William Penn Life, 1968 (3. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)
1968-01-01 / 1. szám
living death by *Solomon S. Huebner, Ph.D., D.Sc. *Solomon S. Huebner —A founder of the American College of Life Underwriter» . . . president eighteen year», then elected president emeritus ... for half a century on the faculty of the Wharton School of Finance, University of Pennsylvania . . . author of numerous books on insurance and economics . . . lecturer and internationally recognized insurance authority. • HE WHO BECOMES A LIVING DEATH, TOTALLY AND PERMANENTLY, is just as dead economically as he who is actually dead. • HE WHO BECOMES A LIVING DEATH TOTALLY, BUT AS IT MAY HAPPEN NOT PERMANENTLY, is also dead economically during the period of disability. • THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN "living death" and actual death is only six feet of sod. • AND IF ANYTHING the living death is the worst economically. • THE VICTIM IS STILL HERE —a heavy consumer because of medical and hospital care —without being a producer. • THE FAMILY CERTAINLY WOULD BE BETTER OFF FINANCIALLY with the victim gone than with him on its hands. Cut and mail to: William Penn Fraternal Association 429 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15219 PLEASE SEND ME MORE INFORMATION LIT lOLL or DlEU $ f IV' *' s V XVv Vv u 0 v