22.121 (Classified) 2 Clifhvroi* At li'crfiscr tC* Timex. J u ly Il l lt , W!Hi ^ 1
ADVICEAT MORNING
WiSt/SMtilW &ixA CLINIC
Between 10am and 12.30pm No appointment necessary No obligation
OUTNUMBERS >1254 872888 ' H254 265809
CARTER HOUSE 28 CASTLE ST, CLITHEROE BB7 2EH
TELEPHONE 01200 427228
heques for worthy causes
be visiting the Kib ble V a lley fo r a m u c h -a n t ic ip a te d
,ATFR this year a .roup o f ch ild ren ronfi Chernobyl will
holiday. Organisations am) ndividuals throughout
the area have been busy raising funds (» ensure
delighted to include the Chernobyl children among his charities. T h e P en (lie fo r
tbal’lbe holiday is one the children will Ion*! remember. Consequently, when Clitheroe Uolarian Mr
Romania group and NCI! Action for Chil dren also received che ques for £85(1. The sum of 11)00 was presented to Miss Elizabeth Trevor- Jones. the daughter of the late Rtn Harry Creaser. for the pur ch a se o f two p a rk benches in Clilheroe in his memory. Pictured is Mr Hail
Roland Hailwood ended his year of office as p r e s id e n t , he was
wood distributing some of the cheques at the conclusion of his year.
New presidents take over at local Rotary clubs
Valley Council chief is the new president of C l i th e r o e R o ta ry Club. Mr Philip Bailey, of
FORMER Kibble
Aim is to support the British Red Cross
Eriisford Road, Wadding- ton, took early retirement from his position as the council’s director of devel opment last year. He moved to the Ribble
Valley in 1979, when he was appointed the coun cil’s chief architect and planning officer. Pre viously, he was planning and engineering officer with High Peak Borough
Council, in Derbyshire. He was educated at
Mr Bailey S i M M ' E ' l OPEN ALL THE i L HOLIDAYS
EVERYBODY OVER 1000 BEDS AND MATTRESSES IN STOCK
WE HAVE THE PERFECT BED FOR
I AT UNBEATABLE PRICES. UP TO 60% OFF THIS WEEKEND
e.g. 5ft King Size SIcepeezee Senator (Beauty Rest, over 1,000 pocket springs) R .R .P .
SA L E PR IC E O N LY £ 4 6 5
FREE delivery and removal of old bed M y a * D BU S o gSfecpeott£ VI-SPRING SfentaMMBe*
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P.RESiTilG
EISUP.ER
' ^;'1;S7’MYEU (012M) 5562S/M5555 ^V> ,’;: . ^ OPEN SUNDAY l i -O O .m - *LOOpm B/EURN ONLY v
HART,STREET (NEXT TO TOMMY BALL) BLACKBURN T5T
, 40/12/14 BURNLEY ROADi PADIHAM. 01282 774993 ; ^ OPEN MONDAY TO SATURDAY
O.OO.tTI - 5.30pm
m m
ONE of the country’s top male voice choirs has been a good sport for a local club raising m o n e y
facilities. Nelson Arion Glee
f o r i t s
Union, which has won the Llangollen Kisteddfod five times, sang for Whalley Sports Club members and friends at Whalley Parish
entertained by the choir and approximately £500 has been raised towards the sports club’s National Lottery bid. Mr Harry Barlow, of the
Church. Over 150 people were
Newcastle High School, S ta f f o r d s h i r e , and obtained a Diploma in Architecture in 19G8, fol lowed five years later by a D ip lom a in Town Planning.______________
Plenty
of notes for club.
Following retirement Mr Bailey was appointed a
travel and he is a member of Bowland Pennine Moun tain Rescue. He is also a trustee to
Commitment to the next generation
the British Red Cross, an organisation he hopes to su p p o r t d u r in g his presidency. Mr Bailey, who has been
a member of Clitheroe Rotary Club for 11 years, is particularly keen to strengthen links with the club’s “twin”, in Assam, India. In the coming year, Clitheroe Rotary Club will
enthusiast and char te re d e n g in e e r Mr Richard Dugdale, of Park Avenue, Clith eroe. is the new driv ing force behind Ribb- lesdale Rotary Club. Mr Dugdalc. a director
VINTAGE t r a c to r of Timbermatic Products.
Chatham, said on^ receiv ing liis chain of office that young people would be the
continue to support the SuperScan Appeal, as well as several community projects, he said. Mr Bailey’s wife, Anne,
focus of his presidency and lie reiterated the club’s commitment to the next generation. He said the club would
non-executive director of James (27), works for a the Marsden Building ski-operating firm, after Society.
is a member of Tangent and the couple’s son,
His interests include in tourism and business horse riding and foreign studies._______________
having obtained a degree club.
Dugdale. who has been member of Ribblcsdale Rotary Club for 10 years, enjoys motor cycle trail r iding, inves tig a tin g rights of
way.computer: and restoring vintage trac
In his spare time, Mr f
tors and cars. He helped found th
Mr Dugdale
sponsor youth leadership courses, competitions for young inventors and school debating teams, and would forge closer links with Uolaract and t-lith- eroe Rotary Club. F o r th c om in g club events include a mammoth
cycle ride on September 22ml. in aid of the Life Kducation Trust caravan, which tours schools with advice on health and drugs
Club and is a past member of the Moreeambe Lay Tniction Engine Club, as well as a past chairman of the South Lancashire and North Cheshire branch of the National Vintag Tractor and Engine Club. Mr Dugdale is a gover nor of Itibblesdale High
Ribble Valley Vintage
issues. Plans are also underway
to host Rotarians from Yeli/.v Villacoublav. near Paris. Ribblesdale’s twin
C l i t heme 2 2 m (E d i to r ia l) ,
2^ S ^ VV^rPUPi1S JOi n i r r
in big
landscape survey
TWENTY geography stu d en ts from Chth-
eroe Royal Grammar School are taking part ; a nationwide project assess the state of
the UK landscape. They are currently ana lysing one square kilo
metre of the Chatburn Roia area of Clitheroe.
near to the school. The group is among
50 000 pupils from the 1 200 schools joining in Land Use-UK, a project set up by the Geographical Association to monitor how the nation s land is
bCStudents are recording
the land use on a grid map and will then transfer the information to school computers. The data wall then be assessed by the Institute of Terrestrial Ecology in the autumn and the results of the Land Use-UK survey will be published during Geo-
join
Jrrmhv Action Week SoTnfber 11th to 17th) i The survey will also
nvestigate new- trends such as the growth of su-
perstores, modern bousing developments and the
installation of satellite and communications towers. The young su rv ey o rs across the country will be
asked to record their own feelings about the state of their local environment and to predict what it will be like in the 21st century. This will be the first UK
land use survey for three decades and only the third
this century.
School and his wife. Ste phanie.teaches at Gisbum Primary School. The cou ple have four children — Richard (21), Joanne (22). Paul (14) and Martin (18).
T e s t in g t im e f o r f i r e - f ig h t e r s
BEING a retained fire-fighter requires dedica tion, but it is also a refreshing job. Fire-fighters usually Ciitheroe’s fire-fighters
have jobs and families to take part in regular train- keep them fully occupied, jng exercises at the sta- but they drop everything tion, in Princess Avenue, when their bleepers go off. They also take regular They rush to deal with refresher courses at their incidents in our district training centre in Chorley and beybnd, and they have an(if 0nce a month, they a great deal of false alarms are involved in a simulated to give them more than major incident for East the occasional headache. Lancashire. But this is only half the Recently. Clitheroe dis-
Insulin appeal
Farmers in • bid for
beef aid
FARMERS in the Ribble Valley are supporting the NFU’s bid for retrospec- . tive compensation since the onset of the beef
crisis.The European Union . has announced a £112m. aid package for the beef industry and farmers* representatives in the North-West are stressing that the money must be used to compensate beef. ] producers for their losses on the sale of prime beef animals since the crisis began in March. The package has to be
story. Every Monday. lr}ct held one such exer cise, at Waddow Hall, with station officer Dave McGrath co-ordinating the event. It involved eight engines and the special unit from Accrington. Nine dummies were
IF YOU have suffered from diabetes and have
been injecting insulin for more than 50 years, scien tists are looking for you. The British Diabetic
village’s Swan Hotel, sponsored the evening and provided food for the
event.The Sports Club chair man, Mr Malcolm Douglas, said that the success of the event could lead to future concerts. Mr Douglas is pictured
____
Association says that the length of time a sufferer has been using the treat ment could mean that the genes are special. A study of them could help others who su f fe r from the
complaint. The association believes
receiving the sponsorship cheque from Mr Barlow, surrounded by choir members.
there are 1,000 or so peo ple who have used the treatment for this length of time and it would like them to call on 0800 607060.
paid by the end of Septem ber. North West NFU senior policy adviser Mr
Rodney Bacon said: “I t * would be natural justice to ,
placed in the building and a simulated fire and rescue was enacted. Fire-fighters had to retrieve the dum mies, set up a first-aid post, bring water up from the river and organise themselves in a way best suited to dealing with the emergency. The exercise lasted two
help those farmers who have continued to supply the beef market since March 20th — many of them at a great cost to their businesses. Prices have been between £150 and £250 per head down on pre-scare levels and many have found that the price they received for their animals has barely covered their costs.” The NFU is urging all
hours and, according to Mr McGrath, went according to plan. These exercises take
r e t r o s p e c t i v e compensation.
place in a different district of East Lancashire every month. They are aimed at familiarising the brigade with the area’s larger buildings, in the event of possible incidents there. Ciitheroe’s fire-fighters
u p To the seaside
have dealt with about 120 incidents already thjs year. Anyone interested in becoming a retained fire fighter can call in at Clith eroe station on Mondays,
between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Three of Ciitheroe’s
fire-fighters are pictured saving a dummy at Wad dow Hall.
Planning in pipeline
PLANS for the erection of 15 dwellings at the site of the former St Denys’ Chil dren’s Home, Pimlico Road, Clitheroe (number 0254) are among the latest applications submitted to Ribble Valley Borough C o u n c i l P l a n n in g Department.
ble glazed window at 8 Elkcr
The Aladdin’s cave of Britain’s best buys.
with loft conversion and renewal of planning permis sion (8/91/blU9) at Biker
Mews, Whalley Road (0:155). Front and rear dormers
ble garage at 19 Pimlico Road
(0:153). Application for a certificate
Lodge, formerly The Sheiling, Elkcr Lane, (0807). Clithcroe: Erection of dou
of lawfulness for a proposed use to erect a fence to act as a boundary at 87 Moorland Crescent (0858). Application for determina tion in respect of proposed a-
at The Crofters, Paythome (0865).
To make sure you g et to th e trea su re first, open up Exchange & Mart every Thursday.
To advertise call 0345 680 680. .
http://www.exchangeandmart.co.uk
ter Road, Dinckley (0I9N). (fisburn: Erection of porch Lane,
I torc
Grindleton: Change of use from com m u n i ty su b -p o s t
Other plans include: Millington: Hardwood dou
office to residential at 2 West View (08(51). Newton: Siting of mild steel
sculpture, depicting local buildings and animals and painted with Hanunerite paint (grey with colour highlights) at Newton village (0852).
former school to one dwelling, demolition and rebuilding of out-building, erection of three-ear garage and new access at Pendleton School, Main Street (0:157).
Pendleton: Conversion of
and building as store for agri- c u l t u r a l go od s a t garage/workshop, Kell Road (0859).
grieultural/forestry devel opment for storage barn for hay and farm implements at New Maries Farm. Roches
had its q u a r te r light smashed bv vandals while it was parked on a Clith eroe ear pari;.
AVandals strike GREY Jeep Cherokee
the vehicle, which was parked on Kdisford Road car nark,is valued at £150. The offence took place
The damage caused to
between 8-05 p.m. and 10- 15 p.m. on Wednesday last week.
IT’S FULL STEAM AHEAD A STEAM train to Carlisle will be running through
Clitheroe tomorrow. West Coast Railway is running a 285-mile main-line
steam tour from Carnforth, south to Clitheroe and Blackburn, and then north to Skipton and Carlisle. After a 2,/>hour break in Carlisle, the train will
return. Anyone interested in travelling on the steam train
should call 01524 732100- HWOMPN 6 DY ORO OE
For the ultimate in quality fully reinfnrroH.8? .06 assured. doors and conservatories. y nforced white or woodgrain UPVC wine Hardwood and Aluminium windows
Large selection of:- Vertical. Roller a n d V ^ S m n d s .
, Fitted by our own Craftsmen 10 Yeai
Proprietor owned and run with personal
for a certificate of lawfulness for an existing use of land for parking a commercial vehicle
Waddington: Application
MEMBERS of Trinity Ladies* Afternoon Fellow ship and friends found the su n sh in e when th ey visited Cleveleys. , Leaving Ciitherue in pouring rain, the party
farmers to contact their MPs to stress the need for
arrived at the coast to blue skies and perfect weather for browsing round shops before tea at the Method ist Church. The party
wpre invited into the church for half an hour of hymn singing of their choice before leaving for home.
The Local Company you can trust!!
VIE DO NOT
...Inflate prices so that we can offer huge discounts. WE DO
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OFFER...top
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SNAYGILL IND. ESTATE T n S
AS A WE -rnrn = 01756 79 . i'HE P n g an esign
Established 10/12 EK
E lanin d D
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