The Mail-Journal, Volume 21, Number 39, Milford, Kosciusko County, 10 October 1984 — Page 17

LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION OF INDIANA DOCKET NO. 37614 IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF UNITED TELESPECTRUM OF INDIANA. INC. (1) FOR A CERTIFICATE OF TERRITORIAL AUTHORITY TO OFFER AND FURNISH RADIO PAGING SERVICE TO THE PUBLIC WITHIN ELKHART AND ST. JOSEPH COUNTIES, INDIANA, AND (2) FOR THE APPROVAL OF RATES, ’ CHARGES, ANO RULES FOR SUCH SERVICE. Notice Is hereby given that the Public Service Commission of Indiana will conduct a public hearing In this cause in the Rooms of the Commission. 903 State Office Building, Indianapolis. Indiana, at 1:30 p.m., EST, on December 5, 1984. Public participation is requested. LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION OF INDIANA DOCKET NO. 37539 IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF WABASH’VALLEY POWER ASSOCIATION, INC., FOR AUTHORITY TO BOR ROW APPROX IMATELY $53,000,000 F ROM THE NATIONAL RURAL UTILITIES COOPERATIVE FINANCE CORPORA TION. Notice is hereby given that the Public Ser vice Commission of Indiana will conduct a public hearing In this cause In the Rooms ol the Commission, 907 State Office Building, Indianapolis, Indiana, at 9:00 a.m., EST, on November 7, 1904. Public participation Is requested. NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice Is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Kosciusko County, Indiana will receive sealed blds from this date until 1:00 P M .November I, 1904 for Aerial Photography Specifications will be on file In the Kosciusko County Auditor's Office, Court House. Warsaw, Indiana All bids must be submitted in duplicate on Form No 95 Revised, and must be accom panted by a Surety Bond or Certified Check equal to ten percent (10%) of maximum bld, and the necessary affidavit of Non Collusion as required by law The Board of Commissioners reserve the right to reject any or all bids Dated this Sth day of October, 1904 JD Geiger. Auditor Kosciusko County 0.10 17 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Board of School Trustees of Warsaw Community Schools. Kosciusko County. ift diana will receive sealed bids until 10:00 a m local time In the office of the Business Manager, 303 East Main Street, Warsaw, In

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Notice Os 1985 Tax Rotes To Be Charged . ... , »A, rP ..<>rt <o th. Rqerd «* Tax Commixataners. naming specifically the items In the budget and the tax rate* which ere ’ £ ZX This notice isgiven incomphanc with Chapter 11,. Actsof .937 asamendedby Chapter 41. acts of iß47,and Burns 44 1414. and the the t ax l ev Vl ngo’ l c l aisofthesevera tl m I tsof^coun^raWso t Uxa^^h^h U n^^ ll arsofva lo at I <monthetaxab 1 manner of filing objections are set forth herein JD Geiger. Auditor. Kosciusko County have the right to file objections with the county Auditor to such budoets. rates or teviw within ten days from Dated this 3rd day of October. IW4 . _J r- — —7 ..... i , — ' , s r—r- > « g uj TAk RATES CHARGED 1 —~l T"”" - 71 Z”! § 5 2 3f5« ro, '“*'’“* . .5 | S L | 5 - |=| g| f i| ! i 111 1 ! o§l 1 58 £ § =s = 5 55 _11_ PAYABLE IN TEAR 1985 < J 5 8 i 1 in H 25 5 * ’ “ — ~~ ° ~ L_ - ,0035 . 0035 . 0035 . 0035. .0035 .Q 035 -QQ3S _UMBS J 035 I22JS_ .M 3- fflTs ■ MIS J lt(! for ? s ' w : .0065 . 0065 . 0065 .Q 065 JX&I JQfilJ - - 01 “ “ “ “ ZZHZZZZZ____ -01 -01 -01 01 01 Joi M - 01 01 n 01 -a2J —TT 575 .575 .575 ' .575 .575 .575 -575 .575 ■ .575 -575 - —count w. fare - ' ~ ™ :g; 6 — r -ff-. •<- —l? —<~TlE: Z3TZ Z3C JZ ZTZ :g- - 02 M,, „ , 'IU —Ol aL—< -*g “ “J “ £ “ .04 .04 -04 .04 .04 _ .04 .04 _JM JH M M— —M c ,-7— 03 065 075 J35~ -02 -0« .OX .01 .01 -02 - __222 ±L -J22 10 1 Township Poor Relief QS .0437 .20 .042 .14 . 28— rrjr 015 015 .005 Townsnip Recreation .015 ,g .... -JB JKU - -MS ZZZZ Ownsh - B ' E;W ~ ; —— — “777 : ~ .0101 ■ —dfl 2: 71325 ,21 .0924 .234 -?34 . ,?34 n ZZZZZZZZZZZ '—J ZE —2l. 222 i<a .1035 .8536 . 505 .11 .1402 . 554 . 554 . 301 ,s ,a I.? z% —hSX.’ff —77~~ —: w :zr~— —-m. I.,— xb —y.uat--«—-«»• y ..y*! »•” <■» a ia Ia ■ lB T' U '• .4349 .60 . 513 . 513 .51 .30 . 370 . 4349 .51 -4349 - 4349 _370 Jl3 22 -J2_ __22 -A—- -JJJ I 4 4 ,^ 2 4.1188 3.957 3.957 4.07 4,07 4.313 4,313 4,1188. <.07 JJIM. _4Jl£ fj},},&, WT^^C^ On RATES ~ ±«LZ ZZI 3 957 4 313 407 «-357 - 14-1188 4.313 4,1188 4.H88 4.357 3.957 _ JJZ <£_ _±2L. 4 3 J....' 2J ” "TW TW 2,671 2-49 1-523 2-1?6 Uafl £2222. -L 477 - .tffiGeneral Corp. — -- —— — -.l— —. —— —— ——— ——- ■ - - —— —— - .600 ~ — .— 1 <l2 —**’ , ——— |>>Q t?>q street (mvh) ' - — —— l —— ~ ~ ZZZZ ' ——— —* ZZZZ - 37 ” ZZZZ 3788 'f ‘ .0795 .0795 Perk I Recreation ■ — — —. ———— ——— j ■ — ■ .. _ -_ —— , ■ ■ — "■ —— —— '— l — — - . . — .„, , 1 ■ 1 a—— ,0688 .0688 *' ut<o " —: — ZZZZ , ; jssl. ZZZ-2Hi— Police Pension' —1 ———— ——— ~ ___________ __ ■■_|—. — -. — » —— .05 - __________ Ft renin Pension - ■ .■— —— < — — 1 —* "—— ■ I —— ————— —— - _____. — ' — _____ „ ,_., „—.— " - —— —,052] .-JS2I fiM Srwir — — —— ——— • ‘ 1-— -—— '—— ' " - . ■ ■ .ns _3|| .178 Cja. Fire Equipment - ■ — ‘ —— — ■■■ ——— _J2_ —— -«MB— - — Corp — ' J 4 J 4 J2J3J JS29— Cub. Capital laprovcaent . _ , — - ■— " —— —-— .75 _____ - ZZZZ 7T“ "7Z~ ZZZ VZZ TfflZ 2.22 3.153 2.53 1.523 2,510 _2Jl__ JJ23I. -2x421- - - ZZZZ — — ..- —: LJD s'o?L r 7 449 7.446 7.4535 8.2475 8.6176 7.262 7.6598 8.3112 9,M72 9-?7<a 9-M«-N S T SO 15.7* $.141 | 5.4» s,!<» 5,<5*8 5-U7B ».194Q 5.4 W s fl<fl f S M7» „ IS.PM Is.MR tfl» I 8 Jft HUH I Mtf IM* 751 H _ _J TQTM. TAXING WII_T_RAIt. .. ■—wnCMm—' ’/ „ y * ; •, . — e

diana on Tuesday October 24,1964, for trash collectton, gasoline and fuel oil. The bMs should be in an envelope marked "Bid." Groups are as follows: Group’l: regular gasoline Group 2: number 2 diesel fuel Group 3: number 2 heating oil Group 4: trash collection State Board of Accounts Form 95, non-. collusion affidavit, and bond or certified check must be submitted with the proposal. Instructions and specifications are on file at the office of the Business Manager, 383 East Main Street, Warsaw, Indiana. The Warsaw Community Schools Board of Trustees reserves the right to refect any or all proposals and to waive any Informalities and/or irregularities in any proposal. Dated this 4th day of Octobar. l«u Board of School Trustees Jean A. Bowers, Secretary 0.10-17 NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Kosciusko County, Indiana will from this date until November 5, 1984 at 10 00 a m. EST, receive sealed bids for the following: Blank Books. Blanks, Stationery. Printing, Office supplies. Walk off mats, and Janitor Uniforms, as required by Kosciusko County during 1985. Specifications and estimated quantities required are now on file in the County Auditors Office. All Bids must be submitted on Form *95 Revised as prescribed by the State Board of Accounts and must be on file in the County Auditor's Office at Warsaw, Indiana by 10:00 a.m.. November 5, 1984. Each bid must be accompanied by a surety bond or certified check in the amount of Sl.oooor 10 percent of the maximum bid, subject to the approval of the Board pt Commissioners. All bids must be accompanied by the necessary affidavit of non collusion as required by law. The Board of Commissioner reserve the right.to reject any or all bids. Dated this Ist day of October, 1904. JD Geiger. Auditor Kosciusko County O 3LIO NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby given that the Kosciusko County Board of Commissioners will from this date until 9:30 a m EST on November 5, 1984 receive sealed bids for County Highway supplies for the 1985 year. Specifications are on file at the County Highway garage. Old Road 30 East Bids must be filed on State Board of Accounts approved form *95 revised and be ac companied by the necessary affidavit of non collusion A bid bond or certified check in the amount of 10% of the total bid must be Included The Commissioners reserve the right to reject any or all bids Dated this Ist day of October, 1984. J D Geiger, Auditor Kosciusko County 0 3410

Focus on health —

Family rituals vitamins of the mind

By KEN YODER, A.CAW. Youth Services Therapist Healthy families have rituals. They are practices done over and over again, sometimes without much thought as to their purpose. Family members look forward to them. The family definitely approves of the event. Their wish is to continue doing it. Supper-time is a basic ritual. The most common family ritual is the daily mealtime spent together. Family members look forward to it. Other daily rituals can include playtime with the children after supper, story-time, or a bedside chat with the children done before a regular bedtime. There can be weekly rituals such as church, a family outing, or a special menu selection repeated weekly. Holiday rituals can be quite meaningful for family members. Rituals have been done in families since the stone age. Healthy families know they are importent for the family to function well together. It provides a sense of familiarity and a natural, comforting rhythm to life. It can help give meaning and order to family life. Rituals can be creative, energizing, and refreshing to family members. The modern day rat race is a problem. Does the modern family have time for rituals anymore? Some families are even saying they don’t have a mealtime together. Many families are saying that life is very frantic. They talk about the “rat race,” being a full-time chauffeur for their children’s piano lessons, soccer practices, and school activities. The phone rings continually and a longer day seems to be required just “to keep up.” Families that are confronted with these barrages of excellent community activities need to set priorities in order to preserve a healthy family life. Is it necessary to answer the phone notice of public hearing Notice is hereby given, that the Syracuse Town Board of Zoning Appeals shall hold a public hearing on a petition filed by Jerry and Deb Kirkdorfer requesting a Variance in the Kosciusko County Zoning Ordinance, which would permit the construction of a garage on a lot with no principle structure and to build it 20' off the road right of way and 6' off both sides on his property which is located on the south side of Medusa Street and 470 feet southeast of Front Street and described as follows, to wit: A trad of land lying adjacent and souther ly to Lot Number Eight (8) in Colwell and Wood's Addition to the Town of Syracuse, In diana; and lying between parallel lines formed by the projection and extension of the EAsf and WEst lines of aforesaid Lot Number Eight (8), further and better described as follows:, to-wit Commencing at an iron pin that is 40 feet south 7 degrees 16 minutes west of the Southwest corner of the aforesaid Lot Number 8; thence south 83 degrees 44 minutes East on and along Southerly right of way of Medusa Street, 45 feet to an iron pin; thence South 7 degrees 16 minutes west 107 9 feet to the Northerly right of way of the Chessie System Railroad, thence Westerly on and along aforesaid. Railroad right of way. 45 feet to a point that is South 7 degrees 16 minutes West, 108.1 feet from the place of beginning; thence North 7 degrees 16 minutes East, 108.1 feet to the Place of Beginning. The hearing will be held in the Main Meeting Room, in the Syracuse Town Hall, Syracuse. Indiana, on Thursday the 18th day of October, 1984 at 7:00 P M All interested persons are invited to attend and be heard Written comments will be considered if they are received in the Office of the Kosciusko County Area Planning Department, Cour thouse, Warsaw. Indiana, no later than 12:00 Noon on the day of the hearing SYRACUSE TOWN BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS Daniel W Richard. Director

during a family mealtime? (Some families let it ring or leave it off the hook during mealtime). Should the family decide not to enroll their children in gymnastics class this year so they can have more time together? If TV prohibits healthy family interactions, will it be turned off or placed in another less-used room? What about parent child relationship? One family was able to decide to turn off the TV. The children chose 5 to 6 programs they wanted to watch in advance of the week. The parents did the same. This family ended up playing more games together,

Modern charlatans

By J. W. ANDERSON The teaching of a false psychology has taken its toll. Years ago people believed that children had to be guided to prepare themselves for civilized society, and churches taught the doctrine of original sin and total depravity. Children were considered sinful by nature and in need of salvation. We have forsaken these beliefs. Children are now considered innocent and pure until they have been corrupted by adults. At an early age children exhibit a desire to be kind and helpful, but the idea that they are never selfish or jealous until taught by elders is simply not true. An oft repeated saying is, “There are no bad children.” Why not extend this to, “There are no bad adults?” This psychology has led to a proliferation of counselors, psychologists, and psychiatrists who show no great ability in managing their own lives or in rearing their own children. There is some relationship between a doctor’s reputation and his success. While the legal profession leaves something to be desired, a lawyer cannot lose all the cases and pass himself off as a great success. That acrobatic stunt is performed by educators and psychologists.

- • II ~1l ■ I * J" VEHICLE INSPECTION — Bob Stanley, chief maintenance officer from the Fort Wayne district of the Indiana State Highway Commission, inspected highway vehicles in New Paris Friday, Oct. 5. Pictured above is Stanley motioning the driver of the truck to begin testing his turn signals. The tests are conducted each year prior to the winter months. (Photo by Mark Weinstein)

reading and actually relating together. The family reaped some immediate benefits. Their son was able to work harder at school. He got better grades and was less of a discipline problem. The father stated that he enjoyed doing more activities with his son — playing basketball, talking about school and actually relating to each other. Today’s experiences are tomorrow’s memories. The task of parents is to prepare their children for a future that can enable them to be responsible, mature adults. It is clear that some parents are setting

Jean Jacques Rousseau, the modern father of permissiveness, taught that children were good and that primitive man was noble and virtuous until corrupted by society. Children were not to be subjected to restraint or discipline of any sort. Rousseau was father of several children. W’hat kind of a father did this expert on child psychology make? Before his children were one-day-old he brought them to an orphanage and never saw them again. He could not be bothered with children. Rousseau was like a present day professor of education who taught that whenever you subject a child to corporal punishment you brutalize him. He taught that corporal punishment was an expression of hatred. When this loving professor caught a child writing and walking on his netyly laid concrete walk, he spanked him. When the professor was reminded that you do not punish people you love, he replied, “I love children in the abstract, not in the concrete.” Loving children in the abstract is what Rousseau and countless others did. Not satisfied with almost complete failure in everything they undertake, the crypto saltim-

priorities and creatively working at using rituals to establish healthy family interactions. These families know that rituals are “vitamins of the mind” and are essential for healthy families. They want to build memories that can last a lifetime with their children. This father and other parents are recognizing the benefits of stable, family rituals. He was building memories for his children. He was also able to discover that those times spent with his son were crucial not just to his son, but to himself as well.

banks inflate every phenomenon of adolescence into a major concern. A temporary feeling of inadequacy becomes an inferiority complex. A father who expresses displeasure with the cqnduct of his son is accused of rejecting his son and causing his son to have major psychological problems that are apt to ruin his entire life. When we announced that we were through with the opposite sex, the adults just smiled. Now such a person must be psychoanalized “in depth.” Witch Hazel Worries If you planted a witch hazel shrub in the spring and the leaves are brownish and spotted, it may be . suffering from transplant shock. The leaf spots can be a problem when witch hazel grows under stress. Be certain the roots of your plant have adequate drainage. If your siol is clay and you have filled the planting hole with a light, peat moss-amended* soil mix, water could be collec * ting around the roots. If so, you should reset the plant. Otherwise, water deeply at 10-day intervals during dry periods and avoid overwatering. It often takes transplanted woody plants a full growing season to establish roots to support vigorous top growth.

Wed., October 10, IBM —THE MAIL-JOURNAL

/t i Msnnnn i x—x ■■L I—WVIUUUI rZYjooMQ I ’ jv 80 Midai IBik Bra ’W” ■u 30 >4 X [lilt ( 10 ■ I fe °/ J OBr i i NEARING THE GOAL — United Way officials have announced that pledges and contributions have reached the 71 percent mark of the >450,000 goal. According to George Gilbert, 1984 United Way campaign chairman, “The success of the campaign thus far is in large part due to the support of industry in Kosciusko County. We do, however, need all the divisions to come in at their goal, in order to reach the top.” Other divisions, in addition to industry, include selected prospects, service clubs and sororities, small business, professional and allied health, accountants, attorneys, insurance, clergy, agri-business and farmers, city and county employees, northern communities, southern communities and United Way agencies. Pictured with the United Way “thermometer” are George Gilbert, 1984 United Way campaign chairman, right, and Don Bergen, campaign vice chairman. (Photo by Dee Jaynes)

Two questions

By EDWARD THORLUND Two questions fascinate the financial community at the moment. Will interest rates come down, seriously? And — does the slowdown in the economy mean a prolonged recovery or does it presage recession? The view on interest rates, as usual, is divided. If the Federal Reserve Board is losing its grip on the money supply and allowing greater increases, most experts believe interest rates will come down. If not, most see interest rates staying relatively high. Some put much blame on banks, still charging eighteen percent on personal loans when they borrow

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(from other banks) at ten or eleven percent. It doesn’t take a genius to make money like this. About continued recovery or recession: one expert, Peter Kozel, in Connecticut, says conditions which typify the end of a period of business expansion are not evident. This analyst of the Connecticut National Bank in Hartford says chances are good for continued expansion of the economy at a slower pace. Recessions are usually preceded by a rise in inflation; the Reagan Administration seems to have inflation under control at the moment. Thus if there is a recession, it should be a very mild one — judged on past history.

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