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Good Housekeeping

Issue by issue contents page listings for back issues of old Good Housekeeping magazines. Locate subjects, articles, stories, authors, and other information hidden inside various vintage editions of Good Housekeeping magazine.

1952-08 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

1952/08 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

Contents are as follows:

STORIES AND FEATURES:

  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Assignment in Hollywood
  • We Take a Look at Chlorophyll by The Staff
  • Now There’s a New Law About Furs by Max Bachrach
  • “Hit and Run” – A Story of Suspense by John D. MacDonald and illustrated by Alex Ross
  • Lonesome with You by Libbie Block and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • The Trouble With Love by Margaret Cousins
  • The List by Harriett Pratt
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Co-ordinator
  • FASHIONS:
  • BEAUTY:
  • SECURITY:
  • SEWING CENTER:
  • BABY CENTER:
  • STUDIO:
  • CHILDREN
  • BUILDING:
  • APPLIANCES AND HOME CARE:
  • MEDICINE AND HEALTH:
  • MUSIC:
  • TEEN-AGE:
  • FOOD:
  • AUTOMOBILES:
  • NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
  • BUREAU AND CHEMICAL LABORATORY:
  • TEXTILE LABORATORY:
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1952-02 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1952/02 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    STORIES AND FEATURES:

  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Assignment in Hollywood
  • Look, Ma, We’re Moving by Shirley Jackson (article)
  • “Who’s Afraid?” by Dorothy Staley and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “The Bike” by William Saroyan and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “All Good Secretaries Get Married” by Rachel Thornton and illustrated by Frederick Smith
  • The Hurricane by Lucia Alzamora
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Co-ordinator
  • FASHIONS:
  • SECURITY:
  • BUREAU AND CHEMICAL LABORATORY:
  • STUDIO:
  • BUILDING:
  • EDUCATION:
  • APPLIANCES AND HOME CARE:
  • NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
  • FOOD:
  • MEDICINE AND HEALTH:
  • CHILDREN
  • MUSIC:
  • TEEN-AGE:
  • AUTOMOBILES:
  • BEAUTY:
  • BABY CENTER:
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1951-03 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1951/03 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    STORIES AND FEATURES:

  • The Town of the Month: Crescent City, California by Best and Hillyer
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Assignment in Hollywood
  • What My Mother Gave Me by Madge Mahan
  • “Tomorrow and Tomorrow” by Val Teal and illustrated by John McClelland
  • The New Laws of Canasta
  • “The Big Dream” by Elva Williams and illustrated by Frederick Smith
  • “Pattern” by Rachel MacKenzie and illustrated by Mac Conner
  • A New Boss Every Hour by Lorna Slocombe
  • The Case for Privacy by Evelyn Eaton
  • “Revenge” by Alice Griffith Craft and illustrated by Robert Patterson
  • The Meeker Sex by Fredda Dudley Balling
  • My Mother-in-Law Stayed Four Years by Virginia Patterson
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Co-ordinator
  • FASHIONS:
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
  • NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
  • DECORATING STUDIO:
  • SEWING CENTER:
  • FOOD:
  • TEXTILE LABORATORY:
  • CLEANING, MENDING AND APPLIANCES:
  • BABY CENTER:
  • BUREAU AND CHEMICAL LABORATORY:
  • CHILDREN
  • MEDICINE AND HEALTH:
  • AUTOMOBILES:
  • TEEN-AGE:
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1947-12 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1947/12 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “The Miracle Tree” by Kermit Rolland and illustrated by Robert Patterson
  • “Out of a Box” by Charles Robbins and illustrated by George Englert
  • “Two People, Alone” by Richard Mealand and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “Days of Grace” by William Fay and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • TWO-PART STORY:

  • “The Rose and the Yew Tree” — Part 1 of 2 — by Mary Westmacott and illustrated by David Berger
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • The Most Famous Christmas Music by George Marek
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Assingment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Party of the First Part by Helene Wright
  • High Blood Pressure by Maxine Davis
  • Nothing Personal by Russell Maloney
  • Wife Can be Beautiful by Kay Riley
  • These Cream Antiperspriants Won’t Rot Fabrics by Christopher Brooks
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • The Greater Happiness by Margery Sharp
  • Here’s the Way They Wash Your Clothes by Morton Sontheimer
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • FASHIONS:
    Nancy White, Director
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
    Dr. Josephine H. Kenyon, Director
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1947-06 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1947/06 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “All That Matters” by Margaret Cousins and illustrated by Alex Ross
  • “Like a Flower” by Mary King O’Donnell and illustrated by Al Muenchen
  • “The Early Million” by Carl Dreher and illustrated by Bob Harris
  • “Sham” — The $5,000 Prize-Winning Story by Allan Seager and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “Not the Cushion and the Slipper” by Samson Raphaelson and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • CONTINUED STORIES:

  • “The Bright Promise” — Part 2 of 5 — by Richard Sherman and illustrated by Al Parker
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • Summer Concerts by George Marek
  • Anything for a Date? by Helene Wright
  • Assignment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • ,

  • My Opia, I Love You by Kay Riley
  • The World Is Eighteen, Too by Mary Maxtone
  • Sleeping Pills by Maxine Davis
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • The Growing Menace of Vandalism by Morton Sontheimer
  • The Money in Your Life by Lawrence Galton
  • Whatever Happened to Alice? by Katherine Elizabeth Fite
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1947-05 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1947/05 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Oh, Brother, Take Love” by Anita Rowe Block and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “Weep Not For Me” by William Fay and illustrated by Ben Prins
  • “My Shining Palace” by Samson Raphaelson and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “The Chiming Watch” by Eleanor McCoy and illustrated by Mortimer Wilson
  • “Souvenirs of His Late Wife” by C.S. Forester and illustrated by Robert Douglass
  • CONTINUED STORIES:

  • “The Bright Promise” — Part 1 of 5 — by Richard Sherman and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “Composition for Four Hands” — Part 2 of 2 — by Hilda Lawrence and illustrated by David Berger
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • Add an M to the Three R’s by George Marek
  • Whose Great Big Boy Are You? by Helene Wright
  • Assignment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • The Bitter Part of Your Life by Kay Riley
  • Wish for a Spring Bride by Mary Parrish
  • Two Acres and a Brook by Hal Borland
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • The Magic Way to Go to Sleep by Hildegarde Dolson
  • Hardening of the Arteries by Maxine Davis
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1946-12 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1946/12 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Morning Wishes” by Victoria Lincoln and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “Lost on 44th Street” by Samson Raphaelson and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “One Sunny Afternoon” by William Worden and illustrated by Alex Ross
  • “Inconstant Star” by Margaret Cousins and illustrated by Arthur Sarnoff
  • “The Bridge” by H.E. Bates and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “The Voice” — Part 1 of 2 — by Ruth Power-O’Malley and illustrated by James Bingham
  • “Quest of William Hunter” — Part 2 of 2 — by Leon Ware and illustrated by George Hughes
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • Records for Children by George Marek
  • Let the Older Men Alone! by Helene Wright
  • Assingment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • Christmas Rapping by Kay Riley
  • Last Look at 1946 by Katharine Brush
  • Remembrance of Yules Past by Frank Sullivan
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Phlebitis by Maxine Davis
  • How to Go to the Theatre by Kohn Mason Brown
  • Scholarships, and How to Get Them by Frederick Moery Winship
  • Rest Ye Merrie, Gentlemen by Katherine Fite
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1946-07 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1946/07 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Loyalties” by Isabella Holt and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “Communion” by Oliver H.P. Garrett and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “The Finer Things of Life” by Leon Rice and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “The Enchanted Villa” by Robert Hillyer and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “Journey at Sunrise” by D.D. Beauchamp and illustrated by James Bingham
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “Know Your Own Heart” — Part 1 of 2 — by Dorothea Malm and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • “The Man Who Married Money” — Part 2 of 2 — by Margaret Cousins and illustrated by Larry Harris
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • Genius and Showoff by George Marek
  • Assignment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • Put Your Nickel in the Juke Box by Helene Wright
  • Don’t Look Now, But We’re Happily Married by Lloyd Shearer and illustrated by Tran Mawicke
  • Man and His Ties by Judith Chase Churchill
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Anesthesia by Maxine Davis
  • Woman’s Instinct Isn’t So by Carl Van Doren
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1946-05 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1946/05 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Wayward Journey” by Frederick Nebel and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “Substance of a Dream” by Gadys Taber and illustrated by Wesley Snyder
  • “The Judge Goes Out of Town” by Anita Rowe Black and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “A Woman of Fifty” by W. Somerset Maugham and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • “The Way They Wanted Her to Be” by Nancy Hale and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “The Affair at Melchester” — Part 1 of 2 — by Margaret Kennedy and illustrated by Alex Ross
  • “One NIght, One Spring” — Part 2 of 2 — by Day Keene and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • Sh-h! Composer at Work! by George Marek
  • And She Never Saw Him Again by Helene Wright
  • Assignment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • Auto Suggestions by Kay Riley
  • Keep Up With Science
  • Discovery by Beulah Frances Holland
  • Do You Know Any Girls Who Want to Go on the Stage? by Judith Chase Churchill
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Mumps by Maxine Davis
  • Woman Needs Man by Margaret Case Harriman
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1946-03 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1946/03 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “The Outsider” by Margaret Cousins and illustrated by Fredric Varady
  • “The Man Who Talked to Himself” by Clive Grierson Cornish and illustrated by Rolf Tietgens
  • “Love Affair” by Louis Pach and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “The Colonel’s Lady” by W. Somerset Maugham and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “New Member in the Club” by Norman Katkov and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “The Amateur” — Part 1 of 2 — by Marian Cockrell and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “The Turquoise” — Part 2 of 2 — by Charles Morgan and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • How to Help Your Child Practice by George Marek
  • Reasonable Facsimile by Helene Wright
  • Assignment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • Babies You Can Have by Kay Riley
  • Confessions of a Relectant Optimist by Phyllis McGinley
  • Gallstones by Maxine Davis
  • Anything for a Laugh by Bennett Cerf
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • My Friend Landru by Jules Romains
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • We Are Getting Taller by Earnest Hooton
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1946-02 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1946/02 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “On the House” by Walter Weir and illustrated by Bob Harris
  • “The Princess Was There All the Time” by Ruth Power-O’Malley and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “Do You Ever See the Stars?” by Grace Amundson and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “Better in Memory” by Naomi A. Hintze and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “The Turquoise” — Part 1 of 2 — by Charles Morgan and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “Wanted: Someone Innocent” — Part 2 of 2 — by Margery Allingham and illustrated by Al Parker
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • Strictly for Laughs by George Marek
  • You Don’t Have to Be Introduced by Helene Wright
  • Assignment in Hollywood by Harry Crocker
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • Lives of Wives by Kay Riley
  • The Passing Parade by Roark Bradford
  • The Male Coiffure by Judith Chase Churchill
  • Jaundice by Maxine Davis
  • The Library That Things by Donald Culross Peattie
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • Accustomed As I Am by Louis Untermeyer
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1946-01 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1946/01 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Vote for Henry Ladd!” by Max Shulman and illustrated by Alex Ross
  • “One-Way Ticket” by William March and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • “I’ll Get Along Fine” by Wilma Shore and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “A Man of Parts” by Grace Amundson and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “No Other Woman’ by Lorna Slocombe and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “Wanted: Someone Innocent” — Part 1 of 2 — by Margery Allingham and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “Little White Flowers” — Conclusion — by Ruth Power-O’Malley and illustrated by Perry Peterson
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • What Women’s Clubs Can Do For Music by George Marek
  • Who’s Your Friend? by Helene Wright
  • Assingment in Hollywood by Frank S. Nugent
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • Light and Fantastic by Kay Riley
  • A New Year’s Prayer by James Street
  • About Islands by Roderick Peattie
  • Memory Lane by The Editors
  • Cirrhosis of the Liver by Maxine Davis
  • Diamonds in the Street by Meyer Levin
  • The Poetry Page by Emerson Starr
  • Tootie by Loy Byrnes
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Helen Sells, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
    Alice Edith Carroll, Director
  • THE BUREAU:
  • A PAGE FOR CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1945-12 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1945/12 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “The Strange Christmas Dinner” by Margaret Cousins
  • “Veronica” by David William Moore
  • “Round Trip” by Frederick Nebel
  • “The Coin” by Walter Weir
  • “The Avenger” by Gladys Schmitt
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “Little White Flowers” — Part 1 of 2 — by Ruth Power-O’Malley
  • “The Murder in the Stork Club” — Part 2 of 2 — by Vera Caspary
  • ARTICLES AND FEATURES:

  • The Great Man of Music by George Marek
  • Take Your Impulse by Helene Wright
  • Assignment in Hollywood by Frank S. Nugent
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • Ghost of Christmas Past by Kay Riley
  • Mama and the Christmas Tradition by Kathryn Forbes
  • Good Old Limericks by Louis Untermeyer
  • Those Fake Prophecies by Anthony Standen
  • Your Man’s Hat by Judith Chase Churchill
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Our Sleeping Soldiers by Archbishop Francis J. Spellman
  • THE BUILDING FORUM:
    Joseph B. Mason, Director
  • THE STUDIO:
    Dorothy Draper, Director
  • FASHIONS:
    Martha Stout, Director
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Katharine Fisher, Director
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Ruth Murrin, Director
  • THE NEEDLEWORK ROOM:
  • THE BABY CENTER:
    Dr. Josephine H. Kenyon, Director
  • THE BUREAU:
  • THE PLAYGROUND

  • A Page for Children by Courtenay Sage
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1945-07 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1945/07 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Every Woman Does” by Frederick Laing and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “Female” by Darrell Huff and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • “Send In Your Answer” by William March and illustrated by Phil Dormont
  • “The Man Who Was Born in Grand Central” by Robert Cenedella and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “The World of Mr. Hovington” by Anita Rowe Block and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “The Dark Corner” — Part 1 of 2 — by Leonard Q. Ross and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “The Lawbreaker and the Lady” — Conclusion — by Ruth Power-O’Malley and illustrated by James Bingham
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • How to Entertain a Visiting Celebrity by George Marek
  • Town Hall by The Editors
  • Trouble, Somewhat by Helene Wright
  • Going Hollywood by Frank S. Nugent
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • More To Be Pitied by Kay Riley
  • And What Did You Say to Sinatra? by Margaret Case Harriman
  • What Do You and He Talk About? by Helen Van Pelt Wilson
  • If You See These Two Pigeons, You Can Get Five Thousand Dollars by William Bridges
  • The Mystery of a Man’s Pockets by Judith Chase Churchill
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Some of This Unclaimed Money May Belong To You by Sylvia F. Porter
  • The New Plastic Surgery by Maxine Davis
  • It’s Silly to Try to Be Perfect by Marjorie Mattern
  • Tootsie by Loy Byrnes
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Dorothy Draper
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone
  • THE BUREAU:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN
  • Ad for Woodbury Film Finish Powder features large color image of Lucille Ball
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1945-04 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1945/04 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Mighty Fine Day” by Ernest Haycox and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “The Whetstone” by Hamlen Hunt and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • “The Awakening” by Charles Robbins and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • “Front Seat in Heaven” by Louis Golding and illustrated by Al Parker
  • “What Dreams May Come” by Rose Franken and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • TWO-PART STORIES:

  • “Sandra Stone Will Be a Ball” — Part 1 of 2 — by Margaret Cousins and illustrated by Coby Whitmore
  • “Before the Swallow Dares” — Part 2 of 2 — by Victoria Lincoln and illustrated by Lonie Bee
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • The Most Popular Symphonies by Geroge Marek
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • Nothing for the Boys? by Helene Wright
  • Most Likely To Recede by Kay Riley
  • Anything Can Happen in a Year by Katharine Brush
  • Asthma by Maxine Davis
  • What’s Wrong With These Endings? by Carl Van Doren
  • Memory Lane by The Staff
  • Diamonds and Bad Luck by Evelyn Schloss
  • A Place for the Extra Woman by Florence Howitt
  • That Average Baby by Judith Chase Churchill
  • Those Oysters We Eat by Howard Bloomfield
  • A Bachelor Keeps House by Louis Untermeyer
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Dorothy Draper
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • THE BABY CENTER:
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone
  • THE BUREAU:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1943-06 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1943/06 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “What Else Am I?” by Anita Block and illustrated by Alex Ross
  • “You’ll Understand When You’re Older” by Elizabeth Dunn and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “Doris Mutten and the Man Downstairs” by Noel Langley and illustrated by Tom Lovell
  • “Dear Mr. Dix” by Edmund Ware and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “The Roses Were for Her” by Hamlen Hunt and illustrated by Barbara Schwinn
  • “Sweet and Girlish” by Libbie Block and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • NOVELS:

  • “Episode of the Wandering Knife” — Part 1 of 2 — by Mary Roberts Rinehart
  • “Charm Bracelet” — Part 2 of 2 — by Katharine Brush and illustrated by Alfred Parker
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • This Haunting Business by George Marek
  • There’s Smoke, There’s Ire by Kay Riley
  • Situations Right at Hand by Helene Wright
  • This Special School Is for Tomorrow by John Sexton Fraser
  • The Lingo in the Theatre by Henry Stahl
  • Take a Look in His Wallet by Private Reuven Frank
  • Brain Surgery by Maxine Davis
  • If You Don’t Like Your Daughter’s Beau by Florence Howitt
  • When the Movies Were Young by Vernon Pope – 2 pages, 16 reproductions of movie theatre slides used years ago with general messages such as “No Stamping or Whistling Allowed” and requests for ladies to remve their hats
  • If You Were Mrs. Lin Yutang by Nanette Kutner
  • How to Avoid Lightning by Paul W. Kearney
  • You, Too, Can be a Book Collector by John Fleming
  • Is Your Name Smith? by Edith Rose
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Helen Koues
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • BABIES, NEEDLEWORK:
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUREAU:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • The Vanishing Private — Walt Disney’s Donald Duck – One page
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1943-05 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1943/05 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Beyond These Words” by Marlise Johnston
  • “Show Me the Town” by Barbara Aldrich and illustrated by George Hughes
  • “Disillusioned” by F. Hugh Herbert
  • “Mr. Willis Works a Miracle” by Whitfield Cook
  • “Hope Is Where the Heart Is” by Mosser Mauger
  • “Nearly Perfect” by Thyra Samter Winslow and illustrated by Robert Harris
  • NOVELS:

  • “Charm Bracelet” — Part 1 of 2 — by Katharine Brush
  • “The Romance of Henry Menagee” — Part 2 of 2 — by Paul Gallico
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • The Home Brunt by Kay Riley
  • Music Was Not Rationed by George Marek
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • Sugar-Cured by Helene Wright
  • Prizes of War by Margaret Culkin Banning
  • What Goes On at a Costumers by Mary Hamman
  • If You Were Mrs. Jerome Kern by Nanette Kutner
  • Don’t Let Poison Gas Panic You by Paul W. Kearney
  • Sure Ways of Being an Old Maid by Florence Howitt
  • Who Uses It? by Vernon Pope
  • My Seventh Assisstant by Alexander Woollcott
  • How to Buy Art on a Shoestring by Stanley Rayfield
  • What’s Money? by Margaret Case Harriman
  • Parties I Wish I Could Have Attended by William Lyon Phelps
  • Safer Than a Known Way by Eleanor Barry
  • I Have a Pound of Dots by Deems Taylor
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Dorothy Draper
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • NEEDLEWORK, BABIES:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • The Pelican and the Snipe by Walt Disney
  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUREAU:
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1943-02 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1943/02 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “The Trip Down” by Catherine Hubbell and illustrated by Douglass Crockwell
  • “Something Like a Dream” by Frederick Nebel and illustrated by Bob Harris
  • “There Seems to Be a Letter” by F. Hugh Herbert and illustrated by Alfred Parker
  • “The Favorite Suit” by Alberta Pierson Hannum and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “Alone” by Bayard Kendrick and illustrated by Albert Dorne
  • “Do This For Me, My Darling” by Katharine Brush and illustrated by Alex Ross
  • NOVELS:

  • “The Debt” — Part 1 of 2 — by Helen Hull and illustrated by Nicholas Riley
  • “Without Roots” — Part 2 of 2 — by Nelia Gardner White and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • You’ll See Her Later by Kay Riley
  • How Much Does an Instrument Cost? by George Marek
  • What Not to Think About by Marshall Sprague
  • On Not Visiting Places a Second Time by Irwin Edman
  • Why Parents Leave Home by Lester Markel
  • Want to Save Your Teeth? by Maxine Davis
  • Twenty Years Ago by Vernon Pope
  • On Reading Mysteries by Clifton Fadiman
  • If You Were Mrs. Norman Rockwell by Nanette Kutner
  • How to Say Good-bye by Howard Whitman
  • Everybody Worked at Our House by James Ames Wilson
  • How to Pass an Examination by James Crawford Watt
  • To a Woman Whose Baby Was Never Born by margaret Lee Runbeck
  • What Goes on in a Casting Office by The Staff
  • Fighting Words–Who Said Them?
  • The Luck of Johnny Mills by Alexander Woollcott
  • Teens of Our Times by Helene Wright
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Dorothy Draper
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • NEEDLEWORK, BABIES:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Pluto and the Armadillo – Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse – One page
  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUREAU:
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1942-11 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1942/11 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Some Day I Have To Buy a Hat” by Wilma Shore and illustrated by George Hughes
  • “At a Sacrifice” by Margaret Cousins and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “Do You Remember?” by William E. Barrett and illustrated by Hardie Gramatky
  • “A Call for Mrs. Garrett” by Robert Carson and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • “Miss Laurie Will Be Late Tonight” by Dennison Smith and illustrated by Mead Schaeffer
  • “They Said She Wasn’t Much Good” by Barbara Aldrich and illustrated Fedric Varady
  • SERIALS:

  • “Shadows in the Son” — Part 1 of 2 — by Edmund Ware and illustrated by Arthur Sarnoff
  • “Lady Not Alone” — Part 2 of 2 — by Katharine Brush and illustrated by Alfred Parker
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • You’re Welcome by Kay Riley
  • Can You Read These Signs of the Times? by Vernon Pope
  • Distinguished Visitors by George Marek
  • The Watch by Norman R. Jaffray
  • Dearest Jane–You Tell Me by Phyllis Duganne
  • Grace for This Day by Margaret Lee Runbeck
  • How to Write Your Congressman by Mary Jane Gallagher
  • If You Were Mrs. Ogden Nash by Nanette Kutner
  • What the Bible Society Does by The Staff
  • Just Relax by Maxine Davis
  • The Girls We’re Going To Marry When the War Is Done by Corporal Marion Hargrove
  • Snapshots of Your Children by Toni Frissell
  • What I Thought by Margaret Culkin Banning
  • Five SHort Vocabulary Tests by Wilfred Funk and Norman Lewis
  • Don’t Lose These Papers! by Hawthorne Daniel
  • Teens of Our Times by Helene Wright
  • The Censor Reads Your Letters by Jonathan Wake
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • Adopted Babies Should Be Tested First by Hildegarde Dolson
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Helen Koues
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUREAU:
  • BABIES, NEEDLEWORK:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Bambi – Conclusion — Walt Disney – This is a single page with about 3/4’s of the page taken up by an illustration, a little text underneath
  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone

  • Includes “Tableau at Twilight” by Ogden Nash
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1942-10 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1942/10 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Memo to Maggie Brown” by Marian Spitzer and illustrated by Tom Lovell
  • “The Temporary Death of Mrs. Ayres” by Mary Roberts Rinehart
  • “Another Word for Love” by Hilda Sidney
  • “Evelyn Kane Calls on Her Husband” by Lyon Mearson and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • “Mary Osaka, I Love You” by John Fante
  • “Someone Who Cares” by Jessie Scott
  • SERIALS:

  • “Lady Not Alone” — Part 1 of 2 — by Katharine Brush
  • “Never Too Late” — Part 2 of 2 — by Vina Delmar
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • Music Books for Children by George Marek
  • The Crowning Glory by Kay Riley
  • How to Begin a Month by Irwin Edman
  • A Letter to Mrs. Novotny by Margaret Lee Runbeck
  • If You Were Mrs. George Marshall by Nanette Kutner
  • Three Wars Are Too Many by Booth Tarkington
  • Have a Good Time, Daughter by Edward L. Stokes
  • What a Florist Does by The Staff
  • A Chart on Vaccines
  • What to Feed Dogs in Wartime by Dr. Leon F. Whitney
  • Some of My Favorite Insults by William Lyons Phelps
  • Reading Aloud by Clifton Fadiman
  • Snapshot Secrets a Parent Should Know by Mary Louise Barrett
  • No High-School Sorority for My Daughter by Kathleen Park Bennett
  • Teens of Our Times by Helene Wright
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • But Who Were They? by Helen Kelmar
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Dorothy Draper
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUREAU:
  • NEEDLEWORK, BABIES:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Bambi – Part 2 – by Walt Disney – A single page, about half of which is an illustration
  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1942-09 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1942/09 – Cover illustrated by Alex Ross

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “The Clinging Oak” by Margaret Lee Runbeck
  • “A Dance Remembered” by Margaret Cousins
  • “What Mrs. Thomas Said” by Thyra Samter Winslow
  • “The Meeting” by Edward Stevenson with large color illustration by Norman Rockwell spreading the top half of two pages
  • “Lazy Gal” by Gordon Malherbe Hillman
  • “Two by Two” by Mary O’Hara
  • SERIALS:

  • “Never Too Late” — Part 1 of 2 — by Vina Delmar
  • “First Time Alone” — Part 2 of 2 — by Edmund Ware
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • How Some Children Are Taught Music by George Marek
  • You’re Public by Kay Riley
  • Letters from Camp by Margaret Sangster
  • My Snapshot Advice to Parents by Ruth Nichols
  • The Instinct for Happiness by Countess Waldeck
  • Can You Learn Another Language Quickly? by Howard Whitman
  • If You Were Mrs. Elmer Davis by Nanette Kutner
  • Footnotes Only by Katharine Brush
  • Why You Need a Birth Certificate by Victoria Case
  • How Well Do You Know the Comics? by Vernon Pope
  • What Goes on at the Bide-A-Wee Home by The Staff
  • I’ve Been in Australia by Lucille Gordon
  • What I Wish I’d Learned in School by Frances Aves Smith
  • Teens of Our Times by Helen Wright
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Dorothy Draper
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUREAU:
  • BABIES, NEEDLEWORK:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Bambi – Part 1 – by Walt Disney – A single page, about half of which is an illustration
  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1942-06 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1942/06 – Cover illustrated by Molly McMahon

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Got to See That Girl Again” by Gordon Malherbe Hillman and illustrated by Earl Cordrey
  • “Though I Walk through the Valley” by Naomi Lane Bobson and illustrated by Ray Prohaska
  • “Girl Comes Home” by Philip Wylie and illustrated by Alfred Parker
  • “Sleep Not, My Country” by Martha Cheavens and illustrated by Harold Von Schmidt
  • NOVELETTE:

  • “Mrs. Wilson’s Husband Goes for a Swim” by Thyra Santer Winslow and illustrated by Hardie Gramatky
  • SERIALS:

  • “Do You Take These Women?” — Part 1 of 2 — by Vina Delmar and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “A Clock Striking” — Part 2 of 2 — by Richard Sherman and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • Nice Girls Go on Military Weekends by Jo Anne Healey
  • Making Better Snapshots by Palmer Sims
  • Keep Up With Medicine
  • On the Clothesline by Kay Riley
  • Music by the Enemy by George Marek
  • Advice to Babies Not Yet Born by Margaret Lee Runbeck
  • Words to Remember You If You Get Blue by Dorothy Chamberlain
  • What an Art Student Does by The Staff
  • Boyhood Recollection by Stanley M. Rinehart, Jr.
  • I Married My Sister Anyway by Anonymous
  • If You Were Mrs. Fred Allen by Nanette Kutner
  • Expect and Live by Manuel Komroff
  • Can You Tell Which Are Valuable?
  • Maybe It Happens in Your House by Katharine Brush
  • Mrs. Lane Has Herself a Day by Mary Hammon
  • Don’t Lift That! by Maxine Davis
  • Teens of Our Times by Helene Wright
  • Letters from Home by Frances Fenwick Hills
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Helen Koues
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUEREAU:
  • BABIES, NEEDLEWORK:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • El Gaucho Goofy – Walt Disney’s Goofy – A 5-stanza poem with 5 illustrations all on a single page
  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone

    Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1942-05 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1942/05 – Cover illustrated by Molly McMahon

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:
    SHORT STORIES:

  • “Taxi Dance” by John Marquand and illustrated by Ray Prohaska
  • “The Way a Girl Smiles” by Earl Reed Silvers and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “A Pompadour and a Bow” by George Weston and illustrated by Bob Harris
  • “David” by Margaret Lee Runbeck and illustrated by John Gannam
  • “What Son Tells Everything?” by Libbie Block and illustrated by Tom Lovell
  • NOVELETTE:

  • “You Have to Tell Someone” by Edmund Ware and illustrated by Mead Schaeffer
  • SERIALS:

  • “A Clock Striking” — Part 1 of 2 — by Richard Sherman and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • “High Stakes” — Part 2 of 2 — by Alice Duer Miller and illustrated by Michael Dolas
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • Making Better Snapshots by Palmer Sims
  • All Jokes Aside by Kay Riley
  • Do you Know What These Musical Terms Mean by George Marek
  • Letter to My Mother by Hazel Parker
  • How Good Is Your Wartime Morale? by Floyd L. Ruch Ph.D.
  • My Husband’s Habits by Helen O’Hare
  • How to Spend a Night at Home by Helen G. Cousins
  • My Parents Musn’t Know by Hildegarde Dolson
  • Keep Up with Medicine
  • Your Little Angels by William Steig – Full-page, 6 drawings by Steig
  • What a Woman Magician Does by The Staff
  • Why Teachers Are Neurotic by Frances V. Rummell
  • Advice–From Me to You by Katharine Brush
  • That Hour Before the Party by Mary Hamman
  • Teens of Our Times by Helen Wright
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Helen Koues
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUEREAU:
  • BABIES, NEEDLEWORK:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • Donald’s Garden – Walt Disney’s Donald Duck – A 5-stanza poem with 5 illustrations all on a single page
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone

    Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1942-03 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1942/03 – Cover illustrated by Molly McMahon

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:

  • “Tomorrow He Comes Home” by Adela Rogers St. Johns and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • “For Whatever Ends” by Louise Redfield Peattie and illustrated by Ray Prohaska
  • “Have You Heard from Tom Lately? by Faith Baldwin and illustrated by Alfred Parker
  • If We Had Met Before by Marion Valensi and illustrated by Tom Lovell
  • “The Man Who Gets Cindy” by Frances Shields and illustrated by George Hughes
  • NOVELETTE:

  • “Second Chance” by Mary Hastings Bradley and illustrated by Michael Dolas
  • SERIALS:

  • “She Accepts With Pleasure” — Part 1 of 2 — by I.A.R. Wylie and illustrated by Harry Anderson
  • “This Is Neda Marsh” — Part 2 of 2 — by Joseph and Adeline Marx and illustrated by Bob Harris
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • Rough Sketches by Walt Disney — 15 war propaganda sketches from Walt Disney Studios, dealing with rumors spreading and keeping quiet, fill one entire page plus a single column on another page
  • Wait by W.F. Bigelow
  • Out on Your Own by Henrietta Ripperger
  • We Love You Still by Kay Riley
  • Should I Read Books about Music? by George Marek
  • Commentaries by David Grayson
  • One War Ago by William Lyon Phelps
  • Women Without Men by Maxine Davis
  • Nothing to Brag About by Mary Hamman
  • Do you Tell Everything You Know? by Gelett Burgess
  • I Could Have Died by Katharine Brush
  • What A Wedding Director Does by The Staff
  • Do you Want to Be a Nurse? by Dorothy Dunbar Bromley
  • Making Better Snapshots by Palmer Sims
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • BABIES, NEEDLEWORK:
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Helen Koues
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUEREAU:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • The Art of Self-Defense – Walt Disney’s Goofy – A 5-stanza poem with 5 color illustrations all on a single page
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone

    Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

    1942-02 Good Housekeeping Magazine Contents

    1942/02 – Cover illustrated by Molly McMahon

    Contents are as follows:

    FICTION:

  • “It Was a Good Marriage” by Nelia Gardner White and illustrated by Alfred Parker
  • “Stupendous Moment” by Elizabeth Dunn and illustrated by Earl Cordrey
  • “It Goes Like Music” by Libbie Block and illustrated by Michael Dolas
  • “I Have to Tell You Something” by Philip Wylie and illustrated by Ray Prohaska
  • “The Awful Day” by Mabel Brown Farwell and illustrated by Amos Sewell
  • NOVELETTE:

  • “Powder-Room Blues” by Mary Singer and illustrated by John Gannam
  • SERIALS:

  • “This Is Neda Marsh” — Part 1 of 2 — by Joseph and Adeline Marx and illustrated by Bob Harris
  • “The Golden Road” — Part 5 of 5 — by Eric Hatch and illustrated by Jon Whitcomb
  • SPECIAL ARTICLES:

  • What Do They Defend? by Hazel Parker
  • Hollywood Fanfare by Mary Hamman
  • The Quiz Kids’ Favorite Music by George Marek
  • And the Bell Told by Kay Riley
  • Good Housekeeping and the War by The Editors
  • I Wish I’d Seen by William Lyon Phelps
  • How to Play Gin Rummy by Dudley Courtenay
  • Crushes–and What to Do About Them by Frances Warfield
  • Home Chart on Influenza
  • What goes On in a Theatrical School by The Staff
  • To Our Baby’s Husband by Margaret Lee Runbeck
  • Notions Department by Katharine Brush
  • What Makes Females So Useless? by Howard Whitman
  • “Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered” by Henrietta Ripperger
  • FASHIONS:
    Edited by Martha Stout
  • BABIES, NEEDLEWORK:
  • THE INSTITUTE:
    Edited by Katharine Fisher
  • THE BEAUTY CLINIC:
    Edited by Ruth Murrin
  • THE STUDIO:
    Edited by Helen Koues
  • GOOD HOUSEKEEPING BUEREAU:
  • FOR THE CHILDREN

  • Donald’s Camera – Walt Disney’s Donald Duck – A 5-stanza poem with 5 color illustrations all on a single page
  • Yoomee by James Swinnerton
  • BETWEEN THE BOOK ENDS – POETRY:
    Conducted by Ted Malone

  • “The Bridge” by Edgar Lee Masters
  • “Sarah’s Heaven” by Margaret Widdemer
  • Filed Under: Good Housekeeping Tagged With: Good Housekeeping

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