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NIGHT CLUB QUEEN

MAGISTRATE’S WARNING. FINE FOR SELLING LIQUOR. LONDON, May 11. London’s night club queen, Airs. Kato Moy rick, must abdicate or face n severe sentence of imprisonment. A friend declares that London’s night life will see her no more. “I do not want to sand an old woman to prison if 1 can help it,’’ said Mr. Diummett, S.M., in convicting .Mrs. Moyrick of silling liquor without a license at the “Bunch of Keys” Club. Mrs. Meyrick. at the magistrate’s suggestion, pledged herself never to conduct another night club. She was lined £5O. with 60 guineas costs, and bound over for throe years on a second charge. Mr. Dumnictt warned defendant that a breach of the undertaking would bp most, severely punished. Miss Kathleen Aleyrick. daughter of the night club queen, visited Sydney by the Strathaird in March. There are two brothers and five sisters in the family. Two of the latter are married, one to a Scottish peer, Lord Kinnoul, and the other to Lord de Clifford, an Englishman with lands in Ireland.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19320521.2.76

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 75, Issue 118, 21 May 1932, Page 7

Word Count
176

NIGHT CLUB QUEEN Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 75, Issue 118, 21 May 1932, Page 7

NIGHT CLUB QUEEN Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 75, Issue 118, 21 May 1932, Page 7