Word: schuveldt
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...much-discussed new Dawes bank (TIME. Sept. 12). It is called City National Bank & Trust Co. (instead of Dawes Bank). It starts business with a capital of $4,000,000. surplus of $1,000,000. several new directors. These include Elisha Walker, onetime Transamerica head; Vice President Charles Schuveldt Dewey of Colgate- Palmolive-Peet; Publisher William Franklyn Knox of the Chicago Daily News. Announcement of the new bank and the fact that it had taken over all of Central Republic's deposits was made on the day that the statement of condition was reported, averting a possible run which...
...directors of Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co. met last week to discuss their company's dividend.* After they decided to lower it from $2.50 annually to $1 they told Charles Schuveldt Dewey to make the announcement. Onetime unofficial financial adviser to Poland, Mr. Dewey has served C-P-P as vice president in charge of finance for six months. To explain the dividend reduction he said: "The Company has over a long period and by the expenditure of large sums of money, placed its brands in the forefront. . . . The company contemplates continuing its advertising campaign on a basis that will...
Last week the following were news: Charles Schuveldt DewEy, onetime (1927-30) financial adviser to Poland, was made vice president in charge of finances of Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Corp, From 1920-24 Mr. Dewey was a vice president of Northern Trust Co., Chicago, then served three years as assistant Secretary of the Treasury. In Warsaw he advised Poland on its foreign borrowing policy, kept its national debt down to $15 per capita, initiated a budget balanced monthly I instead of yearly...
Last to step from the limousine and lie down under the robbers' guns, was Charles Schuveldt Dewey, financial adviser to Poland for the last two-and-a-half years. Aside from Mr. Dewey's letter of credit, which the Rumanian robbers scorned, they took from his well-lined pockets $2,000 in cash...
...Charles Schuveldt Dewey (Yale 1904) changed his address from U. S. Treasury Dept., Washington, D. C., to Bank of Poland, Warsaw, Poland. Though he is called "American Financial Adviser to Poland," he and the U. S. disclaim all official connection. As Architect Albert Kahn, of Detroit, and Engineer Hugh Lincoln Cooper, of New York, hire out their expert services to the Soviet, so Economist Dewey puts his expert advice at the disposal of the Polish Treasury. It was he who was behind the recent deal by which Standard Steel Car Corp. underwrote $20,000,000 worth of Polish State Railways...