New Milton Advertiser 27th Nov 2020

Friday 27th November 2020 · 21

news@adt.press · advertising@adt.press · 01425 613384

HURST POINT TIDES Nov/Dec H.W. L.W. Sat. 28 0918 2138 0233 1458 Sun. 29 0948 2203 0310 1533 Mon. 30 1017 2233 0345 1607 Tue. 1 1043 2306 0420 1640 Wed. 2 1118 2343 0454 1713 Thu. 3 1154 — 0528 1748 Fri. 4 0025 1233 0604 1824 Sat. 5 0113 1321 0643 1906 LyMINgTON TIDES (1st hw) Nov/Dec H.W. L.W. Sat. 28 1117 2343 0241 1507 Sun. 29 1149 — 0318 1542 Mon. 30 0011 1217 0354 1616 Tue. 1 0039 1245 0429 1649 Wed. 2 0116 1201 0504 1722 Thur. 3 0018 1232 0539 1756 Fri. 4 0054 1308 0614 1832 Sat. 5 0137 1351 0652 1911 high tides applied to hurst Point times: Barton, Highcliffe, 10 mins later. Beaulieu rivermouth 20 mins later. Low tides: Barton, Highcliffe, 10 mins earlier. Beaulieu rivermouth 25 mins earlier. Although care is taken in the preparation of these tables, the publishers are not responsible for any consequences that may arise from inaccuracies. Tide predictions do NOT include meteorological effects.

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Lamp vandals...Forest entry charge...court cold 75 YEARS AGO COL. Oliver Crosth- want to live with their parents or “in-laws”.

26 zones, it is recommended, should be made car-free. An- other factor to which consid- eration is given is that with the expansion of motorways the Forest will become more accessible to Londoners. * * * * * * THE present ban on the fell - ing of New Forest hardwoods is to continue – at least, for the time being. This was decided upon by the minister of agri - culture, Mr James Prior, after he had spent Monday morning being taken on a tour of the New Forest to investigate the conditions of the timber felling controversy. In pouring rain, the minister toured the Forest, spending four hours seeing some of the felling and inspecting some of the woodlands earmarked for felling. He said that the problem was of the Commission keeping a proper balance between con - servation in the Forest and the commercial exploitation of the timber. This balance wanted re- consideration. * * * * * * A SUGGESTION that the New Forest be policed by squads of men on motor cy - cles and horseback was made by Mr R. Wakeling at the New Forest verderers’ meeting at Lyndhurst. Referring to the recent Brit - ish Legion refuse collection in the Forest (Operation Clean- Sweep), Mr Wakeling said that they had made a tiny impres - sion. Already, he said, the Forest was being advertised for the new population of south-east Hampshire in the 1980s and people were being offered what appeared to be a free takeover of fresh air and rec- reation.

Only if there were uniformed police in the area, said Mr Wakeling, would the public be dissuaded from fouling an- imals’ grazing. Newspaper or radio appeals were useless. “They are that kind of people,” he declared. 25 YEARS AGO MAGISTRATES at the new Lyndhurst Court on Monday staged a walkout in protest that they were too cold. The heating went wrong in No. 2 court and the three JPs, Mrs Olga Soper, Mrs Brenda Timms and Mrs Catherine Garfath, endured the cold for nearly two hours before rising. The Bench heard all cases where defendants were pres - ent before their walk out. They resumed in the afternoon in Court 3, a converted former police house. * * * * * * A DRAMATIC increase in the number of cases of asth- ma cannot be attributed to air pollution, New Forest council - lors heard last week when they pledged to call on the govern - ment to provide additional funding for research into the condition. Emissions from industries on the Waterside were thought to be responsible for a cluster of asthma cases in the area until the Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollution, chaired by Prof. Stephen Holgate of Southampton University, com - pleted its investigation. The report concludes that the effect of air pollution on asthma sufferers is “generally small” and relatively unimpor - tant when compared with oth - er factors such as infections and allergens known to pro - voke asthma.

waite-Eyre, MP for the New Forest Division, told the mem- bers of Milford-on-Sea Wom- en’s Conservative Association, at their annual meeting on Saturday, of some of the dif- ficulties he experiences as an MP in getting any satisfaction, or even replies to questions, from some government de- partments. One woman asked him: “Are we to be denied the privacy of our homes again by being compelled to take in billet - tees?” He said: “Regarding billet- tees, it is a difficult question. It is most unpleasant to have to share one’s own house, but there is this about it – and I speak from personal expe - rience – many people are in absolutely desperate straits. Many people returning from the Forces have nowhere to go and if anybody can take in a couple they will be doing a very great service to the coun- try. Some people are having to live in summer houses with no cooking or washing facilities. They write pathetic letters to me and all that I can do is to send them on to the local au- thorities.” * * * * * * REAR ADMIRAL H. S. Cur- rey again raised at the New Forest Rural District Council on Monday the point that the people of Brockenhurst were getting anxious and agitated at the delay over preparation for going ahead with housing there. The parish, he said, was making the fourth highest contribution in the district to the rate fund, and there were 200 married men coming from the services who would not

The clerk (Mr A. E. N. Ash- ford) observed that between the two wars Brockenhurst was provided with about 50 council houses. Some of the other parishes had none. Lyn - dhurst was one; Beaulieu was another. The Ministry of Town and Country Planning had not accepted the South Weirs site, as it was felt it was separated from the village by too much open country, but the minis - try was still being pressed to agree to the site. * * * * * * WANTON damage to street lamps and other amenities was the main topic of discus - sion at a Ratepayers’ Associ - ation meeting in Lymington Parish Hall on Monday. Field Marshal Sir Cyril De- verell (president), mentioned that the council was appealing to residents to help bring the offenders to justice. Lt-Col. The O’Doneven said he thought the trouble was due to a psychological cause. Mr W. Torrington suggest- ed youth might be taught to appreciate the value of public property by elementary les - sons on local government in schools. Ald. E. H. Marshall consid- ered inadequate punishment was meted out by the Justices where causes of wilful damage were proved. 50 YEARS AGO A CLOSURE of all but 200 of the 1,200 vehicle entry points to the New Forest, and a charging system for those who enter the area, are two of the highly controversial recommendations made in the “Conservation of the New

Forest” report, prepared by officers drawn from the For - estry Commission, Hampshire County Council, the Nature Conservancy, New Forest and Ringwood and Fordingbridge Rural District Councils and the Forest verderers. For as part of the new “pay for the privilege of visiting New Forest” scheme which the con- sultants have devised, 1,000 vehicle entry points would be blocked off. And once the cars had en- tered the Forest area, they would be progressively chan - nelled into some 140 special - ly prepared localities. Some bridge, on the A337 entrance into Lymington. “I’ve never had this happen before,” he told the A&T photographer at the scene. 25 YEARS AGO: Thirty-nine- year-old John Norman, of Grimsby, has been driving heavy goods vehicles for the past eight years but he blotted his copybook on Wednesday when his 12-wheel trailer became wedged under Ampress

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Shades Of Red P S E R L C A R M I N E N O W L N T J M T E L R A C S R T S M H O R I D N K B A X I Q G J E D O O W E S O R U S T C W Q S F U O R J O D S G S C U S E H O O U A A I W R M H X A T P R D B N M N M T A E I J U T U W Y R A A P X A S G F R S T U L D V L R K U T P V B A C T Q O U N S A T N E B S N T V N S G A C I N U Y P E G R R L A J F U K P T U B U R G U N D Y L H O L O H H S I R S B A B W L E B T E N R A G Y R U S S E T E V J Z S E K W F L A M E T X

CROSSWORD 316

WORDSEARCH 316 SHADES OF RED

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Calmore

FORDINGBRIDGE

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New Forest National Park

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Bournemouth Airport

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QUIZ 316 ACROSS 1 - Strongbox (4) 3 - Presiding officer (8) 9 - Kind of abbreviation (7) 10 - Opinions (5) 11 - Corresponding; proportionate (12) 14 - Limb used for walking (3) 16 - Display freely (5) 17 - Lyric poem (3) 18 - Place of conflict (12) 21 - Ball of lead (5) 22 - Eight-sided polygon (7) 23 - Reassured (8) 24 - Nervy (4) Across 1 - Strongbox (4) 3 - Presiding officer (8) 9 - Kind of abbreviation (7) 10 - Opinions (5) 11 - Corresponding; proportionate (12) 14 - Limb used for walking (3) 16 - Display freely (5) 17 - Lyric poem (3) 18 - Place of conflict (12) 21 - Ball of lead (5) 22 - Eight-sided polygon (7) 23 - Reassured (8) 24 - Nervy (4)

DOWN 1 - Barely (8) 2 - Public meeting for open discussion (5) 4 - Meat from a pig (3) 5 - Animal lacking a backbone (12) 6 - A very skilled performer (7) 7 - Facial feature (4) Down 1 - Barely (8) 2 - Public meeting for open discussion (5) 4 - Meat from a pig (3) 5 - Animal lacking a backbone (12) 6 - A very skilled performer (7) 7 - Facial feature (4) 8 - Not discernible (12) 12 - Foam or froth (5)

RUBY RUSSET RUST SANGRIA SCARLET

LAVA MAROON RASPBERRY REDWOOD ROSEWOOD RUBY RUSSET RUST LAVA MAROON

CHESTNUT CRIMSON FLAME GARNET GULES

SUDOKU 316 AMARANTH AUBURN BURGUNDY CARDINAL CARMINE CHESTNUT CRIMSON FLAME GARNET GULES AMARANTH AUBURN BURGUNDY CARDINAL CARMINE 6 4

RASPBERRY REDWOOD ROSEWOOD

13 - Inclination (8) 15 - Not sudden (7) 19 - Advised; encouraged (5) 20 - Box (4) 22 - Be in debt (3) 8 - Not discernible (12) 12 - Foam or froth (5)

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SANGRIA SCARLET

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13 - Inclination (8) 15 - Not sudden (7) 19 - Advised; encouraged (5) 20 - Box (4) 22 - Be in debt (3)

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1. What is the chemical symbol for tin? 2. What does a circle with a cross through it mean on a clothing label? 3. Which French monk is thought to have invented champagne in 1697? 4. What is the state capital of Arizona? 5. For which movie did Hilary Swank win her first Oscar for Best Actress? 6. In what year did the Spanish Civil War start? 7. The RMS Carpathia rescued survivors from which ship in 1912? 8. Stefka Kostadinova’s women’s world record high jump of 1987 reached which height: 1.59m, 2.09m or 2.59m?

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9. Who wrote and directed the film ‘The Shawshank Redemption’? 10. Who was the leader of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia in 1917?

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A C H E E J E C T I O N C E F U O M O C O L L O I D U N P I N O I R G R R A M A X I M E N T R E A T M A S M S T O C C U L T H A S S L E D A D S R N A I L M E N T T U N E D T Y H A I E A I M P L Y T R A D E I N N S D O L D C G E O M E T R Y I S L E

E V T R B G O L D E N R O D U B B B A R A S D R L Z D P R J O L L T A L L H Y E T T B O S L A U S T F O D I H X V X H R G C E E S N J S E E L D B C E F K S T R O I S L A L I M N W A H H I E I U X V A G D O A O S O I H P N B L B D S L S P L T R E W P U C B I G D H E S F O S L U O A U P O R I A R R N T E D F C A P D N N A R N W U E S T S W E D U G W M S W O S R S S Q R E E T S N O S I B N I P R E S O O M O E N R S Y U P P K S A N N B A E D K C I A

Solutions to this week’s puzzles will be provided in next week’s paper.

1) Troposphere 2) The FBI 3) Kleptomania 4) Romania 5) John Williams

6) January 1st, 2002 7) Bob Odenkirk

8) Rachel 9) Fibula 10) Tequila

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