleen Elizabeth Slingoi T N; Mollie Gilchrist Sm E EL, H, T, X, L, F, G M. Pamela Jill Smith, E, EL, H X L F, G, M, N; Susan M| Spurgeon, E, EL, H, T, X, Li G M, N.
|H, T, X, L, F, M. Susan Margaret ThornberL
E EL, T, X, D, F, M; Cal Lynne Sutcliffe, E, T, X, D.l Lucv Cressdda Sutcliffe, E, T,| Enid Anne Swinbank, E.
Cathryne Louise Stanwol
EL H. T, X, L, F, G, M,l Anne Thxelfall, E, EL, H, t | D F, N; Margaret Elizalf Tranter, E, H, T, L, F, M.f Janet Mary Turner, E, EL]
T L, F, G, M.
1
E EL, H, T, X, D, M; Lil Elaine Wilkinson, E, EL. Hi M N; Lilian Margaret Wo E, T, L, F, M.
X; Linda Diane Blezard, E,l T D, DS; Susan Hilary Boj E EL, F, DS. Pamela Bretherton, E, T, X, D, DS; Diane Brooks, E. EL, F. M, P, N; Susan Linda Cl wick, E, D, F, DS; Jean hT Christie, E, EL, H, T. X. Violet Barbara Clark, E, " X F, M.
Gail Anne Astley, E, El
E EL, T, D, F, M, P. N; S* Fish, E, EL. T, X, M, N; <1 line Elizabeth Ford, T, Patl Fowler, E, T, X, D, F, M.
Catherine Margaret Claril
j Janis Lynne Hallam, E, Ef D, F, M, N; Margaret I greaves, E, EL, H, T, F, 11
Joyce Patricia Gillam, E, T.l Joan Mary Garside, E,
seems, was conveying a boiler to a mill at Clitheroe, and my correspondent, therefore considers the conduct of C
Ingrid Patricia Waterhol
Bad
They* FIT ai
subject Ao 3 months
SSi Interest onyour As from 21st. SEPTEMBER ^ P e. ^ £
m e n t D e p a r tm e n t is able t0..0^ito4tharawal' subjectrto 3months notice ot ww j5ts
ThePresent rate of .6% Is maintained repayable bn one’months notice of
Full details supplied on request. ;
TRlffiTiEE.SAVINGS BAN1' i f t JVii
A. great 'group of I trendy guys. Go* team with today’l Cool combination| end grained leathi out patterns and \
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