Monday, Feb. 15, 1932

Personnel

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.

Broadwayfarers know the songwriting team of Paul James and Kay Swift, whose lilting hits were in the first Little Show and Fine and Dandy. And they know this is no ordinary Tin Pan Alley combine. Paul James is James Paul Warburg, 35. brilliant banker-son of the late great Banker Paul Moritz Warburg. Kay Swift : is his wife.

In Wall Street, where he works hard for the $141,028,000-in-assets Manhattan Co. group of concerns (Bank of Manhattan Trust, International Acceptance Banks. New York Title & Mortgage and others), young Mr. Warburg is the junior member of another "team." Its senior member is John Stewart Baker, 38, whose great grandfather was one of the Manhattan Co.'s founders 133 years ago. whose father. Stephen Baker, 72, preceded the late famed Mr. Warburg in the chairmanship and still lends distinction to its board, i Last week the Baker-Warburg team advanced to the topnotch. Young Mr. Baker, who had followed in his father's exact steps by being made president of Bank of I Manhattan Trust at 34. was last week | elected chairman of the holding company I and young Mr. Warburg was made vice chairman. Old, rich in tradition, Manhattan Co. has never had its destinies in hands so young. If all goes well, the Baker-Warburg team has at least 35 years to make itself famed.

Henry G. Dalton, a partner in Pickands, Mather & Co., are producers and ship-building firm in Cleveland, was made chairman of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., succeeding 77-year-old James Anson Campbell whose health was broken in the titanic effort to merge Youngstown with Bethlehem. Mr. Campbell will assume a title new to finance: Chairman Emeritus.

Harry H. Rogers, Southwest banker and oilman, onetime (1926-27) president of Rotary International, resigned as chairman of Exchange National Bank of Tulsa because of failing health.

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