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8 Clithcroe Advertiser and Times, June 7th, 1979 Q&ce Danes' game is not quite cricket!


GaipelS PRICES FOR OUR


‘ONCE ONLY’ BUY


1 roll only 12ft. wide


HEAVY DOMESTIC AXMINSTER BROADLOOM


£ 7.95 sq. 1 roll only 12ft. wide


MEDIUM DOMESTIC AXMINSTER BROADLOOM


£ 6.95 sq. yd. Foam back shag pile


LIVING ROOM QUALITY 12tt. wide in 4 colours


£ 4.95 sq. yd. Plush pile secondary back


LIVING ROOM QUALITY 12ft. wide in 2 colours


£ 5.50 sq. yd. Semi-shag pile foam badk


MEDIUM DOMESTIC 12ft. wide in 5 colours


£ 2.75 sq. yd. 1 roll only


BEDROOM SHAG PILE 12ft. patterned


£ 2.25 sq. yd.


SWAN COURTYARD NewShbpping Area,


KENYON — FORREST


Swan &.Royal;Courtvarcl, CLITHEROE. TEL: CLITHEROE 25941 (CLOSED WEDNESDAY! ALSO AT: High Street, Skip ton. Albert Rnad. Barnoldswick


LIFE AND PENSIONS Calder Britnell & Co.


INSURANCE BROKERS 28 WELLGATE, CLITHEROE. Tel. 26026


All other types of Insurance transacted Local Agents for


The Marsden Building Society


CLITHEROE secretary Miss Cheryl Anne Forrest vvas mar r i ed to Mr Stephen Kenyon at St James’s Church, Clitheroe, on Saturday. The bride is the second daughter of Mr and Mrs H. R. Forrest, of Lingfield Avenue. The bridegroom, a


cabinet maker, is the elder son of Mr and Mrs E. Kenyon, of Shireburn Lodge, Waddington. The bride, given away


by her father, wore a full- length white gown of Not­ tingham lace and chiffon, th a long train. Her


shoulder-length veil was held in place by a head­ dress of white seed pearl flowers and silk ribbon, and she carried a bouquet


of apricot roses and stephanotis.


Bridesmaids were Miss


Lorraine E. Forrest, the bride’s sister, and Miss Jean Kenyon, the brideg­ room’s sister.


They wore full-length


apricot silk jersey dresses with clusters of white seed pearl flowers in their hair and carried bouquets of apricot roses with white bridal flowers. Best man was Mr David


Bialecki and ushers were Mr Michael Isherwood and Mr Earl Kenvon. Following the ceremony, conducted by the Rev. A. Siddall, a reception was held at the Castle Restaur­ ant, Clitheroe. The couple, who are hon­


eymooning in the Lake District, are to live in The Crescent, Clitheroe. Photograph: Studio 19,


Blackburn.


THE setting and the weather were perfect, even though the cricket was . . . well . . . not quite so perfect when Clitheroe Round Table entertained Danish vis­ itors at the weekend.


The Danes, members of


Lemvig Round Table, were new to the game. And by the time the match at Barley Field, Downham Hall, had finished, they were still wondering what it was all about.


The result was described


by one member of the Round Table as “inconclu­ sive.”


Sunday afternoon cric­


ket was just one of the many traditional English pastimes enjoyed by the Danes and their wives.


After the match there


w a s a n uproarious medieval banquet at Pend­ leton Village Hall, which had been decorated with shields and coats-of-arms.


During the weekend the


Danes stayed at the homes of Clitheroe Round Table members and enjoyed English breakfasts, visited old village inns and attended house parties.


For good measure, there


was also a disco dance in Pendleton Village Hall.


When the Lemvig party


left to tour the Lake Dis­ trict after lunch on Mon­ day, everyone agreed that the visit had been an unqualified success.


Exchange visits bet-


w e e n L e m v i g a n d Clitheroe are now estab­ lished as an annual event. It was the Danes' second visit to the town. Next year Clitheroe Tablers will make their second trip to Denmark.


Our picture shows the


combined Clitheroe and Lemvig teams before the start of the match at Dow­ nham Hall.


GUILTY ON DRINK CHARGE


SUMMER SALE SAVE UP TO


-HALF PRICE- ON


CONTINENTAL QUILTS by SLUMBERDOWN


A superb quality, lully guaranteed and made to BSI 5335 to.5 minimum Tog Value


SIZE SINGLE.. DOUBLE KING........


SIZE SINGLE.. DOUBLE KING.


SIZE SINGLE. DOUBLE KING.


............. ............. .............


REC. PRICE £45.95 £65.95 £75.95


£ 2 2 .5 0 £ 3 2 .5 0 £ 4 2 .5 0


ICI. Terylene. Washable. 10.5 minimum Tog Value REC. PRICE


• ■


...................... ......................


SUPER HI-LOFT £26.95


£38.95 £48.95


Wide choice of misprints REC. PRICE £ 12.95 £ 19.50 £23.95


SALE


£ 1 5 .9 5 £ 2 4 .9 5 £ 2 9 .9 5


D0RMA CONTINENTAL QUILT COVERS £ 8 .5 0


£ 1 2 .9 5 £ 1 4 .9 5


C A U C 4 AO/, on all REGULAR DORMA FITTED w M W E I V /0 SHEETS, VALANCES, CURTAINS etc


SIZE SINGLE......................


PILLOWS BY Curled feather


| i


I’-.- L"


SINGLE.......... DOUBLE........


SLUMBERFLEECEPERFECT REC. PRICE £6.50


DOUBLE............................ KING.....................................


FITTED SHEETS SIZE


VANTONA R


£7.30 £9.75


SLUMBERDOWNSALE PRICE


EC. PRICE SALE £5.95 £7.25


KING................ £1225 £9.95


luxury simulated sheepskin under blan­ ket seconds


SALE


£10.95 £ 11.95


£ 3 .9 5 £ 5 .9 5 £ 6 .9 5


£2.75 CLEARANCE OF DISCONTINUED SHEETS


MATCHING VALANCES SIZE


R


SINGLE.......... £10.15 DOUBLE........ £11.95 KING............... £12.95


ACCESS AND BARCLAY CARDS WELCOME


EC. PRICE SALE £7.95 £8.95 £9.95


6 MARKET SQUARE, BURNLEY. Tel. 24439. 24 BIRLEY STREET, BLACKPOOL.


each I Bu>| SALE LIMELIGHT


HEW WHITE GOOSE FEATHER/WHITE GOOSE DOWN SALE


C L I T H E R O E m a n Stephen Pryle was fined £10 by Clitheroe magis­ trates when he was found guilty of being drunk and incapable. Pryle (08), of Curzoii


Street, denied the charge. Giving evidence, PC


Keith Sandham and PC Norman Cox both said that while on duty in Wellgate, Clitheroe, in the early hours one morning they saw Pryle leaning against a shop window. He was unsteady on his


feet, incoherent in his speech and smelling heav­ ily of drink. They felt Pryle incapable of looking


after himself, so took him to Clitheroe police station where two colleagues had to help put him in a cell. Pryle said he was not


drunk, but that his condi­ tion was due to drinking two bottles of cider, lack of sleep, and taking tablets for an illness.


Auctioned


THE Mano r House, Brookes Lane, Whalley, was sold at auction for £55,000. The auctioneer was Mr Andrew Miller, of Ingham and Yorke, Clitheroe.


Ex-court clerk dies at 80


A MEMBER of an old Clitheroe family, Mr Fre­ derick Richardson Catlow, of Lipgan, Claremont Avenue, died on Monday at the age of 80.


A fall had affected his


health, but until recently he had run his home on his own.


His father was a


member of the fami ly jewellery business, but Fred, as he was always known, joined the Navy as a boy of 15. His love of the sea continued throughout his life, and he cherished some of the souvenirs he gathered on his voyage.


On r e t u r n i n g t o


Clitheroe, he joined a firm of solicitors and began an association with Clitheroe Magistrates’ Court which continued until 1962, when he retired as clerk to the Magistrates’ Clerk.


As s e c r e t a r y o f


Clitheroe Conservative Club for 2S years, he made many friends. When he retired from the position in 1958 he had been a member for more than ■


1


years. In 1948 he was awarded


the distinguished service medal of the Association of Conservative Clubs, and later a bar for five years’ further service.


Soda Stream competition winner


FORMER Harrop Fold farmer's wife Mrs Dorothy Faraday is the winner of our “Soda Stream" com­ petition.


Mrs Faraday, who now


lives at Moorcock Farm, T a t h a m F e l l s , n e a r Bentham, has continued to be an avid reader of the Advertiser.


She works in a solicitors’


office in Bentham, and her husband John has an 104- acre farm. They have one son, John (30), who is also a farmer.


Mrs Faraday is no


stranger to winning com­ petitions. In the last two years, she has won 75 prizes, and will be adding her soda stream to her col­ lection.


Mrs Faraday had to


match suitable flavours of drinks wi th fictional characters to win.


£60 FINE FOR


DRIVER


A CHATBURN HGV driver’s efforts to keep up with delivery schedules ended in a £60 fine when he appeared before Clitheroe magistrates.


Michael Taylor Birtwis­


tle, of Ribblesdale View, admitted two summonses of failing to enter informa­ tion in his driver’s record book and was fined £30 for each offence. He was also ordered to pay £35 costs.


Birtwistle said he did •0


not make entries on two separate days because he was in a hurry to finish his "drops” in Yorkshire on time. But he was stopped for a spot check by a traffic examiner in Castleford, who reported the errors.


The funeral service is at


Clitheroe Parish Church on Monday, followed by interment in the family grave.


Award for


rescue bid


A C L I T H E R O E ambulanceman has been commended for his part in a courage­ ous rescue on Pendle


• Hill in last winter’s blizzards. Mr Richard Walsh (54),


o f Chat burn Ro ad, Clitheroe, is the fourth E a s t L a n c a s h i r e ambulanceman to receive an award following the rescue last January. Mr Walsh, who is based


at Clitheroe ambulance station, is to receive the Certificate of Merit for Distinguished Service awarded by Lancashire Area Health Authority. He and three colleagues


struggled in atrocious weather conditions to reach two ramblers and a dead companion, Mr Graham Robert Bateman (41), of Rogersfield, Lan- gho, who suffered a heart attack near the summit of Pendle. Mr John Roe, area


administrator, said Mr Walsh made a “determined and conscientious” effort to keep pace with his col­ leagues during the rescue attempt but was only pre­ vented from doing so by the weather. The tragedy occurred


during a winter weekend considered the worst in the Ribble Valley for 30 years. M r W a l s h , a


grandfather, who has been in the ambulance service for more than 26 years, said he was very proud to learn of his commendation. “The certificate is one of


the highest awards we can receive,” he said. January was an eventful


month for Mr Walsh, who was based at Darwen before coming to the Clitheroe station two years ago. A few days before the


Pendle Hill rescue bid, he assisted at the birth of a baby born in his ambulance on the way to hospital. He and colleague John


Taylor delivered a 101b. 9oz. baby boy to Mrs Mau­ reen McKeown, of St Chad’s Avenue, Chatburn.


CUTS OF LAMB COSTING MORE


SPRING lambs have been selling at £5 more apiece at Clitheroe mart than they year ago.


The hard winter and wet


spring have reduced sup­ plies by almost hal f. Demand remains strong and it is likely that house­ wives will be paying more for some time.


A sheep farmer told the


Advertiser and Times that a satisfactory number of lambs had been born, but because the ewes were in poor condition, losses were heavier than usual.


Costly extra feeding had


helped to maintain flock numbers, but the continu­ ing wet and cold weather had prevented the lambs making normal progress. Suffolk and Down cross


lambs reaching Clitheroe mart have fetched 40p a kilo (estimated dressed carcase weight) more than was paid a year ago. - Prices are likely to fall


as more lambs reach the market, but the effects of long-term shortages are uncertain. Winter weather in


CUBS ENJOY BOWLEY CAMP


to £6 did a


Wales and in the Yorkshire uplands was harsher than in the Ribble Valley and even if much work by far­ mers has kept lambs alive, it may be a long time before they are fat enough for the butcher.


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CHURCH STREET, BARNOLDSWICK, COLNE, LANCS.


Telephone Barnoldswick 813309.


10 HOWE WALK, BURNLEY. Tel. 37118. 41 VICTORIA ROAD, EARBY. Tel. Earby 2319.


alrel rive I sucll affoj


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PATTERN BOOKS ISSUED TO THE TRADE


LOWEST CASH A CARRY PRICES F.A. SOUTH & CO.,


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Til


for vl be c l tors T wou:| to thl £79,l| prof fees I


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CUBS from the 1st Pendle


Group, Clitheroe. enjoyed a busy programme at their


annual weekend camp at Bowley.


The party of 24 lads car­


ried out conservation work and general nature studies. With Dr G. Hamp- son and Mr F. Pool in charge, they also tested


their skills on the archery range. On Saturday evening the


group launched into a hearty sing-song around the campfire, led by Mr


\


Len Dickinson. Our picture shows the


Cubs, having packed their gear away, all ready to climb into their minibus and head for camp.


I C C T ^ M ’ C 72-78 ST JAMES’S STREET L C f I \ J V i O BURNLEY. Tel. 24892


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