GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



327 



Morosini, G. P., of New York city, gift to Seaton 

 Hospital, on the Spuyten Duyvil Park Road, 

 $5.000. 



Morss, Annie A., of New York city, bequest to Pres- 

 byterian Board of Relief for Disabled Ministers, the 

 residue of her estate, estimated at $5,000 to $10,000; 

 Will contested. 



Moseley, Kev. William 0., of Newburyport. Mass., 

 bequests to Harvard College. $50,000 ; Massachusetts 

 General Hospital, $20,000 ;" Newburyport Public Li- 

 brary, $10,000; Boston Lying-in Hospital, $10,000; 

 Perkins Institute for the Blind, $10,000; Anna 

 Jaques Hospital at Newburyport. $10,000 ; and Gen- 

 eral and Howard Charitable Societies at Newbury- 

 port, each $3,000. 



Mustard, Mrs. Eliza, of Farmingdale, Me., bequests 

 to Maine General Hospital, $8,000; Westbrook Semi- 

 nary, $5,000 ; HaHowell Industrial School, $4,000 ; 

 and Topsham and Bowdoinham, for the support of 

 the poor, each $3.000. 



OTarrell, Rt. Rev. Michael J. See OBITUARIES, 

 AMERICAN. 



Paige, James W., of Boston, Mass., bequest to Mu- 

 seum of Fine Arts, on the condition that $10,000 be 

 - added within five years, for a fund to enable pupils 

 of the institution to study art in Europe, $30,000. 



Paladini, Mrs. Lonisa, of Burlington, N. J., bequest 

 of her husband, inside available by her death, for the 

 poor of the city. $25,000. 



Palmer, Francis A., of New York city, gift to Home 

 for Aged Ministers of the Christian Church, to be 

 built at Castile, N. Y.. an endowment of $10,000. 



Palmer, Mrs. Rhoda M., of Brockport, N. Y., bequest 

 to the University of Rochester, $10,000. 



Parser, Mrs. Sarah, of Roxbury, Mass., bequest to Rad- 

 cliffe College (formerly Harvard Annex), $150,000. 



Patterson,^ Hannah W., of Westfield, JS. Y., bequest 

 for a public library, $100,000. 



Pearsons, Dr. D. K., of Chicago, 111., gift to Yankton 

 College, S. D., an edifice to be known as Science 

 Hall, dedicated Sept. 5,1894. The city contributed 

 $25.000. 



Pepper, William, M. I)., for many years provost of 

 the university of Pennsylvania, gift to the institu- 

 tion on resigning his office, April 23. 1894, for exten- 

 sion of the hospital buildings, $50,000. 



Peyton, Mrs. Josephine L., of New York city, bequests 

 to Baptist and Presbyterian institutions in New York, 

 Hohoken, and Rochester, and charitable institutions 

 in New York city, an aggregate of $12,500, and, in 

 the event of her daughter dying without heirs, to 

 25 institutions in New York city and Rochester, a 

 trust fund of *"..<iOO.OOO. 



Fhelps, William Walter. See OBITUARIES, AMER- 

 ICAN. 



Place, Mrs. Sarah B., of Gloversville, N. Y., bequests 

 to the Congregational church (supplementing a 

 subscription of $5,000), $2,700 ; to Oberlin College, 

 $5,000; American Missionary Association, $2,000; 

 American Board of Foreign Missions, Women's 

 Board of Missions, and Congregational Home Mis- 

 sionary Society, each $5,000 ; the four societies also 

 beino; made residuarv legatees. 



Pleasonton, Mrs. Elizabeth Hoge, of Philadelphia, Pa., 

 widow of Gen. Augustus J. Pleasonton (see OBITU- 

 ARIES, AMERICAN), bequests to Presbyterian Hospital, 

 Philadelphia, $24,000; Princeton Theological Sem- 

 inary, for scholarships, $6,000 ; Ministers' Relief fund 

 of Presbyterian Church, $5,000 ; Philadelphia Home 

 for Incurables, for free beds, $10,000 ; Franklin Re- 

 formatory for Inebriates, for a free bed, $5,000; Pres- 

 byterian Orphanage, to endow a cottage, $5,000, and 

 to equip it. $2,000 " to five other Presbyterian institu- 

 tions, each $3,000 ; and to the Presbyterian Home 

 ibr^ Women, the Presbyterian Orphanage, the Presby- 

 terian Hospital, and the Philadelphia Home for In- 

 curables, in equal parts, a conditional trust fund of 

 $20,000. 



Pond, Charles M., of Hartford, Conn., bequest to the 

 city of Hartford, property valued at $750,000. Con- 

 tested. 



Pope, Col. A. A., of Hartford, Conn., gift to that city 

 for a public park, a tract of 74 acres of the market 

 value of $100,000. 



Porter, Isaac, of Philadelphia, Pa., bequest to the 

 Methodist Episcopal Orphanage, available on the 

 death of his widow, $20.000, and if none of his chil- 

 dren survive his widow,' an additional $30,000. 



Proctor, Thomas E., of Boston, Mass., bequest to 

 Massachusetts General Hospital for a building for the 

 insane department, $100,000. 



Quackenbnsh, Mrs. G. V. S., gift to the Troy (N. Y.) 

 Female Seminary, a building, dedicated Sept. 13, 

 1894. 



Quinn, Rev. Thomas, of Rah way, N. J., bequests to 

 Roman Catholic institutions in New Jersey, $5,350. 



Raynolds, William F. See OBITUARIES, AMERICAN. 



Kenwick, J. B., of Cambridge, Mass., bequests to 

 charitable institutions, $40,000. 



Eoherts, Mrs. Annie S., of Torrington, Conn., bequest 

 to the Congregational Home Missionary Society, 

 $5,000. 



Robinson, E. A., of Louisville, Ky., gift to the Shen- 

 andoah Valley Academy, $11.000. 



Rockefeller, JohnD., of New York city, gift to Chicago 

 University, $500,000. This was his 'sixth gift to the 

 institution, and made the total $4,250,000. 



Rogers. Mrs. Henry H., of New York city, gift to the 

 town of Fairhaven, Conn., a handsome and commo- 

 dious town hall that cost $500,000. 



Rotch, Arthur, of Boston, Mass., bequests to Massa- 

 chusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary, $25,000; 

 to Harvard College, for a department of architecture, 

 $25.0dO; to Massachusetts Institute of Technology, for 

 the department of architecture generally, $25,000", and 

 the department specifically, $15,000 ; to Boston Mu- 

 seum of Fine Arts, $25,000; to Boston Children's Aid 

 Society, $5.000; and to Boston Architectural Club, 

 $5jpeO; in all, $125,000. 



Royce, Mrs. Jane D., of Boston, Mass., bequest to the 

 Benevolent and Missionary Society of Tremont Tem- 

 ple. $20.000. Contested ; sustained. 



Sage, Henry W., of Brooklyn, N. Y., gift to Cornell 

 University, a museum of classical archaeology, in- 

 tended tolllustrate the development of antique'sculp- 

 ture: dedicated Jan. 31, 1894. 



Saltonstall. Henry, of Salem, Mass., bequests available 

 on the death of his widow, to Harvard University, $59,- 

 000; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, $50,000; 

 Boston Society of Natural History, $15,000; Massa- 

 chusetts General Hospital and the 'Eye and Ear Infir- 

 mary, each $10,000 ; and for other charitable purposes, 

 f 20.000. 



Sayles, William F.. of Pawtucket, R. L, bequests for 

 a public library in Pawtucket. $100,000; to the Rhode 

 Island and the Rhode Island Homoeopathic Hospitals, 

 for free beds, $32,000 ; and to Brown University, $200,- 

 000. He had previously erected the Memorial Hall at 

 a cost of $125,000. 



Schiff, Jacob H., of New York city, gift to the city, a 

 granite and bronze fountain, to cost about $65,000. 

 The city has given a site at the intersection of Canal 

 Street with East Broadway and Rutgers Street. 



Scott, Charles, of Washington, D. C., bequests to the 

 Protestant Episcopal diocese of New York, for its 

 building fund, $10,000 ; and to St. John's Church, 

 Trinity'Church, and the hospital, all in Waterbury, 

 Conn., each $5,000. 



Searles, Edward F., of New York city, gift to Bowdoin 

 College, a new building for scientific work. 



Seligman, Jesse. See OBITUARIES, AMERICAN. 



Shepard, Mrs. Elliott P., of New York city, gift to the 

 village of Scarborough, N. Y., a Presbyterian church 

 with Sunday-school annex. 



Simpson, Samnel, of Wallingford, Conn., bequests to 

 Ladies' Library of Wallingford, $50,000; and to Prot- 

 estant Episcopal Academy of Cheshire, $10,000. 



Skinner, Thomas H., D. D., of Chicago, 111., bequest 

 to Parsons College, Iowa. $25,000. 



Slocum, Charles E,, M. D., of Defiance, Ohio, gift to 

 the Ohio Wesleyan University, for library building, 

 $50,000. 



