SKIPTON: Skipton District Oddfellows will serve up a double helping of music this weekend.
Nina and friends will entertain on Saturday, from 8pm, and there will be a Country and Western afternoon with Ade Payne on Sunday, October 18 from 1pm (entrance is £3 on the door).

* Local band Undercover will be in action at The White Rose Club on Saturday from 8pm. All are welcome.

SETTLE: The Gallery on the Green - housed in a former phone box - is displaying a selection of entries from Settle Stories’ writing competition titled My Journey to the Stars
In a test of imagination, writers were invited to describe their journey to the stars on a postcard and some of their work is on show alongside visuals that try to capture the size of the universe.
The exhibition will run until Saturday, November 28.
For more information, visit galleryonthegreen.org.uk

* The Folly has looked overseas for its latest exhibition.

It is hosting Textil/Juvel: Contemporary Craft from West Sweden.
It features seven leading makers of textiles and jewellery and reveals the rich craft heritage of West Sweden, together with an awareness of the natural world and humans’ impact upon it.
The show is the fourth in the Art Unpacked series of exhibitions from Chrysalis Arts of Gargrave and will run until November 1.
Visitors to The Folly - home of the Museum of North Craven Life - will also be able to view the Community Skills exhibition, which has been running since the spring.
It tells the story of the potteries in Burton-in-Lonsdale, which were fired up in the mid 18th century and showcases around 60 pots from the museum’s collection.
It too runs until November 1.
For more information, call 01729 822854 or visit ncbpt.org.uk/folly

* The Lime Gallery, at The Courtyard, has unveiled its latest exhibition.

Nature’s Elements features a series of photographs featuring Iceland and Greenland by Ross Brown.
The images include dramatic glacial icescapes, aerial photography, landscapes and close studies of the flora and lichens wresting a precarious life from apparently barren terrain.
The exhibition will run until November 6.
ADDINGHAM: Addingham Drama Group will stage the Dennis Potter classic, Blue Remembered Hills.
The production will include video and other effects.
"This is a great play to be involved with," said co-director Ian Taylor. "It will certainly be a change from the usual Addingham fare."
The play is set during World War Two and is famous for having adults play children.
Performances will take place at the Memorial Hall next Thursday and Friday, October 22 and 23, and the following Thursday, Friday and Saturday, October 29 to 31, at 7.30pm.
Tickets cost £7 and can be reserved from Gerald Whittington on 01943 830097.

* Addingham Ceilidh Club will meet in the Memorial Hall on Sunday, from 7.30pm to 9.30pm.

Lively resident band Beneath The Clock will provide a varied programme and there will also be performance spots from musicians and guest callers.
Admission is £4 and for more information, call 01535 664634 or 01943 609393.
BRADLEY: Bradley Film Club has resumed again after the summer break and is showing a series of Steven Spielberg films.
First up is ET The Extra Terrestrial (PG), which will be screened next Thursday, October 22.
Films are shown in the school hall, starting at 6pm and everyone in the community is welcome. Admission is free.
CARLETON: Carleton's next film night will be held at the village hall next Saturday, October 24.
The featured movie will be The Imitation Game, which is based on the real life story of legendary cryptanalyst Alan Turing.
It portrays the nail-biting race against time by Turing and his brilliant team of code-breakers at Britain's top-secret Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, during the darkest days of World War Two.
Doors open at 7pm, with the film starting at 7.30 pm, and tickets cost £4 from the village shop or on the door.
EMBSAY: Embsay will hold its second film night of the autumn on Wednesday.
The film, The Railwayman, starring Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman, will be screened in the village hall at 7.30pm.
This is the true story of Eric Lomax, a British Army officer, who was captured by the Japanese in World War Two and forced to work on the infamous Burma-Siam "Death Railway". He survived and 40 years later discovers that one of his tormentors is still alive and decides to return to South East Asia to confront him.
Admission is £4, which includes tea and biscuits.
GARGRAVE: An arts and crafts fair will be staged in the village hall.
Running from today until Sunday, the fair will be open daily from 10am to 6pm (4pm Sunday) and on show will be original paintings and photography, sculpture, limited edition prints, cards, gifts, jewellery and kites, produced by local artists.
There will also be some demonstrations during the event, which will support both the village hall and nominated charity, the Yorkshire Air Ambulance.
Entry is free and there will be refreshments available courtesy of Gargrave Women's Institute.
GLUSBURN: Glusburn Community and Arts Centre will hold its monthly film night tomorrow.
It will screen The Hundred Foot Journey, an American comedy starring Helen Mirren, Om Puri, Manish Dayal and Charlotte Le Bon.
It tells the story of a feud between two adjacent restaurants in a French town: one operated by a recently relocated Indian family and the other a Michelin-starred restaurant.
The film starts at 7.30pm and for tickets, call 01535 630223.