302 



GIFTS AND BEQUESTS. 



Tuck, Edward, an American citizen resident in 

 Paris, France, gift for the benefit of the American 

 colony in Paris and American visitors to that city, 

 the Franklin Hospital, erected on the most ap- 

 proved American models and managed by Ameri- 

 can physicians and nurses. 



Tully, Miss Cecilia, Boston, Mass., bequests to 

 Woodstock College, $30,000; St. John's Seminary, 

 $10,000; Apostolic College, County Limerick, Ire- 

 land, $5,000 ; Boston College, for scholarships, $4,- 

 000; Working Boys' Home, $2,000; Religious So- 

 ciety of the Sisters of Mount Carmel, and the 

 Oblate Fathers Novitiate at Dublin, each $1,000; 

 and Little Sisters of the Poor, Home for Destitute 

 Catholic Children, House of the Good Shepherd, 

 and Carney Hospital, each $500. 



Turkey, Sultan of, gift to the University of 

 Pennsylvania, through Prof. Herman V. Hil- 

 precht, a collection of Babylonian antiquities, 

 said to be the richest in the world. 



Tuskegee (Ala.) Institute, gift from a friend, 

 for a girls' dormitory, $25,000. 



University of California, gift from friends, 

 $30,000; the Alumni Association, $9,000; and a 

 friend for salary of the professor of physiology for 

 three years, $15,000. 



Upson, Dr. Anson Judd, Utica, N. Y., be- 

 quest to the public library, $5,000. 



Vanderbilt, Mrs. Cornelius, New York, gift 

 to St. Bartholomew's Church, an entire new front, 

 cost $200,000. 



Vanderbilt, Frederick W., New York, gift to 

 Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University, for 

 a new dormitory, land and money, value about 

 $500,000. 



Van Rensselaer, Mrs. Mary Thorn, New 

 York city, bequest to her husband and sister, 

 the interest to be used in aiding the poor and 

 sick, $25,000. 



Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., gifts 

 from friends, a library building and a chapel ; 

 from Alumnae Endowment Committee, $9,000; for 

 the Abbot and Beach Scholarships, each $8,000; 

 and for a scholarship founded by the Association 

 of Students of Miss Hersey's School, Boston, 

 Mass., $5,000. 



Vickery, Percy O., Augusta, Me., bequest to' 

 the Winthrop Street Universalist Church, $10,000. 



Von Pape, Ernest, New York, bequest to the 

 German Hospital, $5,000. 



Voorhees, Ralph, Clinton, N. J., gifts to 

 Rutgers College, $50,000; Coe College, Cedar 

 Rapids, Iowa, $25,000; and Carroll College, 

 Waukesha, Wis., $20,000. 



Wade, J. H., Cleveland, Ohio., gifts to Cleve- 

 land Fresh Air Camp and Lakeside Hospital, each 

 $100,000; Cleveland Day Nursery and Kinder- 

 garten Association, $50,000; and Salvation Army. 

 $1,000. 



Wales, Mrs. Maria W., Boston, Mass., be- 

 quests to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, $20,- 

 000 ; Harvard College and the Kindergarten of the 

 Blind, each $10,000; Home for Aged Colored 

 Women and the Children's Hospital, each $1,000; 

 and the Tuckerman Circle, $100. 



Walker, Mrs. Mary G., Brooklyn, N. Y., be- 

 quests to New York Association for Improving the 

 Condition of the Poor, and St. Luke's Hospital, 

 each $100,000; New York Association for Improv- 

 ing the Condition of the Poor, for the Fresh Air 

 Fund, and Society of St. Johnland, each $50,000; 

 Home for Incurables, Fprdham. and Children's 

 Aid Society, Orphans' Home and Asylum of the 

 Protestant Episcopal Church, Colored Home and 

 Hospital, Home for Old Men and Aged Couples, 

 New York Institute for the Blind, and St. Luke's 

 Home for Indigent Christian Females, all of New 



York city, each $25,000; New York Society for 

 Relief of the Ruptured and Crippled, $15,000; and 

 Samaritan Home for the Aged, $10,000. 



Walsh, Mrs. Ann Eliza, Brooklyn, N. Y., gift 

 to Henry McCaddin, Jr., fund for education of 

 candidates for the Catholic priesthood, $450,000. 



Wanamaker, John, Philadelphia, Pa., gift to 

 Bethany College, Philadelphia, Pa., a new build- 

 ing, cost $300,000. 



Warburg, Felix M., New York city, gift to 

 new building fund of the Hebrew Technical 

 School for Girls, $5,000. 



Waters, Mrs. Sarah Ann, New York city, be- 

 quests to the American Female Guardian Society 

 and Home for the Friendless, improved real estate 

 valued at $15,000, and to the Women's Auxiliary 

 of the Guild for Crippled Children of the Poor, 

 $1,000. 



Webb, Mrs. Henrietta A., widow of William 

 H. Webb, founder of Webb Academy and Home' 

 for Shipbuilders, New York, bequests to the- 

 academy, about $1,000,000; Hospital for Ruptured 

 and Crippled, and Daisy Fields Home for Crippled 

 Children, at Edgewater, N. J., each $1,000; and 

 Night Refuge, Children's Aid Society, and Little- 

 Mothers of New York, each $500. 



Webb, William Seward, M. D., New York 

 city, gift to the University of Vermont, for pur- 

 chase of the herbarium of Cyrus G. Pringle, $6,- 

 000. 



Webber, Mrs. A. S., Nashville, Tenn., gift for 

 a polytechnic institute there, $150,000. 



Weeks, Mrs. Augusta J. S., Patchogue, L. I., 

 bequest to that village, ground for a public park. 



Weeks, George W., Clinton, Mass., bequests 

 to Clinton Hospital, $30,000; the First Unitarian 

 Church of Clinton, $22,000; the city of Clinton, 

 for the site' of a Carnegie Library, $15,000, for 

 shade trees, $3,000, and to provide a course of 

 lectures, $10,000; the Carnegie Library fund for 

 the purchase of scientific books, $10,000 (the in- 

 terest only to be used), and for books and pictures 

 for the Children's Room, $3,000; and Woodland 

 Cemetery, $10,000. 



Weil, Theodore G., New York, bequests to 

 Mount Sinai Hospital, $2,000; Five Points House 

 of Industry, St. Francis Hospital, Children's Aid 

 Society, and Aguilar Free Library, each $1,000; 

 St. John's Guild Floating Hospital, Hebrew 

 Orphan Asylum, Montefiore Home for Incurables, 

 Home of the Good Shepherd, Emanuel Sisterhood 

 Day Nursery, Home for Indigent Commercial 

 Travelers, and Skin and Cancer Hospital, each 

 $500; Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Chil- 

 dren, and Society for Prevention of Cruelty to 

 Animals, each $250; and Actors' Fund, $200. 



Weinstock, H., San Francisco, gift to the 

 Universitv of California, for its College of Com- 

 merce, $5*000. 



Wellesley College, gift from Classical Soci- 

 ety of, a society house m the style of a Roman 

 villa. 



Wells College, Aurora, N. Y., gifts from 8 of 

 the Alumnae, for a recreation hall in honor of 

 Dean Helen Fairchihl Smith, $15,000; from the 

 class of 1902, a memorial window, and other gifts,, 

 aggregating $2.000. 



Wells, Daniel, Chicago, 111., bequests to 6 local 

 charities, each $1 ,000. 



Wertheim, Henry P., New York, gift to the 

 University Settlement, a new building. 



Wesleyan University, gift from the brother 

 of Prof. Van Vleck, an observatory, cost $50,000; 

 and from a friend, name withheld, for a new sci- 

 ence building, $75,000. 



Wharton, Joseph, Philadelphia, Pa., gift to 

 Wharton School of Finance and Economy of the 



