THURSDAY. JULY 29th. 1943 PAGE TWO THE NEWS - JOURNAL.RAKFORD, N. C "T State Guardmen Proving Themselves At Fort Bragg By Pvt. Calvin Leonard, N. C, State j :.... -.1 I Fort Brag, N. C. July 21. It's a strange and physically harder lite that more than 2,000 North Carolina State Guardsmen are experiencing at this largest of Army posts during their 10-day encampment, but they are tak ing it in great stride. There have been few moments dur ing their waking hours since the guardsmen reached Fort Bragg that they have had idle. In tact, about the only free time the men have had has been after evening mess, and even then for some there have been spe cial details which are the added touch es (if Army life. Any illusions which the general public may have about the training which the guardsmen are undergoing need only to be subjected to the real ity of a typical training day. The encampment definitely is not an out ing in the popular sense of either wartime or peace days. There is a deiinite purpose to be achieved in the training program, and that is to de velop the some 40 units into organiza tions capable of dealing with emer gency situations which it is hoped will never materialize but which it is STATEMENT THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK NEW YORK. N. Y. Condition December 31. 1942, as Shown by Statement Filed. Airour.t of Ledger Assets December 31st of previous year $1,508,343,859.81 Total $1,508,343,859.81 Fremium Income $127,436,189.44: Miscellaneous. $94:650:682.87; Total 222.086.872.31 Oisbusements To Policyholders, $108,830,083.76; Miscellaneous $60,312,099.13; Total 169.142.182.89 Business written during year Number of Policies 60.321; Amount - 166.330.510.00 Business in force at end of year Number of Policies 1,257.496; Amount 3.644;202;486.00 ASSETS Value of Real Estate (less amount of encumbrances) $ 48.618.200.00 Mortgage Loans on Real Estate 221,475,329.40 Ioans made to Policyholders on this Company's Policies assigned as collateral 105.635,391.77 Net Value of Bonds and Stocks 1.172.424.015.01 Cash 11.802,980.35 Interest and Rents dud and accrued 13.098,959.63 Frerniums uncollected and deferred 12.918.687.01 At! other Assets, as detailed in statement $ 4,038,397.30 Total - $1,590,011,960.47 Less Assets not admitted 2,482.465.41 Total admitted Assets $1,587,529,495.06 LIABILITIES Net Reserve, excluding Disability Provision $1,225,119:893.00 Present value of amounts not yet due on Supplementary Contracts, etc 129.987.767.39 IMlicy Claims 7.879.069.75 Dividends left with Company at interest 8.791.480.23 Premiums paid in advance 4.819.368.70 Unearned Interest and Rent paid in advance 35.777.58 Commissions due to Agents .. 17.957.42 Estimated Amount payable for Federal, State and other Taxes 3,143,300.00 Dividends due Policyholders 206,687.95 Amount set apart for future dividends 12,912,125.74 All other Liabilities, as detailed in statement 159,077,717.48 Total amount of all Liabilities, except Cap;tal Unassigned funds (surplus) $1,551,991:145.24 35,538,349.82 Total Liabilities $1,587,529,495.06 BUSINESS IN THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA DIKING 1942 ORDINARY No. Amount Policies on the lives of citizens of said State in force December 31st of previous year 19.963 $ 50,314,548.00 Policies on the lives of citizens of said State issued during the year 1,075 3,126.085.00 Total Deduct ceased to be in force during the year 1,019 Losses and Claims unpaid December 31st of previous year Losses and Claims incurred during year 21.038 $ 53,440,633.00 . 1,019 2,599.938.00 20.019 50,840,695.00 3 3.82000 270 , 609,522.00 Total 273 613,342.00 Losses and Claims settled during the year, in full $ 608.231.00 by rejection 271 608,231.00 losses and Claims unpaid December 31st 2 5,111.00 Premium Income Ordinary 1.621,288.15 Total 1.621,288.15 President, Lewis W. Douglas Secretary, Willard T. Johns Treasurer, Stuart F. Silloway Actuary, Joseph B. Maclean Home Office 34 Nassau Street, New York, N. Y. Attorney for Service: Insurance Commissioner. Raleigh, N. C. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Insurance Department. Raleigh, May 7, 1943. I, William P. Hodges, Insurance Commissioner, do hereby certify that the above is a true and correct abstract of the statement of the Mutual Life Insurance Company of N. Y., New York. N. Y., filed with this Department; stvowing the condition of said Company on the 31st day of December, 1942. Witness my hand and official seal the day and date above written. William P. Hodges, Insurance Commissioner. lay COAL Now To KEEP WARM Next Wamfceff We have a limited amount of good COAL on hand and we urge you to buy NOW. The mines are rationing COAL to the dealers and we can not contract for as much as we bought last year. No orders accepted for future delivery. HOKE OIL & FERTILIZER CO. Dial 2401. Raeford, N. C Organized as the militia of North Carolina while the Notional Guard is in Federal service, the State Guard has the responsibility of keeping or der and protecting life and property in the State. That is a purpose which might come as a tough reality on the homo front, either because of intern al disorder or because of enemy action either through invasion, bombings or parachute landings. The guardsmen would have a real assignment if any thing like this happened, and those responsible for their training realize that lack of proper training for such possibilities would be suicidal. So a program has been mapped out to keep the guardsmen on the move all the time that they are here, and in 10 short days will be packed a lot of training and physical hardening. The camp is a laboratory of practical ap plication of the theories and rules from which are moulded civilian-soldiers, and what is learned by the guardsmen during the intensive train ing period is to be practiced in their weekly and semi-weekly drills at their home stations in the ensuing months, or so long as the war emer gency exists. Whatver may be the public's ap praisal of the State Guard, Army of ficers emphasize the importance which they attach to it. This was effective ly expressed by Col. William S. Pritchard. Commanding Officer, Dis trict No. 2, Fourth Service Command, when he addressed the assembled guardsmen on the parade ground Monday. Colonel Pritchard. under whose guidance the training program is being carried out, told the guards men that the United States Army has a lot of respect for the State Guard and is counting heavily on it for the protection of the home front. That is what the Army command thinks about the State Guard. The enlisted men have their notions, too, about the guard, and some of them have been frank enough to admit that they have changed their ideas since coming in contact with the officers and men of the guard encamped here.- "Why, hell," blustered a regular Army sergeant who had been detail ed here from another camp for duties in connection with the State Guard camp, "they told us down there that we were coming up here to work with a bunch of 4-F's and a lot of old men and softies. They didn't know what they were talking about, 'cause you're a bunch of real guys who can really take a lot of punishment." Of course, what the sergeant said should not be taken to mean that ev ery man is a physical "toughie," but it is a conservative statement that the guardsmen are standing up surpris ingly well under the strain of a stren uous training period which has alrea dy been in full swing several days. There have been few "casualties" to date, and the first few days were de finitely the hardest and most difficult from a physical and psychological standpoint, standpoint. This is the first encampment for all members of the guard, although the Army has conducted special schools for commissioned officers. Funds for the encampment were appropriated by the 1943 legislature, and the chair man of the lower house's military af fairs committee was Rep. Shelley B. Caveness of Greensboro, who is also a private in the headquarters and ser vice company of the first regiment. And thereby hangs a tale which is an interesting sidelight on the camp. Members of the headquarters and service company reached Fort Bragg on Friday, two days before opening of the camp, and those were two hec tic and strenuous days, from all ac counts. There were long hours on special details, many of the most men ial type, including sweating stretches in steaming kitchens on what is popu larly known as "K. P." Private Cave-ne.-s was one of the workingest guards men slaving over the big Army stoves and dishing out the mess, and this spirit will probably be remember ed by a lot of the men when they go to the polls next time that Caveness is running for something. The guard units are aoout recrcited to full strength, and. contrary to an apparent public notion, the guards men are not a bunch of old men. as the Army sergeant found out. In fact, some of the units are composed of youngsters who have a lot of energy and enthusiasm which are the mak ings of soldiers, of either civilian or regular Army variety. Of course, a lot of the other guardsmen have more years on them, as the saying goes, but it's a fact that for the most part they present a picture of physical fitness that is surprising. This was the re action of one who made a round of the companies soon after the camp open ed. Then today's engagement in prac tical field problems of scouting and patrolling revealed how the officers and men were able to "take it." One officer, after crawling on his belly and scampering from cover to cover while scouting planes roared overhead and officer-observers watched, jokingly remarked, "My wife would divorce me if she could see me doing this she'd swear I was crazy." The guardsmen are not "crazy" and what they are doing and learning down here is rebuttal of any such no tion. On the other hand, they are smarth enough to realize that they must be prepared if they are to deal with any situation which they may be called upon to meet. In this connection it is proper to note that the encampment is all the 'Vacation" that most of the guards men will have this year. That is ta ken to indicate how serious they are about the job they have undertaken as protectors of the hmoe front while "the boys" are away. For, if they had been out for a "big time" this year would have chosen some other place. Yet. with it all' the camp is not an unbroken grind in the strict sense. For, there are a few idle moments even in the Army, and let it be em phasized here and now that it's the Army life in rather concentrated form that the State Guardsmen are experi encing. Men in barracks, whether on a permanent or temporary assign ment, find time for the lighter side of life, in the comparatively few hours that come between evening mess and taps. And so it is with the guardsmen. It's these few hours of reaction and rest after the hours spent on sunbak ed drill fields and in the forests of this Army post that give the fellows the life to carry on the next morning when reveille sounds. The training will become more advanced and stren uous as the camp progresses, but the hardening process apparently is tak ing care of the physical fitness prob lem that is a natural consequence of the quick transition from civilian, to Army life. The physical is only a part of that something which makes a soldier and a military organization. Of equal im portance is that intangible something AMERICAN HEROES BY LKFF When our mort.n were poundina. Maknaaay Hill near Sidi BuSid in Africa, Private Jaraei Rugolo of Brooklyn, New York, was one of the men bringing up the ammunition. Struck by shrapnel, he kept going until he dropped, wit awarded the Purple Heart. Un every battlefront men like Rugolo presi the attack relentle jalr, regardleM of personal cost. Are you doing enough to keep our attack rolling through Payroll Savings? U. S. Inasurj Utportmtnt IIH. II BMU.I - n - '' P cf -a t. - -r r - "nil r i nirr frT-n----rtTfTfr Jta-i . -m4 -6s- -n------"T fltmoTitajLiiiiiHT-i .i. i i.iiiaMMiiMpii run Tun Tl nv--.u:.fJ .. -'i-' s. ylt) ; '. -m jfaT . FUNCTIONAL SWIMMING The nation U taking to functional swimming. Deviled by the American Red Cross Water Safety Service for the self -protection of America's fighting men, the functional swim ming course ia being used extensively by the armed forces. Now It ii available to millions ef civilian! including those of pre-induction age. Thii mammoth training program, already under way, is tarried on by an army of 15.000 Red Cross Water Safety instructors. Functional wimming skills are baaed apon the demonstrated needs of global warfare which call for much overseas transportation. Troops are aometimei obliged to swim great distance or remain afloat for long periods with full equipment "Shirt tail" life saving ia an Important part of the course. It teaches the swimmer to keep afloat by ingenious use of clothing and , equipment Top, left: Because its content Is buoyant the regulation itO-lb. pack weighs nothing in the water and will keep the wearer afloat for soma time. Top, right: Before jumping into the water 'these men pulled their shirts out at the waist and scooped them fall ,ef air in the descent which made them beuyant Above: The thro 'Den in this photo have removed their trousers, tied the ends, inflated .them through the waist opening by twinging them overhead and blowing in additional air. Crooking an arm through the V of the inverted trousers they are able ta remain afloat with ease. called esprite de corps, and that is where the State Guard is OK again. They are demonstrating a commenda ble pride in their respective units which is the quality that adds up to the spirit of the entire regiment or brigade. Something of the spirit of these guardsmen is demonstrated by the cases of at least three men in separate units. Each of these men have been ordered to report the day after the encampment breaks for induction in to the Army right here at this post. These men could have asked for hon orable discharges in order to have a few days to themselves before going into the Army. Rather, they chose to come here with their units and spend 10 strenuous days which are a fore taste of what is to come to them as members of Uncle Sam's Army. Such fellows as this will make good soldiers, and the men they leave be hind in the guard without indulging in too much boasting have that same spirit which is necessary for service on the home front as well. Police of Buenos Aires, Argentina, are searching for thieves who stole $100,000 in jewelry and $10,000 in cash from a flat near the heart of the city. Australia is trying to stabilize in comes for the duration of the war. FORGET TABLE MANNERS, SAVE VITAL FOOD! Because of the war emergency, ex perts on deportment now agree it's correct to chew meat bones, tip your soup plate, ask guests to bring their ration cards and chuck customary po liteness out the window. Read the new rules for wartime etiquette in the August 8th issue of The American Weekly The Big Magazine Distributed with THE BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN Order From Your Newsdealer STATEMENT MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY NEWARK. NEW JERSEY Condition December 31, 1942, as Shown by Statement Filed Amount of Ledger Assets December 31st of previous year $ 771,274,23W)8 Total . 771,274.:l JJ Premium Income, $66,494,347.04; Miscellaneous; $52,291,790.33; Total 118,786,137.37 Disbursements To Policyholders, $50,010,463.71: Miscellaneous, $31,209,327.13; Total 81 ;2 19 ;790.84 Business written during year Number of Policies 23.614; Amount 110,108,593.00 Business in force at end of year Number of Policies 559,497; Amount 2,135,966;573.00 ASSETS Value of Real Estate (less amount of encumbrances) 55,114.587.58 Mortgage Loans on Real Estate 112,674,201.91 Loans made to Policyholders on this Company's Policies assigned as collateral 64,463.636.69 Net Value of Bonds and Stocks 5fi0,891,828.23 Cash 15.672.046.02 Interest and Rents due and accrued 7,941,141.23 Premium uncollected and deferred 8,361,751.86 All other Assets, as detailed in statement 10,559,034.81 Total Less Assets not admitted $ 835,678,228.33 1,126,160.93 Total admitted Assets $ LIABIIJTIIS Net Reserve, excluding Disability Provision $ Present value of amounts not yet due on Supplementary Contracts, etc Policy Claims Dividends left with Company at interest Premium paid in advance Unearned Interest and Rent paid in advance Commissions due to Agents Estimated Amount payable for Federal, State and other Taxes Dividends due Policyholders Amount set apart for future dividends All other Liabilities, as detailed in statement 834,552.067.40 639,645,481.00 111,295,866.00 3.623,206.57 21.813,419.47 T. 502,030.27 11,200.83 66,596.38 2,015.000.00 2.670.623.89 12.343,745.00 4.276,429.05 799.263,598.46 35,288,468.94 Total Liabilities $ 334,552,067.40 BUSINESS IN THE STATE OF NOKTU CAROLINA Dl KING 1942 ORDINARY N. Amount Policies on tho lives of citizens of snid State in force December 31st of previous year 11.529 $ 34.977 275 00 Policies on the lives' of citizens of said State ' issued during the year 193 913,082.00 Total arrrunt of a!! Liabilities, except Capital Unassigned funds (surplus) $35,288,168.94 Total 11.722 $ 35 890,357.00 Deduct ceased to be in force during the year 470 1,430,940.00 Policies in force December 31st 11.252 Losses and Claims unpaid December 31st of previous year 9 Losses and Claims incurred during year 195 $ 34,459,417.00 26,273.00 553,690.00 Total 204 $ Losses and Claims settled during the year, in full $ By rejection 200 Losses and Claims unpaid December 31st 4 Premium Income Ordinary 579,963.00 573,853.00 573.853.00 6,110.00 931,633.58 To1 V, - $ 931,633.58 Secretary, Harry H. Allen President, John R. Hardin Actuary, John S. Thompson Treasurer, Milo W. Wilder Jr. Home Office 300 Broadway, Newark, New Jersey. ' Attorney for Service: Insurance Commissioner, Raleigh, N. C. fJ STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA Insurance Department t urn- d r Raleigh, May 6, 1943. I, William P. Hodges, Insurance Commissioner, do hereby certify that th above is a true and correct abstract of the statement of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company, of Newark, New Jersey, filed with the Department; showing the condition of said Company on the 31st day of December 1942. Witness my hand and official seal the day and date above written. William P. Hodges, Insurance Commissioner.