TWENTY-THREE CHILDREN
Rec. noon. LONDON, July 9. Dr. G. O. Taylor, of Peterhead, refers in the "British Medical Journal" to a woman patient aged 53 from .a Scottish rural district who had 23 children. Her mother, aged 75, had 22 children, and is still fit for daily work in the fields.
TO TRY WAR CRIMINALS Rec. 12.30 p.m. RUGBY, July 9. Sir Basil Hurst, the leading British authority on international law, who since 1929 has been a Judge—and later President —of the Permanent Court of International Justice, will be the British member of the United Nations commission for the investigation of war crimes.—B.O.W.
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Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 9, 10 July 1943, Page 5
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103TWENTY-THREE CHILDREN Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 9, 10 July 1943, Page 5
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