In other words, HTML considers any amount of white space (including carriage returns) to be equivalent to a single space. Hence writing
<tr><td >My Information</td><td width=100><fontcolor=blue>
DIV_BORY__V10.30.0__AR
LIV_BORY_1696_V10.30.0__HD
LIV_BORY_162X_V10.30.0__CL
</font></td>
is the same as writing
<tr><td >My Information</td><td width=100><fontcolor=blue>
DIV_BORY__V10.30.0__AR LIV_BORY_1696_V10.30.0__HD LIV_BORY_162X_V10.30
+.0__CL
</font></td>
As
matija says, the solution is to use <tr> pairs around each line -- this creates new lines for your table. If you put 'border="1"' in the table definition, you would see that each row is in a different cell of the table. The other solution, also mentioned above, using <br> would put all the information into one single row, but still separated on different lines.
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