Classified)
Clitheroe 22324 (Editorial), 22323 (Advertising). Burnley 22331 (Classified)
Gisburn Auction Mart prices
THERE were 158 newly calved dairy cows and heifers forward at Gisburn Auction Mart, on Thursday.
£675 (average £602), second quality to £538 (£506). First quality heifers made to £750 (£614), second quality to £535
First quality cows made to
(£500). ■ Chief prices were made by A.
W. Wade, who sold to T. Duck worth a cow for £675 and a heifer for £750. Also, J. M. Parrings sold a cow to Mr Con- aghan for £660, and heifers were sold by D. Carter to R. Metcalfe for £710, and by J . R. Drinkall to R. J . Seed for £735. There were 419 calves for
l l l l
Istle re- lunds of
Irday — Ission of Council.
Incert at bill for
’ were groups
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I) e o p 1 e lunshine Jut, or- |)orough
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I August lid On,” II “The
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Now Mark doesn’t have to share
a computer
CLITHEROE schoolboy Mark Hayth ornthwaite proved he had more than a grain of sense when he entered a competition at the Great Yorkshire Agricultural Show at Harro
gate. For Mark (12) came out
top in a grain weight guessing contest for the under-18s! Competitors were re
quired to estimate the weight of grain contained
in the shovel of an earth mover and Mark, of York Street, was almost spot on.
the actual weight was 369kg. — earned him a
His guess of 371kg. —
ZX Spectrum-Plus Com puter with games, which has turned out to be an
ideal present for the Rib- blesdale School pupil, al ready a keyboard wizard. Mark, son of Mr and
Mrs Ro g e r Hayth- ornthwaite, received the computer, awarded by Case International Trac tors, at a special presen tation at a barbecue at Carnforth. “It came as a lovely
ward. First quality Friesian bulls made to £136 (£122.95), second quality to £127 (£97.20). Heifers made to £106 (£104) and £78 (£53.10). Hereford X bulls made to
steers and heifers, 244 cows and bulls, 2,341 graded sheep and 716 ewes and rams. Young bulls: Light made to
124.8p (110.5p), medium to
124.8p, C. Denby made 124.2p. W. A. Towler made 124.2p, Mrs Cornforth made 123.8p and J. S. Boyle made 122.8p. F< teen bulfs made over 120p. Steers and heifers: Light
124.2p (112.2p), and others to 102.8p (97.2p). Chief prices: J. H. and M. A. Morphet made
steers made to 107.2p (98.6p), medium to 108.8p (97p), and heavy to 102.8p (102.8p). Light heifers made to 102.2p (93.5p), medium to 105.2p (96. Ip), and heavy to 94.2p (89p). Uncertified medium steers
£150 (£136.55) an d £126 (£102.40, heifersto£77 (£76.50). and £76 (£57.70). Charolais X bulls made to £226 (£187.70) and £154 (£128.60), heifers to £135 (£124.40) and £121 (£91). Black Polly bulls made to
r \
made to 99.2p (97.2p), heavy to 99.8p (99.8p). Light heifers made to 102.2p (89.4p), medium to 105.8p (89. Ip) and heavy to 94.21) (87.5p). Chief prices: Steers sold by
£128 (£108.80) and £70 (£65.30), heifers to £86 (£74.50) and £74 (£55). Limousin X bulls made to £187 (£168.15) and £158 (£131.60), h e ife rs to £158
(£129.60) and £121 (£93.40). Simmental X bulls made to
made to £148 (£148), beef X bulls to £256 (£214.60) and heif ers to £258 (£189.40). Chief prices: G. P. Le G.
Weaned calves: Friesian bulls „ . . . ...
£174 (£163), heifers to £140 (£140).
J . Thompson made 107.2p and 108.8p and heifers were sold by
J . Barton for 105.2p, R. Nuttall and Son for 102.2p and F . Cow- gill for 105.8p. Eleven cattle
made over lOOp. Cows and bulls: Grade one
cows made to 86.2p (80.6p), grade two to 79.2p (73.8p), and grade three to 71.2p (62.7p).
Starkie sold a Charolais bull for £226 and a Belgium Blue for £202, and Limousin bulls were sold by M. Stapleton for £187 and P. Nelson for £256 and
£256. Forward in the fat stock sec
tion were 255 young bulls, 136 No waiting
WHALLEY motorist An nette Jackson (26), of Woodfield View, was fined £20 at Clitheroe for parking her car in a no
surprise for Mark. Now he has his own computer and doesn’t have to share one with his brother and sister,” said his mother.
waiting area. The court heard that
the defendant, who admit ted the offence by letter, left her vehicle in Church Street, Ribchester, in a no waiting area.
Chief prices: Cows were sold by N. Jennings for 86.2p, J . T. Forrest for 83.2p and H. A. Parker for 81.2p. Forty-three cows made over 75p. In the sheep section, light
MEET
week is on the Rebels who play in Division Two of the Clitheroe Netball League. They
The spotlight this
lambs made to 192.5p (181.4p), standard to 185.5p (173.Ip), medium to 176.5p (163.9p) and heavy to 154.5p (150.7p). Light s h e a r l in g s made to 139p (126.7p) and overweight 121.5p (121.5p). Half-bred ewes made to £40
T. Duckworth made 192.5p and 191.5p, and for standard lambs, R. Rawlinson made 185.5p and P. M. Landsworth made 184p F o r medium lambs, J . H Boothman made 176.5p and Hanson and Third made 173p, and for heavy lambs, R. Met calfe made 154.5p. For a half-bred ewe, J . Hart
Chief prices: For light lambs, . , ,
ley made £40, and for a horned ewe, A. Moorhouse made
£29.20.
Another fine run for Shaun
(£27.10), horned ewes to £29.20 (£18.70) and rams to £36.50 (£33).
FELL runner Shaun Livesey (22), of St James’s Street, Clitheroe, is now third in the Great Britain Fell running championships after competing in a stiff three-mile run near Keswick at the weekend. Shaun, a wood machinist at
are back, from the left: Andrena Back h ou se , Marjorie Hunter, Audrey Gas- kell. Middle: Tricia
TEAM
P ro c to r , Angela Croft, Marie Aspin. Front: Susan Frank- land, Clare Cowperth- waite (capt.).
Clitheroe Adveiiiser and Times, August loth, 1985 13
SUMMER DARTS
IN Monday’s matches in the Summer Darts League, John
*
Burgess (Kings B) gained the Shield Insurance achievement award, winning two legs, in 37 darts. Kings B had little else to
celebrate, as they were held to a draw by Commercial. This allowed Royal Oak to extend their lead to 13 points and third-placed Black Horse to close up to within three points of Kings.
side competition is about to start. Entries should be re turned to the Royal Oak by
The leagues annual five-a- , „
Wednesday. Next week’s Shield Insur
ance award will go to the player with the highest finish. League positions: Royal Oak 108, lungs B 95, Black Horse
* 49, Clitheroe FC 48, Craven 45, Cross Keys 43, Kings A 43, Victoria 32.
HOMING
ONE hundred and forty birds were sen t by members of Clitheroe Wednesday Flying Club to compete in the race from Madeley, near Hereford. Winners and their velocities were: L. Limbert and Son (1353 yards per minute), L. Limbert and Son (1350), Mr and Mrs Holgate (1346). Worcester was the liberation point for Clitheroe Homing
Society’s 100-mile race in which 195 birds flew. Winners: H. Chatburn (1540), J . Ainsworth (1535), A. and C. Rung (1533).
F iv e -a -s id e surprise
92, White Horse 78, Commer cial 68, Horseshoe 66, Station
Second-half show rocks Leyland
Clithcroc 2 Lcyland Motors 1
CLITHEROE manager Eric Whalley’s half- time pep talk worked wonders for his side on ” ;da:
Tuesday evening. Leyland Motors had run the
game, prior to the interval and were worthy of a one goal lead. But, as in their opening
TEAMS
game at Bootle, Clitheroe pro duced a sterling second-half show which rocked their oppo nents. After having no noteworthy
effort at goal in the first half, C l i th e ro e s t ru c k th e b a r through Geldard five minutes into the second period and three minutes later a shot by Martin Eatough from the edge of the area flew inches wide. Those two near-misses set
Mullen c ro s s was headed against the post by Geldard and Gary Butcher fired home the rebound — thus cancelling out the 14th-minute penalty he ■ had -given away to put Motors
the pattern for the remaining play and it was no surprise when the equaliser arrived.' In the 69th minute a Steve
in front. With a crowd of nearly 200
.forward for the winner. Skip per Mick Ashcroft headed nar rowly wide from a corner and then, with just nine minutes to go, another corner was half
behind them, Clitheroe pushed
cleared and John Taylor poked the ball home from close range. There was a heart-stopping
moment in the dying seconds when Clitheroe keeper Dennis Underwood had to make a
reflex save after a goalmouth scramble, but Clitheroe hung
on to a deserved victory. Despite a few f ir s t half
scares when Motors’ forwards were allowed acres of room, it was a satisfying home debut in the First Division by Clitheroe. With Eric Whalley s half-time instructions ringing in their ears, the defence and midfield tightened up their game and it was the turn of the Clitheroe front men to find the room. C l i th e r o c : U n d e rw o o d ,
Bowker Brothers, completed the run with its steep 1,600ft. ascent in 28 minutes and six seconds. He came sixth and there are
ing his marriage.
H u tc h in s o n , W h i t t a k e r , Mooney, Ashcroft, Eatough, Sharpies, Butcher, Mullen, Taylor, Geldard. Sub: Merran.
now two races left in the championships, which he has returned to this year after a year's absence, in 1984, follow
Chatburn slump
CHATBURN went down to a heavy defeat in their latest N o r th -E a s t Lancs League game. After making 107 for 9, their opponents, Burnley Boys Club, went to victory with only one wicket dow*n. The defeat means Chatburn are second from bottom of Division T w o .
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' These and many more BACK TO SCHOOL BARGAINS at The Town’s Leading Stationers and Pen Shop
4-6 MARKET PLACE, CLITHEROE Tel. 23587
Serving the community since 1868
CLITHEROE ROYAL GRAMMAR
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Music
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Fantastic range of school shoes, trainers, joggers and pumps.
Clothing grants welcome - ;; ? .
AS the long summer holiday from school draws to an end children and parents all over the area are turning their thoughts to the new school year.
THE ADVERTISERS ON THIS PAGE HAVE AN
EXCELLENT RANGE OF ‘BACK
TO SCHOOL’ ITEMS AND HELPFUL ADVICE
THERE was an upset in the Clitheroe Castle five- a-side knockout tourna ment when it kicked-off on Monday. A strong Waggon and
and Brockhall beat Tug Rovers 2-0. Playboys were awarded their match against Craven Heifer, as the opponents failed to
Horses B team, which in cluded one former and three current Clitheroe players, went down 1-0 to
Chipping. In the evenings other
matches, Diecast Metiers beat Rotaract Rovers 4-0
turn up. Our picture shows the
Chipping and Waggon and Horses B team before their match. Chipping, back (from the left): Wil liam Marsden, Edward Woodhouse, Kevin Kel- sall, Ken Kelsall, Edward
Carter, Stephen Burrow, Nigel Townley. Waggon
and Hor s e s : Nig e l Whiteside, Eric Geldard, Denni s Unde rwo od, Stephen Dean, Simon Whiteside.
The tournament con
tinues until next Friday when the finals of the three sections — senior, junior and ladies — will
be staged.
N o rth e rn , away, Sat): W. Slinger, K. Fawcett, G. Sutclif fe, P. Hall, D. Hardcastle, S. Blackburn, N. Duckworth, C. Musson, P. Bishop, C. Seed, Norman. Clithcroc 2nds (v Blackburn
C l i th e ro c (v Blackburn
Northern, home, Sat.): E. Boden, A. Rigby, R. Banks, S. Westhead, P. Rushton, M.
Scott, A. King, R. Booth, C. Chisholm, M. Booth, M. Black burn. Clithcroc 3rds (v Ribblesdale
Wands., away, Sun.): J. Coul ter, K. Driver, J. Myler, S. Rush, G. Bennett, J. Furnell, R. Sharp, G. Cartledge, J. Scorah, W. Briggs, P. McRae. Clithcroc Youth (v Ribbles
dale Wands., away, Mon.): C. Seed, P. Rushton, G. Wood- worth, A. Palmer, S. Amin, T. Amin, J. Scorah, R. Black- bum, N. Thomas, S. Miller, F. Hussein. Kibblcsdalc Wanderers (v
Read, home, Sat.,): M. De nnett, 1. Johnson, D. Cottam, P. Seedle, S. Kerr, G. Leach, J . Ainsworth, R. Driver, I.
T h re lfa l l , K. P ro c to r , D. Mason. Wanderers 2nds (v Read,
away, Sat.,): K. Taylor, S. Proctor, T. Wallbank, N. Oslif- fe, R. Hargreaves, M. Wrigley,
A. Holeate. A. Dickinson. P. S pencer , S. Hutchins, A. barker. Res: S. Pickles. Wanderers 3rds (v Clitheroe,
home, Sun.): M. Britcliffe, S. Farnsworth, N. Parker, D. O’Neill, J . Renwiek. W. Brad ley, M. Wrigley, M. Watkins, I. Nuttall, M. Edmondson, S. Pickles. Res: S. Nield. W a n d e r e r s Y o u th (v
Clitheroe, home, Mon.: S. Kerr, A. Dickinson, M. Wrig ley, P. Spencer, S. Pickles, D. N iven, S. F a rnw o r th , J . Broughton, D. Braithwaite, 1. Britcliffe, B. Spencer. Res: S. Hitchen.
More sport on
page 21
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