c i t th e rp e A d ve r tiser a n d T im es , M arch 3 ,1 9 7 2 3
les hypocrites! For ye are |n to whited sepulchres deed appear beautiful but are within full of
. on scribes and
■:'< boric-- and of all Matt. 2? v. 27.
...........i- -. on to o u r 'v.- .i nes. Sunday:
- l t r e ak in y o f Bre ad. i". S u n d a y School . m. Go sp e l Service. Tu c sd a y:
:v. B’hle Study. Thursclnv:
’ ’raver Meetina.
|for Free Leaflet "Other T o n g u e s "
|IV!TY METHODIST c r i i -R c n
-'.if March 5th
i)MF. MIS S IONS and
UM R S U N D A Y
it. Rev. N. D. Walton, i t . Rev. .
1. A. Goodhal!.
LiMINARY NOTICE iheroc Methodist Circuit
STH FESTIVAL OF YOUTH
will be held
|h—18th November 1972 it the Schoolroom
|ity Methodist Church
t.tries please note
|N H .\M C.F. SCHOOL
IIHBLE SALE the School on
|iuirt':iy. March 4th at 2.00 p.m.
Admission 4 p
hiding refreshments MANOR HALL
[lihliorne Avenue iav. March 5th. 1972
|1> F I. S E R V I C E -it a.50 p.m. Sneaker:
mon (Great Harwood I mien's Fellowship
*nesday. March Sth 2.45 p.m. Speaker:
I cake t Blackburn) |u rn Mothers' Union KBLE SALE
' : .:<!a\ March fOlli at 7.00 p.m.
Ike Cini reh Ins t i tute Ai lmis s ion 2p
rcsiimcnts available
I.IC HAI L WHALLF.Y Don't forge:
MBLF. SALK
it Fridas at 7.30 p.m. Admission 3p
e r n e Congregational C Lurch
mu.a .
Ma.reh 5th
MILV WORSHIP at 10.30 a.m. ■
eu by COmmunion
atiilcen M. Hcndrv. B A.. B.D.
C hristian Fellowship d 1 rued
m W.M.C. Missionary ■cryonc Welcome
morrow Saturday at 7-30 p.m. 57 Clastic View
hie Sale
Catherines School ’•‘• c - - Brad fo rd
u rd ay . Ma r c h 4th at 2.45 p.m. \ i m . -,; op. 5 p
mimy : ci re«hmcnts AM RS HID E ' • MAI FLY
at 7.40
p.ni. Street. Whallcy Tickets 25p.
1 Y T H E
H 41 h PROVISIONS
I'll'.COSTAL CHURCH l ii rloo Road. Clitlicroc Ic-L!' follow a line of III co-existence with the li-; leaders of His d a y ? unto a
NOTHING ABOUT RENTS
£ u
IX i
1tj; §
X \
I WOULD like to comment on the decision taken by Clitheroe Town Council on the subject of Fair Rents.
come about because the Bill re quires councils to charge “ Fair Rents” for all their accommoda tion.
per cent of council house ten ants will be eligible for a re bate; think of the cost of ad ministering the scheme. This drastic change would
IF THE Government’s Housing Finance Bill becomes law. within the next 15 months many council house tenants will find their rents doubled and in some eases more than doubled, and although the majority would be eligible for a rent rebate, past experience has shown that many will fail to claim it. In some areas, as many as 75
PROFIT
is lifted from the 1965 Rent Act, which lays down the rules for private, unfurnished tenan cies.
The concept of a “ fair rent”
Hit below the belt
ONCE again the greed of man has hit the pensioner below the b e l t with beer, electrical appli ances. gas, coal, rail fares, bus fares and rates all rising by the
end o f March. Will the so-called workers
ever be satisfied?
PENSIONER (£6.20 to live on).
Thanks for help
MAY I convey through your paper, our sincere thanks to the Lions Club, and all concerned, fo r their kind thoughts; and de livery of a bag of logs and candles, to the old people with coal fires during the coal strike. They were very much appreci
ated.
ALICE MARTIN, 25 Accrington Road, Wballey^____________
MP dashes hopes of
cheap fares for OAPs
IT would be very costly for the Government national
to take over responsibility for
concessionary fares Tor old age pensioners, Skipton’s MP, Mr. G . B. Drayson, told Bowland Rural Council in a letter this week. "I cannot hold out any hope for it,” he said. Mr. L. D. Telford, clerk to
‘FAIR’ NEW BILL
letters to the editor
what is "fair” af te r allowing a modest profit for the landlord, and that same profit will be included in the “F air Rents” charge to council tenants. T h e clear intention is that the
fn practice, officers decide
councils will make a profit from the new rents, and once the Bill is fully implemented many Councils will receive no govern ment subsidy at all. This makes nonsense of the
FIVE POINTS
down of council building at a time when a boost is needed to deal with the appalling housing problems of many areas (and at the same time help the employ
This could lead to the run
ment situation). The Labour party suggests tile
following five points as alterna tives to the government’s Bill: 1, Local authorities should retain the freedom to fix their
own rents. 2, A general subsidy should go to council housing in the form
to draw on the rates to help their housing programmes. 4, In special areas where there
of low interest loans. 3, Councils should be allowed
is an immediate need fo r new building, the government should subsidise the local authorities 5, The government should
government’s stated objective, which is to improve the alloca tion of subsidies.
rocket. Because of the already high
(/tli'.'Vi
control the price of land which, in recent months, has begun to
percentage the working man pays out of his wage packet fo r a house to live in. the situation will become intolerable if the new Bill gets to the Statute
Book. We shall end up with an un .
fair rents” Bill R. CHADWICK, Oak House, Eastham Street, Clitheroe.
CULTURE SHOULD NOT BE SUBSIDISED
"CULTURE VULTURE” (a large carnivorous vora cious bird of prey—Web ster’s Dictionary) in his beautifully sarcastic trea tise obviously couldn’t delay replying to Geoffrey Sains- bury—and put him in his place! So hurried was he— or she—the point of my let ter condemning; indiscrimi nate council expenditure in the name of culture was completely missed. Able to pass me in the street and smugly think "I put that bighead in his place”. Cer tainly in print you did, but deeds are the need of our community particularly in my area of interest. I may do you an injustice, in your obscurity, a risk you must take writing under a nom-
de-plumc, but Vulture does seem to be the correct orni thological group for many of the world’s anonymous
letter writers. I regret I and "my workers ’
cern is and always has been the well-being and progress of Clith- croc. Surprisingly maybe, cul ture t appreciate and enjoy, but my excursions into these realms
arc governed by my pocket, and
Flower Club officials
re-elected
OFFICIALS of C l i t h c r o e Flower Club were re-elected at the fourth annual' meeting in
the St. John Ambulance Hall. They were Mrs. A. Cowell
th e council, read the letter a t its meeting this week. Mr. Drayson said he had raised the question with the Department of the ■Environment but had been told it would be very costly. Mr. Telford also read a letter
(chairman). Mrs. G. Grange (vice-chairman), Miss E. Telfer (treasurer), and Mrs. D. Ball (secretary). The committee was rc-elected with one new mem ber. Mrs. Seed. There were 57
from the Waddington branch o f the Royal British Legion asking the council to consider concessionary fares. Coun. W. J. Harrison, the
members present. Reports were given of the last
12 months, and the meeting ended with supper served by members of the committee. The club’s future meetings
council's Waddington represen tative, said there was very strong feeling in the village about tbc matter especially as ■they had heard th a t conces sionary fares operated in other
there was no action tha t it could take.
areas. The council decided that
Keep land
tidy, pleads Council
RESIDENTS o f Woodlands Drive, Whalley, are to be asked by the Parish Council for their co-operation in helping the council to keep the adjacent
Manor Road tidy. This was decided at a meet
j . s. R. Shaw said that Manor Road was becoming a “real jungle’’. The frames of steel chairs, a large steel drum and piping were Jittering the road. “ I t’s becoming the rubbish tip fo r Whalley,” he saids I t was agreed to write to the
ing of the council after Coun.
round its manholes, to Mr. r i . Cockshutt, Clitheroc R u r a l
will be held in Ribblesdale Adult Centre. The next meet ing is on March 10th, when a talk and demonstration entitled "The dead, the dried and the twisted” will be given by Mr. W. .Summcrhays, superintendent of Lancaster Parks Depart, ment. Coming events on the club's
arc unable to find time to re organise Covent Garden, that s someone else’s worry—my con
tent of 50p. FAMOUS
ORGANIST The world famous organist
Dr. George Thalbeu Ball C.B.E. who is one of the patrons of Clitheroe Parish Church Organ Society will be giving another of his memorable recitals in
I do not expect my local council to subsidise my seat to the ex
The new complex a t Edistora _ . ,
I accept as being a public necessity, our improved library I applaud, though would ap preciate a modern building, and 1 do not bewail the extra rating
for either. J do not accept and never wjll
the loss of £140 to entertain ap proximately 400 people fo r a couple of hours—nor do 1 ac cept the ridiculous weekly loss
aptly named or unsuitably
appointed. It always was and will remain
all means satisfy your appetite— but not as a Vulture, nor as a cuckoo and expect our council to hatch your eggs. Over the years they have hatched a few duck eggs, maybe the Civic Hall will fall from the nest some day and reveal a fa r less ugly duckling-
GEOF F SAINSBURY, 12 Beverley D r iv e , Clithcroc
Scouts
qualify for Fireman badge
qualified fo r the fireman's badge a t the end of a six
FIFTEEN local Scouts have
weeks course. Ribblesdalc Scout T roop: E.
Duckworth, G. Gore, D. Hornby, M. Halliwell, S. Taylor. D. Ore. I. Nuttall. 1st Pendlc: D. Johnson, R.
Thornber, D. Coward, W. Dent. Loyola: R. Fox. St. Mary Magdalene and St. Pauls: J. Lord, M. Bo>d, B.
the course a t Clitheroe Fire Station arranged by Station Officer Clark with the assistance o f Sub-Officers Davis and Driver.
Hitchen. A total of 18 Scouts attended
programme are the spring show in the Conservative Club on March 25th. and the Flower Festival at Clitheroe Parish Church in September, to com memorate the 850th annivers ary of the church.
Successful year
THE Clitheroe
branch of the RSPCA have had another successful year, with many cases of cruelty to ani mals being brought to the at tention of members, and dealt with by them and Inspector Orritt. At their annual meeting, in
auxiliary
Whitsuntide procession at Whalley
years, a procession is to be held in Whalley. Tbc Rev. E. S. Jose- lin told members of Wballey Parish Council a t their meeting that a procession of witness would be held through the village and a united service would take place on Whit Sunday. A united service is usually held on Trinity Sunday in the Abbey grounds or, if it is wet, in Whalley Parish Church. Final details about the procession have yet to be made.
F or the first time in many
North Western Gas Board ask ing them to tidy up the ground
Council’s surveyor, and to the residents of Woodlands Drive,
also asking them to tell the i clerk of the parish council it they sec anyone depositing litter
there. SUCCESS
Calderstones Hospital h a v e passed their G.N.C. Intermedi ate Examinations, February: Mr. S. Beeharry, Miss G.
The following students of
Billington, Mr. W. Dixon, Miss F. Doyle, Mr. N. Dyson, Mr. P. Gent, Miss P. L. Kelly, Mr. P. A- Kilburn, Mr. G. Massey, Mrs. C. Pidlyskyj, Mr. R. D. Scott-Clark, Miss R- L- Swee- ney. Miss M. Tallon, Mr. R. J*
Taylor*
the Dog and Partridge Hotel. Clitheroe. Mrs. G. Bolton, of Fairfield House. Chatburn, was re-elected president, Mrs. I. Gradwell was re-elected chair man and secretary, and Mr. J. F. Fielding treasurer. Flag week organiser is Mrs. F. Bridge, of Windsor House, Clith eroe.
Bible Society’s market stall
visions, and nearly new house hold goods will he on sale on Clitheroe market tomorrow, on a stall manned by the local
Nearly new clothes, pro
branch of the British and Foreign Bible Society. A special visitor to the stall will be the North-West area secretary, Miss p Owen. In conjunction with the stall, a colourful display showing the work of the Bible Society has been arranged in the window o f the Skipton Build ing Society, in the Market Place.
an architectural monstrosity in York Street, correctly named the Grand Kinema. Yes! I visit the place when the entertain ment suits my taste but I sit and wonder where almost £40.000 is justified—it looks much the same as when I paid 2d at matinees, met my wife there (Tale of Tw'o Cities, Feb. 1937), did a fair amount of courting on the back rows—under the same management then a s now. If culture be your craving by
Clitheroe Parish Church on Wednesday, March 15th, and not on the originally announced
date of March 8th. The recital will begin at 8.00 p.m. The pro- cramme will include music by J. S. Bach. Parry, Pietro Yon and the ever popular Liszt Var iations on “Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen”.
THE retirement of the local ! Royal Engineers’ chaplain was i marked by a presentation at the .
Association’s third dinner-dance at the Starkie a n n u a l
Arms on Friday. Branch president Mr. V.
Wood presented a stainless steel ! tea service to the Rev A. K. j Bisbrown, retiring chaplain, and ’ his wife. Mr. Bisbrown lakes 1 up a new church appointment at Glasson next Friday.
j Pictured are olltcials and
cucsls (back, from left): Mr. F. ’ 1 . Moon (vice-president), Mr. j
(chairman), Mrs. Lockett, Mrs. j (I-ront): ----- ,
and Coun. S. L Mo o r e (Mayoress and Mayor ol Clith
eroc), and Mr. H. Lawrcnson. governing director of Castle Castings.
on the Civic Hall. Never was a building less
PUBLIC MUST HAVE ACCESS IF ANCIENT WELL GETS GRANT '
KING Henry’s Well, in the grounds of the now demolished Bolton Hall, Bollon-by-Bowland, is in urgent need of re pair, members or Bowland Rural Council hc.ud at their
meeting this week. Mr. L. D. Telford, clerk to
in ~ which they asked if the council would m a kc ; gram towards the costs of
make grants towards historical buildings but. instead, to make
loans.Mr. E. Berry, surveyor, said i GISBURN Loiest is a very at- thc well was a scheduled build-
pairs. He told the ecu noil that in 1963 ill.ey had deci ded not
to
lien coops plan
ing and it would be a shame if
of restoration, if a gran', were to be made towards the cost, the public would have to have access to it. Coun. R. J. Howard, Bolton- | c;ps p(ans Cv-nimittcc.
West Riding County Council had already told the land agents that while ihc weii was worthy i about an
it fell down. The council was told that the
Council durtno'ftijj.'.’a apjwcaii
the public had the well. Several councillors agreed with this point and Coun. Mrs
right to sec
S .L Dow and Coun. F Mason ! h running round and thi s; said the council should con- ! cou)d be donb it lhc public was stder a grant.
.. . ~ r- , .
He said it was all very well , to have small hen coops with
a grant towards Bashnll Hall, where the public did have access. Coun. \V. R. King-Wilkinson
Coun. J. Porter commented , ‘ ’ tha t the council had not civen i
said he was in favour of grants. He pointed o u t th a t in some cases, where large amounts of money' were involved, the offer of a loan from the council would n o t encourage people to carry out repairs. “We have sonic duty as a council,” he said.
council would give a grant if the public had access to the well and Mr. Telford is to take
It was decided that the
Henry VI, the Lancastrian King who hid at Bolton Hall af ter the battle of Hexham in May. 1463, discovered the spring which feeds the well. It is said that the well was
up the matter with the land agents. According to tradition. King
dug and walled round for his use.
Jagged edges on car
THE bottoms of both doors of a Clitheroe man’s car were cor roded. leaving jagged edges, while the sills were completely corroded away, Insp. T. J. Sum ner told Clitheroe magistrates. Wladysl Bocinn, of Moorland Crescent, admitted in a letter
using a car with dangerous parts, and was fined £3.
WADDINGTON CAR PARKING PROBLEM
WADDINGTON residents who j live near the Social and Bowl
ing Club often find that on re turning home after an evening out, their driveways are blocked by cars whose owners are in
Council were told this a t their meeting this week during a dis cussion about the area plan ning officer’s recommendation of conditional approval o f an application to build an extension
side the club. Members of Bowland Rural
on the club. The extension would form a
billiards room and store. Mr. L. D. Telford, clerk to
the council, said h e had received two letters from residents, both complaining about cars being parked outside th e houses and sometimes d o uble parked. He
said the residents, on returning j home, often found that they 1 could not get into their drive- ' ways. I t was pointed o u t that the
club had already received per mission front the council 12 months ago to build a car park but this work had not been carried out.
the proposed car park may not i be large enough to accommo date all the cars and Coun. R. Williamson said that if the council was to approve the ap plication fo r the extension, it should be made conditional on the car park being enlarged. I t was decided to defer the
matter so that the planning officer could take up the ques tion o f adequate parking faci lities with th e club.
The question was raised that ‘ j
World day of prayer
REPRESENTATIVES women’s organisations in Clith
o i
eroc and the Mayoress, Mrs. Eva Moore, have been invited to attend an interdenominational service in the Congregational Church this evening as part of the Women’s World Day of Prayer. The form of the service lias
| prcparcd l0 p . s0p for a dozen 1 ’
- b’ ■ AMENDMENT
for the proposed buildings was the best one because of its isolation.
He added that the site chosen
"A farmer has lo make his ; living one way ot another." lie !
|
j said. Conn. Mrs. Dow commented ,
that she did not agree with such ; commercial ventures and she proposed that the committee | turn down the application for ! building the poultry houses on i any site. This was seconded by Coun. Mrs. Mary Bairstow. However an amendment from
Coun. Mason that the applica tion be returned to the planning officer fo r him to discuss with the applicant the possibility of finding a mutually' agreed site, was carried by a majority 0f one.
| area was one of outstanding! : beauty it shculd be kept that ! reduction in interest rates, the way.
___ ..... „r
; j
kept so but people have lived , During the past year, said i tractive area and it should be
make a living, ( ran. F. Mason told members ot Jowland Rural
there all their live, and have to Councillor Sharp, the council i ' had lost some good rateable i value with the result that the '
two poultry' .louses at Quarry
Bank Farm. The discussion took place at Monday’s meeting of the coun-
by-Bovvland’s representative on | Coun viavn was answering the council, said there was no j a po jnt nladc bv Coun Mrs. S.
point in the council spending, j . Dow who Fad said that as the i money in giving a grant unless !
lion to erect j fallen from £3.000 to £2.900. ; The council’s share of the j
£212.000 to be collected would j be £24,000.
'crviccs during the past year had been above the estimates, but thanks to a substantial in crease in the Resources Ele ment Grant and a welcome
Spending on all the main
council would end the year £450 underspent. Coun. Sharp noted that even
j j
so. the council had spent £2,S00 on repairing the "notorious” sewer at Brookes Lane, Whal ley.
turnover of £113.000 this un derspending must rurely be creditable estimating and com pared with an underspending of only £230 last year. The balance of the repairs
Lrom a total rate fund
and renewals fund was low but the capital fund was more healthy and £5,000 had been earmarked for a new refuse collection vehicle.
HOUSING
however, that £8.000 would be found from general rate fund balances, which should be ! about £33,000 at the year end. ! A new charge on the rate
probable increase over this year's <55,000 capital spending would he reflected in higher loan charges. It was
likely,
fund would be the cost of ad ministering the rent rebate j scheme and 10 per cent of the ' rebates—something over which ; the council had no control. Rents of council houses
would go up by 50p a week from April 1st and, as there were 53 weeks in the next ac counting year, tenants would have three instead of the usual two rent-free weeks. Coun. Sharp went on: “Our
Coun. Sharp warned that a a discussion j product of a penny rate had !
the council, read a letter lrom Ingham and Yorkc, land agents,
lhc re Talks on
CLITHEROE RDC RAIDS BALANCES AND KEEPS DOWN RATE
Wood, Mrs Btsbro-Bishrow^8 1 ral rate increase of 8p, of which 71 p will go to the county Bisbrown a n d
Domestic ratepayers benefit :
from a government grant equal j to 10-1-p and they will there- ^ fore be asked for only 63p; j people in mixed properties will j
i pay 68Lp, the commercial and | i industrial rate being the full
i 731-p.
; half penny, tbc council had taken nearly £3.,500 from b al ances.
j !
| Commenting on the budget, I i Coun. John Sharp, finance j
! chairman, said tha t to keep its j own demand to only an extra
good housekeeping he men tioned that af ter revaluation in 1963 the county levied a rate of 33p, roughly half the present demand, while the rural rate was 9 |p—more than was being asked today.
Illustrating the council’s For a rural council to de
mand less than it did nine years ago was "pretty good going” and something of which The council and officials could he proud. He wondered if any other authority in the county could mate’
UNDERSPENT €1MEMA
A return visit from 007
ACTION packed fun and ex citement for everyone is the theme at the Civic Hall next week, as 007 pays a return visit in “Goldfingcr". Starring Sean Connery and
Honor Blackman, ‘‘Goldfingcr” holds the usual quota of nar row escapes, and fast action for James Bond, as he struggles against master-criminal Gold- i
finger. Still more action is provided !
n that achievement.
by the supporting film—“The j Return of the Magnificent j Seven”, starring Yul Brynner. Drama with music, and set
in the court of King Arthur, comes to Blackburn’s Unit Four cinemas next week, with the popular “Camelot” , star ring Richard Harris and Vanessa Redgrave. The film includes such well-known songs as "I f ever I would leave you", and the title song. In contrast, also showing is
a period romance based on the novel by D. H. Lawrence, and "The Good Guys and the Bad Guys,” a comedy starring Robert Mitchuni. complete the Unit Four bill.
"10. Rillington Place", the true story of Reg Christie, the murderer, and his crimes. The film is based on the book by Ludovic Kennedy. and is powerful propaganda against capital punishment. "The Virgin and the Gypsy",
Wanted :
Clothes with 1946-look
PROBLEM—have you any
dington Drama Group want to bcgT borrow or steal any ladies’ day and evening dresses and gentlemen’s suits of the period for their production of "The Paragon” in three weeks time. Any help with the clothes
clothes to spare? Dated roughly 1946? Wad
would be very welcome—tele phone Mrs. Beryl Parkinson. Clitheroe 4439. and she will be pleased to collect them.
Died on way to hospital
rounds in West View, Clithefoe, on Friday found a man lying on the floor o f his home. The man. Mr. Stanley Wil
A window-cleaner on his
been compiled by dillcrent women members of all the Christian religions throughout the world and services will be held all over the world today. In the Congregational Church,
housing accounts have tieen in very good shape but in order to avoid these being taken over by the government they arc largely being spent on im provements for the benefit of tenants. I hope this point will be appreciated by the bene ficiaries."
SCRUTINY
the service will be led by the Rev. Mrs. K. Hendry and readers will be Miss Barbara Bingham, of the Parish Church, and Mrs. Margaret Blcazard. a Sunday school teacher at St. James’s Church. The Towns women’s Guild Choir will sing Beethoven’s “Hymn of Joy" and Bach’s “Jcsu Joy". This afternoon, shortened
versions of the services and hymn singing will be given in Clitheroe Hospital and Castle-
ford.
FAULTY TYRE F or us ing a car wi th a defec
will pay an additional precept. Chatburn has asked for 2p. and Aighton, Bailey and Chaigley, Chipping, Downhani. Pendle ton. Whalley and Wiswell have Ml asked for an extra penny. There will be no additions in the remaining six parishes. " i t is,” said Coun. Sharp, “a
Ratepayers in some parishes
very great relief, after having scr>linised the estimates, to find that we can contain our own increase to something as rcason- a blc as a half penny. "We could no doubt have
son, who was in his sixties and lived alone, died on the way to hospital. A post mortem re vealed that death was due to natural causes.
V. W o o d (president), Mrs. j CLITHEROE Rural Council on Monday approved a gene- w ,j c o u n c i L The lo[aI ra£ for ,972-73 will be 73bp.
UP TO
NET
ARE YOU WORRIED ABOUT FALLING INTEREST RATES?
There arc Income Bonds offered by leading insurance com panies which provide you with complete security for your capital
is paid AND capital repaid in full at the end of the selected term.
will guarantee a return of £3.173 over a 15 year period from y&ur original investment of £1,000.
For further details call and discuss this with:
GORDON SMITH & PARTNERS (LIFE and PENSIONS)
Incorporated Life Assurance Brokers
Proprietors: Cook and Smith (Insurance) Ltd. 40 WELL TERRACE, CLITHEROE
Tel. 2381 BB7 2AF Parking space outside office
BOTH BONDS GUARANTEED BY LEADING LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANIES
. . and an income of 7 per cent, after all income tax
You also have the option to cash in your BOND at anytime should you so wish. OR CAPITAL GROWTH BONDS; which
STATION TAXIS Tel. CLITHEROE 2933
Mr. J. J. Travis wishes to announce that from the 1st Match, 1972, he will be commencing a new private hire firm.
TAXIS WEDDINGS SMALL PARTIES
FUNERALS ETC. Tel. CLITHEROE 2933
SANDRA ANN HAIR BOUTIQUE
4 YORK STREET. CLITHEROE. TEL: 3353
Wishes to thank all customers for their patronage in the past, and hopes they will continue to support . . .
KATHLEEN TOWNLEY
who will take over the business on
MONDAY, MARCH 6th
ENVIRONITE Electric Central Heating
LIFT OFF TO A NEW WORLD OF COMFORT vnth the central heating system that combines two space age technologies, printed circuitry and polyurethane coropo-
sites- ln practical terms this means an installation with
• LOW CAPITAL COST • LOW RUNNING COST • LOW INSTALLATION COST and • NO MAINTENANCE COSTS • S YEAR GUARANTEE • This is not a night storage heater • Radiator can be removed for decorating • or taken with you when you move home
Three rooms heated for less than you pay now for beat ing one room; for example—Terraced bouse, four panels for £136. running costs less than 2p per hour. Tv-o bedroomed bungalow installed including time-switch, thermostate and wiring cost (6 panels) from £-16- This is a genuine and long awaited breakthrough m central heating. Panel sire is 4ft. x 2ft., by 1 inch thick.
YOUR LOCAL STOCKISTS
E. RONNAN (WTialley) Ltd- Heating Engineers, Plumbers
3 ACCRINGTON ROAD, WHALLEY Tel. 3259 and 2555
D. COWELL Electrical Contractor
127 WTIALLEY ROAD, SABDEN TeL Padiham 72082
Estimates given without obligation Demonstrations at 3 Accrington Road, afternoons only CARPET SALE
GREAT REDUCTIONS IN QUALITY CARPETS
By all the Leading Manufacturers Hundreds to choose from
Axminster, Wilton and Indian qualities.
See our range of Wilton Carpets. 5yds. x 4yds., £40 Other sizes at £2 per square yard.
Our Bulk Baying is the answer to your money saving!
raided the balances even more and reduced the rate, but in view of local government re
organisation I do n o t think this w°uld have been the right and
t ive tyre on the Whalley-Clith- eroe by-pass , Brian Whitehead (23), of Queen Street, Clitheroc, was fined £5 and his licence was endorsed by Cl i thc roc magis" trates. He pleaded gui l ty by
letter.
Proper thing to do. We must retain a reasonable balance to 'ake into the new authority and arn convinced the course
GENUINE BARGAINS FOR YOU AT
taken is the correct one.” Adoption o f the budget was
TAPSELL & WEST
jf’rnally seconded bv County Councillor H. Eastwood, deputy finance chairman, and ap proved.
SWADFORD STREET, SKIPTON. Tel. 2960 ALSO 89 LEEDS ROAD, NELSON. TeL 62816
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