Fbb. 18, 1890.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



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BEST & CO.. 

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Hunting 1 Boots. 



The most practical, comfortable and durable 

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SWEET CAPORAL. 



OR, 



The Value of Woodlands as Reservoirs, 



Being the Les Etudes de Maixre Pierre 

 sur L' Agriculture et les Forets. 



PAR ML ANTONIN ROUSSET. 



Translated by 



REY. S. W. POWELL. 



The introduction reviews the extraoi dinar y 

 movement of torrent taming in France, in pre- 

 paring public sentiment for which the Studies of 

 Master Peter played a noteworthy part. The 

 book was written as a sort of science primer, 

 setting forth the first principles of the relations 

 existing between woodlands and agriculture. 

 The principles and reasoning are not less appli- 

 cable >.to the United States to-day than to France 

 then. 



Price in cloth, 75 eta.; paper, 50 cts. 



Forest and Stream Publishing Co. 

 39 Park Row, New York. 

 !,n*mON: OAVTU» * HO.. 1 V Tatip 



Bromfield House, Boston. 



EUROPEAN PLAN. 

 MESSENGER, Proprietor. 



New Winter Resort. Second Season. 



VIRGINIA BEACH. VA. 



Eighteen miles east of NORFOLK, on the 

 ATLANTIC OCEAN, and six miles south of 

 CAPE HENRY accessible by NORFOLK. & 

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 nects with all lines North, South and West, 

 Hotel perfect in its appointments. Fine DUCK, 

 SNIPE and other shooting convenient to hotel. 

 "A SPORTSMAN'S PARADISE." 



8. E. CRITTENDEN, Manager. 



Circulars at 44 Broadway (Room 4). 



STATEMENT 



OF 



The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York. 



RICHARD A. McCURDY, President. 



For the year ending December 31, 1889. 



. ', '. . 8136,401,328 02 



ASSETS, 



Increase in Assets, 

 Surplus, . 



Increase in Surplus, 

 Receipts, 



Increase during year, 

 Paid Policy-Holders, . 



Increase during year, 

 Risks assumed. 



Increase during year, 

 Risks in force, . 



Increase during year, 

 Policies in force. 



Increase during year. 

 Policies written in 1889, 



Increase over 1888. 



. $10,319,174 46 

 . $9,657,248 44 

 . $1,717,184 81 

 . $31,119,019 62 

 . $4,903,087 10 

 . $15,200,608 38 

 $473,058 16 

 .$151,602,483 37 

 . $48,388,222 05 

 . $565,949,933 92 

 . $83,824,749 56 

 182,310 

 23,941 

 44,577 

 11,971 



THE ASSETS ARE INVESTED AS FOLLO.WS: 



Real Estate and Bond and Mortgage Loans, 

 United States Bonds and other Securities, 

 Loans on Collateral Securities, .... 

 Cash in Banks and Trust Companies at interest. 

 Interest accrued, Premiums deferred and in transit, etc. 



$69,361,913 13 

 $50,323,469 81 

 $9,845,500 00 

 $2,988,632 79 

 $3,881,812 29 

 $136,401,328 02 



Liabilities (including Reserve at 4 per cent.), $126,744,079 58 



I have carefully examined the foregoing statement and find the same to be correct. 



A. N. VVATERHOUSE, Auditor. 



From the Surplus above stated a dividend will he apportioned as usual. 





Risks 



Year. 



Assumed . 



1884.. 



.$34,681,420 



1885.. 



.. 46,507,139 



1886.. 



.. 56,832,719 



1887.. 



.. 69,457,468 



1888.. 



..103,214,261 



1889.. 



..151 603,483 



New York, 



Jan. 39, 1890. 



Risks 

 Outstanding. 



Assets. Surplus. 

 13,876,178 51 $4,743,771 



Samuel E. Sproulls, 

 Lucius Robinson, 

 Samuel D. Babcock, 

 George S. Coe, 

 Richard A. McCurdy, 

 •James C. Holden, 

 Hermann C. von Post, 

 Alexander H. Rice, 

 Lewis May, 



BOARD C 

 Oliver Harriman, 

 Henry W. Smith, 

 Robert Olyphant, 

 George F. Baker, 

 Jos. Thompson, 

 Dudley Olcott, 

 Frederic Cromwell, 

 Julien T. Davies, 

 Robert Sewell, 



1 TRUSTEES. 

 S.Van Rensselaer Cruger, 

 Charles R. Henderson. 

 George Bliss. 

 Rufus W. Peckham, 

 J. Hobart Derrick, 

 Wm. P. Dixon, 

 Robert A. Granniss, 

 Nicholas C. Miller, 

 Henry H, Rogers, 



Jno. W. Auchincloss, 

 Theodore Morford, 

 William Babcock, 

 Preston B. Plumb, 

 William D. Washburn, 

 Scuyvesant Fish, 

 Augustus D, Juilliard, 

 Charles E. Miller, 

 James W. Husted, 



Vice-President, 



BO BERT A. GRANNISS, 

 ISAAC F. LLOYD, 2d Vice-President. WILLIAM J. EASTON, Secretary, 

 A, N. WATERHOUSE, Auditor. FREDERICK SCHROEDER. Assist. Secty, 



EMORY McCLINTOCK, LL.D., F. I. A., Actuary. 

 JOHN TATLOCK, JR., Assist. Actuary. CHARLES B. PERRY, 2d Assist, Actuary. 



FREDERIC CROMWELL, - Treasurer, 

 JOHN A. FONDA, Assistant Treasurer. WILLIAM P, SANDS, Cashier. 



EDWARD P. HOLDEN, - Assistant Cashier. 

 WILLIAM G. DAVIES, Solicitor. WILLIAM W. RICHARDS, Comptroller, 



Medical Directors: 



GUSTAVUS S. WINSTON, M.D. WALTER R. GILLETTE, M.D. E. J. MARSH, M.D. 



3 



A Book Warmly Welcomed. 



PAWNEE 



HERO STORIES AND FOLK-TALES 



With Notes on the Origin, Customs and 

 Character of the Pawnee People. 



By G-SOB&E BIRD GRINNELL ("TO.") 



Cloth, 417 pages. Illustrated. Price $2.00. 



In these stories we find examples of self sacrifice, gratitude, honor, 

 ??-!d curiously enough, an idea of the atonement for sin, an intermediate 

 state, and communication between this and the invisible world. Mr. 

 Grinnell's ''Notes," as he modestly calls them, are really a history of the 

 tribe, its origin, its relationships, its medicines and 'mystery, and its 

 present condition and progress. The book is beautifully printed, bound, 

 and illustrated with first-rate drawings.— Hartford Gourant. 



The folk-tales are full of magic transformations and mystery, and 

 they are related with a strong feeling for dramatic effect and often with 

 much poetic grace.— Springfield Republican. 



The Indian will become extinct or will be civilized. In either case 

 their stories and myths will pass into oblivion. It is well that those of 

 the Pawnees have been rescued and are preserved in this book so that 

 generations yet to come shall read Indian tales as Indians told them to 

 Indians. —Horn e Jow rial. 



Their stories abound with humor, pathos and sentiment. The plan of the book is com- 

 prehensive and vividly portrays the Pawnee race from its historic, social and intellectual 

 standpoint. The author has performed a valuable service, and his work will be welcomed 

 and prized as it deserves.— Magazine of American History. 



It is an important contribution to folk-lore literature that is especially valuable because 

 of the insight it affords into the origin, customs and character of the Pawnee people.— Phila- 

 delphia Times. 



This volume is a novelty and a valuable accpuisition to American literature While 

 volume upon volume has been written of the folk-lore and hero stories of other and distant 

 nationalites, the Indian (except in some fanciful sketches and romantic poems) has oeen over- 

 looked. And yob the American Indian is the wisest and shrewdest and most manly of all the 

 unlettered people on the globe. This collection, not fanciful, but drawn directly from the 

 Indian oracles, shows that with his heroism and cunning he has wisdom and soul, * * * 

 The volume is charming upon every page.— Chicago Inter-Ocean. 



FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., 318 Broadway, N. Y. 



London: DAVIES & CO., 1 Finch Lane, Cornhill. 



WOODCRAFT. 



Vriaa. iBX.OOc 



FOR. SALE BY FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 



