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10 Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, June 16th, 1983
THE AREA’S LEADING KITCHEN ' O AND BATHROOM CENTRE
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OPEN 6 DAYS, 9 a.m. — 5 p.m. RgkrT Howe
E D ISFO R D BRIDG E o CLITHEROE Situated in three acres orerluokintj the River Ribble
ROEFIELD NURSING AND REST HOME
vY Registered for 28 people \Y Single and double rooms most with en-suite bathrooms vY All services provided
Registered nurses anil assistants on duty 21 hours to provide the highest standard of care in a comfortable and pleasant environment.
Telephone: Mrs M. I\ Bickford, S.R.N. CLITHEROE (0200) 22010
Emm
C H A R L T O N SPORT SCHOOLS
MONDAY, AUGUST 1st to FRIDAY, AUGUST 5th, 1988 (inclusive) £63
* FOOTBALL i f ANGLING i f BASKETBALL
if CRICKET ic DANCE
i f DECATHLON
■ all sports inclusive of transport (courtesy of GM Buses) and lunch Bobby Charlton plus top North West players popping in Alan Mayer, a National Champion and International Angler Jeff Jones, Manchester United; Joe Welton, Great Britain Olympic coach Jack Simmons, Harry Pilling, Lancashire CC Past pupil finished third Disco Dance Championships of 1987 Stars from Stretford and Sale Harriers popping in
★ GOLF if MINOR GAMES
Roland West, professional circuit golfer
All youngsters will have a great time, for young brothers and sisters aged 6 to 10 years inclusive
i f SNOOKER i f SWIMMING
★ TENNIS i f WATERSPORTS
John Parrott
Beginners qualified A.S.A. instruction Charles Applewhaite, L.T.A. National Director Opportunity to
Open to all youngsters, lads and lasses, from 8 to 18 years of age. Each confirmed booking will receive a BOOT BAG, courtesy of T.S.B.
"I want the lads and lassies when they leave to say: ‘That was really great I enjoyed it.' On the last day I see them off knowing that I will
see many of them next year. ” / V " 1
BOBBY • CHARLTON 4. ■45:
WHALLEY LIBRARY CLITHEROE POST OFFICE CHATBURN POST OFFICE GISBURN, SHIREBURN ARMS
participate in Sailing, Canoeing and Windsurfing
PICK-UP POINTS
BARNOLOSWICK. STATION ROAD EARBY BUS STATION COLNE BUS STATION NELSON BUS STATION BRIERFIELD TOWN HALL BURNLEY BUS STATION PADIHAM TOWN HALL
FULL NAME POSTAL ADDRESS..
. Tol. No..
SIGNATURE OF PARENT OR GUARDIAN..
” 5 k “n.?eS,w,,h ,5?.?um,aY E * * * *” . Nelson Leader. Colne Times. Bamoldewlck end Eerby Tlmee. Clllheroe Adverileer end Times-
SPORTCOURSE.................................... ,or ,h* BobbY Charlton Sport school CourM
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'N o depout and 6 0 monlhly payments of £4.99 per week. Total Credit Price C1297.20p (Repreienlotive APR 15%) Normal
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SO MUCH MORE THAN JUST CENTRAL HEATING
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«m T Carnival fun
THERE was a weekend of fun in Downham for its carnival fete
A WEEK (REPRESENTATIVE APR 15%) - You can choose to buy Electratech on
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where the fete was officially opened by Lady Clithcroe.
dress, winners being Thomas Moorhouse (bull fighter), Rachel Dilworth (Carmen Miranda) nnd Philip Gill (Worzcl Gummidge). Ail the stnlls and sideshows did a roaring trade and many of the stall holders were in fancy dress. Two local bands helped the carnival atmo
This was followed by the judging of the fancy
sphere — Pendle Jazz Band and Barden School Steel Band.
Address
I Postcocdo I
Tel. No.
Simply post in a sealed envelope to: Norweb, Freepost Eledralech, Manchester M l 6 0HQ (no stamp needed).
nor we i tm
jund spectators — and about £1,100 was made. %.-».When the afternoon had cooled a little, a tug- of-war over the brook warmed it up again. The teams taking part were Downham and Pendleton, with the home side proving the winners to take the Whitbread trophy. The annual pull was
organised by Mr Duvid Busby, the landlord of the Assheton Arms. Our picture shows contestants in the fnney dress.
and the church was filled with flowers, providing a cool oasis on a hot and hectic nfternoon. The village was packed with people — workers
Mr Michael McFall was MC for the afternoon
Assheton Arms, led by a tractor and trailer bedecked in flowers and carrying all the toddlers dressed for the occasion. Others followed on foot to the village green,
and village for Sunday’s fete, which was blessed with excellent weather. The day started with n procession from the
hall, music was provided by Nookies Disco and the party atmosphere was helped by a chicken supper and raffle. About £100 was raised. Saturday was spent transforming the church
celebrations. At a dance on Friday, in the village
6-30 a.m. 6-40 a.m. 6- 7-
8- 05 a.m. 8-15 a,m.
7-15 a.m. 7-25 a.m. 7-35 a.m. 7-45 a.m. 7-
45 a.m. 00 a.m.
ATS’) >7: Wn rtiC® New MD
WEST Bradford man Mr John Whybrow has been appointed managing direc to r of TDS Circuits , Blackburn. Mr Whybrow (41), of
Moor Roods, is a former plant director of Mullard, Blackburn. He spent 17
years with organisation.
the Philips
have two children, Mark (16) and Andrea (13).
He and his wife, Paula,
Whybrow enjoys sailing and squash.
In his spare time Mr
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AN outline application for the building of an agricul tural worker's dwelling at Manor House Farm , Rimington, has been granted by the Ribble Val ley Council’s Development Sub-committee.
THE demolition of an existing barn and the building of an extension at Kelrydding, Station Road, Rimington, has been approved by the Ribble Valley Council's Devel opment Sub-committee.
Extension
Medieval feast
A COURT jes ter and a king and queen are just some of the notables fea turing at a medieval ban quet being organised by Clitheroe Ladies' Circle.
S a tu rd ay , will ho at Henthorn Farm, Clith eroe, by permission of the Spudding family.
The banquet, a week oil
course feas t and old English mead, wine and ale will be available from the licensed bar.
There will be a five-
Liver Transplant Patients Support Fund. Tickets, price £5, are available from Carole Rob erts (Clitheroe 23550).
his merry men will be pro viding the entertainment and medieval dress is optional. Proceeds are for the
Roger Westbrook and
Fined £50 for shotgun
offence A MAN who used a shot gun on a family farm for removing vermin, failed to renew its licence, Clith eroe magistrates wt told.
Chew Hill Farm, Elker Lane, Billington, admitted posessing a 12 bore semi automatic gun without certificate.
but magistrates decided not order the confiscation of the gun.
Proctor was fined £50,
secuting, said Proctor told police he was not in poses- sion of a certificate. He said his mother had tried to renew it at Clitheroe Police Station, but the rules had changed and she was told it would have to be done at Blackburn.
more an oversight than criminal intent.
cheque, but was told she would have to go to Black burn. She put the cheque in the glove compartment and the licence was overlooked. Mr Mewien said it was
£600 and its current value would be in excess of £800.
The gun was bought for
of renewal, he went as he always had done to Clith eroe Police Station. His mother made .out a
defending, said Proctor worked on the family farm and used the shotgun for removing vermin. He had held a licence for several years. When he received notice
Mr Jo h n Mewien, Mr Nigel Harrison, pro Andrew Proctor (2d), of
Skyblue’s fixture with a Tangerine!
Manchester City FC sup porter, not only wore a white sown trimmed with blue, carried blue and white flowers, decorated the church in the colours and dressed her brides maids in blue, had blue and white flowers and decorated the church in the colours . . . she wore
THEwcddingof Clithcroe man Mr Mark David Cook and Miss Catherine Kelly was very much a blue and white occasion. For Catherine, a keen
a Manchester City scarf in her garter as well!
body builder, is the elder son of Mr and Mrs Nor man Hornby, of Mytton View, Clitheroc. He sup ports Blackpool FC. The bride, given away by her father, wore a
daughter of Mr and Mrs Michael Kelly, of Stanley Street, Radcliffc. The bridegroom, a car
place at St Andrew’s Church, Radcliffe, Bury. The bride is the elder
The w ed d in g to o k
Anna and Caroline Kelly, her sisters, Sarah and Gemma Holt, the bride groom’s cousins, Victoria Hope and Donna Loftus. They wore blue and white
Village loos are under review
A REQUEST for a Ribble Valley Superloo scheme received an enthusiastic response from councillors at a meeting of the Policy and
ton (Gisburn), reminded co lle ag u e s th ey had authorised expenditure of £110,000 in the past two years on the provision of toilet facilities in the Rib ble Valley.
Resources Committee. Coun. Harry Wadding-
was, lie explained, £9,000 a year. At lOp a time the
The rent of a Superloo
expected annual revenue was £2,000. “These are as vandal
existing toilets were in a poor state of repair, the site was away from the village centre and it could be appropriate.
unthinkable to put a Superloo in a village such as Downham. In Ribchester, where
officer Mr Philip Bailey told councillors it would be
of enthusiasm for the scheme, but after looking at a picture of one of the Superloos, several council lors expressed doubt about Superloos blending into the countryside in some picturesque villages. Planning and technical
Church Walk were built at a cost of £54,000, are going to cost us another £2,000 a year to clean and super vise and were vandalised in a couple of days.” The general feeling was
our policy on the provision of toilets. “ The new ones on
hours and instead of pro viding three separate faci lities for gents, ladies and disabled, we can get away with one. We have to re-think
proof as possible." said Coun. Waddington. “ If they are vandalised there is no loss to the authority. “They can be used 24
Specials on parade
joined 400 from Lanca shire on Sunday for the t r ie n n i a l p a ra d e in Burnley. Mounted police officers
SPECIAL Constables from the Ribble Valley
Constables in the county, 177 of them women. They have all kinds of civilian jobs ranging from bus
by H. M. Inspector of Constabulary, Sir Philip Myers, outside the magis trates’ court building in Parker Lane. There are 512 Special
driving to hairdressing and are trained to under take routine police duties and support Lancashire’s 3,158 full-time police officers.
Stepping out
PENDLE Playgroup, which is based at Clitheroe Cricket Club, is holding a sponsored walk today to raise money for its funds.
and the Lancashire Con stabulary Band headed the parade, which marched to St Peter’s Church for a service conducted by the Bishop of Burnley, the Rt Rev. Ronald Milner. It followed an inspection
matter back to the Public Works and Health Com mittee, after agreeing that schemes for the provision of toilets in Downham and Ribchester should have priority.
Members referred the
white satin crinoline- style gown overlaid with tulle and a neckline pep pered with blue rosebuds. Her veil was held in place by a tiara-style headdress of white pearls and flow ers and she carried a bou quet of blue and white silk flowers. She was attended by
Clitheroe 22321, (Editorial), 22323 (Advertising). Burnley 22331 (Classified)
Clitheroe 22321, (Editori\ 'X T ^ T t y
mooning in Florida. They are to live in Clitheroe.
Fined £100 for jumper theft
jumpers and I don’t know what I would have done with them,” he said.
had gone
into.the shop to buy something to eat. He waited for a while, but no- one came and he grabbed the jumpers. “It was a stupid thing to do. They were women’s
with other youths, but Mrs Heap took the regis tration number and police stopped the vehicle at Skipton. In court, Coe said he
Heap as she made a tele phone call behind a two- way mirror. She watched him take three jumpers, dropping one as he fled from the shop. He jumped into a car
secuting, said Mrs Heap sold jumpers and hard ware, made by elderly people in the area, from her shop display at the Coronation Hotel, in Horton-in-Craven. Coe was seen by Mrs
Waterloo Road, Clitheroe, was fined £100 a f te r admitting stealing prop erty worth £100, belonging to Barbara Heap. Mr Nigel Harrison, pro
THE prompt action of a licensee resulted in the arres t of a 19-year-old youth who had stolen several jumpers from a display, Clitheroe magis trates were told. Justin Frazer Coe, of
ducted by the Rev. N. Grayshon and a reception was held at the Bolholt, Walshaw. The couple are honey
Gregson and ushers were Mr Andrew Hornby, the bridegroom’s brother, and Mr Ian Clarke. The ceremony was con
dresses with frilled neck lines and carried flowers to match their flower headdresses. Best man was Mr Ian
k A y
CHATBURN — ASTIN
Sales liaison officer Miss Pauline Astin was married to driver Mr Mark Rodney C h a tb u rn a t C h r is t Church, Colne. The bride is the youn
gest daughter of Mrs J. Alister, of Colne, and Mr F. Astin, of Nelson. The bridegroom is the only son of Mr and Mrs G.
Wilde, the bride’s nephew. Best man was Mr Jon athan Kay, groomsman was Mr Steven Hull, the bridegroom’s brother-in- law, and ushers were Mr Graham Seed and Mr Andrew Patten. The ceremony was per
formed by the Rev. J. C. Priestley. A reception was held at Stick House Hotel, Gisburn. The couple are to live in
Barrow. Photograph: Linton Photography, Nelson.
A WOMAN who spent the majority of her working life at Trutex has died, aged 63.
Helene Wilmot, of Pendle Court, Claremont Avenue, Clitheroe, worked as a cu tte r at Trutex after leaving school and, apart from a seven-year break to bring up her soil, John, stayed until her retire ment in 1972.
Keen fund-raiser for cancer r e l ie f Mrs Marjorie Alice
Pendleton WI, Mrs Wil mot was also a keen fund raiser for cancer relief and
at SS Michael and John's Church, Lowergate. He went on to become the managing director of Neothechnic Engineering in Clitheroe, and died in 1986. A keen member of
Mrs Wilmot married her husband, Kenneth, in liliS
55 a.m.
held last Thursday at C l i t h e r o e P a r i s h Church,followed bv inter ment a t Cli th er oe Cemetery'.
Lessons in the art of big business
experience scheme being planned for pupils in Clitheroe and district.
THE help of local employers is needed to ensure a successful start to a- pioneering: work
ting up a Young Enter- young people practical Valiev w h h
1.ntt:eRibb!e businesS experience a
some GO fifth and sixth for mers will set up companies making various products which will then be sold at local trade fairs.
school, Bilhngton. Under the scheme,
four companies which can provide room to be used two hours weekly in the early evenings by students as production centres and board rooms.
The agency is seeking
Chris Rawlinson said the scheme was new to Ribble Valley but had proved to be a big success in other areas and the schools were
Agency director Mrs Sec°n d a ry Business™
Pi!!™,!?' b«b 1e v “Hey very enthusiastic. Enterprise Agency is set- She added: “ It gives
ra s sSN ? ? s w sthss: c £ e ?
can contact her (Clitheroe 22110) .
ble and the sort of pro ducts that can be made range from stationery, garden ornaments and T -s h i rt s to s impl e
clocks.Mrs Rawlinson added that students suc cessfully completing the scheme receive certificates which greatly improve job prospects. Anyone who can help with the scheme
act as advisers are also sought for the scheme, which will last for eight months before the com panies are wound up. Production is very flexi
inessmen who can
Cambien, came to the area from Belgium. He was injured in the First World War, and was sent to Cal- derstones, Whalley, and then to what is now St Denys Home, Clitheroe. It was there that he met his wife. Mildred, who lived on HawthorneFarm and used to deliver the milk to the soldiers. The funeral service was
Wilmot was a member of the Betty Wells Dancing School, which performed for the troops stationed at Low Moor Mill, Clitheroe. and Moreton Hall, above Whalley. After the war, she took prominent roles in the Catholic Hall panto mimes, which her brother. Edmond , h e l p e d to produce. Her f a t h e r , Joseph
in particular Christies Hospital, Manchester. During the war. Mrs
Samantha Wilde, Stacey Wilde and Amanda Col lier, the bride’s nieces. They wore pink Bo-Peep satin dresses with white sashes and ribbons and carried hoops trimmed with pink flowers and rib bons m a tch in g th e i r headdresses. Page boy was Lee
by her father, wore a white satin gown with embroidered detail, fea turing a drop waist and a scalloped hemline. Her cathedral-length veil was held in place by a head dress of pearls and flowers and she carried a bouquet of pink and white roses, gypsophila and ivy. She was attended by
R. Chatburn, of Winder- mere Avenue, Clitheroe. The bride, given away
Bridge, then the younger :( Sykes and Lower High Fiell route took ramblers to Bluet The walks were organiscl and I’eter Ratcliffe.
‘Ordeals’ to pay
for hall
raise about £20,000 for the coffers over a three- year period, the remain ing cost to be met by grants. To get the fund off to a
ing Fields Management Commi t tee, who are responsible for the fund, are planning to put up an £80,000 hall. They therefore aim to
flying start, committee members have agreed to undergo “ordeals" by request on Saturday, in return for money pledges — and it’s only fair to warn them that a session in the stocks looks set to be a firm favourite!
WINNERS of the weekly bridge session at the Pen dle Club, Clitheroe, were Mrs F. Porter and part ner, Miss R. Holland and Mr J. Lynch.
Pendle Club
SATURDAY will be a big day for the people of West Bradford. For not only is it the village sports day, it is also the launch of the West Brad ford Building Fund in aid of a new village hall. Members of the Play
SLAIDBURN was an idea] eroe Ramblers’ first faml chairman Mr Frank Parro| and 23 children. Everyone went on the fiJ
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