Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 197, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1938 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

f Test Your Knowledge [ Can you ui»*r aeven of the** ton question*? Turn to page Four for tne answer*. »— « 1. Nam* the city of Florida with the largest popuiatiou. 2. Is a reeldent ol the United States, who has only his first papers, an alien? 3. Name the capital of Madagas-, car. 4. What la the femiuiue form of toastmaster? 5. Where is the principal seat of' motion picture industry in the U.' S ? 6. Did President Franklin D. Roosevelt ever hold a high office under j a Republican Administration? 7. What is another name for Statement of Condition of the St A INDEMNITY COMPANY OF NEW YORK New York 65 Fifth Avenue On the 31et Day of December, 1937. F. I. P. CALLOB, President It. A. KEARNEY, Secretary Amount of Capital paid up J.000.0U0.0U GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate unincumbered 6 None Mortgaso Doans on r-.al estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) None Bonds and Stocks owned Amortised Value on Bonds. Conv. Value an 1 Stocks 4,700,805.43 Cash in banks (on interest and not on Interest) -—. .... 504,467.30 Accrued Securities (Interest & Rents, etc.) . 34,346.80 Other Securities — Cash in Office 7,598.35 Reinsurance Recoverable 60.835/M Workmen's Comp. Reins. Bureau 85,081.55 Sur. Ass’n. of America 1500.00; Adv. for trav- • eling 1548.27 1,048.27 Premiums and Accounts due and in process of collection 701,b70.0l . Accounts otherwise secured — Sundry Balances - 28,641.10 Fed. Tax Refund-1934-Underwr. Exps 19,574.75 Fed. Tax Hefund-1934- • Tax on Interest 13,543.33 Total Gross Assets 4 6,277,602.77 , Deduct Assets Not Admitted — I 115,219.27 Net Assets 3 6,162,383.50 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount ne- i cessary to reinsure outstanding risks , 6 1,419,092. 04 Losses due and unpaid.. None Losses adjusted and not due - None ( I.asses unadjusted and • In suspense 2,146,068.48 Lilis and Accounts unpaid .... 323,150.11 Amount due and not > , due Banks or other Creditors None Other Liabilities of the Company — Contingency Reserve 91,633.69 Total Liabilities * 3.978.943.22 Capital -3 1,000,000.00 Surplus » 1,183,440.28 Total » 6,162,383.50 STAT!) OF INDIANA, Office of Insurance Commissioner. 1 the undersigned. Insurance Coni- , ni’ssioner of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correcr'copy ot j the Statement of the Condition ut the above mentioned Company on the 31st day ot December, 1937, as shown by the original statement and tuat the said original statement is . now on file In this office. In Testimony Whereof. I hereunto subscribe mv name and affix my official seal, this 21st day of June. 1938. (Seal) GEO. 11. NEWBAOER, J Insurance Commissioner. •If Mutual Company so state. AUGUST 13—20 j immmwbbhdbb < MORRIS PLAN ! LOANS 1 on i FURNITURE LIVESTOCK ELECTRIC STOVES REFRIGERATORS. Special Plan for School Teachers. NEW AUTOMOBILES 56.00 for 5100.00 per year Repayable Monthly. Suttles-Edwards Co. Representatives.

1 - ' — ■ ■■■'■ _ ■■■■■■■■■■ i — BARNEY GOOGLE ~~ -“A STETHOSCOPE FOR HIS CHEST” By BiUy Deßeck aJHBTTR NIGHT’.'. \I M / YOU DON'T REV y vjHRT ReoUT ' rr—en I cskw N\nRF I Jd 1 -FI'NGIN PLRTES RT THB HFmii-T* ;"2— - ’ I niMTc, OPPEQ Won ORCHESTRA LEADER RN* GRRBBIN' |kj Q? / tSWOU). \ OFF ALL THE TABLE CLOTHSr - \ OOE^oRW R tT§u S^°. OR UNT MG OUT-'/ ReCK 'MEWBER J THE SPEECH YOU CARDS <* ' “ S * s ro , ? 9— ( LOW-DOWNER'N) J ABCA'V YOIJR FANHLY FEUD Q £2' ' 8' I A MOLE, / , W PATER ~ Z wn<4 THE BULGER kcHs X GOOGLE-- / i IHpy y’-d'™ ~‘ ™d ttß I iyz Mses , frQed/ddd£%j. i 'CW.raMr 7 [ <—? >— PWr??W'T '-' K, "g Ft.f.rX Syr.?. »■--. I v. (J ■ •'■ ~< | |(UUI - WWyEffilJ \ pl-T | ' ?**" V ° THIMBLE THEATER FOOD FOR FORGETFULNESS By SEGAR POOR GIRL, CAY HERRT>| CHIEF MINISTER,\ _f G-R-R j IYA BRINGIN' YA rJ L~X (/) S_, I GOES OUT TO HER- I THINK WIMPY \ MEDfid, WIMPY/y< YES. I SNATCHED HER OUGHTA GET A \ /t rcgA ’ V^W' “&» </'i FROM DEATH’S DOOR. MEDAL FOR SAVIN' ] (paßDOn)' 1] Id SHE'S STILL r —-' OLIVE FROM THEM/- \HAKUOiy J/P 5 X N V d UNCONSCIOUS^ 7 DERN DE-MINGS Z d *RB. I / BRN6 iX H TRY TO GET! 75 /BRING MEP lW§'-r VH°^ PlTftl 7, rfrWMUA H VA A X/ IA MEDAL k Tvii’ & 4~1 'IB? yZj> 4 BHIPr I | \ -•■ ; '\ - •yy,d--

shooting stars? ?. Who invented th* Diesel engine? 9. What is crlbbage? 10. Which naval officer commanded the American slept Mi th* Battle ot Lake Erie? —. ■ o Twin* Joint Valedictorian* Chardon, O.~<U.R>—Martha and Marie Johnson, 17, and identical I twins, both are the valedictorians of the Chardon high school gradulat Ing class. The twins had the I same grades, the highest in their ; class. “We study alike and do everything else alike so why I shouldn't our grades be alike?” they said. o Students to Save Time Noagles, Ariz.—(U.R) — A popular vote by students brought trustees’ approval ot "daylight saving time" for local schools. Classes will commence at 8 a. ni. and will be dis- | missed at 3 p. ni., instead of an hour later. o Oregon Farm* Electrified Salem, Ore. — (U.R) —More than one-third of Oregon's 67,753 farms ' are served with electricity, accord- ( ing to a report by the rural elec-1 I triflcation adminUtration. The per-' eentage is 39.7, compared to the national average of 16.8. Statement of Condition of the VANNERS EXCHANGE St IISCKIHEItS AT W ARNER I.NTEH-I.NSt RANCE Bl Kill. Lanning B. Warnrr, Incorporated* Attorney-In-Fart Chicago, Illinois 540 North Michigan Avenue On the 31st Day of December, 1937 LANSING B. WARNER, President i CLARENCE R. LELAND, Executive Vice-President and Secretary of said Attorney-in-Fact Amount of Capital paid up — Not Applicable ’I None (This is a statement of the aggregate of the Subscribers separate accounts.) GROSS ASSETS OF INSURERS | Real Estate unincumbered 5 None Mortgage Loans on real estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) None U. 8. Government Securities 12-31-37 (Market Value) 2,414,UU0.UV 1 Cash in banks (on interest and not on interest) — 1,557,932.34 Accrued Securities (Interest & Rents, etc.).. 16.553.U6 Other Securities None Salvage Estimated 17,444.21 Expense and Guarantee Fund Deposits due but not yet made 233,213.46 Accounts otherwise secured None Total Gross Assets > 4,233,173.07 | Deduct Assets Not Admitted I 33,586.98 Net Assets ■ > 4,205,566.03 LIABILITIES Deserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks ... I 855,761.65’ Losses due and unpaid.. None Losses adjusted and not due None Losses unadjusted and in suspense G,960.U0 Bills and Accounts unpaid —... None i Amount due and not due Banks or other Creditors None Other Liabilities of the Insurers 44,581.33 Total Liabilities . > 307,303.03 Capital >Not Applicable Surplus i 3,238,233.04 Total > 4,205,536.03 STATE OF INDIANA, Office of Insurance Commissioner. I, the undersigned, Insurance Com- | missioner of Indiana, hereby certity that the above is a correct copy ot the Statement of the Condition of the above mentioned Subscribers on the 31st day of December, 1937, 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 21st day of June, 1933. (Seal) GEO. H. NEW BAUER, Insurance Commissioner. ♦ls Mutual Company so state. AUGUST 13—20 To Make Good Pickles Use ESTELLE S B. A B. SPICE MIXTIRE, with green tomatoes i or cucumbers. Eat ’em the same ; day you make ’em. The best you ever tasted. Directions on pkg. 15c at all food and drug stores.

U CORLISS

CHAPTER XXII You lunched with Scott *t his club, thought Whitney, and arranged your life, making all th* necessary comI promised and concessions and cvcnt- ' ually he left you and you went on to Kay Reynolds’ for tea. You came into a familiar Beacon Street drawing room and saw a lot of people you had known all your life and they said that New York had certainly agreed with you and that your Rose Descat hat was becoming and was an advertising job as much fun *s it was reputed to be in novels ... and none of it had any reality at all. Kay Reynolds was telling her about a man she had met in Panama. “You would have adored him, Whit. He’d been positively everywhere. You see, he was sort of an explorer ... that is, he was some sort of a metal expert, I never did find out just what his work was, but anyway . . .’’ Kay had let her hair grow. She was wearing it parted in the middle and slicked low over her ears like a Russian dancer. It made her skin look very white. Whatever else she had done in Panama, she hadn't got i a sunburn, at any rate. Mrs. Reynolds was getting really enormous and she shouldn’t wear silver brocade ... it made her look like a homemade lampshade. And the room was too hot and there were too many people in it and too much food. Whitney had forgotten that sandwiches could be cut in so many different shapes and filled with so : many different pastes and yet taste curiously alike. It was supposed to be a small tea. Mrs. Reynolds had ■ said over the telephone that morning: “Just a few of your old friends, i Whitney, who want to see you before 1 you go back ...” But fifteen or twenty people : wasn't a small tea. And she had i known most of them all of her life ; and yet none of them, or the room, 1 or the conversations swirling about 1 her, seemed to have any reality. . . . i And then someone moved and she < saw Olivia sitting on the bench in front of the fire, and Olivia had 1 reality. 1 Olivia was Scott’s wife. She was i a small, blonde girl in a green wool dress who must not be asked to give < up her marriage. Because any way i you looked at it, it wasn't her fault that Scott had loved her too well, too briefly. And it would do something 1 irreparable to her pride to have to i divorce him. It would crack her 1 wide open. And you couldn’t do that i to any human being. Not and have ; any happiness yourself, afterward. She wondered suddenly just how i much it would disturb Olivia to know that she was going to stay in Boston . . . and she decided that it would probably disturb her very little. She had been pretty much in love with Scott eighteen months ago but surely a love that isn't returned must have to wear itself out in a year and a half. She must know by now that emotionally, at least, her marriage was a pretty empty thing, not a real marriage at all . . . what Scott had called “just another design for two people living together . . She would probably, if you asked her about it, be the first to admit it. She was a pretty direct person. And she would see that there was no reason, really, why Whitney shouldn t come back to Boston. W hitney thought: “Because she asked me to do so I stayed away for more than a year. That is a long time. That is long enough •.. she will have to see that ...” But suddenly she knew that whether Olivia thought it was or not, she wanted to be the one to tell her. She walked across the room to where Scott’s wife was sitting with the firelight shining on her pale gold hair and on her soft red lips. She said: “I’ve got Aunt Hester’s car. Olivia. Let me give you a lift home, won’t you? It will give us a chance to talk . . .” Olivia lifted eyes that were surprised, a little guarded. She smiled slowly. She said: “Why, yes, Whit , , That will be nice. Scott was coming for me but I’ll telephone him not to ...” Olivia said: “This car looks more like Hester than like you, Whit...”

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1938.

and settled herself lightly against its beige tyroaddoth cushions. Whitney directed the long hood of the slightly aneient Cadillac into the six o’clock traffic of Commonwealth Avenue. Without looking at Olivia, she knew how she looked. Sho was wearing soft, dark furs and her profile would be pure and clean-cut against them. An almost perfect profile with a childish, rounded chin beneath that flawless red mouth, and an imperious, small nose and eyebrows. darkly slender, half-moon shaped. A perfectly composed profile at the moment, or perhaps controlled was a better word for it. Olivia had grown older. She had acquired poise . . . and resistance. A sort of hard, bright finish that because of her blonde fragility would in a few years make her seem a little brittle if she wasn't careful.... Whitney slid the Cadillac around a blue taxi, managed to squeeze between tv.-o trucks and so avoid a red light. And in a few years what would have happened to all of them? To Scott and Olivia and to her? How would they have worked this thing out? However they did, it would leave its mark irreparably on them all ... Suddenly she wondered just how well any person was ever allowed to know another person ... and decided that except in rare cases the answer was, not at all. For instance, it would be impossible for her ever to know Olivia well. Always between them there would be antagonism and distrust and that blind, unreasoning jealousy that had nothing to do with the mind at a11... was purely involuntary and emotional. Yet, if they had met under different circumstances ... if Olivia hadn’t happened to be Scott’s wif* . . . “But," Whitney thought, “she is: and because she is I wii, never be able to look at her impartially . . -1 any more than she will ever be able j to consider me that way ... always, | because of Scott, we will be ene- 1 mies ... but at least we can be honest ones.” She said, abruptly: “I asked you to let me drive you home tonight, Olivia, because I wanted to tell you something.” Olivia said: “I knew that of course. And I think I know what it is. You’re not going back to New York” “No, I’m not. But how did you know?” Whitney’s hands were steady on the wheel of Hester Prentice’s town car, her eyes stared straight ahead. Her voice was even, pleasantly controlled. She thought: “This is the way these things are discussed by two young women who have had the advantage of going to the right sort of schools ... it would be better perhaps, and more satisfying if we screamed at each other ...’’ “It was comparatively simple to figure out Scott was out somewhere with the car, Saturday night. He didn’t say where he went, so I was pretty sure that he was with you. He was distrait and irritable all day yesterday and very gay and amiable this morning ... but obviously excited. It didn’t require much deduction to decide that you were lunching together. Then you arrived at Kay’s tea looking very beautiful and a little vague and i was certain of it. “All right Everything you’ve just said is true. Except that our lunching together today was accidental ...” “But you did lunch together and he asked you not to go back to New York and you’re still in love with him, so you’re not going. You gave me a little more than a year to put my marriage in order and you think that’s long enough. Weil, Whitney, it isn't long enough.” Whitney said, and her voice was so level it sounded strange to her own ears: “I am afraid it will have to be.” "Perhaps,” said Olivia, "you’ll tell me why it has to be." "All right, I will. Wnen two people love each other as much as Scott and I do, it isn’t fair for a third person to keep them apart, even when she happens to be his wife.” “I see,” said Olivia. Then she said, “Is Scott going to ask me to divorce him?”

t "No. Why should he? You like being married to him, don’t you? f You like being his wife. Besides, s divorce is a pretty ugly thing . . . i “Not as ugly as having an affair , with another woman’s husband.” j “I don’t intend to have an affair - with Scott I think you know that, t Olivia. I think you know it, absot lutely." • i “Just what do you want then. 1 "Just a chance to live in the same - city with him, see him occasionally, 1 be friends with him.” “And you think that will be • enough?” “I know it will be enough. It will • be so much more than I have had l for the last year and a half that it ■ will be heaven ...” 1 “Don’t be a fool 1" Olivia’s voice • cut, coolly bitter, across Whitney’s . strained young composure. “It I would be utterly impossible for you . and Scott to be together, to see each I other continuously, without finding ; yourselves in no time at all in each 1 other’s arms. And that must not , happen, Whitney.” Whitney knew a sudden, unj reasoning anger. Her hands i were shaking uncontrollably. She clenched them hard on the wheel, • made a desperate effort to keep her I voice from shrieking. She said: . "You’re wrong about that. But even i if you were right you still have no right to say whether or not I shall stay in Boston. I gave you a year . and three months and that is a long time. It is long enough ..." “And I say,” said Olivia, and her voice was deadly even, “that it isn’t And I’ll tell you why it isn’t I’m going to have a baby, Whitney. In October." Olivia was going to have a baby. In October. All the time that they i had been talking, she had known | that. She had known it two nights ! ago. Scott had known it But he ; couldn’t have. That would make it i too intolerable. Whitney said, her 1 ilips stiff: “Does Scott know this?” I “No. I wanted to be sure about it. I made a mistake once and I didn’t want this to be a mistake. I saw Dr. Wrenn this morning. It isn’t." Whitney felt a tight band that had been pressing hard about her forehead let go. She said: “That makes it quite a lot better. It would all have been pretty bad if he had known.” "Well, he didn’t know. I suppose you hate me for this, Whitney?” “No. Why should I?” “Well, I’m having this baby deliberately. You see, I don’t intend to let you or anything else smash up my marriage and I’m wise enough to know a child will hold it together when nothing else might.” Whitney felt a little sick. She said: “That’s undoubtedly true . . . but isn’t it rather hard on the child?” “That’s for me to decide. It will be my child.” "Yours," said Whitney, '’and Scott’s.” "Well,” said Olivia, “I’ve figured it all out... and I’m willing to risk it." “Yes,” agreed Whitney, “I suppose you are. I suppose I would be if I were in your place. It’s natural to fight to the finish for something we really want terribly...” “And we can’t always choose our weapons ... sometimes we are desperate enough to use any .. • even unfair ones . . .” “Having a child by a man you love and are married to could hardly be called an unfair weapon, I suppose. You do love Scott?” "I don’t know. I suppose I must. I certainly did once.” “Yes,” said Whitney. Then she said: “Well, this does settle things, doesn’t it? I’ll go back to New York tonight and in five or ten years I’ll probably have a very good job with an important salary. I’m clever at , writing advertising, you see . . Olivia put her hand suddenly on I Whitney’s arm, her fingers closed about it urgently. “Try not to hate , me too much, Whit.” ; “I don’t hate you at all. And I I hope you have a lovely baby ... you i should have, you know, you and ’ Scott are both exceptionally nice- , looking people.” ! | (To be continued) IWrllM, Ill), 6, King r«tur.i Bindlcl., In*

i rw® 1 JBk. I,

♦ RATES * - One Time—Minimum ch*rg* of \ 250 for 20 word* or le»*. Ov*r 20 word*, 154 c P er word | Two Time*—Minimum ch*rg* « I cf 40c for 20 word* or !*••■ . Over 20 word* 2c per word for the twr> tlmee. Three Jme*— Minimum ch«rg* of 60c for 20 word* or le»*. Over 20 word* 2>/gO per word 1 for the three tlmee. i I Card* of Th*nk* Sso | ■ Obltuarlet *nd v*r***——Sl-00 Open rata-dliplay advertising 35c per column Inch. ] FOR SALE 1 ■ a FOR SALE—Good dry buzz wood $1.85 a cord delivered. $135 on farm Boyd Stepler. Phone 17.20 Craigville. 196-k3tx ( FOR SALE—Roasting ears, green cornfield beans, tomatoes, weight guaranteed. Harold Rhynard, 116 Grant St. 196-3tx . FOR SALE —Hominy feed. Call by Wednesday, August 24 if interested. Williams Equity Ex- * change. Phone 860-J. 196-3 t ‘ FOR SALE — Tomatoes, 50c a bushel. Inquire of Albert Teeple, 7 miles west of Decatur on road 224, bring container. 195-a3tx , FOR SALE — New type Fordson j tractor. 2 used Fordsons, JohnDeere tractor, F-12 Farmall, 2 fertilizer grain drills, one fertilizer 1 I corn row drill, 2 used cultipackers. • ‘ i See the New Oliver tractors and I ( I farm implements on display. Craig- [ | ville Garage. 193 5t , FOR SALE — Early red duchess apples. Good cookers. 50 and 75c per bu„ while they last. One- 1 < half mile west of Kirkland high school. Sam Henschen, Craigville ; phone. 195-3 t FOR SALE—3I Chevrolet coach, j Good condition. Mile south, half mile east of Monroe. On Bert Hendricks farm. 196-3 IX ‘ FOR SALE—Small building, 9xlo, ] located on South Third street. ( Inquire Haugk Coal Yard. Phone i 660. 197-3 t I 1 FARMS FOR SALE—I2O acres, St. I Mary's township, bargain for'( some one; 27 acres close to Deca-; 1 tur, good home, electric lights; 50;, acres, Kirkland township, can be . 1 bought on easy terms; 45 acres j be bought for $3,600, good soil, j i good house, barn; 80 acres close 1 to Monroe; 120 acres in Root town-' I ship, will trade for smaller farm; u 120 acres in Root township, sell i J lon easy terms; 40 acres Blue Creek i j township, easy terms; 20 acres'.close to Berne, nice home; 201 | acres close to Monroe, good soil,! ’ electric lights; 10 acres close to 1 ! Monroe. Nice home in Berne. . Nice home in Monroe. These can ; ,be bought at right price. See J. A. Harvey Realty Co., Monroe. Itx ————o Bear-Oil Lamp Found St. Clairsville, O.—(U.PJ—A bearI oil lamp has been found on the I Edward Eckles farm near here. o 1 Statement of Condition of the AMEHK AY MI TI AI. I IIHIIIIY IASI IIAM E «>Hl>»\4 Boston, Massachusetts < 112 Berkeley Street Cn the 31st Day of December, 1937 CHARLES E. HODGES, JU., President < FRANK R. MULLANEY, Secretary |j Guaranty Amount ot Capital paid up -J 200.00u.0ul GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY I < Real Estate unincumbered * 768,60 4.99 t Mortgage Loans oa real I I estate (Free from any 11 I prior incumbrance) . . None'l Bonds and Stocks own- I ed (Book Value) 29,547,477.09.1 Cash in banks ton in- I terest and not on in- 1 i tere»t) 3,978,001.23 Accrued Securities (In- - terest & Rents, etc.).. 202,513.31 , Other Securities None; Pioniums and Accounts due and in process ot I • collection 1,790,948.03 Accounts otherwise secured » 149,276.35 Total Gross A»sets . 636,437.811.66 Deduct Assets Not Admitted J 1,571,205.83] Net Assets 634,866 615.84 j liabilities I Reserve for Unearned Premiums .. j 4,262,497.61 Losses due and unpaid. Losses adjusted and not due. Losses unadjusted and in suspense . 20,161,797.001 Taxes Accrued and Sundry Acct*. Payable . 1,118,927.44 Reserve for Dividends to Policyholders . . 2,6U0,0U0.00 Reserve for Contingen- • cics 1,000,000.00, Other Liabilities of the Company None Guaranty Total Liabilities ...129,443,222.08 Capital j Z00.000.U0 Surplus J 5,223,393.76 Total _... $234,866,615.84 j STATE OF INDIANA, j UUice ot Insurance Commissioner. f, the undersigned, Insurance Com-’ mlssioner of Indiana, hereby certify that the above is a correct copy ot the Statement of the Condition of the above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, 1937, as shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is now on file in tills office. In Testimony Whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix, my official seal, this 21st day of June. 1938. (Sea!) GEO. H. KEWBAUEK. Insurance Commissioner. •It Mutual Company so state. AUGUST 13—20 I

WANTED < WANTED — WELL DRILLING ■pedal Harvest prices; any size, anywhere, any depth. Buffenbarger, 627 N. Seventh st., phone 989. 182t30x WANTED—GirI for general housework. Small family. Mrs. Earl ] Compton. 2916 Shawnee Drive, Fort Wayne, Ind. Telephone H- > 5498 or E-1731.196-3tx j WANTED—To do practical nursing and confinement cases. Rural phone 870-H. 197-3tx WANTED — Plowing or mowing with rubber tired tractor. 75 cents acre. Bob Crownover. 196-k3t 1 MISCELLANEOUS CALL FRANK BURGER to move ; dead stock. Will pay for live horses. Day or night service. Phone collect. Harley Roop 870-A. 152-ts NOTICE—Parlor suites recovered. We re-cover and repair anything. We buy and sell furniture. Deca- ; tur Upholsters, Phone 420. 145 ( South Second St. 186-30 t < o Burglars Baseball Fans Cincinnati, O. — KU.R/ —Burglars who entered the home of Roy Hughes, star infielder of the St. Louis Browns, apparently were baseball fans. Icluded in the loot of the robbers were 24 baseballs, all of which were autographed by outstanding American league stars. o Statement ot Condition of the AMERICAN SIHETY COMPANY OF NEW YORK New York City 100 Broadway On the 31st Day of December, 1937 A. F. LAFRENTZ, President C. H. HALL, Secretary Amount of Capital paid up - 7,500,000.00 GROSS ASSETS OF COMPANY Real Estate unincumbered (Appraised Value) |10,V00,000.U0 Mortgage Loans on real estate (Free from any prior incumbrance) .... None Bonds and Stocks owned (Book Value) 17,396,573.0 i Cash in banks (on interest and not on interest) 3,024,945.04 L»ue and Accrued Securities (Interest and Rents, etc.) 40,150.55 Other Assets None Reinsurance Receivable Sched. E CoL 1 .... 2?,206.80 Agents Debit Balances Equity in Funds of Bail Bond Bureau 2,717.27 Equity in Funds of Excise Bd. Underwriters 37,651.10 Equity in Funds of Work. Comp. Reins. Bureau 36,230.52 Accounts Receivable .... 4,503.03 Premiums and Accounts due and in process of collection 1,564,020.86 Accounts otherwise secured . None Total Gross Assets >32,106,252.58 Deduct Assets Not Admitted $ 6,481,408.18 Net Assets - *25,684,784.40 LIABILITIES Reserve or amount necessary to reinsure outstanding risks ... | Losses due and unpaid . 1TT57,200.85 I osses adjusted and not due None Losses unadjusted and in suspense includes >5,281.36 proportion of Loss Reserves-Work Comp. Reins. Bureau.. 3,500,307.08 Bills and Accounts unpaid 111,103.54 Amount due and not due Banks or other Creditors None Other Liabilities of the Company —3,311,680.33 Total Liabilities . >14,112,190.40 Capital > 7,500,000.00 Surplus -> 4,072,584.91 Total >25,684,784 40 STATE OF INDIANA. Office of Insurance I, the undersigned, Insurance Commissioner of Indiana, hereby certify tnat the above is a correct copy of the Statement of the Condition ot the above mentioned Company on the 31st day of December, 1937, as shown by the original statement and that the said original statement is now on file In tins office. In Testimony Whereof, I hereunto subscribe my name and affix my official seal, this 21st day of June, 1938. (Seal) GEO. H. NEWBACHR. Insurance Commissioner. •If Mutual Company so state. AUGUST 13—20 JR. C. V. CONNELL Veterinarian Office & Residence 430 No. Fifth st. Phone 102. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eye* Examined • Glasses Fitted HOU RS 8:30 to 11:30 12:30 to 500 Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Teleohone 135 Notice to Patients My office will be closed August 22 to August 24, inclusive. DR. EUGENE P. FIELDS, Dental .Surgeon HIGH - TEST “MAJOR” GASOLINE 6 gallons SHEWMAKER SERVICE 825 No. Sedond St.

market w Brady'. M>rke t f or Q Koa 9land Clo *ed *t i 2 No commissi, ln and r . MB Veals received !00 to 120 ii,s BM to no 14" to urn 11,, s OB 160 to iso n ls SB to 2 ' !l) to to 300 to 350 lbs . ami up Ml Roughs Vealeis BM Spring Spiini: bnk lambs MB Yearlings SB East Buffalo Fai.-i Hirtajj. X y a - s ; local grain burk elevator Prins Ai iv Bmi MB — Si CENTRAL SOVA CjBM Legion ( onwntion MB Opens At Cm| 4B best M,. ; , ! '' 1 MB - Old Lock to Be ■ - ■ 48W Flu:.biiii In.-' BB XOI I IV -.1 «l HIM <>l- i> I i it: mi Noli., hereby KU'cn I. th.- ]>. -a t ur. 11:<. : of S'T’t* :nb< 11' a «I ' i counts willi « <<ilent sli'.ui.i tiui said heirs are >nf:e<l to i here k<- 1 ' : " i. . v< Floyd l.iby. I 'i“ a t ur, Indian... A I riKlile A l ilfir.r. Statement "f < IX 11 'KM 111 I'.f sI H'livm it am t: < 111 F.ast Pearson Cliieago, Illinois Ur. the 31st I'ny of I CHAS F ld-'g.NS>'y ). M. Ml |\T'P •.Ili.n). Amount ol I'apitai Hg * GROSS ASSI/rS Iteal Estate unn .m;.--ered . ’ ' Mortgage E-'-e ' M estate (Free from au> prior ineunibr.iiiee) - Bonds and St" Its owned (.Market Value! « Cash in banks ton in- M terest and not on interest) Accrued Securities Unterest & Rents, ot. m Other Seciirltles, Agents Balances Bills lieceivable ■ Market Value of he- 11 ■ Estate over Book value ■ Premiums and A 11 i lll ’ ■ due and In process M collection Due and Deferred ■ Accounts otherwise se- M Due from Chicago-Con- J demnation Awards . Unexpired Fire Ins. I re- j mlumw - Total Gross Assets . 1 Deduct Assets Not ACmitted « 569,1 Nel ASSe I I Reserve or amount n<cessary to reins outstanding risks , (Not a cash demand Diability) .. Losses due and unpaidLosses adjusted and not d ue — Supple"’™ t»O Losses unadjusted < tn suspense ; Bin* and Accounts un , paid Amount Advance inium Payments Other Liabilities of t"e Company — Estimate Taxes — < -' Total Liabilities • $ Capital j Surplus -—-7: $ Total — -— STATE OF ’ NP '^ N comml ssln "( Office of Insuran<e J liril nce' I f the undersigned. „ r( .|,y (C 1 I mlssioner of Ind . |a ‘‘ ’ c orrect cop that the above l« » ‘ poniittl"' the Statement of ( . ompl iny the above mentioned 19J i the 31st day sWter.« nt shown by the’ u r '«‘ ‘“al » tatenie that the said or ginaj e now on file tn ‘ lL| iel - e of. 1 l |er In Testimony '' h ® e d ,fllx m?. subscribe my of JujeJ cial seal, this XKWB*" (Seal) , JizSlACom"*^ 10 Insurance t „ -It Mutual Compan) “ AVGUST 13—-0