the Marmon Motor Car Company introduced a more affordable (under $1,000) car to New Yorker readers in 1929, but it was too late for the struggling company, which due to the Depression folded in 1933… …this seems an unusual ad for the New Yorker, but then again perhaps the White ...
Car Wars As the Great Depression slowly crushed some of the smaller automobile manufacturers, the Big Three (Ford, GM and Chrysler) were duking it out in the advertising pages, much to the amusement ofE.B. White,who filed this in his “Notes and Comment” section: FLOATS LIKE A BUTTERFLY...
Melissa Lawford – The Telegraph As Vladimir Putin held meetings with Russian police chiefs earlier this month to discuss tightening migration controls in the wake of the Moscow concert hall terror attack, foes were crossing his country’s border hundreds of miles away. A Ukrainian drone flew over...
Lise Andreasen, Andrew (not Werdna), SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, and Andrew Porter for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern.] ...
Presidential deaths after Kennedy, and the date of their memorial stamp (on or near their birthday), are shown here: President Herbert Hoover Dwight D. Eisenhower Harry S Truman Lyndon B. Johnson Richard Nixon Ronald Reagan Gerald Ford
a-tracy. What about the people who for years had been buying food from the German discounters or had their car insurance bought after considering these comparison websites. These people are not going to find any big savings now and will have seen that even the discounters have increased thei...