Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1948 — Page 5
MONDAY, NOV. §, 1048 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ———
focal Deaths. Dr. H Longden, DePauw Wil i Services Set Lt George Jones ‘Grand Old Man, Dies i Vin For Mis. bean
pital after five years of {liness, - . . G. Killed in War Mission ‘was in m Henry Boyer Longden, the “Grand Old O’Brien, foreman of the Chevro- was born in Bowling Green, Ky.
w ! coh Mrs. Ethel C. Bean, 324 Park Rites Tomorro Had Been Associated With University Ave. former grocery owner who, died yesterday in General HosAir Con Fly - 73 Years; Was Faculty Member 54 Years Was Employed at Cor er Times State Service v fed t in Washps REENCASTLE, Nov. 5.-The campus of DePauw University] Chevrolet Body Co. i be Buried OOTY = ran A today. Services for William # , wh Services for 1st Lt. George A. Man” of the university, was dead. 0 M.| Services for Mrs. Bean, who Jones, who was killed on an Army Three times acting president of DePauw and a pioneer in the|let Commercial Body Co. for the and lived in Indianapolis 26 years, Air Corps mission over France, development of the school, Dr. Longden died last night in Putnam last 15 years, will be held at 10 will be held at 1:30 p. m. in
Feb. 14, 1945, will be held at 2:30, County Hospital here after a long illness. He was 88.
p. m. tomorrow in Jones & Mat:
thews funeral home, Brownsburg. Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery. A graduate of Technical High Schdol, Lt. Jones was a bombar-dier-navigator and squadron leader in the 8th Air Force. He was 22 when he was killed. A member of Tuxedo Park Baptist Church, he was employed in H. Lieber Co. when he entered service. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orbray P. Jones, and two sisters, Miss Glinda Jones and Mrs. June Gray, all of Brownsburg, and .the paternal grandparents, Mr. .and Mrs. George Jones, Indianapolis.
Muncie Man Dies KNOXVILLE, Tenn, Nov. 8 (UP)—Phillip W. McAbee, 65-year-old retired manufacturer of Muncie, Ind., died here late last ign while en route to Melbourne, a.
Relieve
DePauw could never forget the man who, for 73 years, had been associated with the university as a student, instructor, professor, vice president and vice president emeritus. Holding nearly every
executive post during his 5¢ years
as a member of DePauw's faculty, he was revered by alumni and undergraduates alike as the “Grand Old Man.” “The day of his retirement, Longden Day, June 15, 1935, was the occasion for alumni from all
over the nation to travel to De- §
Pauw in his honor. Until his illrfess one year ago, he had continued to exert a strong influence in university affairs as vice president emeritus. Unparalleled Record Born Sept. 13, 1860, in Vevay, Ind., he was the son of Samuel Longden, a Methodist minister who emigrated to the Midwest from England. : A flip of a coin turned Dr. Longden’s steps toward DePauw rather than another institution of
learning.
His record. with DePauw was believed unparalleled in the his-
j
DEPAUW PIONEER DIES— Dr. Henry B. Longden, three times acting president of DePauw University and a pioneer figure in the school's development, died yesterday in Putnam County Hospital, Green-
Old Man.
a. m. tomorrow in St. Philip Neri Catnolic Church. Mr. O'Brien,| who died Saturday in Methodist Hospital, lived at 633 N. Tacoma! Ave. He was 63, A native of Binghampton, N. Y., his body will be returned! there for burial Thursday. He had lived in Indianapolis 31 years. Superintendent of the old Marmon Motor Company's body trimming depastment for several years, he worked in supervisory capacities for the Murray and Hayes Body Corporation when the company went out of business. He was a member of the St. Philip Neri Catholic Church and its Holy Name Society and the Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Anna O’Brien; a brother, Thomas! O'Brien; three sisters, Misses, Lena and Emma O’Brien and| Mrs. Anna Hurley, all of Bing-| hampton; a nephew, Fay McHale,
Moore Mortuaries Peace Chapel. From 1928 to 1933 Mrs. Bean: owned a grocery at 4745 English Ave. Bhe is survived by two sons, Clarence and Hubert M.| Bean, Indianapolis; a sister, Mrs. Clyde Fisher, Evansville; two nieces and two grandsons.
ALMANAC STARTED IN 1732 Benjamin Franklin began publishing Poor Richard's Almanac in 1732.
| | {
Miami; another nephew, Francis O'Brien and a niece, Miss Cath-! erine Hurley, both of Binghampton.
Greencastle. He extended his tra-|
- . tory of American education. castle. ey A ggg tiretient® De) $ Dr. Longden devoted his entire s 00 5. relirement, LF, Constipatio n life to the welfare of DePauw. A|llY on the support of the “Grand|Longden continued to live in
‘Pleasantly!
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graduate of the class of 1881, he held a Phi
Pauw in 1881 on the day he became 21 as an instructor in German literature. After advancing to full professorship, he served at various times as librarian, registrar, vice president and three times as acting president.
degree in 1884 and a doctor of law degree in 1925. turn of the century he studied at Goettingen and Leipzig Universities studied at the University of Berlin, Amherst College and the University of Chicago.
dents through 1935, leaned heav-
Beta Kappa key. He joined the faculty of De-
Dr. Longden received a masters
Before the
in Germany. He later
Eleven of DePauw's 14 presi-
He became director of the|ditional welcome to new students $2,250,000 Rector Scholarship/at the start of each school year largest single/and remained a familiar figure on grant scholarship in the nation|the campus. at the time of its establishment in 1918. He remained director of Grafton Longden, the foundation until his retire-/three grandchildren, Grafton Jr.
Foundation, the
ment.
Mr. Rector later included in his den, and two great-grandchildren. grant funds for a new men’s dormitory which was named in{at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the Gobin
Dr. Longden’s honor.
In addition to every living for-|sity campus. mer president of the university,/man, university president, | a host of national figures came to|the Rev. John Tennant will offiDePauw's campus to celebrate ciate. Longden Day, the day of his reThey included the late/by Dr. Van Denman Thompson, Willis|head of the School of Music.
{irement. Supreme Court
Vandevanter, the late James E. Burial will Watson and David E. Lilienthal,| Cemetery.
Justice,
His survivors include a son, Greencastle;
Lucy Louise and Rebecca LongFuneral services will be held Memorial Church on the univer-
Dr. Clyde E. Wild-!| and |
Organ selections will be played
be in Forest Hill
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