Oshawa Times (1958-), 15 Sep 1966, p. 19

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, Stole a pay eheque from) vehicle while intoxicated netted a fellow employee. Donald Leonard Carr a 14-day He was caught trying to cash |jail sentence, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, September 18, 1966 -- GOOD FOR BUSINESS Africa totalled Foreign investment in South|the end of ig a a * BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE FLOODED HIGHWAY Motorcycle Club and 'Satan's Choice' Clubmen |Assaulted OPP Officer © When a Whitby provincial police officer arrived at an East Whitby Township home he was met by a naked and bleeding youth. The youn claimed he had been beaten up by his brothers and he wanted police protection back into the house so he could get his clothes. What happened next led three Oshawa youths before Mazgis- trate Harry Jermyn at Whitby court, Tuesday. Brothers Murray Madill, 21, and Herbert Madill, 19, and Dennis Tripp, 19, all pleaded not guilty to a charge of as- saulting OPP constable Bibeau. Dennis Tripp and Herbert Madill were both fined $150 and costs or 45 days in jail. Murray Madill was fined $100 and costs Bior 30 days in jail. Each of the defendants was given time to pay the fines. Giving evidence, Constable Bibeau said that after arriving and finding the naked and bleeding youth he entered the house at RR 3, Oshawa. Tripp, Const: Bibeau said, told him that the three were members of the Satan's Choice) "if he didn't watch out he was dead." Two of the youths, he said,| Autos are stranded on roads in northern Vir- south-bound land of Shir- ginia were closed for a ley Highway near the Shir- time in the rain measuring lington, Va. area in the between 6 and 7 inches in | said he saw Tripp wrap a) leather belt around his knuckles |with the buckle facing out- | wards, | The three, he said, pushed R. North of Oshawa. the three were arrested, SPEEDING It was outside the Pickering police department that the progress of Wayne Dougias Huggins, of Napanee, was first noticed. A police officer looked out of the window and saw Huggins go by at a fast rate of speed. A police chase ensued when speeds of 75 miles. per hour were reached. Huggins, who was charged) with careless driving, was fined) $75 and costs or 15 days in jail. charge. DISMISSED A case of 'care or control while intoxicated was dismissed against William E. Gregg. of Toronto. A Toronto man was bound) over to keep the peace in the sum of $500 when he appeared | on a charge of threatening a| Pickering woman. He pleaded not guilty to threatening harm to Rosemarie | Smagala and her husband. On a charge of having liquor | Cecil Kay of Pickering was fined $25 and costs or 10 days in jail. The unlawful sale of a fire- larm cost William James Wood, made a move toward him. Helo RR 3, Pickering, a six-month |} pushed them to the ground. He suspended sentence, The gun was confiscated. TWO YEARS A British Columbia man was sentenced to two years at He pleaded guilty to the) suburbs on Washington dur- ing heavy downpour of rain today. This and other a 24-hour. period. (AP Wirephoto) Penitentiary Awaits Escape Count Trial tol, although he had not fired it, | and had no licence for the cur-| BOWMANVILLE -- A Niag- era Falls man was remanded in custody to county jail at Whitby following his appear- ance in Mazgistrate's court Tuesday on two charges of escaping custody. Last week Thomas Magnoff and Harry Allan Crawford pleaded not guilty and asked for time to get the services of a lawyer. They were remanded to county jail, Cobourg, for one week, . e broke out of jail, beat - two a ana escaped taking twa) with em. The other pags were catight in Yorkville, Toronto, Friday. Crawford is still at large. Magnoff was ar- rested in the Newcastle area Saturday. A police inspector from Wel- | land said Magnoff and Craw- ford, who were serving time in Kingston Penitentiary, were brought to Welland to give evidence in another case. The inspector and another officer, acting as sheriff's officers, were returning them to King- ston. When the prisoners request- ed that they be taken to a washroom the officers stopped at a restaurant at the inter- section of Highway 401 and Waverly Rd. Bowmanville. Upon coming out Magnoff yanked the handcuffs from the inspector and took off across Prisoner rent year. Cobbett said he owned a .22,| a 30-30 and a pistol and had gone hunting last year at Ban- croft but not this year because the season did not open until Sept. 15. "You have sworn under oath) that you were only target prac- | observed Magistrate) "T will give you! tising,"" R._B. Baxter. the benefit of the doubt." him out of the house. No blows |Kingston Penitentiary after Toronto, was sentenced to {seven days in jail, His licence was suspended for 12 months. He pleaded guilty to the charge. | A 23-year-old Pickering youth' appeared for sentence on \charges of being drunk in a eres. place and causing a dis- urbance. He was fined $50 and ate or 10 days on each charge. A Toronto man, John Alex- ander McKenzie was given an 18-month suspended sentence when he appeared on a charge of causing a disturbance. The |suspended sentence was given nm the understanding that he lseek psychiatric help. A Toronto youth, Glen Gallin- | get, was fined $50 and costs or 10 days in jail when he ap- | peared on a charge of 'minor! consuming. PAY CHEQUE A summer employee with the| department of lands and |forests, Anthony Younghus- band, of Pineridge Rad. Picker- uttering the signed cheque. He pleaded guilty to both charges. Sentencing was put over two weeks 80 a pre- sentence report could be ob- |tained on his past. THREE CHARGES A Toronto youth was fined a total of $200 on three separate charges. when he appeared be- fore Magistrate Jermyn. Keith Oldham, 18, of Concord Ave., was fined $50 and costs or 10 days for minor consum- ing, 375 and costs or 15 days for careless driving and $75 and costs or 15 days for having no insurance. For driving while impaired, Joseph Roberts, of Bond St. E., Oshawa, was fined $100 and jcosts or 15 days in jail. He 'wtesded guilty to the charge. Having care or control of a the cheque. He was charged > |with the forging of an en- Picghn | while by mos, dorsement to the cheque and Gitert st E., Whitby, gt go $100 and costs or 15 days for impaired driving and $25 and costs or 10 days for supplying liquor to a minor. He was William Henry Airhart, of Dun- das St. E., Cooksville. RADIATION NO PROBLEM VICTORIA (CP) -- Canada's industrial radiation accident record is "excellent," says the assistant. director of ical services for Ontario Hydro. Dr. R. B. Trewin of Toronto Tues- day said there have been no deaths in recent years and vir-| tually no serious. exposure to| ionizing radiation. He was) speaking to the International Association of Industrial Acci- A Cooksville man was fined dent Boards. 4 DYNAMIC DAYS OF MINISTRY FROM TULSA, OKLA. ---- PUBLISHER "FAITH DIGEST" --- HAS HED TO THOUSANDS IN 40 NATIONS. FRI & SAT---FAITH NIGHTS MESSAGES YO BUILD FAITH FOR SALVATION : eae ee SUN--DECISIONS F FOR CHRIST rei FOR THE @NTT pauect. MON--"HEALER OF TRINIDAD" FILM PREMIERE--A POWERFUL FILM, Docu. MENTS A MIRACLE WHICH CHALLENGES EXPLANATION"AF THERE 16 NO GOD. COLOR, EVERYONE WELCOME AT CENTRAL TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOL Herbord & Lippincott Sts., Terente SEPTEMBER 16, 17, 18, 19 et 7:30 p.m. H Do You Have | Your 66-67 MEMBERSHIP 1 TICKETS ? |} OSHAWA TAMBLYN LTH1 » OUR FIRS SPECIAL VALUES See Page 21 Ce LITTLE THEATRE |were struck against him. Hejpleading guilty to a theft of an ~ was, he said, only pushed and) shoved. Outside, he radioed for as- sistance while the three hurled| taunts and insults at him. The three then jumped onto! motorcycles and rode away.' Constable Bibeau followed.'George Edward Watkins, Oshawa man's car. Ralph Anderson, a man with ja lengthy record over a num- ber of years, admitted stealing! the car and trying to sell it in Toronto. For driving while intoxicated | of | 11% For All Your Fall Sewing Needs House oF Fapric Kina St. East Shop ot | | 725-4551 was "also 'dismissed. { the fields. When the officer | saw he was being outdistanced | he returned to the service cen- | tre and assisted his partner who was having trouble with | the other prisoner. From the service centre he | phoned the local OPP office then | set off again in pursuit of | Magnoff, The officer snied him hiding in long grass near a rail- | road embankment, Magnoff re- fused to go quietly and had to | be wrestled all the way to the | road where a cruiser from the | local detachment had pulled! up. a THE BOY WHO BECOMES Crown Attorney G. F. Bonny- | castle recommended that Mag- noli be remanded a week in, county jail at Whithy where, there is greater security than | at Cobourg. Magistrate R. B. Baxter con- curred, GET BENEFIT DOUBT Two Oshawa men charged with hunting without a licence were given the benefit of the doubt when they insisted they were only target practising. Douglas Cobbett, 51 Nassau St., pleaded not guilty and his friend, Robert Jones, same. Beverly Sterling had already paid his fine. The game warden laid the charges when he observed the three men carrying firearms in a field off the Second Con- cession of Cartwright Town- ship. Cobbett and Jones had .22 rifles and Sterling a_ pistol. Cobbett produced a 1965 licence which had expired in February this year. The field was cover- e@ with Christmas trees and brush and was inhabited by deer, grouse, rabbits and pheasants. Cobbett explained that they were on Jamieson's farm, which was private property, and that they had asked per- mission to do target shooting. He admitted it was not a regu- | lation target they were using but a plastic coffee cup. He | further explained that they | were testing the sights of their rifles and that his was firing a little to the right and needed | to be adjusted by a gunsmith. Sterling told the same story adding that he paid his fine} begause he was carrying a pis- did the | THE SPARKPLUG in every group there's a boy who "fires up" the others and get things going in a hurry. More often than not, this sparkplug is a newspaperboy. There are reasons, of course. A newspap erboy is a "manager" and a "doer". He has learned to manager his time so that he can develop a business of his own, while, at the same time, pulling down good grades in school. Through meeting people and dealing with them, he has developed initiative and self-confidence -- both outstanding traits of a leader. More than that, he has learned the value of service to others; so, when his group seeks a chairman or a president, he is not only willing to serve, he is well able to do so. When you encourage your son to make the most of his opportunities as a newspaperboy you are encouraging him to take advantage of the finest leadership training course available, ANYONE INTERESTED IN THIS OPPORTUNITY: PLEASE PHONE THE CIRCULATION DEPT. 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