Gertrude Ogden Tubby

[5] In 1908, Tubby edited and published the novelist Donna R. Cole's Chums: Or, An Experiment in Economics, a "volume of contemporaneous history" (under the pseudonym D. R. C.): "sane wholesome stories of a number of living women and girls who have met and overcome various obstacles in life.

[3] As Hyslop's assistant, Tubby investigated a wide range of psychic phenomena, including mediumship, telepathy, clairvoyance, psychokinesis, and survival.

Tubby contributed a number of articles to the ASPR's Journal and Proceedings, and in 1935 published Psychics and Mediums, A Handbook for Students.

Miss Tubby has an orderly mind which enables her to clarify the matter with which she deals and to give it scientific classification.

Her advice on such subjects as the individual development of mediumship, and how to conduct a psychic seance is lucidly and methodically set forth.