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...Spalding & Bros...
...Angels Author Horgan tells a story whose background is the Eastman School of Music at Rochester, N. Y. Citizens of that place will immediately recognize such thinly-disguised characters as Tycoon Eastman (Henry Ganson), Conductors Eugene Goossens (Vladimir Arenkoff) and Albert Coates (Sir Alfred Banner). But Publishers Harper & Bros, are banking on the book's attracting a wider attention than Rochester's. They paid Author Horgan $7,500 and royalties for his book, hope it will sell as many copies as previous Harper Prize Novels (Anne Parrish's The Perennial Bachelor, Glenway Wescott's The Grandmothers...
...CRIMSON reporter, more than half the merchants in Harvard Square have joined President Roosevelt's program for national recovery. Among the stores that have joined are: Leavitt & Perice, J. August Inc., Walter A. Burke, The Haberdashery. The Harvard Co-operative Society, James Brine Co., Daley's Drug Inc., Gomatos Bros., Morisson MacGowan, J. T. Phelan Co., Worcester Bros. Co., Ruth Evelyn, E. F. Kemp. The First National Stores, Eaton Pharmacy, Amee Bros., Edwin R. Sage, La France Co., Russell R. Cameron, Bernice Cannon. Gustie's Restaurant, Fred Olssons, Cahaly's, Wright & Ditson, Valeteria Shop. Briggs & Briggs, and Max Keezer...
...Yale had won because he mistakenly expected his Yale confrere to return the courtesy. William Meikleham, Columbia stroke in 1886, who usually referees the race, this year decided he was too old. Harvard suggested a Yale man to replace him, Julian Wheeler Curtiss, 75. president of A. G. Spalding & Bros., who usually runs the Poughkeepsie Regatta...
...Good-looking Publisher Hammond, 40, was back on home soil. He had been brought up in Tennessee, got to be a bank vice president in Arkansas whence he was hired in 1922 by Lord & Taylor. Manhattan department store, as its treasurer. Five years later he became president of Gimbel Bros, store in Pittsburgh, there stumbled through a back door to the publishing business when William Randolph Hearst bought the store's radio broadcasting station for $900,000. In course of the negotiations Mr. Hearst hired Mr. Hammond...