244 THE FISCAL PROBLEM IN MISSOURI sources, the interest on the school fund certificates is the most important, and the remainder consists of miscellaneous amounts. The total for each year agrees with the total for the same year in Table 77, and the two tables present a complete picture of the expenditures from the state school monevs fund as well as the sources of the credits to the fund. Total State Aid Distributions for Maintenance of Public Schools In order that total state aid apportionments for public school purposes may be compared with maintenance ex- penditures for all state functions, it is necessary to present the data on a state fiscal year basis. Table 79 shows the total maintenance expenditures of the state and the total appor- tionments for public school purposes for the years 1924 to 1928, inclusive. The amounts shown for school apportion- ments include the distribution of the moneys in the county insurance tax fund!, which are apportioned in October of each year, and other allotments resulting from direct appro- priations. Apportionments from the state school moneys fund are included in the total, but, since the data are for the years ending December 31, they are not directly comparable with those in Table 77. TABLE 79: STATE SCHOOL APPORTIONMENTS IN RELATION to ToraL STATE EXPENDITURES FOR MAINTENANCE, Missouri, 1924-1928 Source: United States Bureau of the Census, Financial Statistics of States series V ory Te <' Ftzte Expenditure for Maintenance State School Apportionment= Per Cent of Total Ex- penditures for Maintenance 70 yy ยข Y According to the data in Table 79, school apportionments in 1928 amounted to almost $6.3 million, or 25.89, of the maintenance expenditures of the state. In the preceding year 23.09% of all maintenance expenditures were accounted for by the school apportionment, while in 1926 the proportion was 1 Tn 1928 there was apportioned $1,160,228 from this fund.