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C l i th e ro e 2232J. (E d i to r ia l ) 1 22823 (A d v e r t is in g ) . B u r n le y 22331 (C la s s i f ie d ) Arts and Entertainments EEEKiQEB5S BOOK SALE Burnley nts Centre Jsk AT CLITHEROE UNITED REFORM CHURCH HALL
AUTUMN SEASON THEATRE Theatre de Compliclte
ON FRIDAY, 21st SEPTEMBER 1990 ------ 10-00 a.m. — 5-00 p.m. ------
AND SATURDAY 22nd SEPTEMBER 1990 ------ 10-00 a.m. — 4-00 p.m. ------
ADMISSION FREE VILLAGE HALL CHATBURN
THURSDAY — SATURDAY 13-15th SEPT. 8-00 p.m. "/ laughed continuously Irom boginning to ond"
Tlcknt% C4.00/C3.00 Concoaslont (Thursday and Friday only) C3.00/C2.23
Raw Cotton present
JUMBLE SALE FRIDAY 14th
SEPTEMBERT990 — at 7 p.m. —
IN SCHOOL HALL Admission 10p
Jumble will be collected Thursday
By Elisabeth Bond
WEDNESDAY/THURSDAY 26/27th SEPT. 7-30 p.m.
Elisabeth Bond's powerful new study of women and sexuality. Sot in the 16th contury, but not tor under 16s
Tickets C4.00/C3.00 Concessions C3.00/C2.25 AUTUMN SEASON MUSIC CHAMBER SERIES
Soven superb contorts. Throe brilliant pianists - with Margaret Fingorhut and Leeds piano competition finalist Nonko Ogawa. Tho Cambridge Baroquo Camorata • plus Arensky trio, Mistry String Quartet ana
Hand-Dupro guitar duo. All seven at substantial savings with a Soason Tickot (C22 lor tho host seats)
KATHEYN STOTT BRASS PAMJ
Chamber Music Series 1 TUESDAY, 25th SEPTEMBER 7-30 p.m.
Tho Nelson born pianist opens tho Chamber Music series Schubort, Ravel, Beethoven.
Tickets C4.50/C3.50 Concessions C2.75/C2.00 NEWTON-IN-BOWLAND
UNITED REFORMED CHURCH
HARVEST FESTIVAL
Still a low soason tickets loft to guarantee your Sunday soat starting with the Rigid Containers Group Band
SUNDAY, 23rd SEPTEMBER at 2-45 p.m.
(Isl'g 'g W SHOWCASE
SUNDAY 16th SEPTEMBER 8-00 p.m.
Count John Hot Four; Apollo Saxophone Quartet; Andy Schofield Los Chistmll Quartet; Some other Country.
T ic k e t s £ 3 .0 0 c o n c e s s io n s C 2 .2 5
eommmrAm SOHHY CURTIS
WORKSHOPS FOR ADULTS Picture Framing. Boxes. Candle Making. Xmas Crafts
Ring for dates and prlcos to mnko your Christmas prosents truly crafted.
THURSDAY 20th SEPTEMBER 8 p.m. Alt Tickets £5
Association lor Spritual Knowledge Spiritual healing Explained, followed by Open Forum
THE HEALING PROCESS
Speaker: MR DUNCAN GASCOYNE M.S.N.U. MONDAY 24th SEPTEMBER 7-30 p.m. Tickets Cl
Your route to cheaper tickets for folk, blues and acoustic events. Ring for details.
MusienrH
Freshly prepared meals every lunchtime, no smoking area, and tho best beers in the district.
Car and drink at The Mechanics in the Colleo Shop or Shuttle Bar. •ManchesterRoad,
Burnley.Tel.(0282) 30055
A REAL BARGAIN DAY Don’t forget its this
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16th
THE SPECIAL (Indoor) MANUFACTURER’S CLEARANCE EVENT
At the CORONATION HOTEL, GISBURN 10 n.m. to 4 p.m.
Famous Brands and Ex Mall Order Bedding - Cushions - Pillows - Duvets - Towels -
Furnishing Fabrics - Socks - Underwear - Jewellery - Leather Goods - Art Sale and lots lots More.
Unbelievable Prices - All goods lully guaranteed Admission Free
Event Organised by Ray Promotions Ltd. 0836 367754
played with Buddy Holly and the Crickets wrote "Walk Right Back"and ••/ fought the Law" appearing with his band Hogans's Heroes
Seven major bands lor just C15 Evon loss for concessions!
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16th at 2 p.m.
Preacher: Rev. A.G. Burnham B.A.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17th at 7 p.m.
SALE OF HARVEST PRODUCE ETC.
Tea and Biscuits NEWTON VILLAGE HALL
FARMERS BALL
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5th 8-30 — 12-30
TOSSIDE INSTITUTE
WHIST AND DOMINO
DRIVE SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 15th at 7.45 p.m. Admission £1
including supper CLITHEROE COMMUNITY CHURCH
MEETS EVERY SUNDAY 10-30 a.m. in
CLITHEROE
CRICKET CLUB Chatburn Road
For further information Tel. CLITHEROE 22334 ) V
IN DISTRESS? SUICIDA L ?
NEED HELP? Ring the
SAMARITANS
ANYTIME BLACKBURN
662424 NELSON
' 694929 Call or wnte to
105 NEW PARK STREET BLACKBURN
15 MARKET SQUARE NELSON
Ring Slaldburn 642 or 643 for Tickets
MARK KITTO BAND
TRINITY PANTOMIME
JUMBLE SALE
SATURDAY 15th SEPTEMBER
at 2 p.m. In the
SCHOOLROOM, PARSON LANE
Admission 10p BUCK INN
LOWER Waddinffton
CLITHEROE 28705
Food Served D a ily
Lunchtime and evenings
\
DALEHEAD CHURCH
HARVEST FESTIVAL
SERVICE on
SUNDAY 16th SEPTEMBER at 2.30 p.m.
WHIST AND
DOMINO DRIVE In Tosside Institute on
Admission £1.00 including Supper
MONDAY, 17th SEPTEMBER at 7.45 p.m.
Followed by salo of harvest produce
LANCASHIRE COUNTY LIBRARY
Crumbs — this bird can
use its loaf
seven-month-old Mealy cock pigeon, which whistled home from Weymouth to Clitheroe last week at a speed of nearly 60 m.p.h. to scoop first prize in the annual North East Lancashire Nantes Club young
COO — when it comes to fast flyers you can’t beat a Clitheroe pigeon called Baker’s Pride. There was no loafing about for this
bird race. Baker’s Pride beat 109 other pigeons to
ih:it high-flying Baker’s Pride — named after Peter Baker, of Fort Street, Clitheroe, who bred the pigeon’s father — had flown the 224-milc course! For the Chamleys entered him four days previously in the Clitheroe Homing Society Weymouth Young Bird Race and he came fourth. Said Keith, who works in the stores at
break a jinx on his owners, father and son team Keith (37) and Darren Chamley (15), of Riverside, Low Moor, who have been entering races for 18 months without a win. It was the second time within four days
Clilheroc’s ICI factory: “We haven’t come down to earth yet after the win. It’s been a very exciting week. It is a terrific achievement for a young
bird to fly 448 miles in a week, but Baker’s Pride was bubbling with excitement and keen to go on the second race. Pm sure I could enter him in a third race and he would win again.” However, for the time being, Baker’s
t c v r* Sr'
• ‘
Memorabilia wanted for a Royal display
WITH the Queen’s visit to the Ribble Valley exactly five weeks away, a plea has gone out from Clitheroe Royal Grammar School for help in finding items for the exhibition she will see in the school library.
This week, headmaster
Mr Clive Darley appealed for items connected with the school in the pre-1945 era and, in particular, the 1920s. “What we are especially
Pride will be taking a well-deserved rest among Keith and Darren’s other 100 pigeons kept in lofts behind their home. Meanwhile, Keith and Darren, a pupil at
BROWN — BUCKLEY
Rihblcsdale School, Clitheroe, will be sharing the £30 prize money which went with the trophy and splitting the £75 they received from the club’s betting pool. Said Keith: “We have had a lot of help in
breeding and training the pigeons from Alan Parker, of Downham. He has only won the race once, but was delighted that our bird came home first.” Picture: A bird in the hand . . . father
and son team Keith and Darren with Baker’s Pride.
Extra time for talks on rural plan
PARISH councillors have won extra time lot- talks before planners map out the development
policy for the rural areas in the Ribble Valley. Far-reaching proposals
for tho villages, which will control housing and indus trial development, tour ism, green issues and con servation, well into the 21st century, are under discussion. Kibble Valley planning
BURNLEY PENDLESIDE ROTARY CLUB GRAND CHARITY QUIZ
AMD FUN NIGHT Sponsored by: Matthew Brown pic
and East Lancashire Newspapers Ltd
CENTRE SPOT, BURNLEY
MONDAY, OCTOBER 8th at 8-00 p.m.
Contestants sign in a t 7 -3 0 p.m. p le a s e
£5 Entry Fee (per team of 4) Entries limited to 50 teams
PRIZES: for winning team and
runners-up of boxed medallions Your Quizmaster:
Mr TERRY BANNISTER Raffle conducted by:
MISS MATTHEW BROWN ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
* CLITHEROE SOCIAL CLUB * 3F SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15th * MAL DARWIN
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16th PAUL ALLEN
Another First j L EVERY WEDNESDAY
T USUAL ENTERTAINMENT Members and Bona Fide Guests
All entries in by September 28th to: Rotary Quiz, Promotions Dept,
Burnley Express, Bull Street, Burnley
TEAM NAME .................................................. CAPTAINS NAME ......................................... ADDRESS ....................................................... ........................... TEL. NO ..........................
NO.2's N AM E ................................................ NO,3’s NAME ___ '........................................ |^N0.4's NAME ..............................................j
manager Mr Stewart Bai ley has drawn up ideas for the interim settlement strategy for the Rural Areas Local Plan — a document required under Government legislation. He told the Parish
Councils’ Liaison Commit tee ou Thursday that noth ing had been finalised and th e c o in ill e n t s a n d responses of the public and parish councillors were now being sought. The proposals are set
out on a map defining areas for certain purposes, but he emphasised that this was a draft only and could be addcil to or altered after the views of the parishes were made known. Several parish council
lors asked that the dead line for responses should he extended, after learn ing that this had been ini tially fixed for the middle o f S e p t em b e r . T l ie y pointed out that holidays had intervened and that some parish councils had not had time to discuss the proposals. Mr Bailey, who empha
sised that members of the public were also invited to forward their views to the borough council, said that the proposals had been circulated over a month ago, but lie was more than w i l l in g to support an extension for discussions. A mid-October deadline
for responses from the parishes was agreed and Mr Bailey said that a report on the interim set tlement strategy would be ready on November 15th. It would be four to five
years before the full rural area s local plan was adopted and, as in the ease o f the Southern Fringe Plan, which concerned other areas in the Ribble Valley, the borough coun cil was expecting a suc cession of appeals before the plan was f in a l ly adopted. Tlie plan would deter
mine industrial d e v e l opment and housing needs and control purely specu la t iv e housing d e v e 1 - opment. The problem fac ing local young people, wanting to live in their home villages, would be taken into account. Mr Bailey explained
that the question of defin ing rural settlements was
also an important issue. The definition of a village, as far as the plan was con cerned, was that it would have to have at least 20 houses, plus shops, church and inn, in close proxim ity . V i l la g e s with 20 houses separated by open countryside would not be defined as settlements where infill development could take place, he said. The plan would support
the borough council’s green policy, protecting open countryside and con servation areas, such as t h e g r e e n a t Bolton-by-Bowland. Development in open
countryside would be refused unless it was con
cerned with the farming in du stry or fo r e s t ry . Rehabilitation and re-use o f redundant buildings wou ld be taken in to account, as would housing assisting local employment needs.
Business involvement
required THE search is on in the Ribble Valley for commu nity-minded businesses which might be interested in working on projects with schools and other local groups. Conducting the search is
Business in the Commu nity, a group set up nine years ago to involve busi nesses in economic regen eration. Backed by large companies like Unilever and Reed International, as well as by the Department of Trade and Industry, the group is looking for invol vement, not donations. A n y o n e in te r e s t e d
should contact Mr George Pragnell at British Aero space (061-439 4452).
A Tosside man carried on a family tradition when he was married at Horton-in- Craven Higher Paradise Chapel, for his parents were also married there and he and his brother, the best man, were chris tened there. Mr Jason Gareth Cald
well Brown, the elder soil o f Mr ami Mrs David Brown, of Chapel House,
was m a rried to Miss Nicola Louise Buckley, the only daughter of Mr Anth ony Buckley, of Haworth Street, Rishton, and Mrs Janet Lunib, o f M e l bourne, Australia. The day was made all the more special for the
happy couple when a stir prise helicopter ride, a gift from the b ridegroom’s parents, took them to their reception at the Copy Nook Hotel, near Bolton-by-Bowland. There, a magnificent
four-tier wedding cake was waiting, made by the bride’s grandfather, Mr Lawrence Hammond, of Blackburn, and iced by the b r id e ’ s em p lo y e r , Mr Terry Wild. The bride is an assistant
at Mr W i ld ’s “ Ap rico t Meringue” tea room in King Street, Clitheroe, and the bridegroom is a foreman UPVC fabricator at Sterling Frames, of Great Harwood. The couple are to emi
grate to Australia neat year, to l iv e near the b r i d e ’ s m o t li e r i n Melbourne. The bride, given away
by her fattier, wore a full- lengtli off-the-shoulder
giwn of white pure silk ill inderella style, with a
hooped s k ir t , pu f fed sleeves and ribbon trim ming. A floral headdress, held her short veil and she carried a bouquet of silk flowers, including white, pink and aqua roses, car nations and ivy. Bridesmaids were Miss
Helen Gibson and Miss Donna Stinson, the flower girl was Rachel Coekett and tlie page boy Andrew Green. The bridesmaids wore
full-length dresses of aqua blue taffeta, trimmed with white lace, with hooped skirts and puffed sleeves. Best man was tlie bride
groom’s brother, Mr Dan iel Brown, groomsman was Mr C h r is to p h e r Alderson and ushers were Mr Neil Shoesmith and Mr Shaun Dewhurst. The ceremony was per
formed by the Rev. Alan Lloyd-Griffiths and the organist was Mrs Dorothy Brewer. 'File couple are spending
their honeymoon in Gala Mondrago, Majorca. P h o t o g r a p h : John Barry, Blackburn. -
T r ip to, W a le s
THE
Galder.stones Fel lowship trip to Llandudno oil September 25th will pick up at Clitheroe Sta tion at 9 a.m. Other points and times
where passengers can board tlie bus are: Wlialley Road (9-10 a.m.), Barrow (9-20 a.m.), Whalley (9-30 a.m.) and Sabden (9-45 a.m.).
looking for arc tangible items to d isp la y ; we
Advice on bulbs for gardeners
C A L L ING on the exper tise and knowledge gained from many years as a pro fessional gardener, Mr Frank Smith, of Preston, proved to lie an excellent s p e a k e r w h e n h e addressed members o f Clitheroe Garden Club. Starting with the rudi
ments of all growing — light, aii-and water — and explaining the necessity of the practical use of these, he p ro g re s s ed to the planting of bulbs in pots and in the garden for (low ering at specified times, as well as tips oil supports and feeds. The next meeting will
be on October 8th. Spring bulbs, including
specialities are now avail able at the sales shed on Sundays, between 10 a.m.
and noon.
already have plenty of documentation,” he said. “We would like to borrow old photographs, items of uniform, medals from sports days and the like from tiie former boys’ and girls’ schools. Of course, we would look after the items very carefully and ensure they w e re all returned.”
The display will be split
into four parts, with the first concentrating on the school’s foundation and charter in the Kith cen tu ry , including much material provided from the county archives.
This will he followed by
a list of the distinguished, and less than d is t in guished, head teachers the town has seen. The 19th century will lie explained ill records and a pupil will he dressed in the uniform of the day, eating a meal that would have been served in the boarding house.
The last part will fea ture this century and show
the enormous changes the hoys’ and girls’ schools fa c e d as th e y w e r e e x ten d ed and f in a l ly amalgamated. Said Mr Darley: “We
are also trying to compile a list of distinguished old girls . . . we have an end
- We'successfully - ,)' { ‘ j ’ treat
ALCOHOL DEPENDENTS
Our private clinic has years of experience and success in treating alcohol depend ents - the vast majority are still abstainers. For advice, help and details of our lully confidential treat ment programme simply phone Gisburn, Lancs. (0200) 445999 (24hrs).
less list on the boys’ side and would be grateful if t h e public could put forward suggestions.” Meanwhile, the search
is still going on to find the school’s priceless charter, which was probably last seen in the 1930s. Said Mr Darley: “ Fol
lowing the ‘Advertiser and Times’ story last week, we have hail some leads. The hottest at the moment seems to be that the char ter could he in bank vaults somewhere from the pre- ,vious Martins Bank, which later became Barclays. It is getting to be a detective chase of epic proportions."
v ” ■
Clitheroe A d ve r t ise r & Times, September M th , 1000 3
' v V#n- • V * J- L/
>'.V- •• * LS-'A'X*' - r, " i t ,mr\
The Clinic
at Gisburnc Park
B u y a fu l ly rem o te S a t e l l it e S y s t e m fo r o n ly £ 9 .9 6 - M o n th ly (N o Deposit)
Includes Full Installation with Five Year Parts & Labour Guarantee - THEN NO MORE TO PAY - Oiler Subject to Availability
Attention all Pubs, Clubs, Hotels, Cafes, Restaurants, etc — We have a limited amount of SOUTH WESTERN BELL PAYPHONES
NO DEPOSIT — RENT/BUY AT ONLY £14.22 per month inc VAT inclusive of 3 year free maintenance - nationwide
SPECIALISED TV, VIDEO i SATELLITE REPAIRS, INSURANCE ESTIMATES ETC. > m
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Beige 90/20 Berber Twist: 11ft. 0in. wide, slight subs. 34oz Heavy Domestic Weight £6.99 *q. yd. 40 oz Contract Weight £9.50 *q. yd.
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Dorchester Twist: 80/20 Plsln Twist 13ft. 1 in. wide. Perfect stock. 3 Colours available @ £8.50 sq. yd.
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* Further reductions on our enormous stock ol room size roll ends - Over 300 in stock and on display now
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ULTBftFB A M E b ^ S S a r o J ^ l ° se'°mo<
iv 8 8WlC\S°c»nsuUa»'on 20 BURY ROAD CLITHEROE RAWTENSTALL (0706) 030445
. BURNLEY ROAD, WHITEOIRK BLACKBURN (0254) 600153
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