ELECTION OF FELLOWS 617 



Charles Wilson Brown, Ph. D., A. M., Brown University, Providence, Rhode 

 Island. Assistant Professor and Head of the Department of Geology, 

 Brown University. 



Frank Carney, A. B., Granville, Ohio. Professor of Geology, Denison Uni- 

 versity. 



Edward Salisbury Dana, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., 24 Hillhouse avenue, New Haven, 

 Connecticut. Professor of Physics and Curator of the Mineralogical Col- 

 lection, Yale University. • 



Cassius Asa Fisher, A. B., A. M., 1832 Baltimore street N. W., Washington, 

 D. C. ; U. S. Geological Survey. 



Albert Johannsen, B. S., Ph. D., U. S. Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. 



Geo. Frederick Kay, M. A., State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. Pro- 

 fessor of Mineralogy, Petrography, and Economic Geology, State University 

 of Iowa. 



Henry Landes, A. B., A. M., University Station, Seattle, Washington. Pro- 

 fessor of Geology, University of Washington, and State Geologist of Wash- 

 ington. 



George Burr Richardson, S. B., S. M., Ph. D., Washington, D. C. Assistant 

 Geologist, U. S. Geological Survey. 



Joaquim Candido da Costa Sena, Engenheiro de Minas pela Escola de Minas de 

 Ouro Prato, Brazil. Director of the State School of Mines and Professor 

 of Mineralogy and Geology. 



Earle Sloan, Charleston, South Carolina. State Geologist of South Carolina. 



George Willis Stose, B. S., U. S. Geological Survey, Washington, D. C. Geol- 

 ogist and Editor of Geologic Maps. 



Charles Kephart Swartz, A. B., Ph. D., Baltimore, Maryland. Associate Pro- 

 fessor of Geology, Johns Hopkins University. 



On call of the President, memorials of the Fellows who had died since 

 the Albuquerque meeting were presented by title as follows : 



MEMOIR OF HOMER T. FULLER 

 BY EDMUND OTIS HOVEY 1 



Dr Homer T. Fuller, son of Sylvanus and Sarah M. (Taylor) Fuller, 

 was born at Lempster, New Hampshire, November 15, 1838, and died at 

 Saranac Lake, New York, August 14, 1908. 



He was prepared for college at Kimball Union Academy, and gradu- 

 ated from Dartmouth in 1864 at the head of his class. 



After serving three years as principal of the Fredonia (New York) 

 Academy, he spent two years in study at Andover and Union theological 

 seminaries, and then became pastor of the Congregational church at 

 Peshtigo, Wisconsin. He remained there two years, and then returned to 

 the teaching profession as principal of the Saint Johnsbury (Vermont) 



1 The author desires to acknowledge his indebtedness to Professor B. H. Finkel, of 

 Drury College, for data used in the preparation of this notice. 



