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Clitlieroe,, 2232J, (Editorial), 22323 (Advertising). Burnley 422331 (Classified)_ I Clillwroe Advertiser A- Time:x, April 2Sth, HUH Round and About tho Ribble Valley


High seas venture sails to success


Windows and Doors —— I! & P HRR V


F o r a l l y o u r p r in t in g r e q u i r em e n t s


• Letterheads • Billheads • Business cards etc


42/44 York Street Clitheroe. Tel: (0200) 25193


i In hardwood, softwood, uPVC. DIY and timber supplies contact:


RitiWinn Cnnlrado rs


1 ■ mm *■ m ■ »■«-» - - — — Joiners and Building Contractors


AGEAES


THE WORKSHOP, HALL STREET, CUTHEROE. Tel: 26929 For a friendly and personal service


FYES PRINTING WORKS ( B & R. E. P y e L td )


MAINTENANCE Landscaping,


GARDEN


ponds, rockeries, crazy paving, stonewalling, fences etc.


turfing, garden


fay City & Guild T rad e sm a n


Tel: 0200 443068


GAS BOILERS £595


R ep la c e your old boiler with a new efficient ga s boiler for as little as £ 5 9 5 .


Raymond Lowe


Free estimates. Telephone


0282 773173 Evening calls welcome


THE HEDGEROW GARDEN


F or p rom p t a t te n t io n c o n ta c t


S E R V IC E S


DAVID MILL Tel: Whalley 0 2 3 * B7 2 7 6 2


NINA Mobile


Hairdresser Qualified to a very high standard


TEL: (0254) 826253


INTERIOR and EXTERIOR PAINTING AND DECORATING


* FREE ESTIMATES * * Special Rales OAP ★ * No Job loo small ★


* All work guaranteed ★


Tel. Whalley 0254 822248 Clitheroe 440117


0374 224330 Mobile


POLISHER Dining tables


FRENCH For nil your Joinery


and carpentry requirements


Specialists In Timber Treatment


and Damp Proof Course


___ 0 3 7 4 1 7 3 7 0 8 ___ 0 2 0 0 4 4 1 6 2 2


We employ time served tradesmen only POLISHING


SANDING and


Make your timber floor a feature. Floorboards and


parquet professionally restored.


Reasonable rates and free estimates. Distance no object


E.R. HEYWORTH


Painte r & De corator


NO JOB TOO SMALL


Ring now for a FREE Estimate


Tel. 0200 24627


CHAIR CANING SERVICE & RUSH


SEATING Tolaphona Cllthero*


4 4 2 1 7 3 kniter 6 pan,


i PROCESSING WORD


High quality laser printing Business letters and reports, students' disserlalions, etc


Tel: Barbara Morris (0200) 24067


C.C. PARKER! PAINTER


AND


DECORATOF Tel:


Clitheroe 25473


P.S. DIXON SAME DAY SPECTACLE REPAIRS


Clitheroe • Tel: 290241 40 Park Avenue


from £ 5 0 Cha irs


from £ 2 0 Furniture Refurblsher


John Schofield Tel: Clitheroe 29217


Washing Machines,


Tumblo Dryers, Cookers, Fridqos/Froozers, DisFiwashors ole. ropaired by


K . G . D O M E S T I C e*


S E R V I C E S i9 8 i | Also Rocondilionod


machines su pplied with 12 months guaranleo


(0 2 0 0 )4 4 3 0 7 5 Tel: KEYBOARD


New frames and lenses supplied


O R N E R /7 K c y b o a rd /P ia n o H T u i t io n


ome Visits.


Tel: M r B.J. Hughes : ' (0254) 202971 ,


□ r a c


ADVANCED ROOFING For all typos ot storm damage. iKlgo tiles, chimney stacks


L & S BUILDING &


rebuiltand repo.nted, all gutters cleaned!’"4 s“ t,4 All typos ol gaidon lencrng. patios. dnves and pains


ALL ESTIMATES FREE O A.P. Discounl


Why pay more when wo charge less 24 HOUR CALL OUT


For more information 0200 443139 Mobile S 086 081 9177


i 3 GZ 3


) I V//.71 ___ rmm □ __ L- -


{TTTTt t r


1 t 'n V.. ■ /J i C3


Domestics Propi David J . Parker


QUALIFIED IIOTPOINT/CREDA SERVICE ENGINEER ______ _


SAIF.S/.SF.RVICE/ltr.l»A1ILS 'iw-s'r Nocallout charge?


To ill typo ot Lkxnauc A p p um a Reconditioned ApplUncm ivjlliblc 2 Franklin St,


Cltthoroe, BB7 1DQ TE L 0200 4433-10


MOIlIIEi 0860 154981


/ALSTONS^ Collect our sample


books and choose at your, leisure


900 WHALLEY NEW ROAD, WILPSHIRE, BLACKBURN,


y Tel: (0254) 248754,


DECORATING by


PAINTING & GERALD


WHITEHEAD CST i960)


All, TYPES OF WORK UNDERTAKEN


High Standards • Competitive Prices


Tel: 0 2 5 4 8 8 5 3 5 2


WAIlLBANK AERIALS • ALL TYPES OF T.V. & RADIO AERIALS


REPAIRS • INSTALLATIONS


• COMMUNAL AERIAL SPECIALISTS


• SATELUTE AERIAL SYSTEMS SUPPLIED & FITTED


ElMAIN: CONTRACTORS TO LOCAL AUTHORITIES


2 3 Y EA R S E X P E R IE N C E FU L L Y IN S U R E D


TEL 0254 392609


A. WHITTAKER, PROPRIETOR 2 LEY ST.. BAXENDEN. ACCRINGTON


BATHROOMS £199


Choose your own suite and have it fitted from as little as £199, also tiling and showers etc


Timeserved tradesman with over 30 years experience Free estimates Telephone


RAYMOND LOWE H'/icre quality counts


On Sabden 0282 773173 (evening calls welcome)


ami me iiim » a i aim **■ y at the lillC's future.


FOR HELP AND ADVICE TO ADVERTISE ON THIS PAGE Telephone


Mazy Baker 0200 ......., ...


P r e s s f r e fe d i^ S u n d e r threat around world .


SOMETHING we are hardly ever faced with at the "Advertiser and Times” is physical threat or attack because of stories we have


written or are investigating. Ye'' we may receive complaints about aittcles


we have published or are planning to publish. W e may come across resistance when we try to uneaith


certain information.


entirely foreign to ourselves and the bulk ol British journalists.


But violence relating to stories ls


world. On Slav 3rd. we are being asked to spare a thought for those countries where press Ireedom is under threat.


Unfortunately, this is not the case m most ot the


something almost .


. . ,


lishers reports that journalists are regularly being arrested, detained, assaulted, killed and imprisoned


Press Freedom Day is: •■Freedom ol the press is yom freedom," meaning that press Ireedom and dempi­ racy are inextricably intertwined. Ihankfulh. tin


The message being driven home on International . two are thriving in the Kibble Valley.


Famous columnist gets his te eth into Nigel


AN Amoricttn-slylu smile could soon grace the face of Ribble Val­ ley MP Nigel Evans, according to another well-known Nigel who featured him on the pages of his popular gossip column. "Daily Mail" journalist


captioned "Toothy: Nigel, the article reported that Mr Evans had campaigned for the American Republi­ can party in three Presi­ dential elections and was keen to maintain close links with the States. Mr Evans was reported


Nigel Dempster high­ lighted the interest Mr Evans has shown in American politics and orthodontistry, alongside t i tb i ts about Andrew


Lloyd W eb b er and Roseanne Barr.


. Headlined “Toothpaste smile" with a photograph


The International Federation ol Ncwspapei 1 ut>- .. .


in countries around the globe, from the Yugoslavia and Soviet Union to African and South American nations.


, H


e b i- i d e a n shoe)) a n d


Highland cat­ tle grazing on a Chaigley


field are the only clue that a cruising company, which takes passengers to some of the most remote and beautiful Scottish islands, is anchored on the farm. Mrs Amelia Dalton, of


Manor Farm, is at the helm of Pointdrakc Ltd,


which owns the converted fishing traw le r MV .Monaco. As we go to press, the 80ft boat is fin­ ishing a cruise around


that Mrs Dalton, who once cooked directors' lunches and designed window boxes for offices in the City of London, decided to take the plunge. She had previously per­ suaded her father and a


Mull. Hum and Skye. It was five years ago


POWER TOOLS, SCAFFOLDING, LADDERS, GENERATORS, MIXERS, VIBRATOR PLATES. FOR HIRE OR SALE. EVERYTHING FOR THE CONTRACTOR, ENGINEER OR HANDYMAN. CHATBURN TRADING ESTATE, CHATBURN.


TEL: 0200 441511


MRS DALTON and MV .Monaco, the converted fishing trawler which is now ply­ ing the high seas


ns a h o 1id ay cruiser


As the boat began to fill with water, a May Day


was issued and a North Sea gasfield had to be shut off. Ultimately, a lifeboat brought the Monaco into Peterhead as a casualty. " I t was extremely


IF . & P PLANT HIRE -


______________________________________T V V . • C B n ; ■ ! * .


: . - « i


embarrassing. It was a baptism by fire,” Mrs Dal­ ton said. Five years later, the


Monaco is a floating hotel for parties of holiday­ makers and divers alike. There are six passenger cabins, each with ward­ robe, wash-hand basin, heating and two full-sized berths, as well as two electric toilets, a drying room and shower with enough water for passen­ gers and crew to bathe daily on a 10-day trip. Mrs Dalton prides her­


friend to let her cook and crew for them on several occasions when they char­ tered a boat in the West-


ern Isles. Mrs Dalton fell in love


with the experience and, particularly, their trips to the dramatic and forlorn St Hilda, where a remote island community once survived on a sparse diet of dried seabirds and eggs. Equally importantly,


self on the high standard of cooking, featuring largely local ingredients, from cheese and fish to


game and meats,- although Chaigley-reared Hebri­ dean lamb also oecasion- allv features on the menu. the places the Monaco


visits, however, are the most extraordinary aspect


she thought there was a niche in the market for a mini-cruiselinor, catering for divers and holiday­ makers, which wtts neither as large nor as small as many of the boats pres­ ently operating. She found the Monaco


of the operation, which takes passengers from Oban to uninhabited islands, abandoned vil­ lages and romantic castles all along the West Coast. St Kilda, -10 miles west


of the Outer Hebrides, is possibly the favourite des­ tination. Not only is the scenery unrivalled, but the underwater world around the archipelago is on a par with the Great Barrier-


as expressing an interest in forming a group for newly-elected Republicans and Conservatives, as well as in following in the loot- steps of American cousins and "getting his teeth


fixed." “I’ve got crooked teem,


but I've been told they can be sorted out painlessly, Mr Evans told Nigel


Dempster. LIBRARY CORNER £ 5 & S S S L V f - - K ? hi* son an,}


lo look closely at the inhuman smile of llu i«>tm.in. Other..cvvlK«k^«hPlcj.riis(.r A ril.,,


il b ti,m- ,|iL.s :1„,| leaves his


through a magazine. A decommissioned Danish fishing trawler, the boat has a u-shaped hull, rather than the v-shaped hull of its Scottish equivalent. The design means larger cabins in the 12-foot-deep space below deck. But the trawler Mrs


Reef and Red Sea. “St Kilda is basically an


Dalton convinced friends, bankers and the Highland and Islands Development Board to back in 1989 was a far cry from the luxury Monaco cruising alongside dolphins, whales and sharks in the Atlantic Ocean today. The boat bad to be con­


verted, but first needed to make the crossing from Denmark to Britain. " I t was an absolute


nightmare getting her h e r e ,” Mrs D alton recalled. “The first thing I heard from the people who were bringing her over was when my husband received a call from someone asking whether he knew anything about a boat that was sinking in


exploded volcano. It’s a world heritage site with the biggest gannetry in the world. It’s absolutely superlative,” Mrs Dalton said.Radio Four is the guard­ ian angel of St Kilda voy­ ages, for the Shipping Forecast dictates when the Monaco makes the nine-hour trip and which route is taken. Mrs Dalton and her crew never miss a broadcast. At 6 a.m., 2 p.m., 6 p.m. and 12-30 a .m . th e y t u n e i n religiously. "It’s vital. At the begin­


ning, you have the gale warnings. Then you hear about all the high and low pressure systems. From that, we are able to work out what to do,” she said. “I think it's terrifically romantic hearing about all these wonderful places.” The next time Ribble


the North Sea.” The inexperienced deli­


very crew had managed to knock an echo sounder pod off the bottom of the trawler in shallow water.


Valley lis tene rs hear Rockall and Hebrides mentioned on the Shipping Forecast, they can think of the Monaco cruising against a breathtaking b a c k d ro p of p u f f in colonies, heather-covered hills and rugged Scottish coastline.


SPEAKING to a group of people who ;had (plt-hc^ ‘l ,nf the chapel, the hospital chapton refe. e<Uo 01 n


— and atlded that he felt bound to put a c mark at the end of this (juestionable statement, hence


the many notices displayed — i ou ai t w nai > ou c* nouces uispia.vcvt Y * ,* « junction.


“You are what you eat?’ He suggested that two more such statements could


be considered — “You are what you think and ou are what you believe.” Our diet can only supply a


faint clue as to what we are. However, it has been established beyond all rea­


sonable doubt that the way we think affects us in every part of our body. If a person develops a stomach ulcer, it is possible


that its origin could he traced to family pressure being exerted upon him or her, pushing him or her beyond their powers. The ulcer could ho the result ol


the fact that we matter to the “one who is behind all


and in all things, God in Jesus.” The way we have a real life contact with Jesus can


affect us in many different ways, one of these at least relating to our general physical health. When Jesus brings new life into our being, our natural powers are energised with new power, enabling us to do our job better than ever before. Our health improves and there is no limit to the response the body can make when endowed with the new power installed by the


Holv Spirit.


health?” But, for the Christian, it is the privilege of being alive in Christ. To be aware of this is a moving and developing experience of God. We all have to live life’s many unanswered questions. Shining through those mysteries is always Jesus, saying: “I am the


There is no simple answer to the question: What is .


an over-burdened mind. What we think is governed by what we believe. If


" if we have spiritual health, so we are able to con­ tribute to the spiritual strength of others. We find


we feel that the whole world is against us, we -may become anxious and depressed, falling victim to all kinds of illness. The antidote would be to recognise


that we can also help them continue on the way


with Jesus. This can be a very satisfying exi^nence JOE STAnbr IbLD


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