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EDWARD WINSLOW FOX 3L.
Edward Winslow Fox 3L., of Portland. Maine, died of typhoid fever on Monday night, September 18, in Rockport, Maine, at the home of his fiancée. Having graduated from Philips Exeter. Academy where he received highest honor in all departments, he entered Harvard in the fall of '94. His academic course he finished in three years, graduating magna cum laude. In the Law School, also, he was one of the first men in his class, and, as a result, was early chosen an editor of the Law Review. He was twenty-three years old at the time of his death.
HENRY HOBART BROWN '76.
Henry Hobart Brown '76, of Philadelphia, founder and principal of the well-known De Lancey School, died on Thursday, August 18, at the Bryn Mawr Hospital, Pennsylvania. He was forty-four years old at the time of his death, which resulted from blood poisoning and septic pneumonia. A wife and son survive him.
Before coming to Harvard, where he graduated with high honors, Mr. Brown attended the Pennsylvania Military College. His life since has been devoted to the cause of education. From a small school for boys he built up a day school that has become an important educational center in Philadelphia. Indeed, his personal influence among boys has been so great, and his life-work so successful, that he has often been compared with Dr. Arnold of Rugby.
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