torial staff Woman's Companion, September, 1904-October, 1906; fashion editor N.Y. Sunday American since April, 1907. Occasional con- tributor to periodical literature.
FULLER, Sarah, 122 Concord St., Newton Lower Falls, Mass.
Teaching; b. Weston, Mass., Feb. 15, 1836; dau. Hervey and Celynda (Fiske) Fuller; ed. public schools of Weston and Newton and in the Eng- lish and Classical School of West Newton. On Nov. 10, 1869, organized a public day school for deaf children in Boston; was principal of this (The Horace Mann School for the Deaf) from Nov. 10, 1869, until retirement in June, 1910. In 1890 taught Helen Keller to speak. Mem. Board of Directors of the Am. Ass'n to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf; mem. of the Woman's Education Ass'n of Boston; vice-pres. Exec. Com. of Sarah Fuller_Home School for Little Deaf Children; mem. Board of Directors of Boston Education Ass'n for the Deaf; mem. of the New England Educational League. Favors woman suffrage. Author: An Illustrated Primer; A Set of Phonic Charts. Episcopalian. Mem. Neighbor Improvement Soc., Church Guild. Recreations: Musical entertainments, reading.
FULLERTON, Anna Martha, Landour, Mussou- rie, United Provinces, India. Physician; b. Agra, United Provinces, India, Aug. 16, 1853; dau. Rev. Robert Stewart and Martha (White) Fullerton, American mission- arles; ed. Philadelphia Girls' High School and Normal School, Woman's Med. Coll. of Pa. (M.D.), '83; post-graduate work in Europe. Taught 8 years in Girls' High School, Philadel- phia; before entering Woman's Med. Coll. of Pa., taught in latter as demonstrator of ob- stetrics, and later clinical prof. of gynecology. Physician in charge Woman's Hospital of Phila- delphia, 1886-96; taught in med. school, Lodiana, India, 1899-1903 and 1906-07. Went to India in 1899 and has been engaged in med. missionary work ever since; has now retired from very active work, on account of health; has been asssociated as an honorary worker with the Foreign Missionary Soc. of the Am. Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, N.Y. City. Author of articles on Gynecology and Obstetrics, contributed to the various journals on these subjects published in America; two books for nurses, entitled: Ob- stetric Nursing, and Surgical Nursing; a book for schools entitled: The Human Body and How to Take Care of It. Presbyterian. Formerly connected with the Am. Med. Ass'n and the Pa. State Med. Socs, also the County Med. and Obstetrical Socs. of Philadelphia; mem. Ass'n of Med. Women, and the Med. Missionary Ass'n of India.
FULLERTON, Edith Loring (Mrs. Harry B. Fullerton), Medford Station, Long Island, N.Y. Author; b. Brooklyn, N.Y., Oct. 24, 1876; dau. John A. and Eleanor Louise (Switzer) Jones; ed. Friends schools of Pa., Pratt Inst., Brooklyn, N.Y.; m. Bristol, Pa., June 3, 1898, Harry B. Fullerton; children: Hope, Eleanor, Loring. Co-worker with husband on the Long Island R.R. Experimental Stations and lecturer on agricul- tural subjects. Interested in agricultural uplift. Author: How to Make a Vegetable Garden; The Lure of the Land; Small Gardens for Small Folks. Editor of The Long Island Agronomist; contributor to magazines, weeklies and dallies. Mem. N.Y. State Agricultural Soc., Suffolk Co. Agricultural Soc.; pres. Long Island Agricultural Soc.; associate mem. Pa. School of Horticulture for Women. Recreation: Floriculture.
FULLICK, Elizabeth, Dana Hall, Wellesley, Mass. Teacher, artist, lecturer; b. Alton, England; came to U.S. in girlhood; educated in schools of Coldwater, Mich., and Vassar, A.B. '78; student of art in Europe, 1888-96. Teacher in Portland, Ore., two years; Tacoma, Wash., three years; Staten Island, N.Y., 1896-1901; teacher and lec- turer in Dana Hall, Wellesley, Mass., since 1901.
FULTON, Beatrice Joanna Shattuck (Mrs. Frederick S. Fulton), 675 Magnolia Av., Pasa- dena, Cal.
Teacher and librarian (now retired); b. Nor- wich, N.Y., May 6, 1860; dau. John Samuel and Joanna (Terry) Shattuck; ed. schools of Norwich, N.Y.; Vassar Coll., A.B. '85; m. Norwich, N.Y., July 14, 1886, Dr. Frederick S. Fulton (died Mar. 26, 1889); children: Ruth, b. June 5, 1887; Mar- gery (Mrs. Robert Freeman), b. Dec. 26, 1888. Teacher, Miss Mittleberger's School, Cleveland, O., 1885-86; Norwich (N.Y.) High School, 1893-94; St. Joseph (Mo.) High School, 1894-96; Pillsbury Acad., Owatonna, Minn., 1896-98. Sup't of cir- culation, Buffalo Public Library, 1898-1911. Mem. of B'd of Directors, Y.W.C.A., Pasadena, Cal. Occasional contributor to periodicals. Presby- terian. Republican Progressive. Mem. D.A.R.
FULTON, Linda de Kowalewska (Mrs. Robert Fulton), Delaware Av., Buffalo, N.Y. Artist and writer; b. Niagara Falls, N.Y., Mar. 27, 1858; dau. Count Piotr de Kowalewski (a Polish patriot officer and exile) and Asenath (Whitney) Kowalewska; ed. private schools; m. Niagara Falls, Robert Fulton (died 1910). Trans- lated: The Jew (from the Polish); Carine (from the French of Louis Enault. Author: Nadia, the Maid of the Mist, a story of Niagara; has done much newspaper work, art critiques and short stories. Landscape painter (has exhibited); also poet and lecturer. An officer in the Buffalo Chapter D.A.R.; is first vice-regent of Niagara Frontier Chapter Daughters of 1812, through descent from her grandfather, General Parkhurst Whitney, officer in that war and a distinguished pioneer of the Niagara frontier. Episcopalian. Favors woman suffrage. Past pres. of the Scribblers; sec. Buffalo Soc. of Artists.
FULTON, Mary Celia, Young Women's Christian Ass'n, St. Louis, Mo.
Education secretary Y.W.C.A.; b. Newark, O., Nov. 5, 1882; dau. J. Willis and Harriet (Glick) Fulton; ed. Denison Univ., Granville, O., B.S., Univ. of Chicago, M.S. Instructor modern lan- guages in Broaddus Inst., Clarksburg, W.Va., 1904-05; in Scio Coll., Scio, O., 1905-06; dean of Coll., Lexington Coll., Lexington, Mo., 1912. Educational sec. in St. Louis Y.W.C.A. Favors woman suffrage. Cor. sec. during Ohio campaign for Licking Co. Equal Suffrage League. Baptist. Pres. Investigation Club, 1911-13; mem. Research Club, 1911-13, at Nowark, O.
FULTON, Sara Acer (Mrs. Edward Fulton), 1009 West California Av., Urbana, Ill.
Born Shelby Center, N.Y., Jan. 7, 1861; dau. Volney A. and Charlotte (Peck) Acer; ed. Vas- sar Coll., A.B. '84; m. July 23, 1896, Edward Ful- ton. Prof. of mathematics, Wells Coll., 1886-96. Bloomington Presbyterian Missionary Soc.; mem. Trustee Presbyterian Church, Urbana; cor. sec. Ass'n of Collegiate Alumnæ. Presbyterian. Mem. Am. Mathematical Soc., 1892-97; Fortnightly Club, Champaign Social Science Club.
FURMAN, Nellie E. C. (Mrs. George Furman), 121 Hooper St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
Born Middletown, N. Y., Jan. 12, 1871; dau. Edward P. and Mary Elizabeth (Harford) Camp- bell; ed. Brooklyn Girls' High School; m. Brooklyn, N.Y., Oct. 14, 1890, George Furman. Director of The Internat. Sunshine Soc., sec. Internat. Sunshine Dep't for the Blind, sec. Sunshine Home for Blind Babies, Dyker Heights; pres. Southern Division N.Y. State Intenat. Sun- shine Soc.; ex-sec. Crystal Missionary Soc. of First Reformed Church, Brooklyn, N.Y. Teach- er of Young Men's Bible Class. Mem. Rainy Recreations: Rowing, Day Club of America. walking. Mem. Dutch Reformed Church.
FURNESS, Caroline Ellen, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
Teacher: b. Cleveland, O.; dau. Henry Ben- jamin and Carrie S. (Baker) Furness; ed. Cin- cinnati public schools, Vassar Coll, A.B. '91, Ph.D. Columbia Univ., 1900. Teacher in high schools, West Winsted, Conn., and Columbus, O.; ass't in observatory, Vassar, 1894-1911; asso- clate prof. of astronomy, Vassar, 1911. Mem. Audubon Soc., N.Y. League of Unitarian Wo- men. Ass'n of Coll. Alumnæ, Associate Alumnæ of Vassar Coll. Favors woman suffrage. Has made scientific contributions to the Astronomical Journal, Astronomische Nachrichten, and Popu-