With his wife, whom he married in 1923, charles wrote two plays, "Man's Estate", which the Theatre Guild produced in 1929, and and "The Terrible Turk", which appeared in 1934. The Goulds also wrote the screenplay "Reunion" in 1936.
Charles and Beatrice Blackmar Gould were joint Editors of The Ladies Home Journal for thirty two years. Under their leadership, the circulation of the Journal tripled to 7.5 million.
The Goulds are survived by a daughter, Sesaly Kraft of Federalburg, Md.: a sister of Mrs. Gould: Florence Snoke of Ann Harbor, Mich.; five grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
With his wife, whom he married in 1923, charles wrote two plays, "Man's Estate", which the Theatre Guild produced in 1929, and and "The Terrible Turk", which appeared in 1934. The Goulds also wrote the screenplay "Reunion" in 1936.
Charles and Beatrice Blackmar Gould were joint Editors of The Ladies Home Journal for thirty two years. Under their leadership, the circulation of the Journal tripled to 7.5 million.
The Goulds are survived by a daughter, Sesaly Kraft of Federalburg, Md.: a sister of Mrs. Gould: Florence Snoke of Ann Harbor, Mich.; five grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
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