The Castlegar Sun Wednesday, May 29, 1991 The Castlegar Sun Page 5B of difference ¢; Page 4B Anerersas te! of infection. three: months — “after wanton ., stabbing. strange and unusual set of clreum- stances unfolded around Leonard Thomns in 1049, whereby. he stood trial on two separate occasions for one criminal act. Intriguing? You bet, Len was a 46-year-old warchouseman who lived in Tooting, London. He and his wife Florence had not been getting along well. In fact, when the pertinent portion of our story took place, they were separated, Flo maintained her own apart- ment, where she lived with her young daughter, Sheila. y It depends on whom you want to belicve when it comes to the underlying reason for the Thomas’ dis- cord, Len claimed that Flo told him she packed bag and baggage becauso he refused to take up dancing pasa hobby, Later, Len would state that when Flo fat suggested he learn to dance, he had diligent: other men, untru son for the Thomas’ separa. tlon was immatertal. Th results would have been exactly the same. On March 13, 1949, Len paid a visit to his wife's apartment, He and Flo argued. Len produced a Jackknife and proceeded to stab his wife 13 times, She lay helpless on the floor. A nelghbor heard the com- motion and ran to Flo's apartment, She found Flo on the floor and Len sitting on a chair, looking out a win- dow. Flo looked up and said, “He's stabbed me in the back and I can't feel my legs.” he neighbor looked at Len and blurted out, ‘You brute, you've murdered jer!"* Len replied, ''Yes, and I'm prepared to swing for it.” The neighbor forcefully told Len to call a doctor. He responded curtly, ‘Il won't felch a doctor, I'll fetch the police." As it turned out, both a doctor and police were soon at the scene, Len was arrested and charged with attempted murder. He was tried, found guilty and sen- teneed to seven years’ imprisonment. Flo Thomas lingered in hospital for weeks, She had given statements to police . ar “*'from' the wounds inflicted by her’ ‘hsb The ~ regarding’ the’ statibin; of her statement: ‘unchallenged and instrumental in convicting ar hiehar URGENT IN NELSON CIVIC CENTRE | PUBLIC AUCTION RE: DEFAULTED UNPAID DOCUMENTS CANADA CUSTOM CLEARED DUTIES & TAXES PAID AT PORT OF ENTRY VALUABLE PERSIAN CARPETS | Fine imported rugs and majority consists of hand- knotted oriental rugs. Contents: Persian Tabriz, Baluch, Indo Kirman, Deep Pile Mainland Chinese, Bokhara, Sunwashed Village Rugs, Kars, Silk Masterpiece Qum, etc. Sizes 1x1 to 10 x 14. In the quickest possible manner rugs unwrapped and liquidated piece by piece. Monday, June 3, 1991 The Civic Centre 719 Vernon Street at 7:00 p.m. Sharp Viewing from 6:00 p.m. ‘3e: Advert. subject to terms and conditions of auction at auction site. * Liquidation by Federal Collection Agency | #)/;-2.00 ; * Terms; Cash, Major Credit Cards, Bank Cards, or Bank Cheques. ¢ 10% Freight, Brokerage and Warehousing Charges to be added. e, As it turned out, the rea. | nt ‘were MAX HAINES Len The Dancer Was Prepared To NO ieameee Now, things became complicated. Flo, confined tu hospital, was paralyzed in portions of her. legs. She developed a bedsore on a paralyzed area of her leg. Wi The bedsore healed, but two weeks later, another as bedsore developed high on her thigh, which was not paralyzed. It too became infected. The infection caused her entire body to become septic. Despite injuries which made her lame. Suppose this woman later was struck by a car because her lameness rendered her incapable of Betting aut of the way. the man who had caused tl responsible for her death? Len’s counsel urged the jury.to remember that the bedsore which: caused death e original Injury was not on that the best effort of attending physicians, Florence part of the victim's body which was paralyzed. He Thomas died, three months after her husband's wanton atlack, With Florence's death, Len was taken from prison and charged with her murder. On July 13, Len appeared once more at the Old Bailey, where he pleaded not guilty to murder. His counsel entered a plea that he cottld not be prose- cuted because he had already been convicted of the offence charged. In all the history of crime in Eng- land, this was the one and only case where a man had been found guilty of attempted murder and was serving his sentence when his victim died, plac- Ing him In the position of facing the courts again, this time charged with murder. The presiding judge threw out the plea, reasoning that being convicted of attempted murder was not the same charge as murder. Len’s murder trial took place as scheduled, here was no controversy as to the jackknife attack on Florence Thomas, That was conceded by both sides, Len's lawyer put his client on the wit- lurther stated Uhat the fatal bedsore developed weeks after the stabbing. The infection did not originate at any of the stab wound entry points. In charging the jury, ihe presiding Jw Ife empha- sized three points, which he asked sider when deliberating the guilt or innocence of the accused, Was it the accused who struck the blows? At the time the blows were slruck, was there an intent either to kill or to inflict grievous bodily harm? Did death result from those blows? He further pointed out that if the blows were struck in such a manner that an ordinary of his senses, believed that grievous bodily harm would result, then murder had been committed. ie judge went on the explain that the defendant claimed that his mind was a blank at the time of the crime. Conversely, the prosecution had pointed out that as Len usually didn’t carry a jackknife, his mind would have to have been a blank from the Ume he had put the jackknife in his pocket, je jury to con- man, in possession stand, a risky ploy under any circumstances. As the aclual cause of death had been an infected ness Len eried like a baby as his lawyer altempted to illustrate that he had not intended to kill his wife. Len stated, ‘‘My mind became a complete blank until I found myself holding a knife and my wife lying on the floor. I cannot remember going out to lo any injury.”” The medical evidence was scanned in meticulous detail. Len's lawyer stressed that Flo had not died “pause of death was a’ bedsore which’ Had’ Keedme alnfected.. In an attempt to illustrate:sthe point;:he: + asked the jury to consider a hypothetical case whereby a woman, having been attacked, received ‘You'll find it all in the Sunt Excellent Business Opportunity Available We are looking for an_owner-operator of a Chinese/Japanese fast food outlet to be located in a new fast food court in Nelson. : Please direct. your inquiries to 354-4496. Ask for Garth Walker. Graham Read Quality Products Guaranteed 222-102 Street Castlegar The Best” "Because You Deserve | Are you fed up with your current. personal Be) circumstances? Fed up with not being steadily employed and having to constantly scramble just to. get by? Tired of working hard and not getting the rewards you think you deserve? Maybe it's time to make a career change by taking your future into & your’own hands. :We ‘now have an opening in our @ sales team and it's your opportunity to take the bull.F by the horns and make that’ important decision f ‘fi today! Join the Kootenays: largest Import dealership, receive on the job sales training and § a ‘put your worrles behind you. . Adopt a cop? KIMBERLEY - It’s a bird, it’s a plane, no it’s Adopt-A-Cop—if sometime in mid-June you see a police officer streaking by you at close to the speed of light, don't be concemed, just open your wal- let and make a donation to the Torch Run. Using Kimberley as the starting point for one of the three runs in British Columbia, the Kimberley Dear Ann Landers: The letter about the husband who lovingly cared for his wife who. has Alzheimer's prompted me to tell you about, another beautiful love Within minutes another hospital bed was brought into Mother's room. Dad has slept there every night. While the nursing staff attends to her daily moming bath, Dad goes home, fixes himself ly, my 74-y 1d moth- ” er was hospitalized for surgery in Hudson, Wis. On the moming she was admitted, I was present when my father asked the attending nurse if he could stay with Mother at the hospital. Reluctantly,the nurse told him that he would have to stay down the hall since there was only one bed in Mother's room. Dad. wondered out loud if perhaps another bed might be moved into her room, The look on the nurse’s face was not very encouraging. Then my father said, “You know, for 53 years mine has been the first face she's seen every moming. I’d like to keep it that way as long as possible.” The nurse patted him on his shoulder and replied, “If you two have been together for 53 years, we're not going to separate you now.” showers and shaves, and returns to be with his “best girl” - until the next moming. Ann Landers Syndicated Columnist ‘These days when so many mar- riages arc in trouble, I thought you might like to hear about one that has endured for more than balf a century and is still going strong. — J.W., Bumsville, Minn. Dear J.W.: What a touching love story. It seems they don't make marriages like they used to, But that's another column. Thank you for writing. ° yi Dear Ann Landers: Please say something about biological fathers who come around several years after the child is born and cause problems for everyone, I wonder if they know how much damage they lo. My 5-year-old grand daughter " has not seen her biological father since she was year old. The par- ents did not get married. Her father never visited, never phoned and | never sent her a birthday card, a Christmas card or a gift. Not once did be offer to care for this child while her mother worked full-time and went to college, even though he lives in the same city.’ Only recently did he start to pay $10 a week in child support after he was ordered to do so by the court. Two years ago, my daughter martied a wonderful man and they now have another beautiful child. This man loves and supports my grand daughter as if she were his own. So now all of a sudden, the biological father calls up and tells my daughter he wants visitation rights, He never showed any inter- est in the child before. This sounds like a clear case of jealousy to me. ‘What is your opinion of this, Ann? Should my daughter tell her little girl that she has a father in the same city who has never shown any interest in her and now he sud- denly wants to be friends? Or should she just wait until this Stranger shows up on her doorstep? — Grandma in Kalamazoo Dear Kal.: If your grandchild has not been told about ber biologi- cal father, her mother should tell her at once. If she doesn’t, the child could be in for a terrible shock should her father show up, and chances are very good that he will. T hope your daughter will get some counseling so she can deal with this potentially explosive situ- ation in a way that is best for her child. The signals are clear, There is trouble abead. Dear Ann Landers: I hesitate to write to you about this because the questions sound stupid, but I [= | = » | Extra effort makes a world need some advice, V'm a 38-year-old man, happily married for eight years, and have two young daughter. I've been at my job since 1974, the ycar after I graduated from college. It's not the biggest business of its kind but it's been good to me and I've become the proverbial big fish in a small pond, The problem is this; Over the years I've run into several college buddies, and most of them have done much better financially and career-wise than I have. When I compare my accomplishment to theirs, I always come up short and wind up feeling inferior and T’ll be the first to admit that I haven't been.as ‘ive as some of the guys I used to run around with. I should tell you that I've tumed down a couple of job offers with better pay in order to stay in this city with my family, because we like it here. I also confess that I lack self-confidence. I’ve never attended a college reunion because I feel like a failure around these ‘guys. I haven't spo- ken to the ones who were my clos~ est friends in 15 years because I'm ashamed to tell them I’m still at my first job. To be perfectly hon- est, an 8-year-old car-doesa't quit cut the same swath as anew BMW or Ford Taurus, iarpseetia How can I prove to my old col- lege friends that I’m not a loser? ‘What can I do to show them I’m OK, too? — Class of ‘73 : Dear Class of ‘73: Since when does having a new BMW or ford Taurus and s'a sizeable bank account make a man a big success? You need to s it back and take a good look at your priorities, mis- ter. ees ety Tt sounds as if that “small pond” suits you just fine, so stop looking longingly at the ocean where life might be much more hazardous and not nearly as’ rewarding. ‘All that glitter is not gold. The: guys you are envying may be envying you. eee news: Qa f- the VES ] N : ad ¥ current compilation of themost iar things people do, edited by Chuck Shepherd. Proof that true stories are _ Weirder than made-up, | «, stories. . oP eine + Tara Georgianna Gephart Jud- kins, 37, was accused in February of performing oral sex on a Via- com Cablevision employee in Nasbville in exchange for a cable TV hook-up. A Nashville Banner reporter failed to ascertain whether she received premium channels or just basic cable. Least Competent People Fleeing from the robbery of a children’s clothing store in Los Angeles in October, Douglas Eric Girard, 32, and his colleague Frank M. Teresi got in line ata nearby McDonald's, hoping to be inconspicuous as police flooded the area. However, both were heavily tattooed; Girard had a gun in his waistband; and both: men had wads of money bulging out of their socks. After a standoff, they were captured. ¢ Ronald S. Terry, 25, was arrested near Morristown, N.J., for robbery of a gas station in January because he forgot to check the cars in the driveway, one of which was a police car with an officer inside. When Terry emerged from the sta- tion, clutching cash, and saw the officer, he ran back inside and flung the cash at the attendant but was arrested anyway. ¢ In November, two men were arrested in Clayton, MO., for steal- ing copper gutters an’ drainspouts from several homes and selling them, as scrap. Police believe that .it took. the men “several hours’ to dismantle the parts (and would. cost the homeowners several thou- sand dollars to repair), but that the subsequent sales netted the thieves only “$8 to $10” on the scrap mar- ket. ¢ In March, Daniel Smith and Louis Reed were arrested for steal- ing a huge, green, 1971 gas-guz- zling car in Baton Rouge, La. They came to the attention of police as they drove the car slowly backward, past a police station to get to a gas station. They had stolen a car that had no forward gear, « Police in Doylestown, Pa., arrested Alfons Kessler, 47, in March for attempting to murder his girlfriend’s husband. It was Kessler’s fifth attempt at the man. He had been unsuccessful using a gun, a truck, a Mol ktail pavement and arrested the men. Police Blotter * Jesus Lezcano, 20, was arrest- ed in Westminster, Calif, last July, on suspicion of drunk driving. Police say he had driven over 15 (which undercover officers had requested), but he cheated officers out of 0.2 ounces and thus received a lesser sentence. In September, police in Ames, Towa, sought a magazine salesman accused of entering an Iowa State Uni miles with an tele- phone call box stuck in his wind- shield after he had smashed into it on the San Diego Freeway. A police officer said Lezcano was so drunk that he did not appear to realize that the call box was in his and a crossbow, and this time as unsuccessful using a pipe bomb. « Fifteen gang members were arrested in Nashville last June after terrorizing the clerk at a formal wear shop. They had gone to be outfitted for a friends’ funeral and then begun trashing the place. For- tunately for police, the gangsters had first filled out applications for the tuxedos, and police were able to call their homes and entice them back to the shop to arrest them. ° In October Los Angeles police arrested James Richardson, - 32, and Jeffrey Defalco, 18, for stealing a 3-ton safe that had been left on a sidewalk pending. arrival -of a forklift to move it. The safe ; was empty, but the men thought it - contained $6,000. As they dragged the safe behind their car, it created a deafening noise; further, the metal on the pavement created such a spectacular shower of sparks that police were alerted. Police followed the gouges in the © Convicted killer Daniel Faries ° was indicted in August on charges that he earned $2 million in a direct-mail credit-car fraud scam operated out of his Dade County Fia., jail cell. Jail records indicate Faries bad placed more than 1,000 phone calls from his cell, and when the cell was searched in 1989, guards found 2,000 credit cards. © In October, a 24-year-old man told police that a woman forced ity woman’s dorm room and kissing, punching and kicking her until she finally agreed to pur- chase a subscription. From the police column of the Boothbay (Maine) Register: “On Thursday, Sept. 27, at 4:53 Pm, on the Gardiner Road, complainant reported that a known subject drove toward the complainant and crossed the center line in front of him. The offending subject, who was warned not to do it again, stated he was just fooling around.” ( Send your Weird News to Chuck Shepherd, P.O. Box 57141, Washington, D.C., 20037.) see FOR ONE BILLION PEOPLE, THIS IS: A TOXIC SUBSTANCE. Mitions still die every year from unsafe water supplies. Through our water projects, CARE Canada helps improve health conditions in developing communities. Please support our work - give to CARE Canada now. cA RE c P.O. Box 9000, 1550 Carling Avenue, Gnawa, Ontario K1G 4X5 1-800-267-5232 her way into his car at P at 4 pm one day in Ocala, Fla., kidnapped him, made him submit to oral sex, and then made him .Sign a paper. stating that.he owed bersome money, ;-- * Ramon Leon, 28,'of Grand Rapids, Mich., was sentenced to 13 years in prison in January for selling cocaine to undercover police officers. He would have received a mandatory 20-year sen- tence if he had sold police the legal threshold amount of 8 ounces Selective blending of wheats gives all purpose flour its ve~~..uiny (NC)—Ever wondered what makes all Nour, all purpose? the cuse of Robin Hood's ing product, the answer 2. of three of da has to offer, C nationunique to Robin Hood, f hree specific UTposes: Canadian Spring Wheat helps to e fuller ze with ‘tbl eRed Winter Wheat actually Adopt-A-Cop program known as Special Olympics Torch Run. will run through town on | Monday Sune 17. Starting just north of the city-_ limits, the Kimberley RCMP hopé to be able to run the torch all the way to Cranbrook—the purpose to raise money for the Special Olympics. One of the Kimberley organiz- ers is Cst. Brian Leibel. “Our whole detachment is involved, we really want to make sure Kimber- ley shows real well.” To this end the detachment will soon be making available adopt-a- cop forms in local businesses,"The pledge forms,” said Leibel, “are to support local officers entered in the run.” Last year the Torch run did not make it’s way through Kimberley, but the Calgary to Vancouver Run did raise more than $145,000. With possibly 1000 officers ” ‘expected to participate in the com- munity runs throughout the province this time around, orga- nizers are hoping to beat last year’s numbers. WEST HOOTENAY CAMERA CLUB 1st Annual Photo Salon Sunfest Weekend © the baking of muffins— them more tender, delicate and 118; eSoft White Wheat is ideal for baking cakes that are softer and velvety smooth. Robin Hood has been awarded the Gold Medal for All Purpose Flour by the igi Monde i 212cups 625mL ROBIN HOOD All-Purpose Ul/2cups 375mL ROBIN HOOD or OLD MILL Oats: (tsp SmL_ baking soda 1/2 tsp 2mL {U/2eups 375 mL ed coconut teup 250 mL chopped nuts (walnuts, pecan or peanuts) Ice cream or frozen yogurt *or substitute 2 1/2 cups (625. mL) ROBIN HOOD Whole Wheat Flour CREAM first 6 ingredients in large bow! on medium speed with electic mixer until light and creamy. COM! flour, oats, baking soda and salt, Add to creamed mixture gradually, beating at low speed until i Committee in Belgium for producing one of the world’s most outstanding flours. From bread and muffins to cakes and cookies, the versatility of All Purpose Flour is the basis for’ this intriguing recipe for Ice Cream Sandwiches. “These treats may be frozen and kept on hand once completed, or, the crunchy oat laden cookies: be stored Separately to be filled with ice cream when desired, Ice Cream Sandwiches Utscups 300 mL. Golden Flavour CRISCO Shortening Leup 250 mL grunulated sugar 2/3 cup 180 mL lightly packed brown sugar. 1. eee SO mL: honey. t U4 cup Somb, milk uy VA cup If you have ‘. something to seil, . the Sun classifieds can help you. — 365-7848. ended. STIR in coconut and nuts. DROP dough by heupi pon fuls onto ungreased baking sheets, leaving room for spreading. BAKE at 3S50°F (180°C) for 10-13 minutes or until golden, Cool slightly, then remove: to cooling rack and cool completely, TO ASSE! E, spread 1 cookie with a generous amount of ice cream, Top with another cookie: press down lightly, Wrap and freeze. (Makes about 22 sandwiches or 44 plain cookics) a Ice Cream Sandwiches make a wonderful snack. You'll want to keep a NC batch on hand. * Sub compacts *4x 4’s * Pickups, Cargo * Courtesy pickup * All new vehicles .. NOW.IN.... NELSON & CASTLEGAR to luxury cars £ Vans * 7 & 15 passenger vans ue Special low weekend rates * ICBC replacement