GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



295 



Carney Hospital, Boston, Mass., gifts from 

 friends for a new building for the out-patient de- 

 partment, $10,000; securing a State appropria- 

 tion of similar amount. 



Carpentier, Horace W., gifts to Columbia 

 University, 2 scholarships, $10,000; and to Sara- 

 toga county, N. Y., for a hospital, $10,000. 



Carroll, Mrs. Mary Austin, Boston, Mass., 



fift to the University of Virginia, a pledge of 

 10,000 annually. 



Catholic Missionary Union, Washington, 

 D. C., gift from a priest for the establishing of 

 the Apostolic Mission House there, $10,000. 



Catholic University of America, Washing- 

 ton, D. C., gift from a priest of Pennsylvania, for 

 a fellowship, $11,000; gifts from friends for a 

 training-school for missionaries to non-Catholics, 

 $50,000. 



Chandler, Mary Ellen, New York, bequests to 

 the American Unitarian Association for the Hack- 

 ley School at Tarrytown, $5,000; and to the So- 

 ciety for the Employment and Relief of Poor 

 Women, $500. 



Chapman, William H., New London, Conn., 

 gift to that city, for a manual training-school, 

 $100,000. 



Cheever, William J., North Andover, Mass., 

 bequests to Orphans' Home, and Woman's Chris- 

 tian Relief Association, both of Denver, Col., each 

 $25,000; Essex Institute of Salem, Mass., $20,000; 

 city of Salem for provisions for the needy, $10,000, 

 and for its Public Library, $5,000 ; Salem Marine 

 Society, Seamen's Charitable Society, East India 

 Marine Society, Seamen's Widows' and Orphans' 

 Society, Samaritan Society, and Woman's Friend 

 Society, all of Salem, each $2,000; and Bertram 

 Home for Aged Men, Salem Hospital, Association 

 for Relief of Aged and Destitute Women of Salem, 

 Woman's Christian Relief Society of Denver, Col., 

 and other institutions, the residue of his property, 

 estimated at $300,000. 



Chicago, University of, gifts, from an Amer- 

 ican woman in Paris, for a French school, 

 $200,000 ; and from other friends, $526,000. 



Church of the Heavenly Best, New York 

 city, gift from friend, name withheld, $40,000. 



Clark, Edward W. and Clarence H., Phila- 

 delphia, Pa., joint gift to the University of Penn- 

 sylvania, toward a chair of Assyriology, $100,000. 



Clark, William, Newark, N. J., bequests to 

 Newark Female Charitable Society, Newark 

 Orphan Asylum, Home for the Friendless, Protes- 

 tant Foster Home, and Rutgers College, each 

 $10,000; and Newark Charitable Eye and Ear In- 

 firmary, $6,000. See OBTTUAIUES, AMERICAN. 



Cochran, William F., Yonkers, N. Y., be- 

 quests to St. John's Riverside Hospital, as an 

 endowment, $150,000; Hollywood Inn, as an en- 

 dowment, $100,000, and for library, $10,000; 

 Women's Institute of Yonkers, Church Mission to 

 Deaf-Mutes in New York, Trustees' Fund for 

 Relief of Widows and Orphans of Deceased Clergy- 

 men, and Aged, Infirm, and Disabled Clergymen 

 of the Protestant Episcopal Church of New York, 

 and Presbyterian Board of Relief for Disabled 

 Ministers and Widows and Orphans of Deceased 

 Ministers, each $10,000; and Young Men's Chris- 

 tian Association of Yonkers, $5,000. 



Cole, Henry, Denver, Col., gift to the Meth- 

 odist Episcopal Church of that city, for evangelis- 

 tic work, new buildings, and charities, $350,000. 



Colman, Mrs. Anne Lawrence, Greenwich, 

 Conn., bequests to the Post-Graduate Hospital of 

 New York, for the babies' ward, $5,000 ; Children's 

 Aid Society and Diet Kitchen, New York, each 

 $1,000; and the Newport Hospital and the Char- 

 ity Organization of Newport, R. I., each $1,000. 



Columbia University, gifts from friends to 

 endow the Professorship of Social and Political 

 Ethics, $7,500, and for books for the library, $10,- 

 000; and a joint gift from several friends for the 

 Dean Lung Department of Chinese, $10,925; joint 

 gift by James Stillman, H. McK. Twombly, Edwin 

 Gould, George F. Peabody, James Speyer, Stuyve- 

 sant Fish, Archer M. Huntington, Isaac N. Selig- 

 man, Samuel Thorne, D. Willis James. William E. 

 Dodge, and Mrs. Henry Villard, the two blocks of 

 land in front of the university, known as South 

 Field, cost $1,900,000; cash payment, $400,000. 



Converse, John H., Philadelphia, Pa., Presi- 

 dent of Baldwin Locomotive Works, gift to the 

 Presbyterian General Assembly's Committee on 

 Evangelical Work, $25,000. 



Cook, Joseph, D. D., Glens Falls, N. Y., be- 

 quest to the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Mis- 

 sions, available on the death of his widow, his 

 entire estate, valued at $50,000. 



Cooper, Edward, and others, New York city, 

 joint gift to Cooper Union, for endowment, 

 $600,000. 



Cooper Union, New York, gift from friend, to 

 endowment fund, $25,000. 



Cox, Sarah Silver, Boston, bequests to Boston 

 Home for Incurables, Perkins Institute for the 

 Blind, Boston Industrial School for Crippled and 

 Deformed Children, and the Boston Young Men's 

 Christian Union, each $5,000; and to the Sewing- 

 School of the North End Union, $4,000. 



Crandol, Justis Brazil, Seaville, N. J., be- 

 quests to Hahnemann Medical College and Hos- 

 pital, Philadelphia, and Women's Hospital, Phila- 

 delphia, each $5,000; Old Ladies' Home in Oneida, 

 N. Y., Home for Destitute Children, Peterboro, 

 N. Y., Methodist Episcopal Church, Sea Isle City, 

 N. J., Methodist Episcopal Church, Seaville, N. J., 

 and Calvary Baptist Church, Seaville, N. J., each 

 $1,000. 



Crane, Zenas, Dalton, Mass., gift to the city of 

 Pittsfield, Mass., for a museum of natural history 

 and art, $80,000. 



Cresson, Mrs. Priscilla H., Philadelphia, be- 

 quest to trustees, $500,000, the interest to be 

 paid to the Philadelphia Academy of the Fine 

 Arts to enable students of unusual proficiency to 

 continue, their studies in Europe. The bequest 

 includes a legacy left for the same purpose by 

 Emlen Cresson (died in 1899), which became 

 operative by the death of his widow. 



Crocker, Mrs. William H., San Francisco, gift 

 to University of California, for researches in 

 Mexico, $5,000. 



Currier, Mrs. Lura, New York, bequests to 

 Yale University for a fund as a help to deserving 

 students, $100,000; Columbia University, for a 

 similar fund, $50,000; and Presbyterian Hospital, 

 New York Society for Relief of the Ruptured and 

 Crippled, Madison Square Church Mission, Home 

 for the Friendless, Messiah Home for Children, 

 New York Post-Graduate Hospital, for the 

 " babies' ward," New York Society for Prevention 

 of Cruelty to Children, and Society for Prevention 

 of Cruelty to Animals, each $5,000. 



Curtis, William J., New York, gift to Bowdoin 

 College, $5,000. 



Dana, Ruth Charlotte, bequest to the Catho- 

 lic University of America, Washington, D. C., for 

 a scholarship, $5,000. 



Daughters of the American Revolution, 

 Philadelphia Chapter, gift to the Government for 

 an army recreation building, $10,000. 



Deaconess Home, Milwaukee, Wis., gift from 

 friend for endowment. $5.000. 



De Peyster, Mrs. Cornelius B., New York, be- 

 quest to the New York Historical Society, avail- 



