1961-01-21 — Page 4

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

THE CHINA MAIL, SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1961.

HOMESIDE PICTORIAL

LEFT: The aim of tho Third Assembly of tho World Counci of Churches, to bo hold in Now Delhi in November, ware outlined recently by Dr Fisher, Arch bishop of Canterbury, speaking at a Press con- ference at Church Houso, Westminster, London. He spoke of "the increasingly great interest shown in the World Council of Churches by the Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churchos, which are not members of it." Picture shows (I, to r.) Dr A. Payne, Dr Fishor (the Archbishop of Cantor- bury) and the Rev. Kan. noth. Slack at the Church House, Westminster, Pros$ conference.

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Pictures by Reuter and London Express Service

For the third day ABOVE: It was a great day for Mr Antony Armstrong-Jonas. running he was out with the shoot from Birr Castle, where ho and Princess Mer garet wore staying, and he demonstrated his success as a marksman by leading the field with a brace of pheasants. Princess Margaret, dressed in a stylish brown fur cossack hat, raincoat and wellington boots, acted as his loader and watched with pride as the shoot went on in the wooded grounds of Lord Rosso's estate. Picturo shows Tony Armstrong-Jones (centro) who hai fired and scored. Ho watches a pheasant coming down. With him is Lord Rosse (right).

BELOW: Far from the havoc in Laos, torn by civil war, the Laotian Ambassador, Prince Khammao, a brother of the Crown Prince of Laos, loft the quiet calm of his embassy, facing Kensington Palace, to deliver a note to the Soviet embassy. The note contained his government's protest against the delivery of Russian arms to the rebels in Loos, but the Russian charge d'affaires rofused to accept it, on the grounds that the Soviet Union did not recognise the govern- ment of Prince Boun Oum, the new Rightist Premier. Prince Khammao (seen horo) is sad and disturbed, "I expect to be recalled home very soon," he said. "I am sure that the rebals are being helped by the North Vietnamese. They and the Russians hope to split the country by sowing seeds of discontent in my countrymen,"

POP by Goc

A FINE THING

FOR HIM TO HAVE

TO TELL HIS PSYCHIATRIST

WHEN HE GROWS UP!

ABOVE: Helicoptors wore brought in to spoed up the laying at half a mile of pipeline across swampy ground in Kent. England. In four hours flying time the task was completed--normal methods would have taken between 10 and 14 days and at less than half the cost of doing it by conventional moans. Picture shows the ground crew recolving a 20-foot length of pipo, swinging it round and bolting it into position.

*

LEFT: Five men with five shabby suitcases stepped out of a resorved second- class compartment as the Irish Mail train como to a stop at Euston Station. Only the two plain-clothes Scotland Yard men who mot them know that tho luggage was insured for a million pounds. For tho casos, brought by steamer and train from Dublin, contained Ireland's greatest art trousuro, tho Book of Kells, and 20 other manuscripts and books for exhibition at tho Royal Academy, London. The five-man party was led by 59-year-old Pro- fassor Horbort Parko, Librarian of Trinity Col. lege, Dublin, where the Book of Kells is kept. Picture shows Profenior Harbert Parke taking the Book of Kells from its

CAID.

Carlsberg

BY

ANY TEST THE BEST

$

BELOW LEFT: Twenty- two thousand "ayed" oggs-11,000 each of soa frout and salmon-at have been reared in the Frosh Water Fish Labo» ratorics of the Ministry of Agriculture and Fishorics, and are being packed for their long journey to the Falkland Islands. Tho first stage is by Boac plane to Montevideo. Picture shows scientific officers of the Ministry of Agri- culture and Fisheries, P. E. Carodine (loft) and A. Swain packing the eggs in trays of moss, with trays of ice to on- sure that they travel at

a temperature of less than 43 degroes F.

*

BELOW: Racing driver Jonathan Sieff, who al- most lost his life in a 125-mile-an-hour, crash

at Le Mans last summer, is planning a now life... which does not includo motor racing. He said: "if word singla and without family ties thon I'd race again. But with a wife and son I cannot. It wouldn't be fair to those who love me," Instead, Sieff, 26-year- old great-nephew of Sir Simon Marks, will throw all his energies into the family commercial em- pire of Marks and Spen- cer. " was brought up in it," said Sloff," "I've worked in the stockroom, unloaded torrias, sarved behind the counter. From now on the business will

Occupy my energies in- Picturo creasingly."

Sipff shows Jonathon with his wife Nicole and their son Mark.

ABOVE: The men whoso Hurricanes ond Mos- Forschmitts tangled in the Battle of Britain 20 years ago are to work together on the plane of the futura-tho "Jump-

Jet", ing

Germany's Willi Mossorschmitt is ́to help develop the Hawker P1127 (pictured here), the "Jumping Jot" do- signed by Sir Sydney Camm of Hurricano fame. This is part of a fast- expanding pro- gramme of arms-sharing foreshadowed by a state- ment in Bonn after talks there by Britain's Avia- tion Ministar Mr Peter Thorneycroft. Tho P1127 is to be developed as a vertical take-off · light- weight strike fighter air- craft, and other Nato countries will be invited to join In this develop- ment project.

257

James Bond

BY FLES DHAYES BY JUAN METUSAT

YALDI

TUG FAKE POLICE HAMMERED ON THE FRONT

DOOR OF THE BULGARIANS HIDEOUT

THERE HE JS) WELL

SOON HAVE

FLY

Canadian Paoifis's

det-prop BRITANNIAS

to TOKYO

and WECT COAST

SEE YOUR TRAYAL AGENT OF Canadian Pasito mingines

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