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4 Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, July 12th, 1979 iKodak'EKlOO' nstant camera Trip of a lifetime for Scouting trio


A LEADER and two Scouts from Clitheroe will leave for the trip of a lifetime to the World Jam­ boree in New Mexico, on


* Monday. Mr Alban Snape, assis­


tant district commissioner for Scouts, Duncan Field­ ing (18) and Jeremy Barker (16) will sjjeild three weeks in America. Originally, the Jamboree


MR SNAPE


was to have been held in Iran, but because of the troubles it is now being held in several countries, i n c l u d i n g Swe d e n , . Denmark and Canada. During the visit, the


Clitherpe party will join about 250 • Scouts from other countries at Phil- mont. The camp covers 137, 493 acres and is com­ prised of rugged moun­ tains in the Rockies.


from expedition trails, rock climbing and ranger training to learning about Indian folklore. They will spend 10 days


Exercises will range


at the camp and then stay at the home of families in Dallas, Texas. Duncan, of Peel Park


Avenue, is an apprentice technician engineer, and Jeremy, of Shays Drive, is


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PYES of CLITHEROE (L. & R. E. PYE LTD)


42/44 YORK STREET, Tel. Clitheroe 23193


I t ’s next stop Egypt for globetrotter Don


AT the age of eight, train spotter Don Hindle travelled on his own from Clitheroe to Carlisle. Now, at 36, he has travelled the world.


Doris Hindle, of Woone Lane, expect him home on holiday in No.vember, but he will then spend two years in Egypt developing a computer based manage­ ment information system for the Mediterranean Reg i on of the World Health Organisation. Don was recently voted


His parents, Bill and


became an operational research engineer at GEC, Clayton-le-Moors. Doris ran her own ladies’


LTD Curtains 65/67 MANCHESTER ROAD; Tel. BURNLEY 22948


industrial engineering and water resources manage­ ment there while on leave from the WHO. The Uni­ versity, second largest in the USA, has 40,000 stu­ dents. The Hindles areagifted


family. Study after leaving school took Bill well past d e g r e e s t a n d a r d in ma thema t i c s and he


the winner of the ^ ou t ­ standing instructor of the year” awarded by students at the University of Wis­ consin. He taught courses in


and four at A-level. His geography mark, 98, exceeded by three the pre­ vious record total — gained by Tony. Don was three times


outfitting business. As a keen sportswoman, she has al s o c a p t a i n e d Clitheroe Gol f Club’s ladies section. Don’ s elder brother


Tony, who has a Ph.D. in ope r at i ons research, teaches at the University of Lancaster. His sister, Mrs Sheila Dawson, has a hairdressing business in Woone Lane. Don, who. graduated


from Liverpool University with a BA degree, taught in Grimsby, before work­ ing for the Australian Treasury.


(


He later resigned a promising career with the.


Australian Government to take a Ph. D. in operations research at Lancaster Uni­ versity, where his brother was one of his tutors. Don’s previous studies


had been on the arts side, but in a group of 31 hon- o u r s g r a d u a t e s in mathematics he came top in the first year examina­ tions. Since graduating from


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Lancaster he has been a rofessor at a Brazilian niversity and has worked


in Papua, Indonesia, India and the United States. The WHO now employs


him as a management con­ sultant to the Government of Indonesia, based on Surabaya. At Clitheroe Royal


Grammar School, Don gained 10 passes at O-lev^l


Victor Ludorum in the school sports and ran in the National Schools Athletics championships. He was in the school soc­ cer team, and while study­


ing at Liverpool played for Clitheroe. The school chess


team, of which he as a member, won the Lanca­ shire schools shield. His father says that to


DON . . . popular lecturer.


then home of the Garnett family.


His father, Thomas, had


all pursuits, scholastic and atheltics, Don brings dedi­ cation and the will to win. A walking holiday spent in the Rhineland at the age of 14, for instance, was a muscle building exercise to improve his running. In Australia Don mar­


ried a girl who had emi­ grated from Bolton and last .month they had a son. They have a bungalow in Canberra, but the indica­


tions are that they will not be settling there just yet.


Writing


biography RE-VISITING scenes remembered from child­ hood, Mr John Rowland recently dropped in on Low Moor to discover how the old order has changed. Now 71, Mr Rowland is


the retired chief forester to the Duke of Bedford at Woburn Abbey. When he first saw Low Moor he was only four, his parents hav­ ing come to live at the Lodge, Shirebum House,


just left the Army, in which he had been a sergeant in the Royal Artillery. He had learned to drive a car and obtained a post with the Garnetts.


August, 1914, he was recalled as a reservist and his battery fired the first shot when the BEF faced the German Army in France.


from Mons and wrote of his experiences in the Clitheroe Advertiser. John is now writing a


He was in the retreat


member of Union Street (We s l e y ) Me thodi s t Church and on his recent visit John was saddened to discover that the village school has vanished and that the church too, no longer exists. In his youth, John


became interested in fores­ try and gained his early knowledge at Towneley Park, Burnley, in which town the family at one time lived. This experience led him to take up forestery seri-


Janet keeps up family tradition


CLITHEROE police cadet Janet Irene Taylor will be following in the family tradition when she joins the fight against crime.


Janet (17), of Peel Park


Avenue, today steps up to receive her award for suc­ cessfully completing a 10 month residential course at the Lancashire Constabul­ ary Training School , Hutton.


She will not have to look


far if she needs any advice about life on the beat.


Frank Taylor, is a Detec­ tive Inspector at Accring­


For her father, Mr


ton and brother Frank (19) is a PC at Darwen. Janet is one of 71 cadets


academic studies leading to O-level and A-level exams and physical activities such as life-sa,ving and self defence. Janet will start duty at


who will receive awards from Maj. Gen. Peter Sib- bald, accompanied by Chief Constable Mr Albert Laugharne, at the pas­ sing out parade. The course consisted of


Clitheroe Police Station soon and should become a fully fledged WPC next year.


,


biography of his father and these are some of the notes to be included. His father was a leading


But when war came in


ously and from 1937 to 1938 he was head forester to Lady Worsley Taylor. His hobbies are painting and drawing. While in this neck of the


woods he is making a point of visiting a sister in Read and another in Grange- over-Sands.


Unusual


joinery firm of Langshaw’s wiil form part of ,a BBC documentary on ancient Greece. Filming is due to start next month. Joiner Mr Jim Procter,


order A GREEK cart modelled on designs from 500BC left Whal ley this weekend bound fo r the BBC’ s Elstree Studios in London. The cart, made by the


a pupil at Ribblesdale School.


• They were chosen for the trip by the Clitheroe and District Scout execu­ tive. , The t r ip is b e i n g


financed by district funds, troops and from the lads own pockets. The troops and packs, in appreciation of Mr Snape’s work over the years, will be paying for him. Mr Snape, of Littlemoor


Road, Clitheroe, is taking along both cine and. still cameras to record the trip.


He will be in charge of the East Lancs contingent.


JEREMY DUNCAN


RICHARD'S MODEL


• IS A WINNER


YOUNG Farmer’s Club me m be r Ric ha rd Comthwaite, of Bolton-by- B ow l a n d , has b e en awarded a travel scholar­ ship worth £250 for win­


ning a second prize at the Royal Show, Stoneleigh. Richard (16), of Closes


Hall Farm, gained the award in the class for mod­ els made from farm scraps. He made a hawk swoop­


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ing on a mouse from pieces of pipe, chain and staples, mounted on a pirchfork. Richard, who has been a


member of the YFC for six years, was representing Lancashire in the nation­ wide competition. He is an apprentice joiner with a Clitheroe firm. The scholarship will take


him on a trip to an agricul­ tural fair in Berlin next February.


Recruitment


campaign AFTER a lapse of four years there are plans to re­ form a local branch of the Young Conservatives Association. A meeting to discuss the


idea wi l l be held in Clitheroe next month. A general recruitment


campaign has been started in Clitheroe by Conserva­ tive agent Miss Mary Dut­ ton, who - said they were particularly looking for people aged between 15 and 20. Five hundred leaflets


of Accrington, has spent two weeks preparing the cart from unseasoned wood, so that it will have a twi s t e d and warped appearance. This condition is vital to


i t em p r o d u c e d b y Langshaw’s for television. Almost a year ago' the firm made a Cinderella coach for a Yorkshire TV quiz show.


BOXED V


dow boxes are blank, and the council thinks people may be interested in hav­ ing a part of their history on display.


SOME months ago I sat semi-dozing and watching a programme on Exeter Cathedral and it struck me as more than a little odd that the documentary on such an essentially English topic should have been made by a Canadian televi­ sion company.


It was a fascinating


programme and as the midnight hour approached I fought a desperate battle. to keep my eyes from clos­ ing and to concentrate attention on the square box.


“There is some connec­


tion between this cathedral and our own village,” my bemused and befuddled brain kept telling me, but precisely what that con­ nection was failed to regis- ter and I was still puzzling, the next morning. .


Then, as it so often does


after a good night's sleep, the answer came. “Of course ,” I told


.


myself, “an ‘old boy’ of Whalley Grammar School b e c ame a Bishop of Exeter.”


The washing up com­


pleted, I decided to check the facts. I. reached for Taylor-Taswell’s invalu­ able book on our church, and abbey, which contains


A ‘GRADELY’ OLD BOY Whalley Window


a chapter on the grammar school. “Among the distin­ guished alumni," I read, “was Dr. Woolton, Bishop of Exeter in 1579. He was a skilful divine, a learned scholar and exemplary pre­ late.” I determined to learn a


little more and started a' minor research. John Woolton was, it seems, a nephew of the .celebrated Dean Nowell of Read Hall (the same thirsty cleric who, when' Dean of St. t Paul’s, was said to have - discovered bottled beer.) . On leaving Whalley'John


went - to Brasenose Col­ lege, Oxford, where he became a distinguished scholar. On graduation he found generous and inf­ luential patrons in Bishop Alley and in Francis, Earl of Bedford, and was insti­ tuted to the l iving of Sampford Pev6rel at the age of 25. . He then moved, to


was exemplary in the attendance on the sick.” Other benefices included the Rectory of Ken, a War- denship of Manchester Collegg and the Rectory of Spaxtonin the Deanery of Bridgewater.


refer to him as John from now on) was installed


Dr. Woolton (mustn’t


. Bishop of Exeter in March 1579 and “the better to


enable him to support his rank, he was further prom­ oted to the Rectory of Hac-. combe in 1581 by. the Carew family.”


Whimple and became a canon of Exeter Cathed­ ral, in which office, we learn, "during the plague ■ of the summer of 1570 he


l


vwe are surprised to learn that, on receiving ‘his bishopric, “Woolton had not trie means to purchase the 'most necessary furni­ ture for his palace and was reduced to borrowing £5 apiece from 15 of his clergy.” To assist is keeping the wolf at bay he was permit­


Despite his many offices


ted to augment his income by drawing the stipends of the Archpriest o f Hac- combe and Rector < o f Lezant.' -


HISTORY ORGANISATIONS and families in the Clitheroe area are to be invited to donate a coat of arms to be placed on window boxes in the Town Mayor’s parlour. The shields on the win­


cially by timber merchants L u k e Sma l l e y , o f Clitheroe. The cart is the second


the BBC series, for the cart has been modelled on designs taken from paint­ ings on ancient urns. The wood was cut spe­


PYES of (L. CLITHEROE E. & R. E. PYE LTD)


42/44 YORK STREET Tel. Clitheroe 23193


oocoooccoscosoocoscocococccosooGcoftoeo | LUKE


SMALLEY LTD FOR


have been delivered by 10 branch members and house-to-house canvassing is also taking place. Half-a-dozen areas will


be canvassed and it is hoped to complete the whole exercise by Sep­ tember.


FIELD GATES POSTS & RAILS FENCING WIRE EXTENSION LADDERS GARDEN FENCING FENCING MITTONS CREOSOTE EXTERIOR GRADE PLYWOOD etc


EMPRESS SAWMILLS CHATBURN, Nr CLITHEROE Telephone Clitheroe 41215.


oocooocoocoooocoococoooeococoooeosc ! Sabde


whist winners at Over 60s whist and drive were: Whist: — Mrs M. Procter, Howarth. Gents — Flannagan, Mr H. 1 Dominoes: E. J:


Tricks and s On Thursday


A. Alston. Raffle: Birtwell. Prizewinners on I


night at whist Ladies — Mrs Kiri Ingham, Mrs K. Gents — A. Know Jackson, E. Flanna Hartley. Dominoes: N.


greaves, M. Wo Alston, T. Graham. Mrs I. Flannagan.


Display Sabden Ladies K


team were guest keep-fit open night Michael’s High & Chorley, on Me where they gave minute display. The open nigh


CENTENARY YEAR‘S


1879 D. BYRNE 1979 12 K


IN


G STREET, CLITH EERO 23152-


ITALIAN WINE MONTH


TWO OUTSTANDING WINES FROM BARONE RICASOLI CHIANTI “ BROLIO” RISERVA 1974 £2.45


With this assistance, the


financial worries of the Bishop appear to have


evaporated. He published a number o f learned


treaties and distinguished himself in the administra­ tion of his diocese.


. before.. His Lordship died in


found some favour with his Queen, Elizabeth I and during his bishopry the Crown restored to the Chapter the lands, tene­ ments and rents which had been confiscate for years


He appears to have


1593, aged 57 years, and was buried in the cathedral


1 which had been the scene of his most • distinguished service, where his monu­ ment, can still be seen.


might think, and one whom successive master at Whal­ ley in their school above the Westgate of the abbey (the present building dates only from 1725) would fre­ quently cite as a noble example to the more dili­ gent of their pupils.


A notable prelate, one


leyite of whom we-villa­ gers can, with justifica­ tion, gently boast, .“We


He ,was another Whal-


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