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Date

1900 - 1949
35 1900-1909

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South East, England

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35

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35

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MAY MAGAZINES

... regions aboot Greenland, where I have beeau enuaged, there is I lasd-real, solid land, not the wlere Lmockery of it, like the shifting pack that was about us here With land at hand prolonged journeys are always possible, but what were we to do on a moving ...

JUNE MAGAZINES

... JUNE4 MWAGAZINES. Plenty O? General5. ie Ibe British Army has at this moment a c El ]arger proportion of Generals who have seea active E a service in the field than is possessed by tbat of t any other couLtrY, writes Robert Macniray ia the E r attractive ...

JANUARY MAGAZINES

... more' notwrhe- Igs views' of books is one on The LifeanLetr ifl'- of Sir John Millais, by his son. all 5S. ~WOMAN AT HOME. ,!n The WOMAN AT HoM13 (Hodder and Stoughton, in 27, Paternoster-row).' Probably most readers-.will- first turn to the paper ...

HISTORY OF PORTSMOUTH

... the Army as 'I le Lieutenant of the Rloyal Engineers. Sas Paeleastine Uzitploration. . or * eto, .i seI XKitcl ehe' career iatd begun ,, rt earnet; audit is hil~bly cbara~cteristic of the joan that, impatient of the ordinary routine of I the Army aud ...

THE TREASURE OF CAPTAIN SCARLETT

... physi- sally exhausted; none of them, had escap~ed ; chrv, although in somue cases it was light. One man had a broken leg; one woman had 1 Lost her husband and a child. Out of six I hundred souls, passengers and crew, only seven Survived - only seve~n had ...

OUR SHORT STORIES

... simply this: Good- Iye, Eunice. I aw not worthy of yeu. Another ain woman is ay fate. Try and forget me. BacUt f neL HOSTE SSES ag I ty t's ENIGL95r AND ANAERI1CA . I No man or woman capable of observation has I ever left Amverica without addiin some ...

HISTORY OF PORTSMOUTH

... as a naval and mercantile port. One of the first things they did was to provide a burial ground for their dead. A piece of land ?? was purchased, and until quite recent years the public pathway that skirted it was known as Jews Lane. Phe next step of ...

LOVE HAS NO PITY

... islands to a rugged shore. The first part of her travels was corm- parativel- luxurious. Once or twice only she had a market-woman, flung in bv a too neighbouriv porter, on her numiltbing knecs. The conclulsion was hard and drearv. The frost still hel d-the ...

HISTORY OF PORTSMOUTH

... have had it. Where, asked the woman suffrage orator. would man be to-day were it not for woman F She paused a moment, and looked around the hall. I repeat, she said, where would man be to-day were it not for woman ? Be'd be in the Garden of ...

HISTORY OF PORTSMOUTH

... of public gratitude. We, there- fore, still hope that an order -will arrive to. convey these beloved remains to town by X1 land. The hope was, however, not realised, 0 as the 'Victory sailed to the eastward on the I following Wednesdav. I The day of ...

OUR SHORT STORIES

... terror, whatever the e stress shall be, d Our Lord for His own is mighty; they are safe on c land and sea. c Tbe great world-navies hasten, the great world- t armies rise, t But ine is serene above them, the Lord of the c earth and skies. 0 Out of the fury ...

OUR SHORT STORIES

... tile seal. th the U8 wtor Be Sc lzde : V - - , ,on THE ARMY eF THE GEA. re hin al Far out, far out, close riding crest on crest, In Ible The oung, while legions glisten in the sun, rit Endless and armied for instintr strife tbhey rrn hi her In monstrous phalhn:a ...