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The Horseshoe

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The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
The Horseshoe
Phone:
+44 1778 421576

Hours:
Sunday12pm - 11pm
Monday5pm - 11pm
Tuesday12pm - 3pm, 5pm - 11pm
Wednesday12pm - 3pm, 5pm - 11pm
Thursday12pm - 11pm
Friday12pm - 11pm
Saturday12pm - 11pm


There are newspapers distributed nationally in the United Kingdom and some in Scotland only, and others serving a smaller area. National daily newspapers publish every day except Sundays and 25 December, and there are also Sunday newspapers. Sunday newspapers may be independent; e.g. The Observer was an independent Sunday newspaper from its founding in 1791 until it was acquired by The Guardian in 1993. Many daily newspapers now have Sunday stablemates, usually with a related name , but editorially distinct. UK newspapers can generally be split into two distinct categories: the more serious and intellectual newspapers, usually referred to as the broadsheets due to their large size, and sometimes known collectively as the quality press, and others, generally known as tabloids, and collectively as the popular press, which have tended to focus more on celebrity coverage and human interest stories rather than political reporting or overseas news. The tabloids in turn have been divided into the more sensationalist mass market titles, or red tops, such as The Sun and the Daily Mirror, and the middle-market papers, the Daily Express and the Daily Mail. The Independent and The Times have changed in recent years to a compact format, not much bigger than that used by the tabloids. The Guardian moved in September 2005 to what is described as a Berliner format, slightly larger than a compact. Its Sunday stablemate The Observer followed suit. Other Sunday broadsheets, including The Sunday Times, which tend to have a large amount of supplementary sections, have kept their larger-sized format. The national Sunday titles usually have a different layout and style from their weekly sister papers, and are produced by separate journalistic and editorial staff. All the major UK newspapers currently have websites, some of which provide free access. The Times and The Sunday Times have a paywall requiring payment on a per-day or per-month basis by non-subscribers. The Financial Times business daily also has limited access for non-subscribers. The Independent became available online only upon its last printed edition on 26 March 2016. However unlike the previously mentioned newspapers it does not require any payment to access its news content. Instead the newspaper offers extras for those wishing to sign up to a payment subscription, such as crosswords, Sudoku puzzles, weekend supplements and the ability to automatically download each daily edition to read offline. Most towns and cities in the UK have at least one local newspaper, such as the Evening Post in Bristol and The Echo in Cardiff. They are not known nationally for their journalism in the way that some city-based newspapers in the USA are . An exception to this was the Manchester Guardian, which dropped the Manchester from its name in 1959 and relocated its main operations to London in 1964. The Guardian Media Group produced a Mancunian paper, the Manchester Evening News, until 2010 when along with its other local newspapers in the Greater Manchester area it was sold to Trinity Mirror.
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