SUSTENANCE FRAUD
•Press AssOciation,!
Man with Eleven Children
(By Telegraph—
§ DUNEDIN, Last NighL Described by Chief-Deteetive Young fts probabjy the most difficult case yet to come before the Court, -Clarence Harold Lowe faced 12 eharges of obtaining sustenance relief by inaking false statements. It was shown that Lowe was & mar- • ried man with 11 children, the eldest being 14 yearg pf age, and that over a ppripd of a year he had received £67 i3s 2d to which he was not entitled. The Magistrate took into account Lowe's circumstances, imposing a fine of £5 and costs 10s on the first charge, payment to be suspended until a further order of the Court. On" the other eharges accused was convicted and ordered to . come up for seutencp if called upon within two years.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HBHETR19371113.2.128
Bibliographic details
Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 43, 13 November 1937, Page 15
Word Count
132SUSTENANCE FRAUD Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 43, 13 November 1937, Page 15
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