Vile mystery stench plagues famous cinema for weeks

IAG220909cameo_20By Rory Reynolds

A CINEMA is asking customers to smell their auditorium before they buy tickets – because of a terrible stench.

The famous Cameo cinema in Edinburgh has been plagued with a vile smelling pong for nearly a month.

It has been so bad it left some movie-goers feeling a bit queasy.

There was even fears that a body may have been stashed away somewhere in the historic building.

Movie buff Brian McGlone was visiting at the weekend but changed his mind after being invited to have a sniff before buying a ticket. Continue reading

Number of centenarians in Scotland rises

By Cara Sulieman

MORE Scots than ever are reaching their 100th birthday.

The true extent of Scotland’s ageing population has been revealed in the newest figures out from the Registrar General.

The number of centenarians has risen by more than a quarter in the last six years, with a grand total of 720 people aged over 100 living across the country.

And not surprisingly, the vast majority of them are women – a staggering 90 per cent.

Continue reading

War honour for ‘forgotten soldier’ 111

by Alexander Lawrie

A SCOTTISH soldier killed during WW1 has finally been honoured – more than 90 years after he fell on the battlefield.

Robert Liddle Kilgour died during the Third Battle of Ypres – more commonly known as Passchendale.

And the brave private’s name has been missing from his hometown’s war memorial ever since.

But that omission was rectified yesterday during a ceremony which was attended by some of Pte. Kilgour’s closest living relatives.

A specially cast bronze plaque bearing the Scot’s Guardsman’s name was attached to the sandstone ‘wayside cross’ memorial in Tranent, East Lothian.

The 22ft memorial was erected in the town’s centre in 1923, and features the names of the town’s 90 heroes who gave their life during both world wars.

The emotional ceremony took place on the 91st anniversary of Pte. Kilgour’s death.

Robert Kilgour MBE, 84, Pte. Kilgour’s nephew and a former Pipe Major, said: “Robert Kilgour was my father’s brother and I was not even a baby when he was killed.

“I didn’t know too much about Uncle Bobby, but thanks to Mr Lawson I have found out so much about his short life.

“I’m extremely grateful I can now come to Tranent and look at the war memorial and there’s a special plaque with his name on it.

“The family are delighted with today’s ceremony.”

The story of Pte. Kilgour was unearthed by amateur historian Robert Lawson who, during his research, discovered the soldier’s name was missing from the Tranent memorial.

Mr Lawson, 64, said: “I’m very pleased to see Pte. Kilgour’s name finally recognised. There has been a lot of hard work put into making today so special.

“It was quite a moving occasion because he was truly a Tranent lad and it was lovely to see so many people here to see his name remembered.

“It means a great deal to the family as they still feel bitter he was slain at the command of General Haig.

“It was a truly appalling battle that Robert Kilgour died in, and I’m just pleased he has finally been honoured today in this way.”

Once his research was completed, Mr Lawson contacted East Lothian Council and the area’s local councillors in an effort to rectify the missing entry.

Cllr. Donald Grant said: “Last November I received a letter requesting Pte. Kilgour’s name be put on the town’s memorial. 

“I contacted council officials and arranged for his name to be rightfully placed on the memorial today.

“The council were extremely glad to help in the family’s cause.”

Private Kilgour was one of 32,000 men killed during the Great Push on July 31, 1917.

He is buried in Artillery Wood Cemetery, north of Ypres.

His older brother John was also killed on active service in India, in 1909.

Born in Tranent in 1892, Kilgour left the East Lothian town as a teenager to work as a tinsmith in Edinburgh.

He joined the Third Reserve Battalion of the Scots Guards in 1915, and just under a year later he was transferred to France as a member of the First Battalion.

Pte. Kilgour fell on the battlefield on July 31, 1917, aged just 24.

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