26 Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, June 26th, 2004.
www.clitheroetoday.co.uk
Clitheroe 422324 (Editorial), 422323 (Advertising), Burnley 422331 (Classified) Clitheroe 422324 (Editorial), 422323 (Advertising), Burnley 422331 (Classified)
wwwxlitheroetoday.co.uk Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, June 17th, 2004 27 of the f e 1 - \ l i f,\* ■' J V vCd ‘si a olfolS A GOOD hair salon can make you
look and feel a million dollars. Not just by giving you the latest look or
a style which is just right for you, but through friendly service and high levels of customer care. All of these elements combine to help
make a trip to your favourite salon a plea sure to anticipate and savour. Here in the Ribble Valley we are blessed
with a wealth of hair salons and studios catering for every need. Whether you want to mimic the latest
style of your sporting hero or need a stylist who knows just the look you want and how to achieve it every time, you never need leave the Valley. Now we are looking to crown the cream
of the crop in the Clitheroe Advertiser and Times’ Hair Salon of the Year 2004 com petition. From the finalists featured on this page
CLITHEROE Advertiser and Times catergory sales manager Lisa Rudgyard-Stenson presents Heather Mitton, proprietor of Hair Care, Clitheroe, with the trophy after its success in last year’s competition (T150703/02)
we want to know who is top of the crops and who is a cut above the rest - even if only by a hair’s breadth. And it is up to you, the reader, to decide. There is a lot to consider when choosing
Hair year I think the hair salon of the year is
Your name.................................... Address.........................................
Postcode....................................... Daytime Tel No.............................
Please send your entry to: Hair Salon of the Year Competition
| Clitheroe Advertiser & Times, 3 King Street, Clitheroe by 24th July 2004 l East Lancashire Newspapers Ltd will use the information you have given us for the purpose of processing your request,
| / or mail. □ ! 01254 822323
- .nUudrng foi vertification and credit control purposes. From time to time we and other companies in our group also ha»e aome g« eat offers and special promotions and we would like to be able to share your information with these ».ompanie». Please tick the box if you do not want us or other companies in our group to contact you by telephone and
-
Winners of the 2003 hair salon of the year competition -
Professional Team of Stylists We can create up to the minute styles
Blow Wave • Razor Cutting • Dry Cuts • Traditional Shampoo & Set Childrens Trims • Colours - Foils, Spatula etc Our Experienced &
Qualified staff are here to help See us for a Special Offer with Jackie
OPEN as usual throughout the summer holidays O P E N I N G T IM F .S :
Tuesday - Friday 9.00 a.m. - 5.00 p.m. Saturday 8.00 a.m. - 1.00 p.m.
Tel: 01200 423793 or call in at
18 PARSON LANE, CLITHEROE to make an appointment
RAWSONS HAIR DESIGN
Unisex Salon for
Since opening in 1998 this stylish studio nos gone from strength to strength offering the very latest in colour ana styling ideas.
With an experienced and
friendly team of 10 stylists all qualified to high standards and a vast array of
knowledge you won’t fail to be impressed.
The latest introduction to the
studio is the ergoline sunbeds, the very latest in tanning beds.
Monday to Thursday 9am-9pm Friday 9am-6pm
Saturday 9am-4pm P H
Precision Cutting and Creative Styling by experienced and friendly Stylists
Vote to decide
who is cream of crop of Valley hairdressers
your favourite salon. First and foremost, does the stylist create the look you want, not just once but every time? Is it perfect in every detail, or do you
find yourself with scissors and mirror in hand when you get home? Maybe you do not know the style you
want, so can your s ty lis t give expert advice, drawing on his or her skill and experience to know what look will suit you best? Does your favourite salon offer a com
prehensive range of treatments, everything from colouring and highlights to perms and extensions? Do the staff have a good knowledge of
the numerous products available to thick en, tone, colour, cleanse and moisturise hair of every length, colour and texture? Once they have styled your hair, can
they advise you how best to look after it until your next visit? Then there are all the little extras that
can make a visit to a salon a special treat. For example, is the salon warm and wel
coming, comfortable, clean and tidy. Are you made to feel at home by staff
who take a genuine interest in you and your needs? All these things and more besides will
determine who claims the title of Hair Salon of the Year 2004, and that decision is yours to make. Simply fill in the coupon on this page
and deliver it by hand or post it to: The Clitheroe Advertiser and Times, 3 King Street, Clitheroe, BB7 2EW. Please mark your envelope “Salon of the
Year” and make sure it reaches us by next Thursday, June 24th. The winner will receive an engraved cup
and free advertising worth £200, and, of course, be pictured receiving the coveted Hair Salon of the Year award.
.. E 4
f •• Campaign for village memorial by Margaret Parsons
A SABDEN man is concerned that the village has no memorial to its war dead which is accessible to all. Mr Simon Mount feels strongly that
there is no permanent memorial in the centre of the village.
And when the whole country celebrat
ed the 60th anniversary of the Normandy landings on D-Day he feels it is even more
poignant to remember the village’s war dead. There are two memorial plaques - but
one is in the parish church and one in the primary school - which he says are not only out of view to people most of the time, but are also incomplete. He says there are at least 19 men from Sabden who died during the two World
Man (34) could not accept end of affair
A LANGHO man hanged him self days after his girlfriend had finished with him. An inquest heard that Gary
Peter Oddie (34), of Moorland Road, did not want to accept th a t his relationship with Heather Townsend was over. The last thing he said to her
before taking his life was: “I know what I am going to do now.” Miss Townsend told the
inquest that she thought he was going to smash her flat up or damage her car. Mr Oddie, was found hanging
from the attic space at his home by his father, Mr John Oddie. He said he was not aware the
relationship with Heather had ended until after his son’s death. Miss Townsend said she had
ended the relationship on the Saturday before the Easter weekend. She said Mr Oddie did not
want to believe it was over and kept going round to her flat, phoning and texting her. “He was having difficulty accepting that I wanted to
move on with my life,” said Miss Townsend. She last spoke to him on
Sunday, April 11th, while she was in the Knowles Arms. She said he seemed fine. “He wanted us to try again
and didn’t want me to tell him it was over, the same old thing really,” said Miss Townsend. “At the end of the conversa
tion he said he knew what he was going to do.” She said Mr Oddie had never
said anything to make her think he was going to do him self any harm. Recording a verdict that Mr
Oddie had killed himself, coro ner Mr Michael Singleton said that had Mr Oddie been able to get through the moment of crisis, everything could have turned out differently. “In the cold light of day I
am sure he would have seen things differently,” said Mr Singleton. “That he acted as he did and
brought about so much distress can only be described as a
tragedy.”
Bank holiday revellers raise cash for charity
BANK holiday DalesRail travellers raised £215 in a charity raffle. The annual charity day was
an overwhelming success rais ing more money than previ ous years. Organised by First North
Western, Lancashire County Council and the Rosemere Cancer Foundation, the fund raiser topped last year's efforts and helped in raising the profile of Rosemere. This is a charity which pro
vides support for cancer ser vices in the Lancashire and South Cumbria area. Sue Thompson, chief offi
cer for Rosemere, explained: "We were delighted to be involved with the DalesRail
Charity Day this year. The money raised will go to fund additional projects in the Cancer Centre at Preston and the smaller local cancer units which often make all the dif ference to patients receiving treatment for cancer in this part of the North West. The first prize of a luxury
overnight stay and evening meal for two at the Gibbon Bridge Hotel, Chipping, was won by Mr J. D. Wilkinson from Penwortham. Runners-up received tickets
for travel on First North Western trains, entry to the Ravenglass and Eskdale Steam Railway and tickets to Camelot theme park at Charnock Richard.
Call our Newsdesk on 01200 422324
Manufacturing Programme (AMP) has been created to provide them! AMP is an intensive 4-year training programme developed by Pendle Training in association with leading technical organisations, already backed by some of East Lancashire’s biggest names. It’s a direct response to the shortage of qualified people in the region, as manufacturers have a tough time recruiting young people with the right skill requirements for increasingly high tech jobs. AMP learners will have the skills and knowledge to progress into high pro file positions, typically, product designers, manufacturing engineers, management and technicians.
L
Unlike a degree course at university, AMP will provide hands on experi ence in a company. Much of the training will be project based, focus ing on real-life business situations so students will get valuable experience from day one. With suitable graduate job vacancies becoming more difficult to find, AMP is the ideal way to start a professional career. Students will be fully employed and paid by one of the areas leading manufacturing compa nies. At the end of the programme they will have gained a foundation degree in Engineering but more importantly 4 years of real industrial experience.
AMP combines expertise at Pendle Training with a network of industiy experts and organisations including Warwick University, the Manufactur ing Institute, Burnley College and Salford University. The majority of the training will take place at Northern Technologies new Advanced Manu facturing Centre, which opens later this year in Burnley.
“Elements of the programme such as computer aided design, lean manu facturing and machining are key.’’ Said David Greenwood, Rolls- Royce’s Barnoldswick Training Man ager. “We already work with universi ties so its good that these are involved.” Rolls-Royce are now in the process of recruiting graduate
Wars whose names are not on the plaques. He has done a lot of research for a website on ex-Servicemen of Sabden and one such war hero who died in action in 1944 and whose name is not on the plaques is Lt Charles Jeffrey, pictured. Lt Jeffrey came to Sabden in 1919 from
Portugal with his parents, Robert and Jane, and older brothers John and Robert, to stay with Mrs Jeffrey’s sister, Mrs Annie Wood, in Rydal Mount, Whal- ley Road. The two sisters, who hailed from Scot
land, had met their Sabden-born hus bands while working in Lisbon, Portugal. Mrs Wood's husband, Raymond,
returned home to his native Sabden with his wife and family at the outbreak of the First World War so he could enlist with his friends, and tragically died of pneu monia in 1918 while serving in India.
The Jeffrey family lived in Thorn
Street and Watt Street, Sabden, and attended Sabden Council School. When he was 15 the family moved to Burnley when his father became caretaker at Ebenezer Baptist Chapel. At the outbreak of the Second World
War when Charles was working as an accountant, he enlisted in the RA0C, serving in France until the evacuation of Dunkirk in 1940. On being commissioned in April 1943 he was transferred to the Royal Artillery. In June 1942 he returned to Sabden
where he was best man at the wedding of Mr Harold Bridge and Miss Marion Parfitt - a couple who still live in Sabden. He was introduced to their friend, Alice Wood, who served in the WAAF as a driv er to famous Blackpool organist Reginald Dixon, then an RAF officer. Romance
blossomed and they were married at Sab den Baptist Chapel in July 1943. Lt Jeffrey joined the East Lancashire
Regiment and the following June, at the age of 25, went out to France. His compa ny was sent to the Caen area of Nor mandy where the Germans had so far repulsed the Allies’ attempts to capture the town. On July 16th his company came under heavy enemy fire and he was killed. He is buried in the Fontenay-le- Pesnel war cemetery. Mr Mount says Lt Jeffrey still has fam
ily in the area and his name should be remembered for posterity. Some time ago he brought up the mat
ter of a permanent memorial with Sabden Parish Council, but says he did not receive enough support. Now he says he will continue his research and wonders if anyone else feels as strongly as he.
HAVE YOU GOT WHAT IT TAKES?
Training programme looking for young engineering talent
ancashire’s manufacturing com- pss;sp panies need skilled, talented young people. And the Advanced
engineers and apprentices, with AMP playing an integral part in providing an alternative option in terms of grad uate recruitment, complementing its existing programmes. “And of course, our apprentices enjoy receiving a wage at the same time.” Added David.
ADVANCED: Manufacturing offers high-tech career opportunities Another example of technological
AMP will be part of Hycrome’s recruit ment plans this year too. David Anderson said Hycrome encourage staff to go as far as they can, and really invest in the individual through out their careers:
“New technology will help us stay competitive in the future. We have some of that technology already, but are also focused on the need for young people to come through and help develop it further.”
development in East Lancashire’s manufacturing industry can be seen at Smiths Aerospace Components- Burnley Ltd. Parent group Smiths Aerospace has recently invested £6 million in its new Burnley plant and expansion plans are continuing for the global group. ‘The AMP pro gramme will certainly help us to recruit a higher calibre of apprentice and they can progress to achieve a degree here.” said Head of Human Resources Emma Noble.
A limited number of places are now available on the AMP programme. For more information contact Julie Wilmore at Pendle Training on 01282 724200 or email
info@pendletraining.org
W pendietraining
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