GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



Cunningham. Mrs. Jane, Brooklyn, N. Y. (died 

 in 1896), bequest, available by decision of the Su- 

 preme Court, to St. Mary's General Hospital, prop- 

 erty appraised at $10,000. 



Currier, Moody, Manchester, X. II., bequests to 

 MancheMer 1'ublic Library, his large private library 

 and |6400; for a public art gallery, $300.000. 



Curtis, Albert, Worcester. Mass., bequests to 

 the Women's Board of Missions, $30,000 and his 

 h. urn-Mead : Doane College, Crete, Neb., $15,000; 

 Colorado College, the American College and Educa- 

 tion Society, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 

 each $10.(KK); Bi-rea College, American Board of 

 Foreign Missions American Home Missionary So- 

 ciety, and Won-eM.T Home for Aged Men, each 

 $5,000; Worcr-ter City Missionary Society and the 

 American Seamen's Friend Society, each $3,000; 

 other Worcester institutions, $6,000; and residue 

 of his estate in equal parts to the American Home 

 Miionary Society, American Board of Foreign 

 Mi ions. "American Missionary Association, and 

 the Worcester Young Men's Christian Association 

 in all, $500,000. 



<urHiii. George R., Rutland, Vt., gift to Essex 

 Institute, Salem, Mass., his collection of chinaware. 

 furniture, oil portraits, glass, and silverware, said to 

 be unequaled in the United States. 



1 hi hi in iin n. Anthony, Milwaukee, bequests to 

 local institutions, $6,250. 



Davis, J. M., Cincinnati, Ohio, gift to the Society 

 of Friends, University Hall, at Wichita, Kan., which 

 cost $220,000. and an" endowment of $200,000. 



Deering. William. Chicago, 111., gift to North- 

 western University, Kvanston, 111., a building for its 

 preparatory department. 



He Forest, Julia D., New York, Paris, and Brus- 

 sels, bequests to Roman Catholic institutions in 

 those cities, an aggregate of $35,000, with residue 

 of estate to Archbishop Corrigan for schools and 

 seminaries in New York. 



De Merinyille, Marquise (formerly MARY G. 

 ( 'ALDWELL). gift to the Catholic University of Amer- 

 ica, for a scholarship, $5,000 ; also, with her sister, 

 the Baroness yon Zedtwitz (MARY E. B. CALU- 

 WELL), a joint gift to the same institution, for a fel- 

 lowship in divinity, $10,000. 



Dickinson, E. M., Fitchburg, Mass., gift to North- 

 field, Mass., a librarv building, dedicated June 9. 



Domestic and Foreign Missionary Society 

 of the Protestant Episcopal Church, gift from 

 an aged woman, conditional on keeping her name 

 a secret, cash, Government securities, and city mort- 

 gages, aggregating a little over $40,000. 



Downes, Caroline T., Canton, Mass., bequests, 

 to the Children's Hospital of Boston and the New 

 Knirlaiid Hospital for Women and Children, each 

 $20,000; Massachusetts Infant Asylum and Mission 

 to the Children of the Destitufe, each $10,000; 

 First Congregational Parish, Canton, Young Men's 

 Christian Union, and Perkins Institution for the 

 Blind, each $5,000 ; and Canton Public Librarv 

 $2,000. 



Drake, Francis Marion. Des Moines, Iowa, gift 

 to Drake University, $26.000, making a total of 

 $100.000. 



Draper, Elien S. and George A., Ilopedale, 

 Mass., joint gift to Ilopedale Unitarian Society, a 

 church building; cost, $75,000. 



Drew Theological Seminary, Madison, N. J., 

 gifts from two friends, whose names are withheld, 

 each $50,000. 



Duke. Washington. Durham, N. C., gift to Trin- 

 ity College in that city, $100,000, making his total 

 cash gifts to it nearly $500.000. 



Durkee, Joseph H., New York city, bequest to 

 the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a collection of 

 coins ; estimated value, $25,000. 



Duryea, S. D., Brooklyn, N. Y., bequests to nine 

 charitable institutions, made available by the exec- 

 utor's sale of property, realizing $90,000. 



Eaton, Robert B., Woburn, Mass., bequest to 

 Trinity Episcopal Church of that city, $10,000 and 

 the reversion of his residuary estate. 



Eddy, Rev. Mary Baker. Boston, gift to the 

 Christian Science Church in that city, property val- 

 ued at $50,000. 



Edmunds, George F., ex-United States Senator, 

 and wife, Burlington, Vt., gift to the city, to aid the 

 erection of a $100,000 high-school building, a plot 

 of ground and $15,000. 



Eno, Amos R., New York city, bequests to the 

 Chamber of Commerce of New York, conditionally, 

 $150,000; Amherst College, $50,000; Congregational 

 Church, Simsbury, Conn., $7,000; 12 New York 

 city benevolent institutions, each $5.000 ; and New 

 York Juvenile Asylum, $3,000 in all, $270,000. 



Evans, Harriet B., Philadelphia, Pa., bequests, 

 funds for the erection of a Presbyterian church, 

 and to the Women's Christian Temperance Union, 

 $5,000. 



Faiyel. John J., Deadwood, S. Dak., bequest for 

 a public library at his old home, Theresa, N. Y., 

 $75,000. 



Fay, Patrick, Boston, bequests to local Roman 

 Catholic institutions, an aggregate of $25,000. 



Field, Marshall. Chicago, gift to the University 

 of Chicago, land valued at $135,000. See ROCKE- 

 FELLER, JOHN D. 



Flagler, Henry M., gift to the American Red 

 Cross Society, $5,0'00. 



Flood, Cora Jane, San Francisco. Cal., gift to the 

 University of California, the mansion of her father, 

 the late James C. Flood, with 540 acres of ground, 

 at Menlo Park, value exceeding $3,000,000. 



Fowler, George A., Kansas City, Kan., gift to 

 rebuild the agricultural shops of the State Uni- 

 versity, $21,000. 



Frick, Henry C., Pittsburg, Pa., gift to the Car- 

 negie Art Gallery in that city, a painting by Dagnan- 

 Bouveret, of Paris, for which he paid $100.000. 



Fuller, Mrs. Caroline, Bayonne, N. J., gift to the 

 Salvation Army, real estate which has been ap- 

 praised at $20,000. 



Gardener, Prof., of the Groton (Mass.) School, 

 gift to the school, for a 'new chapel, $75,000. 



Gardner, George A., Boston, Mass., gift to the 

 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, $20.000. 



Gardner, John L.. Boston, bequests, available on 

 the death of his widow, to the Boston Museum of 

 Fine Arts and the Boston Lying-in Hospital, each 

 $100,000; Massachusetts General Hospital, $50.000; 

 and the Brookline Public Library, $25.000. 



General Hospital, Paterson, N. J., friends of, 

 gift to remove debt, $20,000. 



Gould, Helen Miller, New York city, gifts to the 

 United States Government for war purposes, $1(M>.- 

 000; for the relief of sick and wounded soldiers at 

 Camp Wyckoff, Long Island, N. Y., $25,000; Uni- 

 versity of New York, $60,000 : Rutgers College, New- 

 Brunswick, N. J., $10,000; Engineering School of 

 the University of New York, $10,000; Mount Hoi- 

 yoke College, $5,000 : Manhattan Eye and Ear Hos- 

 pital, $5,000: and for the benefit of crippled children 

 from New York, Woody Crest, a home at Tarry town, 

 N. Y., established and maintained by her. Late in 

 the year Chancellor McCracken announced that 

 Miss Gould was the secret donor of $250,000 to tin- 

 University of New York in 1895, for a library build- 

 ing, and that her gift of $60,000 in 1898 was to 

 defray the additional cost. 



Graham, Mrs. John, New York, gift to the Gen- 

 eral Hospital, Paterson, N. J., $8.000. 



Graham. John S., Philadelphia, bequests to 

 local charities, the reversion of $100,000. 



