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The State from Columbia, South Carolina • 7

Publication:
The Statei
Location:
Columbia, South Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE STATE: COLUMBIA SUNDAY MORNING APRIL 22 1934 if AGE SEVEN-A Where was Buffalo Bill boro and when did he die? A A William Frederick Cody (Buffalo Bill) was born in 1849 in Scott County Iowa He died in Denver Colorado January 10 1917 Books and Writers Concerning WRITERS OF TODAY IN SOUTH CAROLINA church music ballets and an outline history of music itself This is an excellent volume to have around the home It i' well arranged ts a reference book and would serve good purpose as bock for the instruction of children Scott first novel since "The Great is called Is the Night" (Scribners) It demonstrates plainly that there has been no retrogression in the author's work He gains power with the years "Tender Is toe tolls ths story of a group of Americans met first on the Riviera Dick Diver a young psychiatrist: Nicole his rich and neurotic wife end Rosemary Hoyt a young woman who has gained success in the movies are the main characters We see them thrown together on the beach tna at home Then toe story back-tracks so we may see how Dick and Nicole first met book is i study of abnormal psychology vet can stand on its own legs as an engrossing story It is intelligently and gracefully written and should brir-g many fans its author's door Books you should oe reading these days: New Deal "Long "The Memoirs of Vincent Noltc" "The Robber "Louis XV" Our Dumb Friends They have their courage and their fears Their hopes discouragement and prayers The same as we They have their happiness and cares Their joy and silent shedded tear As we can see There is no love as hard to wear! No friendly look quite aa sincere As theirs can be No human friend could be as dear Nor feelings hurt could you repair As easily So give to them as kind end true A friendship as they give to you As joyously And try to make their cares as few As you would have them be in you "Be thro plea HERBERT EXT DICKSON Columbia least to catch their drift There are betides sketches dealing with the chief composers even the jazty ones and plenty of illustrations A New York office boy in which the 1929 crash brings down the money-gods ought to furnish good material for a novel but for Revenue" by George Agnew Chamberlain (Bobba-Merrifi Indianapolis $2) foils a little short at making the moat of it However after a alow start suspense is -set up which carries one along without undue strain There is a beautiful heroine end hero who ia already paying alimony to two wives Modem enough Wo can understand the difficulty of translating Chinese poetry when we gaze upon Chinese writings which represents not only words but ideographs For instance the Chinese wore is translated "good" but the ideograph we are tola in "The Hundred by Henry EL Hart (University of California Press Berkeley $250) presents a picture of a woman and child "Hie Hundred offers representative Chinese poems from 200 to modem times There are more than 200 pages of verses soma of the best of which are by women For example this is the poetess Huang Wan Ch'iung: A FLUTE AT EVENING 'Hie dewdrops cling To the green bombooe Like pearls The wind stirs lazily In the lotuses And their pale red petals Flutter to toe earth As the night creeps on space Hie twinkling glow worms Light my path And fointly from a tower In the east Cells a bamboo flute The Chinese have their rigid traditional forms but to translate their verses into Occidental metered and rhymed forms is to belie their spirit To understand what that is one would better read Mr Hart's introduction A cover in yellow and jacket in old rose make an appeal to the eye while the printing is nighty tasteful Here is a book that might be added to a shelf that include the translations of Waley Powys Mather Cnnmer-Byng and Judith Gautier PHILLIPS RUSSELL BOUND TO BE READ BY ALLEN SMITH United Fna Book Editor The conduct at affairs public and intimate in this land of ours during the last several years is held up to high scorn in Philip Wylie's amazing new book which Lean the title His Notions and Opinions Together With a Haphazard History of Hi Career and Amours in Throe Moody Years as Weil as Sundry Rhymes Fable Diatribes end Literary The book published by Farrar and Kmehart bears the further labeL "A Novel in a New Manner" Well it is Finnley Wien as his story unwinds impresses the reader as one of the strangest figures in cor temporary fiction Yet when the finished portrait is before you he actually seem to be altogether toe strange Firm lev is a hell-niser He is inordinately fond of his grog he is inclined to call a spade a spade on any and all occasions and the women just wont let him aicne Not that he minds The publishers say his story is in the spirit of Sterne and Rabelais end they don't go far afield with the statement Personally I found Wren" a book that I couldn't leave until it had been finished It it wild end erratic and sometimes it is almost revolting Yet it mirrors the character of Finnley so surely that few if any of the objectionable figures could have been eliminated Sane people will cell it outrageous because of the Elizabethan language it contains But few will much heed to their complaints Hazel Gertrude Kinseella has written a compact volume on music called "Music on the (Viking) which should find wide favor The book pu produced for modern listeners and considering its size ia remarkably comprehensive One of its most valuable feature! is a section devoted to biograph'cal sketches of the great comparers with brief cnalvses of their works There are nearly 100 illustrations and various essays on folk music orchestras Bats Boaches and Vermin Exterminated Get rid of these dangerous pests bout home Our methods or extermination end fumigation are safe and sun end the cost is moderate Estimate bee Orkin Exterminating Go Inc 1128 Elizabeth Avc Charlotte Learn to Earn By Doing The several branches of the printing trade are taught by a limited amount of class work and by seven hours per day of actual productive work in the branch you choose- at the Southern School of Printing 1514-16 South Street Nashville Tennessee Illustrated catalog sent on request have always bettered that ede does not eompiete the transaction between ns and the ear buyer but estsMishea a mem obligation on ns to sen that bit ear gives him good service Wa arm at mnch interested In your economical opera-fits of thm ear as yon ora in our aconomlcal manufacture of it" By A Frances Gulgnard CIbbro (Mrs Oscar Keith) Frances Guignard Gibbes was born In Columbia and has always lived here On bdth sides her an-ceftry is such as Id transmit to her the traits moot fitting to maintain the beet of the traditions of the Old South The Gibbgi were originally from the Barba dlies whence they came to America They have always been distinguished for their high literary ability and their public-spirited efficiency in civic affairs Frances' Gibberi paternal grandfather wrote a documentary history of South Carolina an excellent biography of the painter Deveau and a very instructive book about Cuba Her father Maj Wade Hampton Gibbet was a prominent citizen of Columbia at one time he was treasurer of Richland county and he was postmaster under Cleveland He left a handsome property consisting largely of real estate in what is still the best residential section Columbia Her mother was Miss Meson from Virginia a charming woman and a gifted conversationalist They sent their daughter Franco to private schools and she later attended lectures at the South Carolina college soon to be chartered as the University of South Carolina of which she was the lint woman student There she came under the influence' of some of the strongest minds in the South and her love of literature and history was fostered by her contact with them Her family believed Ih the awakening effect of study away from home and she was sent to Boston where fortunately her teacher was Josephine Peabody the brilliant instructress in poetry and drama and a leader in the new poetic play-writing movement Mias Gibbes also worked hard in Washington for two years over the technic and form of verrifl-cation From early girlhood aha bad the "urge" to write and with her keen perception of the beautiful and ardent Imagination end strong emotions it is small wonder that poetry was her outlet She was too sensitive to let her family guess that she constantly writing and she never submitted a poem for publication until her book was accepted by the Neale company in 1902 Her readers were instantly impressed by her melodious lines and the poignancy of her feeling but Miss Gibbes herself makes apology for the haste in which the book was gotten out She says that it was never revised properly that there was much slipshod writing and 'ificed that she had sacril ing Be this as it may her poems met with some very fine criticisms Dr Maurice Egan minister to Denmark says: "Her work is exquisitely musical end has the true Petrarchan feeling" No sweeter truer rendering of the impression made by a bird than in her "The Mocking Bird" is to be found in American literature "Stan and suggests the longing of the "straining craving" mind for infinite truth end its typical of the high aspirations of the author In many of her lines you sense the earnest desire to apprehend the di-vino end her desire to impart this emotion to others She has the paradoxical nature of those who achieve She is happy in her work but she is penervenngly striving and looking forward to the accomplishment of something better and more beautiful than she has yet created She hopes that each day may see immeshed in the net of her imagination or produced from the workshop of her mind the gleam that die is continually following It is very characteristic of her that it is not the sunset that she loves those caravels of bright beauty with which the evening sky are decked signify to her the end iff something ana because it is vanishing it conveys a trace of sadness and the end of effort She believes essentially in the power of exertion and of fulfillment and so it is that to her each sunrise means new creation and is precursor of fresh inspiration and endeavor People who write are frequently interested in many other things besides this one creative outlet ana it is always intriguing to us to think that we can analyze their motivating emotions Frances Gibbes has that heavensent gift a zest for life She is always looking into the future and has the spirit of the very young who see happiness around every corner She is thrilled by the things that are yet to come not the full flower for her but to watch the unfolding of buds the song of birds at sunrise and the thrill of the setting forth upon a great ocean liner for unknown countries She loves to cultivate her garden where the Duchess and the Quatre Saison rosea bloom during almost every month In the year She writes because she loves it It would be diffi- cult for her to fetter her soaring imagination and this bungled with her seel for rearorch enables her to bring forth the poetical dramas which are her favorite medium of expression She realizes fully that they are not what is generally known as popular reading and that then is a rare chance of their ever being produced but she has never compromised her talent for prominence or money and has loyally adhered to her ideals in writing After the publication id her book of poems she wrote little for IS yean She is an excellent business woman and it took time and management on her part to help in the settling of her father's estate In 1911 she married Oscar Keith brilliant professor of Romance languages at the University of South Caroline In 1913 their only child a daughter was barn Mrs Keith hid a serious illness from which her recovery is due to her Indomitable strength of will end her fixed purpose to "cany She is an inspiration to ell who know her in her love of life and her determination to attain the best out of it and it is stimulating to know of her triumph of mind over matter After her long literary silence Mrs Keith won In 1922 the Town Theater prize for her one act play a dramatized version of the tragic Old Testament story The play was artistically produced at the Town theater under the able direction of Daniel Reed and his talented wife who have helped to make the play-house in Columbia a notable art center In 1923 she wss announced as the winner of the second annuel ploy contort- conducted by The State She received a for the one-act play called "The Although revealing herself in these plays as a mistress of dramatic art and expression end capable of fine craftsmanship these two plays were but a ration for the poetical drama ilda" Owing to her fine power of i Mrs concentration steep herself in the atmosphere end background from -which rite draws this historical romance The eccne is the kingdom of Bemicia in northern England In the fifth century and the central theme is the struggle between Christianity and Paganism end this is symbolized by the love of the Pagan princess fM' the Champion of Christendom Prince George Thera is something Shaksperian in the directness and beauty of the lines and though there is no hint of plagiarism in the play in there is trace of Lady Macbeth without her ambition and of Cordelia lacking her ingratitude Pick up the book end you become so enthralled by the loveliness of expression end so engrossed with eager interest as to the outcome of the story that you cannot put It down until the final curtain drops on the inevitable tragedy High praise was accorded to by the most discriminating critics in this country and abroad One such ays "It surpasses anything done by American in poetic drama ana ranks as one of the beauties of our The Literary Supplement iff the London Times gives it a lengthy review Amongst the fine extracts from it is the following: "It is relief to take up an American book end discover not only no trace of elaborate struggle for effect of literary self-consciousness but a production worthy of the Elizabethan tradition of poetic and again "undoubtedly the work gives distinction to the American poetic drama of the new century" Our own Mr Stanhope Sams and Doctor Wauchope have given choicely worded and exceptionally complimentary reviews of I cannot -resist quoting some of Mra felicitously worded and aptly thought at similes "Peace visits nim as shyly as the brush of humming birds will come as sir unknown end silently" "The night had trembled into day" "The path between my mind and yours had rone astray" These are but trifling lines in comparison to the beauty end power of the sustained speeches was produced on the stage of the Town theater and was greatly admired "The Face" followed In 1924 and for sheer beauty and inspirational value is I think the mast important thing Mra Keith has done The face of Mona Lisa is Leonardo da Vinci's dream but the free of Christ in his painting "The Last Supper" is the goal to portray which he has aspired and yearned all his life "I would paint" he says that men should apprehend the When in despair of delineating the well nigh unattainable he murmurs do not feel deeply enough to sense divinity" He has never loved woman until he meets Mona Lisa end this belatedly awakened passion enables him to put into the face of the Savior that trace of the divine which has been the der of the world Hie picture painted ai an order from the Duke of Milan and when he offers Da Vinci four thousand ducats and a keg of Sicilian wine as compensation for its successful completion the Master refuses it declaring that he has been well paid in hearing the Duke say when he looks at the inspired free think of i of Christ "It makes me I wish I had not and yet he continues "A reigning Duke must not be too much troubled with a The fickle populace of Milan acclaim da Vinci to be omnipotent and bless him for having given to them the Savior Hie last scene changes to Florence where the master has gone to paint the portrait of Mona Lisa In very human utterances she is pleading with him to kt her abandon her husband end give herself to him but he is of more Spartan breed end affirms to her that ha can only reverence the woman who has helped him to point Christ's free This resolution is about to be broken when Mona Lisa dies suddenly and the curtain descends upon the broken hearted painter Michelangelo and Raphael have been preferred before him by the Pope who gives them the commission for the frescoes in the Vatican and in the Sistine Chapel His devoted pupils are incensed at this but Da Vinci gently rep roves man's life is all that may against him" His vindication may be that the smile as he portrayed it on the face at one woman is still the enigma the wonder of each succeeding generation end though his dreams iff hurling great meteors to graze the were never realized his visions of flight are now actually sending men into new fields of valor and endeavor "The was staged at the Town theater in Columbia in Mississippi end at Palm Beach Muriel McCormick starred in it at the latter place and made of it a very fine performance Three mare plays have followed There" is a legendary tale of Mont St Michel It was inspired by Mis visit to nrance when she saw clouds like wings id Seraphim hovering above the of tin glorious Mount It was produced at the Town theater in 1932 and in technic and in beauty of conception measures up to anything Mrs Keith has done "The Strange Woman" won the hundred dollar prize awarded by Hie State This ia indicative of its merit but Mra Keith says that she has never really completed it end she did not went it to he staged neither was ever published She- is now revising her latest play which is an historical romance scened at the time of the settlement of the Huguenots in America Mrs Keith has the happy faculty of saturating herself with the environment in which her characters live and of conveying this atmosphere vividly to her audience In nothing that she has written is this more evident than in in Carolina" Her views of the forest are very lovely: we feel the magic of birds in flight butterflies poised above flower cups and the quivering tenderness of the dawn Against the soft beauty of this picture stern brave men are making history in the young colony of Carolina and ladies with all the charm and grace of the French court add the flavor of romance which will make the play a successful production Mr Belford Forest ia at present searching for an adequate cast for "Dawn in Carolina" on which ho expects to begin rehearsal in the early autumn Although wa are assured now and again that the poetic drama la dead and that no audience will tolerate them Mrs plays have been produced before crowded houses in Columbia and Jewett manager of the Repertory theater in Boston immediately accepted "Hilda" and mi Rring to produce it when un-istely he died Au of Mra Keith's plays have mend from literary dubs and critics of judgment and taste such as Lady Aster and Padralc Colum admire ana appreciate them Among the many events that have given Mra Keith happiness none surpasses that of her acquisition of a grandchild The youngest Frances sleeps with her grandmother who PIONEERING A SERVICE TO FORD OWNERS A photograph of Aldous Huxley made by Ben Finchot during Mr brief visit to New York His new book the Mexique is announced for pu April 2C The Lantern BY PHILLIPS RUSSELL University at North Carolina Since both prpse and poetry of the day la taking on a sociological tinge mis evident every year wa find of more than ordinary interest the discussion by Prof Ernest Marchand of the University of Wisconsin in American Literature for March (Duke University' Press Durham $4 a year) of "Poe as a Social It has been the fashion in the past to regard Poe as having been ia literature a detached phenomenon as an artist pure and simple (whatever that is) without roots in any age and without interest in or connection with the events of his period Mr Marchand reveals how devoid of substance this view is Poe in his various writings public and private had much to njr about il economic and social ten- expressing himself freely and sometimes with mote rancor than judiciousness He often referred to such things as democracy industrialism feminism emancipation end othec- reforms He was agin them alL As regards the world and its doings ha waa conservative not to say Ti corn for democracy and his fear of the author observer "are the same excited in the breast of the propertied North and South the Jacksonian incursion Hu theory at government as instituted for the protection of property with his identification of interests of property with throe of religion and is the theory naturally i feels an economy which itself on the defensive aa the South felt in the '30s and By intellectual aa well as physical ties Poe regarded himself as belonging to the aristocracy and his view on all public questions were in keeping with what ha regarded os the aristocratic attitude Such reformers at the period as Fourier and Greeley he Sew aa having a common bond in 1st us call it insanity" For him dace waa in the home He denied that Negroes could have "passions and want and feelings" like those of white men He despised the rabble with its "excitable undisciplined end childlike mind" He was pro-slavery and corned the notion of program "The ha wrote "about the amelioration of society etc is but a very usual trick among some authors whereby they hope to add such a tons of dignity or utilitarianism to their pages as shall gild the pill of their In short Foe was a man of his time end place subject to the fancies end prejudices of his period and not at all indifferent to the events mirrored in ordinary newspaper headlines American history particularly in its early days was mads by wild man but somehow historians have missed that note i ft wildness They have set down their chronicles with a sedateness end soberness not at all with the spirit of the bullies who settled ao in keeping hairy reckless much of the cc country Their is no wilder story than that of the opening of Nevada by adventurers wno rushed there to seek gold and discovered that the fortunes they craved lay in the despised "blue which was later identified to the consternation of thoee who thrown it away aa silver It waa this silver lying about in tons which built cities in the desert financed the Federal armies in the Confederate war- and laid the foundation! for the unheeding prosperity which with occasional setbacks endued until 1929 George Lyman tolls the story with appropriate color and vigor in "The Saga of the Comstock Lode" (Scribners New York $350) Hero is history a highly important part of American history related with an appreciation of the fantastic humors of the situation and of its heroes that is somehow missing in the clerkly writing of the New Englanders who have recorded the greater portion at out history Included ere some new end authentic stories about Mark Twain and his career at Virginia City which Twain fanatics will not wish to overlook One of the soundest and senri blest articles on a musical subject which we are acquainted with ia contributed by John Powell of Virginia in on the a symposium and cyclopedia of musical information which ought to be welcome to radio followers and should be iff no less value to' the student and layman (Viking Press New York $150) It seems to be difficult to write of folk music without painful erudition on the one hand ana hooey son the other but Powell has successfully steered among the rocks in his piece "Virginia Finds Her Folk Music" It accurately indicates just whet the value of folk music particularly that of the Southern states is end what respect with the buncombe trimmed way ought to be accorded to it And the author's enthusiasm mixed with an eerily-carried learning does his writing no harm We are pleased to note the whack ha gives to those collectors who go around recording folk songs to the neglect at the tunes which to our mind is like collecting dried stems when the blooming flowers are close by on the Ai la edited by Hazel Gertrude Kinseella whose labors In the educational realm have been tireless She and her helpers make their subjects so plain that even the individual who has been vaccinated against music ought at says that the child has given her the "gift of the morning itar" I wish that I could hear them talking together as night is trembling into day1 Perhaps the fruit of these hours will be another play and there la nothing that Mra Keith's public could wish for more earnestly 'Julian Grerti whose novel "The be published April ZI New Book Shelf COLUMBIA IVBUC LIBRARY Lafayette by Michael de la Beday (Scribners) This "Revolutionary gentleman" chivalrous gallant was a hero of our Revolution and of the French Revolution Hie biography is osring and masterful analysis man and though every inch inch a nobleman had broad views of democracy Th' Spade and the Bible by Prescott (Revell) From the most authoritative sources dealing with archeological research in Bible lands we have this important compilation It represents the untiring work of a scholarly Christian and it vindicates many Bible statements attacked by destructive critics 1 Serial Work Year Book by Fred Hall (Russell Sage Foundation) A description of social work events and developments including a roster of the national agencies a Wnrh The Autobiography of Charles Veil as Told to Howard Marsh (Marrow) A veritable soldier of fortune We find him in South America a gauebo in France a star performer in the Lafayette es-cadrille he worked to establish the Paris-Warsaw line he was in the famine on the Volga: served as a spy in the Turco-Gredan war: was a Son Juan and is now a gold miner In the Far West The School of Charity by Evelyn Underhill (Longmans Green company) In the prace the Bishop of London says: "Mias Evelyn' Underhill is best known as a writer on mysticism and yet you could not find a more practical book than this It is most helpful May this noble book stimulate us all to a more noble Watcher of the Cross by Canon Peter Green (Longmans) Intended to encourage religious thought meditation ana prayer especially are the "seven last stressed Day Without End by Eugene O'Neill (Random House) The author calls this a modem miracle play It is a destructive contribution to the age not only as moving drama of religious faith but a penetrating psychological study Dictionary of American Biography edited by Dumas Malone (Scribners) The latest volume No 13 presents striking diversity of characters which includes neaylyevary field of American endeavor There are a good many South Carolinians included: the versatile Robert Mills author end architect John Moore Colonial governor of South Caroline Abraham Charles Myers Confederate general: Dr Jo-siah Clark Nott distinguished physician William and John Moultrie and others Fiction: Two's Company by Margaret Bering (Morrow) Two aspects of New York the idle rich and the ere const rested hut primarily it is a romance of tangled love Trumpeter Sound by Murray (Knopf) Victorian London is recreated most picturesquely in this dramatic story Then the dashing Earl and his half-brother inarch away to the Crimean war both in love with a fascinating little actress Hie des-- tinies of the main characters are worked out on the battlefield Worth Remembering by Rhys James (Longmans) An hilarious tele adults of a family of Southern children raised by their Negro mammy The critics are lavish in praise Mrs Peterkin says: "It makes me bitterly homesick for my own childhood Blark River by Carleton Beals (Lippincott) A bizarre tale of modem Mexico and the disasters caused by a greet oil company Mitchey Tilley by Soy Helton (Harpers) Nitchey Tilley represent the universal adventure of youth seeking life He is a product of the primitive regions of North Carolina mountains and he and an inocent mountain girl go to New York Mr Helton friend of Christopher Morley is regarded as a writer of merit We Sail Tomorrow bv Frederick Brennan (Longmans) This romantic novel of the epic struggle with ship and sea and the spiritual struggles of the characters most of whom are involved in tangled love affairs is a tale of some significance Thelma Buane by Flora Sands trom (Kinsey) Hie elemental things of life ere interwoven in the fabric of this story as they are in Knut Hamsun's or the Soil" though in this there is nothing of the effort to wrench a living from the earth The older generation end the new are contrasted but the whole bode is dominated by the beauty of Thelma Suane Beyond the Street by Edgar Calmer (Harcourt Brace) An unusual tale Is this of a big New York high school It is the focus of the lives of numerous characters of diverse types The publishers believe the tutor a writer of importance by Turner (Har-' centered great Quentin Calif of the lived for escape It is a 'One Way Ticket by Turner rison-Smitn) The story is ce In and around the walls of penitentiary at San Quentin where the young daughter of captain of the guards has lived 19 years She aids a prisoner to end meets him "outride" It tensely dramatic tale The Blonde Countess by Herbert Yardley (Longmans) A breath-taking spy stale of wartime Washington The countess is the wife of a foreign ambassador The Luck id the Road by Ruth Savage (Appleton-Century) The philosophy of this story is cheering and its humor contagious It tells of a woman of (9 who determines to seek the hick of the road in preference to the poor house In her quest he i (joined by other homeless adventurers Hie Dragon's Brood by William Warner (Kinsey) Modom China is file background of this romance the hero a lovely Chinese girl who frees end conquers the agonies of revolution and pestilence Marriage for Revenge by George Chamberlain (Bobhs-Merrill) maelstrom of love treachery end high finance" ENGINES AND OTHER UNITS RECONDITIONED AT THE FORD FACTORY HENRY FORD believes that the engine overhaul ahonld be a factory job For in the Ford factory are the men and the machines which produced the engine originally Engine overhaul should have the same advantage of our precision equipment and methods which engine manufacture had That ia our proposal to you When the time cornea for the engine to be that will be normally after 40000 or 50000 miles the Ford owner simply gets from the local Ford dealer an engine that has been completely reconditioned in the Ford Motor Company plant at Dearborn Michigan The coat is far below the usual cost of overhauling and there is a great saving in time as your car is tied upfor only a few hours instead of days Besides that the price is not guesswork it is a fixed known price This reconditioning service is further extended to such units as the distributor carburetor and brake shoe assembly Worn or obsolete parts are replaced with new ones Every reconditioned unit installed by the Authorized Ford Dealer has passed the closest factory inspection In every detail it is ready for thousands of miles of trouble-free service Ask any Ford dealer about this new money-saving service for owners of Models A and and eight-cylinder Ford cars and tracks This is an exclusive Ford service It is one of the important reasons why you should own a Ford V-8 the only V-8 under $2300 the car which hundreds of thousands of owners say ia the most economical Ford car ever bnilL TUNE IN FORD DEALERS' RADIO PROGRAM Fred Wabiho and Dis Pruisylvasuhs Clarion music Ecary Sunday night at 8t30 and arory Thursday night at 9 1 30 (E T) Columbia Broadeasting System And in the meantime TAe Fords Co By" 0 COMPANY FORD 0 I WIDLSOK NKMWMSL lias 1518 Sumter St Phone 4611 i.

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About The State Archive

Pages Available:
1,952,453
Years Available:
1891-2024