She served as the executive secretary of the Congressional Committee of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
She gave speeches several times a day, speaking at sits ranging from mines to the homes of butchers to organized dinner dances.
[3] On October 2, 1914, Funk was jailed in Minot, North Dakota for making an unauthorized street speech.
[1] In 1918, Funk was the vice chairman of the woman's liberty loan Committee at the Treasury Department.
[5] During Franklin Delano Roosevelt's administration, Funk served as Assistant Commissioner of the Land Office.