6 Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, August 21,1970 Ear ly morning mist
clinging to Pendle’s side like a chiffon band served to remind the traveller of
the fields bordered with low hawthorns and lofty ash and sycamore brightened the scene and did much to l*ro vide an inspiring introduc tion as I journeyed past Pen dleton Hall and. crossing the cattle grid, began to climb the steep road in the direc tion of Well Springs. 1 paused, reluctant in a
approaching autumn. Ever so green after-grass in
way. because of a full day ahead. Still, urgent as my objective could be, I turned time after time to enjoy the vast sweep of Ribblesdale stretching far below.
Explanations
hill, so commonly referred to as The Nick of Pendle, I descended a mere mile or so to that often ignored yet neighbouring village of Sab- den. There are, I suppose, numerous explanations for this and the most important is. surely, Pendle itself. Were it not for this huge
Reaching the crest of the
Often i{ pleasant blend of the old and new
certain fashion that above all subjects few are more interesting than our fellow beings. I t also revealed a hospital
My visit proved in no un
ity seldom excelled beyond the borders of Lancashire and Yorkshire. Of course It could quite easily have been other wise for had I not been taken to task by the inhabi tants for, as they said, "ignor-
son to be proud of its general appearance. I t can sit back and admire the blending of the old and the new for, like most country places, the amount of new property is enormous. Modern houses and bunga
is no rash of futuristic dwel lings. a symptom of this day When untutored townspeople
lows are in keeping with the general surroundings. There
a
odd little places, you axe reminded of those quaint haunts in a Oamish village. Wesley Road ds really out standing.
to the sea; it is surrounded by hills and a landscape which rises an every side. Green pastures and meadow land soon give way to the severe uplands which are Pendle. These axe the gathering grounds which supply Sab-
But Sabden is not adjacent Severe uplands
Sabden, a village whloh has harmoniously blended the old and the new. .
ing the place!’ Hence my visit and eager
mass rising amidst bracken and heather covered slopes then I have every good reason to suppose Sabden would have as many visitors from the Clitheroe side as the hamlets and villages adjacent to the Ribble and Hodder.
HI LADIES’
HOME HAIRDRESSING AND
WIG SERVICE
by a Registered Hairdresser TEL. CLITHEROE 4627
A L E S ’ & CARBY
TO THE TRADE ONLY EVERYTHING AT CASH AND CARRY PRICES
BIG SAVINGS—LOW PRICES BIGGER PROFITS
CADBURY’S - ROWNTREES—MARS—TREBOR TAVERNER’S—MACKINTOSH ETC
HERE’S WHERE YOU GET QUALITY, SELECTION, SAVINGS.
E, SWALES (Clitheroe) Ltd. 27-29 BAWDLANDS.
CLITHEROE . Tel: 3123 NEW
RECONDITIONED SEWING MACHINES ALL MAKES TYPES AND PRICES TO SUIT CUSTOMER
M E M.o G.3;
Be wise and buy from a member of Sewing Machine Dealers’ Association
With after'sales EXPERT service E. W. DAVEY 23A, KING STREET, CLITHEROE. Tel. 3005.
Big Cash Discount :: Part Exchange Repairs :: Convertions
LEADING STOCKISTS for
Marrnet, Tan-Sad, Leeway, Swallow, Swiihin, Pedigree, Fisher, Fctha-Lite
Prams and Nursery Goods M 58-70, Darwen Street {OF BLACKBURN)
end 38-40, Northgate, Blackburn
Telephone 59121 ERCERS
INVITES YOV TO A
FREE FILM SHOW AND FOOD FREEZING DEMONSTRATION
BY JACQUELINE GREGORY IN YOUR
jjjsMcijl ELECTRICITY SHOWROOM
King Street Clitlieroe, on August 21 st, at 7-30 p.m.
Accommodation s t r ic t ly limited. Please ask for your free ticket at your Electricity Showroom now.
Lorgait stock* in
ness to explore, seek out the character and, not least of all, talk to its fascinating people.
First, however, let me say Sabden has every good rea-
Good reason
invade the open spaces to impose an entirely foreign atmosphere bn a rural scene. As you descend the steep
hill to enter Clitheroe road, the eye is at once captivated with the little old world cot tages tucked away, yet just adjacent to the main high way.
ignored. What charm and character remaniscen$ of so many hamlets in all sorts of out-of-the-way spots in the Dales. . Like so .many of the older
Bury Road just cannot be
the water baillUTs home iso lated In wild country. The catchment area is
den's water. So I- went up Wesley Road, past a row of ever so tidy cottages with their faces to the sun, and soon my path gave way to a narrow track and I came to
lings blending harmoniously with the overall general char- aeter. As I went along I was often reminded of such terms as the Garden City. Here we have in Sabden a Garden Village. No matter where you go
citizens these places will be remembered when most of the things we term modem have passed into oblivion. Close by are modem dwel
some 6,000 acres on which forestry planting is now tak ing place. The reservoir it self surrounded by an arti ficial bank and wall attracts mallard and the odd rarity. A cormorant stayed in ihe vicinity and during the win ter 20 geese provided a high light for several bird wat chers. Like so many waiter bailiffs
returned from Pendle side where . two dogs. had been harassing sheep.
menace to the stock of Sab den farmers, who in these days when most people axe crying out fat* more., 'and more leisure have quite, enough to keep them occu pied without wasting time chasing dogs. As r lef t Oockshiitts T did
The threat of these mar auding- dogs is a constant
Slaidbum and he was ■ so eager to tell of his numerous trips; in particular of •>* happy times he had when watching ' the Wh;..un'..a. 'festival.
His mother came from
Mr. Rawes finds great satis faction in his work. His is a responsible job, for this reser voir has the capacity and is capable of supplying the needs of Padiham. Read and Simonstofie. A visit to Sabden would be
by the main road leading to Padiham,' Wh alley or Cldth- eroe—you are greeted with gardens ablaze with uowers. Many fringe the road, but to ■get a better understanding you must take a peep just off the beaten track where, in
so with a reminder ' that . although the Gill family , have been farming' here since 1932 they are still ‘incomers'. Evidently, as in most villages by nibble and Hodder, one has to be bom in a place in order to be a true native. On Padnham Rood I met
incomplete did it not take in near-by Cockshut farm. Here Mr. E. W. Gill, past branch chairman of the NF.U., and his sons farm an extensive acreage. Conversation took on a more
dramatic trend when his 6an entered the room carrying a very impressive looking twelve-bare. They had just
Fred Parkinson, an active 83, bom a t Nappa and living in Sabden 70. years. Fred also had the same idea. “You have to be bom in Sabden before you are a native”. Following my ch a t . wi th
time for I had several calls to make and after a delight ful cup of coffee at Timbrills ■Avenue—-the home of Mrs. Butterwortii—I e n q u i r e d regarding a neighbour just across the way in whom I was primarily interested because of the name. This, however, must wait until next week as my journey provided, in one instance, a pleasant shock. In contrast to many who
However, perhaps another
Pensioners upset by disappointment
Clitheroe Town Council have , said ‘No’ to conces sionary bus fares for old- age pensioners and other
the council’s ‘No’ Letters to the editor
One notes with keen t h a t
lems involved is appreciated, but this does not help us, and one can only regret that the town council have taken
elderly people. Their point about the prob
the easy way out—they have not shown any inclination . to try overcoming the prob
lems. In fact, nobody seems, to
fight the battle for today’s underprivileged. Transport
users consultative associa tions and similar so-called watchdogs seem invariably. to side with the big bat
fares will go up again in Sep tember and if that is so the already occasional journey to Cliitheroe will become even more of a rarity. One sighs for the old days when Ribble had competition from the Pendle, Claremont and Cal- der companies and, of course, from Isaac Bleazard’s Bolton- by-Bowland service. Pensioner, Whalley (name and address supplied).
talions. I t is rumoured that bus
Baths versus ’buses
had not been bom in the vil lage the observations of Mrs. Butterworth were entirely different. She has only been in the village three years. But she has been accepted and made very welcome. She has been President of
Fred:X went along' to see Mr. William Ainsworth, of Pen dle Road West, who at the ege of 87 has a very alert mind.. My intention was to. chat about Sabden in the
good and perhaps not so good days, but my casual remark about Slaidbum quickly had the Hodder village as the focal point..
school teacher has to be careful when he parks his car in Addis Ababa, Ethi opia. After all, there might 'be a goat tethered to the
Goat was tethered to the meter
A former Waddington
parking meter! It was from this strange
land with Its mixture of the ancient and modern that Mr. Peter Robbs has returned on holiday. He and his wife ■Margaret, have spent the last five years working in the isolated North African king dom. and this month Mr. Robbs was visiting his child hood home near Clitheroe where his parents still live. Formerly a teacher, Mr.
comes they close the whole enclosure with a thorn fence. There is little dangerous wild-life; most of "it has been exterminated."
Robbs. “In the summer it isn’t
s a i d Mr.
very hot because of the alti tude. I t is Just like a warm
llllltllllllllllllltlllllllllllltlllllllllllllll
Robbs Is now assistant news editor for Ethiopian radio. Travelling with him and his wife are Alison, their four- year-old daughter, Lucy, aged 22 months and Lydia, four months.
and escape from the hum drum of life in Britain,” said Mr. Robbs. “There was no particular romantic call to Ethiopia."
“We wanted to go abroad
live In Addis Ababa, the capi tal, which he describes as "a vast, sprawling African vil lage with skyscrapers in the middle."
Mr. Robbs and his family
between ancient and modern in the city which is 8,500 ft. above sea-level.
There is a strange contrast E x p a n d in g
tethered to parking meters,”' said Mr. Robbs.
“You sometimes see goats Disturbing
the back, of beyond. The poverty is very disturbing at times. I t is one of the most backward countries in the world,” lie went on.
. "In some ways it is really
the central plateau which is about eight or nine thousand feet above sea-level, but many like to go down to the lower levels. The altitude makes you, very tense.”
"Most of the people live in
in the country. It’s all farm ing, on one or two acres. The typical peasants live in . an enclosure with their immedi ate family. When night
“The majority of people live
VANDALS are everywhere. We live In an age of senseless destruction. There is con tempt for property, private and publlo. And the problem Is .growing, - Clitheroe has not escaped.
Councillors have recorded their disgust at the damage to trees and plants. Our post master echoes the conoern we all feel about the violous van dalism In telephone kiosks. The authorities can scarcely keep pace with the demand for repairs, Who knows what distress Is caused by the .loss of a 'phone service? On football grounds—and
people very much and find them hospitable and friendly. There is a tremendous amount of European influence but the people, because of their • iso lated-history are a little dis
five years and we' are very happy. We like the Ethiopian
‘We have been there now
Round and about
summer day in England but it gets cold at night with temperatures as low as freez ing point.
a country like Ethiopia be cause communications are so bad. I t is two days’ drive over rough roads between the two main cities. The h e a v y wagons which travel the route go through a set of tyres each time,1’ he said.
“Radio is all-important in
trustful of the outside world.” "Some of the younger men
come into the capital seeking their fortune, in the Dick Whittington tradition. Then they find that the streets- are not paved with gold. Some return, but some stay and-do all sorts of jobs until- they gradually carve a niche for themselves. They can do this because there is a gradually expanding economy," he said.
wife first' went to Ethiopia, they 'found a lot of foreign p e o p l e 1 from non-aligned countries throughout th e world.
When Mr. Robbs and his
In the capital, .Addis Ababa, there is a school for the children of diplomats. This draws pupils of all nationalities, says Mr. Robbs, but there is multi-racial harmony.
six-day war between Israel and the Arab countries we didn’t have a bit of trouble.
“Even at the height of the
another school like it in .the world. The school is run by a couple of idealistic people who do it because they think
"I don’t think there is
it’s worthwhile.” Mr. Robbs is the son of a
former vicar of Hurst Green, the- Rev.' Francis H. Robbs and his wife Dorothy, and this week the Robb- family from Ethiopia held a family reunion in Waddington..
Mr.- Peter Robbs, his wife, Margaret, and their family— Alison, aged four, Lucy, aged 22 months and Lydia, aged four months-renjoy .themselves on the swing at Ivy Cottage, Waddington, where they are staying whilst on holiday from .' Ethiopia.
JIMMY’S TOWN
people on holiday in Surrey soon learned ' that they hailed from an unknown part of the ooumtay! In some respects -this is
Three Clitheroe young
hardly surprising when it is considered that the 200 boys and girls at the holiday home were from as far apart as the' West Country, Scotland, the East Riding and East Lancashire.
’came to-recognition occurred when somebody inquired: "Is that the place where:
..the Jimmy OHtheroe programme
Burnley b u t : had no idea where it was; Blackburn-was unknown and a . girl from the West Country asked where and what was Man chester! The ■ nearest. CMitheroe
One boy had heard of is recorded?” ans copy-cats
the season has hardly begun —there Isa trail of wreckage. Woe betide town,. train or eoach after the favourites have been beaten. Sportsman ship'for these violent charac ters does not admit defeat. The Home Secretary has called a top-level conference:
.of growing up In a toorper- missive age, Some audacious people have suggssted that television may
elsewhere there Is to be a study of youth to find causes for this urge to smash, hurt and disfigure. But It will take 2j years, and by then a fresh generation of young thugs will have thought up new ways' of striking terror into the hearts and homes of older people. It is all very disturbing and there Is a ten dency to shrug It off as a part
be to blame. This Is to'be probed—but we want an answer now. Parents raoognlse the mes-
merlo hold whloh TV has on children from the moment they oan watoh with . under standing. Of course it is easy to exaggerate the Impact! the
. and cupidI ty . Indulgence rules the day. Is :it any won der that some have no respect far people or. possessions?
faot remains that! our child ren are weaned on oruelty
No doubt those responsible H igher bo ok fine
late to the County Library, wfll have to pay more far the privilege from November on wards. ■ The threepenny fine which
Borrowers who return books Prize
Crossword ACROSS 1. Completely out of form?
8. and 24 Dn. Do mountain eers enjoy it, as well as t h o s e ta . fashionable society? (4, 4).
(9).
has operated for 17 years - ■will be increased to 5d. a week. And from October 1st the system of collecting library fines by means of no-receipt boxes will become standard throughout the county. Incidentally,
drew £28,104 in fines last year.
for horrors on our screen will reject this view. But it must be analysed. Reeently there have been
11. Struck as being earnestly attentive; we hear (6).
9. Sovereign bonds—th e y provide a commission on sales (9).
13. I t is made up of a teach er’s charges (5).
15. A load we bear (4). 16. Gusto Is never veiled in part (5).
the County
17. To beg is almost cowardly (5).
18. Vessel put in tile market cheaply (5).
'20. This number is too big for the stronghold (5).
Office asked newspapers to exercise responsibility in re
cases where Incidents on tele vision have been copied In real life. It cannot be a coin cidence. Some years ago the Home
porting suioide details. It was aocepted that weak-minded (or possibly too-determined) people oopied methods. - The same careful attitude
19. Short . opening for the much-vaunted player (4).
22. Aspiring to first-class, pottery (6).
26. You need to work for the money (4).
25. Likely to cause trouble in low joints (9).
27. Speeches often written on envelopes (9). ,
must be taken by television and we must certainly not glorify by publicity those who oommit acts of wanton dam age or who advocate violence. Every citizen has a duty to
DOWN. 2. Robin has this cover (4). 3. Soft noblemen will pro vide the wherewithal for a necklace (6).
courts have a special role— to see that the culprits who are caught do not escape with ludicrously light penalties.
help the police to maintain peaoe and order, and the
■ tlons as a prophet (4). 6. Pairs in a tidy mess show ing inequality (9). ■
4. Are many over America these sorts of eaters? (5). 5. One who makes observa-
10. Rescue about fifty : and ease .one’s : conscience (5).
7. Show signs of sorrow when h e a d - r e s t s are'' broken (4, 5). .
13. Usual disguise- for army scout (9). •
19. Exposes the laths (6). 21. To put up with the girl is
(5).'
'23. Eebfcrfdtyr n e tw q r k ' is shown by a -system of . lines on the map (4)..
different (5). 24. See 8 Across. .
. LAST WEEK’S SOLUTION Across—1; Milkmaid; .5,
' 14, Attire; . 17, Arrangements; 20, Hapless; 21, Organ; 22, .
Trim; 9. Glass; .10, Tearful; 11, Felling trees; 13, Retail;
■ Rifle; 7. Molasses; 8, .Earth- . 'tremors; -12, Breather; 15, In-
Ring; 23, Preserve. - Down—1, Magi; 2, Leanest; 3. Misalliances; 4, Intent; .6,
King Strerti- [J31
i first post n e x tJ ^ ^ tc t r i Entries r^ ,
tag. No entries before then snd soMtijf the f t r s t ' - c o ^ , ! ^
opened will .be -• -, po6t*L order. ’
12. A better literary compiler! (9).
14. The employees provide a framework for notes (5).
17. Clay producing country "
19, Once. 'Hie first . t
teger; 16, to last'
When youto'Ld ftU the above cr°-^
dington.
was sent ta by -rii flri' 26, Waddow G rwt’
opened on - 18'
rou...-- 0.3°&
Crowd stirred by Billy ’s music
Calderstone’s Hospital, n e a r Whalley, used to sit with a manuscript and pencil in the middle of a crowded and noisy day-room at the hospital arrang
A FORMER MALE nurse at
tually to hear some of his com positions when they
were.played
ing music. Millions of people were even
on radio by the
them Orchestra and hoiidaj- makers at Blackpool also enjoyed the sounds of his
Nor*
music. Now in his mid-seventies,
Mr. “Billy” Coates lives in Woone Lane Clitheroe, with his
wife Elizabeth. Mr William Coates had little
formal training as a musician but is well-known in the town and at Calderstones Hospital for his piano playing and his considerable work for the hos
pital orchestra. “In our considered opinio®,
to a genius we ever had on the male nursing staff. Where
the Central Piet- BucspM played one of Mr. Coa™ ,c«- I positions and when the-p?.i-; from the holiday crowd o-: l away, the conductor introduce. I
tainly merited such an acclaim.’ I "Toni’’ and his orciw-’i ® I
the composer—) !r On »
and his work a stano-ga tlon.
S e p a r a t e bill f o r w a te r
people will receive a bill farSince the Fj'lde Wa-er began supplying some six years -?o;
Billy was the nearest approach Olitheroe is nov ^ c Wi the boards
music is concerned, tie is a perfectionist,” say the Calder stones Hospital Management Committee in their monthly bulletin. “Given a little more luck, Bill's talent and ability could have earned him national fame and recognition; he cer
Prom next ApW- wsjfJ tr-t
paratron have —.. .. ^ waiter charge on ®6‘ rate demand. _ _ j® This was
inciuari With decimal^® 1 ^
on to the bosri People will, ^
be able to pay ^ the 0® 1 B" 1
for next FeWW «W ^ | is bemg t a ^ t a P - i : ,
rsz I ■ the Borough w - 1
been sitting quit u in The audience? eM Coe I
sionary fares for O.A.P.S gets no sympathy from our town
So the request for conces
council. It would cost a 4d rate, and our councillors are too interested in baths at present. If our O.A.P.S will now do
the prospering W.I. for two years and spoke of the enthusiasm of the members and also of her own admira tion of th e surrounding countryside.
agreed with hex sentiments and felt guilty that I had postponed my visit to this long overdue date.
I certainly NATURALIST.
Pensions Association ■ will instruct members what to do, and to remind them that if children need still more swimming lessons than the free ones they get through schools., then in this age of
So perhaps the Old Age Bunwjo..
run them there in their behind her skirts aiia “posh” cars.
affluence most parents could P*™®rs.Q ^ ^ Unmoved by
was .... many people had no mention
in the “Advertiser and Times" except for Clue No. 8 Down in the Crossword Puzzle. If the tremor affected this
And Mr. Musson Iif
replies ,
stiU clinging to ? 1 Pron str*ngs, ^
«iM apjj
"Quid Pro Quo,” Clitheroe. mg Boo . Those who lack the car. I to reveal their names 2 1
secure, plucMy sSI
the recent earth tremor showing that I am not atah-'1 which affected this area and but very much in favoU commented upon by
I was surprised to find that part of a recent letter o: nfcJ r 1
addresses are really unreal of a reply. I would reter •'Woriaw J
to Norwood Junction Station’s (Southern Railway) shunting yard, where the impact of shunted railway trucks has to be felt to be believed. We ceased to be “crash
house we did not feel it, but this was possibly due to some years of residence adjacent
the link road-not as a owi pro quo but as a necessity I the wealthy firms in qi^LI Access to the outer W l l will, be a distinct ecoz«J| advantage and will quid**I pay them for any a - J j involved.
"”1' ' I
appeal, the greater if tt weal possible to fill and refill ■; y I keep it clean. It would "ne^ I
The lake idea also lasts I
more than just an oocasxnfi | rainfall. Horrockslord or &
conscious” after a time.—A. E, Cousins, St. Mary’s Street, Clitheroe.
A job for youth
a bit of reckoning up of their meagre resources, they will decide that the "modest” shilling a week for baths is not on for them. They are not likely to need them, whereas they do need the buses, and Blackburn is now out of their reach at a mini mum fare of 6/-. Very soon they will not
even be able to write to their friends, let alone visit them!
ders how many more are having their living space threatened by steady but systematic expansion of in dustry in residential areas. To this could be added: and of residential areas into the countryside. The answer is.
Mr. Charles Musson wan
all of us.With an estimated popula tion increase of nearly 25 per cent, and double the number of cars by the year 2,000, this spoliation of tile environment is more than threatened. It is inevitable, unless increases can be prevented. Only the younger genera
Residents in Pimlico r^j I eagerly look forward to a itit I rest, q u i e t and prot«tioa I from the perpetual hew I
hill could scarcely be regardti I as natural gathering gums I and there arc no convtfe I rivers at that level. A sprat I catch a mackerel!
!•• I |
the Beverley Drive cul-de-sac (r comparatively isolated P.ibte | dale Avenue and already e:- joys the peace and security it I covet.
transport, traffic hazards, aid I exhaust fumes. Perhaps “Workman" f e s I
fell out of his chair. I suspt- ted as much. My small pan!- child uses a high chair to). Were I completely lacking to | charity I might have added: would it have been much ci a tragedy if you had done so.-1 Charles Musson, 15, Pimlico | Road. Clitheroe.
■Workman” says he nearly
tion can do this, but they need more education than they are now getting in the things that really matter.— Student of Nature, West
Bradford. | %
IPSli«r
S c ie n c e helps to fi
the shoe ^ ^ r ^ om ° th anVtv
aS r f d remember as clul foot X-rays we had t
1 ^ n e should be allowe. * S^more than twice a year
4 a 2? if M.ns announced i ^ ^ . i e hazards attach, 5 **l?rfise of these machines,
pair of shoes.
^ i f d r e n ^ h o i fitters r c, ,‘ relv on the convent
4 ? takenEwhile the child i '! U aw n and the pressu
I nis’ weight A account. LONG RESEARCH
both safe and accurate Electronic Foot Gauge.
1ft< of these machines Country and Clitheroe is rate to have one at o. and son, in Moor Lane. Mr. Lord, who has hat
There axe at present
before Clarks were able tc duceC a machine which
I t took 15 years of res is not taken
I luadred for determining I USfth The disadvantag 3 eaugc is that the me
^ of foot gauge-a n HLhaped “ruler" with a
machine for six month delighted with it and expi bow simple it is to use. Members 'of staff neede
do is to take off his shoes, on a platform and put
hout further assistanc All that the child nec
on‘ hour’s instruction 1 wit thev could use the ma
foot in -turn into a shallot in the centre of the plat
bim flashes sizes and \ and the correct sizes fo: are indicated by a gang’ rather like being weighec there is nothing for the to fear in the process. It takes only a monic discover the child's exac-
Then up on the screen l
length and width fitting. Many parents buying
for the new school ter* be interested in this mefci choosing the correct fit:
must carry the writer’s dim I and address, not nroesserlij | for publication,
and especially those on tail topics. They may ooculonilij be oondensed, tor space end I other reasons, Every littirl
Th* Editor welcomes leiltit I M e t h o d i s t s S
| g iv e o n e S
| d a y 's p a y
: There are ten churci - the Clitheroc Methodis- - cuit, but on Sunday, Aug J only one will be holdin i evening service This will Trinity, Clitheroe and t.he
I bers of the other at. ; churches are invited to c i gate there for a Circuit ] ant Service,
i At this service, to be c ■\ fed by the Rev. G. A, V : the scheme accepted b
.: 1969 Methodist Conferer < World Development w i explained to members.
s In line with a r i placed before the Co~ ; an Methodists will be a. j make a personal pled; i their total giving for th s oi world poverty througl i mg channels should not - than one per cent of t’ i come, after tax, includ i annual discipline of on pa
t i960 the Methodist api i their members on Good ] was to give one day’s ] the same purpose and suited in £404,000 beta ted. the largest amou given away by the churc
i i t will be recalled t
followed by a social I schoolroom when light ments will be served. Officials of the circ
The August 30 service
hoping that the usual quate. parking facilit
Trinity will be fully ta this occasion.
at Chatbum caught Tuesday-night. Two ap liom clitheroe were the flames had bee__ Buished w’hen -they a r
Fire at chip si a pan of fat in the cl
SCHOOL SAT
GIRLSTERYLENE/SAR1L SCHOOL PINAFORE SKIR FRONT PLEAT.DROPWAI IN GREY OR NAVY. Fro
PETER PAN
’NYLON f HOSE 2 1 1 *
GIRLS GYM PAGK0F4EXERCI PACK OF 6 NO REPORTERS not
STATIONER INCl. RULER, COM
4 COLOURED PENCILS, PASS, P
WOODEN PENCIL B (RULE TOP) OUR PRICE
FELT TIPPED PENS (.SET OF t r eme n d o u s n
STEPHENS ’CLUB’ CARTRIDG «EC. PRICE 3/3tOUR PRICE.
king___ LATE N IG H T S
LANE
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12