Oshawa Times (1958-), 8 Dec 1967, p. 8

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8 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, December 8, 1967 4 OF BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE $300 Fine, Costs Assessed Pickering Township Man To 20 Years MONTREAL (CP) -- Andre Daoust, a 25-year-old gunslinger PICKERING -- Pleading)cused was found to have ajwho was tried in absentia on | guilty to the possession of|bottle between his legs. charge of speeding at 70 mph) stolen goods, Leo Desjardins,| Admitting he had consumed|in a 40 mph zone, | 38, of Woodview Road, Picker-| liquor while under the legal) Found with a full pint of beer| ing Township, was fined $300)age, Robert Shelley, 17, ofjand a part bottle of beer in the and costs here Thursday by|Greene Lane, RR'1, Bath, Ont.,/front seat of his car when Magistrate H. M. Jermyn. The was placed on suspended sen-| stopped on the Brock Road, jaccused said he had purchased tence for six months. \Dwight Douglas, David St.,| alge yo ag Peco After learning the accused|Claremont, was fined $25 and benik and 18 'bags i cement had made restitution the court) costs or 10 days in jail. lfrom Daniel Wilkins, now | "emanded Michael Sullivan, 17, Pleading guilty to a charge serving a jail sentence for theft.|'0 J" 4. The accused, thel having false plates, Ray- Saaul jcourt was told, caused damage/mond Uzzel, 21, of Steeles Ave- _ Convicted on a charge of fail-|;. Cycess of $50 to another al Wintwinle, Gas fines Gs jing to remain at the scene Of}, 10 jact Octobe carla beaded 9 iii ned | hicle Ja ober. and costs or five days in jail jmade of Daoust who once vowed he would never be taken alive, was sentenced Thursday to 20 years in prison for bank robberies, two escapes from police custody, kidnapping and several shootings. Mr. Justice -Ignace Deslau- riers branded Daoust, a "men- ace to society." | He said an example had to be} and imposed] sentences ranging from two to 15 years, to run concurrently, on a variety of charges. In addi- tion, five years was added on a charge of shooting a girl used Gunslinger Sentenced In Prison Daoust's one-man war with the law started in June, 1966, when he escaped from Mont- real's St. Luc Hospital where he was being treated for an injured hand. He was serving a four- year team for robbery with vio- lence at the time. A month later he. was caught by the RCMP in Bathurst, N.B., but escaped after slugging a guard with a lead pipe. In August, 1966, he shot his way out of a police ambush near La Tuque in north-central Quebec and evaded a similar ambush a month later near La- as a hostage in a bank holdup. chute, northwest of Montreal. 'c terald| i te Reetart aid. he A fine of $20 and costs or|The court was told the accused lering Township, was placed on|five days in jail was imposed had transferred the plates from three months suspended sen-jon Arthur Winacott, 139 Gar-jone car to. another so he could tee on a charge of not having/tard Road, Whitby Township, |test drive it. a driver's licence he was fined $10 and costs or three days. | M | 'tae coset nee os, New Home Recipe -- e Reducing Plan days was imposed on William It's simple how quickly one| tose bulky fat and help regain | |Drive, Willowdale, who ad- |mitted the unlawful possession of liquor. The liquor was found when police stopped the car) may lose pounds of unsightly fat| slender more graceful curves; if for a check right in your own home. Make| reducible pounds and inches of | Pleading guilty to a charge this home recipe yourself. It's| excess fat don't disappear from of consuming liquor while under the age of 21, Mel Patton, 16 was placed on suspended sen- tence for six months. Convicted on a_ charge of driving while his ability was impaired, Richard Lainesse, of Montreal, was fined $50 and costs or 20 days in jail. Stopped easy, no trouble at all and costs little. Just go to your drug store and askfor four ounces of Naran Concentrate. Pour this into a pint bottle and add enough grapefruit juice to fill the bottle. Take two tablespoons full a day as needed and follow the Naran Plan. If your first purchase does not neck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips, calves and ankles just return the empty bottle for your money back. Follow this easy way en- | dorsed by many who have tried this plan and help bring back alluring curves and graceful | slenderness. Note how quickly | bloat disap pears--how much bet- | BUILD IN... FLAMELESS E Electric Heating Contractors Electromode LECTRIC HEAT 56 PRINCE ST. OSHAWA Phone 728-4611 | RED CROSS DONATES SAFETY EQUIPMENT TO CENTENNIAL POOL | William Smith, chairman of the Red Cross local water safety committee (second from left), explains the use 1857 Envelope | Sold For $40,300 © By CARL MOLLINS LONDON (CP) -- An enve- lope posted in Newfoundland 110 years azo for sixpence was auc- tioned Thursday for $40,300, a record price in stamp collect- ing. The envelope--known as cover in philatelic circles-- bears a unique strip of three) twopenny Newfoundland Com- pany stamps of 1857. The £15,500 paid by a dealer! was the highest price ever for a newfoundland cover and among the top few figures paid for any/ cover, says stamp auctioneer Stanley Gibbons Ltd The Newfoundland cover was) the highlight halfway through a three-day auction of a classic collection of British Empire stamps put.on the block of Lars Amundsen, descendant of the Norwegian explorer who collect- ed Jaurels for being first to reach the South Pole in 1911 and first to navigate the Northwest Passage over the top of Canada in 1906 Among other items snapped up by dealers were three atamps from pre-confederation Canada; an 1851 Canadian 12 penny black for $9,750, and two others for $7,800 apiece---an 1857 yellow-green Canadian 7\4 pence and an 1865 Vancouver Is- land five-cent issue. WILL AID LIFESAVERS With another day to go, the biggest auction of old colonial atamps ever held in London had raised £120,500 ($313,300) which was good news for the Norwe- gian Lifesaving Society Amundsen plans to buy the eociety a sea-rescue jaunch with the proceeds from his stamps Roald Amundsen, the stamp col- lector's adventurous forebear, was lost in 1928 while flying ever the eastern Arcti The Amundsen. stamp sale has been helped along b; deval uation of Britain's currency--an unexpected henefit reflected nie of simulta- es dealing in from racehorses to also in an epide neous hamm everytl duelling p&sto s BIG PRODUCER A tobacco seed can produce in five months a plant 20 times its own weight IF YOU ARE THINKING ABOUT LIFE INSURANCE Why Not Call TOM FARQUHARSON SUN LIFE Assurance Company Of Canada RESIDENCE; BUSINESS: 668-4371 725-4563 of the safety equipment do- nated to the Oshawa Cen- tennial Pool by the Red Cross, Left-to-right, James Stamp auctionneer John Webb jof Gibbons explained that buy- |ers flocked from other countries hoping to find cheap prices fol- lowing devaluation of the pound Noy. 18. However, so many buy- jers turned up for.expected bar- jgains that competition pushed up prices. Devaluation clearly helped foreign buyers pick off the best of the horseflesh at the New- market December Sales Thurs- day. Bidding against other foreign buyers, an agent for California A. Yanch; president of the reation Department and Red Cross, Mr. Smith Charles MclIlveen, chair- : * man of council's recreation James Smart, aquatic committee, supervisor of Oshawa Rec- (Oshawa Times Photo) lyn paid £142800 for the two | £100,000 above the previous big- year-old colt Vaguely Noble--a|gest price for a racehorse in record by a margin of aboutitraining. WESTERN ELECTRIC RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL WIRING QUALIFIED Blectrie Heeting Contractor Certified Lighting Consultant WESTERN ELECTRIC "33," 725-0842 cosmetic surgeon Robert Frank- ...nO kidding live better electrically "OSHAWA PUBLIC | UTILITIES COMMISSION 100 SIMCOE ST. 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PHONE: 668-5846 & 1688 PRET Abia ~aeats FROM DEAD TO Spark C Across |] By BRIAN SULLIVAN NEW YORK (AP) -- Dr. Ya sunori Koga carried the life from the dead baby across the room in his hands. There surgeons placed the tin} heart in the chest of anothe: infant, after taking his hopeless ly sick heart out. They sewec the' new heart in, squeezed i until it began to beat normall; and life surged through the in fant's body. Mrs. Washk Her Husban By DAVID J. PAINE GAPE TOWN (AP) -- Mrs Louis Washkansky visited he husband Thursday for the firs time since his heart tragsplan operation and found him strong cheerful and "just too beauti ful." "I'm feeling fine," Washkan sky told his fellow South Afri cans in a nationwide broadcas from his bedside The 55-year-old wholesale gro cer's physicians, encouraged by; his: excellent progress, allowec his' wife to enter sterilized roon 274 at Groote Schuur Hospita for a four-minute chat after on of the surgeons _ interviewec Washkansky for the South Afri can national radio network. "He is so much better than | expected,'"" Mrs. Washkansky said. "He is so cheerful anc bright. I was astonished by his strength." HAND REACHES OUT Wearing a surgical gown anc mask she entered her husband's room with instructions not t kiss him. He reached out fo1 her arm, she said, and told her: "Darling, I am so happy to sec you." "How are you feeling now. Mr. Washkansky?" Dr. Bertie SEES WORLD GAMES WINNIPEG (CP) -- The Ca nadian Amateur Hockey Asso ciation says development of jun ior hockey in Europe indicates ¢ world junior championship may not be too far away. In its monthly bulletin released Thursday, the CAHA says ¢ growing interest in junior hock ey has led to a European junior championship in Finland Dec. 25-Jan. 2. O When .the When a gla Then is the

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