ey 22331 (Classified)
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1ER0E ADVERTISER & TIMES
g Street, Clitheroe el. 24804/22323
AUGUST. 1 9 8 3 ----- )le Val ley M a y o r - Commi t t e e c o f f e e
l iny. P r o c e e d s for. o r ' s ch a r i ty c h i l - in ne ed. A UG UST , 1 9 8 3 . C h a tb u r n P l a y in g
I d s C o m m i t t e e , i m e r F e t e
a n d
ting Di s c o . AUGUST, 1 9 8 3 ,
; Ho l ida y Mon d a y , ! iburn Vi l la g e Ha l l \VI F l e a Ma r k e t ,
n q u i r ie s Te l . S la id - 1 256.
AUGUST, 1 9 8 3 ,
clay — C l i t h e r o e s Gala Da y in c o n - c t i o n w i t h
*s He ad, W o r s t o n . 3. S E P T E M B E R ,
t h e
l e F e t e , T r i n i t y h and C om m u n i t y Te l . 2 7 8 8 6 .
— Clitheroe EPTEMBER, 1 9 8 3
l ib b l e Va l le y Ma y - ; ’ s C o m m i t t e e e v e n in g (b y k in d
l i s s ion o f Mr s K. nai l , Ch a tb u rn ) . S E P T E M B E R ,
<burn S ym p h o n i a , id o f th e H o s p i c e *al Fund. .E VALLEY HOS - A P PEA L r e g r e t
n d C o n c e r t b y
mo u n c e th e c a n c e l - i o f th e g a r d e n p lan n ed f o r S e p -
e r 1 1 th . -
B E R . S a tu r d a y a n d
2 5 t h S E P - 1 9 8 3 .
d ay . C l i t h e r o e t e d R e f o r m e d •rh. F o u r S e a s o n s
e r Fe s t iv a l . SE P T EMB ER .
----
e r s t o n e s C a r ib b e a n St e e l b a n d an d
)bean s u p p e r . — Cl i th e r o e 2 3 7 1 6 . OCTOBER, W e d - y, C l i th e r o e C o n - S o c ie ty , B r o d s k y
g Qu a r t e t . 2 1 s t and 2 2 n d Oc - — T r in i ty
n n in g R i o t ’ * b y
k Ben f ie ld . OCTOBER, 1 9 8 3 , ay ---- P e n d l e t o n
. C . h o e
78 th and 2 9 th OC- R. — C l i t h e r o e h Church D r am a -
. ' o c i e t y p r e s e n t s N o w D a r l i n g , ”
ly C o o n e y .
DISTRESS! UICIDAL!
ED HELP? Ring the
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NELSON 694929 Call or write to
MARKET SQUARE NELSON
NEW PARK STREET BLACKBURN
e . P r o c e e d s t o le t o n Chur ch.
d o w n
h o d i s t C h u r c h Gr ou p p r e s e n t
Dancers strike
have gone to Carole Brad ley, Jacky McDonald, Anne Pietrazak (all com mended) and Aileen Hother- sall (highly commended). Mildrea Hand, Pauline Owen, Jan e Hindle, Judith Smith (all highly commended) and Sandra Marshall and Christine Scholes (commended) gained gold medal for tap. Fellow students of Mrs
gold TEN members of the Rib- blesdale Adult Centre Tap and Modern Dance Class have earned gold, silver and bronze medals during the past year in examina tions of the International Dance Teachers’ Associa tion; Gold medals for disco
Gladys Sutcliffe, mean while, have played their part in maintaining the group’s 100% pass rate. News of the la te s t
THE sun smiled on this group of Clitheroe holidaymakers off on a trip to historic Ches
to spend time looking at the animals and also the opportunity to savour Chester’s an cient atmosphere and browse in the shops. All ages decided to
ter and the zoo. They had a chance
take advantage of the trip, organised by Bolton-b'y-Bowland
proved popular this year with stay-at- home holidaymakers.
Tory fair misses
the rain ORGANISERS of the Ribble Valley Conserva tive Association’s holiday
July examinations, judged by Miss Barbara Shar pies, of Manchester, are
Myers, Enid F ie ld , Marion Read. Com mended: Jean Seed, Kath leen Sutcliffe, Avril McNeil, Marilyn Davis,
as follows. Silver: Pat Haigh, Joan
Linda McCally. Junior class — modern
dance primary: Sadie Ellis, Tara Heal, Fiona Eastwood. Grade 1: Helen C r om p to n , J o a n n e Murray. Grade 2: Lisa Sharpies, Meagan Shar pies.
On the march
•second world war and of ■Britain’s post-war cam paigns will be marching again, in August when
VETERANS of th e
'members of Chatburn. and d is tr ic t Royal British Legion hold a sponsored
■walk to Bolton-by-Bow- land. The seven-mile walk
awards comes at the end of a rigorous year’s train ing, which has produc two shows and four ex amination sessions. Other results o f the
fair at Moorland School, Clitheroe, on Sunday, are
keeping their fingers cros- sed th a t , with some amounts still to come in, it has raised more than last year’s £1,700.
fair attracted a big at tendance.
stars Competition was again the highlight. It
An Inter-Club Super-
was won by the Lee Carter Health Studio, of
Clitheroe, which scored 25 points, one more than Clitheroe Rugby Club.
the cup was presented to the winners by Mr Brian Cunliffe, association presi dent.
Six teams."entered and
The teams were put through a gruelling prog ramme which included a
1,000m track event, gym nastics, tug-of-war and a 100m dash.
cluded a display of vin tage cars, falconry and a mock battle staged by P re s to n and District Model Aircraft Club.
Other attractions in
il4th, is also open to f r ie n d s of Legion
members.
Lancashire Youth Clubs Association and PHAB
(Physically Handicapped .and Able Bodied)
re the siege of Troy, II Dorado, Andalucia •th century AD. East rated cities of Spain
the Moorish rule — eaders please note
ur Might to Malaga. built as a summer
Whalley, Padiham,
nal sightseeing also noon. Time to stroll
ities. Perhaps you’d the largest In Spain,
decoration, and the This morning drive
‘ falgar’s lighthouse. oa in Torremolinos/
COLLECTION and
FLAG DAY TEDDY BEAR PLEASE SUPPORT US
TOMBOLA on the MARKET S A T U R D A Y , J U L Y 3 0 th
J. J. TRAVIS (CLITHEROE CARRIAGE)
PRIVATE HIRE
Tel. CLITHEROE 22998
Order our DORCHESTER LIMO USINE fo r your Wedding
will be to raise money for the national Poppy Appeal, and it is hoped to beat the! £600 raised last year! when 30 people took part.' The walk, on August
ised by the Cumberland and Westmorland Wrestl ing Association and the Lancashire Evening Post Silver Band provided music.
Valley MP Mr David .Waddington and his wife, Gillian.
Guests included Ribble Wrestling was organ
fected other places, hold ing off during the day, the
With the rain, which af
and Hodder Motor Services and J. Wear- den’s, Blackburn. Coach trips have
Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, July 28tli, 1983 3
Clitheroe 22324 (Editorial), 22323 (Advertising). Burnley 22331 (Classified) x fm tM
\\ 4 r to 1 55?S
Back from jamboree of thrills and spills
a
SHOOTING t h e rapids, riding a buck ing bronco and being under threat from grizzly bears and wolves are just some of the hair-raising ex periences of two Clitheroe Scout s , home this week from the hol iday of a
lifetime. Andrew Tomlinson (16),
of York Street, and Paul Worswick (15), of King Street, represented the town at the 15th Interna tional Scout Jamboree staged in Kananaskis country, Alberta. And the Canadians
STARTS FRIDAY, JULY 29th
AT C b u i i l t jV o Q t fe
were given a taste of Lan cashire culture . . . for
four displays of Morris dancing at the jamboree.
Andrew and Paul were among a group of 24 Lan cashire boys who staged
Lowergate parking
restriction protest
I WOULD like to make a plea on behalf of shoppers and shopkeepers in the Moor Lane area of Clitheroe. This end of town is
rians, but if they will ; cross on a bad corner, not ieven an extended pave ment will g u a ra n te e safety.
badly off for parking spaces and there are to be fu rth e r restrictions in Lowergate. Everyone is concerned for the safety of pedest
! What will probably happen is that cars will go more quickly and be
.tempted to overtake if there are no parked vehi cles. Could we not have a
to attract visitors to a town where parking, ad mittedly free, is so dif ficult.
notice “Elderly people crossing”, such as one sees in so many places? It isn’t much use trying
in the country where parking is so scarce it has to be limited to two hours in the main car parks?
Is there any other town
well over 300 signatures in protest at the latest move to bring more park ing restrictions to Lower gate.
I have already obtained
MRS C. FERGUSSON Vogue and Value, Lowergate, Clitheroe.
Stolen drill turns up
’found by a neighbour his outhouse the following day.
:the outhouse in panic, or ■had intended to return for it later.
that, after breaking into the garage, the intruder must have left the drill in
A police spokesman said
A BLACK and Decker drill, stolen from a garage in West View, Clitheroe, during Friday night was
Ban the bomb
petition IF nuclear war came, Clitheroe would be in the front line, say members of Clitheroe CND who are collecting names for a pet ition calling for a halt to the manufacture of nuc lear weapons. On the next two Satur
national drive by the United Nations Associa tion, calls for a halt to the testing and deployment of new missiles, particularly the Cruise which, CND
days, the petitioners will be out in the shopping area. The petition, part of a
feels, could be used to launch a surprise attack
on the Soviet Union. ' Mrs Eila Richardson,
the branch secretary, said: “We have found both young and old eager to hear what we say and we have had very l i t t le abuse.” She added that the peti
.boys had 10 practice ses sions at Preston and Andrew and Paul were loaned bells and acces sories by the Clitheroe Morris men. ■ Andrew, a former pupil
Before setting off, the
BARGAINS IN BRAS, CORSETRY, SLIPS, NIGHTWEAR AND BEACH WEAR
32 KING STREET, CLITHEROE Phone 23158
of Ribblesdale School, is a member of St Mary’s Scout troop. Paul, a pupil of St Au
m m Andrew (left) and Paul with some of their holiday mementoes.
gustine’s, Billington, is the first Scout for over 60 years to attend a jam boree from the Loyola troop. The boys spent most of
vigil was kept on the 15,000 Scouts who at tended from 104 coun
A constant helicopter
three weeks in the jam boree camp, near Cal gary, with two, short, home-hospitality stays at Missaussauga, near To ro n to , and at Maple Bridge, near Vancouver. For the actual jam
tries. ' Andrew and Paul, who
boree the Scouts lived in sub-camps separated by forest. “There was the constant threat of grizzly bears wandering in for food and, at a nearby camp, a grizzly and a wolf were shot with tranquil- iser darts,” said Paul.
have both previously vis ited Canada, brought home many mementoes including hundreds of badges and some T-shirts swopped with o th e r Scouts at the end of the jamboree.
Andrew listed the Cal- fary Stampede as the
This included chuck- wagon races, bucking
ighlight of his holiday.
jbroncos, a rodeo and an airborne display. For Paul, however, raft
ing was one of the favour ite camping activities and he also enjoyed trying his hand at lassooing, log-rol ling and gold panning.
raft all managed to fall off at one time or another over the rapids, but we managed to pull each other hack on,” he said.
“The five boys on my
ride on a mechanical buck ing bronco — and Paul was quite proud of his record of five seconds in
Another thrill was a
the saddle. Paul, who celebrated
his birthday while in Canada, was treated to a cake by his hosts in To ronto. He also shared a
cake with two other birth day boys at the camp. One incident Paul and
Andrew will never forget was the opening cere mony, attended by Lord Baden Powell’s grandson. Half way through there
(fc . R U
■ that one Scout collected an inch and a half of water in his dixie in just 30 minutes,” said Paul. Throughout the trip
was a tremendous down pour. “It rained so hard
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.slide shows of the jam boree to all the local Scout troops which contri buted towards the trip.
Paul was kept busy with his camera and it will be a hectic autumn for the boys who intend to give
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'targets if the spread of nuclear weapons led to the ultimate catastrophe,” she said. The petition is to be
tion had just as much re levance in a country town such as1 Clitheroe as any where else. “We are surrounded by
presented to the Govern ment.
Car stolen
A MINI car stolen from outside the owners home in West View, Clitheroe, on Saturday night, is still missing. Clitheroe police would like to hear from anybody who may have seen the blue Clubman sa lo o n , re g is t ra t io n . number APK 46H.
TRINITY Chicks netball team proved that they are among the best in the country by finishing fourth in the National As sociation of Youth Clubs com p e t i t io n a t the weekend.
in the Clitheroe and dis trict Netball League, won its way through several
The team, which plays Hat parade at the parlour CLITHEROE and its
Trinity Youth and Com munity C en tre have proved a big hit with a group of French teena gers.
youth centres are few and far between, explained Jean Christophe (17), one of 20 students at an Engl ish language summer ■school based at Trinity.
For, in France, similar W 7 — a*
here the young visitors have been making good use of Trinity’s facilities.
During three weeks
id Seville, expenditure.
iGlSBURN; ?|MARKET;
* ------------------------ •» .* % atGISBURN ¥
¥ ¥
__________
$ MOTOR MART S { A RAY PROMOTION AD. * J*
Versailles, said that in his town there was no youth club.. It was not usual to have them in France. “You meet friends at school . . . and that is all,” said Jean, who felt it would be a good idea for his town, population 30,000, to follow Trinity’s
Jean, of St Cyr, near / . 'i 'S j example.
EVERY FRIDAY? J 6 p.m. — 10 p.m.
. Members of the party who have been staying with families in Clitheroe and West Bradford, return home tomorrow.
local people, the beauty of the rural scene and dif ficulties in understanding the Clitheroe accent are just some of the impres-.
The friendliness of the s g : -
sions they will take back with them. They will also return
pot, tripe and onions and pea and ham soup.
remembering the taste of traditional Lancashire food, at a spread laid on by the youth and com munity centre last night.
The menu included hot
' and others who have helped to entertain them.
Jo in in g th e young .people were their hosts
!party were guests of Clitheroe Mayor Coun.
On Monday, the French
■John Cowgill. Our picture ; shows Mayor’s attendant
'front are Pierre Yves- ;Joufflineau, Christopher
Mr Keith Niland letting Helene Ducus try on the Mayor’s tricorne. At the
Cornaire, and- Mr Geoff Jackson, youth leader at the Trinity Centre.
■
Ifei' "s® J i? "
4
heats during the year to secure a place in the finals at Nottingham Univer sity.
petition against 11 teams including county players and one having a member of the England squad.
through to the semi-finals and, in the words of coach Mrs Barbara Taylor, “played brilliantly” to come fourth overall.
But Trinity battled
The team, based at the Youth and Community
There was tough com
Centre, Clitheroe, had to draw upon reserves as three members — Dawn MacQuarrie, Julie Allan and Alison Bradley — were unable to play due to holidays and work com mitments.
are: Sharon Sieczkowski, of Castle Candy; Debbie and Bernadette Seymour, of Standen Road; Lesley Britton, of Garnett Road; captain Julie Allan, of Waddow Green, Low Moor; Bridget O’Donnell,
In the squad (picture)
Sue and Nick jump to it
I IT was third time lucky for ' 'lfr'
Airport. ■
First-class honours degree
A F'ORMER pupil of Clitheroe Girls’ Grammar School, Miss Fiona Lesley Green has been awarded a first class
B.Sc. honours degree in computing, op erational research and ■statistics from Kent Uni versity. Fiona, the elder daugh
’statistics at Imperial Col lege, London.
the late Mrs Green, is to study for an
M.Sc. in
larachute couple
Nick Holden and his girlfriend Susan Bowe, of Clitheroe, on Saturday, when they made a sponsored jump from 2,500ft., over Blackpool
tempts, m aid of exten sions to Trinity Youth Centre, Clitheroe, were
Their previous two- at
’foiled by bad weather. On Saturday, wind and
m is t m e a n t d e la y s throughout the afternoon
aircraft took off. Susan, of Waterloo
and it was at the last minute, at 6-30, that the
Iden Road, are both chefs :at Clitheroe Hospital. They received" moral
Road, and Nick, of Stan-
ter of Mr Brian Green; of ,Moorfield, Whalley, and
■ In her spare time,' ■Fiona (21) enjoys squash, cycling, cooking, handic rafts and photography.
■ I
■support from Nick’s mother and sister, Mrs J. 'Holden and Cheryle, and Trinity Youth Leader Mr IGeoff Jackson and liis ,family who all travelled to Blackpool to watch.
' . ■
of Baldwin Road; Joanna Wilkinson, of St Paul’s Close, Low Moor; Sharon Wright, of Turner Street; and Sharon Ainsworth, of Victoria Street. Geoff Hoyle, of the Chicken Shop in Moor
IN ADDITION TO OUR GIFTS AND LEATHER GOODS
LADIES AMD GENTS
HAIRDRESSING AT
THE IVY BARN
GISBURN Tel. 388
Joe Turnbull and Michael Briteliffe also helped out by driving the team to the finals and lending their support.
Lane, Clitheroe, who sponsors the team, post poned his holiday to enable four members of his staff to play at Nottin gham. Assistant youth leaders
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i.e. FAN CHAIR (illus.) WAS £39.90 o n l y £ 1 8
Sold s tric tly on f irst come, first served basis HOURS OF OPENING .
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Usual facilities on goods advertised ; FREE STORAGE 3 months ••• FREE DELIVERY (orders over £100 value) 10 mile radius
Furnishing Centre
, The couple, who hope ■to raise about £200, were
•given a few hours training on the day.
ltd .
3/5 ELIZABETH ST. BURNLEY. LANCS. Tel. 25781
/51,*ABCTmI ~ * h ■ MlntlKw^
~ BARCLA YCARD AND ACCESS
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