KITCHEN
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... KITCHENER'S REPLY Mr. Tenrant informed Sii H Dal7.id that rx>rd Kitchener would make st:it •- ment member* Parliament in ...
... Kitchener Attacked. pointed out that the figure of five millions given the Prime Minister referred the withdrawal of man power from tho Empire and throughout the whole war and not to our present effort in the field. Mr. Ivor Herbert (L., Monmouth) moved ...
... MEMBERS TO MEET LORD KITCHENER. Mr. TENNANT said Lord Kitchener was always willing receive individual members of the House or collective deputations convey him suggestions for the more effective conduct of the war. Lord Kitchener would be glad to meet ...
... VOLUNTEER 'TRAINITG CORPS. LORD KITCHENER'S VIEWS. Replying in the Rouse of Lords on Tuesday to suggestions that further Wl* should be made of members of the Volunteer Training Corps, Earl Kitchener said the Volta.- teen had been most useful in meeting ...
... LORD KITCHENER ATTACKED IN THE COMMONS, MR. ASQUITH’S DEFENCE. Mr. Winston ChurchiH’s phantom army quarter of a million officers' servants who never near the fighting line finally disappeared into the air last uight, when the House of Commons debated ...
... PANSHINE KITCHEN MAGIC. pANSHINE is magnificent on metals! A wizard on woodwork ! A charm on chinaware! It brings brightness and happiness to the home—cleanliness and comfort —here, there, and everywhere. Use it for cleaning Pots and Pans, Chinaware, ...
... in evening, when the debate had developed into motion reduce Lord Kitchener** salary £lOO, Mr. Asquith himself interrened. Mr. Churchill himself had paid a warm tribute Lord Kitchener’* service* the nation, and had informed the House that man could have ...
... purposes beyond any expectation, and that is futile and unjust to blame Lord Kitchener for faults which have arisen from the nature of tilings. There is more reason make Lord Kitchener a scapegoat to-day than there was to put him on pedestal as an unapproachable ...
... debt which cannot be mciisured in words to the services which lord Kitchen has rendered since, the beginning the war. This was not task, heaven knows, which was sought by Lord Kitchener himself, was his way back to Egypt to resume the functions which has ...
... Mansfield) challenged the Prime Minister to deny that at the time of Lord Kitchener’s yisit to Greece the Cabinet endeavoured to get rid of him. The Prime Minister had stripped Lord Kitchener every' authority he had as Secretary of State for War, could not now ...
... work the War Office itself has called upon us to undertake. Lord Kitchener makes a great point of guard duty. Is it fair that man should equip himself order to work which Lord Kitchener himself regards as important, and which relieves Regular troops for ...