(i Chtneroe Advertiser and Times; July 8u LAST
THREE DAYS OF SALE
BEDROOM FITMENT
BARGAINS
AUSTINSUITE (White) RRP E309.&0 Our P rice £ 2 4 7 .9 0 . . . . . ............... SAVE £ 6 2
AUSTINSUITE (White) RRP £281.50 Our P rice £ 1 8 9 .5 0 ■ ■■■••■(•■■■■■■■■a SAVE £ 9 2
SCHREIBER (Honey Oak) RRP £245 Our P rice £ 1 9 9 .9 5 . . .........
....SAVE £ 4 5 .0 5
SCHREIBER (White) RRP £229 Our P rice £ 1 8 0 . . . .
.........................SAVE £ 4 9
AVALON (Teak) RRP £229.50 Our P r ic e £ 1 9 5 .5 0 ................... SAVE £ 3 4
BEAUTILITY (Teak RRP £205.75 Our P r ic e £ 1 8 5 ......... ............. SAVE £ 2 0 .7 5
BROOKS (teak) RRP £167.50 Our P rice £ 1 4 0 .......
SAVE £ 3 8 .7 0 HOMEWORTHY (White) RRP £131.75 ' Our p r ic e £ 1 1 8
........................SAVE £ 1 3 .7 5
HOMEWORTHY (Teak) RRP £106.90 Our P r ic e £ 9 5
...........................SAVE £ 1 1 .9 0
Assortment of COMBINATION ROBES, ROBES, CHESTS, BEDSIDE CABINETS.
3-PIECE SUITES AT REDUCED PRICES. Many More Reductions In Our Showroom
i
HP AND 20 WEEKS CLUBS AVAILABLE
Barclaycard & Access accepted
It’s all at the
THE DAYS when Mr Harry Wilson learnt his trade as a
tinsmith at Theo's workshop in York Street, Clitheroe, were recalled at a party to celebrate his 70th birthday.. Mr Wilson joined the family
CAXTON (Teak) RRP £188.70 Our P r ic e £ 1 5 0 . . . .
...................................SAVE £ 3 8 .7 0
firm over SO years ago on leaving school. The workshop was a hive of activity and a meeting place for local far mers, who went there with their ponies and traps for repairs to milk-kits and other sheet metalwork jobs. . The grandson of the firm’s founder, Mr Wilson was for many years a director on the service side of the business. Although he officially retired IS months ago, he still keeps a friendly eye on things at the company’s new headquarters in Shawbridge Mill/'
At the party at the Edisford B r id g e Inn, Mr Wilson
^received a French mantel clock from the firm and a pair of binoculars from the staff: The gifts were handed over by managing director Mr T. J. B. Kilner. Mr Wilson’s sister, Mrs Doris Williams, received a bouquet. There was also a special
NOW
FURNISHING DEPARTMENT MOOR LANE, CLITHEROE
ftamKsi TEL. 22611 FINED £20 AT t h e ECONOMIC STORES
NEW DELIVERY of LADIES SUN DRESSES sizes 14/16/18. MENS COTTON SHORT SLEEVED SPORTS Shirts sizes M/L/ExL. Various colours. Also M/L T- SHIRTS
EVERYTHING FOR YOUR HOLIDAY REQUIREMENTS MENS
LADIES DRESSES SUN TOPS T-SHIRTS SKIRTS DENIMS SANDALS SWIMWEAR
LINGERIE, etc. Park at the door
SPORTS JACKETS TROUSERS
SPORTS SHIRTS CHEESE CLOTH SHIRTS DENIMS SHOES, etc.
66/70 WHALLEY RD, CLITHEROE Telephone 22697
A 26-YEAR-OLD provisional licence holder was fined a total of £20 by the town’s magistrates when he admitted driving a van without L-plates and being unsupervised. Kevin Clark, of New Lane
Cottage, Withgill, was fined £10 for each offence. In a letter to the court he said his front L-plate had been torn off when he was parking.
v,V v>;; r “ ■ v / l ; PLAY INVOLVES THE WHOLE SCHOOL ’
H A1098 W E H KQ6 C AK106
S.AJ9 D 108
s . C 93
S 642 H J743 • D J9642 C —
match point duplicate would be s
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p . 6NT P p
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7NT P P -
4NT P 5D 6S
1H P 2S
should be seven spades. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ WLW
SUCCESSFUL
WHALLEY girl Anne Shil- litoe (20), of Greyfriars, The Sands, has gained an honours degree in religious studies at Lancaster University. A former pupil of Notre
Dame Grammar School and St Mary’s College, Blackburn, Anne will go on next year to take a postgraduate course in education at Christ'College, Liverpool. Her father, Mr J. A. Shil-
birthday cake, baked by Mr Kilner’s mother, Mrs Lily Kilner. Among the 27 members of
the firm and family guests were Mr Wilson’s son Theo — a director — with his wife Josephine and children Trevor and Wendy. Picture: The toast is Harry
Wilson. Next to him are Mrs Williams and Mr Kilner.
■IT might have seemed rather odd in a summer heatwave to watch a Christmas play, but the audience took it in their stride and showed their appreciation when pupils at St Augustine’s School, Billing- ton, put on their first produc tion. Headmaster Mr Philip
Morris explained that the choice of “My Three Angels” seemed most suitable for a first attempt, requiring a rela tively small cast. Exams were over, and it was an approp riate time to stage a play before the school broke up.
All the school and staff
helped in the production in some way and most of the work behind the scenes, such as backcloth, make-up, scen ery and costumes, fitted in with the school’s curriculum.
Toni Ditri, Danny Lambert
and other fifth-year pupils helped in the construction of
the set and fourth and fifth year technology gioups printed tickets. Girls fiom the fourth year helped with make up and fourth-year pupils painted the backcloth. In the cast of the throe-act play were. Lindsay Woods.
(Smily Dulay), David Stinchon (Felix Dulay), Shirley Camp bell (Marie Louise), Susan Wilcock (Madame Parole), Allan Nicol, Christopher
1 Musker and David Sherliker (convicts), David Hothersall (Gaston Lemare), James Taylor (Paul) and Michael
Stockton (Lt Expoir). Understudies were Donna
Geraghty and Kathleen Cleary.
Three performances of the
play, produced by Mr F. E. Franey, were given. One of the. audiences included patients from Brockhall Hospital, pensioners, and chil dren -who will be joining the L'chool next term.
GLORIOUS weather brought record crowds to Clitheroe Hospital open day on Satur day, when an afternoon full of
e n te r ta inm e n t provided record proceeds of more than £600. The Friends of the Hospital
■and the staff combined to put on a number of stalls in the b r ig h tly decorated front grounds, Slaidburn Silver Band played melodies under the trees on one side of the building and on the other there were pony rides and a karate demonstration. Inside the hospital, which
was open for visitors to walk round, teas were served. , This year more patients
V d S lfS ^ is
OPEN BOTH HOLIDAY WEEKS
FOR SAVINGS FOR SEWERS. LIDSEY’S
Per METRE
MARKET LIDSEY’S
MARKET;
WALK ROUND
LIDSEY’S
MARKET LIDSEY’S
r a i i f MARKET
for a coffee morning — the first fund raising event to be organised by new Ribble Valley Mayoress Mrs Dorothy Green and her committee. The event was very success
MAYORESSES past and present gathered on Saturday
ful, more than 100 people attending and over £100 being raised. The money will be added to other proceeds during the year and divided among various charities. S ta l l s included white
elephant, jewellery, cakes, and two bring-and-buy; one run by former Ribble Valley Mayoress Mrs Elizabeth Robinson and this year’s town Mayoress Mrs Kath Black burn. All the guests were greeted
by Mrs Green and by her d e p u t y Mr s C a th e r in e Ncwhouse. Among visitors were last year’s Mayor and Majuress of Clitheroe, Conn, and Mrs Leo Wells.
TOO FAST
BARROW-FORD TEXTILE
MARKETS
PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE Open all day Saturday
A GARAGE shop foreman testing a customer’s car after a service denied going through a radar checkpoint in Edisford Road,.Clitheroe,. at 45 mph. But Clitheroe magis trates found a ■ speeding summons proved against David Anthony Rigby (22), of Hawthorn Farm, Barrow, and he was fined £15. He claimed he had been
driving behind a bus at a speed which was. not exces sive. The radar meter reading could have been that of a car which had just gone down Edisford Road , ahead of the bus.
FOURTH-FORMERS : from 1' They are pictured visiting Bowland County Secondary School were’ among hundreds of, youngsters who took advantage : of Calderstones . open. week to see the inner . workings of the hospital.
Pendleview/ a garden ;and farm j area constructed over the past six years by patients under supervision.
r > Twenty-five' school parties • were • shown -round- the -hospi
. A joint effort by. the hospi-j •ital and its League, of Friends/., the carnival featured market
ta l , during the open week. Main event was a carnival attended by over 1;000 '.'visitors.
■. :
musical, sporting and drama ■. tic. ■ ' ■
stalls and:, entertainments, /' :
are going towards furnishings for. a : . house . in .1
Proceeds .from these events Padiham,.
bought by the League o f.
Friends residents.
for Calderstones During the open week, 60
.. former, staff took up invita tions, to returnfor lunch and a. look round the hospital.
than usual were able to go outside and enjoy the open day, as the staff, having held their own coffee evening last week, were not involved in fund raising as much as usual. Among the visitors were
the Mayors and Mayoresses of th e R ib b le V a lley and Clitheroe. One of the most popular
stalls on a very hot day was the Rotary Club’s tombola with drinks as prizes. Lucky winner of the pomagne was Mrs Oddie (pictured right), of Chatburn Road, Clitheroe.
" " f e
Need for youth centre
CLITHEROE Town Council wants to see Stanley 'House, Lowergate, put to good use for the community . . . poss ibly as a youth centre. Members have written to
the Ribble Valley and Lanca shire County Councils saying that the building and land owned by SS Michael and John’s Church may soon be on the market and asking them to investigate its use. Coun. Mrs Beryl Cassidy
told the Council: “Clitheroe lacks a community centre for young people to meet. Good, Central sites have been missed in the past, and we should at least -look into this one.” Town clerk Mr Leslie
Telfoiu reported that .the building would need several thousands pounds worth of repairs before any structural alterations could be made.
CARNIVAL ATTRACTS 1,000 VISITORS CONSULT THE SPECIALISTS
CERAMICA ITALIA LTD
WE STOCK THEM — WE CUT THEM
WE DELIVER THEM — WE FIT THEM (any amount supplied)
and you can see them on display at
THE COACH HOUSE, DUCK ST, CLITHEROE (opposite Wellgate Motors). Tot. 24570/25602
OPEN Mon.*Fri. 9 a.m.*5 p.m.; Sat. 9-6 p.m.; Wed. half-day (TRADE INQUIRIES WELCOME)
BACK DUTY
FOR using a van without an excise licence, Alan Leslie Strange (29), of New House Farm, Chipping, was fined £10 at Clitheroe Magistrates Court. Strange, who admitted the offence, was also ordered to pay £3.33 back duty.
litoe, is headmaster of St Joseph’s RC School, Hurst Green.
At rubber bridge, the final bid
A good ACOL sequence playing N E
BRIDGE CLUB
TWELVE tables played in the - duplicate game at Clitheroe , Bridge Club. Winners were:’NS — Mrs Dewhurst and Mrs L. Booth- man, Mrs J. Martindale and Mr W. L..Wilkinson. EW — Mr and Mrs Sheldon, Mr and Mrs Atkinson, Mr Thickitt and Mr Cornfield.- The hands were very exciting with
four biddable slams. The following hand illustrated a difference between match point duplicate-ond rubber bridge. In duplicate, seven NT is the winning score, which needs a heart finesse. • In rubber bridge, the hand should be played in the-safe contract of seven spades,which does not need a finesse. . ■
• S dealer. All vulnerable . C QJ87532
S 87 - H 52 D Q5
N . S KQ1053 D AK2
ISAAC — JOHNSON An old g i r l , of Clitheroe
G ram m a r S ch o o l, Miss Vanessa Mary Johnson, was married at Clitheroe Register Office to composer and musi cal director for television and films, Mr Antony Philip Isaac. The bride, a Newcastle Uni
versity graduate who works as a bilingual secretary in London, is the second daugh ter of Mr and Mrs Douglas Johnson, of Causeway House, Sawley. The bridegroom, who has
worked on the programmes “Warship,” “Survivors,” “The Main Chance,” “Barlow” and “The Onedin Line,” is the only son of Mr and Mrs P. G. Isaac, of Church Shade, Colster- worth, Grantham, Lines. The bride wore an oyster
silk 'chiffon gown with a matching single; silk rose headdress and carried a bou quet of cream rosebuds and alstromeria. The bridesmaid, Miss Sheila
Elizabeth Johnson, the bride’s younger sister, wore a full- length floral silk dress in shades of topaz and lilac and carried a bouquet of marguer ites.
!
A reception was held at the bride’s home. The couple will
•live in Barnet, Hertfordshire. P h o to g r a p h : P y e ’s ,
Clitheroe.
Club formed to help
raise cash
A SUPPORTERS’ club has been formed by parents of the First Pendle Scouts and Cubs in a bid to safeguard the group’s financial future. The move was made follow
ing a special meeting this week at which parents heard th a t th e amount Of cash needed was spiralling fast. Thirty parents at the meet
ing in the group’s United Reformed Church headquar te r s , were told by. Scout Leader Mr Denis Mackey that there were now about 150 Fendle Scouts and Cubs and funds could not longer be raised by the normal methods. Mr Mackey added that
before the Scouts’ most recent camp about £200 had been spent-on tents and cooking equipment. , Annual subscription to the
« - k '
new club will be £1. Parents also agreed that the Scouts’ and Cubs’ weekly subscription should be put up from 5p to lOp, bringing it into line with th a t of many other local groups.
New career
for Michael A FORMER head boy of Clitheroe Royal Grammar School who decided to go “back to school” in his thirties for a teaching qualification will receive a degree from P r in c e s s A le x a n d ra on Wednesday. Mr Michael Miland (36), of
The Strand, Fleetwood, has gained a B Ed at Poulton-le- Fylde, Lancaster University School of Education. Formerly managing direc
tor of a television business, Mr Niland, married with two children, starts his new career teaching French at Ansdell Comprehensive School, St Annes, in September.
CASTLE COSMETICS
33 CASTLE STREET, CLITHEROE HOLIDAY SPECIALS
450ml. SAVLON LIQUID..... !..... ......... 3 7 p SONA BATH SALTS.........
.... 2 6 p ...... ...... 2 1 p
125C.C. ALBERTO, BALSAM SHAMPOO..... 1 9p BRISTOWS HAIRSPRAY, 200gms... ’ . . . . . 3 Q p US ROLLER 50% Extra Free.........
NEW DOUBLE PROTECTION RIGHT GUARD 190c.c. . . . . . . . . . . . 44p
SURE AEROSOL DEODORANT, 250c.c.... . 44p PIN UP END CURL....... .................... 3 9 p .
All cosmetics and toiletries below recorn- mended prices. Call and see. '
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