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THE CHINA MAIL SATURDAY, AUGUST 21, 1954.
HOMESIDE PICTORIAL
*
SCOTTISH
SUNDAY
Nothing has been
A rival to the sea and sands at Ramsgate, Kent, is the model village, which is proving very popular among visitors, both young and old. forgotten in this village, which looks like something from "Gulliver's Travels." Its attractions include a model airport, complete with Comet jet airliners to thrill interested young visitors.
IN a room at the War Office alta Major-General George Humphreys, whose new job is Iaison officer between the Army and British industrialists in the main- tenance of the Suez Canal base after the withdrawal of British troops. (Express)
EDWARD HOBBY (left) and his 14-year-old twin brother, Leonard, of Staines, Middlesex, have been setting people a problem all their lives, for they are "alike as two peas in a pod." Now they are putting an identity poser to the Staines Instructors think they are Squadron of the ATC which they recently" joined.
seeing double.
| D
MR Frank Nalder, 81, at the tiller of his invention a boat driven by a jet of air. Instead of propellers or paddles. It may revolutionise canal traffic. Officials of the British Transport Commission were greatly impressed with the trials, and
SPR: MADEIRONIJODs" for a; further^toot." (Express)
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN paid a surprise visit the 1920- to Wyndham's Theatre, London, to see style musical show, "The Boy Friend." She sat in the fifth row of the stalls unnoticed by the audience. The Queen is seen leaving after the show. (Express)
MR Stephen John Henry of Glasgow being helped out of a helicopter at Renfrew Airport after he was picked up from a Greenock golf course, where he crash- landed his two-seater air- craft because of engine failure. Henry was on his first solo flight. (Express)
MR Peter Albany, 37, of the BBC, who is to become head of British Far Eastern Radio in Singapore, pic- tured with his wife in the garden of their London home before their departure for Singapore. (Express)
NANCY
MAJOR J. C. P. Madden-Gaskell, RA, displaying samples of the handloom work he makes in his spare time at the Eastern Command Handicrafts Exhibi- tion at Hounslow. He took up the hobby 18 months ago and designs his own work. He intends to devote himself to handweaving when he retires from the Army in November. (Army News)
LEFT: Mr Colin Tennant, son- and heir of Lord and Lady Glenconner, has figured prominently in the news as Princess Margaret's constant com- panion. Colin is Lord Glenconner's son by his first marriage to Pamela, daughter of Sir Richard Paget. (Express)
BEING admired by, two visitors to the Blue Cross Horse Show' at Wimbledon is the six-year-old mare, Regina, bought by the Queen'to, save her from slaughter. Regina worked on a farm but had to be ́sold because of mechanisation. The Queen paid 80 guineas for her. (Express)
By Ernie Bushmiller
NOW⋅ PUT. IT BACK AGAIN
DAIRY BOX
MODE
CHOCOLATES
WHY DON'T YOU CLEAN
THAT SPIDER:
WEB OUT OF YOUR WINDOW?
OKAY
WOW