1919-20.] 
Obituary Notices. 
191 
Obituary Notices of Fellows, Honorary and Ordinary. 
By The Assistant Secretary. 
Erskine Beveridge, LL.D. (St Andrews), was educated at Edinburgh 
University, and succeeded his late father as principal of the linen manu- 
facturing firm of Erskine, Beveridge & Co., Ltd., Dunfermline. Following 
upon extensive research in the Western Islands of Scotland, one of which 
— Vallay, in the Outer Hebrides — he subsequently purchased, he published 
in 1903 Coll and Tiree, in which he dealt in exhaustive and interesting 
fashion with the prehistoric forts and ecclesiastical antiquities of these 
places, and gave particulars with regard to ancient remains in the 
Threshnish Isles. He also -published in 1893 The Churchyard Memorials 
of Crail, and was the author of A Bibliography of Dunfermline and 
West Fife, and Burgh Records of Dunfermline from If 88 to 158 f. 
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1904, 
and died on August 10, 1920. 
J. Hamilton Fullarton, D.Sc., was born in Arran in 1856. Deceased 
was one of Glasgow University’s most distinguished students, and later 
a Lecturer in Biology in the University. He was a recognised expert 
in all fishery matters, his writings on the subject being translated into 
almost every European language. For some time he acted as Super- 
intendent of the Scottish Fishery Board Laboratory. Dr Fullarton was 
widely travelled, but in later years had settled in London, where he 
built up a large consulting practice. 
Dr Fullarton was a man of the highest character, proud of his Highland 
birth, and a great fighter for the cause of the crofter. He was elected a 
Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1891, and died in London 
on May 6, 1920. 
Richard D. Graham was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of 
Edinburgh in 1891, and died at 12 Strathearn Road, Edinburgh, in his 
eighty-fifth year, on September 12, 1920. 
Charles Edward Green, head of the well-known publishing firm of 
Messrs William Green & Son, was born in Edinburgh fifty-four years ago. 
He began his career as a medical student at Edinburgh University, but 
the death of his father made it necessary for him to abandon the 
medical course and devote his energies to business. The small concern 
