KITCHENER GREAT SOLDIER AND HIS STAFF LOST. ' H.M.S. HAMPSHIRE MINED OR TORPEDOED ON THE WAY
... KITCHENER GREAT SOLDIER AND HIS STAFF LOST. ' H.M.S. HAMPSHIRE MINED OR TORPEDOED ON THE WAY TO RUSSIA. ...
... KITCHENER GREAT SOLDIER AND HIS STAFF LOST. ' H.M.S. HAMPSHIRE MINED OR TORPEDOED ON THE WAY TO RUSSIA. ...
... flag hoisted halfmast, and the same thing was observed at the Admiralty. Th» Baltic Closed. The news of the loss of Lord Kitchener caused great sensation in the clubs in the West-end. Immediately receipt of the sad news the directors of the Baltic Exchange ...
... BUY TO-MORROW’S DAILY MIRROR SPECIAL LORD KITCHENER ...
... Neither rasa nor men could move them. Kitchener dismounted, got his tunic of, was at apart place against the limber, and was pushing like grim death. The gun creaked, moved, a moment more out mud. It was not Kitchener's strength that moved it. but the climbing ...
... Regiment). Lord Kitchener was unmarried. The heir to the title is his eldest brother, Colonel Henry Elliott Chevallier Kitchener, who was born in 1846 and married in 1877 Eleanor Fanny, daughter of Lieut-Colonel F. Lushin gton, C.B. Colonel Kitchener’s wife died ...
... to whom must be the credit of the original idea of holding such Fair, My. and Mrs. Arnold Bennett, and Mrs. Parker (Lord Kitchener’s sister) were superintending the autograph stall, and stall fee artists' materials M. Pilodaowski, the Polish . j>. d««igned ...
... Cromer, who was intimately' associated with Lord Kitchener in Egypt, gave the following appreciation to representative of the Pall Mall Gazette ”:— My long association and intimate acquaintance with Lord Kitchener enables me, perhaps more than most others, ...
... On the same occasion I heard Kitchener ■peak, and the few remark* he made, without any notes or obvious premeditation, would have quite sufficed to establish the reputation of any man for culture and statesmanship. Kitchener was not merely great organiser ...
... on cliargea, were alleged hare a cix.wd to ae- ji| T ...
... sense of bereavement befallen the people of this country that was comparable with what ia borne by them in the loss Lord Kitchen eh. And not in our day has the stroke of Fate seemed tragic and startling in its unheralded descent. Steeled as our nerves ...
... DRAMATIC TELEGRAM FROM MEMBER OF CREW. There is news this evening of « survivor of H.M.S. Hampshire, the vessel upon which Lord Kitchener and his Staff were travelling to Archangel. A member of the crew, named Richard Simpson, is reported to have telegraphed ...
... PREMIER IN CHARGE. For the moment Mr. Asquith has persona] charge of Lord Kitchener’s department at the War Office. A meeting of the War Council was held this morning at 10, Downingstreet. ...