Alright, I've got a keyboard in front of me now.
Here's a checklist of the ingredients you should have, according to what I see here and on Taobao:
8kg Australian base malt (PPPG is ~1.031, which means a pound of malt in a gallon of water will give you 1.031 wort at 100% efficiency - this is compared to typically ~1.036 from better quality base malt), 1.5kg light caramel (~25L) malt, 1kg crystal (~50L) malt, 30g Saaz hops, 12g Cascade hops, 50g East Kent Goldings, 50g Cascade, M54 yeast, M36 yeast. From your pictures, it looks like you might be missing some hops and some hops might have been replaced or delivered wrong (I see two packs of Goldings and one of Cascade where you should have one of Goldings, two of Cascade, and one of Saaz).
And you're going to be brewing 1 gallon batches.
Here are the instructions if you want to follow the intended recipe as closely as you can:
They don't give mash instructions, so I'd say aim around 67C for a pretty standard mash temp.
They suggest 70 minute boils. You can do this, but make sure to use enough extra water to avoid boiling off too much volume. I'd suggest dropping it to 40 minutes as that's when the first hops go in for both recipes anyway. For the amber, they suggest 30g Saaz for their 40 minute bittering addition, and 12g Cascade at 5 minutes left in the boil. For the English pale ale, it's 50g of East Kent Goldings at 40 minutes and 50g of Cascade at 5 minutes.
So cutting each of them down to the one gallon size:
Amber
800g base malt
300g light crystal malt
100g caramel malt
Mash at 67C.
Boil for 40 minutes.
~6.5g Saaz at 40 minutes.
~2.5g Cascade at 5 minutes.
Chill and pitch M54 (I'd use ~1/4 of the pack) and ferment around 18C.
English Pale Ale
800g base malt
100g caramel malt
Mash at 67C.
Boil for 40 minutes.
10g Goldings at 40 minutes.
10g Cascade at 5 minutes.
Chill and pitch M36 (again, I'd use ~1/4 of the pack), ferment around 18C.
If everything goes as it should, they should both be perfectly serviceable beers.
How much do you know about brewing, by the way? If you're brand new to the hobby and haven't done much research, you're going to need to know more than what I've said in this post. If you need further guidance, don't be shy.