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PrestonsGroup.Com © 01282720742 M r L REG ^


^ FORD Fiesta diesel


5 door, 12 months MoT, silver, well maintained, good condition, bargain


£395 Tel. 01282 456964


V or 07866 286152 ) M 6 to r c Y ile 5 / & b ^


2002


condition, excellent first bike, taxed March 2006, MoT till May 2006


£1 195 £290


\Tel. 07775 765 4 8y 1993


FORD Orion


Tested July 06, new tyres, brakes, e/w,


s/r, towbar, no Tax £350 o.n.o.


.Tel. 07974 606432, H REG


NISSAN Micra Auto, Tax and MoT


July 2006, 88,000 miles, very reliable car


£475 o.n.o. 01282 693743;


H Reg


^ SEAT IBIZA 6 months MoT, 6


months tax, good runner,


radio/cassette. £375 o.n.o.


ly^Tel. 01282 421229^ ^


J REG ^


PEUGEOT 205 6 months Tax, 11


months MoT, good runner, ideal first car


£350 ,T e l. 01282 839835 I ©laassifiedraifiyr www.cnTneroexoaay.co.uk _


Tel. 07957 477816 (anytime) X Reg


>


KYMCO-VIVIO SCOOTER


125CC, red, 12


months MOT and tax, 12,000 miles. Full service last week.


Tel. 077318 98793. £750 ono Private Cars for S ale ' > , - ■


1999 V R e g ^ RENAULT


MEGANE1.616v Alize5dr Hatch


Petrol, 94,500 miles, green. PAS, trip computer.


Drivers, passenger & side airbags, 6 CD. Nokia car kit. 12 months MoT, 4 months tax. FSH, all receipts for last 4 years. Always been totally reliable.


Excellent condition inside and out. A great car - especially for the price.


V Tel: 01254 825401 / 03 REG 2003


£1600 o.n.o. 07973 666808


^


PEUGEOT 206 I . I VERVE 5 door. 20,000 miles. Moonstone.


Immaculate condition. 1 owner from new. £5,500 o.n.o. 01282 854835


, ^


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^ otors mtfw Hyundar


Sonata 2.5 V6Auto Dual Fuel


Top spec luxury car.


' M Reg > FORD


Escort 1.3


5 door, MoT Nov, very reliable, good condition, full log book


£350 o.n.o. S_____V Tel. 07771 916508 / M REG X


P eugeot 3oe' 1.4CC, metallic blue,3 door hatch back,


alloys, 80k, no Tax or MoT, but good car


£500 o.n.o. ^ e l. 07976 10956^


^ VOLVO \ 440GL


Blue, 12 months MoT, 5 moths Tax, sun roof, central locking, new


starter motor & brake discs, absolute bargain


£495 kTel. 01756 796509> >


KYMCO Pulsar Luxe (Sports) 1 lady owner, 1800 miles, excellent


/ ^


Very cheap to run (LPG, 30p/L Long tax and MoT.


FSH, CC,C/L,ABS,CD,69k


^ Tel; 01282 616570 ^ ^


£249S 1995 M Reg


FORD Escort Estate LX Turbo Diesel


p.a.s, central locking, e/windows etc, 91000 miles, Aug '06 MoT& tax, economical and reliable


£590


Tel. 07875 672531 1995 N Reg


ROVER 418 GSD Diesel leather interior, alloy wheels, electric


sunroof, windows and mirrors, 1 owner


from new, 12 months test, 6 months tax, f.s.h


£850 o.n.o


_________ Tel. 01282 843409 1996


good condition £1,400


1997 ^


HYUNDAI Accent LSi Auto, 5 door, white, 56k miles,


\


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N , HONDA Civic 1.6 VTi 3 door, 48000 miles, 2 owners, e/w, e/s/r,


c/locking, alarm, ABS, radio CD, f.s.h, mint condition, taxed and MoT'd


£3500


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1997 LANDROVER


Discovery TDi XS, Blue metallic, 88,000 miles, 7 seats, Yi leather, alloys, twin


sunroofs, 6 cd auto changer, ABS, tow


pack, new exhaust, taxed, 10 months MoT £6,495 o.n.o.


^


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MERCEDES C l80 Classic Auto


full MoT, e/w, p.a.s, immaculate, alloys, full Merc service history


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1998 S REG N


VAUXHALL Astra 1.6 LS ' 5 Door, silver, 36k miles, 12 months


MoT, electric windows, power steering,


full service history, very good condition £3,250 o.n.o.


^ Tel. 01282 438924 a fte r 6 p.m. y ^


1998 S Reg N


VAUXHALL Vectra 1.6 Envoy Automatic


metallic dark green, 5 door, 37000 miles, 12 months MoT, 6 months tax, excellent condition


£2200 Tel. 01282 430830 (after 5 p.m) ^


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^ J N , 2000 W REG V.W. PASSAT SE 1.8L 20valve Azure Blue. MoT till June


Alloys. Climate control. Electric windows. Excellent condition


£3,695 ono 01254 823021


2000 W Reg HYUNDAI Lantra 1.6 Si


metallic blue 4 door saloon with extras. 1 careful owner, low mileage (41000), full


Hyundai service record, perfect interior, tax till December 2005, MoT till June 2006


£2300 (no offers) Tel. 01282 603677


2000 NISSAN Micra S


Full service history. Tax till Jan 06, 11 months MoT, 55,000 miles, sun roof, recent full service, radio cassette


£2,100 o.v.n.o Tel. 01282 459693


2001 Y Reg FORD KA COLLECTION


Silver, C/L. E/W. Very good condition, 42,000 miles, two lady owners.


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CD player, p.a.s, tinted windows, white, log lights, central locking, driver and passenger


PEUGEOT 306 1.9 D


airbags, only 2 owners from new, 12 months tax and test, first to see will buy, only


£2495 no offers Tel. 01282 831093 or 07932 810643 2001 Silver, 27,000 miles, 3 door, 2 owners, PEUGEOT 206 1.4 GLX


velour interior, CD player, air conditioning, alloy wheels. Excellent condition, serviced regularly, 12 months MOT, 6 months tax.


£3,900 >v ^ > y N, ^ > > ' > ' > ) ^ 1998 NISSAN Primera 1.6 GX


5 door hatch back, 1 main owner, service history, 76000 miles, 12 months MoT, taxed till Nov, e/w, c/l abs, air con,


excellent condition, genuine reason for sale £1595 o.n.o


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1999 T Reg BMW 318


\ £5800 Tel. 01282 697819 or 0789 9672022 1999 FORD Ka


40k, lady owner. MoT Feb. 2006, tax Aug. 2005, 6cd changer. Excellent runner.


£1600 ono. Tel: 07810 437033 Burnley. > ^ ^


black, immaculate condition, full sewice history, air con, CD player, recent MoT, first to see will buy


private vehicles for sale


2003


RENAULT Clio 1.2 I6v Expression


6 months manufacturers warranty and AA cover., 5 months tax, 23,000 miles. Genuine reason for sale.


£5000 ono.


\je l : 01282 616535 or 07748 83 88 0iy 2004 54


^ TOYOTA Yaris T Spirit 1.0


3 door, chilli red, CD, air con, p.a.s, sun roof, air bags, 1 lady owner, 4900 miles


£6995 Tel. 01282 430275 July 2001 Y Reg. RENAULT Clio Sport 1.2


5 door, Gunmetal grey, original alloys, alarm fitted, radio/cd, genuine 20,000


miles, battery still under guarantee, ew, cl, taxed July 2006, MoT June 2006. Fully serviced, immaculate condition. £4000 ono


y T e l: 0776575601 o r 01282 718503.y K REG 1993


^ FORD Fiesta 1.3 Ghia


Taxed and tested Dec 05, used daily, excellent runner, genuine reason for sale


£350 o.n.o. Tel. 01282 869632 or 07752 045023, T 1QQQ VOLKSWAGEN POLO I.4CL


Immaculate 3 door hatchback in Green. 2 lady owners from new. Only done 30,000 miles genuine. Recent full service. 12 mth MoT. 6 mths tax.


£2,500 07774 149875 / 01282 438540 > V Reg (cherished No) ALFA Romeo 166 TD 2.0


manual in silver, 59k miles, f.s.h, all orig. docs, tax & test till Feb '06, c/ control, alloys, ABS. airbags,


alarm, heated elec seals, elec s/r, windows etc plus r/cass +6CD, c/I, computer etc, cost new circa £25k, superb cond, a rare opportunity at only


£ 4 9 9 5 Tel. 07660 534637 (day) 01282 454993 (eces) ^ > > >


Prestons MINI 01282 720741


Clifheroe 422324 (Editorial), 422323 (Advertising), Burnley 422331 (Classified)


Valley duo star in


Lancashire


festival win RIBBLE Valley pair Jack Dewhurst and Andy Hutchins were key players in Lancashire Under 12s’ Festival win a t Taunton. Andy, of Ribblesdale


Wanderers, opened th e bowling in most games, taking vital early wickets ag ain s t Worcester and Somerset, and would have had more but for dropped catches. Jack, of Clitheroe, took


2-


3- 13 a g a in s t Kent, and against title rivals Devon, he hit 115 off 81 balls, his second 50 coming of just 27.


He then took two wick­


ets in his first over. The final game against


Hampshire was a formality and they won the festival comfortably, winning three games outright and claim­ ing two winning draws. I t was an excellent effort


by the boys, and the first time Lancashire Under 12s had won the event, which consists of five-50-overs- per-side matches, in six years. Jack has had his best sea­


son with the county so far both w ith b a t and ball, having a batting average of 45 and a bowling average of 12.


Crucial


victory for Chatburn


STEPHEN Booth turned in a superb all-round dis­ play to inspire Chatburn to a welcome 16-run victory a t home to Long Lee on Saturday. Booth hit an unbeaten


69, including eight fours and a six, as the home side made 162-8 after losing the loss and being inserted. And he then claimed 3-


38 off 15 overs as the visi­ tors were dismissed for 146 in the 44th over. With th e b a t , Steve


V Reg Africa grey, just had new front brakes & ALFA ROMEO 156


disks and a new front part on exhaust, tax till Feb 06, MoT July 06, multi cd player,


nice car, 56000 miles, p/s, a/c, alarm, abs, c/l


£3600 ovno k,__________Tel: 01282 859341 ^


^ Renault iSslgiSiie 1.6 RT ^ 5 door hatchback. Silver, 88,000 miles, 12


months MoT, 4 months tax, electric windows, sun roof, radio cassette, new exhaust, central locking. Excellent condition.


£1100 Tel: Mob. 07952 864136 __________or 01282 691919.________ J R Reg FIAT ULYSES 3 seatrer MPV.blue, 108.000 mis, 4 mths


tax, 10 mths MoT, towbar, well maintained and serviced, air con, airbags, exc family car


Vy^Tel. 01282 618499 / 01282 690416J \^Tel 01200 427138after 6.30 m on-fry £2,795 ono , ‘•1 ■ t ^ \


Pro c to r (37) and Andy Booth (20) were the other major contributors, with Rod and Andy Booth, and Russell Braithwaite all tak­ ing two wickets apiece in Long Lee’s reply. Chatburn seconds had


another nail-biting finish, beating Gargrave by two wckets. On a very difficult wick­


et, Gargrave elected to bat f irs t and found Paul Shomck unplayable, as he returned incredible figures of 9-10 as Gragrave were dismissed for 40. The other wicket taker


was Geoff Lambert. In reply, Chatburn lost


wickets a t regular inter­ vals, but an eighth-wicket stand between Aamir Zulfi (22) and John Moore (five not out) enabled Chatburn to edge home. The win kept the team in


third position.


www.clilheroetoday.co.uk


Clitheroe Advertiser STimes, Thursday, September 1st, 2005 67


READ won one and lost one in their double header weekend.


^■ P A T X ___________________ J l- _ i. _____ • i i . , V , , , Mixed weekend! Clitheroe Stay in title hunt ^ The locals faced an impossible task of knocking off


238 runs on Saturday against a rampant Earby - a tally they never looked looked like catching once the top order had been dismissed. Visitors Earby were put in to bat by the locals, but


the decision did not go in Read’s favour. Opener Sam Munns proved unstoppable for the


majority of the innings as he made 81, first alongside professional Mohammad Ayub (15) and then Stephen Pickles (9), both of which exited the field due to the bowling of Frank Barden, who finished with figures of 3-53. However, captain Chris Walton and David Watson


14 against Somerset and


soon added to the scoreline as fourth and fifth men in with 24 apiece, which, when coupled with a mid-order knock of 46 from Andrew daggers, knocked Read for six as the score soared towards the 200 mark. Walton was removed by sub-professional for the day,


Arif from Derbyshire, and Watson was removed by Andrew Rushton, who finished with figures of 2-67. So an undefeated 23 from Stephen Hipgrave along­


side Liam Pickup finished off the innings in style to post an impressive tally for the loss of seven wickets. In reply, Read struggled from the s ta r t as opener


Matt Doughty was caught behind by David Watson for the first of Steven Hipgrave’s six wickets. Only Nick Marsh (41) and Will Driver (43) showed


any glimmer of hope in the possibility of reaching Earby’s total, and once they had been removed, both caught to Liam Pickup off the bowling of Hipgrave, the game was as good as over. By comparison the rest of the order proved easy


pickings with only Arif (12), Tom Marsh (14) and Barden (11) reaching double figures as Hipgrave, Ayub (3-45) and Andrew daggers (1-22) ripped through the mid to late order to leave the locals 106 runs shy. However, Read bounced back to scoop the local


bragging rights in Sunday’s derby game at Padiham. The Whalley Road club took the game by 31 runs in


the end thanks largely to a half century from 16-year- old Will Driver and 44 runs from sub-professional Ganesha. The stand-in paid man also reaped 5-45 in a second


innings th a t also saw 4-64 from Chris Holt. Driver’s 50 came in 105 minutes off 88 balls, of


which seven knocks went to the boundary, and one was launched for a six. He also surpassed 700 runs for the club in his first season with the senior eleven, But the opener exited for 51 after Umar Saddique


had him caught by Gary Pethard for the first of the Padiham man’s 3-52, and Ganesha was brought to book by Naeem Ashraf off the bowling of Siddique. These two knocks were generally the bulk of Read’s


final 172, but a further 29 not out from Kyle O’Con' nor and 11 from Andy Turner added a little extra gloss to put the score just beyond Padiham’s reach. Qadeer Ahmed and Padiham paid man Kashif Sid


dique also removed two wickets apiece (2-44 and 2-67). In reply, Padiham did not have the best of starts as Ganesha quickly had Siddique out for a duck, followed


by Phil Metcalfe for a single. Only Umar Saddique (24) and Naeem Ashraf (65)


made sure that Read didn’t get it all their own way in a mid-order stand th at saw the latter reach his 50 in 80 minutes and 63 balls, taking in six fours and three


sixes. But Read fielded to maximum effect and took all


t h G ir c s tc h s s . Tom Marsh caught Saddique off the bowling of


Holt, and Michael Whalley made the catch off Gane­ sha th at had Ashraf heading back to the pavilion. Ashfaq scored 14 not out and Gavin Kelly reached


11 towards the end of the innings, but the bowling of Holt and the fa s t reactions of wicket keeper Kyle O’Connor finished Padiham off a t 141 all out as both Andrew Robinson and Qadeer Ahmed fell for ducks after James Ibbotson (7) and Pethard (2) had both


fallen to the sub pro. This weekend witnesses another helping of double


headers as Read are away a t Clitheroe on Saturday, and a t home to Ribblesdale Wanderers on Sunday, wickets pitched a t 1-30 p.m.


THE b a tt le for the Veka Ribblesdale League title is drawing to an exciting con­ clusion. Just three games remain


and one point separates Clitheroe from league leaders Settle in the contest for this year’s honours. Clitheroe briefly went top


on Saturday thanks to a six- wicket win at home to Eden- field. But Sunday’s entertaining


derby game across town at Ribblesdale Wanderers did not reap the necessary bonus points to keep them top. Saturday’s seven-pointer


came courtesy of Naeem Ashraf. The all-rounder first took 5-15 from 10 overs, and then smashed a half century in a comfortable victory. His first dismissal of the


game was the crucial scalp of Edenfield professional Babar Naeem, off the first ball of the game, caught behind by Simon Coulter. And once Ashraf got into


his swinging action, Mark Bums and Jim Flitcroft both faltered for a duck, and


Dominic Bulcock managed just five runs. Only Greg Smithson


showed resistance with 42, but he too succumbed to Ashraf, caught by Neil Bolton. Graham Kershaw chipped


in with 2-18, while Farouk Hussain took 3-21. In chasing Edenfield’s low


score of 113, Clitheroe lost the early wickets of Shahid Nawaz and Neil Bolton, both for five, and Chris Mus- son made nine before being bowled by Liam Bones. However, it was the fourth


\vicket partnership of Ashraf and Mark Bolton that saw the side to victory. The pair put on 90, with


Ashraf making 58 off 67 balls before his dismissal. He smashed eight fours


and a six, while Mark Bolton went on to finish the innings with 35 not out alongside Matt Coulter to see the side to victory in just over 26 overs. The following day a t


Church Meadow, Clitheroe eventually won the derby,


but two significant instances in the Ribblesdale innings denied them the full seven points. Ribblesdale won the toss


and put Clitheroe in to bat, and again Ashraf was the star of the show. After Ribblesdale’s David


Howard had removed Nawaz with a wicked ball behind to keeper Ryan Glad­ win for one, and Neil Bolton and Simon Coulter (16) had taken the score to 63, before the latter was also caught behind off Howard, Ashraf set the crease alight with an impressive 94 not out. His tally came off 79 balls


with eight fives and four sixes, with his biggest three shots clearing the roof tops on Brownlow Street. This knock, Neil Bolton’s


41 and Farouk B u t t’s 31 established a competitive total of 214-6 for Clitheroe. Bolton exited to a waist


height full toss off Gary Hunt th at he managed to hit, but his shot fell inviting­ ly to Howard. Butt and Ashraf put on 65


for the fifth wicket in good time, with the former’s 31 coming off 27 balls. In reply, Ribblesdale also


lost their first wicket cheap­ ly as Gladwin (4) was removed by Ashraf for the first of his 5-58. But it was the wicket of


Alistair Marsh (60) that cre­ ated Clitheroe most prob­ lems after the opener enjoyed a stay of execution. Marsh had made just five


when he had a huge nick but was not given out, and rode his luck, b a tting well to attain his half century. The usually steadfast


Mark Bolton also dropped captain Martin Briggs at cover, although Nawaz even­ tually bowled Marsh and Ashraf removed Briggs (71) with an inside edge to Coul­ ter.


However, the bowling


points proved elusive. Clitheroe face two home


games this weekend, against Read on Saturday, and Blackburn Northern on Sun­ day, wickets pitched at 1-30 p.m.


Wanderers slip to heavy defeat


RIBBLESDALE Wander­ ers suffered an eight-wicket defeat to title chasers Barnoldswick in the first of the weekend’s double header home fixtures. Barnoldswick put the


Church Meadow outfit in to bat first, and they made a pos­ itive start as both openers bat­ ted steadily. Gary Hunt, the more


patient of the two openers, went first for 12 with the score on 48 in the 12th over, and he was soon followed back to the pavilion by Ryan Gladwin, who was out for 36 as he returned a sharp chance to


Barnoldswick professional Jeeva Kulatunga. Skipper Martin Briggs and Alistair Marsh had a rebuild­ ing job to do, and took the score towards the hundred mark at the half-way point. Briggs was Kulatunga’s


next \nctim as he was caught behind for 17, and Marsh went for 19 an over later. At this point Ribblesdale


were struggling on 92-4 in the 25th over. Ribblesdale professional


Gerard De Bruin could only make three before he was out, leaving the locals reliant upon David Howard (20) and Dean Braithwaite (19) to try and


establish a total they could defend. Gareth McGuire also made


double figures as Ribblesdale closed on 157-9. In reply, De Bruin bowled


Luke Hodgson for four, giving Ribblesdale the early wdcket they badly needed. Kulatunga came to the


crease to support Nutter and he looked in ominous mood as he took to the Ribblesdale bowlers. Howard bowled well and


gave little away on a pitch that wasn’t really helping him too much. Kulatunga only faced 33 balls, but he made 41 and also


hit seven boundaries to give his team a real kick-start towards their target, before Howard got him leg before. Matt Nutter looked in good


touch as well and continued on his way, completing his half century with former Barnoldswick professional Raja ,4rshad (23 not out) in support.


Ribblesdale used six differ­


ent bowlers but were unable to make any more inroads into the Barnoldswick line up as they completed an eight-wick­ et win with 15 overs left, and Nutter unbeaten on 81.


Skipper Davies inspires Whalley to narrow win


WHALLEY captain Martin Davies guided his side to an 11-run victory over Baxenden on Saturday. The Station Road skipper contin­


ued his recent good run of form with the b a t with a p atient 67, leading Whalley to a tally of 152. However, Baxenden ran them close,


and at one point looked like winning as Hothersall (22) and Howarth (31) pu t on 44, only to fail to stay the course as Ilavid O’Neill (4-33) and Lee Burgess (3-75) rewarded Whal­ ley.


Baxenden won the toss and put the


locals in to bat. Davies opened with Lee Kearsley,


and they put on 37 before the latter was bowled by Baxenden paid man Indika Gallage for 10. However, Davies stay ed and


smashed five fours and a six in his steady innings off 123 balls. Professional Phil Thornton handed


Peter LTsher a return catch for a 30- ball two, but Alex Whelan made 17


before he was c au g h t by Galium Waddington off James Capstick. Richard Palmer (12) and the skip­


per took the score over 100 before Capstick dismissed him via the hands of Gary Sudworth. At this point Whalley were 112-4,


but after a further 12 runs alongside Andy Pratt, Davies’ stay came to an end when he was run out. P ra t t added seven before he too


was run out, while George Thomas made 15 from 11 balls. In reply, Baxenden had several


moderate scores from opener Mark Rishton (24), Usher (19), Russell Haworth (31), Danny Hothersall (22) and Ian Parkinson (21 not out) which could have been much more but for O’Neill, who took out three of the top scorers, and Burgess, who dis­ missed Rishton. Whalley also proved fast in the


field as three batsmen were run out for very little, w th the final two \vick- ets of Stephen Molloy (3) and Cap­


stick (0) leaving Baxenden on 141. The n ext day, again a t home,


Whalley were less fortunate against league leaders Settle. The Station Road outfit’s York­


shire v is ito rs quickly gained the upper hand once Davies (14) and Thornton (19) had been removed. From 42-1, Whalley collapsed to 64


all out in the face of some fine bowl­ ing from Paul Ridgeway (4-21) and Stuart Hornby (4-33). In reply, Whalley did well to


remove th e e ar ly wickets of Mohammed Hafeez and Thomas Davidson for ducks, only for the inevitable to occur as Settle’s Tim Green racked up 30 not out alongside Mark’Verden (11) and Keith Hornby (17 not out) to see the visitors to a five-wicket win in under 28 overs. This weekend Whalley are away to


Padiham on Saturday, and a t home to Barnoldswick on Sunday, wickets pitched a t 1-30 p.m.


THE Clitheroe Midweek Cricket League is appealing for new teams to join, to avoid folding after over 30 years’ existence. At it’s height, the league support­


Long-established cricket league appeals for new blood to avoid folding If there are any organisations out


Ribble Cement, I Cl and Flexible Iteinforcements have all competed. However for several years now,


ed 12 teams in two divisions, as over the years, village teams form Grindleton, Chatburn, Wadding­ ton and Hurst Green, pub teams like the Buck Inn, Brown Cow and New Inn, plus works teams from


the league has existed, quite satis­ factorily, on eight teams. Things are now becoming quite


desperate Prior to the start of the current


season, two teams dropped out, which meant that to have a mean­ ingful season, all teams played each


other three times. To make matters worse, another


team has been unable to fulfil its fix­ tures during the latter part of the season. The prospect of five teams com­


peting next term is not a viable option. The league is therefore looking to


recruit three new teams for next term.


there who feel th at they may be interested in joining the league, then further details can be obtained from the league secretary Fred Booth (424767). Without further support the


league will surely fold. Meanwhile, the curtain has fall­


en on yet another league season. Champions Rimington enjoyed


another success in their victory over Low Moor by seven wickets, while Calderstones sank to a new low of 16 all out as they lost to Chipping Ramblers by seven wickets. Riverside were again unable to


raise a team, thereby gifting the game to Chipping A.


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