44 NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY 
the several funds in the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, as 
of December 31, 1916, are as follows: 
iInconre Account... See eee ees Wee $10,968.47 
aX QU 02 el L016 WOOO Mate te dato Wa ot ea eh ye 2,852.80 
RNGowiments Eun se Ree ee 4,512.80 
Cadwalader Animal hund] = 500.00 
StOKeSuosie OCU. ees ee a er, 58.54 
AriGalleryecuinde ceeat. Oe 0) 2 ee eee 6,764.92 
DropicaleResearch Hund, ae ib 
ei bRay salah et Seite ce Pee ale eee 295.29 
National Collection of Heads and Horns ..... 78.89 
Wala iter "cc Shoot 2 Ee oe ee 729.30 
Pub testo Hid yet eee a ea 6,000.00 
Heads and Horns Building Fund .................. 5,000.00 
Improvement and Repair Fund ..... 1,576.65 
SONA es Sr. oie Le Sra He Sees ee $39,355.23 
Carnegie Pension Fund Income Account: 
Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company... $2,416.91 
Corn Exchange Bank (Bronx) ........... : 499.95 
$2,916.86 
The Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company of 22 William Street 
was designated Assistant Treasurer, and Mr. R. L. Cerero, Bur- 
sar, of the New York Zoological Society, in January, 1916. These 
new arrangements have worked most successfully. 
Mr. H. J. Shorter resigned as Assistant Secretary in July, 
i OaG? 
INCOME ACCOUNT. 
The general income of the Society, including the income 
from the Endowment Fund, was insufficient to meet current ex- 
penses of the past year, although every effort was made by your 
Committee to make it do so; and it was necessary again to trench 
upon the cash balance on hand at the beginning of the year. One 
of the heavy expenditures of this fund is the continuous burden 
which the Society has assumed towards the Carnegie Pension 
Fund, which annually amounts to the sum of $3,915. 
As a result of these drains on the Society’s resources, the 
balance on hand at the close of the year was $10,968.47, or about 
