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OF CLITHEROE No .
£p e x p re s s h is th a n k s
THE playing of a movement from Beethoven’s*' Moonlight Sonata’ was the unusual way in which Mr. Edward Nicholson headmaster of Bowland County Secondary School, “Riversmead”, said thank you to his pupils at his last speech day before
of to thank you at this time of deep emotion is to let Beethoven do it”, said Mr. Nicholson, after he had received from former head boy and chairman of the Old Pupils’ Association, Mr. John Wright, the gift of a
retirement. “The best way I can think
“I think”, said Mr. Nicholson, “that a small plaque should be placed on the housecraft wing bearing the inscription ‘Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson slept in a bell- tent in July, 1949’.”
cheque to mark his retirement after 22 years as Rivcrsmead’s headmaster.
.. Tributes to Mr. Nicholson’s service was paid by the chair man of the governors, Mrs. J. E. E. Yorke, who also referred to the devotion of the teaching staff who had each served the school for an average of 17 years. At the presentation ceremony
a bouquet of carnations was handed to Mrs. Nicholson, by Mrs. Christine Eglin, secretary of h e Old Pupils’ Association. In his annual report, Mr.
in the following winter (the boys built them ah igloo, their kind thoughts being much ap preciated, but the accommo dation declined.
Mr. Nicholson recalled how
so loyally with him for so long. For 15 years the school had been headquarters of the Earl Haig Poppy Day Appeal during which time local villages had
He acknowledged his deep gratitude to all who had worked
the headmaster’s, war time days with a lively performance of the song “When the sergeant major’s on parade”.
England” and had a sly. dig at
as tills was in all probability the last occasion he would ever hear them in public, the songs sung by forms one and two were to his own settings.
Mr Nicholson explained that, BARGAINS GALORE
was that given by the headmas ter—the “Sir” prize which was awarded to the chairman of the govenors in recognition of her work for the school, “especially for her homework in the selec tion of a new headmaster”.
contributed over £2,500, an achievement in which the pupils and caretaker had played a ________ , _ large part. Under the leadership the school; Janet Parkinson id of the new headmaster, Mr. C.
Nicholson paid especial tribute to the two girls who had taken CSE examinations, with results that were unlikely to be sur passed by any school in the country. He amused the audience with
J. Harris, the school could look forward to a bright future, first a secondary and later as a middle school, he said.
stories of the opening. of the school and the almost incredible difficulties. which had to be faced in the early years. These included shortage of money, shortage of water and difficul ties, of running a school during the reconstruction of an old building. He recalled that on arriving
headmaster of B u r 1 e y-in- Wharfedale school, a friend of Mr. Nicholson since 1940. ; In his address Mr. Newbould spoke of the three “C’s”—com radeship, co-operation. a n d cheerfulness. At the conclusion of his address he sang, with
Awards were presented by Mr. Frank W. M. Newbould,
in Bowland in 1949 it was im possible to find accommodation.
the school “toy band”, a setting of Sir Henry Newbolt’s poem, written for him by Mr. Nichol son during the war. He also sang “Yeomen of
ear trouble E A R E X
E e ,d 4 c ^ (S |M ? e d h e a ;^ . fn the
j^^;aro of teacaMsS^^xcsss of wax. M akers of dust & noise ear projectors F 'ir'fvi'r^novad ROM SOOTS&AtLCHEMISTS
DROPSiSQ^r* the wax and
to.bf isjfeJy and painlessly
Chance to inspect centre dedicated to relief of pain
CLITHEROE’S Physiotherapy Centre opens its doors to the public for the first time tomorrow to give people an opportunity of seeing how well equipped, modern and functional it is.
a year arc administered, bring ing relief from pain to many hundreds of people . . . people like Mrs. Melita Liver, of Whalley Road, Clitheroe. “I think the centre is mar
On average. 5,000 treatments
very -beneficial.” Mrs. Liver who is 59 ex-
vellous,” she told the Advertiser and Times. “I find the treatment
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plained that she had hurt her leg badly after a fall earlier this year. Before she began a course of physiotherapy she could walk only with assistance and with the aid of two sticks. “1 could not move my leg at
doctors. The cost of each treatment for those from Clith eroe Borough, Clitheroe Rural District and Bowland Rural District is 40p. For people liv ing outside these areas, it is more expensive.
therapist in charge, says the centre is now fractionally busier than it was when the new pre mises opened in August. 1969. They deal with, about 130 cr 140 treatments every week. He has two assistants. Mrs,
Bowland, is also receiving treat ment at the centre. She hurt her leg when part of a garage door fell on it and she has found her visits to the centre have helped greatly. “My leg is a lot better now, ’
all but I can now. I only need one stick for walking.” Mrs. Amy Bell, of Bolton-by-
she commented. Another patient, who has been having wax treatment for rheumatoid arthritis in her hands, said she thought the centre was marvel lous and a great asset to the
centres, Clitheroe’s physiothe rapy unit is completely inde pendent of the National Health
town. Unlike many other similar
the overheads are high and as a result, the centre is grateful for the many contributions and help it receives from people and organisations in the town and district. Patients are referred _ there for treatment by their own
Service. Equipment is expensive and
■ Mr. A. Hollings, the physio . Among the prizes presented!
GENUINE REDUCTIONS We have a selection of
cluded: Christine Lund — the chairman’s prize for service to
Major : award winners in SCHOOL
Sheila Hitchen—the headmas ter’s prize for achievement; Karen Simpson—Billy Parker Memorial for determination to improve in PE and swimming; Janet Parkinson — prize for housecraft, and Sheila Hitchen— prize for mathematics.
tea was served by the housecraft teacher, Miss D. Peace and the girls of the third year. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson, the hosts and the girls, were thanked by the
were expressed by the head girl Christine Lund and the head boy Malcolm Handley. After the ceremony afternoon
Thanks to the plaform party
CALL FOR ACTION ON MITT0N
PROBLEM
.AFTER discussion about suitable site for public con veniences at Mitton, Bowland Rural District Council is to inquire into the cost of build ing them at The Spinney. The original proposal to
the council that the vicar, the Rev. A. F. Knowles, also objected to this site,. on the grounds that there are already conveniences near the church. Coun. R. Williamson pointed
objections from the CWS, the owners. It was stated at a meeting of
buffd the conveniences on land near the church, had raised
Wendy Dawson, of Clitheroe. and Mrs. Elizabeth Rumboll. of
HOLIDAY DATES
Primary, and secondary school holidays for 1972 have been approved by the No. 5 Divi sional Executive.
holidays in Clitheroe and the Clitheroe rural areas are as fol
The inclusive dates for school
vice-chairman, Coun. R. Wil liamson.
July 14th, with a Whitsuntide and Spring Bank holiday from May 22nd to 29th. Autumn term: September 3rd
1972, to March 30th, with half term on February 14th and 15th. Summer term: April 12th to
lows: Spring term: January 4th,
C L IT H E R O E Hospital's administrative officer • fell several -feet into a large padd ling pool full of water on Sat urday—30 times.
accident, just a novel way of raising money at this hospi tal’s open day. The adminis trative officer, Mr. Michael Britcliffe. of Chatburn Road. Clithcroe, clad in swimming trunks, was seated on a stool fixed above the pool.
But this was not a freak
a small fee to throw balls at a nearby target. When the bulls-eye was hit, Mr. . Brit- cliffc was automatically pitched off the stool and’ into the water. He survived his mul tiple ducking with no ill- effects. “I was lucky to have escaped so lightly,” h e . said, “Only about one ball an 10 found the target.” The open day was a great
Visitors were then charged
to December 22nd, witli a holi day on September 18th and 19th, and half term from Octo ber 30th to November 5th. Three days occasional holiday
can also be taken at the discre tion of the governors. Primary schools will now be
getting an extra week’s holiday, bringing them in line with the secondary schools. Another departure from pre
bowling alley. There were a large number
of stalls, including a cake and produce stall run by Clith croe Afternoon Townswomen’s Guild, cake stalls run by Clitberoe Old People’s Wel fare, and the Ladies’ Circle, and stalls organised by the Soroptimists’ CJub, the Towns women’s Evening Guild and the Inner Wheel club. Clitheroe Rotary Club ran
10% OFF all Summer Dresses} Coats, Millinery, Rainwear.
GARMENTS AT HALF-PRICE and
5/9, CASTLE STREET Tel: CLITHEROE 229S
a tombola, and the S t John Ambulance Brigade a raffle. The day staff and the night staff at the hospital each ran a stall.A photographic competition attracted about 150 entries, and was judged by the editor of the Advertiser and Times. Mr. R. W. Mann, and Mr. R. Wrigley.
success, and raised about £400. It was attended by almost 500 people As well as the ducking p o o l , children’s entertainments included pony rides, a hoop-la stall and a
the Rotary Club’s tombola for one visitor to the open day. The winner receives her prize from Rotary member Mr. G. Hood, watched by Mr. E. J. Addcrley (left) and Mr. A. Hollings, who are also Rotar-
Picture: A lucky number on ians.
vious practice is the increase of the autumn half term to five days, and the reduction of the September holiday to two days. OBJECTION
the objections of secondary school teachers were voiced by their representative, Miss B. Bingham, who said that a Mon day start to the autumn term would leave no lime for the pre term staff meetings. She also mentioned • that the
At a meeting of the executive
Barnoldswick. Mr. A. Hollings would like
to see more doctors in this part of Lancashire using tile centre’s facilities.
RELAXED
Great Harwood, Accrington and Burnley could also attend. As a private venture, there is no long waiting list before treatment is available. _ The premises are bright and
He feels that patients in
out that these conveniences were only available to the congregation. There were many visitors to Mitton Church, proved b y the fact that 500 people had signed the visitors' book in .the church so far this year, and the existing con veniences were not available to them. The chairman of the Public
FARMER ALLOWED CHILD TO RIDE ON TRACTOR
FOR allowing a child under the age of 13 to ride on a tractor while it was being used in the course of agricultural operations, Mr. James Richard Simpson, of Forest Backs Farm, Bolton-by- Bowland, was fined £15 by Bowland magistrates on Monday.
modem. Patients sit or lie in cubicles, reading magazines or chatting. The atmosphere is relaxed and friendly. “Working in these conditions,
Health Committee, Coun. Mrs, S. J. Dow, said “the conveni ences should be in the middle of the village.” She also reminded the Council that the matter of public conveniences in Mitton had been under dis cussion since 1962, and it was time that positive action was taken. In a letter to the Council
you cannot wish for more. It is marvellous.” says Mr. Hol
lings. Tomorrow, Mr. Hollings and
some of his staff will be avail able to show visitors the centre, to answer questions and to demonstrate the equipment. It is .not a money-raising
effort; it is a chance for people to see a physiotherapy centre that any town would be proud of.
VISIT TO MALHAM FIELD CENTRE
A VISIT to the field centre at Tarn House, near Malham, was one of the highlights of Satur day’s outing by members of the Clitheroe Naturalists’ Society.
Disney, warden of Tarn House and taken on a tour of th e woods, shores and the nearby
The party was met by Dr.
unique peat bog. Under the guidance of Dr.
see of
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Disney, the party saw many botanical specimens of flowers,
anhy’s
grasses, mosses, sedges and so on, as well as trees, shrubs and birds. They were told of the growth of the peat b o g and plans for subsequent study, and of the geology of the district I and ideas for new types of | wood and plantations in which different species of trees will | be grown at different ages.
old hunting lodge of the Lister I family, . was . replaced in the middle of the last century by the present building by Walter Morrison, the Liberal MP. It was here that Charles Kingsley | wrote part of the .well-known “Water Babies”.
Tarn House, originally _ an ACROSS COVE
-from I a 1229; foot plateau of limestone.' . , Dl, ,/The party o£ 41, under the -leadership “■
been a field centre to encour age- the research in specialist branches of botany, zoology, geology, geography and so on. -It-- is built on a splendid site, overlooking the 153 acre tarn
For the last 20 years, it has
Mrs. C. Seagar, then, made for the top of Malham cove. A few
of - the - secretary,
,'ibehind, the: cove.’-Spoh. Malham was, reached, and . the journey
members crossed: the. limestone clints above the 250 foot cliff; the others; however,, chose the easier, route (foni' the grass
home begun. Thanks to Mrs. Seagar,' this
formed. ' ' '
nature walk proved to be one of the most': outstanding in the 14 years since the'society, was
ton, and schools in the Padiham and Burnley Rural area, which includes Sabden, will break up for the summer holidays on June 30th, and resume for the autumn term on August 15th, They will have a day for Bank holiday on August 28lh, and a half term on October 30th and 31st. St. Augustine’s will have their
late finish before. Christmas would leave married staff very little time in which to do their shopping. St. Augustine’s School Billing-
tpld the court: “The bench feel very strongly that this should be brought to the notice of the farming community”.
Mrs. M. R. Lord, presiding,---------- -------i------- ----------------—
inspector for the Ministry of Agriculture, said he was driving past Forest Becks when he saw the child, aged four, sitting on the tractor. He added that the child was sitting in a very dangerous place on the vehicle.
Mr. Frank Shields, a safety
by James Alec Simpson, the de fendant’s ■ son.
The tractor was being driven
September holiday from Sep tember 18th to 24th, and Padi ham and Burnley Rural schools will take a week’s holiday from September 11th to 17th. County Councillor Miss K,
the CWS had suggested that the conveniences should be built in The Spinney, on land also owned by them. Surveyor to the Council, Mr,
in a letter to the court that the son was not aware of the re gulations governing children riding on tractors.
The defendant’s solicitors said
Sumner said that the committee had given the matter of school holidays a lot of consideration and she hoped that parents would realise this and be more sympathetic.
E. Berry, said that although this site was damp and diffi cult to drain, it would be pos sible to erect a concrete raft before starting the building. Mr. Berry and the public
health inspector, Mr. R. Overend, will report on the cost of th i s project at the Council’s next meeting.
THE RECENT concert by the Stonyhurst College Chamber Orchestra in Whalley Church of England School raised £102.25 for the Sunshine Homes for blind babies.
Life in Canada
man, welcomed the speaker Mrs. Dobson, of Ulverston Mrs. Dobson described life in her native Canada, and com mented on many aspects of life in Canada compared to life in England. She was thanked by Mrs. Alice Houghton.
DESPITE the summer weather 110 people attended the monthly meeting of the Clith croc Townswomen’s Guild, at the Remembrance Hall. Mrs. Lilian Coulter, chair
Mr. Ayyildiz Yavash prose cuted for the Ministry.
Concert raises £12 A concert of songs and
poems, organised and presen ted by 10 Clitheroe children, raised £12 for the East Pakistan relief fund. The children, Helen and
Christopher Seed, Gail and Mark Griffiths, Carol and Paul Ashworth, Sarah Ball. Christine Coward, Jacqueline Swift, and Carol Grcgson, gave the con cert after school in Mrs. Seed’s garden, in Langshaw Drive, before an invited audience of 128 school friends.
iirnsls
tour works The premises of a local plant
and machinery hire firm, was the venue for a meeting of Clitheroc Soroptimist Club. The firm, based on Littlemoor
Mill, is run-by Mr Brian Dent and his wife, Dorothy, who is a member of the Soroptimist Club. After a business meeting, Mrs Dent introduced fellow members to the office staff, and gave a short talk on her work in the
showed members round the pre mises. He demonstrated the driver-operated machines and showed the vast amount of smaller machinery which the firm hires out, including drills, chain saws, concreting applian ces, and a huge three-motored industrial vacuum cleaner.
firm. Mr Dent then took over and
hired one machinery as far afield as Northern Ireland and the Hebrides. Although not a sub ject that many women would show an interest in, Mr Dent explained things in a language that gave members an insight into a new world. Mrs. Dent afterwards served
Mr Dent told members he
supper 'and the couple were thanked for a most enjoyable evening.
They gave Rachel a year to live . . . back in 1946
THREE doctors gave Miss Rachel Seddon 12 months to live when she retired from Calderstones Hospital after 37 years’ service, but on Tuesday, 25 years later, Miss Seddon celebrates her 90th birthday. Life on the staff of the famous hospital at ihat time was
hall Hospital and two years later moved on to the newly- opened Calderstones Hospital— “I went to Brockhall to wait for Calderstoncs to open” she recalls. But Miss Seddon worked at
so rigorous that Miss Seddon would have been unable to con tinue for longer than she did, even if she' had not reached retirement age—which was 65 in those days.
of the kitchens and was at one time responsible for something like 7,000 meals for patients and staff.
Mises Seddon was supervisor
ing almost' all the time, and during the war T was up for two or three nights together”,
“At Calderstones I was work
the agei of 17 when she left her native village of Whiston, near Prescot, and travelled to Lon don to learn domestic science.
said Miss Seddon. Her culinary career began at
. however, for she was the young est of a family of two boys and five girls.
Miss Seddon never did any cooking while she was at home,
In 1907 Miss Seddon began work in the kitchens at Brock-
boilers—I don’t know what its like now. I was housekeeper and I had my own flat with its own garden. It used to be three pence from Whalley to Black burn then.”
many other places before '"its. She was emplpyed by doctors and specialists in Liverpool and when Lord Derby visited Cal derstones years later he remem bered Miss Seddon working for him and asked to see her. Later, he sent a photograph of him self, which to this day graces Miss Seddon’s bookcase at her home in Waddington Road, Clitheroe.
ing place”, she reflected, “but I ’ve had such a varied life that it is hard to remember every thing. I know I’ve been to six places abroad, and I recall that Casablanca was one of them, but I can’t remember the others”.
.“I’ve been all over the blink
never been back to Calderstones' since she left 25 years ago, she speaks of her time there with a detectable note of nostalgia.
Although Miss Seddon has
: Gill was the superintendent and - Matron and I were among the '• first ones to start. The kitchen was a great size, with huge
“When I first started. Dr.
never strays beyond the con fines of her bright, comfortable
Nowadays. Miss Seddon , . "
little house. The culinary arts have not
deserted Miss Seddon after all these years and she stiff em broiders with the same skiff that has won her so much acclaim
in the past. “1 only dp a little cooking
now. I love cooking—but 1 hate housework 1” But Miss Seddon
has plenty of willing neighbours and friends to help her out “I have visitors galore. I don’t think a day goes past
me what I had seen. I said, “Chimney pots and chimney pots—give me the sea any day. I like the sea”. As far as riding in cars goes
—“Give me a horse and trap every time: I haven’t seen one for years”. On Tuesday. Miss Seddon
without someone calling. I have me”. iam Jiiornl f A
everybody is wonderful to
^Despite the relative unimport- ance of the accelerating pace of life outside—“I don't think about motor cars”—Miss Sed don is in no doubt about which period she prefers:
old days. I don’t go out now. I once went up in an aeroplane at - Southport when they first came out, and someone asked
“It was much happier m the ,
ion of three experts? “I don’t worry; and I’ve worked very hard, because'I like to do things properly”, was Miss Seddon’s conclusion. ‘They gave me 12 months, but I’m still here. It seems they can’t get rid of
will be throwing a little party, for any of her many friends who call regularly, but when she stands before you it is difficult to believe that this will be her 90th birthday. So how did this grand old lady manage to defy the opin
got some very wonderful friends One of the patients at Caldep l . 1 L m
stones who was there at the same time as Miss Seddon, 71- ycar-old _ Mr. Jimmy Walsh, spoke, highly of her and ex- plained'how well liked she was by all< the girls who worked
B o
the present staff, he added: “We used to get some cracking good meals in those days — always something different every . day. Miss Seddon was all right”
under her. Without intending to offend
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