Be the number one advertiser in this Area By Placing Your Advertisement Here.
Kirkcudbrightshire Advertising Pages
A limited number of free advertisements are available.
Only Advertisements Of Acceptable Moral Standard Will Be Published
Phone Ads Kirkcudbrightshire Free On 0800 8818103
Local Advertising All UK Towns
Campaign Advertising
Your Ads Here
FREE PHONE ADS Kirkcudbrightshire
0800 881 8103
| Property | Classified | Vehicles | Jobs |
This could be a description of your sevices or goods for sale along with a link to your website SPECIAL SITE LINK
Better I think that we leave the above link and put your advertisement on this line.
FREE PHONE ADS KIRKCUDBRIGHTSHIRE
0800 881 8103
LOCAL ADVERTISING KIRKCUDBRIGHTSHIRE
Notes From CAP Code Of Advertising Practice
All marketing communications should be legal, decent, honest and truthful. 2 All marketing communications should be prepared with a sense of responsibility to consumers and to society. 3 All marketing communications should respect the principles of fair competition generally accepted in business .4 No marketing communication should bring advertising into disrepute.
ADS KIRKCUDBRIGHTSHIRE Acknowledge Wikipedia for the following information
The Stewartry of Kirkcudbright (IPA: /kɚˈkuːbriː/; Siorrachd Chille Chuithbheirt in Gaelic) or Kirkcudbrightshire (IPA: /kɚˈkuːbriːʃɚ/), was formerly a county of south-western Scotland. It was also known as East Galloway[1], forming the larger Galloway region with Wigtownshire. Kirkcudbrightshire bounded on the north and north-west by Ayrshire, on the west and southwest by Wigtownshire, on the south and southeast by the Irish Sea and the Solway Firth, and on the east and northeast by Dumfriesshire. It included the small islands of Hestan and Little Ross. It had an area of 575,565 acres (2,323 km²). That area is now part of the unitary authority of Dumfries and Galloway, and is additionally administratively used for property registration. In 1372 Archibald the Grim, a natural son of Sir James Douglas "the Good", became Lord of Galloway and received in perpetual fee the Crown lands between the Nith and the Cree. He appointed a steward to collect his revenues and administer justice, and there thus arose the designation of the "Stewartry of Kirkcudbright" (see History below). The county is still called The Stewartry by its inhabitants and forms the Stewartry area of Dumfries and Galloway Council, represented by eight Stewartry councillors. Local administration of the district today is overseen by a Stewartry Area Manager, based in the county town of Kirkcudbright. The name Kirkcudbrightshire (or "Kircudbright-Shire") as alternative to Stewartry of Kirkcudbright appears from an early date, noticeably on the maps of Herman Moll in the mid-eighteenth century[2].