Word: conde
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Sued for Divorce. Condé Nast, publisher and chief owner of Vogue, Vanity Fair, House and Garden, Royal, Children's Vogue, Vogue Pattern Book, by Clarisse Coudert Nast, daughter of Charles Coudert, member of the law firm of Coudert Bros., one of the oldest international law firms in the U. S.; in Paris. They have lived apart for some time...
Editor Crowninshield's employer, Publisher Condé Nast, is not one of your editorial Hamlets. Not that he lacks any of Editor Crowninshield's sensibility and finesse, or his modernity in things aesthetic. But Publisher Nast is more practical. For some time he was advertising, then business manager of Collier's Weekly. He now has a string of publications of his own.* His polish is as that of hard ebony beside the soft silk of Mr. Crowninshield...
...Condé Nast, publisher of Vogue, Vanity Fair, House and Garden, Le Costume Royal, is not a publisher of newspapers. In that respect William Randolph Hearst has the better of him. Mr. Hearst, ever watchful for financial gain, makes use of his newspapers to boost his magazines. To this Mr. Nast expresses no objection. But when Mr. Hearst's press undertook to puff Hearst magazines at Mr. Nast's expense, Mr. Nast rose in dignified wrath...
...Condé Nast, editor and owner of Vogue, has abandoned his attempt to establish Vogue in London and has sold the English edition of Vogue to the publishing house of Hutchinson and Company. ... In this connection it is interesting to note that all attempts to establish English editions of American magazines have not failed. The English edition of Good Housekeeping, owned and published by William Randolph Hearst, has become in two short years the leading woman's magazine in England, excepting only Nash's Magazine, which also belongs to Mr. Hearst...
Next to the reprint of this puff patent, appeared the lie direct, subscribed by Condé Nast...