WHERE KITCHENER FAILS
... ‘man ocannyt serve two masters,” quoted counsel, adding, “Lord Kitchener says so.” “We do mnot accept Lord Kitchener’s opinion on matrimony, remarked the chairman with a smile. ...
... ‘man ocannyt serve two masters,” quoted counsel, adding, “Lord Kitchener says so.” “We do mnot accept Lord Kitchener’s opinion on matrimony, remarked the chairman with a smile. ...
... LORD KITCHENER’S GUESTS. Lord Kitchener entertained a party of wounded soldiers at Broome Park, Canterbury, during the week-end The men came from the Manor Court Army Nursing Home, Folkestone. The Secretary of State for War had tea on the lawn with his ...
... thno-(tn:m of the factories are closed, and the workpeople starving. While a vocalist was singing “Any Old Iron” at the Kitchener Hospital, Brighton, a member of the Overseas Expeditmr{ Force who had lost his speech threugh shell shock, euddenly joined ...
... standing with bowed heads to show rmfizct to the great man whos¢ death the w le _Nation and the Empire deeply delored—Lord Kitchener. UNSHADED LIGHT. Ethel Parsonage, Alpine-street, Earlestown, was charged by the police with infringement of the Lighting ...
... ACHIEVEMENT Deali‘ni with hie great work at the War Office, the Military Con'es}:ondent of the Ddl'y Teloir:ph * says: ‘‘Kitchener never underrated the difficulty and hazards of the situation. He realised the comparative cm.ngth.ol the belligerents, and ...
... Earl Kitchener was not married, and his titles go by special remainder to his elder brother, Colonel Henry Elliott Chevallier Kitchener, born in 1846, who himself had a distinguished carcer as a soldier. His son and next heir, Henry F. C. Kitchener, born ...
... LORD KITCHENER DROWNED. WAR MINISTER AND STAFF LOST WITH CRUISER ON THE WAY TO RUSSIA, The whole Empire has been profoundly moved b{: the tragic death of Lord Kitchener, who, with his staff, perisked at sea on Monday night in the sinking of H.M.S. Hampshire ...
... mourning with their uniforms on the melancholy occasion of the death of the late Field-Marshal the Right Hon. H. H. Earl Kitchener of Fhartoum, K.G., KP, GCB., OM., GCSI, G.CMG., G.CIIE., Colonel Commandant the Royal Engineers, Colonel of the irish Guards ...
... SYSTEMATIC VISITATION. ’Let them go from house to house, and kneel and pray with the people in their kitchens, parloars, or best rooms, and then they would come and listen to a man who had sat at their own hearthstone, and who had talked to them as a ...
... Asquith summed up the significance of Lord Kitchener’s great task in these words:— “J think the ngt the country, and the Empire are under a debt which cannot be measured in worde to the services Lord Kitchener has rendered since the beginning of the war ...
... CAREER. fresh Earl Kitchener of Khartoum and of Broome was born at Crotter Houwe, Ballylongford, Co. Kerry, on June 24, 1550, and had therefore almost oomgleted his sixty-sixth year. He was the son of the late Lient.-Colonel H. H. Kitchener and Frances, daughter ...
... have been obtained with a minimum of friction. The mere recital of the military situation of Britain on the dg -when Earl Kitchener became Minister for War and its comparison with our position to-day comstitute the best eulogium that could possibly be written ...