4 Clitheroe A dver tiser and Times, June 25th, 1981 BUMPED IT?
THEN BRING IT TO US FOR REPAIRS
Tv' WE HAVE THE BEST EQUIPPED BODY and PAINT WORKSHOP
VEHICLE BODY REPAIRS — FULL OR PART BODY RESPRAYS ON ANY MAKE OF CAR
Accident damage and Insurance work our speciality
Members o f the Vehicle Builders end Repair ers Association
Approved Insurance Repairers
WELLGATE MOTORS LTD T h e pa int and body shop
WATERLOO ROAD
. . . lightweight, hand crafted leather for summer wear. Styled with imagination and flair at sensible prices
THE LUXURY OF LEATHER...
Our extensive range of jackets and blousons in suede and leather covers ___ all seasons.
VICTORIA TANNERY LTO
Manufacturers of sheepskin and Leather Clothing
; Victoria Mill, Trafalgar Street, Burnley. Tel. 25664
Open daily including SATURDAY
k ?ip aiK"
A ) .
BARROWFORD JOINERY MILL STREET (OFF PASTURE LANE)
Also at DIY Centre 238 Leeds Road, Nelson. Tel. 693897 BARROWFORD. Tel. NELSON 692929
20% OFF NORMAL PRICES FOR LIMITED PERIOD ONLY
WINDOWS
MADE TO CUSTOMERS SPECIFICATIONS — VERY COMPETITIVE PRICES
FREE DELIVERY OPEN MONDAY TO SATURDAY, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Prints-of most
photographs in this issue are available to order
8" x 6" — £1.00 Tel. 22222/3/4 MAIN YAUXHALL — OPEL DEALERS FOR THE RIBBLE VALLEY IN THE RIBBLE VALLEY
Dad’s ingenuity and Guides’ silence to ‘speak’
A SEVERELY handicapped Clither.oe teen ager now finds it easier to communicate with his family and teachers — thanks to an ingeni
of Hawthorne Place, is a spastic and is unable to speak, except for simple works like “mum” and “dad”.
his hand movements also make it impossible for him to point out what he wants to say on a conven tional symbols board. So his father, Gordon,
Severe restrictions in
has cost Mr Woodacre about £1,000 in materials and on Friday, West. Bradford Guides made a contribution of £100 to wards its cost. The money was raised
the 20in. by 8in. board allow Anthony to make himself understood by il luminating the bulb next to the required symbol. The custom-made board
an electronics technician, set about building a com munication board which Anthony would be able to operate himself. The answer lay in a board made up of more than 100 squares, each containing a sign or symbol with an accomoanvine bulb. Switches on the side of
ous electrical symbol board painstakingly built by his father. Anthony Woodacre (15),
ro u n d & a b o u t
Ruth Woodacre, said they were very grateful to the
West Bradford Guide? for their donation.
c en tly added to the Woodacre home to give Anthony more room and his father took care of all the electrical work. Anthony’s mother, Mrs
Laneside special school in the grounds of Calder- stones Hospital. ■ An extension was re
stays at . the boarding school from Monday to F r id a y and sp e n d s weekends at home with his parents and older sister. Previously he attended
16 next month, uses the board at the special school in Bromley Cross, near Bolton, which he has at tended for the past 12 months. During term time he
Houghton said that £60 had already been donated to Waddow Hall and An thony’s communications board was just the kind of deserving cause they had been wanting to help. Anthony, who will be
by a two-hour sponsored silence undertaken by 24 members of the village troop, which made a total of £180. Guider Mrs Maureen
FANTASTIC OFFER at
PENDLE MILL SHOP £ 1 OFF
ALL DENIM STOCK FOR ONE DAY ONLY SATURDAY, JUNE 27th
DUNGAREES...;
JEANS........................ SKIRTS.......... ..........
Don’t forget our DRY CLEANING SERVICE!
PENDLE ROAD, CLITHEROE Tel..23174
Office Equipment Servicing. ‘ Radio-controlled vehicles
‘Copying specialists ‘Maintenance Contracts ‘ Loan Machines
‘ Manufacturer-trained technicians, from pocket, calculators to word processors
Caldervale Showrooms, F H Brown Ltd Burnley
ANTHONY is pictured at his communication board as Jane Greenwood hands over the £100 cheque. Far left is Anthony’s father, Gordon, and next to him guider Mrs Maureen Houghton.
Aims to set up Leos club £
‘HIS AND HER FASHIONS; FOR SUMMER
HOLIDAY WEAR HAWAIIAN SHIRTS
STRIPED COTTON SHIRTS
STRIPED T-SHIRTS — Good selec tion of colours
DENIMS. Wrangler, Levi and Lee Cooper £15.75
West C o a s t £14.50
&SPORTS JACKETS and CASUAL JACKETS. Sizes 30-46 chest
^TROUSERS 30-46 waist, * 1 plain stretch, now in stock. IKNITWEAR V-neck with g motif, £6.99. Shirts, shoes etc.
HOLIDAY WEAR
TRENDY WEAR. PEDAL PUSHERS — BERMUDA SHORTS — STRETCH DENIM — CHEESECLOTH & CREPE DE CHINE DRESSES. — DENIM AND COTTON DRILL SKIRTS (Mini and Normal)
COATS. % JACKETS, QUILTED JACKETS (Pretty Shades), SUN DRESSES, SKIRTS, SHORT SLEEVE BLOUSES, SWIMWEAR, SHOES, SANDALS etc.
h \ v
* sA V» ;>, v.. ik'.'A \ \
hope our projects will in clude going out and visit ing people, as well as car rying on our fund-raising work. “I also hope to encour-
good work, but during my year of office I want it to be seen to be done,” said Mr Whittaker. “By that I mean that I
personal involvement a fe ature of the Lions’ work, with members visiting as many people as possible, as well as raising cash. “The Lions do a lot of
THE establishment of a Leos group for the young people of Whal- Iey_ will be one of the objectives of new Wnalley Lions presi dent Mr Brian Whit taker during his year of office, which begins on Sunday. He also hopes to make
:' x ; ; * * i
of work to be done and I am looking forward to my year of office very much.”
“There is always plenty
Woodlands Drive, suc ceeds Mr Arthur Pearson as president at a cere mony at the Spring Mill Hotel, Langho.
Mr Whittaker (43), of
age the younger people to help us and will be hoping to form a Leos -group in Whalley similar to the ones which operate in tandem with the Lions in towns such as Blackburn.
manager of the Whalley branch of the National! Westminster Bank, has been chairman of Whalley Football Club since the in ception of the current set-
MAKING A RECORD
66-70 WHALLEY ROAD, CLITHEROE. Tel. 22697 Park at the door
PUERI Sanctae Mariae, the 47-strong boys’ choir from St Mary’s Hall, Stonyhurst, is breaking into the record business.
Win this gilt framed full colour picture,
printed on canvas, of the “Happy Couple,” measuring
approximately 2ft. wide by 2ft. 3in. deep in our free to enter Royal Wedding Souvenir Competition.
All you have to do is answer the questions by ringing the true or false box, for instance if ypu think that Prince Charles was born on November 14th, 1948 then put a ring around the true box for question No. 1.
PRINCE CHARLES WAS BORN ON NOVEMBER 14th, 1948
LADY DIANA SPENCER WAS BORN ON JULY 1st, 1961
THE MAIDEN NAME OF PRINCE CHARLES’ MATERNAL
GRANDMOTHER (QUEEN MOTHER) IS BOWES-LYON
THE MAIDEN NAME OF LADY DIANA’S MOTHER IS ROCHE
PRINCE CHARLES HAS TWO BROTHERS AND ONE SISTER
LADY DIANA SPENCER HAS TWO SISTERS AND ONE BROTHER
UilLLJ TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE TRUE
or or or or or or
IJ . I4 I4 FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE
In no more than fifteen words compose a telegram of congratulations you would like to send to the happy couple on their wedding day........... ............................................................
Monday, technicians from Abbey Records, a com pany sp e c ia l is in g in church music, will be at St Mary’s Hall chapel to record more than a dozen tracks which will be fea tured on an LP expected to be on public sale by September.
N e x t S u n d ay and
mainly of church music, with some hymns sung in Welsh and German. But there will also be some original material, notably “The Peace Song”, com
The record will consist
posed by Stonyhurst Col lege masters John Mallord and Mel Morrow.
who are aged between seven and 13, will be au gmented on some tracks By tenors and basses from th e fo rm e r P re s to n Catholic College choir.
The voice of the boys,
approached us after we had sung at the Montreux Festival in Switzerland earlier this year,” he said, “and everyone has been looking forward to the re
ductor Mr Harry Duck worth said everyone as sociated with the choir was thrilled at the chance to appear on a record. “Abbey Records first
Music master and con
cording session ev e r since.”
In August, the choir
St Mary’s Hall chapel and the choir was accom panied at the organ by Mr Philip Jones, of Preston, who will also appear on the record.
A family tradition
THE longer you live the more you learn. After many years of- reading and research I thought I knew all that could be known about Whalley Abbey. I was wrong. I didn’t.
FULL NAME. ADDRESS....
. Mr/Mrs/Miss
You may make as many entries as you wisn on the officfaf entry form. Send your entries to “ Uaddv coupl| 8Comp.” advertiser office, king street, clitheroe by first post monday^ C ^
Employees of United Newspapers and their Immediate family are Ineligible for this competition. V ............................. ........................ ...............................................:•...... Tel. No........ .....J.....
too, that in years to come, the boy brings his own wife and youngsters along. This annual pil grimage, the family’s changing mode of,' travel and arrival, makes an in teresting commentary on 20th century custom and usage; not only for the
. I
continued, indicating a bright-looking boy, “and I hope he’ll keep up the tradition.” So do I, and I hope,
used to walk it — when I was little I was tired out. Later we came by ’bus and now, of course, we come in the car. I t ’s become a family tradition. We bring a picnic and we have a real good day. Wet or fine, it makes no differ ence. “This is my son,” he
Friday my family has been here,” he told me. “Starting in 1928 my pa rents paid their first visit' here and we have earned on ever since. “In the early years we
covered a new tradition. On Good Friday, doing volunteer duty at the NE' Gateway, I got into con versation with Mr Peter Harling, of Blackburn, who had come along with his family. “This is the 53rd Good
For a start, today I dis
Harling family but for so many of their Lancashire kin.
the position is very diffe rent.
time, there stood in: Darwen Street, Black burn, an old inn “The Legs of Man.” In cen turies gone this had re-
reading George C- Millar’s “Old Inns and Coaching Houses of Blackburn," I came across further inter esting information that, old as it was, was news to me. It appears that, at one
Later the same day,
placed “ The Paslew Arms,” for , the hostelry was the property of the Abbots of. Whalley and, we are informed,” was the resort of pilgrims as early as the 14th century.”
i-
a walk to Whalley was a “must” for many families in our neighbouring towns — the village was a magnet that drew people out for their first holiday of the year — and the s tree ts were crowded with happy, laughing families, just as Brunger- ley Bridge was for' wal kers from the other side of Pendle. Now, as we all know,
In my own young days
Whalley Window
in close proximity to a “hallows spring” which, in medieval times, was famous for its healing properties.
retained as a rest house for the monks after their translation from Stanlaw
know, was the site of the monastery from whence the Cistercian monks came to establish their great Abbey of Whalley and it is yet another sign of the changing times that, where the monas tery of Stanlaw once stood, today you will find a huge oil refinery. Dif ficult to imagine a much greater contrast, is it not?
romantic company. ' J.F.
stantial merchants and their dames, pert es quires, palmers and. the like.” , In short, a colourful and
the inn that bore the name of successive abbots would be very highly re commended., It would be patronised, claims that same author, “by gallant knights and their ladies, church dignitaries, sub
Blackburn was • vested in the abbots of Whalley who, invariably, ap pointed one of their brethren to the incum bency and so, wrote Mr Millar, “pilgrimages to the holy well would be sure of every encouragement.” And, without question,
The gift of the living of . LOCATION
CLITHEROE Hemhorne Road
BILLINGTON Nr. Petre Arms, Whalley Road''
OPENING TIMES
OPEN 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 7 DAYS ALL DEPOTS - should be made to:
All enquiries relating to facilities at theseorothersites _
^NOTTCEn^TCADER?
Persons with trade or .commercial waste (transit size van and above) must not use these facilities, but take their waste te a recognised waste disposal site. In case of difficulty contact _________ _ the above address.
County Council Lancashire t*/\*j ' 1 ?
The County Surveyor, Lancashire County Council po BnxQ ^CrossSLJ^^on^^cashireJe
I.Preston54733ext.243 ’
Stanlaw, as you will Doubtless, the inn was Tip l*>
lioo ! «
■ ^ For HOUSEHOLDERS wishing to TAKE bulky household waste (e.g. do-it-yourself materials, old furniture, garden waste) fordisposal, the County Councn are now providing the following free disposal
centresS ^ oowln9^ousehold waste disposal The inn, it seems, was
programmes about music of different kinds around the region and one of the half-hour slots will be de voted entirely to the Pueri Sanctae Mariae. The programme has al- :ady Been filmed in the
will be performing before its biggest-ever audience when it appears on the forthcoming BBC North West TV series “The Music Scene”. This consists of six
l in t e m a t i o n a l l exclusive design, built up In Germany Every TIFFANY
a a c a s s 9riX> — 5-30 v ,s ,t 0ur Showrooms 12 noon"—Too
___________________
A V T i f fa n / V KITCHENS
We, as kitchen specialists, have chosen TIFFANY KITCHENS because the
. reputation they have for quality and CO -O P 1 4 i |
BUSH 20iiT C IA L ......
FERGUSOll COLOUR T|
with our expert fitting, we will create your own personal tailor-made kitchen — beautifully
JRibblesbalf Utcben g>tubio COACH HOUSE COURT, QUEENSWAY CLITHEROE. TEL. CLITHEROE 27727*
TO SH IB A T V ................
FERGUSOfl COLOUR T |
BUSH SCC MONO TV ( I SHARP 12 j | T V .......... H I T A C H I MONO TV..I
F E R G U S O l MONO T V . . I
F E R G U S O l C O R D E R T S TIL L......
F E R G U S O l CORDER S I
B U S H 5 4 l c a s s e t t e !
BUSH 5 9 0 2 1 RECORDEF
B U S H 54C ONLY....
B U SH 5 7 7 | B A N D ...
ra
B U SH 5 7 2 | B A N D ...
T O S H I B . CENTRE.
FE RG U SO N | MUSIC CEN1
HITACHI 14tJ
f i d e l i t y ! PLAYER . . . . . f
HITACHI C f R A D I O c j A B LE ...... HITACHI 24d CASSETTE 1
H I T A C H I R A D IO ........
H O O V E R D R Y E R .......
HOOVER 31 i
HOTPOINT 1| H O T P O I I WASHER.,
COLSTON H i
BENDIX HOff SO ILED ..
USE Y <
has served as chairman of i the activities, welfare and social committees and for the last 12 months has held the office of vice- president. Mr Whittaker, sub
ley, he has lived in Whal ley for 30 years and has been a- member of the Lions for the last five. During that time, he
Born and bred in Burn
the Queen Elizabeth Play ing Fields Committee. In his spare time he enjoys vegetable gardening.
member of Whalley Methodist Church Ladies Evening Fellowship and the village committee of
His wife Anne is a
the NSPCC. The couple have three sons, Andrew: (16), Ian (15), and eight- year-old Richard.
up 14 years ago. He is also a member of
NEW LP RELEASES KEITH MARSHALL
SIOUXSIE AND THE BANSHEES • “JUJU”
KILLING JOKE “WHAT’S THIS FOR”
AND TAPE CENTRE 30 Castle Street, Clitheroe — Tel. 24550
ames record bar
3Rtbttebale kitchen ^lubto
PROFESSIONAL ADV/Ce \ FREE DESIGN FA CIUTIE
Your partner for built-in kitchens
STEEL FRAME l BUILDUP
Size and Sd coil
We also Manufal
c o w c u t TRAILERS
PleJ K &
PEN! CH/I
1 W l 1 L,WI‘ Tel. Burnley (0282) 26622
STOVES:! CENTRAL! heating!
cookers! BOILERSf
BARBECUfl LOG
BASKETS!
ACCESSORlI and upstrf
A SELECTION| ING
, LONG , Tel. Long Pres
from £18.89
STRETCH JEANS................... .'. £17.99 BIB & BRACE SKIRT..................... £15.99
..£14.50 ..£11.95
RIBBLEl 20 WE
Gas Fires, Heaters, Ball
ALL ATfI
e.g. ValJ Flail Win! Mail Corl inc.
Central Heatirj
Complete Cel II
compleI
Dark Oak Welsl Oak Diningl G a l
te| r
AGRICUl
»V 7, l f
Page 1 |
Page 2 |
Page 3 |
Page 4 |
Page 5 |
Page 6 |
Page 7 |
Page 8 |
Page 9 |
Page 10 |
Page 11 |
Page 12 |
Page 13 |
Page 14 |
Page 15 |
Page 16 |
Page 17 |
Page 18 |
Page 19 |
Page 20 |
Page 21 |
Page 22