i2 2323 (Advertising), Burn V
i Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, September 26th, 1996 | | S ® i 8 i l 8 l S
Clitheroe i2232i (Editorial), Wmm m m w __________________________________ ______ ^M m m s B s m i & M GATE^124 PIMUCO ROAD
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Prescription spectacles from £20, tints free. ERGENCY REPAIRS -
PAINTER AND
DECORATOR Tel:
Clitheroe 4 2 5 4 7 3
D. HARTSHORN Joinery Manufacturers and Building
Contractors
Rotten Windows, Fascia’s, Soffit Boards REPLACE THEM - TOP CLASS WORK Fully guaranteed
References if required, Grant work undertaken. Special rates for OAP’s
Tel: 01200 443524 or 0973 401853 Merrber of Federation of Small Businesses
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
BATHROOMS £199
TELEPHONE - RAYMOND LOWE Where quality counts
Free estimates
on Sabden 01282 773173 (Evening calls welcome)
Ribble Valley Council Approved Over 25 Years Service From Radio to Satellite NO JOB TOO SMALL
From houses to hotels Quotes and surveys
WALLBANK AERIALS Tel: 0 1 2 5 4 3 9 2 6 0 9
Mobile: 0 8 3 1 6 4 1 3 4 4 0 5 8 5 1 6 8 3 8 2
BLUES
New and second hand most types and sizes in stock
S P E CI AL O FF ER
Brand new 20” x 10” at 65p each plus VAT Discount for large orders
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NORTH WEST RECLAMATION LIMITED
T e l : 0 1 2 8 2 6 0 3 1 0 8
C LEA N SW E E P Cars & Carpets Caravans Trucks Office
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JOINEK/HMDYMAN AD household work undertaken.
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No job too small • All work guaranteed 9 am - 9 pm
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J o h n S ch o f ie ld Telephone:
CUtheroe 429217
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• ACCRINGTON Call or ting 01254 872061' Same day delivery :
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For all your domestic and commercial joinery needs.
For a friendly and personal service contact R . & P . H a r g r e a v e s
Joiners and Building Contractors The Workshop, Hail St, Clitheroe. Tell 01200426929
DEREK LEIGH TV RENTALS
Portable/Rexnote/Teletext from £7 per calendar month New 21" Remote T V ......................................... .£10.50 NewTeletexTV
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DUSTERS
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CompLhlive rates CAU. JANET OR SARAH ON
0 1 2 0 0 4 4 0 2 4 3 FOR FURTHER DETAILS
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR
PAINTING AND DECORATING
• Free Estimates • Special Rates OAP • • No Job Too Small • All Work Guaranteed •
Telephone: Whalley 01254 822248 Clitheroe 01200 443524
Mobile 0973 401853 • Member of Federation of Small Businesses • STONES f iLES NffTCIRffL PAUL ASHWORTH
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For FREE estaimates or advice
Tel: 01200 442134
New and reclaimed flags and crazy paving setts, curbs, etc N E W
Heads, Cills, Jambs, Mullions,
Quoins and Copings masoned to any shape or size
Also
Large selection of reclaimed DELIVERY SERVICE
NORTH WEST
RECLAMATION LIMITED T e l : 01282 603108
Children go green
A GREEN initiative to encourage children to recycle bottles is to be launched in the Kibble Valley.
Company plan to visit around 20 primary schools in the borough next year at a cost of £2,000 to* the council. I ts 40-minute show explains the history of glass and the reasons why glass recycling is important.
theatre visiting schools in the area. Bottle Busters Theatre
The council also plans to
revive its home compost ing scheme by supplying around 500 composting units to houses next year. Backed by funding from Lancashire County Coun cil, the council plans to sell the units for £10 each.
have given their backing to the bottle recycling education campaign which will involve a touring
Borough councillors OUR VINTAGE PLOUGHMAN
GRINDLETON lorry driver Henry Taylor has a date with des t in y n e x y month when, after 17 years of vintage ploughing, he takes on the country’s best at the national c h a m p i o n s h i p s in Goole, Humberside.
has been dreaming of suc cess in the championship for almost as long as he lias been working for Clitheroe-based animal feed m an u fa c tu re r B. Dugdale and Son.
The hulk feeder driver
petition ploughing after I went to a local rally and became in te r e s te d . I bought a vintage tractor and plough and it all went on from there.
successful for me. I won at many of the local matches in Lancashire and York shire and even qualified for the national champion ship, which was being s tag ed in Wellington,
“Last season was very
Somerset, but my tractor 12th. broke clown.”
this year and will be en ing on his 11)28 Standard s ta k in g ly re s to re d to route to tloole on October Fordson tractor and Rail- excellent condition.
He qualified at Dumfries here in action, will be rely- bought last year and pam- Mr Taylor, pieturecl p e t i t io n . B o th w e re smiles plough in the com- He said: “I started com Valley Matters = a weekly look at local issues, people and p
Agony of vu who are bullied
ast week’s sad story of bullying at a local school gives the lie to Ithe old cliche about "the best
days of your life”. A friend who had been bullied dur
ing her schooldays remembered how her father, comforting her, said that bullying was a sign of inadequacy and those who did it needed help as much as their victims. His advice to her was to stand up for
As I see it
in my working lifetime I have seen far too many instances of people being
picked on. Bullying is an increasing problem in
herself, which she did, ending the problem. Twenty years ago, it was safer advice to give than today and would not work for every child then. My friend is a feisty young woman and I am sure she was a brave little girl. Indeed, that might have been responsible for her being singled out, although I suspect her intelligence made her more of a target. The majority of children who are
put through this agony are picked on because they are vulnerable. They simply cannot stand up for them selves, so the responsibility falls on the school and their fellow students. Some of the most successful initia
business life as well. Senior manage ment pu ts middle management under ever-increasing pressure as the results of the latest management con sultants’ inquiry lands on their desks. Some middle management who can not cope then take i t out on their staff. I t is not just th a t people feel insecure in their jobs. Again and again you hear people say they do not enjoy them like they used to. For nearly 20 years, we have been
told that it is the precious freedom of the individual to look after them selves, a philosophy which reaches a peak with the Prime Minister’s asser tion that tax cutting is a moral oblig
ation. So in the workplace we have to take
tives against bullying have been oper ated by the children themselves, counselling both victims and perpe trators, trained and supported by members of staff. The problem is, how are schools to find the extra staff time to operate these systems? I t is too easy to think of this prob
lem as simply being to do with young people. My own trade is famous for its bullies. The late Robert Maxwell is only one example of the species and
on the bully ourselves. I t is true we have recourse to an industrial t r i bunal if we feel we have been wrong fully dismissed, but that is a complex business and demands courage and a resourcefulness which not many peo
ple have. In matters of taxation, the principle
is that the more we have in our pock ets, the more we can make our own choices as to what to do with it. That is a moral good, says Mr Major. But
we know that, for most of us, what eXtra income we might gam from tax
cuts is not going to “ akeJ:he r i c h est deference to something like the problem of our child being bulhedat Lhool. No tax cuts for ordinary peo ple will produce enough income to
PB uU h e ^ ^m e a n that there is less money available for education and
health, for housing, for social securi ty, for investment in the infrastruc ture of our society. People who work for the public ser
vice, like teachers and health work ers, will continue to stand still in the wages league as company directors and MPs stride ahead, justifying their increases in terms of compara bility, while demanding th a t wages stand still for the rest of us, in the interests of the battle against lnfla-
Workers in businesses where the cost
can be passed on will get their rises, but those who depend on the public purse will find themselves struggling And the teachers will have to try and explain principles of decency and care for others to children who have lived under this system, with these values, all their lives.
Tony Cliff
Aga cook Annie has the recipe for success
dinner prepared by Anton Edelmann, could be on the menu
by Marcia Morris A! .London, with
for a local lady. Way back in the spring,
Rimington resident Mrs Annie Farrimond entered a national competition launched in the Aga Maga zine. This week Annie (pic
tured) will receive a prize from Susan Brookes, ot the TV programme “This Morning”, for winning the regional round of the com petition to find the “Aga Cook of the Year.” She will also demonstrate her cook ing skills to an official judge at T. N. Cook’s shop, in Skipton. Ten regional rounds will be taking place in centres
throughout the country to find three finalists who will be invited to compete in a grand final a t Aga head quarters in Telford. To reach the regional final, Annie had to devise and submit recipes for a three- course dinner for two, using her Aga cooker, and die will now be required to cook the meal in three hours, using ingredients which should cost no more than £25. Annie, who has owned her
Aga cooker for only 18 months since moving to Rimington, enjoys cooking for pleasure and says the versatility of the cooker is quite amazing. Even bacon can be grilled
but, because there is no smell, she had one or two burnt rashers in the early days. I t is also particularly good for making stock and roasts, as food can be left in the slow oven for ages. In the regional final, she will demonstrate how easy pan cakes are to make on an Aga, using a special baking glide instead of a pan. Although, when younger,
luxurious night at the Savoy, in
lnerable ----------- .a ■■
■ ■ . RumleylSZSSl (Classified)
books and one-time televi sion cook who, coinciden
tally, will be one of the judges in the grand final,
together with Anton Edel mann, executive chef of the Savoy Hotel; Charles Cam pion, cookery editor of the
magazine, and Robert Joseph, the Sunday Tele graph’s wine correspon dent. Although a very busy lady, running a large house and looking a f te r her horse,
Work experience plugs Tracy into computer world
RIBCHESTER teenager Tracy Nuttall enjoyed her week’s work experience at a local bank, but she never dreamed it would plug her into the latest in computer technology. While Tracy (15), of Ribchester Road, was
Annie attended the Pru Leith School in London, she was not really interest ed in food and it was only in subsequent years she found she enjoyed cooking.
Recently, she attended a
demonstration by Mary Berry, author of 26 cookery
has won it. So the football-crazy Blackburn supporter who has been mourning the departure of Alan Shearer now has a multi-
working at the Longridge branch of the National Westminster Bank, she entered a national com petition organised by the bank. First prize was a top-line computer outfit worth £2,000 and Tracy
media Pentium computer and colour printer to cheer her up. Tracy also did a week’s work experience in the offices of
the Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, which gave her plen ty of time behind the keyboard of a personal computer, but unfortunately failed to produce one for her to keep. ’
for th e w e ek
people like us have been welcomed into their fellowship. The church has been described as a hospital for sin- sick souls. Our church is our spiritual home. I t is our Father’s house where we learn how to live and love together as a part of the family of God.
’hy are there no perfect Christian churches? I t could be th a t in the past,
that we are praying aloud to music. As we share in fellowship and worship in this way, we sense our common bond in Jesus and are inspired by his Holy Spirit.
many things with his disciples. He took bread and broke a piece off for each of them at the table, saying that it was his body and the wine repre
At the Last Supper Jesus shared When we sing hymns we often find
sented his blood. He told them to think as they ate the bread that they were taking him into their hearts and minds. He enlarged on the illustra
tion by asking them to consider the wine as his blood. In doing this, Jesus instituted the
sacrament of the Lord’s supper where we gather around the Lord’s table for the partaking of bread and wine in memory of him. This is a wonderful service of inspiration to many of us, as so often,when we have shared in this communion with our Lord, we feei renewed in mind and body. We have new spirit within us.
Most of us in church are aware that we need help to be the best that we can possibly be for Jesus. We need wise Christian guidance and counsel to help in the future.
When our spiritual insight comes
nnriIr!r0UF'h for 0 8 10 have a better we sometimes feel like
A t ,! ”8 ,h e™ rds of Simon Peter. “DmLrt fMh ° f '"S'Bht, he cried:
s w t t ’mmeOLord’ fo r Iam a n Lord understands we do not
draw^ r 3" 1 h’m t0 leave us and so
riSTh„?arer t0 11310 “ ahe things nght between us. Of course wefrel “™>rthy in the blessed p r in c e of Ight and radiance enables
sror r°minmutcgrso
h k l rw " th? we are unworthy of but are
e
^hankful to share in what is known CWstGrace ofo>n-Lord Jesus
Joe Stansfield
Smokey, Annie took the time to share her recipe for the main course with our readers. Turn to “Dish of the Week”, on page 9, to find out what she is cook ing.
W o r k o n d i s p l a y a t f i n e a r t
e x h i b i t i o n ARTIST Hilary Carr, of York Street, Clitheroe is to show her work at the 3rd Central Lancashire Fine Art Fair this weekend. She will be exhibiting
alongside Royal Cambri an Academicians, Man chester Academicians and Royal and Scottish Academy exhibitors. She will be showing a selection of her recent paintings in all media. The fair takes place at New Longton, Preston.
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