Ciitheroe Advertiser it Times, July 2ml, 1902 11
Ciitheroe 22321, (Editorial), 22323 (Advertising). Burnley 22331 (Clussijied) EAST LANCS NEWSPAPERS LTD!
CHARLTON SPORTS SCHOOL
BOBBY MON JULY 27th - FRI JULY 31st (incl)
Times and Pick-up Points (Courtesy of G.M. Buses)
WHALLEV - Library
CLITHEROE-PostOffice CHATBURN-Post Office GISBURN - Ribblesdale Aims BARNOLDSWICK - Station Rd
EARBY - Bus Station Manchesta Stop
COLNE - Bus Station Manchester Stop
NELSON - Bus Station Manchester Stoo
BRIEREIElD - Town Hall
BURNLEY - Bus Station 236 Stop PADIHAM-Town Hall
6.30 a.m. 6.45 a.m. 6.50 a.m. 7.00 a.m. 7.15 a.m.
7.25 a.m. 7.35 a.m. 7.45 a.m.
7.55 a.m. 8.05 a.m. 8.15 a.m.
5 DAY NON-RESIDENTIAL COURSE £75
'BOBBY CHARLTON SPORTS SCHOOL
EAST LANCS NEWSPAPERS LTD eio For full details, a d d your name and OFF
address a n d send to Bobby Charlton Enterprises a t 345 Stockpbrt Road, Manchester. M l3 OLF
I N am e . E A d d re s s
.T el.
P IC K Y O U E O W N S T K A W B E R f f lE S at
UNDERLEY
HOME FARM Kirkby Lonsdale Tel. 05242 71207
(24 Hr crop information) open d a lly I0am-7pm.
Raspberries, gooseberries, blackcurrants. Redcurrants also available in season. Picking baskets supplied. Childrens playground/plcnlc area. Ices and home made refreshments.
FERGUSON IPHOFEN
The commercial managei of Castle Cement, Mi Gerald Ferguson, married Miss Catherine lphol'en at St Michael and St John’s liC Church, Ciitheroe. The bride, ail account manager, is the youngest
daughter of Mr and Mrs W. Iphofen, of Southfield Drive, West Bradford. The bridegroom is the
second son of Mr and Mrs J. Ferguson, of Wliitewell
Drive, Ciitheroe. The bride, given away
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by her father, wore an ivory silk dupion gown with pale peach embroi dery on tlie bodice and three-quarter length sleeves, it also featured a full skirt and short train with a large bow at the back and pale peach em broidery. in her hair she wore ail Alice band oi
hand-made pure silk rose buds interspersed with
sprays of pearls. She car ried a long sheaf ol ivy longifiorum lilies and g.vp- sophila, tied with an ivory silk dupion bow. In attendance were Liz
| Iphofen. her eldest sister, and three small brides maids, Lenune Smalley, the bride's goddaughter, Katie Cowburn, the bride groom's niece, and Jodie Fielding. Miss Iphofen wore a
full-length peach taffeta dross and an Alice band of miniature roses, spray carnations and gypsophila. Tlie young bridesmaids laid Bo-Peep style dresses in peach and ivory candy striped taffeta. They all carried posies of gerdo roses, spray carnations, freesia, ivy and gypsophila and the younger brides maids wore headdresses to
match. B e s t ill a II w a s M l
/ f o l l o w in g a l t e r a t io n s AND REDECORATION
We are now pleased to announce we will be open as usual from the beginning of July 7 DAYS A WEEK
Pendle Antiques Centre
SABDEN Constantly changing stock of antique furniture, TEL: (0282) 776311
Bric-a-brac, most of which is refurbished on the premises INTERNATIONAL ANTIQUE DEALERS COMMISSIONED BUTING AGENT FOR
NUMEROUS OVERSEAS BUYERS OVER 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN THE TRADE - BUYING AND SELLING
ALL DEALERS WELCOME
* URGENTLY WANTED FOR EXPORT * FULL OR PART HOUSE CLEARANCES 8c INDIVIDUAL ITEMS BOUGHT VALUATIONS, OFFERS AND ADVICE WITHOUT OBLIGATION!
p] $
DISCREET, CONFIDENTIAL AND COURTEOUS SERVICE
Please telephone:
gi Padiham (0282) 776311 or 'A
Ciitheroe g 1
(0 2 0 0 )2 7 0 2 1 (Residencc)
HOURS OF OPENING: 7 days a week
10.00am - 5.00pm Tyres taken
IA THIEF jacked up a car I in a locked yard at Clitli- [e ro e M o to rs . N orth ■ Street, and stole two I Michclin ZX radial lyres land two wheel hubs. Tlie I items, which were valued Itogether at £140. were I taken between (i p.m. on I Friday and 9 a.m. on I Saturday.
Recovered
1 A MAESTRO van, which was stolen from outside a
| house in Old Row, Bar- I row, last week, was found abandoned in the car park of the Judge Wnlmesley Hotel. Billington. the Ibl | lowing morning.
ST I’AHI/S Sunday School held its annual sports day on Saturday, at the Roofield recreation
ground. The event was opened liv retiring rose queen
Kirsl.v McGnucr. The children tool: part in the events, which included individual and loam races — egg and spoon, tunnel hall, obstacle and sack.
They were divided into lour teams — red, black, blue and green — with the red team coming out on top. Barents helped to make the event a great success
by organising the races, cheering the children on and providing refreshments, including cream and orange squash.
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Adrian Mills and ushers were Mr Paul Ferguson, the bridegroom's brothel and Mr Duncan Fielding. Tlie ceremony was per
formed by Fr J. Warning and tlie organist was Mr
A. Briggs. A reception was held at
'Higher Trapp Country House Hotel. Simonstone, before the couple's depar ture on honeymoon to the Greek island of Kefalonia. P h o to g ra p h : John Barrv, Blackburn.
Jayne nets herself star prize
AM ER IC A N tennis star Andre Agassi’s Wimbledon appearance has turned dis appointment into delight for a 12-year-old Ciitheroe girl, forced to miss the trip to see her number one hero
because of school exams. Tennis-mad Jayne Hutchinson,
however, received the next best treat, when her parents arrived home from Wimbledon with the tennis star’s shirt, which Agassi had thrown into the crowd after his three-set victory over Rus
sian Andrei Chesnikov. Her parents, Jean and Steve Hut
chinson, who run Castle Sports in Moor Lane, and friend Mary Brass, of Daw son’s Greengrocers, were watched by millions on TV as they grabbed the prized top.
“We went last year with Jayne, but
it was rained off. She had to do her exams this time and she was very dis appointed not to be going with us,” said Mr Hutchinson.
He added that they were very fortu
nate to see the Agassi match, \vluch had been scheduled to finish on Tues day night, but because of bad light was played to a finish on Wednesday.
“At the end of his match Agassi tool:
the tennis top off, looked our way and threw it into the crowd in our direction. Several people made a grab for it, but wo had more hands on it.
“Jean put the shirt into her bag. I
said ‘that’s for Jayne,’ who regards Agassi as her hero," said her father.
Whilst her parents were watching
the number one court action, Jayne, a pupil at Ciitheroe Royal Grammar School, was busy doing her geography
exam. “All through the tlay I kept thinking ,. , .
about missing the Wimbledon trip. Later I saw mum and dad on televi sion, when Andre Agassi threw the shirt in their direction. I just hoped thaL they had managed to get it," she
said. .Jayne is one of the county’s leading
junior tennis players in her age group. She took up the game at the age of eight, having gone along to a coaching session at Ribblesdale School, wheie she was instructed by Mr John Schofield. It was Mr Schofield who invited
Jayne to play at Blackburn Northern Tennis Club. She has represented Lan cashire at county level for under 10s and under 12s and in LTA singles tour naments has had wins at the Ilkley .uid Hull Tennis Championships.
Jayne now plays for the Ilkley
Ladies Doubles team, where she is coached by tennis professional Simon Ickringill. Her string of successes has continued with recent triumphs in the Lancashire Schools U n d e l -1.3 Championships.
She has also carried off individual
honours in the Volkswagen singles ten nis tournaments in Manchester and Eagley, near Bolton, and has repre sented the North West in the under-14
age group. Jayne, who has a younger sister Gill,
is also a keen cross-country runner — for which she lias won county represen tative honours — and swimming, but her over-riding ambition is to play at Wimbledon.
Drugs squad chief warns of trends as seizures jump
RED Leb and Pakistani black resin, Dennis the Menace ecstacy, Don ald Duck LSD and a bulging cannabis spliff were among the drugs handed round the Ribble Valley council chamber. But there was nothing
shadowy about the surfac ing of illegal substances. Their appearance out of a respectable briefcase came about, not surprisingly, with the full approval of
the lawr. Tlie drugs were brought
Bid to oppose mortuary plan bites the dust
A BID to put the “death knell” on a scheme to chance a mortuary into a house came at Ribble Valley Council’s Planning and Development
Committee. But the meeting gave
the green light to the scheme, which concerns
!.he former mortuary bu i ld in g at Lang ho Centre, Longsight Road, Billington, now in the
hands of receivers. New uses for various
parts of tlie former hospi tal colony are being sought by J. D. Harrison and C. j ! Hughes as joint admiii- strative receivers of Kiln-
cross Ltd. Councillors heard that
tlie applicants were now seeking consent for the conversion and minor extension of the former mortuary building. Conn. Chris Holtom
(Wilpshire) said lie would like to “put the dentil knell on the application.” He wondered why Wilpshire
New pole
A GRANT worth £2.500 lias been approved to pur chase a new restraining pole for the Ciitheroe Cas tle keep flagpole. At the Ribble Valley
Council’ s Policy and Resources Committee, it was reported that, during tlie course of work on tlie C a s t l e k e e p , t li e restraining pole was found to he rotten and in need of replacement.
Parish Council had not been asked for observa tions, while those of Bil- lington Parish Council were included in the report before the meeting. He suggested that tlie for mer Langlio Centre was 95% in Wilpshire and that tlie parish council for that area would not welcome residential development at tlie mortuary. 'Pile meeting heard that
Billington Parish Council and the county surveyor had no objections to the scheme. it was pointed out that
to the Ribble Valicy Police and Community Forum
meeting as part of a long- awaited presentation on drug abuse given by Det. Ilisp. J. Thompson, of the Lancashire Constabulary
drugs branch. J-Iis talk followed a short
report by Clitlieroe’s Chief Insp. Michael Bourne which, in part, focused on the local drug dilemma. Insp. Bourne said drugs had been found in 11 of tlie 23 houses in Ciitheroe and Wlialley searched since January. During tlie same period, 35 of tlie 90 leople stopped by police lad been arrested and r e p o r te d f o r d rugs
offences. Tlie trend seems to be
mirrored throughout tlie county, as indicated in a report distributed at the forum which revealed that, in the first four months of the year, 915 drug seizures were made in Lancashire — a 41% increase over the same period last year. Ins]). Thompson said
t h a t , in t h e p a s t IS months, four publicans in the county had gone to prison for allowing the sale o f d r u g s o n t h e i r premises. He also reported that
357 new addicts sought help in Lancashire last year, one of the largest annual increases in the
the existing features of the building would he retained and that a scheme for a nursery at tlie centre laid been given the go-ahead on appeal at a public inquiry. Conn. Bill Fleming (Bil
lingtor.) disputed Conn. IloTtom’s suggestion that
the site was more a matter for Wilpshire than Billing ton. in any event, it was difficult to substantiate and uphold a reason for refusal.
country. Also rising was the popularity of ecstacy,
which was associated with “Rave” nights. Research showed 100,000 teenagers in the North West had taken tlie drug regularly. But tlie ready supply of
drugs, continued lnsp. Thompson, showed no sign of slowing and drug use lias been rising for a decade now as a result of easier access to foreign drug markets, combined
S u n d a y s c h o o l ’ s s p o r t s su c c e s s
wi__ more
residents buying and bringing drugs home from abroad. Recent examples in tlie
th Lancashire
county included a lorry j driver arrested for trans porting 000 kilos of can nabis and another vehicle found with amphetamines | taped to its back axle. With tlie disappearance
of EEC barriers, drivers would be able to travel more easily between Ciitheroe and the Middle East by January of next year, Insp. Thompson
pointed out. In addition, the number
of articulated lorries trav elling through channel ports was expected to dou ble to five million within the next three years, which meant a tough job for the customs officers who search for drugs. in light of these trends,
Insp. Thompson said the | only hope of combating the trade lay in reducing d e m a n d t li r o u g h a multi-agency approach which involved, for exam ple, education in the schools and community as we ll as enforcement action. Insp. Thompson said:
“ The police just saying ‘don’t do it’ doesn’t work.
It doesn’t work with car stealing. It doesn’t work with drunk driving. The real answer is to persuade people that there are no benefits and substantial disadvantages to taking
drugs." Cost of loos
A TENDER of £1)3.009 to] complete the public conve niences scheme on Clitli-I eroe Castle field lias been I accepted by Ribble Valley Council’ s P olicy and| Resources Committee. It was reported that an!
17
amount of £02,000 hull j been brought forward to
finance the p ro je c t . Together with fees, the] total cost of the work will] be around £70,000 and] approval was given lor n| further £8.000 to be mel| by tlie capital reserves.
5 M A R K E T P LA C E C L ITH E R O E .
TE L : 0200 23176
S U M M E R S A S L E
Starts
SATURDAY 4tli JULY at 9-15 a.m._______
35% OFF many Selected Garments at
1/2 PRICE Sizes 10-24, N o rm a l and. Short fittings
PETEK HARRISON 35 CASTLE STREET, CIITHEROE
Telephone:- 23240_____ ______
AT T. SUMMER FASHION STOCK PLUS
P h o t o c h r o in i c L e n s e s Umbra met tic SR, Umbramatic SB, Umbramatic SL
NOW ON
shop re-fit. All enquiries and payments can be made at our Cycle
Department will be closed from Friday for one week for major
PLEASE NOTE Our Electrical
Shop on Woone Lane.
We apologise for any inconvenience.
CYCLE, SALE
/Is- the light brightens the lens darkens These are lenses made from
Umbramatic material, which reacts to varying light conditions.
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© Attractive colour tone when unactivated
© Comfortable vision at all light levels
S. W. ALLEN LTD.
Professionals in Eye Care
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