a RECORDI-R 19.90
NTUS GUARANTEE AT
PDENS T„ CLITHEROE
In Memoriam B A R IL E i r
Loving memories of o who died July g g j
(Elizabeth! Ive lost mv sole corrm^v,,
toils Tor
jo r t •ay’s Zest
\M - tvcs
A 1 U C w i t h M y ^ ™ 011* No one knows mvstmvl.'. AS I travel mv lSc & —Piom lovinz hncue' Charlie.
DUCKWORTH.
; e husband In . .
m emory• of Nonnin died Julv 18th, 1972“ - * ° Not ju s t today bnt am-. In silence I lem em b S ^ daj Ijovuia wife Sarnie.
IRELAND.—Loving mcmn»< a d e ar h u s f f a u ^ ^ f
an d a ran d fa th e r H„„ler died July 18th, 1968. Time masses, memorinis ei„
QUIday remembered evwy - P r o m 'h i s lo y n c wiIe and
Mmmnorics a dear hush”
an d fa th e r, S i t o ^ S who died July lath, 1974s'
d
GOdHUU^ im h o n ie ^ . BUtstiU0Ur hGarts 1,6 “veth
l7em°m hiS d0ar W Kath. I Not .just today but every div
n silence We remember^ —Brenda. Eric and
10 th, ford, for
Jen-
rbara ill am otiier h, a t iking jr.
th a t
'liter, iking Lane
and
l Julyester i a s e ,
ie i lions,
. July •ealth s
d and
> an d d and
alula- 21 st,
-Love, best,
•afcula- r 21st, ;a and Mrs
wishes, n and
ratula- vishcs
. July k and
Ot ia r e .—In lovin
R a w d e n and B a S » Catherine. Bill a n d S S S ’ diUdren.
d S1*®*
of William Francis' died Ju ly 21st 1974 t o h y f miSSCd bv «1 hi.
memory who
T’wrGG (Fred). — in ]ovin a. dad and eroSi-
1969 " h ° dl<!d Jldy 15th*
L ° ahvkys!U’a rcmcmbere<I —From .^d au ch tc r Hilda. E dw a rd ,
grandchildren Rosemary.
Acknowledgments
,..T );e brothers of the jata Wal ter Green wash to thank all relatives, friends and neighbours fo r their kind expressions of sympathy and floral tr ib u tes received durinz th e ir sudden bereavement, also t l ie family doctor and s ta f f of Queen's Park Hospital fo r th e ir kind attention and tile Rev, N. Walton for his minis trations . — 18 Chapel Lane, Grindleton.
Maud Hustwaite would like to take th is opportunity to thank all relatives, friends and neighbours for cards and le tte rs of condolence recoiled during th e ir time of sonow; also all who gave donation, for th e Cancer .Research Fund, th e Methodist minis te rs a n d th e Vicar of Chat- b u rn fo r tlieir kind ministra tions a n d - th e district nurecs and doctor fo r their kind a t ten tio n . — 16 Greenfield Avenue. Chatburn.
Tile family of tile late
For craftsmanship to e » f marble, preen slate ono stow j.
etc. B and Cut Uiterta*. f
THOS. ROCK | (ROCK and ALTYi
red 25 d hus- nc. of iheroe. jn t in u r c h , m. on
acci- Monumental MasonSj:
7b MARKET PLACE- (Behind Dean's Hairdresser* •,
1975.— Direc- Clith-
. 1975, re'd 58 *d hus- of 21
\n and of
thcroe.
ri d e ar Service take
Friends only
Crema- July
:. 22582. •tlier of
md a Service irch on
y Uth , ' 21 S t itlieroc, rs. the vhe late
th. was tlon a t Tomlin- e, Rock- ‘ Clith.
lv 10th, home, Clith-
,is 59th ed hus- son and
line and dearest
id Kirs-
vd Fred, lapel of ment a t
tr-in-law dearest
2 r v on . — inq.: :ington). •oe. Tel.
»ars, the »f James ;h a tb u rn . service Church
ilv 11th. I. Ena
During the Period someone
H o l id °V wilt
always be >r
a t t e n d a n c e < 'R o c k d a l e '
ilv 16th e n t in
. — Cal- irectors, .itheroe.
1th, 1975, ears, th e
and of n. dear Gladys dearly
•crineton »1 House.
TOMLINSON'S 1 Scrvlcc5
d oen co me, ' 175
1, in hos on Wise, S tanden n e a r
' Church p.m. on
n d in te r -
U . Direc- * Clith-
17. 1975.— . Keri***^*' po«t Omeo.
Fgncral « F ockf,:,Ic
Eshtpn T°rrVi34? ClUhcrp* *
-jOUSOCO
It’s all at the
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(
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BLACKBURN CO-OPERATIVE
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DAVID, back home at the weekend from Abadan, sets off again today for the Persian Gulf.
I
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,K and Times mother Bronze' Age find the collar of a Bronze Age
cremation urn h as b e en unearthed at Pendleton — tile
second to be found since exca- started in the village
in April. The latest find, in the gar
den of Carrier’s Croft, home „f Mr and Mrs Alan Rayton, vss made just three feet from {j“e spot where a similar baked on, was discovered in May.
In iuhlition to the collar, wveral cremated bones were
also found bu t archaeologists a t the site have not ye t been ab le to determine whether they belonged to an animal or a human being. The collar and the bones are believed to be about '1,000 years old. • • Under the leadership of site
d i re c to r Mr Jo h n Hallam, members of West Lancashire Archaeological Society exca v a tio n unit, helped by the n e w l y - f o rm e d P e n d l e Archaeological Group, based in Burnley,, have extended
th e ir investigations from the garden to a meadow behind.
Work on the original garden
site — 40 feet long by 10 feet wide — is continuing, while a new trench is in the process of b e in g e x c a v a te d in th e meadow.
Mr Hallam said th a t the
purpose of the new trench was to discover the ex ten t of the
. original site, which is p a rt of a Bronze Age burial ground, and to investigate the possible
existence of medieval objects there.
Excavations will be continu
ing for another week, and Mr Hallam is hopeful th a t the a r e a w ill p ro d u c e m o re objects of interest.
“ P en d le to n is an ancient
h am le t ,” he said, “and the re s id e n ts have been v e ry interested in what we have found. “ People now realise that they might have dug up vari
ous objects themselves with o u t knowing th e i r signifi cance. “Everybody has been most co-operative and I have great
. hopes th a t more excavations will take place here in the fu tu re.” Mr Hallam has been doing
th e excavations for Lanca sh ire County Museum Ser vice. The objects found at Pendleton will eventually be p u t on show a t C litheroe Castle.
Adventures on road
■MM
TWENTY-EIGHT-YEAR-OLD David Hargreaves will be joining hundreds of East Lancashire motorists and holidaymakers,on the Continent this week. But for David, of Dale Terrace, Chatburn, it will be no vacation. For he is one of a new breed of lorry drivers,
fields
with an 8,000-mile round trip to Abadan ahead of him. He arrived back in Chat
burn on Friday from his latest trip to Iran and today will say goodbye again to his wife, Carol, and six-year-old daugh ter, Sarah . . . hoping th a t he might see them again within a
month. David works for Howlan
In te rn a t io n a l , a Blackburn haulage company formed to do b u s in e s s on th e lu c ra t iv e route to the Middle East. The company was founded
in J a n u a r y by C l i th c ro e businessman Mr John Lancas te r , ' of Fairf ield Drive, in p a r tn e r s h ip ‘w ith Mr Eric Howell, of Rishton, who for merly owned a freezer busi ness in Clitheroe
Graveyard The Middle Ea s t route has
become a source of big money following the rise in oil prices and consequent industrialisa tion. I t is more expensive, but a great deal faster, to tran s port goods from Europe by road than by ship. B u t i t is also a journey
fraught with hazards and a g ra v e y a rd for hundreds of European lorries abandoned by their drivers. I t takes them over 20 bor
d er posts, every kind of road f rom m o to rw a y to sh eep track, past wily customs offic ers, scheming donkey owners, chrome-hunting children, and shepherds who abandon their flocks by night to go thieving lorry wheels which can fetch around £500 out there. On his latest trip, David’s
ju g g e rn a u t was in convoy with the lorries of two other Clitheroe men employed by Howlan’s — Mr Ted Thomas, of Kenilworth Drive, and Mr Raymond Marsden, of High- field Road.
Lucky They a re s t i l l fa r from
home. Ted is awaiting cus toms clearance a t Dover, and Raymond has had to make a detour to Rumania to pick up a retu rn cargo. “You leave with a couple of mates, but you invariably re tu rn alone,” says David.- T h e , last trip was David’s
fifth this year. So far he has narrowly avoided being shot through the head, and come close to being frozen to death. But he’s been lucky enough to keep out of th e dreaded Tur kish jails and hasn’t y e t been c h a s e d b y W e s t German motorway police in helicop ters.
. This time David is taking a
varied cargo to Abadan. He hopes to reach his destination in two weeks, returning home (hopefully) in.a month. ■ His truck is a 32-ton Volvo
in which he sleeps in a special bunk. He takes with him £750 ru n n in g expenses, clothing, bedding, and a cooker for the p a s s a g e th ro u g h T u rk ey , where he finds the local food inedible. ;
- . He also .hopes for a large
slice of luck, ns the hazards for the overland drivers are manifold, even if th e fa te 'o f th e F ren ch driver, lynched a f te r running down a Turkish
child is not universal. : T a lk in g a b o u t his most
r e c e n t j o u r n e y , D a v id d e sc r ib e d how he escaped with his life a f te r an incident in a Turkish bar. “I was in convoy with two
other lads.and wc all stopped nt .the same .bar for. a . drink. We got talking to a fourth
'SETTLING
down.to his, new duties .as the priest-in-charge of All Saints’ Church, Pend leton, is the Rev John Gordon Cole. Mr Cole (32) was licensed a t a special ceremony a t the
c h u r c h co n d u cted by th e Bishop of Blackburn, the R t Rev. R. A. S. Mnrtinenu. Mr Cole h a s - a ls o , boon
assigned to the-new post of. Communication Officer for the Blackburn Diocese. His- duties will entail editing the diocesan magazine “The Sec,” helping local clorgy with their p u b lic a tio n s , informing the local Press of the Bishop’s engagements and broadcast ing on local 'radio. • At' tho sorvicc v rt**p t'io"
Mayor and Mayoress of the Ribblc Valley, Couh. and Mrs Tom Robinson, and it was also a t te n d ed by friends of Mr Cole from his former parish a t Alwoodlcy, Leeds. - ■ C l e r g y in c lu d e d t h e
Archdeacon of Blackburn, the Venerable Desmond Carroll,
Canon John Cornish (Bishop's. chaplain), the Rev. John Hud
son (Rural Dean) and Mr John A s p in a l l (p a t ro n o f th e parish). Picture: From the left,, a t
th e front: Mr Cole, Canon Cornish, tho Bishop and the Mayor and Mayoress. Behind: The Archdeacon, churchwar dens Mr R.. Collinge and Mr G. E. Cowpcrthwnite, and Mr Aspinall.
'
driver there and when we left he didn’t pay for his drink. “We all drove off, but a few
miles later I was forced into the roadside by the bar-owner in a car. He told me I had to pay for the drink. I refused and he pulled out a gun and pointed it a t my head. I paiil
up!” On his f i r s t trip, taking
drums of paint to Iran in F eb ruary, there were times when
David had to keep his engine running overnight to avoid a complete freeze-up while , he was parked. One night, how ever, the engine stopped — “even with benzine in it, the diesel ju s t froze in the pipes” — and David awoke with his hair frozen to the window. His fate was gentle com
pared to th a t of the Australian h i tc h -h ik e r who reportedly froze to death in a Rumanian lorry. T h a t 'f i r s t trip took seven and a h a lf weeks, a f te r a
series of breakdowns. The worst p a rt of the route
is u n d o u b ted ly Turkey — “1,000 miles of misery” — and David has had stones thrown a t him, and his lights stolen as he passed through. One of his running partners had a £200 f in e to pay a f te r knocking down a cow. Then there are the roads in
Eastern Turkey — “like the Trough of Rowland but 100
times worse” — over which the drivers have to guide their ju g g e r n a u t s , if th e y a re bound for any Middle Ea s t destination.
David has so far done three
trips to Iran and two to Saudi A ra b ia . On the Iran route th e r e is an SOO-mile dead s tra ig h t section following the oil pipeline.
And on the way to the Saudi
Arabian-Persian Gulf coast he had to cross a desert where the route is marked only by^ petrol drums, and the track virtually disappears if there is any rain.
E v e n when th e d r iv e r s
reach their destination, they can wail up to 10 days before finally clearing themselves of rod tape and discharging their
■ cargoes. “A t any time in Tehran
there are about 400 wagons w a i t in g to u n lo a d ,” says David. The job pays well — but it takes its toll in hazards
. and boredom. An 13-hour day is normal,
and there are no weekends to relax. Four weeks on, one off, is the rule if all goes according to plan. “You feel likd kissing the
ground when you ge t back h om e ,” s a y s David. But returning home is really no more than a re s t before the rigours of the next adventure.
ONE of the detectives who has been actively^ involved in th e Black P an th e r murder inquiries-has taken over in c h a r g e o f CID d u t ie s a t CHtheroe. Det. Con. Ian Hartley, who
In charge of local CID
fills the post vacated by DC Tom Logan, recently prom oted to uniformed sergeant, l iv .e s in P im l ic o R o ad , Clitheroe, with his wife Jean and two sons — Steven, a p u p i l a t C l i th e ro e Royal Grammar School, and David, who a t te n d s Pendle Junior School. DC Hartley has been in the
police fo rce fo r over nine years. He tra in ed 'a t Bruche, n e a r War rington, spending his first three months with the" Ac cr in g to n force. Then he was transferred to Clitheroe, where for four years he was on foot patrol duties. For 12 months DC Hartley
worked on the crime patrol in th e A c cr in g to n -B la ck b u rn a re a , before joining Black burn CID for three years. His next job was serving on
the CID Task Force based at Accr ington, and la s t Sep
Sabden furniture firm expands
T H E h o l id a y s o v e r , th e Sabden firm of Pendle F u r nishings has this week been settling in a t new premises in the village. The firm has taken over
Cobden Mill — now in the ownership of the Ribblc Val ley Council — creating 30 new jobs, which, when filled, will bring the labour force up to*
100. The firm is continuing to
occupy Union Mill, Sabden, where it s tar ted business 10 years ago upholstering pre m a n u f a c tu r e d f u r n i tu r e frames. The move will enable the company to eventually double
its output to a very buoyant home trade.
tember he was assigned to the. Black P a n th e r case, which took him to various parts of the country on inquiries. A lth o u g h an Accrington
man by birth, DC Hartley .and his family have become very attached to Clitheroe. “Working on CID in the
town is 'som e th in g I have looked forward to ever since my foot-patrol days here,” he said. “I like Clitheroe people very much and feci really at home here. I am sure I will enjoy working in the a re a.” DC Hartley, a keen golfer,
is a member of the Whalley club. He also plays cricket for Clitheroe Police team.
i * - !
A .
THURSDAY, JULY 24th, 1975 No. 4649
Price 6 p . r * f £ If
V a lu e a n d V a r ie ty in HOLIDAY WEAR TWO-PIECE SUITS, SPORTS
JACKETS, SPORTS TROUSERS with ACCKSSOUIKS TO TOMB
FRED READ & CO. LTD U MAKKKT I'
l.ACK, CUTIIKROK Telephone
Looking happy as they set Shawbridge
rock festival under fire
A STORM of controversy has broken over a proposed mini-rock festival which is planned to take place at Clitheroe FC’s Shawbridge ground. The organisers, rock music
enthusiasts Anthony Pearson, of School Terrace, Clitheroe, a n d J o h n B am f o r d , o f Claremont Avenue, wanted to do their bit to help when they read in the Advertiser and
T u ne s of th e football club’s financial plight. Their idea was to hold the
festival, on August 9th, to raise funds for the club and at the same time to provide some e n t e r t a in m e n t fo r young people in the area. But many local residents
Swan and . Royal...
Plan t© lease
THE Swan and Royal, one of Clitheroe’s oldest and best- known hotels will soon be under new management fol lowing the intention to retire of Miss Margaret Browning, manageress for the past IS
years. N e g o t ia t io n s a r e ta k in g
place with “a v e ry estab lished
h o te lie r” to lease th e nine- bedroomed hotel for a re n t in th e region of £5,000 a y e a r , exclusive of ra te s . The hotel is owned by Mr
Edward Trueman, of Bishops Wood, Cuddesdon, Oxford, w h o s a id th a t th e n ew arrangement was directly con c e rn ed with his proposed development of the court yard a t the re a r of the hotel. The, plan is to convert the L rsh ap ed stable block into
; four shops which would retain their original stone frontages anci beamed cei lings. The shops would be let to busines ses considered suitable by Mr Trueman. Three years ago, property
owned by Mr Trueman adjoin ing the hotel on Castle Street was renovated and converted into two shops and office accommodation. The Swan and Royal Hotel
h a s b e en ow n e d by th e Trueman family for about 40 years. Mr Trueman took over the business on the death of his father, Mr G. A. Trueman, about 12 years ago.
PENDLETON PRIEST IS LICENSED
feel s tro n g ly that such an event should not take place in their neighbourhood, and one
w o m a n , M r s J e n n i f e r Edwards, of Taylor Street,
has. taken a petition to the Kibble Valley Council asking for the festival io be stopped. Mrs Edwards has collected
more than 80 signatures from people in nearby s tre ets who would be a f fe c ted by the event. “Almost everyone I spoke
to was against the festival on the grounds of noise ami poss ible damage to property,” she said. “ P e r s o n a l ly I am n o t
against’ the idea of pop festi vals for young people, but
they should be held well away from where people live." Groups to be featured at the
fe s t iv a l are Seth Bromley. Grimpen Myre and Otto, with co n tin u ity provided by the mobile disco OK. Admission costs will be kept
to about 30p to encourage a high attendance.
Another look at council rent rounds
RENT a r re a rs for the Ribhle Valley Council’s 2,000 houses are now £8,03(5 compared with £2,702 when the authority came into being in April last year. A peak of £9,779 was reached in January.
Faced with these figures,
the Housing Committee has decided to see if the three rent rounds can be more efficiently arranged.
M r M ich a e l H a r t f o r d ,
Housing Manager, told the committee of the volume of
work done by the three collec to r s a n d s u g g e s te d th a t perhaps an additional collector ought to be appointed. He also re p o r te d th a t legal action against several defaulters had been successful.
Umbrella- hol iday
CLITHEROE'S holiday fort night got off to a damp s ta r t foi* those staying a t home. The town’s travel agents
re p o r te d th a t bookings for day trips were up on last year, with Blackpool, the Yorkshire Dales, and Bronte country proving particularly popular.
Traders who have remained
open during the holiday period say th a t business is brisker th an usunL —- particularly those supplying groceries and bread.' ..
Heavy rain meant th a t few
people visited the market on* T u e sd ay anrl several stalls didn’t even bother to open. Camper's a t the Edisford
site decided th a t if they were going to be wet they might as well enjoy i t a t th e nearby R ib b lc s d a le P o o l , w h e re attendances have been well up on last, y e ar /
Wine and Spirit Bargains ggp
Beaujolais 1973.........."...;..,;.:.;..'..;................9gp Valpollcella ?St Giorgio*. Cotes du Rhone Rouge
Daily Claret..:..........J.,,*,.,;.;..............................89p Sunday Claret.;......................
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Talnmanco Spanish'Wines................68d ‘Valar* Midi Wlnos................7Sp- OPEN THROUGHOUT TH E H OLIDAYS •
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A L L MAJOR ITEMS C A R R Y A 12 MONTHS FU L L G U A R AN T E E OPEN BO TH W E E K S O F H O L ID A Y S
j
off for a week’s camp at Gosforth, Northumberland, are these Scouts and Guides from SS Michael and Jo h n 's Church, CHtheroe. It is the firs t time they
have camped at Gosforth, and the 50 Guides and Scouts will he joining together to take p a r t in many of the activities, including hiking, canoeing and abseiling. In charge of Scouts are
leaders Theo Wilson. Alban Snape and Michael and John Gidiow. C ommanding the Guides are Mrs .loan Lee, Mrs .1. Wilson. Mrs Margaret Waroing and Miss Christine Dale.
Accident girl ill
C l . IT II EK OE g i r l Ann Leonard, injured in a road accident in North Wales, is now off the critical list. Ann ( I II), of HighfieJd
Road, is semi-conscious with head and leg injuries in a Rhyl hospital, though she is still “very ill and giving cause for concern”. H e r f a th e r , Mr James
Leonard, is “satisfactory” in Chester Royal Infirmary. Tin* funeral of Mrs Elaine
Leonard, who died in the acci dent, was held at St William’s RC Church, Bradford, on Tuesday.
It’s last orders at Moorcock
THE Moorcock Inn, Wad- dinglon, has closed its doors to the public a f te r going into liquidation with a total e s t i mated deficiency of .£97,500.
The hotel was officially
closed on Monday morning by Mr A. W. D. J a ck on hchaif of the liquidator.
The future of the Moor
cock is yet to be decided, but a n u m b e r o f p a r t i e s in te r e s te d in b u y in g th e h o te l have been in touch with the liquidator.
“ It would have been better
if we had found a purchaser immediately, but it lias been necessary to close the hotel am i . i t . will remain closed until the liquidator has sold the premises," said Mr Jack.
All the s taf f have left the
hotel with the exception of the office workers who are staying until the end of the week.
JS E LEC T ED S P EC IA L S STEREO UNIT AUDIO £48.63....... .. . . . . . . :
MUSIC CENTRE-RADIO-R/PLAYERS- CASSETTE £131.25. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
I C 60 CASSETTES 5 0 p C90 7 0 p
; .MONO RECORD PLAYER £24.95 . . . . . . . . . . . £ 2 1 . 8 0 | MAINS OR BATTERY CASSETTE RECORDER £ 1 9 . 9 0 |
I
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IN C L U D IN G :—
5 DT 2480 MUSIC CENTRE. . . . . . . . . . . . . 5DT 2660 MUSIC CENTRE. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
£ 2 1 8 £ 2 6 5
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26 KINC ST. CLITHEROE—Telephone 22681
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