IV'r I
'?!i»
Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, August 4th, 1977 3 O W S C E i a iA you deserve the best Ir
C h o o s e f rom the la rg e st ra n g e of
1'loutlin- Ig, was laming, l-vative
m In Mart’s
|)rices to There
lor ewes |of lambs espe-
|ghts. fat cattle
J 165 ewes, |:>igs. iTpperkg. 1 to 66.6p to 61p
Is to 56p Irs to 62.^ |jp (65.6p); to 49.^
Id ewes to Imibs 129p |?(112.1p); Lnitters to
; made to
2 0 Y O R K SH IR E S T (K e i r b y B lo c k )
l ie calving Imand and
J.tle prices Ivious sale. I cattle and
Jigust calv- l-age £336); ler-October liAV steers |lBto£230,
1st Tuesday l^mand but 1>wn on the fattle found
to £64;-
I: H/C heif- 1347); H/C
lile of store l e were 173 Tig to a top |> £19.25. le to £20.60 limbs to £23
■•sday there II cows and
l3dited cow Irison (£420) [175); and in rtion to F.
150); heifers |je cows to
I COE'S made V
l.jalf section Itle. August ] September Lr covers to hrs to £325;
I'ore section I rdX heifers lieifers with IA Hereford
1 there were : 4S1 accre-
lide to £82 l'A2 (£18.80);
I. 78 (£45.70); ]'); Charolais leifers to £73 ItJls to £44 l/es: Fresian I'o); beef X 1); heifers to
lion forward sheep, and
lattle: light lip (62.28p); V); heavy to |3TS to |:.8p (58.8p);
and uncer-
l ight steers medium to
|:.6p (54.3p);
|y to 57.5p to 58.4p
|3p (42.6p). It lambs to |rdtol22.5p iSpdlO.lp); |l.5p); over- II.
Ip (i02.5p); I at ewes to
|.4p (53.3p); I; fat sows to
I12.2I); 9-11 I'2-16 w.o. to
I o £60; store ir Gordon
ll parish Isort out
lile Valley Introversy
th I do not Ktuation is I as before he said, ish clerks
lit tongue- tances.” ’ F lem in g
that some Is w e r e
i they felt Iley was port grant
go to the fac t the
n of this j to the
in. Flem- set their it this, we
:tter rela- le parish
ves.” that Mr
sk if he address a lie Valley; Liaison
PRINTS OF PHOTOGRAPHS appearing in th is issue available to order
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Austin Suite Resta, all white.... £330 £165 Full range of Chests Less 2 5%
CARPETS
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AU OUR PRICES INCLUDE VAT
B A R N E S of A C C R IN G TO N Tel. Accrington 33416
THE RITZ CORNER, CHURCH STREET, ACCRINGTON Free Storage— Easy credit facilities
£4.95 £3.15
£236 £208 £193 £209
to 53.8p
[le of in-pig pigs were
SALE TIME A T
H ^ ^ T L E Y ’ S F A B R I C S
BARGAINS GALORE including
90in. X 100in. Seconds FLANNELETTE SHEETS at only £4.99 pair
70in. X 100in. Seconds FLANNELETTE SHEETS £4.25 pair
All stock of SHEETS, COT TON AND FLAN NELETTE 20% OFF for limited periods only
90in. POLY/COTTON SHEETING (printed) from £1.60 yd.
Still a few pairs of R E A D Y -M A D E CURTAINS , Real Bargains
Lancashire Woven TOWELS from 60p each
Curtains made up FREE-OF CHARGE for fabric over £1.50 yd.
TWs offer does not inctude vefvets or finings. CALL TODAY AT:
HARTLEY’S FABRICS 12 MARKET PLACE, CLITHEROE Tel. 23346
op); light END OF SALE BARGAIN
6 5 KING WILLIAM S T (n e x t t o C l a s s i c C in em a )
3 3 2 LYTHAM RO AD ( o p p o s i t e L id o b u i ld in g s )
BU RN LEY T e l . 3 5 5 9 5
BLACK BU RN ' T e l . 5 1 3 4 2
B L ACK PO O L T e l . 4 0 2 5 1 1
M t i m p i
Ittle met a d y
BRIDAL AND BRIDESMAIDS GOWNS
in the area
I British and Continental^^'' .designs
Prices from budget to couture All by
Leading Makers
V IS IT TH E S P E C IA L IS T (Bridal Wear only)
THE I
L e t te r s to the E d ito r encourages
blatant
“ THE Government makes the rules,” says David Walder with evident approval in his la s t W e s tm in s te r Viewpoint. It does not' meet with the approval of Liberals nor with that of the majority of fair-minded people who believe, in the supre macy of Parliament over Government.
The procedures and timet
ables of the House must not be controlled by the fiat of the Leader of the Hou§e but by Parliament itself in the interests of reaching unfet tered decisions. The present system only encourages blatant manipulation of procedural devices, such as were employed by both sides in the recent Abortion Bill debates. There is an urgent need to root out these appa rently arbitrary decisions on whether to hold debates, whether to have strict time limits or none, filibustering and wrecking of motions by speaking (or not speaking) at certain times, or calling out “ o b je c t !” at the crucial moment.
criticise ■When the Liberal Party
a g re ed to support the present Government two thoughts were uppermost — that an election would not be in the national interest (nor it wanted by the peopte
as a whole), and that this Government could best approach negotiations with the “two sides” of industry over prices and incomes and deserved support while it addressed itseu to that task. Quite a -lot of water has flowed under the bridge since then, and there may tc further changes before the autumn, indicating that an election just might clear the
air. F o r the Liberals the
concept of rigid and perma nent control ot prices and incomes is distasteful; it means intensive, moratoring of our everydOT activities, in which the Government should not really need to be involved. We want to move towards an industrial struc ture where the “two sides” cease to exist, likewise the two political groups each determined to control the monetary rewards of the
other. In the meantime the only
acceptable control is one which bites both prices and
incomes, prefefabv through the tax System so that those
who mcrease the price of • labour or goods have to maintain the basic standard of the less fortunate through indexed pensions and allo- w^ces. Miners and doctors alike complain of lower stan dards; since Britain as a
■whole-is not earning higher standards this is hardly surprising! We have no right to expect standards to go on rising for ever anyway, but at least they must be earned.
I f the “ first-past-the-.
post” system is used for the European elections the Tories and the Scottish NationM Party could virtu ally write in the names of most of the members with out bothering to have an election. This system would leave Labour with a mere handful of seats; in fact Labour votes would become just as wasted and irrelev ant as they will be in the Clitheroe Constituency in the next General Election.
FRANK WILSON, Liberal Prospective Parliamentary Candidate, Clitheroe Division
I HAVE read with interest the correspondence, from the
various Clitheroe “obser vers” of the Ribble V ^ e y C o u n c i l ’ s P la n n in g Committee. It must be encouraging to
the . various political parties to know that such active interest is in being — and that there should be no prob lem at all when the time comes to search for the new candidates to stand for the extra seats on Clitheroe Town Council . . . Or will there. . . ? It is so v e ^ easy to criti
cise and quite a different thing to do the job yourself — and do it better. In my house I have an old
Ojibwa (Canadian Indian) saying which could well be copied and thought about — “Oh Great Spirit, Maker of all things. Forbid that I judge any man till I have walked for two moons in his moccasins.
COUN. MRS S. MAW, Lower Clerk Hill, Whalley.
Too much profit
A COUPLE of days before Clitheroe Market on Satur day the price of potatoes on
a wayside stall the other side of Heston was £1.70 per 561b. bag. Yet at Clitheroe Market Sie price was 5p per lb. — a good enough profit by any standard. Tomatoes on the' same
road were 18p per lb, while on Clitheroe Market the
pr ice was 30p.. Quite a difference! To crown it all, in a recent
radio programme, a farmer receiving 2p each for his. lettuces said he found them selling at 13p to 14p. And the politicians wonder what is causing the inflationary spiral. HOUSEWIFE
Sent for Borstal training
A CLITHEROE youth was sent for Borstal training for taking part in a robbery at the home of an old age pensioner. Preston Crown Court was
told that Michele Fernando Gareffa (17), of Mayfield Avenue, admitted being at the home of retired health worker Mr James Atkinson, of Green Road, (Jolne, who had pepper thrown in his face when he answered a knock on his back door. • M o t h e r - o f - tw o Mrs
Regina Anne Taylor (26) and her 30-year-old estranged husband Allan were Mth jailed after pleading guilty to robbery. Mrs Taylor, who also
admitted a second robbery, collapsed in the dock after being sent to prison for five years. Allan 'Taylor, of (Cleveland
Street, Cohie, was jailed for four-and-a-half years after admitting other offences of burglary and theft and being in breach of a sbc-month suspended jail sentence. Mr R o b e r t ’ H a r d y ,
prosecuting, smd that . f c Atkinson was ^ b b e d and pushed into the house and a curtain was tied over his head. ■ The intruders said they
h a d a s h o t g u n an d threatened, to use it. Mr Atkinson, who suffers from bronchitis, ^ v e them his wallet, fearing he might suffocate. Mr Richard Henriques, defending Gareffa, said his
client’s part in the crime was mimmaf, amountmg to bemg present during the robbery.
1. (1) 2. (2) 3. (4) 4. (9)
5. (20) 6. (17)
T feel love” — Donna Summer.
‘Ma Baker” — Boney M. ‘Angelo” — Brotherhood of Man. ‘Feel the need” — Detroit Emeralds. ‘Float on” — 'The Floaters. ‘Easy” — Commodores.
7. (12) “The Crunch” — Rah Band.
(5) (6)
“Slow down” — John Miles. ‘Fanfare for the common man — Emerson, Lake
the Kps. . ‘
12. (16) “You got what it takes — Showaddywaddy. and Palmer. ,
13. (—) “Devil’s Gun” — C. J. Co- •, ^ 14. (7) “So you win again” — Hot Chocolate.
15. (11) “Dreams” .— Fleetwood Mac. 16. (—) “Something better change — btranglers. 17. (8) “Show you the way to go — the Jacksons. 18. (—) “That’s what friends are lor — Uemece Williams.
19. (14) “ Oh Lori” — Alessi. 20. (—) ‘ ‘Dancing easy’V-— Dpnjr Will^m^
“Dancmg easy” — Danny Wilhams^ 1^ of the week. .“Floa ters” —^ e Floaters. Chart compiled by Ames Record Bar.
.T Brackets denote last weelds „ for the-Top. "
8. (—) “We’re all alone” — Rita Coohdge 9. (3) “Baby don’t change your mind —Lladys Knight and
S S ,!”. A L I F E L I N E F O B T H E
O L D F O L K OVER the past few months I have heard from various people nothing but criticism of the Ribble
V ^ ey Council. feel
alley,( I
it is time people
realised just one of the thhigs the council has done over the past few years — a matter of serious concern in this country today. It has faced the plight of a growing number of old people by providing sheltered accom modation and purpose-built flats throughout the Ribble ■Valley. This means old people can
have their own homes and in d e p e n d e n c e , with a w a r d e n , w h o can be con ta c ted by intercom system day and night, to watch over them. This gives the elderly
security. It also assists the social services, in that they can rely on the wardens to' ring them when needed, and also a warden can often a v o id d o c to r s making unnecessary calls. The old people’s relatives’ minds are mso eased. As to certain comments
about Ribble Valley officials being unapproachable, my wife, who has been a warden here for two and a half years, finds all of them — from top to bottom — never too busy to talk to her or sort out any matter however trivial it is and however busy they might be. Recently I was shocked to
read of an elderly Sunder land lady being murdered and her home burgled. She had been living in
council property, fitted with a similar intercom system to
that used in the Ribble ■Valley. But, o^ving to spend ing cuts, it had not been wired up. The cord she could have pulled was hanging above her head on the bed in which she died. This could not happen in the Ribble Valley with the warden schemes. Our intercoms are wired
up to the bedrooms, living rooms and bathrooms. . . a lifeline for the old people. My \vife and I are proud to
be part; of this new Ribble Valley set up. 'We know how hard the council is working for the future; give it the support it deserves. ' Finally, the social services
department and all our doctors deserve a word of thanks for doing what is almost an impossible job.
ARTHUR THOBUBN 1 Garnett Road, Ciitheroe.
Chairman in order
YOUR correspondent Mr Moon seems to be losing his cool a little re the Auction Mart.
Coun Mrs Clegg was quite
in order in taking the action she did, because the vote was merely a recommenda tion. The final decision has
been left to the full Ribble V a l le y ' .C o u H c i l^ It is easy to criticise a
committee chairman who is placed in a difficult position, particularly if one is biased. against the way the vote goes.
Why not argue instead that Clitheroe is now over-
shopped, instancing the slow take-up of severa empty shops and pointing out that another supermarket might kill a few more businesses, thus leaving more decrepit sites in the- town centre. TTiis line of reasoning would be less likely to fall on stony ground.
Is there a more conve
nient site available for a supermarket? As an elderly person myself, I can see how inconvenient it is to have to walk or take a bus from Low Moor, Hayhurst Street or Castleford to have a look at the town centre shops.
INTERESTED
Plenty of queries
THE hard-working girls of the Ribble Valley tourist information office in Church Street, Clitheroe, dealt with a total of 269 inquiries during the first half of the local holiday fortnight. TTie staff dealt with 153
tourist inquiries about the Ribble Valley itself — a figure quoted in last week’s Advertiser and Times. ’We should have pouited out, however, that they also answered 70 queries on other tourist areas and 46 questions on council and other matters.
Slow response to Whalley’s
Jubilee parade
"VILLAGERS and organisations in "Whalley will have to “get a move on” if they want their Silver Jubilee procession on August 2(lth to be a success.
Owing to a delay in the returning of entry forms, possibly due to local holi d a y s , the o r g a n is in g committee has been left in the dark as to how many floats and individual charac ters will actually be taldng
part. They have high hopes, if
entries are forthcoming, that the carnival procession wil be the most spectacular ever seen in the village, but so far only five floats and a walking group have defi nitely promised to take part. Anyone who would like to
join in the merriment should get in touch ivith parish council clerk Mr Jim Holden, 17 'Woodlands Drive (Whal
ley 3152). There .are prizes for the ' , ^
best artistic and humorous floats, walking groups for both adults and children, best decorated bicycle up to age 16, and indiidduals, on foot in three age groups — up to
6.years, 7 to 16, and
adults. Judges are Coun. J. Fell, r ,1
Miss Dorothy Taylor and Mrs M. Ainsworth. Assembly will be on The
Sands about 1-30p.m. fo ra
2-30 start. The route wU take-in Church Lane, King Street, Accrington Road, Queen Street and Princess Street, and back via King Street to Station Road, Mitton Road and Calder- stones', returning to The
Sands around 4 p.m.' Refreshments will be
available on the school play ing field, where the commit tee hopes to have a ' band playmg and Moms dancing.
Keith is
‘comfortable’ SABDEN student Keith Ainsworth (21), who was rushed home from a holiday in lY ^ c e with a mystery complaint, is this week “ fair ly comfortable” in Buriiley Victoria Hospital.
K e ith , a th ird year
student at Manchester University, ivas on holiday with his friend, Glyn Evans, o f Nelson, when he was taken ill with a stomach complaint. He was whisked home by plane and taken to hospital.
His father, Mr Arnold Ainsworth, of Pendle Street
• E a s t , said Keith was believed to have ulcerated c o l i t i s . He h ad n o t responded to treatment as they hoped.
Mr Ainsworth said the
hospital was waiting for notes from Manchester Royal Infirmary, where Keith had been receiving treatment before being given clearance to go on
holiday. POPULAR
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LEFTONS r L I M E L I G H T
72/78 ST JAMES’S STREET, BURNLEY. Tel. 24892 y
-.1 , : i CD cDDiinnin mmrrr • • •xV * '
Request h o t .
selfish “A SHERMAN tank-driv
e r ’ s w i fe ” should have addressed her reply to
those who, as she says, won’t work and are content to live off the state. My letter was in protest against those who, by driv ing noisy
empty of rest. vehicles
through town, waken scores of
Is there
elderly people and also workers entitled to a decent period
anything unreasonable in this?
the
If this minority is keeping country g in joing,
then I must write to the Prime
Minister. Is it being selfish to ask for consideration for those who must sleep in rear rooms or keep windows closed to get a degree of quiet? If the driver’s wife wants
to turn night into day, then I suggest her husband parks his vehicle (presuming she lives in a built-up area) in her own immediate neigh bourhood and takes note of the reaction to the early morning starting of engines. I am not, for one moment,
against her husband rising at four or five in the morn ing or, indeed, working 12 h o u r s a d a v . On the contrary, good luck to him. But let him do it at a reason able time from a more suit able starting point. . If she considers my criti
cism unreasonable, why is it Government policy to get heavy traffic out of towns and why is it necessary to have laws restricting exces sive noise which these vehi cles are flagrantly ignoring?
CONSIDERATE
W E WANT PEAGE
AND QUIET IN reply to “Sherman tank
driver’s wife” first, it is quite evident that she does not live anywhere in the Kirkmoor Road or Castle ■View area, otherwise she would be taldng a very diffe rent attitude. To be awakened at 4-30
a.m. with an articulated vehicle bumping and bounc ing about the roads is no joke. ■\Vith regard to those
people who, she claims, don’t work or stay in bed living off the state, I would like to remind her that most o f those people, including myself, worked for half a
- l i f e t im e a n d , c o n t r ib u t e d , to the state pension scheme.
V/e looked forward to a few years o f peace and
' quiet, yet we find we cannot get this peace and quiet even m the night time, let alone the day time. I t is high tim e the
authorities gave a little thought to the residents, both old and young, who have to put up with this nuisance. I would suggest that at the very least restriction order should be made preventing heavy vehicles from using the road between the hours of 8 p.m. and 7 a.m.
RATEPAYER I ’W a:E‘AiiOUo , L
SUSAN IS CLIFF’S
No. 1 FAN
LIKE many teenagers in the early sixties, Susan McCourt, of Bleasdale Avenue, Clitheroe, ■was a . keen fan o f the up-and- coming Cliff Richard. At 15, she started collect
ing his records and went to concerts at Blaclmool and Southport. But unuke most teeriagers, whose interests change like the weather, Susan’s admiration for the star has grown and grown. In fact, now at 30 and
married %vith two children, Susan is, if anything, more keen on her idol than ever. Not a day goes by \vithout
her listening to Cliff’s re co rd s from her large collection and even on the way to work, as manageress of a King Lane decorating suppliers, she tunes into him in the car on her cassette
recorder. Because of the star’s
international reputation, his official fan club is based in Amsterdam and fans in B r ita in keep in touch through “meetmg houses.” Susan endeavoured to start one in Clitheroe some time ago, advertising in Cliffs
official magazine “Dyna mite.” But owing to the m a g a z in e 's l im i t e a r e a d e r -
ship, the meetings did not get off the ground. Susan is anxious to know
if there are any fans such as herself in the Clitheroe area who would like to meet at her house which, inciden tally, is called “Featherg- reen” after Cliffs home m
Surrey. If there are, they could
have an evening now- and again listening to records, arranging trips to concerts and generally just chatting about Cliffs career. One moment Susan is
certain to talk about is the meeting she and brother Richard (l6) — also an
ardent fan — had with Cliff at Southport. Susan is particularly proud of the photograph (reproduced here) of the three of them. She can hardly recall what
Cliff said to her, but remem bers how delighted he was to accept gifts of a Lancashire witch and a painting of Clitheroe Castle done by her mother, Mrs Barbara Doug- la s , o f The Crescent
Clitheroe. Susan first saw her idol
“live” at a concert at Black
pool when she was 16, and recMls how the screaming a u d ie n c e c om p le t e ly drowned the music. "S in ce th en she has
attended e v e ry concert within reasonable travelling distance and is lookin, forward to being at a gospe! concert at Manchester Free Trade Hall in October. She believes that nowadays Cliff is singing, better than ever. Susan’s familv are reason
ably tolerant of her “crush’ on Cliff. Husband PVank is a Sinatra fan, son Andrew (11) follows “Mud,” daughter Sarah (10) prefers The Bay City Rollers, and Susan’s other brother Michael (twin of Richard) is keen on The
Shadows.
NO POLISH DANCERS?
THERE was a disappionting re sponse to Mrs Linda 'Wareing’s appeal for people to contact her with a view to
forming a Polish dancing group. Mre 'Wareingi of Salthill
View, Clitheroe, asked for people interested in Polish dancing to get in touch with her, but only three people
did so. She is hoping to hear from
more, as at least eight members are needed to start a group. Mrs Wareing can be con tacted at Clitheroe 23988.
SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY
SHEETS Dorma Print 70 x 104 - USUALLY £7.25 each
PILLOWCASES Dotma Prints IiqilALLY £3.95 pair
• BEDSPREAD 3ft. Nylon Festoon USUALLY £15.75________
TABLECLOTHS SOin. Heavy Linen USUALLY £4.70 each_______
TOWELS, Christy, Bath .- USUAgy £4.50 each
FLOOR CLOTHSUSUALLY 15p each
PLACE MATS Old Bleach Linen USUALLY 69p each
SALE C5.50 each
SALE C3.20 pair SALE Cl 0.00 SALEC3.20
-TEA TOWELS, Vantona, plain colours USUALLY 50peadi
SHEETS Teny/Percale Print 90 x 102 U S U ^ Y £10.50 each
BLANKETS Sorrento Single USUALLY £31.00
TOWELS Super USUAL
lALLY £2.50 each Size hand
HANKIES, Jubilee, Gents Box of 3 USUALLY 90p box__________
TEA TOWELS Zodiac Prints, Union USUALLY 90p each_________
DUSTERS> Super Soft Polisher USU^Y44peach
i
TOWELS Christy hand ,
USUALLY £1.35 each
TOWELS Bath, White soiled USUALLY C2.75each
HANKIES 12in. cord Embro USUAaY47peach
SERVIETTES ISin. fgd. soiled USUALLY 17p each
HANKIES imperfecL Men’s CB USUALLY 20p each
PILLOWCASES KW Cotton USUALLY^ each
QUILT COVERS, Docma Print, Double Bed USUALLY £15.95___________
SHEETS Dorma odd D/Dyes 90 x 104 USUALLY £8.95 each
SALE C3.20 each SALE4for50p SALE 4 for Cl .75 SALE 40p each SALE C7.70 each SALE Cl 2.00 SALEC24.00
SALE C6.00 each SALE C2.20 each SALE 65p box
SALE4forC2.60 SALE 4 for Cl .60 SALE Cl .15 each
TABLE SETS 63In. diameter 4 napkins USUALLY £8.50 set
DISHCLOTHS Large, Double Knit USUALLY23peach
SALE PRICE C7.00 sot SALE Cl .90 each SALE 6 for Cl .75 SALE lOp each SALE 6 for Cl .00 SALE4for83p SALE4forC2.15
TEA TOWELS UnecVCoKon Striped USUALLY 58p each__________ SALE4forC2.10
BLANKETS Woollen/Celular 79 x 98 White USUALLY £14.00
PRINTS, TooUe 36ln. vride USUALLY^ yard
OVAL MATS fgd. USUALLY 59p each
-TRAVEL RUGS Mohair Wool USUALLY £13.50
SALE Cl 3.00 SALE 60p yard SALE 50p each SALEC10.00
DUVET NEW DUCKDOWN 4ft. 6ln. X 6ft. 6ln. LIST PRICE £66.00_______________SALEC42.00
DUVET NEW DUCKDOWN 7ft. 6ln. x 7ft. 2In. UST PRICE £121.00______________SALEC62.00
DUVET Plumex Four Seasons 6ft. 6In. x 6ft. 6ln- LIST PRICE £49.50_______________SALEC42.00
SHEETS DORMA PC 70 x 104 ----------------^^.95
SALEC5.20 1 y - , l
4 Hargreaves Street, Burnley. Tel. 22305.
8 Preston New Road Blackburn. Tel. 56087 (Easy parking on Tontine Street)
l o a TREMENDOUS HOLIDAY
O f
CAST OFFS - END OF LINES ALL REMARKABLY CHEAP
Buy now while stocks last and save money
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OPEN Mon. — Fri. 9 ^jn. lo 5 pjn. Sat. 9 to 6 pjn. Wed. Half day fTBADE INQUIRIES WELCOME)
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‘ v > -» i r ) ^ ‘ J V I -V
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