298 



GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



in the form of " In the name of Josephine," now 

 shown to have been his deceased wife. 



Huyler, John S., New York, gift to Syracuse 

 University, to promote the work of its Christian 

 Associations, $15,000. 



Hyde, Mrs. Henry B., New York, gift to Sara- 

 toga Hospital, a full equipment of sun-parlors. 



Ickelheimer. Henry B., New York, gift to 

 Mount Sinai Hospital, an electrical ambulance. 



Inness, George, New York, gift to the Artists' 

 Fund Society, for aiding old, destitute, and sick 

 painters, $5,000. 



Jackson, Huntington W., Chicago, bequests 

 to 6 local institutions, each $1,000. 



Jaffray, Robert, New York, bequests to Board 

 of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, 

 Board o? Domestic Missions of the Presbyterian 

 church, Board of Church Erection of the Presby- 

 terian Church, Board of Education of the Presby- 

 terian Church, and Presbytery of New York, each 

 $2,000; and New York Society for Prevention of 

 Cruelty to Children, and Working Women's Pro- 

 tective Union, each $1,000. 



Jarvie, James N., Bloomfield, N. J., gift to 

 the city, a library, cost $100,000; and for its en- 

 dowment, $50,000. 



Jencks, Francis M. See WYMAN, WILLIAM. 



Jennings, Frederick B., New York, gift to 

 Williams College, 150 shares of United States Steel 

 Corporation stock. 



Jesup, Morris K., President of New York 

 Chamber of Commerce, gift to that bodv, a marble 

 statue of De Witt Clinton, cost about $12,000; 

 gifts to Princeton University for the library fund, 

 $10,000; and to Hampton Normal and Agricul- 

 tural Institute and Tuskegee Normal and In- 

 dustrial Institute for endowment funds, each 

 $25,000. 



Jewett, Miss Sarah Orne, Boston, Mass., gift 

 to Bowdoin College, a memorial window. 



Jewish Residents in the United States, 

 gifts of 25 cents each on Shekel Day, to promote 

 the Zionist movement in Palestine, aggregating 

 $28,000. 



Johns Hopkins University, gift from friends 

 for endowment of new university buildings, $1,- 

 000.000. 



Johnson Iron Works, Elyria and Lorain, 

 Ohio, gift to the Young Men's Christian Asso- 

 ciations, for the use of their employees, a fully 

 equipped building. 



Jones, Frank, Portsmouth, N. H., bequest to 

 the public library, $5,000. 



Keene, James B., New York, gifts for relief of 

 the poor of the city, $2,500 ; to Charity Organiza- 

 tion Society, and United Hebrew Charities So- 

 ciety, each $10,000. 



Kelly, Howard A., M. D., Professor of Gyue- 

 cology in Johns Hopkins University, gift to Johns 

 Hopkins Hospital for extension of the gynecolog- 

 ical ward, $10,000. 



Kennedy, John S., New York, gift to New 

 York Chamber of Commerce, a marble statue of 

 Alexander Hamilton, cost about $12,000. 



Keyser, William. See WYMAN, WILLIAM. 



King, Miss Mary Bhinelander, Great Neck, 

 L. I., gift to All Saints' Church, a pulpit, choir 

 and clergy stalls, reredos, rood-screen, and other 

 furnishings of the chancel. 



King's Daughters, St. Christopher Chapter, 

 Dobbs Ferry, N. Y., gift to St. Christopher's Home, 

 $r>.(MM). 



Landreth, Eliza G., Philadelphia, bequests 

 to charitable and religious institutions, an estate 

 of $47.000. 



Laudy, Louis H., New York city, gift to 

 Cooper Union for three scholarships, $7,440. 



Lee, Mrs. Susan P., New York, bequest to 

 Washington and Lee University, $30,000. 



Leese, Mrs. S. P., New York, bequests to 

 Central University of Kentucky, $25,000; and 

 Leese Institute of Jackson, Ky., $15,000. 



Lent, Mrs. Sarah E., Peekskill, N. Y., bequests 

 to Helping Hand Association (Peekskill Hospital), 

 and First Presbyterian Church, Peekskill, each 

 $5,000; Board of Home Missions of the Presby- 

 terian Church, $2,000; Board of Missions for 

 Freedmen of the Presbyterian Church, $1,500; and 

 American Seaman's Friend Society, Presbyterian 

 Home for Aged Women, and Colored Home and 

 Hospital, New York city, each $1,000. 



Lewisohn, Adolph, New York, gift to Hebrew 

 Technical School for Girls, toward a building-fund, 

 $75,000. 



Lewisohn, Leonard, New York, nine children 

 of, joint gift to Jewish Theological Seminary, 

 $50,000; and to the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian 

 Society, $125,000. The children also agreed to 

 give $100,000 each to charity in memory of their 

 father. 



Lincoln Memorial University, Cumberland 

 Gap, Tenn., gifts from friends for endowment, 

 $200,000. 



Lindesmith, Rev. E. W. J., Cleveland, Ohio, 

 gift to the Catholic University of America, Wash- 

 ington, D. C., for a scholarship, $5,000. 



Lines, Augustus E., New Haven, bequests 

 available on the death of his widow, to Yale 

 Law School, $50,000; Church of the Redeemer, 

 $20,000; Organized Charities, New Haven Colony 

 Historical Society, City Missionary Society, and 

 Welcome Hall, each $5,000; and St. Francis and 

 New Haven Orphan Asylums, each $2,000. 



Littlefleld, George L., Pawtucket, R. I., gift 

 to Brown University, available on the death of 

 his widow, for a Professorship of American His- 

 tory and a General Fund, his estate, valued at 

 $500,000. 



Loeser, Frederick, and wife, Brooklyn, N. Y., 

 gift to Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, a 

 trust fund of $10,000. 



Lord, Benjamin, New York, bequests to the 

 Reformed Episcopal Church, available on the 

 death of his daughter, for the Sustentation Fund, 

 $17,000; the Theological Seminary, $16,000; the 

 Female Guardian Society, $12,000; to several 

 church homes, each, from $1,000 to $2,000. 



Low, Julia Ann, New York, bequests to House 

 of the Holy Comforter, Free Church Home for In- 

 curables, House of Mercy, St. Luke's Home for 

 Indigent Christian Females, Church Mission to 

 Deaf-Mutes, and St. Mary's Free Hospital for 

 Children, each $1,000. 



McClary, William, Philadelphia, Pa., be- 

 quests to Grand Masonic Lodge to establish a 

 perpetual fund for support of a home for orphan 

 children of Free Masons, $30,000; and Pennsyl- 

 vania Grand Lodge of Free Masons, for support of 

 the Home for Aged Masons in that city, $20,000. 



McCormick, Mr. and Mrs. Harold, Chicago, 

 111., gift to Memorial Institute of Infectious 

 Diseases, for endowment, $1,000,000. 



McCormick, Mrs. N. F., Chicago, 111., gift to 

 University of Wooster (Ohio), toward replacing 

 the burned buildings, $15,000. 



McCormick Theological Seminary, gift from 

 a friend, for a fellowship in New Testament Greek, 

 $30,000. 



McDonnell, E. L., Muskegon, Mich., bequest 

 to establish a home for indigent old women at 

 Fainmnint, Ind., $60,000. 



McKay, Gordon, Newport, R. L, gift for a 

 manual training-school for colored children, the 

 Tower Hill House, South Kingston. 



