New beginningsFocuses on the success of Sylvia Monroe in losing weight. Initial weight condition; Workout schedule; Maintenance tips; Factors behind success of workout.Monroe, SylviaShape
but she would continue to make unsigned contributions to the “Comments” and “The Talk of the Town” sections into the 1950s. Her main focus at the magazine, however, would be her fashion column, “On and Off the Avenue,” which she would write until 1968. Upon her ...
Mr. Monroe Outwits a Bat James Thurber submitted a humorous piece on a husband and wife at a weekend cabin retreat. The husband encounters a bat, and feigns to dispatch it while his wife remains behind closed doors. A brief clip: E.B. White and James Thurber, circa late 1920s. Thurber...
Hillside Children's Center 1183 Monroe Ave, Rochester, NY 14620 (3 miles) Helendale Road Primary School 220 Helendale Rd, Rochester, NY 14609 (3 miles) St Ambrose Academy 31 Empire BLVD, Rochester, NY 14609 (3 miles) East Rochester Elementary School 400 Woodbine Ave, East Rochester, NY 14...
37- Mark Monroe - December 18, 2020 at 1:42 PM Are there any pictures of the layout inside Mel's cabin? 38- Anonymous - December 21, 2020 at 11:14 PM I lived near the log cabin and the man-made lake behind when I was a kid aged 8 to 12 in the 1960s. We played around the...
More than 120 years ago, Jerome Monroe Smucker was selling apple butter from a horse-drawn wagon in Ohio, where The J.M. Smucker Co. is still based. Its longtime successful advertising slogan was “With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good.” Beyond fruit spreads, its brands incl...
Monroe, left home alone (his wife was visiting her mother), imagines there are burglars in the house: …like his famous character Walter Mitty, which Thurber would introduce in 1939, Mr. Monroe had an equally lively imagination… The character of Mr. Monroe would see new life in the fall...
WINNING OSCAR…From 1893 to 1943Oscar Tschirkywas the Waldorf-Astoria’s public face and a gracious host who made both the great and the not-so-great feel welcome. At left, in 1923; at right, Tschirky samples the first shipment of beer to arrive at the Waldorf-Astoria when the brew beca...
From its beginnings in 1862 until the end of the 19th century, the F.A.O. Schwarz toy store was known to New Yorkers as the “Toy Bazaar,” and by 1929 was something of an institution. As part of a lengthy column featuring ideas for Christmas shoppers,TheNew Yorkeroffered some tips on...