Milan Jovanović Stojimirović

He lost his father early, so his mother Jelena and uncle Dr. Dušan Stojimirović (1870–1956) took care of him and his younger brother Ivan.

He started the newspaper Vardar in 1932 and was its head until mid-December 1935 when Milan Stojadinović appointed him editor-in-chief of the renewed party body Samouprava.

[2] During his studies in Switzerland, he was appointed correspondent of the Press Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the Embassy in Bern.

He was then appointed journalist of the Press Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Belgrade, in August 1926, and he performed that job until December 1928.

He translated from English the novels "I, Claudia" by Robert Graves and "Tower" by William Harrison Ensworth, were published in Matica Srpska in 1956 and 1955.

In the period from 1957 to 1965, he published articles in magazines under the general title "Silhouettes of Old Belgrade", in which he mainly dealt with the presentation of people and events from the 19th and the first decades of the 20th century.

His portrait, painted by Lazar Licenoski, served as a decoration for the play Gospoda Glembayevi at the Smederevo Theater.

The collected works included Serbian painters and sculptors (Vlaho Bukovac, Ljubomir Ivanović, Miodrag Petrović, Andrey Timiović, Đorđe Jovanović, Periša Milić, Anton Huter, Stevan Todorović, Pavle Čortanović) and several foreign artists (Carol Szathmari, Ladislav Eugen Petrovits, Paolo Vietti-Violi, Gabriel von Max, Vinzenz Katzler (1825-1882), Alois Strobl von Liptoujvar (1856–1926), Louis Zwicki (1859-1906), Nicu Enea (1897-1960), Antonio Carbonati (1893-1956), Jaroslav Kartina (1893-1974), Jozef Arpad Koppay (1859-1927), Erica von Kager (1890-1975), Franta Maly (1900-1980), Boris Šapovalov).