Word: vanderlip
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...three years and three months of publication, Rural Progress had lost $951,000, that continued publication was made possible by cash obtained from Administration critics like Dr. Edward A. Rumely (executive secretary of Publisher Frank Gannett's National Committee to Uphold Constitutional Government), the late Banker Frank A. Vanderlip and his family, Jar-Maker George A. Ball. Like practically every farm paper in the U. S., Rural Progress usually manages to find something wrong with President Roosevelt's farm policies. These facts constituted the most damaging charges that Mr. Minton could bring against...
Poet Edgar Albert ("Eddie") Guest, Helen Keller, Mrs. Frank Arthur Vanderlip, Boston's onetime Mayor Malcolm Nichols, Glass Manufacturer Raymond Pitcairn, the family of Harvard's President James Bryant Conant, the shades of the elder Henry James, the late Financial Publisher Clarence W. Barren all hold one thing in common - a belief in the theological doctrines of Emanuel Swedenborg. They find solace in the Swedenborgian service, which resembles the Anglican, in the Swedenborgian belief in immediate judgment after death, and they experience exhilaration in contact with one of the most versatile scientific minds the world ever knew. Last...
Last week Mrs. Vanderlip, widow of the Manhattan banker and a pillar of the Manhattan Swedenborgian church, presided at the Manhattan Swedenborg banquet to which President Roosevelt sent a praiseful telegram. In Boston, Swedenborgians dined in their Church of the New7 Jerusalem on Beacon Hill. In Philadelphia, Episcopalian Joseph Fort Newton spoke at a Swedenborg gathering in the University Club, while in nearby suburban Bryn Athyn, Swedenborgians of the schismatic General Church of the New Jerusalem held a dinner in the assembly hall of their slowly-building cathedral. These Swedenborgians have a bishop-George de Charms-whereas the main body...
...trophy is donated by the seven Advocate Trustees who include Professor Charles Abbott '28, Bernard P. Day '25, Walter D. Edmonds, Roy E. Larsen '21, Hoffman Nickerson '11, Hon. Samuel H. Ordway, Jr. '21, and Frank A. Vanderlip...
Died. Frank Arthur Vanderlip, 72, one-time (1897-1901) Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, onetime (1909-19) President of New York's National City Bank; after an operation; in Manhattan. Born of poor parents in Aurora, Ill., Banker Vanderlip was first a newspaperman in Aurora and Chicago. While associate editor of the Chicago Economist he was called upon to advise financiers in the panic of 1896. His handling of the panic won him his Treasury Department job. From 1919 to 1924 Banker Vanderlip made repeated trips abroad studying international finance. He predicted a world financial catastrophe unless all countries...