Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 189, Decatur, Adams County, 11 August 1937 — Page 5
lIMN OUSTER IsINCERTAIN Lblican State Committee In Meeting At ■ Indianapolis |„ d ,,n>pol'«- Au <>' 11 — ■ ' „ M. Taylor of Danville. 1 district Republican i |\ jn . was reported to ■J* been agreed upon today G. O- p - state commit ’ Isucceed Ivan C. Moro! Au ,tin as state chairAug. 11 (U.R)—The Hj.iMU S' ll ’ l ' <”'» nltlte ° Ka,,V niee t this afternoon amid |K-4 'in whic h it was certain gW\ a . the members Had been ißd to sel“< t a successor to Bur Knsht as party treasurer. '■v'Sirr the -4 committeemen could or would oust [■,, Morgan of Austin as state 1 still remained in doubt majority and minority on the committee held last ni « ht - K, minority group which is gKjhv Ewing Emison. Vincendistric t chairman, and M ;o restore some semblance harmony immediately. |Kwai report.'d to be counselIK Emison was attributed the that the committee put i .it ion oi dismissing R ari til about Oct. 1 and that committee be appointed a new state chairman on KKg all factions in the party nmte Recommended as two of the committee were
lEke up your [IIIVER BILEYou'll Jump Out «f Bed n the Murium Buu’ to to MhSrer ohould l ,oar out tw ° P°'”’ <ls °* Ur into >- .r bowel* daily. If thiabila Kjt.-.rsfrwi- > jrfooddoesn't digest, t I gdK«n in the bowels. G»» bloats up Yon get constipated. Your K*ra i> poisoned and you feel sour, i Kul the »nr!d looks punk. ■p.w are only makeshifts. A user* doesn't get at the cause .1 ■time Id Cany’< LI-* Liver • .gfrtthew two pounds of bile flowing make you feel "up and up” Harm-Kn-’.e ■' •■na- ns m maki-g bib d w K tk f. r Carter's Little Liver Pills by ra- eae an; thing else. 2ScLOANS Comakers | Chattels Automobiles I SB.OO per SIOO per year I New Cars financed I $6.00 per SIOO per year I Repayable montnly. I The ■Suttles-Edwards Co. j Representatives. Bi I I P 1 M I ■ * J I k « 1 L i l l ■BJ || * "ni |L It li©! i * WE GR NEW I93B PHILCO ‘•ODEL S9i —Pentode ‘ ad,< > System, Electro-Dy-tomic Speaker, Automatic Mnme Control, Wide Jsion Dial With Glowin* Station Finder. 2 "” ,n t Ranges. Beautiful I “alnut-reproduc-ton cabinet. $45.00 easy payments ZWICK'S
George A. Ball, national commit! teetnan and Muncie millionaire who has been the party's financial angel” for years, and Mrs. Grace Reynolds of Cambridge City national committeewoman. Ball, incidentally, Is one of those most Irked by the present party discord and at the last committee meeting last April when Harry Fenton was removed as secretary he openly withdrew his support from the present party leadership. Morgan himself was uncertain about the situation. Last night he said no member of the state committee had suggested to him that he resign Today he said he is willing to step out If the party can can agree upon a succeßwor. And further complicating the situation was the suggestion by lawyers that the rules of the state committee would not permit Morgan's ouster today and selection of a successor even If the committee voted it. A meeting must be called for the specific purpose of selecting a chairman, they said, and notice must be given the committee of such intention. Indications today are that the committee will engage in a long and possibly stormy session at the party headquarters with one and possibly two more meetings nec-, essary to thrash out a solution to I the troublesome party harmony issue. Two persons were mentioned most frequently as party treasurer. These William G. Sparks, son of Judge Sparks of the Federal circuit court of appeals in Chicago, and Felix McWhirter. Indianapolis banker. Sparks is reported to have the support of the majority faction of the state committee headed by Ralph Gates of Columbia City, fourth district chairman. o MORE BUDGETS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ' p-stage, sl2; traveling expense, : $75; official records, S3O; stationery and printing, S2O and fumigation supplies, SSO. The 1937 appropriation for the county health officer is salary of sl2; traveling expense, SSO; books and stationery, SSO; fumigation material, SIOO and total $563. ° I PETE CANCILLA FROM PAGB ONE)_ timidate government by strong arm methods.” Indictment of Cancilla and Baker , grew autos an attack on Coy in a statehouse corridor last March 1 during the session of the genera! assembly. At opening of Cancilia's trial this 1 morning, bosh sides agreed to accept all testimony in the Baker case last week as evidence without repeating it. Cancilla, during Baker’s trial, tes- 1 tilled that he had "hit Coy on my own iMok” and denied tliat the slugging had been ordered by Baker. The prosecution had attempted to show that Baker, who formerly was Marion county welfare director, had ord red the attack in an effort to prevent passage of a bill extending the merit system county welfare departments. Baker denied any connection with the attack on Coy.
I O JOHN CRAVENS (CONTINUED FROM FAOE ONE) 1 AM. degree. He gained a state wide reputa1 tion as an efficient school adtninisI ' trator when he became superintenI dent of schools in Monroe county 1 , in 1887. He was the youngest | superintendent in the state at the | time. I In 1899 and in 1901, Cravens was ■ elected as a member of the Indiana legislature from Monroe and 1 | Brown counties. He was the only 1 man in nerly 40 years to succeed I himself in his legislative district. He was chairman of the Monroe county Democratic committee from 1890 to 1894. He was a member of the Democratic central committee of Indiana from 1916 to 1918. In 1912 he was a presidential elect or and cast his vote for Woodrow Wilson. Besides his wife, he is survived by his sisters, Mrs. Samuel M. Ralston, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Julian D. Hogate. Danville; his brothers Theodore D. and Arthur Cravens. Indianapolis; and Oscar Cravens. Bloomington. — —o — CHINESE DEFY 1 (CONTINUED FRpik, rAQB. I 1 manda on the truce reached foili owing the bloody “Shanghai war of 1932 in which thousands of ! Chinese and Japanese were killed ' Under this truce China agreed ; that she would not station military I units within 12 miles of Shanghai 1 The Chinese asserted, however, that the truce did not apply to their militia - the “peace preservation corps." They said that only peace preservation troops were in I the Shanghai areas. As dawn approached a repetition ’of the horrors of 1932 appeared possible. A Japanese aircraft car , rier was reported off Woosung a • ready to launch scores of bonibiu planes such as those which reduced much of the Chinese city to a 1 sjnokiVS ruins in tbe live weekb
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST If, 1937.
Canning Season Now Under Way in Full Swing Fruit I.mu oi l. tom- I j aAS® s* ' • .Vi'SL* - Sr* c 1 11 Ficking grape* B\ W ' ' bWBKW r> 2L ; !‘-jAIR'- iSOF'iI i ; ‘ 11ln g Julcc containers | | |j!|
Half a million workers throughout United States are now busy stuffing this year’s food into cans. * bottles and packages for next year’s meals. It is estimated that there are 34,000 U. S. factories connected with the canning industry. The enormity of the industry is indicated by the fact that 110,210 pounds of canned goods, fruits alone, sailed from U. S. ports for foreign countries the first five months of 1937. There are more than 18.000,000
war of early 1932. First of the Japanese reinforcements —a cruiser and two deI stroyers, vanguard pf the Japan- ' ese third fleet which was createu’ five years ago in anticipation of the present war, reached Shanghai yesterday. Launch Attack I (Copyright 1937 by United Press! Japanese Army Headquarters, Changping, North China, Tug. 11 — (U.R)—The Imperial Japanese army today launched a smashing attack on strong Chinese forces defending the historic Nankow Pass through ' which the Peiping-Suiyuan railway leads from the flat plains of North | China nito the mountains along the I Great Wall The city of Nankow (or Nankou as it is often spelled), with its railway yards, was in flames, but had not yet been occupied. Japanese said, however, that they had captured Chinese positions fronting the pass and in the immediate outskirts of the city despite stiff Chinese resistance. "Our troops have broken the Chinese resistance on one flank, it was asserted. "On the opposite . flank the Chinese position became untenable, although their soldiers there resisted strongly all day. and tonight the Chinese retreated - on this front. "Our scouts report the Chinese . cavalry units back of Nankow are retreating. "The Chinese Have dynamited the railway in three places." Chinese were entrenched across the rocky bed of the Sha river, which flows down from Mongolia through the pass, and were astride i the railway ior provinces of Chahar and SuiyuControl of the pass traditionally : involves control of the great interan from which the last Japanese were driven last mrwth by veteran Chinese divisions commanded by Gen. Fu Tso-Yi and Gen. Tang En-Pu. —o- — INDIANA DEATH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)_ , Eddie Gyner. 27. driver of the car. was held ipeuding investigation. Mrs. Clarence Cling Daniel, Elkhart, was killed in an automobile accident on state road 2. near Goshen. Her husband and three children were injured. Ralph Kackiey. 28, living near Richmond, was drowned when a canoe from which he was fishing over--1 turned on Canadian Lake. 1 Retired Noble County Farmer Commits Suicide South Milford. Ind., Aug. U-— (U.R) —William Nichols, 88, a retired farmer and resident of Noble county for 78 years, shot himself through the head with a rifle at his home here last night. His wife, who found the body on the porch this morning, said he had been in ill health for the last two years. . -o ' Huge Alaskan Airways Seaplane Found Sale Port Ludlow, Wash. Aug. 11(U.R) —search for an Alaskan Air-
cases of fruit juices packed annually and some 150.000.000 cans of cherries and heavier fruits I alone A typical month-end inventory of cold storage products, aside from canned goods, shows on hand 40,000,000 pounds of fish, 23,000,000 pounds of butter, 85,000,000 pounds of cheese, 11,000,000 cases of eggs and 836,000,000 pounds»of meat, enough to allay any danger of food shortage for several months. -
ways seaplane, which carried nine I persons including two women and,, two children and was unreported for 30 hours, ended abruptly last night when the plane was found riding safely at anchor here while the passengers enjoyed a visit with relatives. They had neglected to inform company officials of their stopover and an alarm had been sent to all U. S. coast guard stations in the, northwest and to officials of British Columbia. The coast guard already had begun a search for the plane. o Three Investigations Into Airplane Crash Daytona Beach, Fla., Aug. 11.— (U.R) — Three investigations were started today to determine responsibility for the construction of a high tension power line at Sholtz airport that “tripped” an Eastern Airlines plane and caused the death of four men and serious injury to five others. The department of air commerce, the Florida’ Power & Light company, and Eastern Air Lines sent officials here to ascertain why the power line was erected where it) endangered planes landing at and 1
Republicans Seek United Front c 41L -il . ... * mH ■Kk i 'A JRI “—— Herbert Hoover Alfred M. Landon “ O' ; fc‘W4*ySy**“*‘*** - ■ k ' . r \, -QK — Lowden home Seeking to establish a united front before the congressional elections of 1938. Republicans are reported planning a conference between Herbert Hoover and Alfred M. Landon at the home of Frank O. Lowden, former governor of Illinois, at the latter's estate, Sinissippi, near Oregon, 111. Considerable factional feeling has prevailed in the G*O. P. since 1936 when follpwers of Hoover and Landon made an issue over which leader held the dominant position in the party Lowden is expected u> play the role of peacemaker at the conference which U slated to be held within a month. ' --S—' t
taking off from the field, and why, /fter it was erected, airport officials were not advised.” o Choice Steers Again Hitting New Prices Chicago, Aug. 11 —(U.R)— The price of choice steers swept to a 9-year high at the Chicago stockyards today when 1336-ponnd steers were sold at $17.60 per hundredweight. Today's high price reflected the recent rise in hog prices which carried the price of swine to an 11-year high in the Chicago yards and marked the second time in the week that steers prices have made a record top. Heifers sold at $16.25, highest since 1930. o Poor Relief Claims Decrease During July Poor relief claims in Washington township decreased $171.91 for this month of July. The July claims, payable in August, amounted to $801.63, according to a repo»t submitted l>y Trustee John M Doan. The June claims, payable in July, amounted to $973.54.
PART OF WEST FEARS DROUGHT Serious Drought Threat Developes In Western States Washington, Aug. 11 —(U.R) — A [ I serious threat of drought has de-1 I veloped over the western portion I of the Great Plains area and some other parts of the midwest, the department of agriculture said to- ; day. “The continued absence of effective rainfall over the Great Plains from northern Texas northward has resulted in rather serious drought conditions over practically the entire area,” a crop bulletin said. The effects of scanty moisture have been aggravated, the department said, by abnormally high ternI peratures for several weeks. Hot i winds were reported over a conI siderable portion of the southern I plains area. ''Conditions have become especially bad in the western plains from western Oklahoma and northeastern New Mexico northward,” the bulletin said. Approves Bill Washington, Aug. 11 —(U.R) —A 1 senate agriculture subcommittee ! today approved a bill providing I mandatory 10-cent cotton loans by the Commodity Credit corp. The bill provides for loans on other basic agricultural commodities in event prices fall to a certain level. The loans on these commodities would be on the basis of 70 cents per bushel for wheat, 50 cents per bushel for corn, eight cents per pound on tobacco, and 65 cents Authority for loans under the per bushel on rice. bill would extend only to December 31. Committee chairman Ellison D. Smith, D„ S. C-, said the measure was designed to meet an “immediate and distressing need” to prevent “wholesale disaster.” o ALBEN BARKLEY FROM PAGE ONE) “He has two great assets for which he ought to be thankful and | for which we are truly grateful—a sense of perspective whereby little things are not unduly magnified and the larger things of life are not minimized, and a sense of humor which enables him to distingl uish between the ridiculous and the serious. • “Any man who, when the discusi sion of some picayune subject waxjes serious and acrimonious, can rise in his place and sing ‘Wagon Wheels” is a positive genius. He knows by sound instinct that on occasion party harmony is aided and abetted by close harmony.” Harner, in his own right, pleaded for forgiveness all around in the j interests of party unity. Sen. Car- j ter Glass, D. ,Va* who has pretty consistently bucked the new deal I was called upon and said: “It is an honor for an unreconstructed rebel to be called on at a time like this to make a speech. 1. ! have not always agreed with President Roosevelt. I have not always agreed with Senator Barkley. But Statement of Condition of the < -ONI’AM Scranton, Pennsylvania Spruce Street and Adams Avenue On the 3lst Day of December, 1936 W. P. STEVENS. President E. W. EVANS, Secretary Am.wunt of Capital paid up * $ 310,000.00 CROSS ASSETS OE COMPANY ileal Estate Unincumbered $1,352,867.37 j i Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Free from any prior incumbrance).... 614,152.82 i ' Bonds and Stocks Owned (Book Value) 5,070,273.55 ' | (’ash in Banks (On In- . terest and Not on Onterest) 4 44,923.89 i Accrued Securities (Interest and Rents, etc.) 85,748.04 i Other Securities Policy Loans 1,917,199.04 Premium Notes & Deferred Prems 213,342.79 i other Assets Premiums and Accounts due and in process of collection Nonej [ Accounts otherwise seemed None j Total Gross Assets >9.860,424.92 ’ Deduct Assets Not Admitted $ 442,802.73 ' Net Assets $9,117,622.19 , LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks ... Losses due and unpaid None Losses adjusted and hot due - None Losses unadjusted and in suspense 40.675.83 1 Policy Dividend Account 185,707.50 Amount due and not due banks or other creditors None Other Liabilities of the Company 343,046.64 Total Liabilities $8,865,676.42 [ Capital $ 340,000.00 i Surplus $ 211,945.77 I! Total »»,417,622.19 I STATE OF INDIANA. Office of Insurance Commissioner I • I. the undersigned. Insurance Com- 1 missloner of Indiana, hereby certify i that the above is a correct copy of 1 the Statement of the Condition of j i the above mentioned Company on t the 31st day of December, 1936 as i 1 shewn by the original statement and $ that the said original statement is . 1 now on file in this office. i In Testimony Whereof. I hereunto ! subscribe my name and affix my ofti- t dal seal, this 9th day of July, 1937. < (Sea!) GEO. H. NEWBAUER, Insurance ’ •It Mutual Company so state. Aug. 11-18 1
' I am flrat and last a Democrat." Law is jarred the occasion with a warning a g a 1 n a t accepting that which is "called Democracy which has for Its purposes temporary political success on the basis of de- ! struction of property and Infringe- ! ment of liberty.” Leaving the banquet chamber, ■ Lewis amplified his remarks for ' reporters, as follows: "The difficulty with our splendid administration and our trustful ' president Is that they are being ! 1 overwhelmed by a set of men who l haven't the courage to be Republi-1 cans or the Intelligence to be Dem-, ocrats.” Harrison, who was regarded as the conservative candidate for sen- i ate majority leader, called for party peace and united action. He j J promised to cooperate with the man who beat him last month Barkley was given an ovation when he was called upon to be the last speaker. “I will undertake to represent ! the senate,” he said, “and to tell' other branches of the government I what our position is and what they i can and cannot do without our co-1 operation.” The harmony motif was carried i I out in a dessert decorated by candy peace doves. A large dove of ; peace was suspended above the diners against a wall. “But the dove looked awful cold —awful dead,” said Sen. William H. King, D-, Utah, as he departed for home. ' " —O -■ Trade in a Good Town —Decatur. Statement of Condition of the THE PAUL HEVERE LIFE IXSI RANCE COMPANY Worcester, Massachusetts 18 Chestnut Street On the 31st Day of December, 1936 I CHARLES A. HARRINGTON, President LEMUEL G. HODGKINS, Secretary Amount of Capital paid up • $ 400,000.00 i GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate Unincumbered $ None Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) .... 342,542.53 Bonds and Stocks Owned (Book Value) 1J52,840.22 i Cash in Banks (On Interest and Not on Interest) 252,626.98 Accrued Securities (Interest and Rents, etc.) 9,257.38 Other Securities Policy Loans . 20,241.67 Mortgage Loan Suspense 1,123.77 Premiums and Accounts due and in proc-ess of collection 117,969.89 Accounts otherwise secured 9,945.52 i Total Gross Assets $1,904,300.42 • i Deduct Assets Not Admitted $ 33,188.14 i Net Assets $1,871,112.28 , LIABILITIES Reserve or amount neI cessary to reinsure , outstanding risks $ 833,860.84 ' i Losses due and unpaid.... None - j Losses adjusted and not .! due None . Losses unadjusted and in 1 suspense .... 243,743.00 Bills and Accounts unpaid 16,554.32 Amount due and not due banks or other creditors None Other Liabilities of the I | Company 53,904.88 Total Liabilities *1,148,063.04 Capital $ 100,000.00 Surplus | 323,049.24 I Total .'.*1,871,112.28 STATE OF INDIANA. Office of Insurance Commissioner 1. the undersigned, Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify) that the above Is a correct copy of the Statement of the Condition of I the above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, ’936. as I shown by the original statement and I that the said original statement is I i now on file in this office. In Testimony Whereof, i hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, this 9th day of July, 1937. (Seal) GEO. H. NEWBAUER, Insurance Commissioner. 1 *lf Mutual Company so state. Aug. 11-18 Statement of Condition of the I'HOVIbtAT LIFE A ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY Chattanooga. Tennessee 725 Broad Street On the 31st Day of December, 1936 I:. .1. MACLELLAN, President IV. C. CARTINHOUR. SecretaryAmount of Capital paid I up ♦ ji.000.0n0.00 I GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Ileal Estate UnincumbI ered * 917,379.31 j Mortgage Loans on Real Estate < Free from any prior incumbrance) 1,469,386.71 ! Bonds and Stocks Owned (Market Value) 3,344,323.51 j Cash in Banks (On Interest and Not on In- ! terest) 501,628.96 Accrued Securities (Interest and Rents, etc.) 62,518.91 Other Assets ... . 1 17,708.3 1! Premiums and Accounts <lue and in process of collection . 1,228,700.17 ! Accounts otherwise secured None I Policy Loans & Renewal Prern. Notes 929,900.01 Loan Secured by pledge of Stocks 9,300.00 ; I Total Gross Assets *8,614,045.95 Deduct Assets Not Admitted * 111,841.68, Net Assets . *8,472,204.27 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount ne. ■ essary to reinsure outstanding risks . $4,167,102.74 I A & H. Premium Reserves 773.180.70) Claim Reserves . 891,937.57 I 'Commission Reserves 101,547.89) | Bills and Accounts unpaid 10,514.48) Tax Reserve . 171.950.70 l Contingency Reserve ... 549,691.1 9 | Other Liabilities of the Company 3,249.00 ' I Total Liabilities *6,672,204.27 Capital .$1,000,000.00 i [Surplus . .. * 800,000.00 i Total *8,472,204.27 STATE OF INDIANA. Office of Insurance Commissioner < I. the undersigned, Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify t that the above is a correct copy of I the Statement of the Condition of t the above mentioned Company on t tile 31st day of December, 1936, as ) t shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is I now on file iq this office. t In Testimony Whereof. I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my offi- t clal seal, this Sth day of July, 1937 ■ (Sea!) QEO- H. NEWBAUER, Insurance Commissioner. •If Mutual Company so state. Aug. 11-18
PAGE FIVE
JUDICIARY REFORM anxious for crop loan action. At least two Republicans were reported ready to join with the five in opposing a rule for the measure. DR. RAY STINGELY DENTIST Rooma 1 and 2, K. of C. Bldg. Phone 240 Office Hours: Btol2 -1 to 5 Office closed sll day Wednesday. CHANGE OF ADDRESS Subscribers are requested to give old and new address when ordering paper changed from one address to another. For example: If you change your address from Decatur R. R. 1 to Decatur R. R. 2, instruct us to change the paper from route one to route Statement of Condition of tbs RELIANCE MITVAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANI OF ILLINOIS Chicago, Illinois 33 North LaSalle Street On the 31st Day of December, 1936 OSCAR W. CARLSON, President C. L. HALVERSON, Secretary Amount of Capital paid up • * Mutual GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate Unincumbered .. . * 257,231.64 Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Free from any prior Incumbrance) 206,185.00 Bonds and Stocks Owned (Market Value) .... 88,350.15 Cash in Banks (On Interest and Not on Interest) 233,627.42 Accrued Securities (Interest and Rents, etc.) 9,600.47 Other Securities 10,314.68 Policy Loans and notes.. 60,308.91 Collateral Loans . 342.39 Premiums and Accounts due and In process of collection 23,006.33 Accounts otherwise seI cured None I Policy Liens — Reinsurance 127,285.79 Agent's Balances - Bills Rec 2,395.43 Total Gross Assets . * 808,648.21 Deduct Assets Not Admitted * 3,387.32 Net Assets .... * 805,260.89 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks $ 671,083.04 ! I Losses due and unpaid None ■ Losses adjusted and not i due None ; Losses unadjusted and in 1 suspense 5,737.00 Bills and Accounts unpaid 3,514.71 Amount due and not due 1 | banks or other credi- ‘ I tors None I Other Liabilities of the s j Company 21,110.42 » Total Liabilities $ 701,445.17 ! Capital None -’ Surplus * 103,815.73 Total * 805,260.89 I STATE OF INDIANA, ' Uttice of Insurance Commissioner ■) I, the undersigned. Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify ' | that the above is a correct copy of ) the Statement of the Condition of ■) the above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, 1936, as shown by the original statement and | that the said original statement'is ) now on file in this office. In Testimony Whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, this Sth day of July, 1937. I (Seal) GEV). H. NEWBAUER, Insurance Commissioner. •If Mutual Company so state. Aug. 11-18 Statement of Condition of the OLD IIEPI BLIP CREDIT LIFE INSI HANCE COMPANY Chicago, Illinois 309 West Jackson Boulevard On tile 31st Day of December, 1936. C. W. HOWE, Vice-President N. A. NELSON, JR., Secretary Amount of Capital paid up • * 1’00,000.00 GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate Unincumbered J 132,423.41 I Mortgage Loans on Real Estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) 117,925.06 .Bonds and Stocks Owned (Market Value) . 24 4,478.56 Casli in Banks (On Interest and Not on Interest) 133,166.10 ) Accrued Securities (Interest and Rents, etc.) 8,732.68 Other Securities lills Receivable & Agent's Balances 29,658.92 Advances to State Life k'und 15,500.00 Assumed Value of State Life Assets 104.341.13 Premiums and Accounts due and in process of collection 24,661.33 | Collateral Loans . 315.88 Accounts otherwise seI cured None I nearned Reinsurance ) Premiums 4.012.63 Loans to Policyholders.. 30,114.88 I Total Gross Assets * 845,330.58 Deduct Assets Not Admitted J 138,581.33 Net Assets J 706,749.25 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary td reinsure outstanding risks * 268,288.25 i Losses due and unpaid. None i Losses adjusted and not , due None Losses unadjusted and in I suspense 5,163.00 | Bills and Accounts unpaid 1,899.28 Amount due and not due banks or other creditors .. .. None | Other Liabilities of thp Company 118.803.11 Total Liabilities * 394,153.64 Capital $ 200,000.00 Surplus * 112,595.61 Total j 706,749.25 STATE OF INDIANA. Office of Insurance Commissioner I. the undersigned. Insurance Comnussioner of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the Statement of the Condition of tlie above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, 1936, as shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is now on file in this office. In Testimony Whereof. I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, this 9th day of July, 1937 (Se4l) GEO. H. NEWBAUER, Insurance Commisstewer. •If Mutual Coiupauy so state. Aug. 11-18.
