Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Oct 1926, p. 10

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. handed Gloves But No Clue OPEN VERDICT Robbery Motive of Early Evening Crime in Bays- water Will the murder of Edwin Creed, ated to « provision shop manager added to the list of London's un. molved the ght o of Suir 28 last, when : reed's body hud- on the oSoaing Yeading to the cel. of the shop in Leinster-terrace, Yard officers and the local have been searching for the as. Every clus however, has proved fu- file, and when the inquest on Creed was concluded all the jury could do _-- to return a verdict of "murder somé person or persons un- Oswald, the Paddington coroner hoped the poilce would continue their inquiries and that the murderer would time be brought to justice, LEFT-HAND GLOVES. Detective-Inspector Mallett gave details of the scene inside the shop when the crime was discovered. Marks the sawdust indicated that the body had been dragged along the passage to the cellar stairs. Near Creed"s head lay a left-hand e with sawdust and on it; another left-hand glove found on a shelf over the stairs and a dark brown coat button, made of horn which did. not correspond Creed was wearing, safe was open----it had not been forced---and cheques and papers Were strewn about the floor. . There Was no money. Dr. Bronte, the pathologist, des. -@ribed the wounds on the head, which like « been caused by an instrument o nner or burgiar's jemmy, the attack had. been made from behind, Alfred Lennard, of Kingaley- road, rn, an assistant in the shop, sald left the premises at 7:10 p.m. The had been closed and Creed was to wash his hands as was his custom, before going home. £30 OR £40 GONE. On the previous night, after he left! the shop, Lennard saw a man knock at the door and then go round and "Jook through the side window. He then ed to the door and went er at the or £40 p cash in the safe, the wh of which in his pocket. The coroner mentioned that he had rend something about a young lady Who saw two men on the roof of the " Detective-1 or Mallett: The persons she saw were the con. fo and a chemist living in the "same strest, who entered with" the constable. In answer to a juror, the coroner the went "fo wash hig hands there a knock at the door, he hung the towel bannisters, went and answered no ou and then met with. his ing upon the difficulties of tracing the murderer, the coroner said that unfortunately the police did not tion She umber of the £3 note taken * USED HAND REND - 10 BLUDGEON CO Woman Attacked on Lonely Road . "Near Hull at Night A man has been detained in con. at the Sanatorium, After o close search over the week- "was returning to sanatorium he night she was with "hand grenaded y, VHA RN 00S sudden jar breaking a '1 Bolt, which 1Sir' T. Holland "Says: Ex}: AAARRAAAAAARAAR LUC KY RECOVERY OF LL FORTUNE FROM CITY RUBBISH HEAPS After a four dayw search & . Bradford' man has found £300 worth of bank notes in a rub- bish heap. Hé "put them among some old papers in a cupboard, but while he was on holiday a char. woman cleared out the appar- - ent.wevriieh into the dustbin, whence it Was sent to a muni- cipal rubbisf tip ERAAREARR AAAS OEE PROVED TOBEFATAL Breaks Promise to Mother With Disastrous Results AT BROOKLANDS Racer Going Over 100 Miles| An' Hour Overturns and Burns At the resumed inguest at Wey- | bridge, on Miss Helen Lavender Nor. | ris, the 20-year-old girl, of Haslemere, | Surrey, who was killed at Brooklands moter track on July 31, when she was! a passenger in the Sunbegm< Napier car, which was wrecked, a verdict of | "Accidentally killed" was returned. | The car, when travelling at 100 | miles an hour or so, overturned, land- | ed in a ditch and burst into flames Miss Norria was killed at once, and! Cyril Cornelius Bone, the owner-driver | injured. | The Coroner, in recording the ver dict, sald that the evidence showed | that theré was no blame attaching to! anyone, unless it was possibly the use of a 1000-10 chassis for such a high speed, A. V. Ebblewhite, official time.| keeper of the Brooklands Automobile | Racing Club, sald that the chassis of the car was of 1009-10 date, and ex- pressed the opinion that cars were not theh constructed to go at the high speeds of the present time, At the previous hearing the girl's stepfather, Harry Willlam Taylor, al dentist, of Haslemere, said that Miss | Norris's mother bad asked her not to go on the track, and she had promised not to do so. Mr. Taylor expressed the view that as it was only a plea- sure ride it was wrong of the driver to ve gone at "a terrific speed' on | the Top of the track : Mr. Taylor again attended, and | when asked by the coroner whether he | had-anything he desired to-say he ret peated his protest, and added avy think the authorities of the racing track should not allow young girls to be taken round in racing cars." LOVE OF SPEED. E. L. Armitage, an engineer, giving evidence, sald that he took Miss Nor- ris to Brooklands, and they spent an hour on the track. At tea Mr. Bone joined them and suggested that they shouid go round the track with him in his car. Coroner: Miss Norris knew that at times the car would be travelling at a high speed?--Yes. Mr. Armitage stated that he knew the car had previously done 113% miles an hour over the half-mile. Mr. Parkes: Did Miss Norris say she. liked speed and would like to go? - Yes, Cyril Cornelius Bone, the owner of the wrecked car, giving evidence, described himself as a member of the Stock Exchange. He said that during the afternoon of July 31 he had tested the car to his satisfaction, and men 'tioned to Mr. Armitage and Miss Nor. ris that it was going much better than usual. Miss Norris said that she was fond of going at high speeds, and would like to go round the track in a racing car. "CAR OUT OF CONTRO! He did not know the speed he was doing on the first lap with Miss Norris it was possibly 100 miles an hour. But on the second lap, when he had come down to the straight after pass- ing Byfleit Bridge, he was supposed to be doing just over 100 miles an hour. ""Then 1 suddenly found the front of the car swing down the banking." he continued. '"Thinking it was a skié 1 tried to correct it, but I found the steering was not working, and realized that the car was out of control. "Glageiug fon at my front wheels 1 saw, although the steering was at full lock, the wheels were hardly turn. A PTT aniasnannne { i i i } ivPhe next thing I remembered was a tremendous crash. I left she car with my clothes on fire." in reply to the Coroner he said that 'had driven a car of this nature since 17 year? old, but this year was the first time he had driven at a high speed. He drove on the track olice last year, and had practised consider- ve | 2DIY this. The car was a freak car, rebuiit by him. It was a Sunbeam en- ull | ove in a Napier chassis. He attributed the accident to the cauded the front axis to become: loose. The Coroner sald the qyestion was whether Mr. Bone 'was Just ified in going so fast with a girl in the car but it was quite clear that he knew nothing of her mother's request to her net to go on the track. perts Ale Have Duties : prvi ip : a made by J he sald, "that not wanted only as {that {a guest the chy { to discomfort. | of red brick and red-tiled rocts, 'THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG SMALLEST CHURCH IN THE WORLD ISATHAGKNEY Ten Poor Ancient Widows] Live in Ten Tiny - Almshouses OLD WORLD SQUARE {Services Were Were Held Every Week Until Few Years Ago It is claimed that Hackney poksesses | what is probably the smallest conse- crated church in the land. In it are seats for ° widows, "' | houses. a square, and fronting an Old World garden, give an impression of rusticity is rudely dispelled when cone crosses the toad into the clamor of Hackney. "Ten poor ancient widowk" have! lived there since the days of the Com- monwealth They no longer worship who-live in ten tiny aims. { In their tiny church, with its heavy vak { door, its tiled floor, its ten oak stalls, { and its ten straw stools, but until com i | paratively few years ago services had been held there every week since there was a Lord Protector of England. SIX paces take the visitor from wall | to wall, and if 'widows'* each took | th would be crowded | Although the church and ad, many of the istrict inhabit have never seen them nts they were provided by Bishop Thomas | Wood, some time Chaplain-in- Ordjgary | | to Charles 1 and Charles Ii. BOYSONDIETTO AID SCIENTISTS Novel Experiment Lasted| Four Years--Important Results In a village 11 miles from London | is a community of youngsters who should have a medal for thelr naturally healthy youthful appe- tites on the altir Of science For four years, by strict dieting, they have been helping towards the solution of a problem which the Medi. cal Research Counetl, in its report, de. scribes as one of great social value and national importance. They have been helping to find the ideal diet for hoys during school age. Hence théy have abstained from tof- fee and green apples and all tuckshop delights. The groups of boys lived In model cottages, and while a large number lived on the basic diet of the vil and gained an annual average of J. ibs. In. weight and 1.84 inches in height, boys in other cottages received additional rations "IMPROVED TONE." Why the miik, which was pasteur- ized, should have made such a re- markable difference to the ordinary | diet is not certain. "We may come | to ptiribute it to vitamins, but it may be fdue to other factors," comments th port. i er the boys. experimented upon were English in parentage, and of the type to be found jiving on the south side of the Thames. The first notice- able feature of the milk-fed lads was their improved tone and "spirit.' Dr. Corry Mann, who supervised the schéme, with the help of women assistants, declares "thef® were ob- viously more fie than those of the other groups.' The ed spirit of these boys led to them being more often in trouble for mi#dr offences against order. No measurable indications were found of their having greater pro- ficiency at = hoolwork. On the other hand, their high spirits were a sign of healthy bovhood, and the investi. gation showed how little extra was required of certain foods to improve the mutritive value of schoolboys' diet, EVADING DUTIES IS NOT CLEVER English Boot Manufactur- ers Face Many Fraud Charges Underpaid duties amounting to more than £48,000 wer™ alleged in a case at Hineklay, Leicestershire. Against Louis Michae! Ney and John Reginald Ney. ot manufacturers. They were on 37 charges of conspiracy to defraud by Furnishing false business accounts: making false returns for income tax and excess profits duty; making false personal returns. Mr. Waiter, prosecuting for the In- land Revenue, said there seemed to be an impression that evasion of income tax was an exhibition of cleverness. It was just as much a crime as in the case of an individual, GIPSIES STAGE Jennies Leads to at Mitcham. racas * ten poor ancient | These, forming three sides of | alms- | houses are just off the Lower Clapton | of the] Butt | sacrificing | FIGHT AT FAIR wits | POlice Raid on Spinning ?t A Great Parliamentarian i i | i . The Earl of Oxford and Asqui th recently celebrated his 74th birthday. ! Above is a recent ure of him with his little granddaughter, Priscilla, daugh. | ter of Prince and neess Bibesco, taken at the Wharf, Sutton Courtney. BRITISH EMPIRE IS REALLY RUN BY THE | | "AVERAGE ENGLISHMAN" i i | | i | { meant Englishman, The Scotsman | { was a different type. i The average Englishman of whom he spoke was not brilliant or spectacu- | lar, but he could be relied upon. He Was so reliable that we paid him | the compliment very oftén of taking | and | him 'as a matter of course, and we | { Woman---who, unheeded and un-| were very seldom disappointed, | | thanked, did the real work of the | The platoon commander, the cotin- | | world, by Major John Hay Beith [try curate, the slum doctor; the | ('lan Hay," the novelist)' in an ad- | schoolmaster and schoolmistress were | | dress at the City of London Vacation | the people who propelled the ship of | | Course | State Above them on the quarter. | Experts in education seemed to be | deck looking portentously solemn were | | entirely recruited from the people who | their superiors. But below the water. had never been young, he said | line these average people, unheeded | We had seldom in our history been |and to a large extent unsupervised, well led or wisely directed. The saw to it that the wheels went round strength of our country had always They grumbled and groused and said { been in "other ranks,"' whether mili. | they were *'fed up," but they carried | { tary, industrial, administrative; "or {bh because initiative and responsibil- professional | iF were in their blood, and kad been Most of our successes in war or | deve eloped by thelr educat They peace: were won. by "soldiers' bat. tles,"" that was by the average man, the average Englishman. When he said ""Englshman,'"' | oye day we aheyla got up 2 monu o.the Aw Ma ie gt Tomb. . the Unknown | Warrior, It 'would bear no name, It would have on it the inscription, "The Man who runs the Empire.' "' This was a striking passage {tribute to the Avérage Man in a not disappointed. { ward he | about. AGED FATHER SEEKS SONS' PRESENCE BEFORE : LIFE FLICKERS OUT | 1 have lost my three sons for 20, them, years, and they have Jost me. Will tative, | you please help an old man to find | ago. hie boys? This appeal The ship went for- and that was all they 'cared De sald to a press represe "came from Albert 20 year? \| There had been some trouble | {about money matters, and my boys | by | blamed me. But they discovered their Michael Caughlan, of 180, Queen"s- | mistake and sent me contrite letters. road, Bayswater, W., who says his | Albert wrote: sons are named John, aged 40, Albert, 1 would not like to break your dear 38, and Leo, 34. They are natives oid heart. 1am entirely in the wrong, of Lymington, Hampshire, but when | but 1 think this will strengthen our Mr. Caughlan last heard of them Al-|love-for one another. I will make a bert and Leo were students at Mot- | resolution to write oftener and come tingham House Convent School, El land see you oftener. Write back and tham, Kent, and John was about to|say everything I all right. leave for Canada. "1 wrote at once, but before he Mr. Caughlan, a grey-haired old | came to me 1 had changed my address, man, is in despair at the prospect of | and he, evidently, had left the con- dying before his sons could find him. | vent { He lives In one room, with only his| 'If my boys read this, let me beg old-age pension for support. lot them to come to their old father. 3 am 71 now, and the misery of the {| LAST LETTER. years } have spent looking for my "The ast letter received from | I boys is telling upon me." HOUSES ARE BUILT MONARCHS CARPET THROUGH SERMON. WORTH £100,000 Tenants Paying Small Ren-| Bears Eulogy of of Shah For| tal, Will Gwa Own Whom It Was Homes in 20 Years Made Ernest Armstrong, of Hankham- 1 A carpet, valued at about £100,000, | place, near Eastbourne, a retired ship | which twice in its *'cheqliered" his- owner and a staunch Liberal, was so! tory has been the gift of monarchs, Nk impressed by a sérmon on housigg de i now on view in Londen. livered by the Rev, James Reid at the "The Emperor's Carpet' 11ft., and was originally woven to the | Py 4 po LS t t Presbyterian Church, Bastbouriie. tha | order of Shah Safi at Ispahan in 1550. i he determined to help the homeless In| [+ jx sald to be the work of one man, | that district. {and took 20 yeirs to weave Within a few days he took over a Josde a border of greeh is a pale} firm of builders, and having obtained | EON ir the a hich a is pians, launched a building schemé at made. Polegate, near Eastbourne. The ground celor is a delicate ruby. | Thirty-eight houses are mpidiy},, The carpet was given as a gift to} Peter fhe Great, Tsar of Russia, who | nearing completion there. Mr. Arm strong is cutting ouf ail profits, and) in 1098 presented it to the Emperor | Leopold of Austria, giving the tenants the benefit of the Government subsidy. ~All the houses | Jhis lustorie on et Plated SY have been aliocated, and the tenants, | acu! b Lona fn ustrian Govern- by paying sowething under 15s a |™e0t BF 8 on Hem week, will in 20 years' time own their A. MODEL OF MOSES po FOOTFALLS TABERNACLE MADE rum, ore Tees Ornaments of Gold and Afk Weird Nobes n of Covenant are : Ghostly manifestations are disturb. Included ing the village of Oxspring, near Shef- After 30 years' toil, E Jones, an field. Mr. George Rowse, an engine- driver. , of Craves avenue, Fly- has Deen awakened from his sleep mouth, has made a model of the taber- | | might after sigie by Stealthy foatatepe nacle srect a | wal ng up re, & the cor. $ 8d by Moses in the wilder-| "iq nis bedroom, and round bis ness. It is composed of materials simi- | poy lar to those Moses used. Foe model 1a} 9 ft. by 4% ft. The sppointments of thy temple, all] of real gold, include the seven branch- i od candiestick, and there is a repro i a was sent out 3 | ! 1 i } | { : As a diversion there Box been shak. ing of his bed, the shiffing of chairs, land the clattering of drinking glasses | on the washstand. A few weeks age Mr, and Mes. | Rowse became Sh troubled that they in gold of the Ark of the Cov. {invited a friend to sleep in the bed. emant. Mr. Jones has graven the two room. They did not tel! her about the tablets of stone with the [en Com- | peculiar happenings, but during the' mandments, and Inscribéd the entire | night she woke wp terrified. Book of Deuteronomy on four strips!' She declared that she saw a glass of parchment which, when foided, can | move on the washstand. feit a Chair easily be enciesed in the Ark. simuchar | move by the bedside and heard foot- "Maryland Export "Exports are. Cut something between a turtie and a tor- { delic ious, | expected no thank#-and so they were : ba mighty leap. EARD INBEDROOM i Monday, October 11, 1926, A PAGE OF BRITISH NEWS FOR THE READERS OF THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG TERRAPIN RAISING IS NEW INDUSTRY ~ ONKENTISH FARM HUNDRED POUND BABY BORNAT 00 BUTTS AN HPO Out by English Ex- periment DISH FOR EPICURES Animals, But in Trout Tank, Killed Fish in Few Minutes ------ So great i§ the demand in London for terrapin--littie animals which are tolse -- that a terrapin farm has been started near Maidstone, Kent. Before the farm was opened terrapin were sent over from Maryland, a town on the Atlantic coast, which is famous for breeding these animals. The terrapin were previously sent to England alive, in tanks, and taken to the hotels, but now only a few are coming from the other side as the farm {35 a great Success. "This farm was n the nature of an experiment at first," said an official at the Savoy Hotel, "We started it with about fifty, and now we have bred hundreds. ""They thrive in marshy land and live half in and half out of water, and feed on small fish, insects and all' kinds of greenstuff. Their shells are diamond-shaped and the color of dark tortoiseshell. * 'Stewed Terrapin Maryland," as an item on a dinner menu, would con- vey nothing out of the ordinary to an Englishman, but it is one of the favorite dishes for tourists '"The animals are boiled three times, cut inte small pleces, then rolled in flour, and served with cream, eggs, butter and sherry, and they are really ""When the first' ? winapin were brought over they were put in the trout tank, Within a few minutes they had killed every one of the trout: '""Terrapin have to be handied very carefully as they have been known to give very se severe bites.' OVER ONE HUNDRED COACHES RUN AWAY Dash Two Miles Downhill and Pile Up On Embankment Dashing through Triangle Station, near Halfax, at a speed of 30 miles an hour, 112 runaway passenger coaches and guards' vans fouled the Watson Crossing points, and the lead. ing carriages crashed into an embank- ment. Four were smashed to pieces, and several other carriages were derailed The crash came after the carriages had run two. miles down a . steep gradient. Loss of life was narrowly averted, for the local train from Sowerby | Bridge to Rishworth had passed Wat. son Crossing only a few minutes previously, The crash occurred on the branch line of the L, M. and 8. Railway, | which runs from Sowefby Bridge to | Rishworth, and had it net been for the | catch points at Watson Crossing the | coaches would have run through Sowerby Bridge Station'and on to the main line, For a distance of four miles between the two points there is a double line, but only one line ls used for regular traffic. The coaches were those week-end excursions and placed on the line not regularly u Traffic was held up for hours, and breakdown gangs from Low Moog and Wakefield removed the wreckage. An inquiry is to be held. | sed for n MIGHTY JUMP IS LIBERTY EFFORT |Muntjac Makes Makes Valiant At- " tempt to Swim Regent Canal A really amazing jump for treadom |! has just taken piace at the London | { Zoo. The heroine was a female munt- | jaca small variety of deer She was in the Zoo hospital] recover- | Ling from a wound in the side, and her is 25ft. by | keeper had entered the big loase-box fo | clean it out. At this moment half the | outer onken door was shut--which pro- | vided a barrier about four feet high {and the inner door, which is formed lof iron bars spaced about six inches apart, was also closed. ° The muntjac grew nervous and took Gauging the centre | of a pair of bars to the fraction of an | inch, she went clear through the inner door and over the outside barrier In & single 'jump. Then the little deer 4 bounded through the length of the gar. } Senay and just behind Mouksy oy her way out into the r ah got down the steep a nad of the | Regent's Canal, which she entered and | swam strongly. { Some workmen gripped her by a hind leg, and she was recaptured and | brought back to her quarters. A close- i meshed pelting now covers the iron | : FLYING LEAP INTO GARBAGE WAGON Riding pillion on a motor cycle at | , near Southampton. Gunner | Wiifred Morrey, of the Royal Arti! ery, had a remarkable experience. The machine collided with the rear; of & scavengers' cart and Morrey was | Hug over the tailhoard into the cart, anid the bolted. When Morrey scrambled out -he found the driver of the motur-cyele, | Henry sGorge W. Griffiths, of fark Hii aD lying in the.road severely injured. ! : BURGLAR'S RECEIPT. A burglar who bioke into the vil. lage institute at Hambledon, near Godalming, and stole, : things, a silver cup vajued at F108 jeft behind a receipt for the stolén goods. EES RR | cracked and a loud bang was heard in]. the attic over the bedroom 14 A zinc bath full af ota i= want in the attie, an® it sounded na if ¢ tools had fallen from a height ina In bath, but an investigation showed § ean i with the tables and the gouden pot of [steps walking round. | 'On Saother occasion the bedroom ihe tools and balh were SaCatGrted » : other | Hall, Few Hours AEF Bifh" Waddled Into Pond for Swim FATHER EXILED Mother Watched to See il She Performs Maternal Duties Fér the first time for §4 years a baby hippopotamus has been born at the Zoo. The last event of the kind wax on November 5, 1872, the newcomer being accordingly named "Guy Fawkes." He died of old age 36 years later, : The new boby hippo weighs 1 owt, stands ten inches at the shoulder, and is three feet long. Save to Joan, the mother, it is not much of an attraction, at present, as parent and infant are boarded off {from the publie, Within a few hours of birth the young hippo waddled down to the waterside and, foliowing Joan's exame ple, plunged inte the indoor floundering around in evident delight and occasionally taking rides on the capacious cranium of its mother, Bobbie, the father, has been exiled to another enclosure, and, save for » possible visit later on, he is not Hke« ly to join his family again, his tems per being too doubtful Joan is also boing watched to see whether she is pérforming her 'matere nal duties, for, If not, she will lose the *'custody of the child,'* and the | keeper, with the ald of copious flag. qae-offnilk, will take over the respons sibilities of foster-mother. No stranger could venture to enter the nursery at present, 'Joan's all right with us because we converse with her," said the keeper, "She knows our voices, and we should never think of going in without talk ing to her first." It will probably be a month before the new arrival is publicly exhibited. CRUSHING TAXATION COMPELLED SALE Famous Romney Disposed of by Old British Family +The reason why Sir Willlam Bromley Davenport decided to sell.the famous Romney portrait of "Mrs. Davenport" which fetched the record figure of £60,000 at Christie's, was explained by Sir William to a reporter. "With crushing modern taxation {and the cost of living," he said, "it is | impossible for a country gentleman to keep open his country house and re- tal in a 11 his pictures. "I was naturally pleasantly sur- { prised that the picture should fetch this record figure, but I feel the loss of 'what has been to me the most beau- tiful pleture in the world. After all, one does not like selling the portrait of one's great grandmother, a cherish. ed possession of the family since 1782, The room from which it is. missing will never be the same.' BURGLAKS TO0 LATE, It 'was disclosed py Sir Willlam that the picture had a parrew escape from being stolen two years ago. Hea brought it up from his Cheshire seat, where it was usually kept, with an other art work, to his flat, On leaving he decided to return them to Cheshire, substituting two others. Soon afterwards burglars raided the flat and ripped the rwo substitutes but of thelr frames. The pictures wers never recovered, and it la presumed that the thieves destroyed = tham to avold detection Whethér the Romney will remain in this country or go to America is a question which is arousing much speculation in art circles, GOING TO AMERICA? Bdward Duveen, brother of Sir Joseph Duveen, sald, he did not know what would be the destination of the pleturs "There is always a possibil. * he sald, "that it may go to Am- as. but there are still wealthy art connoisseurs and collectors In this feountry On the other hand, Sir Joseph Duveen's auction opponent, Charles Carstairs, of Knoetiers, thought that the odds were. on it going to America, where there were plenty of rich peo- ple who liked Romneys "1 had no puyes in view when 1 bid up to 56,000 eas. 1 was animated only by the al re 10 possess a beautiful thing." £650.000 WINDEALL FOR THE EXCHEQUER Three Wills Each Exceed- ing Half a Million Pounds In death duties the Exchequer wil] receive 005.000 under three wills ree {cently probated. Over £250,000 will be paid by the estate of John Musker, of Thetford, Norfolk, one of the founders of the {Home and Colonia! Stores, who left | $875,387 For years he was one of the {ieading breeders of bloohstock, and breader of Jack Horner, winner of This jyeatr's Orand National He left £30,000 in consols to his {five children, with the request that they would appiy the same for such of Ni relatives, dependents and others in his employ. Hetiry M. Beausire merchant, of Liverpool, and of Ashfield Hall, Nes- {ton, Cheshire, a director of severs! ine surance companies, Jeft (543.738, Duties wil lamount fo over {156.000, Dr. John B. Simpeon, of Bradiey Wylam:-on-Tyne, mining en. gineer, left £812,170, on which death duties will amount te 'over £242.000, He left 13.000 for distribytien to This windial ta the do sanething low Fide owious deliciengy he surrent yase<in duis of ut Taps ield is shoei by Dearly PY ig Sf he roger bonne asi Tn ceivaia up the

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