Based on the old Zillow link (found on your other thread), the house has been consistently overpriced. In 2016 the original posting price was $195k whereas the Zestimate* was $180k. You then walked the price down slower than the decline in value. From a marketing perspective this is about the worst thing one can do. You want to be "in the market" at or slightly below, but not too low, and certainly not too high. Not trying to be mean, it's just what happened and not something to beat yourself up about - it's just money and sometimes this is how we learn. The most important thing is, don't keep doing it! The current price of $119k is better, but if you're not getting offers then you need to cut aggressively. Either that, or spend the time/money to strip and paint the walls as these are dated and distracting. Paint elsewhere will also make a huge difference in the appearance.
As others have recommended, take better photos with better lighting. Clean out the attic before taking pictures of it. The washed out photo of the fan window (I think?) is not appealing, get rid of it or replace with a better photo. The sad rainy day/winter photo of the back door (?) is also unappealing. These are all small things that have an impact on first impressions. Unfortunately, in a small market most of your potential clients have likely already seen your house since it's been on the market for 3 years. IMO it's probably too late to remedy these.
In your shoes I would price it very aggressively to get people's attention. As in, drop it to $99k (below the $100k psychological barrier) and either let my credit take a hit in a short sell, or just eat the loss myself. However, this is a very personal thing...I wouldn't be too upset by a ~$20k loss if it meant unloading an albatross from around my neck. YMMV.
*Zestimates aren't perfect, though they are based on comps and real data. If you price above the Zestimate then there should be an obvious reason: specific location, lot features, updated, whatever. Your house doesn't appear to have such things.
ETA: Also, the description mentions a large back yard and an old maple tree. You should include photos from a sunny spring/summer day. Do some basic cleanup and yardword before shooting photos.