LORD KITCHENER
... LORD KITCHENER ...
... LORD KITCHENER ...
... LORD KITCHENER. Foreign etudentse of our people are prone to ascribe to them an unemotionalism that might he metaken for lack of fine feeling, but the expreesions of deep sorrow evoked everywhere by the death of Lord Kitchener and those who were with ...
... LORD KITCHENER, SOME PERSONAL IMPRESSIONS. By J Saxon Mills. The death of Lord Kitchener removes who in many respects it irreplaceable R. u*“ had few opportunities before the present . of displaying his genius a strategist but * an. organiser he had done ...
... Khalifa's : operation with French, devolved the duty of lir lus relief. r host was sealed. Kitchener had ridden for- tackling him. Kitchener decided to strike' Kitchener was now a major, and D.A.A. and I ward at dawn to Jebel Surgarn, a high hill which ! w ...
... Kitchener and the Volunteers. Many energetic Volunteers who have been steadily drilling for months past and doing much useful military work, cannot fail to feci a certain degree disappointment Lord Kitchener's recent pronouncement on the subject the ...
... LORD KITCHENER. Now Ready —a fine photograph of Lord K stchener, on plate paper, by 22k. Order from any bookseller or newsagent. Pries Id., Post free 2d.— Daily News Book Dept., Tudor-,treat, London, E.C. ...
... KITCHE STORIES. Many etories are toki of Lord Kitchener, not all of them displaying him as a man of grim silence and no feelings, which was at one time the popular estimate of him. ...
... KITCHEN FOR MOTHERS. Miss Hutchinson writes: May I make correction? The average attendance at the weekly educational meetings of the Kitchen and Institute for Mothers ia 17 not seven printed. ...
... LORD KITCHENER DROWNED WAY TO RUSSIA. ...
... the rough and tumble of everyday life, was bound in the long run to Dreiudice a proper appreciation of Lord Kitchener's merits. lord Kitchener accepted office reluctantly at the call of duty. When he became War Minister we had a though efficient. Army ...
... KITCHENER'S CAREER. Lord Kitohener was born in 1850. He was commissioned second-lieutenant in the Royel Engineers in 1871. As a subaltcrn he was empmlard in survey work in Cyprus and ll’gslgnnr. & on promotion to captain in was attached to the Egyptian ...
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