Ni:\V 



that 97 of the new corporations have < 

 capital of $1.000.000 or en 

 taw.- An important case w- n the 



r by the I'niuM Slat- 

 Cbot. thai airini 1 >. States, involving 



the sum of $131.1X8 f*>r rnr< 



I* furnished in the wnr ol 

 | . . f \i ; ate, . f ti,e 

 CMS* ith |N. :m.ir> interest and principle 

 Involved, the n. wai that of the 



is; rW. Roberta, a* mptrollcr. 



Ooraptroll- 



nit will pay 

 I. > the State $71 4.-VW. with interest. 



! for the . 



numlH-r of raws in 

 the State is party on appeal pendm- in 



the Omrt of Amali 'b *4 against 81 



lataranrr.-Tbe aggregate receipts < f 

 York Slate cimnenieTYn 1894 w.-n- $! 



-. -. 194,909,514; mak- 



>.<-,;.;:; ;;;. The net 



mm of receipt* over disbar*-.... -nt* f.. r 1894 

 WM $78,781.144. Th.- total premium r 

 for 1804 were $905.182.048.86. Uirse- 



tnt.rv * 177,883,888, of which $116.0 

 was paid to policv hold era, while thr <-! ..f man- 

 iooladuif dividends to stockholdens 



Then waa an increase in the numtar of j,..!i- 



cie* of 102^19. nri ,,f insurance $147380,810. 



At the clow of 1894 the companies doing )>UM- 



nr* in the State had 1.780,307 policies in force, 



.-,. ,; > ,j. 



The co-opermlire organizations receivcnl $47- 

 18M47 from roembera last year, against $42,- 

 M7JU the preceding year. Tin- claims paid ty 



rUlma. The annual report of the Board of 

 is for 1805 shows that since its creation in 

 it has heard d 2,882 claims 



t the State, claiming in the aggregate 

 $M?~ - 1 \v of interest, and has awarded 



thereon $lJs1$JM. This number of decisi 

 eictoivc of those made from 1884 to 1891 in 

 appeal* from the Board of Canal Appraisers to 

 inal Board. 27:! of which, in May, 1884, 

 were transferred to the board by chat 

 of the Law. of 1884. 



HaratloB.-Th* biennial school census, tak- 

 en during 18B5 in all of t he cit ies and villages of 

 the Slate exceeding 10.000 in imputation, rc- 

 vsnlad the neceasitSs for additional school fa- 

 in it occurred the one hundredth anni- 

 of the inauguration of the free-school 

 niUdSUt- 



in UM United Stu- u,i.l.-r th<> admini- 

 of OoT.Oeorgi- < In. tot,. The fir- 

 ISXT. IAWS of 17:. j.r..vid.-d that th<> 

 m of C9CMXN) whould be annually appropriated 

 far the term of five years. M f-r 'th- purpose of 

 MMmniffnig and maintaining schools m the sev- 

 efal Htir atxi towm in this State." 

 Tht Mmber of public-school buildings in 

 w 11.121. decrease of 49, caused bv con- 

 The amount eipend.d 

 [ ).i,-h the 

 and the country 

 iber of persons of 

 of whom the 

 > and the country 723,440. The to- 



tal increase in school popul.-it inn dnrins: 

 was 89,987. The total attendance at 

 589,863; country, :,:}:,.(',:!:,; U,.T 

 770. The total number of tea 

 whom ri.lMMi \\.-n- ni.-i 

 The total amount of teachers' salaries v 

 iii.-n-as of $11' 



and in country districts, $4,788,404.01 

 crease of * 



I Me otato ' < mi 1 

 rattle made r 



'> the Legislature in .Ian 



ini: the year and a half following the pa- 

 ruberculosi '"> n cattle 



ineil and S(H) were slaughtered. 'I ': 



11 Tuliermlosis in Call I- 

 May ::i. I"-!!!. 1.. iii'|iiire furl her into t h, 



f the disease. This com: 

 fully studied, by a system of spec -ial in*-; 

 the prevalence, distribution, mode of in- 

 and genera] ieha\ior <.f tui'crenh- 

 confining j>art of its work to a given area. 

 was thought to lc comparatively fr. 

 eral infection from other 

 trict 1)47 animals were examined n: 

 condemned. 



I'ri.oiix.-In the year ended S- : 

 the i.rison population had increase.! 

 The deficiency for care and maim 

 $lll,l!i" le-< than in l^'.'o. M..n- mom 

 earned by the prisoners, and less was spe 

 maintenance. The expenditures for I* 1 .' 



bhao those of 1893 by $3^.- 

 The earnings of the prisoners show an i:, 

 of $72,800 after deductinjr tw 

 for fire loss in Auhurn prison, $27.807. i. 

 able canceled by act of th< 

 lilt of the fire of 1HJ:J. amount. 

 M". The expenditures for the care and t 

 of the three State prisons and tin i; 

 ings arc shown as follow : 



Shu; Expenditures, $160^14 : induM- 

 ompensation paid convicte, $7,670 : del. 



A ul. urn Expenditures, $157,264; ear 

 "Hiit due ui 

 i-ensation ] 



<Mil;' litnres, ?l. r .7.1'.'', 



Dsation paid convicts, $8^2 



There were 104 prisoners in the w< 

 prison. 



t ate Commission of Prisons made 

 close of 1895 its first annual report I 

 that the unfair competition caused I 

 ing out the labor cheaply has di-turl- 



'. injured some inilu-tries. and 

 others out entirely. The manufacture 



account for sale in the open market 

 even more disastrously, for the reason t! 

 cry against prison-made goods forced th 

 to sell below the price* that other manuf;i 

 could afford, and thus had the san 

 disturbing the market, \vhile the lar 

 of commissions and expenses of 

 made it even more expensive to the > 

 mission called for estimates from a! 



.lions of the supplies purcha.s<-d l-y th ( -n 

 of such articles as can be manufactured in tl 

 prisons, and finds that it is practicable to have 



