William Penn, 1958 (41. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)

1958-02-05 / 2. szám

February 19, 1958. PAGE 11 William Penn Life Benefit Disability Pension Combined III. Disbursements Department Department Department Departments Death Benefit Claims ...................... Additional Accidental Death 804,468.08--. --804,468.08 Benefit Claims .............................. 4,500.00--.--4,500.00 Matured Endowments ..................... 397,000.0«--.-­—.— 397,000.00 Payor Benefits Waived ................ 29.10--.-­—.— 29.10 Cash Surrenders .............................. 307,786.31--.-­—■— 307,786.31 Refunds to Members ........................ 26,715.57--.-­—.— 26,715.57 Real Estate Expenses ...................... 74,188.06 —.— 74,188.06 Other Investment Expenses 10,412.64--.--59.22 10,471.86 Depr. of Real Estate — H/O Bldg. 6,529.84--.-­—.— 6.529.84 Depr. of Real Estate—E D/O Bldg. 4,956.63--.-­—.— 4,956.62 Bond Amortization Decrease ......... Loss on Sale, 13,458.18--.---67.29 13.525.44 Exch. or Maturity of Bonds ....... Loss on Sale, 19,973.31--.--192.93 20,166.24 Exch. or Maturity of Stocks ....... 418.32--.-­—.— 418.32 Loss on Foreign Exchange ............ .70--.-­--.-­.70 24,903.0;: __ _ 24,903.02 Salaries and Wages ........................ 257,968.37 —.--257,968.37 Legal Fees and Expenses ............... 3,525.08 —.— —.— 3,525.08 Medical Examination Fees .............. 12,440.50--.-­—.— 12,440.50 Inspection Report Fees .................. 3.648.S8 3,648.88 Actuarial and Auditing Expenses ... 9.268.25--.--­--.--9,268.25 Traveling Expenses ........................ 39,684.30--.-­--.--39,684.30 Advertising ........................-............ i7.6TD&rr>--.-­—•--17,611.88 Postage ............................................. 5,438.83 —.— —-5,438.83 Express .............................................. 579.42 579.42 Telegraph ......................................... 363.25--■— 363.25 Telephone ........................................... 8,877.07--.--8,877.07 »■»» Printing ............................................. 21.199.03 128.75--.---21,327.7» Stationery ......................................... Cost or Depreciation of 7,181.27--.-­--.---7,181.27 Furniture and Equip..................... 18,925.43--.--18,925.43 Books and Periodicals .................... 1,399.73--.--1,399.72 Bureau and Association Dues......... 1,199.85--.--1,199.85 Insurance except on Real Estate .... 11,769.70--.-­—.— 11,769.70 Sundry General Expenses ................ Off. Machinery Maint. & Off. 3,108.66--.-­-----3,108.60 Equip. Main.................................. 5,168.63--v-­--.--5.168.63 Field Expense Allowance ................ 20,425.91--.--20,425.91 Field Conferences ............................ 2,839.91--.--2,839.94 Official Publication .......................... 25,075.22--.--25,075.22 Convention Expense Account ......... 40,000.00--.-­--.-- . 40,000.00 Donations ....................................... 7,969.32--.-­--.--7,969.32 Sports Activities ......................... ... 30,970.01--.-­--.--30,970.01 State Ins. Dept. Licenses and Fees 5,095.63--.-­--.--5.095.63 State Taxes ..................................... 2,782.55--.-­—.— 2,782.5.) Other State Tax .............................. 23.82 —.— 23.82 Social Security Federal Tax ......... Uninsured Benefits Paid 9,574.05--.-­--.---9,574.05 for Employees .............................. 12,981.94--.-­--.--12,981.94 Trnst Account Paid Deposits ......... 43,459.20--.-­--.--43,459.20 Commissions ....................................... 154,688.42--.-­--.--154,688.42 Collection of Dues ....................... 225,821.12--.-­--.--225,821.12 Miscellaneous Expenses ................. 101.25--.--101.25 Statistical Service Fees .................. Supp. Contracts Without Life 5,068.90--.--5,068.90 Contingencies — Paid Dep............ 3,081.42--.-­--.--3,081.4? Branch Office Expense ................ Dividend Applied to Purchase 7,225.38--,-­--.--7,225.38 Paid-Up Additions ........................ 38,026.88--.-­--.--38.026.88 Mang’ment Consultant Surv. Exp. 5.643.90--.-­—.— 5,643.90 Other Federal Taxes .................... 758.46--,-­—.— 758.46 New Building Plans Account ......... 19.32 —.—--.--19.32 Sick Benefit Claims ........................--.--168,972.6*--.--168,972.65 Permanent Disability Claims .........--.---4,400.00--.--4,400.00 Income Protector Claims ................ X 1,242.50--.---1,242.50 Surgical Claims 365.00 ___ 365.0C Hospitalization Claims .................... _(_ 1,299.99--.--1,299.99 Pension Fund Payments ............... —.—---17,140.08 17,140.08 Int. on Pension FundCont. Returned _._--.--45.84 45.84 Interest Assigned or Paid ............. 967.42--.-­--.---967.42 Withheld Income Tax — Dec. 1956 City of Pittsburgh Wage Tax 5,393.04--.-­— 5,393.0-t Dec. 1956............... 194.57 — 194.57 Total Disbursements ............ 2,772,885.55 176,108.89 17,505.33 2.966.799.77 Ledger Assets as of Dec. 31, 1957 "1R6T4,352.2T LÍ08.695TÍ8 238,394.62 _M25,961~4427oT JULK7S E. SOMOGYI National Treasurer JOHN SABO National Auditor THE SHERATON HOTEL (Continued from page 10) Adjacent is The Town Room Res­taurant, featuring- American-tyi>e liining; it is decorated in a modern adaptation of Pennsylvania Dutch with omraled and illuminated fiber­glass wails. The rest of the 2nd floor — 10,000 square feet — comprises the Hotel’s tile and stainless steel kitchens. Another staircase and moving stairs continue up to the 3rd floor; besides the terraced balcony of the Ballroom on this floor are the She­raton’s executives and sales offices and a series of decorated function rooms . . . first in the four-section Delaware Valley Suite (1,241 sq. ft., accomodating 24 to 180), separated by folding partitions with murals de­picting- historical scenes of the De­laware Valley, . . . next, the Connie Mack Room 1649 sq. ft., accomodat ing 70 to 90), decorated with murals and montages of the late beloved Philadelphia manager and a green carnet inwoven with a baseball dia­mond . . . then the split-sectior. Pennsylvania Railroad Ballroom (4,493 sq. ft., accommodating 140 to 650), decorated with semiabstract murals of the history of the Penn sylvania Railroad; this ballroom can he divided into two rooms by a fold­ing partition . . . finally, the twin Constitution and. Independence Rooms (1,922 sq. ft. combined, ac­commodating 50 to 275), also divided by a partition; decorated with wad-' size enlargements of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, stands of arms, eagles, colonial flags, led and white striped doors . . . dll these function rooms are served from their own kitchens, connected to the main kitchen on the floor below. The 4th floor is the behind-the­­scenes master control center — that most hotel switchboards, engineer­ing-, heating and air-conditioning units, storage rooms, etc. On the 5th are decorated and fur­nished “hospitality” rooms, where commercial guests may display wares, conduct meetings, entertain or hold private dinners. From the 6th through 21st floors are the regular guest rooms and suites ... all open off 390-foot, block-long center corridors (perhaps the longest straight hotel corridors in the world) ... all are “outside” rooms, with no window overlooking another anywhere in the hotel . . . all are decorated in half a dozen different variations of modern ef­ficiency furnishing and color scheme; except for antiques in special suites, all furnishings represent the work of the finest American and Danish designers. The top (22nd) floor is made up entirely of luxury suites, including; tne beautiful Presidential Suite at the east end of the floor; basically, this suite includes a private foyer, wood-paneled living room with marble log-burning fireplace, dining rot in, study, three bedrooms, two bathreonis, kitchen and pantry, plus outside terraces (which run the lengths of either side of the entire top floor) ... actually the 22nd floor could quickly be converted into ore — or four, three or two — huge suites: every room on this floor is connected, and whole areas can be isolated by special doors interchange­able at strategic points in the cor­ridor . . . suites have color TV. THE ARTISTS Several cf America’s finest artists were commissioned to decorate key public and private rooms of The Sheraton. They include: Francis Scott Bradford, “dean” o" American mural painters, who did the Pennsylvania Ballroom. Lumen Martin Winter, noted artist did The Indian Queen, The Town Room, the Constitution and Inde­pendence Rooms. Anton Refregier, fine muralist did The Connie Mack Room, Delaware Valley Suite, and special rugs for the main lobby. John Rhoden, brilliant young sculptor did the “galaxy” for the suspended grand staircase and the mobile-like chandeliers, both in the Grand Ballroom. THE BUILDERS General Contractor and Builder ’s the (Matthew J.) McCloskey Com­pany of Philadelphia. The Sheraton was designed and planned by architects Perry, Shaw, Hepburn & Dean of Boston, with Mrs. Mary Morrison Kennedy, vice president of decorating and architec­ture of Sheraton Corporation (see “24,000 Bedrooms’ sketeh), and Sheraton engineers Fred Kummer, vice president, and Fred Mills, se­cond vice president. The hotel took two years to build: The architects and engineers spent more than 72 000 man-hours in de­signing and planning; The contractor and sub-contractors spent some 3V>-million man-hours making The Sheraton a reality. Jt. JOIN and serve iH“4* ...answer the calll

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