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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 103

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
103
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Monday, June 23, 1986 The Philadelohia Inouirer 19-M 1 lit Continued from preceding page Collins was released after posting 10 percent of $5,000 bail. A hearing is scheduled for An accident led to the arrest Tuesday night of a Haverford man on charges of driving under the influence. Daniel Stewart, 29, of the 500 block of Old Lancaster Road was released after posting 10 percent of a $1,000 bond. A bearing was scheduled for Thursday. Police said Stewart's car was making a left turn from the southbound lane of Haverford Road onto Wynnewood Road and hit a car waiting for the light to change.

Stewart was also charged with resisting arrest and with not being a licensed driver. Police said Stewart threatened the officers and took a swing at them, but missed. A telephone-answering machine was stolen Wednesday from a house In the 100 block of Gilmore Road. Kntry was gained after the sliding-glass door on the patio was removed. Nothing else was reported missing.

ter Ave. in Bryn Mawr. A 73-year-old woman was robbed Wednesday night in the 200 block of Stoneway Lane in Merion. The woman told police that a teenager grabbed her purse, containing $7, and fled. The purse was recovered a short time later.

The woman was not injured in the robbery. A man was charged with aggravated assault, simple assault and reckless endangerment Wednesday after he threw a hoe through the window of his home and injured his mother, police said. Hamilton Carr, 29, of the first block of Holland Avenue, Ardmore, was being held at Montgomery County prison on $5,000 bail pending a preliminary hearing tomorrow. According to police, Carr threw a hoe through the window of the home he shares with his mother, Eileen Carr. The hoe shattered the window, said police, and glass landed in Eileen Carr's eyes.

She was treated at Bryn Mawr Hospital and released. A 1984 Buick, valued at $8,000, was A Haverford man was arrested on forgery and theft charges Wednesday after his parents filed a private criminal complaint against him, telling authorities that he had stolen their checks and cashed them. The amount of the checks was not given, police said. Thomas Lerro 19, was charged with forgery, theft by deception, theft by unlawful taking, harassment and disorderly conduct. He also was charged with harassing his parents, Thomas and Lydia Lerro, after they evicted him from their home in the 200 block of Walnut Hill Lane, police said.

He was sent to Delaware County Prison after failing to post 10 percent of $10,000 bail. A hearing was scheduled for Thursday. Lower Merion A 1986 Cadillac, valued at $26,000, was stolen Tuesday from the parking lot of the Lord Taylor department store at 121 E. City Ave. in Bala Cynwyd.

stolen overnight Wednesday from the parking lot of the Greenhill Condominiums at 1001 City Ave. in Over-brook. A purse containing $180 was stolen Wednesday from the Strawbridge Clothier department store in Suburban Square. The purse was owned by an employee and was stolen from behind a counter while the employee was waitng on a customer. A man was charged with driving under the influence and driving without a license after he was involved in an accident on Tuesday.

Thomas Hennessey, 48, of Wilmington was arrested after his car collided with a car driven by a 29-year-old Vineland, N.J., woman at the intersection of Montgomery and lona Avenues in Narberth. Hennessey was arraigned on Wednesday and released on his own recognizance pending a preliminary hearing. Neither driver was injured in the accident. Charges of driving under the infill-(See POLICE on Page 21) A 14-speed man's bicycle, valued at $1,100, was stolen Wednesday from the front porch of a home in the 300 block of Bala Avenue in Bala Cynwyd. A mobile telephone and antenna, valued at $1,700, were stolen Thursday from a 1983 Datsun parked in the lot at the Bala train station.

Several items of clothing were stolen early Friday from Different Strokes at 705 Montgomery Ave. in Penn Valley. The store had been broken into. A 1981 Cadillac, valued at $7,000, was stolen overnight Tuesday from the Pembroke Apartments at 121 Montgomery Ave. in Bala Cynwyd.

A portable computer, valued at $499, was stolen Tuesday from Radio Shack at 67 E. City Ave. in Bala Cynwyd. An AMFM cassette radio system was stolen between June 15 and Wednesday from a car parked at Sparta's service station at 809 Lancas for advertising information call 216-864-2371 in Pa. and 1-800-468-8248 in W.J.

Route 252 tt Mile South of Rt. 3 NEWTOWN SQUARE, PA. OUR FAMOUS TUESDAY COCOLUNCH SPECIAL Our Fabulous All You-Can-Eat GARDEN CAROUSEL QQ1 when served with any Lunch Item Haverford Plan for day care rejected By Bill Walls fecial 10 The tnuirer The Haverford Township Zoning Hearing Board has rejected an applica tion for a use variance for a day-care center at Chelton and Darby Roads. Board members said they shared the concerns of neighbors about traffic and parking problems. Residents told the board at its meeting Thursday that children played in 5 the streets outside their homes in the area, in the part of the Seventh Ward I zoned R-4 residential.

They said they feared the increase in traffic from 4 parents dropping children off at a cen- tor serving as many as 40 preschoolers. Before voting, board member Vin-i cent A. Morelli said, "I prefer we try to i keep our residential areas residential." That brought applause from an audience of 20. The vote was 30. The other board members are Edward R.

Mor-t gan, chairman, and Joseph Cirillo. I The applicants, Glenn Bogue, a lawyer from Ottawa, and his wife, Theresa, a registered nurse, said they had no experience in operating a day-care center. Glenn Bogue is a former track star at Villanova University and a member of the 1976 'Canadian Olympic team. In a hearing earlier this month, board members seemed perplexed about why the Boeues wanted to open a day-care center. Steven J.

Campetti, Board of Com- -j missioners president, who attended I the hearing, asked, "Am I to believe that an attorney and a registered i nurse are going to give up their professions to operate a day-care cen-i ter on Darby Road?" Bogue said that he and his wife were considering relocating. Bogue had bought the property contingent on obtaining a use variance. Some great new specialities added to our regular lunch menu: Turkey Divan Broiled Scrod Turkey Club id Seafood Supreme Grilled Reuben Hot Corned Beef 160 DeKalb Pike 3374516 CAFE LA GRANDE PRESENTS 'JJmcrvWc DviJicr JOIN US FROM PM ALL YOU CAN AT Featuring Stuffed Flounder With Crabmeat Soup: Losler Bisque Linguim with White Clam sauce Fried Clams Fried Shrimp Deviled Clams Caiun-style Catfish Shrimp Salad Fresh Fruit Bar Salad Bar Fresh Clams, Oysters Crab Legs, ShrrniD AVAILABLE SUNDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY Showtime from 4 m. All Dinner Entrees plus THE FOOD SHOW featuring Appetizers, Specialty Salads. Soup.

Chili, Fresh Fruits and Desserts. All for Enough to put a smile on Mono Lisa's lace 240 E. Lancaster Ave. Malvern. PA (215) 644-7333 DINNER fg Marinara lasagna Much, Mussels Seafood Dessert Crabmeat baiaa Much More and lunch 11 a p.m Sunday Buffet Brunch RESERVATIONS NECESSARY 30 a.m.-2 30 pm Closed Mondays Call 356-9700 'el-days excluded Ask for Morianna to discuss your next business or family party.

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About The Philadelphia Inquirer Archive

Pages Available:
3,845,541
Years Available:
1789-2024