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THE CHARM OF ENGLAND.—Although the “mod. bung.” has made its presence felt all over England. there are still delightful haunts to be found where Time has’left untouched the thatched, gabled cottages and where the Oldest Inhabitant still sits in the sunshine outside The Blue Boar drinking ale from a tankard. Here is one slice of “Merrie England" that is a joy to the eye. The village of Chiddingstone six miles from Tonbridge, in the vale between the North and South Downs called the Weald. Its old-world air has provided many settings for cinema productions.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19290720.2.193.4

Bibliographic details

Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 720, 20 July 1929, Page 19

Word Count
94

THE CHARM OF ENGLAND.—Although the “mod. bung.” has made its presence felt all over England. there are still delightful haunts to be found where Time has’left untouched the thatched, gabled cottages and where the Oldest Inhabitant still sits in the sunshine outside The Blue Boar drinking ale from a tankard. Here is one slice of “Merrie England" that is a joy to the eye. The village of Chiddingstone six miles from Tonbridge, in the vale between the North and South Downs called the Weald. Its old-world air has provided many settings for cinema productions. Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 720, 20 July 1929, Page 19

THE CHARM OF ENGLAND.—Although the “mod. bung.” has made its presence felt all over England. there are still delightful haunts to be found where Time has’left untouched the thatched, gabled cottages and where the Oldest Inhabitant still sits in the sunshine outside The Blue Boar drinking ale from a tankard. Here is one slice of “Merrie England" that is a joy to the eye. The village of Chiddingstone six miles from Tonbridge, in the vale between the North and South Downs called the Weald. Its old-world air has provided many settings for cinema productions. Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 720, 20 July 1929, Page 19

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