GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



263 



Lengel, Rev. Henry M., Reading, Pa., gift to 

 his congregation, a new church edifice. 



Lewis, Mrs. Frederic Elliott, New York, gift 

 to St. John's Guild, a seaside cottage hospital, 

 cost $10,000. 



Lippincott, J. Dundas, Philadelphia, gift to 

 the University of Pennsylvania, $20,000. 



Lisle, John, Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y., be- 

 quests to the Methodist and Baptist churches 

 there, $1,500 direct and the reversion of $20,000. 



Loomis, John Mason, Chicago, bequest for the 

 endowment of a Loomis Institute in Windsor, 

 Conn., the reversion of the greater part of 



P $1,000,000. His brothers and sisters had previ- 

 ously joined him in an agreement to leave the 

 residue of their estates for such an institution. 

 Loring, Mary H., Newton, Mass., bequests to 

 Newton College Hospital, $5,000; three educa- 

 tional and industrial institutions, $5,000; Home 

 for Aged Females, all her real estate; and Perkins 

 Institution for the Blind, Boston, the residue of 

 her personal estate; contested. 

 Loux, Cecelia Julia, New York, bequests to 

 Hebrew, German, and other institutions, $16,400. 



McClary, William, Philadelphia, gift to the 

 Masonic Home of Pennsylvania, for the general 

 use of the home and for the establishment of an 

 orphanage, $50,000. 



McFadden, Alexander, Philadelphia, bequests 

 to Dickinson College, $10,000, and churches, hos- 

 pitals, and charitable institutions, $40,000. 



McKean, Mrs. Thomas, Philadelphia, gift to 

 the University of Pennsylvania, for the new Law 

 School building, $25,000. 



McLaughlin, Mrs. James, Pittsburg, gift to 

 Princeton University, United States bonds bearing 

 an annual interest of $300. 



McMahon, Monsignor James, Washington, 

 D. C., gift to the Catholic University of America, 

 real estate valued at $90,000, supplementing his 

 previous gift of the Hall of Philpsophy. 



Malcolm, Baroness Frederica, London, Eng- 

 land, bequest to " the School for the Revival of the 

 Lost Mysteries of Antiquity, recently founded or 

 about to be founded in America," $25.000. Two 

 Theosophist societies in New York claimed the be- 

 quest, and the claims are to be decided in the 

 English courts. 



Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, 

 gift from a friend, name withheld, for new out- 

 patient building, $75,000. 



Mather, Samuel, Cleveland, Ohio, gift to the 

 Lakeside Hospital there for a contagious disease 

 ward, $50,000. 



Mebarry, Mrs. Elizabeth, Richmond, Ind., gift 

 to Ohio Wesleyan University, for two new chairs, 

 $60,000. 



Milliken, James, Decatur, 111., gift, for an in- 

 ustrial college, to be a part of Lincoln Universitv, 

 100,000. 



Morgan, J. Pierpont, New York, gift to the 

 etropolitan Museum of Art, three paintings 

 iombo's Columbus, for which $40,000 was paid; 

 ayden's Napoleon at St. Helena, and Lucy's 

 rd Nelson in the Cabin of the Victory ; to the 

 me, a collection of ancient Greek ornaments, 

 allied at $150,000. 



Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass., 

 ift from friends, to endow a chair of Philosophy, 

 25,000. 



Nickerson, Samuel M., and wife, Chicago, 

 ift to the Chicago Art Institute, their collections 

 f paintings, engravings, Chinese and Japanese 

 jrcelains, jades, bronzes, and other art works, the 

 hole valued at $300.000. 



Norman, George H., Newport, R. I., bequests 

 o the Rogers High School, $10,000, and the New- 



port Hospital, Redwood Library, and Free Library 

 of Newport, each $5,000. 



Norton, the Misses, Norwich, Conn., gift to the 

 Kingfisher (Oklahoma) Congregational College, for 

 a chapel, $20,000. 



Oliver, Henry S., Pittsburg, gift to chemical 

 laboratory, Lafayette College, $5,000. 



Osborn, William, Pittsburg, bequest to Oberlin 

 College for endowment of the president's chair, 

 $40,000. 



Ottendorfer, Oswald, New York city, bequests 

 to the Isabella Heimath, $100,000, supplementing a 

 gift of like amount a few days before his death; 

 American Museum of Natural History, $25,000; 

 New York Free Circulating Library, Charity Organ- 

 ization Society, Cooper Union, and German Hos- 

 pital and Dispensary, each $20,000; and Society 

 for Ethical Culture and German Ladies' Society 

 fcr the Relief of Destitute Widows and Orphans 

 and Sick Persons, each $10,000 in all, $225,000. 



Pearsons, Daniel Kimball, M. D., Chicago, 

 gifts, on fulfillment of specific conditions, to Mount 

 Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass.; Yankton 

 (S. D.) College, Berea (Ky.) College, Colorado Col- 

 lege, Colorado Springs;. McKenzie College, Leb- 

 anon, 111.; Grand Prairie College, Onarga, III.; 

 Lake Forest University, Illinois; Carleton College, 

 Northfield, Minn.; and two other institutions, the 

 names of which and the amount of the gifts are 

 to remain a secret during his lifetime, an aggre- 

 gate of $500,000, making the whole amount of 

 his gifts to colleges in the past ten vears about 

 $3,000,000. 



Perry, Marsden J., Providence, R. I., gift to 

 Brown University, $25,000. 



Phelps, Dodge & Co., New York, gift to Co- 

 lumbia University, for endow r ment of Schools of 

 Mining and Metallurgy, $10,000. 



Phipps, Henry, Pittsburg, gift, chiefly for 

 pupils of the public schools, a thoroughly equipped 

 botanical school in Schenley Park. 



Phipps, Henry, Jr., Pittsburg, gift to the First 

 Ward Public School of that city, for a boys' play- 

 ground, a tract of land valued with improvements 

 at $100,000. 



Pierce, Moses, Norwich, Conn., bequests to 

 trustees the reversion of $100,000 for the American 

 Missionary Association, $60,000 for the Manual 

 Training School of the Norwich Free Academy, 

 $40,000 for the Associated Charities of Pawtucke't, 

 Central Falls, and Valley Falls, and $20,000 for 

 the Rock Nook Children's Home, Norwich. 



Pinchot, J. W., New York, wife and sons Gif- 

 ford and Amos, gift to Yale University for en- 

 dowment of the new School of Forestrv, $150,000. 



Plum, Stephen H., Newark, N. J., gift to the 

 Day Nursery and Baby Shelter, a building, cost 

 $16,000. 



Presbyterian Hospital, New York, gift from 

 friend, name withheld, funds for erection of build- 

 ing for house staff and nurses, planned to cost 

 $200,000. 



Pringle, Samuel M., Poughkeepsie, N. Y., 

 trustees of, having charge of a fund of $250,000, 

 decided to establish in that city a home for aged 

 men who have had and lost fortunes. 



Quintard, George W., New York., gift to the 

 University of the South, Suwanee, Tenn., for a 

 memorial dormitory, $50,000. 



Rew, Henry C., Newark, N. Y., gift to the vil- 

 lage, a public library, cost $20,000, and the salary 

 of a librarian for a year. 



Rhoades, Mrs. Cornelia R., New York, be- 

 quests to St. Bartholomew's Protestant Episcopal 

 Church and the Society for the Relief of the Desti- 

 tute Blind, each $10.000, and five church and be- 

 nevolent societies, each $1,000. 



