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THE PARISH of BARWELL with STAPLETON and POTTERS MARSTON JULY 2020CONTENTS Parish Priest: Rev. Philip Watson01455446993Views From The PondPage2Woodland CalendarPage4England’s Cathedrals/ The Friendship BookPage5How Many Do You RememberPage10Growing UpPage11Memory Verses/Page13Parish Prayer CalendarPage14Bible Readings For JulyPage15Weekly PrayersPage16Thoughts For The MonthPage18Forthcoming EventsPage19Poetry PagePage20Puzzle PagePage21Recipe Page / The Gift Of TimePage22Answers To Puzzle PagePage24July Intercessors Rota/ 100 ClubPage25ContactsPage26Views from the pond… As I look out over the garden today my mind casts back to ten years ago when the pond was half covered by Laurel and it was impossible to tell that there was a border on the left side of the garden. Today the garden looks quite different. The laurel hedge is trimmed right back, the pond fully visible and the borders are showing a number of different types of flower. While we’ve been in lock-down Richard, my son & I have been taking their dog Lulu, a Cocker Spaniel for a walk across the fields behind the Garden. As we walk back we can see the houses where the Old Rectory stood and I can’t help wondering how different it must have looked when that Rectory was first built. As you will know the renovation work has begun in St. Mary’s and it’s been interesting for me when I have had visit the building very occasionally, often to answer an enquiry from the builders. So I have been able to have a quick look inside. For example, I’ve seen some of the carpet taken up, revealing much more of the floor tiles than we usually see. How different it must have looked at different times over the last 800 years. Even to see the south Wall without the Sunday School Banner which was hung there before I came here ten years ago. Not to mention the back of the church without its pews or wooden floor. Many of us are creatures of habit, we know what we like and we like what we know. Yet if we are honest what we like can change over the years. It was interesting to see a programme on the Television about the changes in the way houses have been decorated over the last fifty or so years, and I remember a ‘Tasteless tie’ Competition whilst at college in the late 1980’s when one of my colleagues won the competition with a ‘Kipper’ tie from the 1970’s. which had in fact been his ‘Wedding tie’. Change and growth are, if we really think about it part of our human condition. Much as we might like to stay youthful we have to grow and develop and move from being young to being old. I guess what I’ve been noticing, along with the lifestyle changes brought on by the Covid 19 Pandemic, once again, are the changes that life brings. One of the things I’ve been able to do during lock-down is to read more books on Theology and spirituality, which are part of my work but can easily get pushed out if I’m not careful. The latest book I’ve read has been a new book of Prayers, published in February this year. It’s called, ‘At your side’ and gives lots of short prayer ’services’ for different seasons, events and moods. Prayer is ‘as old as the hills’ and yet it is as new as our waking breathe. As I think about prayer my mind turns to the one to whom we pray. Who like prayer itself could be described as being as ‘old as the hills’ but who can also reveal himself afresh each day as we grow up with Him. Teaching us new things and new ways of doing old things. The one thing of course that does not seem to change, if human experience is anything to go by, is God’s love for His creation, including us. A love which we as Christians are called to translate into loving action just as Jesus did, and which if some of our news stories are to be believed, is very clearly happening, as we hear of acts of love and kindness across the world. As time goes on I hope you have experienced some of these acts of kindness, and carried them out where you are able. In this changing world may we thank God for the past and pray for his blessing on the future. Thanking him for the things we like and know even if they have changed over the years. With every blessing, Philip Woodland Calendar Thank goodness for some rain. A lot of what grows in this country relies on a decent amount of rain throughout the year. If I want sun, I'll go abroad. Hopefully the dry weather hasn't killed the young hawthorn I planted over the winter. The blackbirds have appreciated some rain too, they seem to have found extra food for their young. I have seen birds fledging down the wood, so I don't think the dry spell did too much harm. There has been an abundance of flowers showing, forget-me-nots, campion, cow parsley and the raspberries flowered much to the delight of the bees. The cows in the adjacent field run out of grass and had to be supplemented. They watch me over the fence with a mix of suspicion and curiosity, they are big pale cream beauties and their young are adorable. Charolais I believe. I managed one mow of the grass, trying my best not to mow too many of the wildflowers. The only other job I've found is to pull up the bramble that sprouts up randomly. If left unchecked this thug would carpet the woodland floor to the expense of all other species. I wish the deer would crop that instead of all the saplings that try to grow. The starlings fledged successfully and the wood is much quieter without them. The stream kept flowing much to the relief of my border collie friend who enjoys a wallow especially when it’s warm. Please all pray for normal English weather and none of freaky stuff...Love...Lee x? ?A BRIEF INSIGHT INTO TWO MORE OF ENGLAND’S CATHEDRALSBirmingham R.C Cathedral Compared with the respect shown by the city of Birmingham to its Anglican Cathedral, Catholic St Chad’s is a discarded orphan. A. W. N. Pugin’s elegant profile once rose over the factories and canals of the crowded gun quarter. It now rises over a wilderness of concrete and tarmac, sandwiched between two roaring thoroughfares. The cathedral is pure Pugin, product of his burst of creative energy to meet Catholicism’s voracious demand for new churches after emancipation in 1829. St Chad’s was to be the first new cathedral built in England since the Reformation, and it cost a mere ?20,000. It was erected in just two years, 1839-41, and it was granted cathedral status in 1852. Why Pugin chose ‘north German’ gothic is obscure. It is unlike his other churches of the period. The twin spires framing the west front might come from Lutheran Saxony rather than Midlands England – though Pugin asserted that it was ‘totally different from any protestant erection’. In 1940, the building had a lucky escape when a bomb pierced the roof, bounced down the nave and then exploded, in the process fracturing water pipes which extinguished the flames. The redbrick exterior is plain and understated, sitting just yards from the inner ring road. This heightens the drama of the interior. To Pevner, the contrast of exterior and interior is ‘a surprise’. To Betjeman, it ‘fairly takes the breath – it soars to the heavens’. The nave is a forest of tall piers, like slender redwoods which, at the crossing, burst into colour and decorative richness. The crossing arches are painted in spirals. The roof pitch is continuous over nave and aisles, again brightly painted. Pugin’s hand is noticeable everywhere, in the chapels, altarpieces, sculptures and stained glass. Though not a big church, St Chad’s exudes the confidence of the gothic revival before later variants, and arguments, took hold. The one regrettable change was the 1960s removal of Pugin’s screen, spoiling the ascending drama of the sanctuary beyond. The furnishings by Pugin’s studio continued the language of the master into the 20th century. His grandson, Sebastian Pugin Powell, designed St Edward’s Chapel at the north-west corner. Its windows tell the story of the rescue of the relics of St Chad, patron saint of Mercia, from Lichfield cathedral at the Reformation. They were hidden by recusants until brought to Birmingham the day the church was consecrated in 1841. A window in the north aisle was donated by glaziers working for the Birmingham firm of John Hardman, Pugin’s close collaborator. Panels at the foot of the window show craftsmen engraving the glass for the panels directly above. The north transept window, by Pugin’s son-in-law, John Hardman Powell, is a masterpiece of 1868, a swirl of ovals depicting the Virgin’s Immaculate Conception, including the scene of Pope Pius IX promulgating this novel dogma in 1854. The ovals are united by a sinuous ribbon with inscriptions. Hardman Snr can be seen in the bottom left-hand corner, in prayer. The Lady Chapel is almost entirely by Pugin, including the windows. At its entrance stands a stature of the Virgin, a Dutch work donated by him and claimed to be the first statue of Mary erected in an English church since the Reformation. Also by Pugin is the high altar, an evocation of gothic revival which Pevsner compares to his thrones in the House of Parliament. A gable forms a canopy over a tabernacle, which deep cusps front and back. The relics of St Chad lie in a casket in pride of place, surrounded by angels, statues, golds and reds. Over the west entrance stands the organ whose magnificent case was designed in 1992 by David Graebe, clearly in tribute to Pugin. We can leave St Chad’s to face the ring road with a lighter heart.Blackburn CathedralThe former cloth town of Blackburn may be a shadow of its old self, but it is justly proud of its new cathedral quarter in the blighted central area. AAs elsewhere, specifically in Sheffield, Derby and Leicester, these historic buildings are hoped-for stimulants to urban renewal, magnets for visitors where conventional slash-and-burn rebuilding has failed. Normally, this magnetism requires an enclave of other old buildings to attract new uses and incoming residents. In Blackburn’s case, there was none and modern architecture has had to suffice. For once, the exercise appears to be working. Blackburn claims documentary evidence of Christian activity since 596, implying possible continuity from a Romano-British settlement. The later medieval church of St Mary was rebuilt in 1826 by a Manchester architect, John Palmer, gutted by fire in 1831 and then restored. The style is Regency gothic, with a substantial tower and a nave interior with a ribbed vault. The decision to make Blackburn a new diocese in 1926 spurred a plan for a large central tower and east end, in the manner of Bury St Edmunds or Chelmsford. The architect was W. A. Forsyth. This was barely started when war and expense brought a halt. A new design for a lantern rather than a tower was produced in 1962 by Laurence King and this was completed in 1967 with the cathedral itself being consecrated in 1977. The lantern, evocative of Ely only insofar as it is a lantern, comprises an octagon of sharp pinnacles from which emerges an exceptionally thin spike. Since it must balance a beefy west tower, the profile is weak, but is relieved by stained glass in the lantern. During the day, it casts a red light over the crossing; after dark, it is a colourful focus in the town centre. Blackburn’s interior is a light-hearted space, chiefly thanks to Palmer’s Regency arcades and elegant vault. The latter has colourful ribs and cobwebby tracery in the aisles. Eastwards, the focus is on the Forsyth/King chancel, a perspective of descending arches over choir and sanctuary, beneath the modern lantern. The new work is warmed by white plaster walls with soft sandstone dressings. The marriage of Regency, interwar and post-war design works surprisingly well, showing the adaptability of gothic to all ages. This light-heartedness is tempered by the work of John Hayward, artist-in-residence during the 1970s rebuilding. Hayward collaborated with King, designing the statuary, glass, furniture and altar. As such, Blackburn represents a remarkable partnership of artist and architect. However, the outcome is an obsession with nails, spikes and agony, reminiscent of Coventry. The corona over the crossing depicts, says the guide, a crown of thorns ‘emphasising the costly pain of the cross’. A statue on the west wall of Christ the Worker by Hayward shows him apparently transfixed on a loom, symbol of Blackburn’s textile past. Paintings by Penny Warden lining the nave depict Christ’s ‘agony, trials, suffering and death’. These are brittle, uncomforting images, although they give the cathedral an undeniably aesthetic potency. Relief comes tucked away in the north transept, some jolly medieval misericords imported from Whalley Abbey. They include the customary fox preaching to geese, a satire on a cunning clergy and a gullible people. At least the Middle Ages knew how to laugh.Next month we look at Bradford, Brentford & Bristol Cathedrals The Friendship Book of Francis Gay July 16th 1993Optimism versus pessimism is a much discussed topic, but I enjoyed reading Joyce Hifler’s definition and think it is worth passing on: “An optimist questions life the same as a pessimist, but the difference is he knows that there is an answer and he knows that he will find it. He is aware that the cherries which life is supposed to be a bowl of, have stones, but he is prepared to remove them. His mind does not dwell on the hardness of the stones, but on the sweetness of the cherries.” What a positive and helpful attitude that is! As the old saying reminds us: “brooding over our troubles is the surest way to hatch more.”How many do you remember? Headlight dip-switches on the floor of the car. Ignition switches on the dashboard. Trouser leg clips for bicycles without chain guards. Soldering irons you heated on a gas burner. Using hand signals for cars without turn indicators. Older Than Dirt Quiz: Count all the ones that you remember, not the ones you were told about. Ratings at the bottom 1. Sweet cigarettes 2. Coffee shops with juke boxes 3. Home milk delivery in glass bottles 4. Party lines on the telephone 5. Newsreels before the movie 6. TV test patterns that came on at night after the last show and were there until TV shows started again in the morning. (There were only 2 channels [if you were fortunate]) 7. Peashooters 8. 33 rpm records 9. 45 RPM records 10. Hi-fi's 11. Metal ice trays with levers 12. Blue flashbulb 13. Cork popguns 14. Wash tub wringers 15. 78 RPM records If you remembered 0-3 = You're still young If you remembered 3-6 = You are getting older If you remembered 7-10 = Don't tell your age If you remembered 11-15 = You're positively ancient! I must be 'positively ancient' but those memories are some of the best parts of my life. GROWING UPSomeone asked the other day, 'What was your favourite 'fast food' when you were growing up?' 'We didn't have fast food when I was growing up,' I informed him. 'All the food was slow.' 'C'mon, seriously... Where did you eat?' 'It was a place called 'home,'' I explained. ! 'Mum cooked every day and when Dad got home from work, we sat down together at the dining room table, and if I didn't like what she put on my plate, I was allowed to sit there until I did like it.' By this time, the lad was laughing so hard I was afraid he was going to suffer serious internal damage, so I didn't tell him the part about how I had to have permission to leave the table. But here are some other things I would have told him about my childhood if I'd figured his system could have handled it: Some parents NEVER owned their own house, wore jeans, set foot on a golf course, travelled out of the country or had a credit card. My parents never drove me to school... I had a bicycle that weighed probably 50 pounds, and only had one speed (slow). We didn't have a television in our house until I was 10. It was, of course, black and white, and the station went off the air at 10 PM, after playing the national anthem and epilogue; it came back on the air at about 6 am. And there was usually a locally produced news and farm show on, featuring local people... Pizzas were not delivered to our home... But milk was. All newspapers were delivered by boys and all boys delivered newspapers --My brother delivered a newspaper, seven days a week. He had to get up at 6 every morning. Film stars kissed with their mouths shut. At least, they did in the films. There were no movie ratings because all movies were responsibly produced for everyone to enjoy viewing, without profanity or violence or almost anything offensive. If you grew up in a generation before there was fast food, you may want to share some of these memories with your children or grandchildren. Just don't blame me if they bust a gut laughing. Growing up isn't what it used to be, is it? MEMORIES from a friend: My Dad is cleaning out my grandmother's house (she died in December) and he brought me an old lemonade bottle. In the bottle top was a stopper with a bunch of holes in it. I knew immediately what it was, but my daughter had no idea. She thought they had tried to make it a salt shaker or something. I knew it as the bottle that sat on the end of the ironing board to 'sprinkle' clothes with because we didn't have steam irons. Man, I am old. MAGAZINE MATERIALFor several months I have been struggling to find material for our magazine.Could I please ask you to send me Poems, Stories, What you done during Lockdown. Anything of interest. Or perhaps you would like to do a Regular Monthly write up.This is your Magazine, we need your imput.I look forward to hearing from you.The EditorMEMORY VERSES FOR JULY 2020The aim of these verses is to help us to build up a bank of Bible verses that will help us in our everyday dealings with life. No-one is going to test you on them but it’s always good when a familiar verse “crops up” in a sermon or discussion!WEEK BEGINNING:JULY 5th 2 Corinthians 13 v 14“May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be with you all.”JULY 12th Philippians 4 v 13“I can do everything through Him who gives me strength”.JULY 19th Psalm 27 v 1“The Lord is my light and my salvation – whom shall I fear?The Lord is the stronghold of my life – of whom shall I be afraid?”JULY 26th Matthew 7 v 7“Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.”PARISH PRAYER CALENDAR FOR JULYWeek 1. VOLUNTEERS: for those who give freely of their time to help others.Week 2. HOLIDAYS: for those going away on holiday that they may find relaxation and travel in safety. For those who cannot get away that they may have chances for relaxation, too.Week 3. PLAYSCHEMES AND SUMMER SCHOOLS: for all those who lead and attend, that the days may be full of joy.Week 4. MINISTRY OF THE CHURCH: (Ordained and Lay) – for the ministry of every member of our church.Week by week we pray for the residents of:Week 1. Cumberland Way, Howard Close, Worcester Close.Week 2. Stafford Street, Bank Terrace, Staniforth Court.Week 3. Malt Mill Bank, East Green.Week 4. Lincoln Road, Jersey Way, Angus Road.Bible Readings to use on a Sunday5th July 4th Sunday after Trinity Sunday Zechariah 9.9-12. Psalm 145.8-15Romans 7.15-21a Matthew 11.16-19,25-end12th July 5th Sunday after Trinity Sunday Isaiah 55.10-13 Psalm 65Romans 8.1-11Matthew 13.1-9,18-2319th July 6th Sunday after Trinity Sunday Isaiah 44.6-8 Psalm 86.11-end Romans 8.12-25 Matthew 13.24-30,36-4326th July 7th Sunday after Trinity Sunday 1 Kings 3.5-12 Psalm 119.129-136 Romans 8.26-end Matthew 13.31-33,44-52A PRAYER FOR EACH WEEK – JULYThese prayers are for your use in private times of prayer and worship. Some are the Collects (special prayers set by the Church for each week) and some are prayers from other sources which may be in modern or traditional form.July 5th :TRINITY 4 (PROPER 9)“May the road rise up to meet you.May the wind be always at your back.May the sun shine warm upon your face.May the rain fall soft upon your field,and until we meet again,may God hold you in the palm of His hand.” AmenJuly 12th : TRINITY 5 (PROPER 10)“Have we trials and temptations? Is there trouble anywhere?We should never be discouraged: take it to the Lord in prayer!Can we find a friend so faithful, who will all our sorrows share?Jesus knows our every weakness – take it to the Lord in prayer!”July 19th :TRINITY 6 (PROPER 11)(22nd – Feast day for Mary Magdalene)“Almighty God, whose Son restored Mary Magdalene to health of mind and bodyand called her to be a witness to His resurrection:Forgive our sins and heal us by your grace,that we may serve you in the power of His risen life;Who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit,one God now and for ever.” AmenJuly 26th :TRINITY 7 (PROPER 12)“Lord you care for all our needs, send us faith that we,Who think our problems are great,May trust in that which is greater,Your everlasting power and mercy.” AmenJuly’s ‘Thought for the Month’GrahamSummer Holidays around the corner, Yahoo;With parks, playgrounds and roller coasters tooDuring the past 3 months or so, lives too have been on a rollercoaster.Thought patterns have been in turmoil, ‘Can we can’t we?’ ‘Is it safe, am I alert, we miss the Grand-kids’ all these playing tricks on our minds, our health and sanity.We have contended with the pandemic lockdown but, there’s another adversary prowling around constantly trying to upset our thoughts, emotions and subsequent deeds and actions.Satan wants us to focus on things that annoy us about the people we live and work with. These daily annoyances keep us from focusing on what God would like us to see about ourselves.Happy thoughts make a Happy Life.Through Faith, we know God graces us to live fulfilling lives according to His plan and purpose.The promises are clear throughout the Scriptures, if only we look.Grace is the power of the Holy Spirit coming into our lives to help us do with ease what we would never do on our own with any amount of struggle and effort. True humility is, knowing that you’re nothing without God, but you’re everything with Him.Your Christianity is not going to be exciting to you until you learn to hear from God and be led and guided by His voice in your life.It’s Time; to ask God for Favour. (Ref: Jeremiah33.3) Instead of trusting yourself to hear from Me (God), trust Me (God) to speak to you. Remember; God closes doors as well as opening doors. He will also ‘blind’ you so that He can ‘Open your Eyes’ to something else, which is usually more beneficial. Get ready for the ride of life, and enjoy the thrills of God’s Rollercoaster. AmenForthcoming Events for your Barwell800 Year Celebration Events Barwell Sunday 23rd August Teddy Bears’ Picnic 2-5pm at Kirkby Road Park. Drum Head Service led by the Church Lads & Girls Brigade 4:30pm at Kirkby Road Park. 12th to 14th September Patronal Festival Weekend, Flower Festival Theme: 120-2020: 800 Years Of History. Sat. 7:30pm Church Brigade Concert. Sun 10:45am Thanksgiving Service with Bishop Martyn. 6:00pm Song Of Praise.Saturday 10th October Harvest Supper 7:30pm in the Village HallSunday 1st November 10:45am All Saints Service 6:00pm Annual Memorial ServiceSaturday 5th December Christmas Concert by the Cantamici Choir 7:30pm in Church Other events with dates to be finalised: Barwell – Coventry Cricket Match in September Victorian event with Barwell Church of England Academy in November. Sadly our celebration events have had to be put on hold for now. As soon as we are allowed we will pick up our events and will look to re-schedule those we have not been able to hold yet.? ? Philip4th Of July FireworksIt’s that time of year again We’re nearing the 4th of July Nothing quite as pretty As sparks against the skyAnd that is what it means Freedom it represents for us A day to set aside And to make a lot of fussWe honor our independence It’s what we have always fought for And even though it’s never easy To keep the enemies from our doorSo picnics and bar-b-q’s are planned To celebrate this special day But stop a moment and remember The meaning of the brilliant displays! Marilyn Lott WORDSEARCH5796725468264392517839172TWO BRAIN TEASERSExpress Problem.Ignoring acceleration, deceleration and train length answer this problem where Trains ‘A’ and ‘B’ head towards opposite stations.At 12:00 train ‘A’ travels towards station B.10 Minutes later the faster train ‘B’ leaves for station A.After train ‘B’ has travelled for 1 hr. train ‘A’ is 70 miles from station A.At this point in time, train ‘B’ has past by train ‘A’ by many miles.Continuing at their said speed, train ‘B’ reaches station A at 13:46.This timing is 14 minutes ahead of train ‘A’ its arrival at station B.How far does each train travel?What is their relative speed?What’s the distance between the two trains after train ‘B’has travelled for 1 hour?Happy ShoppersThree friends go shopping and spend a total of ?170.oo.Mary spends ?10 more than John who’s pleased with his toaster.Mandy spends twice as much as John.The food mixer is the most expensive.What price do each pay Who buys the rug and the other itemCOCONUT FISH CURRYIngredients: 1tbsp vegetable oil 1 finely chopped onion thumb-sized piece of ginger, finely grated 3 crushed garlic cloves 1tsp shrimp paste 1 small red chilli, shredded (take the seeds out if you don’t like it too hot) 2 lemongrass stalks, split, then bruised with a rolling pin 1 heaped tbsp. medium curry powder 1 heaped tbsp. light muscovado sugar small bunch coriander, stems finely chopped 400g can coconut milk 450g skinless hake fillets, cut into rectangles, roughly credit card size 220g pack frozen raw whole Big & Juicy Tiger Prawns 1 lime, halved cooked rice, to serve Preparation Time: 15 mins Cooking Time: 15 mins Serves: 4 Method 1. Heat the oil in a wide, lidded frying pan, then soften the onion for 5 mins. Increase the heat a little, stir in the ginger, garlic, shrimp paste, chilli and lemongrass, and cook for 2 mins. Add the curry powder and sugar, and keep stirring. When the sugar starts to melt and everything starts to clump together, add the coriander stems, coconut milk and 2tbsp water, then bring to a simmer. 2. Add the fish to the sauce, tuck the prawns in here and there, then squeeze over half the lime. Pop on the lid and simmer for 5 mins more or until the hake is just cooked and flaking, and the prawns are pink through. Taste for seasoning, adding a squeeze more lime to the sauce if you like. Scatter over the coriander leaves and serve with rice.EnjoyThe Gifts Of TimeSafe be every journey that you take, Successful every venture that you make… As you travel down life’s winding ways – Time give its best, good health and happy days. Patience StrongAnswers to Puzzle PageWORDSEARCH153672984964831257782549613518763429296415378437928561375284196821396745649157832BRAIN TEASERSExpress AnswersIn the two hours train ‘B’ travels 120 miles the same as ‘A’.Train ‘A’ travels 70 miles in 70 minutes therefore 60 MPH, while train ‘B’ travels 120 miles in 96 minutes therefore 75MPHBoth trains pass the halfway mark; train ‘A’ by 10 miles and train ‘B’ by 15 miles. The distance between is therefore 25miles.Happy Shoppers(?10 + X) + X + 2X = ?170therefore 4X = ?160?10 + ?40 =?50, ?40,2 x ?40 = ?80Mary buys the Rug, John – Toaster and Mandy the Food MixerJuly’s ‘Thought for the Month’GrahamMagazine Material All magazine material for the August issue to be in by Wed 15th July please. New material always wanted funny or sad stories, puzzles, and poems. All material to Colin Sewell 2 Howard Close Barwell Tel. 01455 842944 or 07557 966219 E-mail: sewell-colin@INTERCESSORS for JULYMORNING EVENING5th MIKE DEBBIE12th IRA MIKE19th GRAHAM PHILIP26th STEVE LYNDACould you all please contact Mike Smith by the previous Wednesday so that your Intercessions can be recorded in time for the Services.100 Club The next drawing of the 100 Club will take place at the first Wednesday Service when things are back to normal.They will be the March, April, May, June and July draws.Please do not worry about your Subs as these can also be collected when we are back to normal.The main thing is that EVERBODY STAYS SAFEColin THE PARISH of BARWELL with STAPLETON and POTTERS MARSTON Parish Priest Philip Watson tel: 01455 446993 or e-mail him at frpwatson@Licensed ReadersSt. Mary the Virgin P.MMrs D Watson446993SecretaryMrs L Plumpton 449244Mrs N Holt272321Associate ReadersPotters Marston HallTreasurerMrs S Newbury845244Church WardensSt. Mary’s BarwellSt. Mary/St Christopher’s Mothers UnionMrs Gill Brown845400Branch LeaderMr David Bendell457427Mrs P Bendell457427Assistant Wardens46 Galloway CloseMr J Nottage447110OrganistsMr G Armstrong446587District Church WardensMrs R HallSt. Martin’s StapletonChurch Lads & Girls BrigadeMrs S Howe844412Mr V Cooper450025St. Mary the Virgin Potters MarstonVillage HallMr M Jones282748Mrs P Bendell457427Secretary St. Mary’s BarwellMrs P Bendell457427TreasurerU,s RepresentativeMrs S Newbury 845244Mr T Smith07890 537554St. Martin’s StapletonChristian AidSecretaryMrs P Bendell457427Mrs S Howe844412Friends of St. Mary’sTreasurerTreasurerTim PorterMr C Sewell842944BellringersMembership OfficerMr M Pickering636945Mrs M Braund444595Children’s SocietyMagazine EditorMr C Sewell842944 Mr C Sewell842944 T PLEA tell you, whoever does not British Narrowboat Tracking through Food for Thought 28346 ................
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