300 



GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



Leahy, David T.. Brooklyn, N. Y., bequests to 

 the Catholic University in Washington, I). C., St. 

 Mary's General Hospital, Little Sisters of the Poor, 

 and St. Vincent de Paul Society, each $10,000; St. 

 Mary's Maternity Hospital and Nursery. St. John's 

 Orphan Asylum," St. Joseph's Home for Girls, and 

 Convent of Mercy, each $7,500 ; Home for Con- 

 sumptives, Bureau of Charities. St. John's Guild, 

 and Newsboys' Home, each $5,000 ; and two other 

 institutions, each $2,500. 



Letter. Mrs. L. Z., Chicago, 111., gift to the 

 I'liitfil States Government for an army hospital, 

 the Chickamauga Park Hotel, which she bought for 

 $10.000. 



Upton. Sir Thomas, London, England, the 

 challenger for the " America's " cup, gift for the 

 relief of sick and wounded American soldiers, $10,- 

 000. 



Little. Henry S., Trenton, N. J., gift to Prince- 

 ton University for a dormitory, $100,000. 



Livingston, Henry M., Saratoga Springs. N. Y., 

 conditional gift to the Young Men's Christian 

 Association for a building, $25,000. 



Logan, Frank <., Chicago, gift to the Chicago 

 Art Institute for a library building, $35,000. 



Low, Seth, President of Columbia University, gift 

 fur the new library building, the excess of cost of 

 $100,000 beyond h'is original gift of $1,000,000. 



Lou bat. "Joseph F., New York city, gift to 

 Columbia University, for the endowment of its li- 

 brary, deeds to property on Broadway of an esti- 

 mated value of $1,100,000, subjected to an annuity 

 of $60,000 during the donor's life. 



l.miili iiidon. Charles H., New York city, gift 

 to the Ladies' Library Association of Lyme, Conn., 

 a library building. 



Lyman, Susan B., Brookline, Mass., bequests to 

 Harvard University to aid needy students, $5,000; 

 Perkins Institution for the Blind, $5,000; State 

 Normal School, Framingham, $5,000 ; Home for 

 Orphan Children, Boston, $5,000; Carney Hospital, 

 $5,000; and Warren Street Chapel, Boston, $1,000. 



.M r A I pi n. David H., New York, gift to the Brick 

 Presbyterian Church, a building for a youths' 

 training school and clubhouse; cost, $16.500. 



Macy, Mrs. Josiah, New York city, bequests to 

 the New York Teachers' College (for which she had 

 built the Macy Manual Training School at a cost of 

 $250,000), $200,000 outright and contingent interests 

 in her estate; and to the Presbyterian Hospital, 

 $5,000. 



Marsh, Prof. Othniel C., Yale University, gift 

 to the university, his six scientific collections. They 

 are the result of thirty years' labor, and constitute 

 the most important gift to natural science that 

 Yale has received. For six specimens alone $100,- 

 000 was refused. 



Marshall, Louis, New York, gift toward a pro- 

 posed fund of $1,000,000 for Hebrew educational 

 purposes in New York, $5,000. 



Mast, P. P., Springfield, Ohio, bequests to Wes- 

 leyan College, $375,000 ; other institutions, $105,000. 



M-a<l. Solomon, Greenwich, Conn., bequests to 

 miariotuurj, church, and college organizations an 

 aggregate of 90 out of 250 shares in which his 

 estate is to be divided, each share having an esti- 

 mated value of $3,000 to $5,000. 



Mills, Darius Offden. New York city, gift to 

 the National Red Cross Relief Committee", $5,000. 



Mills, Mrs. Harriet B., New York city, bequests 

 to Grace Episcopal Church, $5.000; and to the 

 Sisterhood of St. Mary, at Peekskill, $2,500. 



Moore, Andrew M., Philadelphia, Pa., beipn-st. 

 available on the death of his three sons,for"f<nin.l- 

 ing and maintaining such charitable or educational 

 institution or establishment in my name as they 

 (the trustees) desire or may deem wise or proper,'" 



the principal of his estate, estimated at about $5,- 

 000,000. 



Morgan, J. Pierrepont, New York, gift to 

 Barnard College, New York, $10,000. 



Morris, Daniel, Atlantic City. N. J., bequests 

 to Bishop McFaul, of Trenton, N. J., for St. 

 Michael's Orphan Asylum, at Hopewell, to which he 

 had given $50,000 in'life, $25.000: for the founding 

 of a home for the aged, $40,000 ; St. Joseph's Home 

 at Beverly, $10,000; and St. Mary's Orphan Asylum, 

 New Brunswick, St. Francis's Hospital, Trenton, 

 and for a diocesan scholarship, each $5,000. He 

 also bequeathed $32,000 to be divided among nine 

 Roman Catholic hospitals and orphan asylums in 

 Philadelphia, and $10,000 to the Little Sisters of the 

 Poor of that city. Excepting $13,000 to relatives, 

 he left the residue of his estate to the above-named 

 institutions, half to the Hopewell Orphan Asylum 

 and the Home for the Aged, and the remainder to 

 the others, making his total benefactions $487,000. 



Morse, Elijah A., Canton, Mass., bequests to 

 eight church, missionary, educational, and chari- 

 table organizations, each $5,000. 



Moss, Lucien, Philadelphia, gift to charities, 

 $200,000. 



Mount Hermon School and Normal Semi- 

 nary, Northfield, Mass., anonymous friend of, gift 

 for equal division, $100,000. 



Mimger, Albert A., Chicago, bequests to the 

 Art Institute, his collection of paintings, valued at 

 $300,000; and Women's and Children's Hospital, 

 Foundling's Home, Home for Incurables, and Half- 

 Orphans' Asylum, each $50,000 in all, $500,000. 



Neafle, Jacob G., Philadelphia, Pa., bequests to 

 the Hahnemann Hospital, $35,000 ; Baptist Orphan- 

 age, $30,000; Baptist Home, $20,000; Fourth 

 Baptist Church, $20,000; Home for Incurables, 

 $15,000; Asylum for Indigent Women, $15,000; 

 and Protestant Episcopal Hospital, $10,000. 



Nichols, J. Howard, Boston, gift to the town of 

 Kingston, N. H., a library building. 



Noble, Mrs. William Belden, Washington, 

 D. C., gift to Harvard University for a religious 

 lectureship, $20,000. 



Osborne, Mrs. Miriam, New York city, bequests 

 made available by decision of the court on proceed- 

 ings for a partition of her real estate, for the estab- 

 lishment of the Miriam Osborne Memorial Home, 

 the bulk of her estate of several millions, and to 

 Yale University a quarter of the residue. 



Palbpt, Calista M., New York, gifts to charita- 

 ble institutions aggregating $300,000. 



Palmer, Mrs. T. W., Detroit, Mich., gift to the 

 city, a fountain on the " Campus Martius," costing 

 $15,000. 



Paton, Mrs. Annie S., New York city, bequest* 

 to Princeton University and the Manhattan Eye and 

 Ear Hospital, New York, the reversion of $100,000 

 and $50,000 respectively. 



Payne, Oliver H., New York, gift to Cornel'i 

 University, for a Cornell Medical College in New 

 York city, $500,000 for the building, and $1,000,000 

 for endowment. 



Parsons, Daniel Kimball. M. D., Chicago, 111., 

 gifts to Beloit College, Beloit, Wis., on the raising 

 of $150,000 by its friends, $50,000, and to Moun; 

 Holyoke College, on similar terms, a like amount. 



Perry, John, gift for a new building for thu 

 Kansas City Boy Orphans' Home at Westport, $25.- 

 000. 



Pfalzer, John, Brooklyn, bequest to St. Leonard':? 

 Roman Catholic Church, $20.000. 



Phelan, James D., San Francisco, Cah, gift to 

 the city, a library and recreation building, with 

 books, for the almshouse ; cost, $10.000. 



Phillips Andover Academy, Friends of, gifts 

 toward a gymnasium, $36,000. 



