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War Office Times and Naval Review

WAR OFFICE TIMES

... a humbler sphere the passing away of f eSkiwri on woman deserves record. Mrs. Horton, o vic tori a vvho in i9oo received a gift of from Queen and nog °n the occasion of her having six sons in the army a vY, has just died. One son, Robert, sergeant, was ...

-,,___

... has ever seen—and to take part in it this country has landed in France, Turkey, and elsewhere by far the greatest Army that has ever been engaged under the - Union Jack. Officers and men of this Army arc fighting under conditions more terrible and trying ...

December 15, 1913. WAR OFFICE TIMES AND NAVAL REVIEW

... not indicate that there is a British Army, but, on the contrary, that the British Army does, for all practical purposes, not exist. As I said last month, I repeat again, the initial step towards obtaining an army sufficient in numbers and efficient in ...

WAR OFFICE TIMES AND NAVAL REVIEW

... the number trained by the Bristol Schools: Bristol Schools : Navy Officers, 9 ; Army Officers, 56; Civilians, 36; Total, 101; All other Schools: Navy Officers, 9 ; Army Officers, 27; Civilians, 111; Total, 147. In view of the scheme recently portrayed ...

AN INTERESTING GAME FARM

... certain section of the Press anent the ruthless manner in which much of the land of this country is appropriated to the rearing of game instead of to the rearing of men. Back to the land has been the parrot-like cry of a certain school of politicians who ...

Service Requirements and flow to Meet Them

... no exaggeration to assert that a large proportion, perhaps the largest proportion, of the food taken by the average man or woman is useless for any bodily purpose, while it throws a tax on the digestive and other organs. What the body needs is a small ...

A GRAVE WARNING. THE Fortnightly Review for February contains an article from the pen of Dr. E. J. Dillon, which

... Dillon's opinion, applying the same folly which has paralysed the heroism of our Army. The British nation has all along believed that, whatever the result of engagements on land, the victory of this country in the war was assured through the pressure brought ...

WAR OFFICE TIMES AND NAVAL REVIEW

... the blue and before the majority of the inhabit a these islands quite realised the fact that the of country British Army had been landed on the short 0f combat with and a was a few days subsequently engaged in deadly ,f t his the benly. About a fortnight ...

A GO-AHEAD RAILWAY

... which they dwell to something very analogous at a popular seaside resort. Our idea of a holiday is a place where the man or woman engaged during the greater part of the year in the battle of life can for a brief spell enjoy the dolce far niente amidst agreeable ...