(^2) DAILY MIRROR TUESDAY 27.08.
DM1ST
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MONDAY’S SET FOR LIFE: 11, 22, 25, 32, 39.
Life Ball: 3. Two winners of £10k a month for 30yrs.
SATURDAY’S LOTTO: 27, 36, 39, 45, 46, 55
Bonus: 38. No winner of £7.3m jackpot.
THUNDERBALL: 7, 9, 15, 33, 39
Thunderball: 13. Two £500k winners.
HEALTH LOTTERY: 8, 15, 18, 28, 35. Bonus: 49.
FRIDAY EUROMILLIONS: 4, 17, 35, 42, 45
Lucky Stars: 2 & 8. No winner of £91m jackpot.
THE LOTTERY
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CORRECTIONS & COMPLAINTS
20 YEARS OF PRIDE OF BRITAIN
To nominate for Pride of Britain 2019 visit prideofbritain.com
available on the NHS and her applications
for grants to fund a pilot study were
rejected. So she made the selfless decision
to sell her house to pay for it herself.
She said: “For me not to carry it forward
meant I would not have been true to
myself.” The study resulted in a 96%
success rate, so Jill decided to set up the
Buteyko Institute Trust, and
launched a two-year clinical study
in April 2001.
When she won Carer of the
Year at the 2002 Pride of Britain
Awards, 600 asthma sufferers
were trying the technique.
Jill was using most of her
wages to fund the research.
At the awards ceremony, she
met firefighters who saved lives at
the World Trade Center after the
9/11 terror attack, and she was
invited to America to help people whose
breathing was affected by the atrocities.
She has since travelled all over the world
and worked in schools.
The 65-year-old said: “Breathing
properly can help us all.”
10 MIN CROSSWOR
D
4 Throw across a surface (4)
5 Late restaurant critic,
— Ronay (4)
9 007 creator, — Fleming (3)
10 Shade (3)
11 Negative (3)
12 Hatchet (3)
13 Arm bone (4)
14 Decorative band (4)
15 Toothpaste container (4)
16 Organ of breathing (4)
17 Actress, — Barrymore (4)
ACROSS
6 Convey (5)
7 Barrel (3)
8 Retired UK tennis star (3,6)
13 Restless (9)
18 Welfare body (1,1,1)
19 Bout of indulgence (5)
DOWN
1 Caledonian (4)
2 Small measure of whisky (4)
3 Flood wall (4)
MONDAY’S SOLUTIONS ACROSS: 1 Rucksack, 6 OBE,
7 Aroma, 9 Sane, 11 Boss, 12 Soya, 14 Tutu, 16 Elfin, 18 Goa,
19 Culottes. DOWN: 1 Root beer, 2 Chess, 3 Span, 4 Coo,
5 Caravans, 8 Rest, 10 Asti, 13 Ought, 15 Undo, 17 Flu.
JILL McGowan knew better than most the
misery asthma can bring.
A sufferer herself, she had also spent 27
years as a nurse treating people with
breathing difficulties.
By 1996, she had become accustomed to
seeing sufferers relying on their inhalers
and medication.
But her life, and the lives of
dozens of her patients, changed
when she was introduced to a
little known treatment called the
Buteyko Institute Method, a
technique that was developed in
Russia in the 1960s.
Asthma sufferers generally
breathe up to five times more air
than they need.
The Buteyko method involved
training them to control their
breathing to take in less oxygen.
Jill, from Glasgow, tried the technique.
She was so amazed with the results, she
sold her house to fund research into it.
She said: “I went along for the course,
and after 24 hours I never touched an
inhaler again.” The treatment wasn’t
AWARD
Jill won
Carer of
the Year
Stores ‘sell
oversized
cabin bags’
TRAVELLERS have been
buying cabin luggage billed
as suitable for Ryanair,
when it is bigger
than the size permitted.
MoneySavingExpert
found Debenhams, Argos,
Robert Dyas and Ryman,
plus sellers on Amazon and
eBay, were responsible.
If a bag does not fit in the
bag sizer, passengers will
have to pay around £24 to
put the item in the hold.
Ryanair’s rules, changed
twice last year, to allow one
free bag up to 40cm x
20cm x 25cm in the cabin
for non-priority boarders.
Debenhams concession
holder Tripp Luggage said:
“Unfortunately some cabin
pieces on the website have
not been updated.”
Debenhams, Argos and
Amazon agreed to change
their websites, while eBay
is probing some listings.
Robert Dyas and Ryman
said they never said it is
free to take hand luggage
on board a flight.
CARRY ON Ryanair’s rules
FLIGHT PRICES
TAKE OFF NEAR
BA STRIKE DAYS
of rebooking was £3,236. Mr Emmett,
of Cwmafan, near Port Talbot, said:
“I’ve phoned more than 70 times since
Friday, and they just have a recorded
message.” BA said it would deal “with
each case on an individual basis.”
France. BA is offering refunds or
re-booking. But Adam French, from
Which?, said: “BA must urgently get
its act together and ensure anyone
whose flight is cancelled is rerouted.
“The airline also needs to do right
by passengers who spent hundreds of
pounds when wrongly told their
flights had been cancelled.”
[email protected]
@Grahamhiscott
due to fly to Greece. But on Friday an
email said the five flights, which cost
£1,381, were off due to strike action.
He followed instructions to claim a
refund. But when a second email said
the flights were back on and the cost
supply and demand. However, Emma
Coulthurst, of website Travelsuper-
market, said: “It’s been such a mess.”
Matters have been made worse
because some passengers booked on
September 8 and 12 were wrongly
told their flights had been cancelled.
An email admitted the mistake but,
by then, some had made other plans.
One was left £133 out of pocket after
booking replacement train tickets to
Airline blunder may cost family nearly £2k
A FAMILY ’S dream trip is in limbo
after BA axed their flights, only to tell
them hours later they could rebook
them – at almost £2,000 more.
In less than fortnight, Tyrone
Emmett, his family and friends are
mma France BA is offering refunds or
BRITISH Airways has ramped up
prices for flights taking off before
next month’s pilot strikes.
Yesterday it cost £514 to book on
the 7.40am Heathrow to Barcelona
flight on September 7, two days
before the first walkout. A week later
the same flight is just £280.
Manchester to Nice on that day,
changing at Heathrow, was £904. To
fly a week earlier it is £383.
Prices on rival carriers have also
jumped on the BA strike days of
September 9, 10 and 27. The rises are
down to pricing systems based on
Chaos ‘costing
fliers a fortune’ UP AND AWAY^
Prices are soaring
EXCLUSIVE
BY GRAHAM HISCOTT Head of Business
grace
(Grace)
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