GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



858 



Annex (now Radcliffo College), the residue of her 



estate. 



Perry, M rs. Frances D., of Smitli|Mirt. Conn., bequest* 

 to 'I'rinily Kpiseopal riiurvli, ifclo.ooo in ,. U sli an<l 

 $_'-,< 100 as a t'liinl, for charitable purposes, ami to the 

 Methodist Kpiscopal ainl Congregational churches, 

 till "I Southport, $10,000 each. 



Pierson, Mrs. Martha A., of Philadelphia, I'a.. I,.- 

 i(Ui->[> t" PrcsKy icriuii institutions, $4,500, and to the 

 Ilahncmann Medical College, $1,000. 



Plumb. Horace 8., of BridgcjH>rt, Conn., gift for the 

 purchase of a lot and tin; erection of a library in Shel- 

 ton, Conn., in memory of his brother, David W. 

 I'luinl), $25,000. 



Pond, Mrs. Harriet N., of Hartford, Conn., bequesta to 

 the Connecticut 1'rison Association, $15,000; to mis- 

 sionary, educational, and benevolent organisations, 

 180,000; and to Center Church, for a home for indi- 

 gent men of American birth, the reversion of $30,000. 



Pulitzer, Joseph, of New York city, gift to the new 

 building fund of Columbia College, $100,000. 



Pullman, George M., of Chicago, 111., girt to the city, 

 a bronze memorial group commemorating the Fort 

 Dearborn massacre in 1812; unveiled June 22, 1893. 



Bookefeller, John D., of Chicago, 111., gift to the Uni- 

 versity of Chicago, for the equipment fund, $150,000. 



Eogers, George P., Prohibition candidate for Gov- 

 ernor of Connecticut, bequests, to prohibition, tem- 

 peraiiec, and Congregational organizations, $11.000. 



Eogers. Henry H., Jr., Eogers, Mary H., Roger-Duff, Mrs. 

 Clara, Eogers-Benjamin, Mrs. Annie E., children of the 

 late Henry 11. Rogers, of New York city, united Lrii't 

 to the town of Fairnaven, Mass., of a free public 

 library, as a memorial of their sister, Millicent G. 

 Rosters ; estimated cost, $185,000. 



Eosenberg. Henry, of Galvestou, Texas, (died May 12, 

 1893), bequests to the Benevolent Administration 

 \\aisenumt Bilten, Canton Glarus, Switzerland, for 

 educational and charitable purposes, $50,000; to the 

 Gemeinde Bilten, same place, tor the same purposes, 

 $30,000 ; to the Island City Protestant and Israelitish 

 Orphan Home in Galveston, for building, $30,000 ; 

 to Grace Church parish (Protestant Episcopal), Gal- 

 veston, for a new church, $30,000 : to the Ladies' Aid 

 Society of the German Lutheran Church, Galvestop, 

 $10,000 ; to procure and furnish a women's home in 

 Galveston, $30,000 ; to purchase or erect a building for 

 the Young Men's Christian Association of Galveston, 

 $65,000 ; for the erection in Galveston of a monument 

 to the memory of the heroes of the Texas revolution 

 (1836), $50,000 ; for the erection of at least ten drink- 

 ing-fountains in Galveston for man and beast, condi- 

 tionally, $30,000 ; and for the endowment of a free 

 public library and free lectures on practical subjects 

 in Galveston, at the end of two years after his death, 

 the residue of his estate, which, it was thought, would 

 amount to $275,'X)0. 



Eothschild, Max M., of Chicago, 111., bequest to local 

 charities, $100,000, carried out by 1m widow. 



Eowland, Mrs. Anna, of Boston, Mass., bequests to 

 Roman Catholic charitable and educational institu- 

 tions, $6,500. 



Euppaner, Antoine, M. D., of New York city (died 

 July 30, 189'2; will declared valid April 20, 1893), be- 

 quests to the town of Alstctten, Canton of St Gall, 

 Switzerland, for distribution of bread to the poor 

 twice a year, $25,000 ; to the Medical School of Har- 

 vard University, $10,000. 



Eussell, Henry E., of New York city (died Jan. -Jti, 

 1893), bequests to the Berkeley Divinity School, 

 Micldletown, Conn., $5,000; to the Bishop Seabury 

 Mission, Faribault, Minn., $5,000; to the Society for 

 Donations and Bequests for Church Purposes of Con- 

 nect icut, $10,000: to Trinity College, Hartford, Conn., 

 for establishment of the H. E. Russell fellowship, 

 $10,000 ; and to the Society for Donations and Be- 

 quests forChurch Purposes, the income to be used tor 

 St. Mark's Church, New Britain, Conn., and the whole 

 fund, if desired, for a new church edifice, $10,000. 



Eyerson, Martin A., of Chicago, 111., gill to the. 

 University of Chicago toward a fund Vor general 



VOL. xxxni. 23 A 



equipment of $500.000, conditional on $400,000 being 



rai-cd, jfloo.ooo; tin,,, extended to July 1. 



Sage, Eussell, of New York city, gift for himself and 



wit.- to the Troy i N. Y.) Female Seminary, u dormi- 

 tory to cost $loo,ooo, to he .-re, -I, .| in : 



Sampson, 0. T.. of North Adam*. Ma--, idled in 



Sept., ls',i;>,|, bequests to the Baptist Home Mil-ion 



Society, $100,000; the I'.aptist Mi-ionary Union, 

 $100,000; and to various Hapti.-t ehun : 

 and educational institution*, in sums ranging from 

 $10,000 to $",0,0(1(1 each, *^!). r >,000. 



Soott, Oharlei, of Washington, D. <'., bequert to 

 Trinity College. Hartford, Conn., $10,000. 



Searlea. Edward F., of San Francis.,,. c u l.. gift to 

 the regents of tin: University of California, for an art 

 UbooTand museum, the Hopkins nansi./n on Cali- 

 fornia Street, valued at $1,500,000; also $5,000 per 

 annum for five years toward its. support. 



Sliepard, Elliott F. See OIUTTAKIKS, AMERICAN. 



Sibley, Hiram W., of Rochester. N. Y.. irift to Cornell 

 University, for a new building for Sibley College, 

 founded by his father, $50,000. 



Simonds, Susan W., of Boston, Muss., bequesto to 

 national and local missionary societies, $5,000. 



Smith, Elizabeth J., of Brooklyn, N. Y.. bequests to 

 missionary and charitable organizations, $8,000. 



Smith, Horace. Sec OIUTTAKIES, AXERICAN. 



Spanlding, Lucy, of Nashua, N. II., bequests to Dart- 

 mouth College, $10,000 ; the American Board of Com- 

 missioners for Foreign Missions, $10,000; the New 

 Hampshire Bible Society, $10,000; and the New 

 Hampshire Orphans' Home, $10,000. 



Spioer, EUhu. See OBITUARIES, AMERICAN. 



Spinney, Joseph 8., of Brooklyn, N. Y. (died May 8, 

 1893), bequeste to specified institutions, $30,000; to 

 Wesleyan University, on the death of his sister, re- 

 version of $25,000 ; and to Wesleyan University, the 

 American Seaman's Friend Society, and In- 

 ter, his residuary estate. He left an 'estate estimated 

 at $2,000,000. 



Stanford, Mrs. Leland, of San Francisco, Cal., gift to 

 Sarah B. Cooper, President of the Golden Gate Kin- 

 dergarten Association, of San Francisco, for free kin- 

 dergarten work in that city, $174,000. 



Stanford. Thomas Weldon, of Melbourne, Australia, 

 brother of the late Leland Stanford, pledge to give 

 to the endowment fund of Leland Stanford Junior 

 University, the legacy of $800,000 left him by hia 

 brother. 



Starr, Charles J., of New York city (died in Novem- 

 ber, 1898), bequest to Middlebury College, Vt, 

 $150,000. He had given it in life $85,000. 



Starr, Lydia, of Philadelphia, Pa., bequests to 

 Catholic religious and benevolent institutions, $18,954. 



Stewart Mis. Mary Ehinelander. of New York city, 

 bequest to charitable institutions, $25,000. 



Stickney. John N., of Rockville, Conn., bequests to 

 CoBffregaaona] Church societies, $12,000. 



Stickney, J. Henry, of Baltimore, Md. (died in May, 

 1893), bequests to the American Home Missionary 

 Society, on condition that the name be changed to 

 Conirr'eirational Home Missionary Society, $150,000; 

 Massachusetts Missionary Society. flM*o; American 

 Missionary Association, $15,000; American Congre- 

 gational Association, $10,000; New West Education 

 Commission, $25,000; Congregational Sunday and 

 Publishinir Society, $20,000; Colorado College", $20,- 

 000; Beloit College, $10,000; Howard University, 

 Robert College in Constantinople. Talladeea College, 

 and Wash burn Colleire, $. r >.iXN>eaeh ; for memorials of 

 the New England PiUrrim*. chiefly in Plymouth, 

 $70.500; to various institutions in Baltimore. $tU.000; 

 and to the CoOffNgltfowd Church Building Society 

 the residue of his estate. 



Stroud. Wflliam E.. of Philadelphia, P.,bwjnert for 

 establishment of the Eliza Cathcart Home, for Incur- 

 ables, $ t _no,ooo. 



Stuart, Mary Macrae, of New York city (died Dec. 

 80, 1891 >, widow -of RoWrt L. Stuart, from her un- 

 conditional bequest* to the Boards of Homo and For- 

 eign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, applies- 



