Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 January 1891 — THE MISSES FULLER. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

THE MISSES FULLER.

Two o' the Justice’* Daughters About t» Wed. The engagements have been announced of two daughters of Chief Justice Fuller’s numerous family. About a yyar ago one of Justice Fuller’s daughters eloped, and great was the talk thereat. The Chief Justice rerjvered, and now the society of the capital is agog over the more ceremonious marriage of two other of hia daughters. It is pleasant to state that the young people who ran away and

got married are happy and prosperous. The coming marriages are to be comme il fau t. One of the brides is Miss Mildred [Fuller, the fourth of the (family. She is said to be exceedingly attractive in appearance and also

in mental make-up. She is a graduate of Wells College, Aurora, New York, from which Mrs. Cleveland received her sheepskin. Miss Mildred Fuller took high honors at her graduation. She is to become the wife of Hugh Wallace, of Tacoma, Wash. It is interesting to note that in Miss Mildred's career at college she wrote a play called “Dreams,” and that she performed the leading part in a representation of it in the college theater. Another bride in the coming marriages is to be Miss Grace Fuller, the

eldest of the Chief Justice’s family of daughters. Miss Grace i 3 petite and charming in appearance. . She has been a tre- j mendous favorite! in W ashington dr awing-roo ms ever since her father took office.

Miss Grace is a distinct blonde. She was the leading figure in the receptions that followed Mr. Fuller’s entrance into Washington life, for she stood beside her mother, and attracted universal attention. Miss Grace will be married next spring.

MILDRED FULLER.

GRACE FULLER.