326 



GIFTS AXD BEQUESTS. 



cational, and American Missionary Societies, $1,000 

 each ; and to Smith College, his residuary estate, 

 which amounted to $54,414. 



Hunt, Mary A., of Nashua, N. H., bequests to Proctor 

 Academy. Andover, $3,000; the Universalist Society, 

 Nashua, $8,000; the First Congregational Unitarian 

 Church, $10,000; for a Home for Aged Couples and 

 Aged Men, in Nashua, a lot of land and $85,000; and 

 to this home, on the death of certain relatives, an 

 additional $25,000. 



Hutchins, Henry 0., of Boston, Mass., bequests to the 

 Bar Association of Boston, for books for its library, 

 $5,000; to the Social Law Library, for books, $5,000; 

 to 5 local charitable institutions, each $2,000; to 9 

 others, each $1,000; and to Bath, N. H., to keep 2 

 irravcyards in order, $1,500. 



Hutchinson, Mrs. Mary M., of Philadelphia, Pa., be- 

 quests to charitable institutions, $200,000. 



Hyde, George B., of Boston, Mass., bequests to the 

 city of Boston for a statue of Eufus Choate, $14,000 ; 

 to the town of Brooktield, for a public library, $20,- 

 000; and to Boston Art Museum, the residuary es- 

 tate, estimated at $40,000. These bequests became 

 active in 1894. 



Hyde Mary W., of Boston, Mass., bequests to mis- 

 sionary and other associations of the Congregational 

 Church, $10,500. 



Jeanes, Mrs. Caroline M., of Philadelphia, Pa., be- 

 quests to the Ilahnemann Hospital, $25,000; German 

 Hospital, $10,000 ; Episcopal Hospital, $10,000 ; and to 

 the Jewish Hospital, Home for Incurables, Old Men's 

 Home, Home for Aged and Inlirm Colored Persons, 

 Southern Home for Friendless Children, Penn Asy- 

 lum for Widows and Single Women, Penn Industrial 

 Home for Blind Women, Apprentices' Library, Prot- 

 estant Episcopal City Mission, Sick Diet Kitchen, 

 and the Home for Crippled Children, each $5,000; 

 total, $100,000. 



Keim, Henry, of Philadelphia, Pa., bequests to the 

 Presbyterian Boards of Home and Foreign Missions, 

 each $5,000 ; the Presbyterian Home for Aged Couples, 

 $3,000 ; and St. Timothy's Hospital, the remainder of 

 his estate. 



Kellet, Mrs. Louisa, of Zunebrota, Minn., bequests to 

 Congregational Home Missionary Society, $5,000; 

 and to the local Congregational church, $1.000. 



Kelley, M. F., of Burlington, Vt., gift to the Roman 

 Catholic diocese of Burlington, tor a general hospital, 

 his property near Winooski Driving Park, with a 

 large lot of adjoining land. 

 Kelly, Eugene. See OBITUARIES, AMERICAN. 

 Keney, Henry, of Hartford, Conn., bequests to Trin- 

 ity College, $25,000; Hartford Hospital, $50,000; 

 Hartford Orphan Asylum, $50,000; Old People's 

 Home, $50,000; Park Church, $30,000; Hartford 

 Charitable Society, $2,000 ; Union for Home Work, 

 $10,000; City Mission Society, $10,000; Good Will 

 Club, $30,000; Wadsworth Athenaeum, $25,000; and 

 to his executors, for the purchase of a park in the 

 northern part of the city, about $800,000. 



Kidston, Andrew L., of New Haven, Conn., bequests 

 to Berkeley Divinity School, $10,000 ; Missionary 

 Society of Diocese of Connecticut, $5,000; fund for 

 Aged and Inlirm < Mcrgymen of the Episcopal Church, 

 $5,000 ; Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society of 

 the Episcopal Church, $5,000 ; Home for Friendles's at 

 New Haven, $5,000 ; General Hospital Society, New- 

 Haven, $5,000 ; Trinity Church Home, New Haven, 

 $8,000; and Trinity Parish School, $1,500. 



Kimball, Mrs. Susan Day, of Boston, Mass., proffered 

 lift tortlie erection of a hospital at Putnam, Conn., 

 {5,000; and, if the people of Wyndham County will 

 laisc the remainder needed, $4rfK)0 additional. She 

 had previously built the Morton Hospital at Taunton. 

 Kramer, Leroy, of Philadelphia, Pa., bequest to Pres- 

 byterian church at Morirantown, W. Va., $5,000. 



"Lamour, Jacob, of New York city, bequests to Roman 

 Catholic institutions, $13,500. 



Leisenring, Edwin J., of Philadelphia, Pa., bequests 

 to St. Luke's Hospital at South Bethlehem and Pres- 

 byterian Hospital at Philadelphia, each $10,000; 



First Presbyterian Church and Sabbath School at 

 Mauch Chunk, $7,000; and Young Men's Christian 

 Association at Mauch Chunk, $5.ono. 



Linsley, Mrs. J. S., of New York city, gift to St. 

 Thomas's Protestant Episcopal Church, a new and 

 completely furnished chapel on East Sixteenth Street. 

 Lippincott, W. V., of Philadelphia, Pa., bequests, 

 which became available in September, 1894, to West 

 Laurel Hill Cemetery Company, slo.doo; Episcopal 

 Hospital, $15,000; Church Home for Children, $6,000 ; 

 to 14 charitable institutions, each $5,000; for exten- 

 sion of the tower of St. Matthew's Church, etc., $: > ,d.oon. 

 If sufficient remained, he directed the payment to 4 

 specified institutions of $5,000 each : and if, after the 

 payment of all these bequests, any remained, lie di- 

 rected that it be paid to the hospital of the Protestant 

 Episcopal Church in Philadelphia. 



Low, Seth, President of Columbia College, New- 

 York city, gifts for endowment of a new fellowship 

 in the college department of sociology, $10,000 ; for 

 endowment of the Henry Drisler Classical fund, 

 $10,000. In conjunction with his brother, Abbot 

 Augustus Low, he also built and presented to the 

 mission station of the Protestant Episcopal Chuivh 

 in Wuchang, China, a completely equipped hospital 

 for the use of the mission and the people of the 

 town. 



Lowell, Anna Cabot, of Boston, Mass., bequests to 

 Radcliffe College, $10.000; Roxbury Latin School, 

 $6.000 ; Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, 

 si.iHiO; Harvard Botanic Garden, $5,000; Roxbury 

 Home for Children and Aired Women, $2,000 ; and 

 to various charities, the income of $10,000. 



Lowell, Percival, of Boston, Mass., gift for the erec- 

 tion of a branch of Harvard Observatory at Flagstall, 

 Arizona. 



__ Lunt, Orrington, of Chicago, 111., gift to Northwestern 

 University at Evansville, 111., the greater part of 

 $100,000 expended for the Orrington Lunt Library 

 building, opened in September, 1804. 



Lux, Mrs. Charles, of San Francisco, Cal., bequest 

 for establishing a manual training school, her estate 

 of nearly $3,000,000, one third of "which was given 

 outright to promote such schools for both sexes in 

 California as might exist at the time of her death. 



McClurg, Miss Mary A., of Philadelphia, Pa., be- 

 quests to the Homoeopathic Hospital of that city, 

 $5,000, and to the Presbyterian Theological Semi- 

 nary, $2,000. 



McConnell, Mrs. Anna E., of Oxford, Pa., gift to the 

 fund for building a United Presbyterian church in 

 Oxford, xf>.oOO; church dedicated March 11, 1894. 



Mcllvaine, James, of Washington, Pa., bequests to 

 Protestant Episcopal churches in Washington and 

 New Haven, Pa., for equal division, $10,000; to the 

 trustees of these churches, for assessments for sala- 

 ries of bishops, $4,000; to the Washington church, 

 for organist's salary, $1,500; to the New Haven 

 church, a parsonage valued at $4,000; and to domes- 

 tic and foreign missions, his residuary estate. He 

 also canceled a large debt that the Washington 

 church owed him. 



McKean, Mrs. H. Pratt, of Philadelphia, Pa., bequest 

 to Germantown Hospital, $100.000. 



Macy, Mrs. Josiah, of New York city, gift to the 

 Teachers' College, the Manual Arts Building, cost, 

 $250,000. 



Means. James H., of Boston, Mass., bequests to Ar- 

 menia College, Turkey ; Normal Institute. Hamilton, 

 Va. ; Educational Commission for the New West; 

 Boston City Missionary Society ; and Bradford Acad- 

 emy, each $1,000. 



Meekins, Stephen, of W'illiamsburg, Mass., bequest 

 for a public library building, $15,000 ; and for books, 

 the bulk of his residuary estate, estimated at $2;">.<".o. 

 Miller. Mrs. Eva, of Philadelphia, Pa., bequests to 

 (lei-man Hospital, sin.noo; Deaconess Mothers' Home, 

 $5.000 ; other benevolent institutions, $15.000. 



Moody, the Misses Mary D. and Frances S.. of Bath, 

 Me., joint gift to the Good Will Farm at Farming- 

 ton, Me., $20,000. 



