FREEHOLD.—HAY MILLS
... FREEHOLD HOUSES, Nos. 73. 75. and 77. Speedwell Road, Hay Mtfla. Each House is »et back from the rr«a ...
... FREEHOLD HOUSES, Nos. 73. 75. and 77. Speedwell Road, Hay Mtfla. Each House is »et back from the rr«a ...
... occupation Mrs. Charles Barton, the tow rant of £32 per annum, and early possession may bad. There are also Ornamental Lawns. Kitchen Garden terse Poultry Run, ftc. There is Wood Erection o! TWO-STaS! STABLE. Wooden Poultry House, and other ooot«nieo«i'^ The ...
... 19J6. al a rental of per annum. The Accommodation comprise* Entrance HalL Dining Room, Drawing Room, Bed Bath Boom and w.c.. Kitchen, Souhery, Pantry, Collar, and Out-office*. There to also Coach-house and Stabling, with large Garden art. the rear . , The ...
... been frozen. Further excitement was caused the action of the Food Board, which met immediately, and decided to arrange field kitchen service for the inhabitants. In Cologne and Hamburg the supply of potatoes was also insufficient.—Central News. ...
... of beach, lying, however, wide open to the Atlantic.” THE KING’S MESSAGE TO LORD KITCHENER’S SISTER. LOST “AN OLD AND VALUED FRIEND.’ Mrs. Parker, sister of Lord Kitchener, has been the recipient innumerable letters and telegrams sympathy in her personal ...
... Homer Street. Bilsall Heath, each con taming Tiled Vest bule and Entrance Hall, two Sitting Rooms, four B Rooms, Bath Room. Kitchen. Sonl’ery. Cellar, and Outbuilding*. The Property stands back from the road, and the rear are long Gardens The Houses let ...
... FUNERAL OF COLONEL FITZGERALD. The body Lieut.-Col. A. Fitzgerald, personal military secretary to Lord Kitchener, who was drowned with his chief in the ill-fated Hampshire, was buried Saturday afternoon at Eastbourne. The body had been lying in state ...
... Chesterfield Settee. Occasional Chair*, walnut Tables, mahogany leaf Table, oak Dining Sutte Treacle Sewing Machine, Couches. Kitchen Furniture. Tradesman s Cycle, Ac. H DOUGHTY & CO. win Sell the Above, -without *• reserve, Twelve o'clock. ...
... adopted the following motion The Senate, profoundly moved the immense loss suffered by Great Britain in the person of Lord Kitchener, saluting the organiser of the armies which, with those of the allies, will assure early victory of the right, and remembering ...
... a military mistake, and ’was the cause of the needless loss of the lives of “our best and bravest.” “The last time I saw Kitchener,” he said, in the course of this statement, I strongly urged that tie Ypres salient abandoned. pointed out that it was being ...
... contact with trees when descending, and destroyed-—Central News. THE GOVERNMENT AND THE VOLUNTEERS. DIVERGENT VIEWS ON LORD KITCHENER’S STATEMENT BIRMINGHAM COMMANDANT’S ...
... rooms.— Audios. B ill. Post; [VJ c.v LN. Oarnarronahira—Furnished Houoo Let. own XI grounds; eight bod. three sitting rooma. kitchens; ail modern ooDvenience*• —it,.,*-. Eiianfa. ...