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IVILL ""COUNTRY LIFE** COME IV 



l^HEN YOU PASS OUxk)] 



WILL your family have the benefit of 

 your foresight in providing daily bread 

 — freedom from want and poverty — 

 freedom from the burden of your debts — a 

 chance for education for your children, etc? 



Will you be foresighted enough to allow 

 Life Insurance to carry the burden when you 

 are gone, or must the double burden fall on 

 the mother whose time you really want spent 

 with the character-building duties of home 

 training for your children?! 



Must your wife hunt a job when you pass 

 out of the picture just because you failed to 

 provide funds through Life Insurance? 



Here are the actual reasons of a policy holder 

 who answers the question "Why I Bought 

 Life Insurance." [^ ] | 



"I wanted to protect my wife. She was 

 independent when I found her. I made her 

 dependent upon me. I became the trustee of 



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her destiny. She became more helpless when 

 the babies came, and would have been de- 

 pendent on relatives or charity in event of my 

 death. ■I' ' ' '^ 



"My span of life was, and is, uncertain. 

 Therefore, my future earnings were just as 

 uncertain. Our monthly bills were met from 

 those earnings and as my wife could not earn 

 in event of my death I insured a part of those 

 earnings because I could not think of her, my 

 wife, and our babies being dependent upon 

 anyone. i" > . •., |. 1: 



"My self-respect could not accept the idea 

 of deserting her and the kiddies and leaving 

 them in want. Manhood counts above all 

 else. My duty to my family was plain and 

 but one possible road was open. It was life 

 insurance. Life insurance made it possible for 

 me to build an estate at Oltce that it would 

 ordinarily take years to build in the hard way." 



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