220. The magnificent idler. Reader’s Digest 28:88-90 February 1936. Excerpt from A Story Teller’s Story.
221. Making it clear. Agricultural Advertising 24:16 February 1913.
222. The man and the book. Reader 3:71-73 December 1903.
223. The man at the filling station. Vanity Fair 30:53, 88, 90 August 1928.
224. The man in the brown coat. Little Review 7:18-21 January-March 1921. TE, NT.
225. A man’s mind. New Republic 63:22-23 May 21, 1930. A review of D. H. Lawrence’s Assorted Articles. NS.
226. A man’s song of life. Virginia Quarterly Review 9:108-14 January 1933. NS (entitled “Lawrence again”).
227. The man’s story. Dial 75:247-64 September 1923. HM, SAR.
228. Many marriages. Dial 73:361-82, 533-48, 623-44; 74:31-49, 165-82, 256-72 October 1922-March 1923.
229. Maury Maverick in San Antonio. New Republic 102:398-400 March 25, 1940.
230. Meeting Ring Lardner. New Yorker 9:36, 38 November 25, 1933. NS, SAR.
231. A meeting South. Dial 78:269-79 April 1925. SAN, DW, SAR, PSA.
232. Mid-American prayer. Seven Arts 2:190-92 June 1917.
233. Mid-American songs (Song of Stephen the Westerner; American spring song; A visit; Song of the drunken business man; Evening song; Song of industrial America). Poetry 10:281-91 September 1917. MAC.
234. Mill girls. Scribner’s Magazine 91:8-12, 59-64 January 1932. BD, SAR.
235. Mr. Joe’s doctor. American Magazine 118:81-82 August 1934.
236. A moonlight walk. Red Book 70:43-45, 100-04 December 1937. SAR.
237. Mother. Seven Arts 1:452-61 March 1917. WO.
238. Motor trip. American Spectator 2,no.22:9 August 1934.
239. A mountain dance. Vanity Fair 29:59, 110 November 1927. HT.
240. A mountain marriage. Fight Against War and Fascism 3:16-17, 25 October 1936. KB.
241. My fire burns. Survey 47:997-1000 March 25, 1922. SAN (entitled “King coal”).
242. The nationalist. American Spectator 2,no.14:1 December 1933; Fortnightly Review 142:24-29 July 1934; American Spectator Yearbook. New York, Frederick A. Stokes, 1934. p.3-10. PA.
243. Nearer the grass roots. Outlook 148:3-4, 27 January 1928. NGR.
244. A new chance for the men of the hills. Today 1:10-11, 22-23 May 12, 1934. PA, SAR.
245. The New Englander. Dial 70:143-58 February 1921. TE, SAR.
246. The new note. Little Review 1:23 March 1914. Reprinted: Little Review Anthology, p.13-15.
247. New Orleans: a prose poem in the expressionist manner. Vanity Fair 26:36, 97 August 1926.
248. New Orleans, The double dealer and the modern movement in America. Double Dealer 3:119-26 March 1922.
249. New paths for old. Today 1:12-13, 32 April 7, 1934.
250. A new testament. Double Dealer 3:64-67 February 1922. NT (entitled “A thinker”).
251. A new testament (The visit in the morning; Negro on the docks; The ripper; Chicago; Hunger; Death). Vanity Fair 28:75 April 1927. NT.
252. A new testament: The builder. Double Dealer 3:311 June 1922. NT.
253. A new testament: A man speaks out of the new confusion. Playboy 2,no.1:9-11 First quarter 1923.
254. A new testament: Testament one. Little Review 6:3-6 October 1919.
255. A new testament: Testament two. Little Review 6:19-21 November 1919. NT (entitled “The dreamer”; with revisions).
256. A new testament: III. Little Review 6:17-19 December 1919. NT. A portion reprinted under title “Man standing by a bridge,” see item 164; also Literary Digest 93:34 May 21, 1927.
257. A new testament: IV-V Little Review 6:15-17 January 1920. NT (final section of “IV” entitled “In a workingman’s rooming house”; “V” entitled “Word factories”). “V” also appeared in Vanity Fair under title “The word maker,” see item 282.
258. A new testament: VI-IX. Little Review 6:12-16 March 1920. NT. “VI” also appeared under title “Ambition,” see item 164; “VII” appeared in Vanity Fair 28:75 April 1927 under title “Chicago”; “VIII” entitled “Cities” in NT.
259. A new testament: X. Little Review 6:58-60 April 1920.
260. A new testament: XI-XII. Little Review 7:58-61 July-August 1920. NT. Part of “XI” also appeared under title “Man walking alone,” see item 164.
261. A new testament: No. 13. Double Dealer 6:181-82 August-September 1924. NT (entitled “A dreamer”). See also item 164.
262. New tyrants of the land. Today 1:10-11, 20 May 26, 1934. PA (with revisions).
263. New York. Vanity Fair 28:33, 94 July 1927. SAM. A French translation by Marguerite Gay appears in Bibliothèque Universelle et Revue de Genève January 1930, p.46-51.
264. Nice girl. New Yorker 12:15-17 July 25, 1936.
265. No swank. Today 1:4-5, 23-24 November 11, 1933. NS.
266. Nobody’s home. Today 3:6-7, 20-21 March 30, 1935.
267. Northwest unafraid. Today 3:8-9, 22-23 January 12, 1935. PA (entitled “Olsonville”; with revisions).
268. Not knocking. Agricultural Advertising 9:22-23 December 1902.
269. Not sixteen. Tomorrow 5:28-32 March 1946. SAR.
270. A note on realism. New York Evening Post Literary Review October 25, 1924, p.1-2. SAN.
271. A note on story tellers. Vanity Fair 28:42, 82 August 1927. HT.
272. Notes out of a man’s life. Vanity Fair 26:47, 98 March 1926. SAN.
273. The novelist. Little Review 2:12-14 January-February 1916. See also item 167.
274. Off balance. New Yorker 9:12-14 August 5, 1933.
275. Oh, the big words! This Week March 31, 1940, p.2.
276. Ohio: I’ll say we’ve done well. Nation 115:146-48 August 9, 1922. SAN.
277. On being a country editor. Vanity Fair 29:70, 92 February 1928. HT (entitled “Notes for newspaper readers”).
278. On being published. Colophon pt.1:[February 1930, 4p.]. Reprinted: Adler, Elmer, ed. Breaking into print. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1937. p.3-7. Included with the reprint is a letter from Anderson to Elmer Adler, dated December 27, 1936.
279. On conversing with authors. Vanity Fair 28:40, 98 June 1927. HT.
280. The other woman. Little Review 7:37-44 May-June 1920. TE.
281. Out of nowhere into nothing. Dial 71:1-18, 153-69, 325-46 July-September 1921. TE, SAR.
282. Pages from a new testament (Addressed to a woman; The word maker). Vanity Fair 19:57 October 1922. NT (the first as “A persistent lover”; the second as “Word factories”). See also item 257.
283. Pastoral. Red Book 74:38-39, 59 January 1940.
284. Paying for old sins. Nation 139:49-50 July 11, 1934. A review of Carl Carmer’s Stars Fell on Alabama and Langston Hughes’ The Ways of White Folks.
285. The persistent liar. Tomorrow 6:10-12 September 1946.
286. Personal protest. Canadian Forum 17:168-69 August 1937.
287. The philosopher. Little Review 3:7-9 June-July 1916. WO.
288. A plan. Modern Monthly 7:13-16 February 1933. PA (entitled “Please let me explain”). SAR.
289. Pop. New Yorker 9:12 May 27, 1933.
290. Price of aristocracy. Today 1:10-11, 23 March 10, 1934.
300. Prohibition. Vanity Fair 27:68, 96 February 1927.
301. Queer. Seven Arts 1:97-108 December 1916. WO.
302. The rabbit-pen. Harper’s 129:207-19 July 1914.
303. Real-unreal. New Republic 63:103-04 June 11, 1930. A review of Margaret Anderson’s My Thirty Years’ War. NS. Millett (item 696) lists a reprinting in the form of a leaflet with the title “Sherwood Anderson on Margaret Anderson.” No copy located.
304. The return. Century 110:3-14 May 1925. DW, SAR.
305. The right to die: dinner in Thessaly. Forum 95:40-41 January 1936. SAM.
306. A robin’s egg renaissance. Story 19:11-28 September-October 1941.
307. Rot and reason (About country roads; About inquiries; About cleverness; About suspicion; Paragraphs). Agricultural Advertising 10:56-58 November 1903.
308. Rot and reason (Doing stunts; Packingham; Of no value; Chicago inspirations; The stamp as a salesman). Agricultural Advertising 10:12-14 April 1903.
309. Rot and reason (The golden harvest farmer; Golden harvest manufacturers; The golden fake). Agricultural Advertising 10:22-25 August 1903.
310. Rot and reason (The lightweight; The born quitter). Agricultural Advertising 10:18-20 March 1903.
311. Rot and reason (Knock no. 1; Knock no. 2; Boast no. 1). Agricultural Advertising 10:54-57 June 1903.
312. Rot and reason (The new job; The laugh of scorn; The traveling man; Push, push, push; Unfinished contracts). Agricultural Advertising 10:13-16 February 1903.
313. Rot and reason (Office tone; Fun and work; Work in the dark). Agricultural Advertising 10:22-26 July 1903.
314. Rot and reason (The old and the new; A Christmas thought; Men that are wanted). Agricultural Advertising 10:50-51 December 1903.
315. Rot and reason (Twenty years in the West; What Henry George said twenty years ago; Twenty years in figures; Fairs). Agricultural Advertising 10:17-19 October 1903.
316. Rot and reason (Unfinished; Finding our work). Agricultural Advertising 10:20-22 May 1903.
317. The sad horn blowers. Harper’s 146:273-89 February 1923. HM, SAR.
318. The sales master and the selling organization. Agricultural Advertising 12:306-08 April 1905.
319. Samovar. American Spectator 2,no.21:3 July 1934.
320. Seeds. Little Review 5:24-31 July 1918; English Review 34:13-20 January 1922. TE.
321. Senility. Little Review 5:37-39 September 1918. TE.
322. A sentimental journey. Vanity Fair 29:46, 118 January 1928. HT, DW, SAR.
323. Sherwood Anderson goes home. Today 3:6-7, 23 December 8, 1934. PA (entitled “Night in a corn town”; with revisions).
324. Sherwood Anderson to Theodore Dreiser. American Spectator 1,no.8:1 June 1933.
325. Sister. Little Review 2:3-4 December 1915.
326. Sit-downers stick: opinions. Literary Digest 123:8 February 13, 1937. A brief statement regarding sit-down strikes.
327. The situation in American writing: seven questions (Part II). Partisan Review 6,no.5:103-05 Fall 1939.
328. A small boy looks at his world. Woman’s Home Companion 53:19-20, 42, 45 July 1926. Tar (with revisions).
329. Small town notes. Vanity Fair 30:58, 120 June 1928; 32:72, 106 April 1929; 32:48, 110 July 1929 (reprinted: London Mercury 20:473-76 September 1929, under title “Small town notes: ashamed”); 33:72, 110, 114 September 1929.
330. So you want to be a writer? Saturday Review of Literature 21:13-14 December 9, 1939; condensation in Reader’s Digest 36:109-11 January 1940.
331. “Sold!” To the tobacco company. Globe 2:30-35 July 1938; condensation in Youth Today 2:28-30 September 1939 under title “Sold.”
332. A soliloquy. Agricultural Advertising 9:25 April 1902. (Signed “Anderson”)
333. The South. Vanity Fair 27:49-50, 138 September 1926. HT.
334. Statements of belief II; further credos of America’s leading authors. Bookman (N.Y.) 68:204 October 1928. Reprinted (without title) in Herrmann, Eva. On parade, caricatures ... edited by Erich Posselt, contributions by prominent authors. New York, Coward-McCann, 1929. p.10.
335. Stewart’s on the square. New Yorker 10:77-80 June 9, 1934.
336. Stolen day. This Week April 27, 1941, p.6, 23.
337. The story-teller’s job. Book Buyer ser.4,v.2,no.8:8 December 1936.
338. A story-teller’s story. Phantasmus 1:1-37, 109-64 May-June 1924. SS.
339. The story writers. Smart Set 48:243-48 January 1916.
340. The strength of God. Masses 8:12-13 August 1916. WO.
341. The struggle. Little Review 3:7-10 May 1916. Reprinted: Little Review Anthology, p.55-59. TE (entitled “War”).
342. Tar Moorhead’s father. Woman’s Home Companion 53:19-20, 154-55 June 1926. Tar (with revisions).
343. Tar’s day of bravery. Woman’s Home Companion 53:25-26, 184-85 October 1926. Tar (with revisions).
344. Tar’s wonderful Sunday. Woman’s Home Companion 53:29-30, 50 November 1926. Tar (with revisions).
345. Testament (containing songs of one who would be a priest); song number two. Double Dealer 7:59-60 November-December 1924. NT (entitled “Song number two”).
346. Testament: one puzzled concerning himself. Double Dealer 7:100 January-February 1925. NT.
347. Testament: song number one. Double Dealer 7:15-16 October 1924. NT.
348. Testament of two glad men. Double Dealer 3:203-05 April 1922. NT.
349. These mountaineers. Vanity Fair 33:44-45, 94 January 1930. DW.
350. They come bearing gifts. American Mercury 21:129-37 October 1930.
351. They got this one. Book Buyer n.s.1,no.4:10-11 June 1935. Excerpt from Puzzled America.
352. The thinker. Seven Arts 2:584-97 September 1917. WO.
353. To remember. American Spectator 1,no.7:1 May 1933. Reprinted: American Spectator Yearbook. New York, Frederick A. Stokes, 1934. p.172-74.
354. Tom Grey could so easily lead them. Today 1:8-9, 23 March 24, 1934. PA (entitled “A union meeting”; with revisions).
355. Tough babes in the woods. Today 1:6-7, 22 February 10, 1934. PA, SAR.
356. The triumph of a modern. New Republic 33:245-47 January 31, 1923. HM.
357. The triumph of the egg. Dial 68:295-304 March 1920. TE, SAR, PSA (entitled “The egg”). “L’Oeuf,” a French translation by Bernard Fay, appears in Revue Européenne 2:1-13 September 1923; a Spanish translation, “La victoria del huevo,” is in John Peale Bishop’s Antología de escritores contemporáneos de los Estados Unidos. Santiago, Chile, Nascimento, 1944. v.1., p.262-76.
358. Two lovers. Story 14:16-25 January-February 1939.
359. Unlighted lamps. Smart Set 65:45-55 July 1921. TE, SAR.
360. The untold lie. Seven Arts 1:215-21 January 1917. WO, SAR.
361. V. F. Calverton. Modern Quarterly 11,no.7:41 Fall 1940.
362. Valley apart. Today 3:6-7, 22-23 April 20, 1935.
363. Vibrant life. Little Review 3:10-11 March 1916.
364. Village wassail. Today 3:8-9, 20 January 26, 1935. PA.
365. Virginia. Vanity Fair 32:66, 74 August 1929. SAM.
366. Virginia justice. Today 2:6-7, 24 July 21, 1934. SAR (entitled “Justice”).
367. War of the winds. Today 3:8-9, 20 February 23, 1935. PA (entitled “Revolt in South Dakota”; with revisions).
368. We are all small-towners. This Week June 16, 1940, p.2. HT.
369. We would be wise: talking it out. Agricultural Advertising 10:45-47 January 1903.
370. What makes a boy afraid. Woman’s Home Companion 54:19-20, 96 January 1927. Tar (with revisions).
371. When America goes to war: a symposium. Modern Monthly 9:201 June 1935.
372. When are authors insulted? Bookman (N.Y.) 75:564 October 1932. Letter to the editor signed by Sherwood Anderson, Waldo Frank, James Rorty, William Jones, Elliot E. Cohen (National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners).
373. When I left business for literature. Century 108:489-96 August 1924. SS.
374. When the writer talks. New York Evening Post Literary Review April 18, 1925, p.1-2. SAN.
375. When we care. Twice a Year 10/11:238-44 Spring-Summer/Fall-Winter 1943. SAR.
376. The white streak. Smart Set 55:27-30 July 1918.
377. Whither the American writer (a questionnaire). Modern Quarterly 6,no.2:12 Summer 1932.
378. Why I live where I live. Golden Book 16:398-400 November 1932. SAM.
379. Why I write. Writer 49:363-64 December 1936.
380. Why men write. Story 8:2, 4, 103, 105 January 1936.
381. Why there must be a Midwestern literature. Vanity Fair 16:23-24 March 1921. HM, SAR (entitled “Milk bottles”).
382. Why they got married. Vanity Fair 32:74, 116 March 1929. DW.
383. Winter day’s walk in New York. American Spectator 2,no.15:3 January 1934.
384. A word of advice. Literary Workshop 1,no.2:43 1934.
385. Worlds of fancy and of facts. Woman’s Home Companion 53:27-28, 79 September 1926. Tar (with revisions).
386. A writer’s conception of realism. Writer 54:3-6 January 1941. SAR; see also item 60.
387. A writer’s notes. New Masses 8:10 August 1932. SAM (as part of the chapter “I become a protester”).
388. Writing it down. Agricultural Advertising 9:46 November 1902.
389. The yellow gown. Mademoiselle 15:94-95, 154-57 September 1942. SAR.
390. Young man from West Virginia. Today 3:5, 23-24 December 1, 1934. PA (entitled “They elected him”).
Serial Publications Edited by Anderson
391. American Spectator. New York, N.Y. December 1933-March 1935. (Anderson was one of six editors, the others being George Jean Nathan, Ernest Boyd, James Branch Cabell, Eugene O’Neill, and Theodore Dreiser.)
392. Commercial Democracy. [Elyria, Ohio. 1909?-1910?] No file located.
393. Marion Democrat. Marion, Virginia. November 1927-1929.
394. Smyth County News. Marion, Virginia. November 1927-1929.
Contributions to the Smyth County News
EDITORS’ NOTE: With the issue of November 3, 1927, Sherwood Anderson assumed the editorship of the Smyth County News. He continued to edit this and its companion weekly, the Marion Democrat, for more than two years, and it is generally acknowledged that during much of that period Anderson contributed an appreciable percentage of the articles published in both newspapers. Files of both papers are, unfortunately, exceedingly rare. The citations in this section have been drawn from the Newberry Library’s microfilm of the Smyth County News covering the period November 3, 1927, through December 26, 1929. We have been unable to examine a file of the Marion Democrat.
The list which follows makes no attempt to include all of Anderson’s contributions to the Smyth County News. Rather, it is meant to give some indication of the type and variety of materials Anderson chose to publish along with the weekly accounts of local news. We have included only those articles signed with Anderson’s name or in his capacity as “Editor” (i.e., unsigned editorials are largely excluded), and reprintings of Anderson’s own stories and articles (often unsigned). Articles signed with the pseudonym “Buck Fever” are separately listed. The numerous anonymous and pseudonymous articles (e.g., letters from “Hannah Stoots” and various Coon Hollow folks) contributing to the Buck Fever fiction, though undoubtedly written by Anderson, have been omitted.
395. Alice. May 2, 1929, p.2.
396. The black hole of Marion. April 12, 1928, p.8. (Unsigned) HT.
397. Brothers. September 27, 1928, p.1-2. (Unsigned; reprinted from TE)
398. Cattle rustler picked up near Marion. December 22, 1927, p.1. (Unsigned) HT.
399. A criminal’s Christmas. December 6, 1928, p.1, 5. (Unsigned) HT.
400. Editorial statement. July 19, 1928, p.1.
401. A garden masterpiece. June 7, 1928, p.2. (Unsigned, but includes references to the writing of Poor White)
402. Glade Spring claims it’s the grass. May 10, 1928, p.3. (Signed “The Editor”).
403. Hands. January 17, 1929, p.5, 8. Reprinted from WO.
404. In a box car. October 25, 1929, p.7. (Unsigned)
405. In gratitude. December 22, 1927, p.4. (An unsigned Christmas editorial)
406. In New York. November 29, 1928, p.1. HT.
407. In Washington. February 9, 1928, p.1, 3. HT, PSA.
408. The life of a country editor. February 16, 1928, p.1, 5. Reprinted from Vanity Fair.
409. The lost novel. September 20, 1928, p.5. (Unsigned; reprinted from Scribner’s Magazine)
410. A man of ideas. January 19, 1927, p.6-7. Reprinted from WO.
411. Milk bottles. January 10, 1929, p.2, 7. Reprinted from HM.
412. Nellie is dead; the print shop cat passes away. January 12, 1928, p.6. (Unsigned) HT.
413. The newspaper and the modern age. August 15, 1929, p.1, 4, 10. A speech made at the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, August 12, 1929.
414. Our new editor’s bow. November 3, 1927, p.1.
415. Print shop to have picture of Thomas Jefferson presented by Governor Byrd. August 30, 1928, p.1. (Signed “The Editor”)
416. A sentimental journey. June 21, 1928, p.5. Reprinted from Vanity Fair.
417. Soliloquy. January 31, 1929, p.3. Reprinted from Vanity Fair.
418. Sophistication. August 30, 1928, p.1, 3. Reprinted from WO.
419. The sophistication. May 23, 1929. p.1, 4.
420. That subscription. September 13, 1928, p.1. (Signed “The Editor”)
421. Tom Greer. March 8, 1928, p.4. (Unsigned) HT.
422. A traveler’s notes. February 7, 1929, p.1; February 14, 1929, p.1, 5; March 28, 1929, p.1, 5. (The April 4, 1929 “What Say” column continued this series.)
423. A traveler’s notes: Elizabethton. April 18, 1929, p.1, 8.
424. The untold lie. December 27, 1928, p.7. Reprinted from WO.
425. War. November 24, 1927, p.5. Reprinted from TE.
426. What is happening. April 5, 1928, p.6. (Signed “The Editor”)
427. What say! (This column first appeared, unsigned, in the issue of November 3, 1927, p.8, and was a weekly feature throughout Anderson’s term of editorship. With the issue of November 10, 1927, a standard heading incorporating Anderson’s picture was adopted, and in the November 17, 1927, issue notice of copyright appeared with the column. Poems, sketches, and letters by other writers were often included along with Anderson’s own pieces, and on a few occasions the entire column was given over to the work of others.)
428. Why they got married. March 28, 1929, p.1, 4; April 4, 1929, p.2. Reprinted from Vanity Fair.
429. Will you sell your news papers. November 8, 1928, p.2. (Unsigned)
430. The writer’s trade. January 3, 1929, p.4, 8. Reprinted from Vanity Fair. HT.
Articles Signed “Buck Fever”
431. Alas, poor Nellie. December 29, 1927, p.6. HT.
432. The big June. June 14, 1928, p.1.
433. Boss back. January 17, 1929, p.1.
434. Buck Fever comments. January 26, 1928, p.8.
435. Buck Fever says. (This column first appeared in the issue for December 8, 1927; next appeared December 29, 1927; and was not repeated until February 2, 1928. In the February 9, 1928, issue the column carried the line drawing of Buck by Wharton Esherick which thereafter distinguished it. Usually a front-page feature, the column appeared almost weekly from February through August, 1928; thereafter it appeared irregularly on an average of twice a month, the last appearance being in the issue for December 19, 1929. The column served primarily as an outlet for Buck’s opinions and his accounts of the fictional happenings up Coon Hollow way; Buck’s reports on actual local events usually took the form of a news story with his by-line.)
436. Chilhowie officers tree the coon. May 31, 1928, p.2.
437. Come and dance. July 19, 1928, p.1.
438. The council. August 30, 1928, p.1.
439. Deep sea club on cruise. October 25, 1928, p.3.
440. Don’t you dare call it a scrap. December 29, 1927, p.5.
441. Fine hunting weather. November 17, 1927, p.1. HT.
442. [Henry Mencken Park] March 8, 1928, p.8.
443. Henry Staley plunges into history. January 17, 1929, p.1.
444. Husband’s day in court. June 28, 1928, p.2.
445. In Coon Hollow. July 26, 1928, p.2.
446. In darkest Marion. November 17, 1927, p.1.
447. It may be the bunk. February 2, 1928, p.5.
448. Kiwanis club. January 26, 1928, p.1; February 2, 1928, p.1; February 9, 1928, p.1; April 5, 1928, p.1; April 26, 1928, p.1; May 31, 1928, p.1; June 27, 1929, p.1; December 6, 1928, p.1.
449. Kiwanis show turns out the town. March 8, 1928. p.1.
450. Look out snakes. December 15, 1927, p.1.
451. Marion High wins first game of season. April 5, 1928, p.1.
452. Marion sports have big night. January 19, 1928, p.2.
453. Mayor bags ’em. November 24, 1927, p.1.
454. The melancholy maid. June 6, 1929, p.8.
455. Mrs. Jimmy Dutton. August 30, 1928, p.6. HT.
456. Odd fellows have fine feast. January 26, 1928, p.4.
457. On the rialto. October 25, 1928, p.1; December 27, 1928, p.2; January 31, 1929, p.1.
458. On the rialto; conversation with Uncle Steve Groseclose. April 25, 1929, p.1.
459. On the rialto—rain. October 11, 1928, p.7.
460. One day court. May 31, 1928, p.2.
461. 100 to 15 or 7 to 1. December 27, 1928, p.5.
462. Over the top. January 19, 1928, p.1.
463. Progress. June 20, 1929, p.1.
464. A question. July 26, 1928, p.2.
465. Rotarians to back Bud’s band. December 13, 1928, p.1.
466. Saltville boys have big night. April 12, 1928, p.2.
467. Sam’s Bible. May 31, 1928, p.3.
468. Scandal in Kiwanis club. June 28, 1928, p.1.
469. The school teachers. September 13, 1928, p.2.
470. Them Andersons. November 15, 1928, p.4.
471. They came. They saw. They conquered. March 8, 1928, p.1.
472. They left there; the gun did it. December 13, 1928, p.2.
473. They liked it. October 11, 1928, p.4.
474. Three McCormack sisters. January 19, 1928, p.1.
475. To Mrs. P. B. Y. July 12, 1928, p.5.
476. Town council. February 9, 1928, p.6.
477. Try this on your piano. December 1, 1927, p.1.
478. Wanted his wife. January 26, 1928, p.1. HT.
479. Well well and oh oh. January 3, 1929, p.1.
480. What about it Ed? June 14, 1928, p.1.
481. What is a good steak? March 1, 1928, p.3.
482. What the boys in jail had for Christmas dinner. December 29, 1927, p.7.