USA > New York > Who's who in New York (city and state) 1904 > Part 108
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United States under the management of Daniel Frohman, in 1896, in The Courtship of Leoni; has since played leading roles in various dramas and starred in Janice Meredith, 1901. Is this season playing with her own company in Leo Ditrichstein's comedy, Harriet's Honeymoon." Married J. K. Hackett in 1897. Address, 38 East 33rd St., N. Y. City.
MANNING, Henry S .:
Was graduated from Yale in 1862; married Miss Leona C. Pearce. Director 60 Wall St. Co .; director Guardian Trust Co .; president Pedrick & Ayer Co .; di- rector American Mail Steamship Co. The International Bank, The Interna- tional Banking Corporation, New Am- sterdam Casualty Co. Member Univer- sity, Union League, Loyal Legion, Army and Navy, and New Yacht Clubs. Resi- dence, 3 West 50th St .; office, 60 Wall St., N. Y. City.
MANNING, James H .:
President Weed-Parsons Printing Co .; born Albany, N. Y., Sept. 22, 1854; son late Daniel Manning; graduate of Al- bany Free Academy, 1873; married, 1879, Emma J. Austin, of Albany. Il'as ma- yor of Albany two terms; interested as officer and director in various corpor- ations including Hudson River Tele- phone Co. Club, Army and Navy. Resi- dence, 409 State St .; office, 39 Columbia St., Albany, N. Y.
MANNING, William T .:
Clergyman of the Protestant Episcopal Church. Assistant rector of Trinity Par- ish and Vicar of St. Agnes Chapel; born England, 1866; came to this country twenty-four years ago; was graduated from the University of the South at Se- wanee, Tenn. Entered the ministry under Bishop Kip of California. Ordained priest by Bishop Nichols in 1891 and be- came rector of Trinity Church. Redland. California. In 1893 made professor of dogmatic theology at the University of the South. In 1896 became rector of St. John's Church, Lansdowne. Pennsyl- vania, and built it up into a flourishing parish; 1898 became rector of Christ Church, Nashville, Tennessee, freeing the parish in five years from an indebtedness of an amount of more than thirty thou- sand dollars; 1903, became vicar of St. Agnes' Chapel. Dec., 1904, declined elec- tion to Diocese of Harrisburg. Elected assistant rector of Trinity Parish. Ad- dress, St. Agnes' Chapel, N. Y. City.
Actress; born Troy, N. Y., 1868; daughter William H. and Esther By- ram Hegeman; married Richard Mans- field in whose company she takes lead- ing roles Address, 316 Riverside Drive, N. Y. City.
MANSFIELD, Henry B .:
Captain, U. S. Navy; born New York; sea in clipper ship Golden State, third mate, 1861-62; entered Naval Academy, Feb. 27, 1863; yacht America, in search of Confederate privateers, 1863; was graduated 1867, having served in Ma- rion, Macedonian, Winnepec and Minne- sota; special service, 1867-68. Pro- moted to ensign, 1868;
Mohongo and Mohican, Pacific Fleet, 1869-70; Eclipse, expedition to Siberia in 1869; com- manded second launch from Mohican, in expedition which cut out and burned the piratical steamer Forward in Tecu- pan River, Mexico. Promoted to Mas- ter, 1870; to lieutenant, 1871; torpedo duty, 1871; Coast
Survey steamer
Hassler, Agassis Expedition, through Straits of Magellan, 1872; survey of coast of Lower California and Hydrog- raphy on California coast, 1873-74;
Michigan, 1874-75; Asiatic Squadron, Yantic, Saco, Mohongo and Tennessee, 1875-77; Navy Yard, New York, 1877- 81; Constellation, to
Ireland, special service, 1880; commanding C. S. S. En- deavor, 1881; commanding C. S. S. Ged- ney, 1882; commanding C. S. S. Bache, 1882-84; Hydrography, Jupiter Light, to Fowey Rocks and west coast of Florida; approaches to N. Y .; Pensacola, Euro- pean Station, 1885-88; commanding C. S. S. Hassler, Hydrography, coast of Cali- fornia, 1SS8-89; commanding C. S. S. Patterson, general survey of S. E. Alas- ka, 1SS9-93. Promoted to lieutenant- commander, Jan. 3, 1890; U. S. receiving ship Vermont, Jan., 1893-96; ordered to command the Fern, Jan., 1896-97. Con- missioned as commander, May, 1897; lighthouse inspector, April. 1897, to May, 1898; May, 1898, to Sept., 189S, commanding the U. S. S. Celtic, North Atlantic Squadron; Sept., 1898, to Dec., 1898, Navy Yard, N. Y .; Dec., 1898, to Dec., 1899, lighthouse inspector; Dec., 1899, to 1901, commanding U. S. S. Lan- caster. Promoted to Captain, Feb. 9, 1902; charge of recruiting rendezvous, N. Y .. Nov., 1901, to April, 1903; Naval War College until Oct., 1903. Member Naval Examining and Retiring Board until Nov., 1903, Washington, D. C .; is
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now on duty on U. S. S. Iowa. Ad- cessful plays, Oct., 1897, he produced at the Fifth Avenue Theatre The Devils Disciple; Oct., 1898,
dress, cure Navy Department, Washing- top D. C.
MANSFIELD, Howard:
Lawyer; born Hamden, Conn .. July 2. 1849; son of Jesse Merrick and Julia Tut- tle Mansfield; was graduated from Yale 1871, A. M., 1874; Columbia Law School 1874; married, Narragansett Pier, R. I .. 1895, Nellie Coolidge Tuttle; admitted to the Bar, 1874; member firm Lord, Day & Lord; New York Botanical Gardens. Na- tional Sculpture Society. N. Y. Bar As- sociation, Metropolitan Museum of Art. American Museum of Natural History: Japan Society, London. Clubs: Century. Players, Yale, Groller, University, Law- yers, Barnard, National Arts (N. Y. ). St Botolph (Boston), Caxton (Chicago) Residence, 21 W. 36th St .; office. 49 Wall St., N. Y. City.
MANSFIELD, Richard:
Actor; was born on the island of Hell- goland, May 24th, 1857. His mother was Mme. Mansfield Rudersdorf. the famous prima donna; was educated at various places on the continent and at a private school in Germany. After leaving school he studied art at South Kensington: soon came to the United States and be- came a clerk for Jordan, Marsh & Co., of Boston; 1875, returned to England and tried in vain to sell some of his pictures, so joined a strolling company at a salary of £3 a week, and soon began to rise in his profession. After several years spent in England, returned to the U. S. and made his first appearance in Les Man- teaux Noires at the Standard Theatre. N. Y .; soon after played the part of Nick Vedder in Rlp Van Winkle; was soon of- fered a place by A. M. Palmer at the Union Square Theatre, and won great applause in the Parisian Romance in 1883; played in Victor Durand at Wal- lack's in Jan., 1885; at the Lyceum in Sept., 1885, in In Spite of All. He then became a star and opened at the Madison Square Theatre in Prince Karl, Feb. 21, 1887; 1888, went to England and produced Parisian Romance and Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde, at the Lyceum. He made a great success in London with Richard III. and returned with it to this country; played at the Garden Theatre, N. Y., in 1891, in the play Don Juan, written by himself; later scored a great success in the Merchant of Venice and the Scarlet Letter; 1895, purchased Harrigan's Thea - tre, N. Y., and named it the Garrick; here he produced some of his most suc-
played Cyrano de Bergerac at the Garden Theatre. It is his greatest success since Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Since played Julius Caesar and Old Heidelberg. Married, in 1592. Beatrice Cameron; has one son. Address, 316 Riverside Drive, N. Y. City.
MANTELL, Robert Bruce:
Tragedian; born Irvine, Ayrshire, Scot- land. Feb. 7, 1854; son of James and Elizabeth Mantell. His first appearance in America was with Mme. Modjeska in 1878, later with Fanny Davenport; for some years has had his own company, appearing principally in Shakespearean roles. Address, Lambs Club, N. Y. City.
MAPES, Charles V .:
('hemist. The founder of the Mapes family in America, Thomas Mapes, reached N. E. at an early date; one of the founders of Southold, L. I., 1640. Of his descendants, General Jonas Mapes, torn 1786, was an officer In the army for nearly forty years; he served throughout the War of 1812, and was commissioned Major-General in 1816; his son. James J. Mapes, turned his attention to science and became famous as an analytical chemist. Charles Victor Mapes is the only surviving son of Professor Mapes, was born N. Y. City, July 4, 1836; has three sisters, Mary Mapes Dodge, the ed- itor of the St. Nicholas, Sophy Mapes Tolles, the artist, and Catherine T. Bun- nell, of San Francisco. When he was eleven years of age his father removed to Lyons Farm, N. J., where the growing boy became fond of farm life, and inter- ested himself greatly in the application of chemistry to agriculture, and when only fourteen he had collected a small chemical laboratory. Several persons of later prominence were then studying ag- riculture under Profesor Mapes, among them George A. Waring, author of the Elements of Agriculture, and association with these helped to develop the active intellect of the boy; 1853, entered Har- vard college; he was graduated in 1857, having given his principal attention to the sciences, especially to chemistry. He proposed to enter upon a professiona ca- reer after leaving college, but circum- stances forced him to engage in commer- cial business, while at the same time assisting his father in the editing of the Working Farmer; his subsequent career was actively devoted to mercantile and manufacturing pursuits, during which
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he continued his studies in agricultural | (Empire, Nov., 1900); Don Caesar's Re- chemistry, giving particular attention to plant feeding. This field of study had then been little developed, and he gave much attention to it, closely investigat- ing, and writing much on this and cog- nate subjects. Among his papers which attracted most widespread attention may be mentioned: Some Rambling Notes on Agriculture and Manures, Effects of
Fertilizers on Different Soils, and of Classification and Requirements
Crops; the last set forth the leading ingredients-ammonia, phosphoric acid and potash-of the staple crops; defined the relative importance of these in each case, and gave the sources, condition and
strength of the fertilizing materials requisite for each crop. He has served as vice-president and manager of
Mapes Formula and Peruvian Guano Co. since its organization, in 1877, and has been president of the Fertilizer and Chemical Exchange since its foundation; is a director and trustee in the Martin Kalbfleisch Chemical Co. and other com- mercial organizations, and belongs to many social organizations of N. Y. City; president of the Theta Delta Chi Club, member of many scientific, art and his- torical associations. Married, in 1863, Miss Martha M. Halsted, daughter of the late Chancellor Halsted, of New Jersey. Address, 60 West 40th St., N. Y. City.
MAPES, Victor:
Author, playwright; born N. Y. City, March 10, 1870; son of Charles V. and Martha Mapes; nephew of Mary Mapes Dodge; was graduated from the Colum- bia University in the first class in 1891; studied literature and the drama at Sor- bonne University, Paris, 1892-93; married Anna Louise Hoeke, June 5, 1900; re- sided in Paris from 1892 to 1896. His first play, La Comtesse de Lisne, was pro- duced in that city at the Theatre Mon- dain, and was a pronounced success; while in Paris he was the correspondent of the N. Y. Sun. On his return to the U. S., in 1897, he became stage manager for Daniel Frohman at the Lyceum Theatre. His first play produced in N. Y. City was a one-act play, A Flower of Yeddo, at the Empire Theatre. Was dra- matic critic N. Y. World, 1898-99; man- ager of the Globe Theatre in Boston, 1903- 04. Among the plays he has produced are La Comtesse de Lisne, (in French), (Théatre Mondain, Paris, May, 1895) ; A Flower of Yeddo, (Empire Theatre, N. Y. City, Nov., 1898); The Tory's Guest,
turn, (Wallack's N. Y. City, Sep., 1901); Captain Barrington (Manhattan Theatre, 1903). Mr. Mapes is a member of the University Club, The Lambs, The Co- lumbia University Club, the Phi Beta Kappa and Psi Upsilon Clubs. Author of: Duse and the French; and a contributor of short stories to magazines. Residence. New Rochelle; office, 60 West 40th St., N. Y. City.
MARBLE, Frank:
Lieutenant, U. S. Navy; born in and ap- pointed from N. Y. City; naval cadet Sept. 4, 1884; ensign, July 1, 1890; lieu- tenant (junior grade), Jan. 25, 1898; lieu- tenant, March 3, 1899; Boston, 1888; Pen- sacola, 1889; Newark, 1891; Petrel, 1891; Mohican, 1893; Naval War College, 1894; N. Y. City, 1896; Baltimore, 1899; Brook- lyn, 1900; Baltimore, 1900; Constellation, 1900; N. Y. City, 1901, to Aug., 1902; office Naval Intelligance, Oct., 1902; secretary to General Board, Jan. 1903; also aide to Admiral of the Navy. Address, The Men- dota, Washington, D. C.
MARBLE, Manton:
Journalist; born Worcester, Mass., Nov. 16, 1835; was graduated from Uni- versity of Rochester, 1855; on staff Bos- ton Journal, N. Y. Evening Post; pro- prietor and editor N. Y. World, 1862-76; delegate to Bimetallic Congress, Europe, 1885. Author of: A Secret Chapter of Po- itical History. Member American Geo- graphical Society, Scientific Alliance, New England Society. Member of Metropoli- tan, Manhattan, Century, New York, Bedford Clubs. Address, Bedford, N. Y.
MARCUS, Louis William:
Jurist; born May 18, 1863, Buffalo, N. Y .; prepared at Williams Academy and was graduated from Cornell University Law School, 1888; admitted to the Bar in the same year. Married, Nov. 19, 1889, Ray R. Dahlman, of Buffalo, Surrogate of Erie County since 1895. Republican. Member of Delta Kappa Epsilon Frater- nity. Thirty-second degree Mason. Ad- dress, Buffalo, N. Y.
MARDEN, Orison Swett:
Author and editor of Success Magazine; born Thornton, N. H., about 1850. Thrown upon his own resources by early death of his parents, he worked his way through New Hampton Institute and Bos- ton University, being graduated A. B., in 1877; A. M., 1,879, Harvard Medical School; then went through School of Oratory, Boston University Law School and earning his way by managing
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ing summer hotels; spent some time | entrance to the best Eastern publications;
in Europe; subsequently engaged in but up to the appearance of the Hoe business in Rhode Island, Florida, poem, in 1897, his work had created no Nebraska and South Dakota. In 1894 he published his book, Pushing to the Front, which has since gone through nearly one hundred editions, in this coun- try, Great Britain, Canada and Japan, in which latter country it is a text book in the government schools, in both English and Japanese. In 1897 he founded the magazine, Success. Author: Rising in the World, or Architects of Fate, (1895), (published also in England); How to Succeed, (1896); Success, (1897); The Secret of Achievement, (1898); Character, the Grandest Thing in the World, (1899); Cheerfulness as a Life Power, (1899); The Hour of Opportunity. (1900); Good Manners and Success. (1900): Winning Out, (1900), (published also in England and Japan); How They Succeeded, (1901); Elements of Business Success, (1900) ; Talks with Great Workers, (1901); Econ- omy, (1901); An Iron Will. (1901); editor: Consolidated Encyclopaedie Library, (1901); Stepping Stones, (1902); The Young Man Entering Business, (1903); Stories from Life, (1904); editor Little Visits with Great Americans, (1903). Ad- dress, The Success Company, Washington Square, N. Y. City. great popular impression. This poem, however, was hailed everywhere with va- rying criticism; some critics called it an insult to labor; others called it a psalm of labor and "the battle cry of the next thousand years." It was copied through- out the world; was translated into nearly every living tongue; was discussed in newspapers and preached from pulpits. In 1899 he abandoned his educational work to devote himself to literature, and with his wife and child moved to N. Y. City, where he has resided for five years. In 1897 his first book was published, The Man with the Hoe and Other Poems; in 1901 came his second book. Lincoln and Other Poems; he has also given his ver- sion of the human problem involved in the Hoe poem in a booklet. entitled The Man with the Hoe, with Notes by the Author; has also published his bacca- laureate sermon on The Social Con- science, delivered at the Stanford Uni- versity. Among his later prose work is A Short History of the City of San Francisco, and an article entitled The Romance of the Central Pacific; among his later poems are The Mighty Hun- dred Years, and a memorial-day poem, MAREAN, Josiah T .: Our Deathless Dead. He is about to publish (1906) his third book of verse; also an illustrated collection of his five poems based on Millet's paintings, and entitled Field Folk: Interpretations of Millet. Address, Westerleigh, Staten Island, N. Y.
Jurist; born Maine, Broome County, N. Y., 1842; was graduated from Normal School, Albany, 1862. Admitted to the Bar in 1866; practiced law in Brooklyn. Elected district attorney of Kings County in 1897; elected justice of the Supreme Court in 1898 for term ending Dec. 31, 1912. Address, 126 Willow St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
MARKHAM, Edwin .:
Poet, writer and lecturer; born Oregon City, Ore., April 23, 1852, of Colonial descent. When about five years old he removed with his widowed mother to Cali- fornia, settling upon a stock ranch and farm near Suisun, in Solano County. Later he worked his way through the San Jose State Normal School, and the Santa Rosa College; still later he made special studies in literature and Christian Economics. Began teaching, and in 1897 while head master of the observation school of the University of California, "The Man with the Hoe" was published, and the poem immediately attracted the attention of both hemispheres. From boyhood he had been writing for news- papers and magazines, and had found
MARKOE, Francis H., M.D .:
Surgeon; born N. Y. City, March 20, 1856; received the degree of A. B. from Princeton, 1876; M. D., College of Physi- cians and surgeons, 1879; New York Hos- pital 1880; assistant demonstrator of an- atomy, 1880-84; demonstrator. 1884-87; clinical lecturer in surgery at Physicians and Surgeons, 1887-1900; professor clini- cal surgery, 1900 to present; attending surgeon Bellevue. 1887-1900; attending surgeon St. Luke's Hospital, 1889 to pres- ent; attending surgeon New York Hospi- tal, 1899 to present. Member of Physi- cians Mutual Aid Society, County Medi- cal Society and Academy of Medicine; also a member of the University, Union, Metropolitan and N. Y. Yacht Clubs. Ad- dress, 15 East 49th St., N. Y. City.
MARKOE, James W., M.D .:
Surgeon; was graduated M. D. at Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, 1885;
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house surgeon New York Hospital,
1886; resident surgeon Nursery and Child's. Hospital, 1887; first resident physician in Sloane Maternity Hospital, 1889; attending physician Maternity Hos- pital, Blackwell's Island; attending phy- sician Society Lying-in Hospital of the City of N. Y. Member of Racquet, Century, Metropolitan and N. Y. Yacht Clubs. Address, 12 West 55th St., N. Y. City.
MARKS, William Dennis:
Engineer; born St. Louis, Feb. 26. 1849; son of Dennis and Elmira Bacon Marks, both of Connecticut; was graduated from Yale, Ph. B., 1870; C. E., 1871. Whitney professor dynamic engineering. Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1877; superin- tendent International Electrical Ex-
position of Franklin Institution, 1884; engineer and president of the Edi- son Electric Light Co., Philadelphia, 1887; author: The Relative Proportions of the Steam Engine; Revised Edition of Nys- trom's Mechanics' Pocket Book; The Fi- nances of Gas and Electricity Manufac- turing Enterprises. Member Franklin In- stitute, American Philosophical Society, Art Club, Philadelphia. Address, West- port, N. Y.
MARLOWE Julia (Sarah Frances Frost)
Actress; born England, Aug. 17, 1870; first appearance on the stage was in the chorus of a juvenile Pinafore Co .; was prepared for the stage by Miss Ada Dow, and at sixteen appeared in a Shakespear- ian part; first appearance as a star was in New London, Conn., April 27, 1887, when she adopted the name of Julia Mar- lowe; appeared as Beatrice in Much Ado about Nothing in 1891; is this season starring in association with E. H. Soth- ern. Address, 34 West 69th St., N. Y. City.
MARSH, Frederick:
Major U. S. Army; born Watertown, N. Y. He entered U. S. Military Acade- my from Missouri, 1873; was graduated 1877; assigned to Second Artillery, with station at Baltimore, Md .; transferred to First Artillery, May, 1878; served at Fort Adams, Newport, R. I., and Governor's Island, N. Y. City, to Oct., 1881; at Pre- sidio, San Francisco, with Light Artil- lery, to 1884; at Artillery School, Fort Monroe, Va., graduating in 1886; instruc- tor of natural and experimental philoso- phy at West Point to Aug., 1888; with regiment in San Francisco to 1891; in charge of military prison, Alcatraz Is- land; member of board to select sites for
fortification on Pacific coast; first lieu- tenant, 1884; to Fort Hamilton, N. Y. H., with regiment, 1891; to Fort Barrancas, Fla., 1897; chief mustering officer for Louisiana, 1898; Captain Sixth Artillery, Oct., 1898; commanding post of St.
Augustine, Fla., winter of 1898-99; to Honolulu, H. T., April, 1899; to Manilla, P. I., Oct., 1899; to Fort du Pont, Del., Sept., 1901; with company in artillery maneuvres, Long Island Sound, 1902; commanding Fort Strong, Boston Harbor, since Sept., 1902; major, Artillery Corps, Aug. 11, 1903. Address, Fort Strong, Mass.
MARSHALL, Charles H .:
President and director of Alabama Mineral Land Co .; was graduated from Columbia University in
1858. Married Miss Josephine L. Banks. Trustee of At- lanta Mutual Insurance Co .; director of the Hanover National Bank, Hanover Safe Deposit Co., Liverpool and London and Globe Insurance Co., and Mexican Telegraph Co. Member of the Union, Century, City, Metropolitan, Riding and Reform Clubs. Residence, 6 E. 77th St .; office, 5 William St., N. Y. City.
MARSHALL, Edward:
Newspaper editor and correspondent; born Enfield Centre, N. Y., May 31, 1868; son of Rev. Davis C. Marshall; edu- cated public schools, Rochester, N. Y .; married, 1893, Judith Berolde, Buffalo, N. Y .; Sunday editor of N. Y. Press, 1888; secretary N. Y. State Tenement House Commission, 1894; on editorial staff N. Y. Journal, 1896-97; of the World, 1897-98; was correspondent dur- ing Spanish-American War for the N. Y. Journal. Residence, 3 W. 8th St .; office, 23 5th Ave., N. Y. City.
MARSHALL, Henry :
Ex-State Senator; born Cambridge N. Y .; was educated in the public schools of his native town, and soon after at- taining his majority took an active in- terest in politics, being for several years a member of the Washington County Republican Committee, serving one term as Civil Justice of his town; resigned his office to engage in journal- ism, and was for several years em- ployed as an editorial writer on various newspapers in northern N. Y., and as a correspondent at Saratoga Springs for several of the N. Y. and other daily papers. Meanwhile, he took up the study of law, and was graduated from the Al- bany Law School in the class of 1882, of which he was president. Admitted
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WHO'S WHO IN NEW YORK.
to the Bar, he went to N. Y. City, where MARSHALL, William A .: he has since practiced his profession continuously, his residence being in Brooklyn, where he soon became inter- ested in politics, and has been at vari- ous times a member of the Kings Co. Republican Committee. In the fall of 1895, he was elected to the Assembly on the Republican ticket; re-elected 1896 and 1897; fall of 1898, elected to State Senate; re-elected 1900 and 1902. In the Senate of 1903, was made chairman of the Committee on Insurance and a member of the Cities, Codes, Public Education, and Military Affairs. Resi- dence, Brooklyn, N. Y .; office, 1302 Broadway, N. Y. City.
MARSHALL, Henry Rutgers:
Architect, author; born July 22, 1852; was graduated from Columbia College, 1873; received the degree of M. A. from Columbia in 1875; L. H. D., from Rut- gers College, 1903; has been in active practice as an architect since 1878; is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects; past president of the N. Y. chapter of that body; member of the art commission of the City of N. Y. appoint- ed by Mayor Low, Jan., 1902 to 1905; has contributed many articles, critical and otherwise, to the architectural journals; has devoted a great deal of attention to the study of the theory of art and to psychology and philosophy in general. Author: Pain, Pleasure and Aesthetics (1894); Aesthetic Principles (1895) ; In- stinct and Reason (1898) beyond this has contributed a large number of arti- cles to psychological and philosophical journals, both in this country and in England. Member of the American So- ciety of Naturalists, of the American Philosophical Association and of the American Psychological Society. Resi- dence, 142 E. 18th St .; office, 3 W. 29th St., N. Y. City.
MARSHALL, Nina Lovering:
Educator, author; born Kingston, N. Y., May 28, 1861; daughter of Arthur Ward and Carolina Ward (Trumbull) Marshall; was graduated from Wellesley, 1895; teacher of science at Misses Ely's school. Member N. Y. Wellesley Club, Association Collegiate Alumnae, Wo- man's University Club. Author: The Mushroom Book, and articles, principal- ly botanical, to periodicals. Home, Metu- chen, N. J. Address. The Misses Ely's School, 85th and 86th Sts., Riverside Drive, N. Y. City.
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