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The Oshkosh Northwestern from Oshkosh, Wisconsin • Page 12

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Oshkosh, Wisconsin
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THE OSHKOSH NORTHWESTERN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1991 13 12 THE OSHKOSH NORTHWESTERN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2. 1991 NATION FOR THE RECORD NATION OBITUARIES Looks like Thomas is in Ruth A. Kersztyn St. She was a member of Suspect dead, but victim still missing FBI was closing in on kidnap suspect when he shot himself Ruth Ann Kersztyn, 65, Oshkosh, died Tuesday morning. Oct.

1, 1991, at Mercy Medical Center. She was born in Oshkosh on April 2b 192(5, to Celow and Anna Hoepner Rasmussen. She married Peter W. Kersztyn Jan. 9, 1948, in Milwaukee.

She was employed at Keene-line Conveyor Co. for the past Raphael Catholic Church. She is survived by her husband, Peter; one son, David (Barbara) Kersztyn of Oshkosh; three daughters, Mary (George) Curtis of Ripon, Elizabeth (Peter) Jutras of Mobile, and Cathy (Jeffrey) Dean of Walworth; and 11 grandchildren. A Mass of Christian burial will be held at 10 a.m. Friday, Oct.

4, at St. Raphael Catholic Church, Oshkosh. The Rev. Daniel Felton will officiate. Burial will be in Lake View Memorial Park.

Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. Thursday at Fiss and Bills Funeral Home and from 9 a.m until the time of services Fri-dav morning at the church. A 11 Democrats will vote for confirmation WASHINGTON (AP) Senate confirmation of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas grew more likely Tuesday as two more Democrats declared they would vote to put him on the nation's highest court. Endorsements by Sens. Richard Shelby of Alabama and Alan J.

Dixon of Illinois brought to 11 the number of Democrats who have pledged to vote for Thomas' confirmation. Americans are preserved and strengthened," Shelby said. "Clearly, Judge Thomas' long suit is his life story, which is compelling, moving and endearing," Dixon said in a statement issued late in the day. Dixon also said he was convinced that Thomas's thinking was not bound by rigid ideologies. "Some justices on the current court appear to have fairly rigid philosophies or ideologies.

Judge Thomas does not appear to fall into that category. That suggests he may well surprise some of his opponents." The Senate is not likely to begin debate until later this week. That means Thomas appears to have the 51 votes needed to survive a floor fight, even if three Republicans should break ranks from the 43-member GOP minority, as his opponents hope. And with at least one more Democrat said to be leaning his way, Thomas could have some room for comfort as the showdown, now expected next week, approaches. Thomas, a conservative federal appeals judge and a black born into poverty in the segregated South, "brings a unique perspective that would better enable the Supreme Court to ensure that the rights and freedoms of all Clarence Thomas JASPER, Ala.

(AP) A businessman suspected in a $1100,000 ransom kidnapping killed himself Tuesday and a woman was charged as an accomplice, but the victim was still missing, authorities said. lerry Bland, 49. was found dead from a single gunshot wound when FBI agents entered his home, authorities said. Investigators on Saturday found part of the ransom money there, said District Attorney Charles Baker. Investigators were still searching for Carrie Lawson, 25, whom Bland was suspected of abducting from her home on Sept.

11. A lone gunman took her, tied up her husband, Karl Lawson and later issued a ransom demand. "He did not leave us any pray service will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday night at the funeral home. The family requests that memorials be made to the American Cancer Society.

Fiss and Bills Funeral Home 130 Church Ave. 235-1170 Louise C. Doro BERLIN Louise Cathrine Doro, 89, died on Sunday evening, Sept. 29, 1991, at the Juliette Manor Nursing Home. Louise was born on June 4, 1902, in Berlin, the daughter of ASSOCIATED PRESS A VOLUNTEER SPLASHES a beached whale covered in wet blankets on Cape Cod.

w. other sites in Walker County, located in northern Alabama. Mrs. Lawson telephoned her family the day alter the abduction, saying she feared for her life, the FBI said. That was the last they heard from her.

The ransom of some $300,000 was paid Sept. 13 by Earl Law-son's parents. It was left in a dark culvert, as the kidnapper instructed but the woman wasn't returned as promised. Between $200,000 to $250,000 was found in Bland's split-level home. Baker said.

"We believe this was the ransom money," he said. "It is apparent that money was the sole objective in the case." A second suspect, Karen McPhearson, was arrested earlier in her hometown of Cullman, 40 miles northeast of Jasper in north-central Al abama, and held on a kidnap charge, Baker said. Authorities found a "significant amount" of cash in Ms. Mcl'hearson's home. Baker said.

She was described as a relative of Bland. Authorities had Bland "nailed to the walls" with information Ms. McPhearson provided on Monday, Baker said. Prosecutors had been negotiating with Bland's attorneys for information on Mrs. Lawson, he said.

Ms. McPhearson told investigators she last saw Mrs. Lawson within two days of the abduction, and she was alive at the time, Baker said. She at first refused to talk to investigators. Once investigators offered to let Ms.

McPhearson become a witness against Bland, she confirmed he had planned a kidnapping. Baker said. "We knew beyond all doubt that Jerry Bland was the man," Baker said. Rescued whales may beach again knew beyond all doubt that Jerry Bland was the FBI agent 14 years as a secretarytreasurer. She was a graduate of the Oshkosh Business College.

She was a pre-school program director of the United Cerebral Palsy, an executive director of Winnebagoland Council of Campfire (iirls, serving on their National Board or Campfire Girls from 1980 to 1990, and was involved with the United Way and 4-H. She was recognized with many awards, a few of them being the Luther Halsey Gulick Award, the Silver Flame Campfire Honor for 25 years of service, the Ruth A. Kersztyn Distinguished Service Award, and the United Cerebral Palsy Humantarian Service Award. Jarre tt H. Roberts "Jerry" II.

Roberts, (i9, Oshkosh, died Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1991, at Mercy Medical Center. He was born in the town of Nekimi on March 13, 1922, the son of William J. and Lilly Schmidt Roberts. On June 7, 1947, he married Adeline M.

Abraham in Oshkosh. Jerry was a member of St. John's Lutheran Church in the town of Nekimi and had been a truck driver for Miles Kimball Co. for 36 years. His survivors include his wife, Adeline; three daughters and sons-in-law, Bonnie and Robert Radtke, and Barbara and John Larson, all of Oshkosh, and Susan and Lee Daniel of Troy, three grandchildren, Michelle and Kristy Radtke, and Derek Daniel; two brothers, Thomas and David Roberts, both of Eldorado; and three sisters, Margaret Meier of Rosendale, Doris Klapperick of Neshkoro, and Jenny Neuman of Beaver Dam.

Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Friday, Oct. 4, 1991, in St. John's Lutheran Church, with the Rev. James Reiff officiating.

Burial will be in St. John's Lutheran Cemetery. Family and friends may call from 4 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at Konrad-Behlman Funeral Home and from 1 p.m. until the time of services on Friday at the church.

Konrad-Behlman Funeral Home 402 Waugoo Ave. 231-1510 their food supply this autumn into Cape Cod Bay. Pilot whales measure up to 20 feet long and weigh 2,000 to 4,000 pounds. Once beached, their bulk can crush their internal organs. Whale blubber, which insulates the animals from cold in the sea, causes them to overheat on land.

Twenty-nine pilot whales beached themselves Sept. 10. Four of that group died and 25 were rescued. Aquarium spokeswoman Vicki Corliss said. The pod was stranded Sunday in shallow water.

They were moved to open ocean at high tide. The five dead whales were older than most of the others and suffered from ulcers, worms and other problems. Squid beaks found in their stomachs bolstered a theory the animals are following DENNIS, Mass. (AP) A dozen pilot whales freed to open sea Tuesday swam perilously close to shore at high tide and marine experts feared they would beach themselves again. Weary volunteers and scientists spent two days rescuing the whales and continued to keep a close watch.

Four stranded whales died and one had to be euthanized. The 12 others survived. Nine were released from Sesuit Harbor, where they were taken to regain their strength, and three were lifted off sand by the morning tide and washed to sea. Later Tuesday, all 12 whales got stuck on a sandbar but freed themselves at high tide. They swam about 1,000 feet from shore, risking another stranding, New England Meat 1 1 prices may fall WASHINGTON (AP) Sharply lower farm prices for hogs and cattle could mean cheaper meat prices for consumers this month, especially cool-weather favorites like roasts, soup and stew meats, officials say.

The Agriculture Department said Monday that farm prices for hogs and cattle tumbled again in September and remain sharply below last year's levels. The lower meat prices, however, were offset by strong prices for apples and oranges, which pushed up (he farm price index slightly, USDA said. But without the fivefold increase in orange prices, the farm price index shows deteriorating prices for producers, particularly cattle and hog raisers. At the same time, the prices farmers paid for items such as fertilizer and fuel were 3 percent higher in September than a year earlier. Dick Edwards, a food marketing specialist with the Texas Agricultural Extension Service, predicted October would be an excellent month for sales on beef and pork, as large supplies lower prices.

Jackson's glove stolen DETROIT (AP) The white, crystal-beaded glove worn by Michael Jackson during his "Thriller" tour was stolen Tuesday from the Motown Museum, an official said. "It's irreplaceable. We want to recover it no questions asked," said William Baran, spokesman for the museum housed in the humble house where the music empire began. "There is no value on it. It's a one-of-a-kind piece." Jackson, Motown's most successful singer, donated the glove along with a hat and $125,000 in 1988, The glove and hat were kepi in a locked clues about the whereabouts of Carrie Lawson," Baker told reporters.

He declined to say whether he believed Mrs. Law-son was alive. Mrs. Lawson completed the University of Alabama Law School earlier this year. She is the daughter of Harriett and David Smith, an industrialist in Cleveland, Tenn.

Several students she helped as an orientation counselor have been coming to Jasper from Tuscaloosa, about 50 miles away, during the weekends to help search for her. Hundreds of townspeople have joined volunteer searches for clues in vacant houses and ASSOCIATED PRESS of a maintenance tractor. The police have been going under cover in a variety of vehicles. SGT. DAVID JUNG of the Illinois State Police uses a radar gun to catch speeders from the cab Man guilty in slaying of seven Incognito officers catch speeders the murders were committed trial, the jury convicted Farley of seven counts of lirst-dogree Francis and Elizabeth Kreuger Doro.

She was employed with the Wisconsin Telephone Co. as an operator and assistant chief operator. After completing 37 years of service, she retired in 1950. Louise was a member of St. Joseph's Catholic Church of Berlin, St.

Joseph's Sanctuary Society and the Telephone Pioneers of America. Survivors include several nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends. She was preceded in death by her parents; three brothers, Frank, Joseph and Leo; and one sister, Lucy Schmitzer. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. on Thursday, Oct.

3, 1991, at St. Joseph's Catholic Church of Berlin, with the Rev. Richard J. Lenarz officiating. Burial will be in the Oakwood Cemetery of Berlin.

Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1991, at the John R. Wiecki Funeral Home of downtown Berlin. A Scripture service will be held at 6:15 p.m.

Please note that the time of the Scripture service has been changed to 6:15 p.m. Roman F. Bartol PRINCETON Roman F. Bartol, 78, of Princeton died Monday, Sept. 30, 1991, at the Wisconsin Veterans Home in King.

He was born Sept. 26, 1913, in the township of Princeton, the son oflgnautz Bartol and Mary Dudgenski. On Oct. 23. 1948, in Princeton he married Adelyn Nowatski.

He was a veteran of World War II Army Service, and he was a truck driver for a road construction company. He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Walter (Mary) Bel-feuil; and three grandchildren. Friends may call from 5 until 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Wachholz Funeral Home, Princeton.

A Rosary will be "End of Summer Perm Special" the highway with the radar in the suitcase," he said. In the latest ruse, Jung sat on his tractor clocking cars and trucks, using the radio to alert troopers waiting down the road. He said police also made two arrests on outstanding warrants and one arrest for failure to wear a seat belt. Jinsville, using a tractor and mower provided by the Illinois Department of Transportation. Jung said speeders should beware this winter because Illinois State Police plan lo go undercover in snow plows and in what appear lo be abandoned vehicles.

"We've already done this posing as a hitchhiker along COLLINSVILLE, 111. (AP) State troopers are taking to deep cover as farmers on tractors and hitchhikers with suitcases to nab speeders. Sgt. Dave Jung said he caught 43 speeders Monday in two hours sitting on a tractor with a radar gun and a two-way radio. He staked out a stretch of Interstate 55-70 near Col- 2.00 OFF Black and only planned to kill himself in front of her to make her feel guilty for rejecting him.

But Assistant District Attorney Charles Constantinid.es called Farley a "jackal" and his 1 -o i I'e "psycho-babble." He said Farley prepared by buying a semiautomatic weapon, taking target practice and arming himself with more than 1,000 rounds of ammunition. After his arrest, Farley wrote Black to say that if he went to the gas chamber he would "smile for the cameras" so she'd know she had won their battle of wills. It was the second worst mass murder in California history. The slaying of 21 people at a McDonald's restaurant in 1984 in San Ysidro was the worst in the state and the nation. Rampage blamed on his love for fellow employee SAN JOSE, Calif.

(AP) A man who killed seven people during an office rampage blamed on unrequited love was convicted Tuesday of first-degree murder and could face the death penalty. Relatives of Richard Farley's victims said they hoped he would be sent to the gas chamber. "The death penalty is absolutely what I want to see," said Bob Silva, who drove 100 miles from Dixon nearly every day to attend the trial of the man who killed his brother, Joe Silva. "He should die." After six days of deliberation and nearly three months at during the commission of another felony, in this case burglary. The seventh murder count carried another special circumstance, that of multiple murders.

The jury will recommend a sentence to the judge, who has the ultimate say, after the trial's penalty phase, set to begin Oct. 21. Farley and Black were computer engineers who worked in different departments. Farley testified he fell in love with Black the first time they met and began stalking her after she rejected his requests for dates, writing her more than 100 love letters. A week before the slayings, Black got a court order to keep Farley away.

The defense claimed Farley was blinded by his love for murder, five counts of attempted murder and one count each of second-degree burglary, felony vandalism and assault with a deadly weapon. The assault charge was for shooting Laura Black, a former co-worker at KSL Inc. who was the object of Farley's love obsession. Black, now 30, survived to testify against Farley, saying she never encouraged his advances, which got him fired from the Sunnyvale defense contractor two years before the Feb. 16, 1988, attack at ESL.

She wasn't in court when the verdicts were read. Farley, 43, had pleaded innocent. He snowed no reaction when the verdicts were read. Farley could face death because the jury found that six of Your Favorite Perm! VV Special Good Sept. 9 to Oct.

5 -We Feature Perms by Matrix, Helene Curtis and Zotos- Self-professed serial killer OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK gets life for kidnapping Call 235-7120 for Welcome Located in the Prange Way Store 4lA case.Baran said. Every Journey Begins With A Single Step Carl A. Klemp RIPON Carl A. "Cutta" Klemp, 83, of 615 W. Oshkosh Ripon, died Monday, Sept.

30, 1991, at Ripon Memorial Hospital. He is survived by one son, Skip of Ripon; three daughters, Sandra Algeo of San Diego, Calif, Judith Maguire of Ripon, and Barbara Swihart of Little Rock, five grandchildren; and one great-grandson. He was preceded in death by live brothers, two sisters and his wife. Mr. Klemp was born May 10, 1908, in Portage, a son to Herman and Wilhelmina Klemp.

He was a 1927 graduate of Ripon High School. On June 24, 1937, he married Ruth A. Dud-zinski. He resided in Ripon all of his life and had been a yardman for Schrader Lumber Co. in Ripon.

Funeral services for Carl A. Klemp will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the Butzin-Marchant Funeral Home, Ripon, with the Rev. Harley C.W. Tretow officiating.

Interment will be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Ripon. Friends may call from 6 until 8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral home. 9k INVITATION TO BID We are submitting herewith for your consideration an Invitation to bid on: THE RAZING AND REMOVAL OF A ONE STORY HOUSE AT 1844 OLIVE STREET ONE WOOD FRAME GARAGE AT 837 W. 9TH recited at 7 p.m.

Services will be at 10 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 3, at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, with the Rev. Al Esselman officiating.

Burial will be in the parish cemetery. and in Canada, starling afler he was discharged from the U.S. Marines for health reasons in 1977. Evans has been charged with first-degree murder in Fort Lauderdale, in the 1985 murder of a prostitute. And Daytona Beach, police want to interview Evans, a drifter from Galveston, Texas, about the 1985 slaying of a pregnant ransient.

But Evans' other claims haven't been substantiated. He brought officials to Arizona desert north of Phoenix in late August to search for the bodies of three women he said he killed and buried there, but the search was fruitless. Evans could be sentenced to death if he's convicted of capital murder in llouth's death. The girl's mother, meanwhile, has been charged with being an accessory lo sexual battery. BILOXI, Miss.

(AP) Donald Leroy Evans, who claims to have killed more than 70 people, received a life sentence Tuesday for kidnapping a 10-year-old homeless girl. Evans, 34, had pleaded guilty Aug. 19 to the federal charge. A sentencing hearing had been scheduled for Oct. 24 in U.S.

District Court in Biloxi but Evans asked that it be held sooner. Judge Walter Gex III agreed and sentenced Evans to life on Tuesday, said Evans' attorney, Fred Lusk. Evans still faces a capital murder charge in the death of the homeless girl, Beatrice Louise Routh, whom he kidnapped on Aug. 1 from a Gulf-port beach. Evans was arrested Aug.

5 in Louisiana and he led aulhorities to the girl's naked body in southern Mississippi on Aug. 11. Bids must be addressed to usnnosn Casinos open in Colorado Locals liken it to 2nd gold rush CRIPPLE CREEK, Colo. (AP) With a pull on an old slot machine and the firing of Wild Bill Hickok pistols, gambling became legal in three historic Colorado mining towns today for the first time in nearly half a century. "I've lived here a good many years 54 to be exact," said Purchasing Division, City Hall, Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

The outside ot I the envelope must be plainly marked in the lower left hand corner "Bid for Razing." Envelope shall also show name of bidder. DEATHS Bids must be on file In the office of the Purchasing Agent no later than 10:30 a.m., C.D.S.T., Wednesday, October 9, 1991. For specifications and further Information concerning this Invitation to bid, contact Donald La Fonatlne, Purchasing Agent, Room 312, City Hall, or telephone (414) 236-5100. William D. Fruoh City Manager Published Oct.

2, 1991 Donald Leroy Evans Roman F. Bartol, 78, Princeton, at Wachholz Funeral Home. Ruth A. Kerszetyn, 65, Oshkosh, at Fiss and Bills Funeral Home. Carl A.

Klemp, 83, Ripon, at But zin-Marchant Funeral Home. Jarrett H. Roberts. 69, Oshkosh, at Konrad-Behlman Funeral Home. A Her his arrest, Kvans told authorities he killed more than 70 people across the country Colors make comeback ASSOCIATED PRESS SLOT MACHINES WERE full in Central City, Tuesday as limited-stakes gambling became legal in three Colorado mining towns.

'k BIRTHS Knight Ridder OPEN ADMISSIONS POLICY STATEMENT POLICY STATEMENT Lutheran Social Services of Wisconsin and Upper Michigan offers residential living arrangements to adult men in transition from a correctional facility. Specialized programming has been designed and Implemented for the program. Residents are accepted without regard to race, color, national origin, or religion. Lutheran Social Services provides the same level of service to all of Its residents in a non-dlscrlmlnatory manner. This facility Is operated In accordance with U.S.

Department of Agriculture policy which does not permit discrimination because of race, color, sex, age, handicap or national origin. More information may be obtained here or from the Office of Equal Opportunity, USDA, Washington, DC 20250. Any person who believes he or she has been discriminated against In any USDA-related activity should write immediately to the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250. Published Oct.

2, 1991 tmveUr'c: innrnpv hpnins with one steD. so vour personal iournev toward a more beautiful home begins with one easy step: to come to Stange's to select furnishings for your home. Stange's features furniture that is crafted with quality and purity of design. Just one piece can bring a whole new dimension into your home. Cripple Creek Mayor Henry Hack.

"I've watched it go downhill, downhill and 1 got a little disturbed by it. But, by God, Cripple Creek has come back." More than a thousand people waited in crisp fall weather for the 8 a.m. opening of casinos in Central City, Black Hawk and Cripple Creek. Voters last November approved a constitutional amendment making gambling legal in the three communities. Gambling will be limited to slot machines, blackjack and poker, and bets will have a $5 ceiling.

Once formal ceremonies were done, the gamblers cheered and then packed into at least a dozen casinos, plunking nickels, quarters and dollars in slot machines and trying their skill at blackjack. Leaders of the three towns refeld Family of Funeral Chapels and Crematory. GEER Norman Visitation Today 4:00 P.M. 'til Service Time Services 6:30 P.M. Church Ave.

Chapel SMITH LaVerne Visitation Today 2:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M. Eagle Street Chapel Graveside Services Thursday 1 :00 P.M. Norway Cemetery At Norway, Michigan halted production of the shades maize, raw umber, lemon yellow, violet blue, blue gray, orange red, orange yellow and green blue the first eight colors to be inducted into the newly built Crayola Hall of Fame here, Tuesday, the company said that the eight colors would be sold again in commemorative tin boxes until the end of December. A million commemorative tin boxes, each containing a box of the new set of 64 crayons and a box with the eight shades, have already been made, the company said.

The response to the retirement of the eight colors was tremendous, said Thomas Mul-ler, vice president. Customers pushed sales up by an additional $(i million last year. from a casino in Central City when gambling became illegal in the state at the end of the 1940s. "This is so exciting," Hopper said. "I can't believe this day is finally here.

We said the buildings would be restored and they have been. We said the economy will improve and I'm sure it will." In Cripple Creek, officials fired replicas of Wild Bill Hickok's pistols down Bennett Avenue to signal the start of gaming. "It's really ironic," said Ray Drake, a Cripple Creek historian and municipal judge. "One hundred years after gold was discovered, we have our second gold rush." regard gambling as a solution to their economic problems. The towns all sprung up as a result of gold rushes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries but have seen their populations and economies dwindle since then.

For years, the small towns Central City, with 329 residents; Cripple Creek, with 655, and Black Hawk with 232, according to the 1990 Census did a brisk trade in the summer and all but closed up shop when winter came. On Central City's Main Street, state Sen. Sally Hopper put a quarter into a 1949 slot machine and pulled the lever to signal the start of gaming. She came up empty-handed. The machine was removed Clara Appleton, girl.

Sept. 27. Harlan and Christine Drephal, 636 E. Bronson Road, Seymour, girl, Sept. 30.

Jerald and Cheryl Schneider. W4550 Schmidt, Kaukauna, girl, Oct. 1. Yen Xlong and Malsla Thao, 803 N. Oneida Appleton, boy, Sept.

27. Roger and Nancy Bllz, 3308 Hemlock Lane, Appleton, boy, Sept. 28. Thomas and Janet Sutter, 1219 E. Marquette Appleton, boy, Sept.

28. Alan Wlldenberg and Alicia Nelson, 14 Eastwood Court No. 2, Appleton, boy, Sept. 26. Edward and Carol LeClalre, 808 N.

Bay Ridge Road, Appleton, boy, Sept. 30. Out of Town Phillip and Sue Paullck, Eagle River, boy, Sept. 26. Grandparents are Charlotte Paulick, Oshkosh; and Bob and Myrtle Bucholtz, Eagle River.

Neenah Theda Clark Kurt and Bobbet Little, Neenah, girl, Sept. 30. Appleton Appleton Medical Center Kerry and Elizabeth Schaefer. 1900 N. Owaissa, Appleton, girl, Sept.

26. Michael and Cheryl Schueh, N2377 Holland Road, Appleton, girl, Sept. 7 James and Brenda Braboskl, 2229 Seneca Drive, Appleton, girl, Sept. 27. Stephen and PeriTylnk, 1207 S.

EASTON, Pa. Ken Lang wasn't going to let his beloved raw umber crayon die without a fight. So Lang, a former freelance writer, disc jockey and dln-nerware salesman from Oyster, N.Y., formed the Raw Umber and Maize Preservation Society. RUMPS, lor short. Its aim: to protest the loss of eight of the 64 original shades that made up the Crayola box of 64.

Thanks to Lang and other crayon lovers, Binney Smith the Easton creator and maker of Crayola crayons, announced Tuesday thai it would bring back those eight original colors for a limited time, at least. In August 1990, the company We invite you to begin your personal journey by shopping during our traditional 8 HOUR SALE Oct. 5th from 9-5. Save 20-50 on the tinest home furnishings avaiiaoie toaay. Begin your journey now with: ORDER LIMITING TIME FOR FILING CLAIMS (ON WAIVER) AND DETERMINATION OF HEIRSHIP STATE of Wisconsin, Circuit Court, Winnebago County.

In the Matter of the Estate of Violet M. Walbrun aka Violet Walbrun. A petition has been tiled for administration and determination of heirship In the estate of the above named person, domiciled in Winnebago County, Wisconsin, whose post office address was 624 Tayco Menasha, Wisconsin 54952, and all Interested persons have waived notice. IT IS ORDERED THAT: 1. Creditors' claims must be filed on or before December 23, 1 991 or be barred.

2. Heirship will be determined and claims examined and adlusted at the Winnebago County Courthouse, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, on December 31 1991 al 8:30 a.m. or thereafter. BY THE COURT: Bruce K. Schmidt Probate Court Commissioner Fink Law Offices 360 chute st.

m' Menasha, Wisconsin 54952 Published Sept. 25, Oct. 2 8. 9, 1991 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 Featuring: Baker, Henredon, OPEN: Century, Hekman, Harden, 9-5 Leathercraft, Ficks Reed Fri. 9-8 plus many more.

Sat. 9-4 715-258-8113 ON WASHINGTON UNION.

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