NOTEPAPER CHEQUE.
PEER COMMITTED. LONDON, Oct. 11. Lord Torrington has been committed for trial on a charge of passing a valueless cheque. The prosecution alleged that he presented a cheque for £lO, written on notepaper, upon a Nottingham. Bank, to Mr Oliver, a chemist at West Mailing, Kent. Oliver, though suspecting the cheque’s validity, advanced £5. The bank dishonoured the cheque because Lord Torrington’s monthly allowance of £25 had been stopped. Torrington did not reply to Oliver’s request for an explanation, but anonymously sent a money order for £5 after proceedings had been instituted.
Lord Torrington, who is 39 years old, succeeded his father, the eighth Viscount, in 1889. He was divorced four years ago. He was Page of Honour to Queen* Victoria and King EdV,mil VII. During the war he was ie-kvn prisoner-while Hying.
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Manawatu Standard, Volume XLV, Issue 276, 26 October 1925, Page 8
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135NOTEPAPER CHEQUE. Manawatu Standard, Volume XLV, Issue 276, 26 October 1925, Page 8
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