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FAMOUS WAR CORRESPONDENT i11…

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FAMOUS WAR CORRESPONDENT i11 AT CHESTER. I INTERESTING LECTURE. I There was a crowded and fashionable asaem-G bly at the Music Hall, Chester, on FrIday, on the ocasion of an illustrated lecture by Mr. Frederic Yilliers, the distinguished war artist and correspondent of the Illustrated London News" and other papers, entitled Kruger and .Khahi," being an account of his experi- ences during the South African campaign. Mr. Villiers, who has been through many notable campaigns since the Servian one in 1876, when P he accompanied Mr. Archibald Forbes, went to l the Cape immediately the war in South Africa broke out, and has been through the campaign with Lord Roberts, Lord Methuen, and General French, being present at the battle of Magers- G L fontein, the relief of Kimberley, Paardeberg, Colesberg, the invasion of the Orange Free- State, also with the Army in Nat,il The lecturer was introduced to his audience by General Swaine, who claimed Mr. Villiers as an i l old acquaintance and triend who had had a great deal of experience in war, having been in India, the Soudan, Servia, and South Africa, The position of war correspondent, he said, 1 1 was a very ticklish one. He had to satisfy his editor, and he had to satisfy thu |§ British public, and he placed himself in | exactly the same danger every soldier was exposed to in a campaign. They might there- JF fore congratulate Mr. Villiers that he had returned from the war with a whole skin. (Applause.) The position of a correspondent was a difficult one, because he had to beware of the ambushes of the enemy, and those placed by his friends of whom, perhaps, the most formidable was the press censor, a post which he (General Swaine) had to hold in 1884 and 1885 with Mr. Villiers as one of his satellites. (Laughter.) In fact, the correspondent was in' the position of the man who was between their deep blue sea and the—well, the other thing! (Renewed laughter).—The lecturer, priately attired in his campaign costume of khaki, was accorded a flattering reception, and fl for almost two hours he absorbed the attention of his audience with a most entertaining descriptive account of the war, as witnessed by himself. A special feature was the exhibition! of about 200 excellent limelight views repro- duced from snapshots taken during the actual fighting, which were thrown on an expan- sive screen by a powerful lantern. Mr. Villiers graphically narrated the incidents in connection with the battle of Magersfontein, [the fighting at Colesberg, the relief of Kimber-A [ley and the scenes in the besieged town, the sanguinary and dramatic incidents of the jPaardeberg fight, the capture of Cronje and his, [wife, while the beautiful and pathetic red cross series of pictures would probably rank as the most remarkable and striking photos of the fl Iwar yet shewn to the public. He elicited enthu- FJ siastic applause on declaring that the transport ]! of two hundred thousand men to the seat of Iwar over so many thousands of miles of ocean !and with such remarkable despatch was not lonly an unparalleled military feat, but it shewed the complete unity of the Empire. A harrow- 1 | ing sketch was given of the hardships and perils which were undergone by our troops, and as shewing the deadly fire to which the British were exposed at Magersfontein, Mr. Villiers W pointed out that there was hardly a water bottle with less than two bullets through it, or a rein which was not shattered by a bullet. 1 He spoke in terms of great praise of the con- ,duct of Mr. Cecil Rhodes during the siege of Kimberley. In the example of his indomitable 'spirit, by his innumerable generous deeds, [and in making the inhabitants bear their [troubles with fortitude, Mr. Rhodes was a true IEmpire maker. A hearty outburst of applause jwas given when the lecturer made an incidental Iremark that, despite the little skirmishes that Iwere still taking plMe in South Africa, there ,was no real anxiety for the ultimate success of the British Army. The lecturer gave anjg emphatic denial to the recent charges of ill- J| treatment of our wounded soldiers. If ther was one thing in the campaign upon which we | could pride ourselves it was the excellent hospital system at the front. In view of the long line of communications in South Africa, with enteric fever rampant, it was impossible to treat sick and wounded in the manner sug- gested by a certain gentleman-to place them between nice, clean sheets and soft pillows. IThe men did not expect such treatment, and if jthey did they were not soldiers. He could [assure them that during his experience of itwenty-five years' campaigning with British and foreign armies he had never seen more p perfect treatment of the sick and wounded than in the Boer War. || (The above articles* appeared in our last Saturde-y BtJening Edition.)

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