GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



299 



Gray, Mercy M., Oakland, Cal., bequests to re- 

 ligious organizations, a total of $200,000. 



Green, Mrs. Paul, San Francisco, gift for Golden 

 Gate Park, a memorial arch ; cost, $30,000. 



Greenleaf, Rev. Joseph, Middletown, N. Y., be- 

 quests to Presbyterian benevolent and mission 

 boards, $6,000. 



Grey, Richard C., Allegheny City, Pa., bequests 

 to the Allegheny General Hospital, $20,000 ; to vari- 

 ous charitable institutions, a total of $25,000. 



Gridley. E incline, Amenia, N. Y., bequests to 

 Presbyterian institutions, a total of $14,500. 



Haddock, Catherine L., Philadelphia, Pa., be- 

 quests for an orphanage, her house and endowment 

 of $125,000 ; other charitable institutions in the 

 State and city, an aggregate of $46,000. 



Had sell, Orlando D., Chicago, 111., bequests to 



the First Methodist Church, a trust fund of $50,000, 



the interest of which is to be expended annually for 



inety-nine years in feeding and clothing 100 waifs. 



Hale, William E., Chicago, 111., bequests to trus- 

 for such charitable institutions as they may 

 select, with a conditional reversion to Beloit College, 

 $300,000. 



Halsey, Cornelia B., Newark, N. J., gift to the 

 local Young Men's Christian Association, $12,000. 



Hamilton, John P., Stamford, Conn., bequests 

 to the Boards of Home and Foreign Missions of the 

 Presbyterian Church and the Board for the Relief of 

 Disabled Ministers and their Widows and Children 

 of the same Church, each $5,000 ; American Tract 

 Society, Seamen's Friend Society, and American 

 Female Guardian Society, all of New York, each 

 $2,000 ; and seven other institutions in New York 

 and Connecticut, each $1,000. 



Mainline University, St. Paul, Minn., friends 

 of, special debt gifts, $16,000. 



Harrison, Catherine, Philadelphia, Pa., be- 

 quests to the Home for Incurables, $10,000 ; other 

 charities, $4,000. 



Haskell, Mrs. Caroline E., Chicago. 111., gift of 

 funds for a dormitory for boys, at Morgan Park 

 Academy. 



Hazard, Rowland, Peacedale, R. I., bequest to 

 Brown University, $100,000. 



Hearst, Mrs. Phffibe, San Francisco, gift to San 

 Francisco Polyclinic, $5,000. 



Hegeman, Mrs. B. A., Sr., North Plainfield, N. J., 

 bequests to local and general institutions of the Re- 

 formed Church, $10,000 ; other benevolent institu- 

 tions, $4,500. 



Hemenway, Mrs. Augustus, Boston, Mass., gift 

 to Radcliffe College, a gymnasium building. 



Hernsheim, Simon, family of, New Orleans, gift 

 to Fisk Free and Public Library. $50.000. 



Hill, James J., President of the Great Northern 

 Railroad, gift to Hamline University, St. Paul, 

 Minn., $20,000. 



Hoffman, Jacob, Philadelphia, bequests to the 

 Home for Incurables, the reversion of $10,000 and 

 conditionally $12,000. and to the Penn Asylum for 

 Indigent Widows and Single Women, conditionally, 

 $6.000. 



Hovey, Marion, Boston, gift to the city of Glou- 

 cester, for best high-school entrance examinations 

 for the Institute of Technology. $5,000. 



Hnbbard, Mrs. Gardiner Green, Washington, 

 D. C., gift to the United States Government, the 

 large collection of etchings and engravings gathered 

 by her late husband, and $20,000 for its annual in- 

 crease. 



Hunnewell, Horatio 1 1 oil is. Watertown, Mass., 

 gift to Watertown Free Public Library, a large ad- 

 dition to the main building. 



Hunt, Albert S., D. D., Brooklyn, N. Y., bequests 

 to Wesleyan University for a library fund, $30,000 ; 

 American Bible Society, $10,000 ; Methodist Gen- 





eral Hospital, Brooklyn, $5,000 ; and Methodist 

 Episcopal Missionary Society and Brooklyn Meth- 

 odist Church Home, each $1,000. 



Huntington, Mrs. Collis P., New York, gift to 

 the Normal and Industrial Institute, Tuskegee, 

 Ala., for a girls' dormitory, $10,000. 



James, Julia Bradford Huntington, Boston, 

 bequests to six benevolent institutions, each $5,000, 

 and to the Museum of Fine Arts and the Massa- 

 chusetts Institute of Technology, nearly all the 

 residue of her estate, $542,069. 



Jackson, John Mason, Chicago, 111., bequest to 

 trustees for division in 1904 among the American 

 Baptist Missionary Union, American Baptist Home 

 Missionary Society, American Baptist Publication 

 Society, and the University of Chicago, half of the 

 excess of his estate over $20,000 in equal parts. At 

 his death the estate was valued at $186,000. 



Jennings, J. Hennen, gift to Lawrence Scien- 

 tific School of Harvard for a new scholarship, 

 $10,000. 



Johnston, Mrs. Ado! ia Field, dean of the wom- 

 an's department of Oberlin College, friends of, 

 gifts to found a professorship, always to be filled 

 by a woman, $50,000. 



Joor, Mrs. Elizabeth, Lawrence, Mass., gift to 

 the corporation of Forest Glade Cemetery, Somers- 

 worth, N. H., a memorial chapel; cost, $10,000. 



Jordan, W. S., Brookline, Mass., bequests to the 

 American Baptist Missionary Union and the Amer- 

 ican Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 

 each $5,000 ; Missionary Society of the Methodist 

 Episcopal Church, Boston, $2,500 ; and other insti- 

 tutions, an aggregate of $6,700. 



Joy, W. I)., Boston, Mass., bequest to Tufts Col- 

 lege, $80,000. 



Juilliard, Mrs. Helen C., New York city, gift 

 to the trustees of St. John's Guild for a new float- 

 ing hospital for sick children, $32,000. 



Keinath, William, Philadelphia, Pa., bequests 

 to the Fuel-Saving Society, $50,000 ; the Home for 

 Incurables, $10,000; other local institutions, $9,800 ; 

 and to his native village of Winterlingen, Wiirtem- 

 berg, an acre of ground and $35,000, principally for 

 a home for the sick poor. 



Kelly, Mrs. Elizabeth, Chicago, 111., gift to the 

 University of Chicago for a dormitory for women, 

 $75,000. 



Kent, S. A., Suffield, Conn., gift to the town, a 

 library building, cost $25,000. 



Kiniball, Mrs. David P., Boston, Mass., gift to 

 Radcliffe College, for a hall of residence, $50,000. 



Kingsley, Chester Ward, Boston, gifts to Wor- 

 cester Academy, Colby University, Newton Theo- 

 logical Institute, American Baptist Missionary 

 Union, American Baptist Publication Society, and 

 the American Baptist Home Mission Society, each 

 $25,000. 



Klauke, J. H., Worcester, Ohio, gift to the Uni- 

 versity of Worcester, his residence, that cost $30,- 

 000, and cash $40,000. 



Knowlton, Edwin F., West Upton, Mass., be- 

 quests to the village of West Upton for a public 

 library, $40,000; the Unitarian Church, $5,000; 

 and the town of West Upton, conditionally, for 

 public schools, $50,000, and for relief of its poor, 

 $15,000. 



Lambert, John, Joliet, 111., gifts to the public 

 library, $7,000; and each of two hospitals, $1,500. 



Langles, Mrs. J. and Miss Angelic, mother and 

 daughter, victims of the " Bourgogne " disaster, be- 

 quests to local institutions direct, $22,000. The 

 mother left the residue of her large estate to found 

 a memorial hospital for women and children in 

 New Orleans, and the daughter left the residue of 

 her independent fortune for the support of this 

 hospital. 



