Scuffed up but nice looking and sounding parlor guitar. Quite playable. Good projection and sustain. You need to be in front of the guitar to fully appreciate how it sounds.

If I had to guess, I would say 1920s or 1930s or even earlier. The neck V is very pronounced. Probably a mahogany and spruce guitar.

One of the upper bouts looks like it may have been badly damaged at some time. The guitar has been worked on. The guy I bought it from back in the day off of eBay said he had used a screw to brace the neck. There is a separation on the top that extends from the bridge to the rosette.  There is a 4+ inch crack on the back that I just had glued at a repair shop.

As far as I am concerned, this is a nylon string guitar. I don't think it can hold up to any kind of steel strings. It only has two braces.

All the strings buzz at the 12th fret. The B and high E strings pretty much stop buzzing above the 12th fret and are playable up there. After I recently changed the strings the open A and the low open E can be made to buzz. There is a little fret sprout up to about the 12th fret, and more above.

I recently put the old (original?) tuning machines back on the guitar. They're kind of hard to turn. I put a bit of silicone grease on the high E tuning machine. The tuning keys operate in the opposite direction than one would expect .

A black Gator GWE-Acou-3/4 hard shell guitar case, worth about a $100.00 new, will be included.