DIALECTIC
No.12 in an occasional photo series celebrating Spurtleshire street-name signs.
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An item of "Breaking News". Will appear on the Breaking News page and the front page.
No.12 in an occasional photo series celebrating Spurtleshire street-name signs.
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Data supplied by Scottish Water sheds light on the network of combined sewer overflows (CSOs) feeding into the Water of Leith.
The figures quoted were obtained in response to a request made by Harald Tobermann, vice chair of Leith Central Community Council, under Environment Information (Scotland) Regulations, 2014.
Le Rouge et le Noir.
No. 11 in an occasional photo series celebrating the street-name signs of Spurtleshire.
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As you read this, surprise copies of the May Spurtle are already popping up across the barony like campervans on the forecourts of Fife.
Issue 328 begins with locals pleading for a good night’s sleep, a sad reflection, a grand span, disputed sunshine and some signs of the times.
Page 2 continues with yet another sign, this time the shrimp-gargling and nipple-tassel kind, followed by moves to ensure local voices are heard. Then we cover potential noise, bad drivers getting away with it, mounting costs and Fantasy Island fog.
Can't understand it.
Fruit and veg supplies are rarely reliable, but other departments never seem to be out of stock.
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The Living Memory Association, based at Ocean Terminal, has recently been given a Heritage Fund award, writes project worker Russell Clegg. We’re using it to start a new reminiscence project – ‘Away for the Messages’ – on shops and retail history in and around Edinburgh.
We are looking for folk to contribute their stories, lived experiences and indeed photos and shop-based ephemera to the project (we can scan these and include in our current exhibition).
Fly-post-free zone. No. 10 in an occasional photo series celebrating Spurtleshire's street-name signs.
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Lovely weather for a walk.
No. 9 in an occasional photo series celebrating Spurtleshire street-name signs.
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Recent work to restore the exterior basement stonework of 19 Hart Street has revealed traces of an old shop frontage.
On the Broughton Place elevation it reads, ‘CONFECTIONS—M.T. SCOTT—CIGARETTES’. Round the corner on Hart Street, we think we can decipher a palimpsest of ‘GROCERIES’ and ‘CONFECTIONER’.
To discover more about the place’s history, Spurtle embarked on a tumultuous rummage through censuses, statutory registers, valuation rolls, Post Office directories and local newspapers. Here’s what we found.
April sunshine. Spring in the step.
No. 8 in an occasional photo series celebrating Spurtleshire street-name signs.
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