THE CHINA MAIL, SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1959.
HOMESIDE PICTORIAL
MARTI
LONDON
ALDER ASTON
LEFT: ""A" choir," suid the Premier, "is much moro difficult to run than a cabinet, I assure yoki.
For choirs just don't turn up if they tool so inclined.
Mr Macmillan, fresh from his visits to Mos- cow, Bonn, Paris and Washington, visited tha country hamlot of Horst- od Keynes, noar his country house, Birch Grava. There ho present- ed a plaqua and a cheque for £120 to the retiring church organist and choir mistress, Miss Hoton Gardner.
Mies Gardner took up the appointment in 1909 -but Mr. Macmilion want one botter by re- minding the gathering that he first visited the church with his father in 1906.
The picture shows Me Macmillan making his presentation speach. Miss Gardner (who tells her choirboys tho is 101) is on the right.
*
LEFT: This is how iomo people spent Easter in England, squelching through pouring rain, pulling proms, carrying banners all the way from the atom warfara "ro- search contro, at Alder- maston to London..
The long march, andad with a rally in Trafalgar squara whore the marchers condomned the hydrogen bomb.
a
Among the marchers word contingents from Trinidad, Tanganyika, South Africa, Sweden, Franco and Germany. Also marching were skifflo band. and Q calypso singing team.
Leading the march in the picturo on the for loft are Sir. Richard Acland, playwright Mr. Bonn Lory (in raincout) and Conon Collins.-
In the picture on the right, demonstrating par- ents drag their children along for the occasion.
Good
ADOVE: It was Friday evening and in the clubroom of the Rose Tavern, a London parsan, ', the Rev. Gooffrey Beau- mont (at the plaño) held a rock and roll service. People drank boor, and. tang hymns, Said Mr Beaumont: "Many people will say this is wrong on Good Friday. But religion is religion, wherever it is: hold. This is just as holy - as it would have been in my church. We are aim- ing at taking the Easter message to people who ara not in Church. This is the way to do it.”
LEFT: Threo, Scottish boys had the most excit- ing 24 hours of their lives recently when they were taken to Surrey to be tosted for radioactive poisoning. They had been playing in a rubblik dump in Wishaw, Lanark- shire. Later a drum of radioactive waste motor- lot
in making. tuminous dials of watches was found in the dump.
It was thought thỏ, lads : were contaminated, so they wore whisked off to a special Surray modical centre for examination. In the picturo, Billy Gilchrist, 11 (loft), Billy Park, 9, and Androw Rooney, 8 (right) arriva at Eviton.
RIGHT: 77-year-old millionairo Sir Victor Sassoon, has married in his Bohamas villa his nurse and companion for the last soven years, 39- year old Dallas born Evelyn Barnes. "Her constant-attention zavedi my life more than once during a heart attack,” "he said: The ploture- shows Sir Victor with his bride (foft) and the Lon3- don -Octress Florence Desmond.
LEFT: Old Etonian Major Harold do Vaht Rubin, 60, announced in Bris- band that he was return- ing to Britain with tho woman who will be his fifth wifo-Swiss Julio Muller, co-rospondent in his fourth wife's divorce suit last month. In the picture the "Morrying Major" and Julio admiro a portrait of his mother.
NANCY
YAHIVE GOT A
DIME FOR ICE CREAM AND YOU HAVEN'T
LOOK
By Erule Bushmiler
ROWNTREE'S
AFRO
THE
MILK CHOCOLATE THAT'S DIFFERENT!
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