Word: editrixes
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Mother of five, grandmother of three, Editrix Roosevelt editorially led off thus: "With this issue we make our bow to the public. Babies! Can you think of anything more wonderful?" She told a tale on Assistant Editrix Dall: "I will always remember when my first-born wept bitterly all of one evening just as some guests were assembling for dinner. I stood it as long as I could, then I went to the telephone and asked a specialist wrhat might be the matter with the baby. He suggested that I turn her over my knee with her little feet...
Just Babies approached its subject from many an angle. The domestic economy angle appeared in "A Layette for $11.10? Here's How" and "The Budget Nursery." A child specialist outlined 24 ideal hours in a baby's life and Assistant Editrix Dal! replied across the page with a report of how difficult she found carrying out the specialist's routine. There were five articles by laymen and physicians on obstetrics and pediatrics. A typical Macfaddle was to be found in a True Story entitled "I Became A Mother at 42?The simple story of a, woman who experienced the great...
...white-haired dame with the patrician profile and shallow-crowned velvet hat "with feather fantasy caught under the nice brim ... for the 40's or 50's or 60's" was unmistakably Mrs. Edna Woolman Chase, gracious, able editrix-in-chief of the three Vogues published in Manhattan, London, Paris. The drowsy blonde in the broadcloth beret (for ladies "this side of thirty") at the opposite side of the group was surely Nancy Hale Hardin, author of The Young Die Good, staff member of Vogue for four years. At Mrs. Chase's left, representing "the stretch...
...Vivacious Patricia Reilly ("Pat") Foster was appointed editrix to succeed Editor Harold Norling ("Swanie") Swanson who resigned June i to become story editor of RKO films in Hollywood...
Small, shorthaired, smart-looking Editrix Foster, 31, has been sitting in the editorial chair for six months, since outgoing Editor Swanson took leave of absence to try his hand at the film business. She is "the kind of woman editor who can tie up loose ends." Her first job, in 1921, was in the advertising department of Bookman, under Stanley Marshall Rinehart Jr.; her next, as assistant to Editor John Chipman Farrar. Farrar & Rinehart later published her first novel, Big Business Girl, co-authored by Editor Swanson. After Bookman was sold Mrs. Foster worked for the George H. Doran...