Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 30, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 18, 1928 Page: 2 of 10
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A 30c CAN OF
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saving. Spend
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PIGGLY WIGGLY
fr
Now Is the Time to Paint Up
A. D.»
We Deliver
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Priced $4.85? $5.00, $6.00
F Phone
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. Phone 171 •
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South Side. *
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No collectors, no bad accounts, no bookkeeping.
The saving is passed on to you—our customers.
cring corn.
Miss Only Jones and Mrs. Ne’tie
Sullivan of Sanger visited Mrs. C.
Bronaugh
Misses Rosa and Dcllie McFarlin
were in Fort Worth. —.---------
^Mr and Mrs. C. Bronaugh and
j were in Gainesville.
-J- E. Odom was in Gainesville.
AT LARGE:
live stock
jy pie City
One
One
One
One
eft -
k- * —
mentioned
—* will be
V j
rt
a
OPTOMETRIST*
Denton, Texas.
McCray's Jewelry Store
Isn’t It i
rnce IS <
\ n>
4
4-
lr
£ IF
^<'-1
Grocery ■■
Charlie’s Market
spent the week end with Mrs. J
B Odom.
Mr. and Mrs. John Schmidt were
m Denton.
MtrsMhllfe Odo-n was in Green -
jX—V.
**a pov«ph’
art -
-W'
FOR SALE OR TRADE
1926 Chrysler Sedan.
1926 Dodge Coupe
1925 Ford Coupe.
1924 Ford Touring.
i
I I—■
offer good for one week only.
J MORRIS PAINT AND PAPER CO.
IT. t. TtORRIS. D. T. McCLENDON.
g “Buy Paint From a Paint Store.”
i Mr
1
V
DO YOU KNOW
That th can straighten out bent or broken fender*
and bent axles on your car?
We can weld or fix anything.
HANCOCK MACHINE WORKS
Phone 806. East Hickory St.
grown, per p
Harry Te
”T».We 'IMHVe*TlSt y««
too. Why mA try mt
<l ...a!
«wo< I'
«Vk
IF*
| : «h*pe
HpotJi Mrarty y
r Receipts 3.000: A
7,000; American
I OKI WORT
PORT WORTH
•mailer cattle r
market held to
trade wa« fairly
, Hoga were 15 t
Sheep and lan
changed
Cattle Beeves
75 to 9 75 calve*
8 to 12; cannera
Inga 9 to 14; bul
Hogs: Medium
11 85 to 12 sow. I
75 to 1175; pig*
Sheep Lamb.
Jamba 8 50 to 9.1
rf - . ■ 1
erne so
CHICAGO Sept
tone hedging p
northwest forced
Corn worked lowe
dera Oata followe<
Wheat: Sept 1
341; Mar 1 17 5-8
Corn: Sept 1 01
Mar. 77 3-4.
Oats’ Sept. 41 I
Mar 45 3-8
8>S-.’—*e
“Really, You'd Think It Waa
a New Suit”
Water-Spar Quick Drying Enamel
•For, 10c, Come in and let us tell you about it. This
I NEW YORK
I na» leKHrdlnvl
credit condltld
I fed uc lion of 83
dlacounta of rel
of the Federal I
week ended sJ
with bulllah al
the healthy aci
ket. thia ahowll
for furth< r bu
- early dealing*. I
Continental I
large hIndira J
ground for tliJ
points from Md
the company's
new strplane d
New high* ol
wsre reached b
shares, includlri
Hudson
951,000 DAMAGE SUIT TltED.IN
GIRL’S DEATH
DALLAS. Sept. 18.—Suit for 851.-
000 damaces wu filed in district
court here against Palmer Lawrence
of Mesquite, near here as the re-
sult of the death of Miss Bonnie
Wayne PennaL 18, from injuries re-
ceived in an automobile accident.
—.......r, ar. Hl ------
For Safety and
Satisfaction
IENTON TEXAS, REOGBP-
' '* * 1 9 JI
' 11
NEW YORK. Sept.’ 18. -From tFe
fundamental st and ; “
' ‘ I
GOODVIEW
GOODVTEW. Sept. 15.—Farmers
are busy picking cotton and gath-
2...:
118 S. Locust
TFoir TKe Housekeeper.
Special prices on Dishes, Cooking Utensils, Cook •
Stoves, Waterless Cookers, Heaters, Water Coolers, Glass*
ware* Electric Irons, Wster Hose, Lawn Mi
Baskets.
rrf c ~ ■-
73 ?
CONFUSION AHEAD
The current season elso bring*
semething of a coincidence. In t. c
wake of “The Childet mass” by
Wyndham Lewia. r.rohiinent Enr-
llsh critic, is "Francois Vllldn." a
docurucntary study cf the poet, by
Wyndham Lewis. London newspep-
cdWThrtUt The tn it la's “D F.”
Vclare the lattei's name arc the
idemification mark.
_ It is not a coincidence, however.
now
at
r.e
cf
a
C -----------------------------------
| T.-
McDowell-Jacobsen Co.
Phone 724. v ’ North Side Square.,
cd with conspiracy to violate
prohibition laws, scheduled
Mcndfty. was postponed.
gs
08
it era.
. «HH Rnlh
____’itov.*'
__, _J^«wiber of
its facing CtnU-Ai park on
^Fall Styles in Our Ladies’ Shoe Dept.
“^Z,^W<mdwfut "fitment of colors. All sizes’and
j - widths. —----
I •
Officers Held on
Dry Law Charges
Notice to Owners
OF STOCK RI NNING A
All persons permitting
to run on land owned oy
of Dallas tn Danton County are
hereby notified to remove ouch stock.
desires that all of such stock be re-
moved from its above
land. Only a reasonable time w
given so to remove such gwek
This 8th day of September,
1038
WAID HOUSE. Patrolman.
——
J
, JUZ'
Hr ' I M
If (
r , ■
x / t
z ,T.a
Fast'Delivery, i
-
-.?j|
■ ■ a. - -xaE
B to 80a par ibl
F lb.: turkeys 13
I lOe per lb ; e|
I table butter 3|
Ing stock bull
I crOam 85c to I
I • • v COTlj
new york]
<T”. up. n<-ll
“> ~riy|
L- active. The stl
I Ida after devel
I proached Georl
by heavy ralnl
ed the cottoJ
other bullish I
L tion of a repol
> of agriculture I
I tions which vJ
cotton prices I
eratc. I
| The Garsldel
r '-ttat cotton d
cent below tl
level and add
."Brlcee wUl c J
Srly gains |
: cent a pound
soiling again I
and the rise
noon Heavy rd
brought in soJ
covering, but
tinued bearish
NEW Yi
itEW YORK I
closed ras) I
January I
March I
May I
July I
r-— October I
December I
t Spots steady; I
New OKI.I
NEW ORLEAN
» closed steady. I
— January I
_ March I
May
-July I
October •
December I
Spots quiet; q
UVF.RPol
LIVERPOOL, S
ened steady 3 to]
2 to 13 higher I
issr :
r M.y
F July .....
Ross Printing Co.
2191*2 W. Oak St.
Phone 841.
1 r ;'i.. ■
week-end.
Mr, and Mrs. H. T. Bridges vis-
ited in Decatur.
Andrew Herring of Graham
visiting J. B. Cherry.
Mrs. E. L. King Jr , and Miss
I-'‘>*ra^ Mae^Kmg of Marietta vts-
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Norris and
Willie Norris of Corsicana visited
Mr. and Mrs, Roy Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Bearfiield of
Clarendon visited Messrs and
J W, and J, Marshall Koons.
Miss Ruby Kemp of Collinsville
visited relatives here.
- -LaXS
......
that ‘he Villon biograpner,
vultlng Nrw TOiX, IS staving
the Windham Hotel. Or that
was the guest at a luncheon
New York columnists wno, in
>vay. flock teactfaer. , .. .j, .
Help Yourself From a Smiling Shelf
>1 and Peace House al-
opposite the park. A
WRIST WATCHES
See the new models in Elgin Strap and Wrist
Watches now on display.
__ / PRICED $19.00 TO $35.00.
Smith Hamilton Motor Co.
~ . Phone 268
Apples,
Fresh '
_
—
j
£
Oy Lin® of school ahoes made especially for
with an extra lining to make them retain their
weau.M.ia.'.'HV--'''—'
Though John Coolidge, son of the president, took a $30-a-week job
as a railroad-clerk in New Haven, Conn, junt as many other young fel-
lows have done. John sUU haa a bodyguard. Here are John (left) and Wil-
liam Wood Of the U. 8 secret'aervictj, leaving the railroad office at the
Close of a busy day. Tne secret sen ice will keep an agent with youm
Coolidge as long as his father is in the White House.
Special to Record-Chronicle. . ”
SANGER. Sept. 18. Among the
students from here who will attend
college this year are the following:
C. I. A,: Vera Lou LeGear, Lois
Averitt. Thelma Lee Seal, Louise
anfj Hazel Toon. Loa Grace Holt.
Alva Fae Cowling and Lona Graham
Gary.
Teachers College—Lillian Smith.
Eloise Bridge*. Irene Hayes. Hen-
rietta Wood. Gordon Wood. Jude
Milligan. Clay Rice, Billy Jones.
Noel Wilson, Connie Amyx. Mrs. C.
A. Williams. Clovis Crockett. Elaie
Henderson. J E. Carrico, John Ash-
ley-
Raymond Carrico has gone to
Texas Tech at Lubbock and Wai
ton Wilfong to Baylor University
at Waco.
‘ Taliaferro & Son.
Hardware and Sporting Goods.
l'1"'*""'**1" <»»!■. —B«a I
Welcome, Students and Faculty •
Teachers College and C. I. A.
We’re proud to welcome you back. May your
stay be both a pleasant and a profitable one.
Don’t forget when you have dry cleaning, dye- “
ing, etc., to call 31-t-the old Tellable
EAST SIDE TAILOR SHOP
vice th at c an please the most <
~ particular. - r
Twenty men, 20 trucks to j
Mrveyou. -
Whone 45, Denton •
OUT TO LUNCH
A new custom, which incidental-
ly fixes Um fashionable hour for
lunch, har been adopted by a film
of Fifth avenue furriers. Promptly
at one o'clock each day the store
i& closed, to reopen at two. A sign
on tBe^ dbor points out that tne
plan has been adapted th " order
that executives may eat at the
same heur as the employees and
thus be available to see patrons
whenever the stjre is open, instead
of being out at lunch when mid-
day customers cglL ~‘
THEATRICAL TRIMMI7 I
Will Shakespeare himself would
ooubtle&s be surprised to Itam that
three centuries after Utt* age he 18
still the most popular playwright
cn Broadway.
Bul so he Is, for last stMon eight
of his works were presented in New
York thea^pis as against flye by
Willard Mack and four, by Henrik -
Shakespearean ' productions of
last reason ranged from "The Tam-
ing of the Shrew," which Basil
Sydney end Mary Ellis played .n.
modern dress through most of ‘he
season to Oeoi're Arliss* "Merch-
ant of Venice" and Max Reinhardt's
Shakespearean impor^diopa from
Germany. Mack, at runner up
among the prolific playwrights, saw
foui of his own plays produced and
was the collaborating author of a
fit tit.
:snn?cs'.??jr^:
■eder wy be dritveeta prompt-
the BYokaws
perpetual-
individuality
McCray Jewelry Co.
West Court Square.
Use B. P. S. Best
paint sold. In lacquers,
interior and exterior
FnfirffeTsT ”T:To8fiSt;T!nr“
enamel that will dry in
four hours. Newest
thing out.
FOR HER BOUDOIR S
There are many dainty cosmetic necessities t<a^
every woman's dressing table, and also for gifts. •
Nothing Is more appropriate than our selections of
. .luxurious perfumes, powders, sachets, compounds,
~ etc. We will fielp you to make you selection.
That your tnrttt ’' 1 Ill TtOTK
No job too small but that
calves our meet careful at-
tention. No job too targv
that we cannot handle. If
it's tin work try _ _
/ M.A.Gay
........ Phone 710. -
1, X19W. Oak BL
0
& ■ 7?
Y*!
I SCORE
I By UNITE
I Yesterday's hei
I ley. St. Louis Ca
I v.'nosc home run i
■ nlng with High ai
I gave the St. Lou
B tc 2 victory over
■ I. '
I mv Welsh and th
I Carl Hubbell enab
I Giants to defeat
I Pirates & to 2
I Five Boston Bra
I found ior ninete
1.1 give the Chicago
I victory.
I Pct< Donohue i
I eighth inning ar
I Brooklyn Robins t
I and uin a 7 to 3
I Cincinnati Reds.
I Six costly errors
I work by four St
I enabled the New
win a 12 to 3 vlctoi
I half a game in
I League pennant r
I The Washington
I the first division I
I third straliht fro
Tigers by a score <
Fred Russell best
I a mound bq^le
I Red Sox won 8 to
I cage White Sox.
' Lyoha allowed ton
I. sell was found fm-
. —Loe Angeles Tlm<
I Wild Plums f
It" -... - »*Uon •••••reevevl
SPECIAL VENIRE TO TRY "BET
Sl.AVF.IT
- DAI,I.AS Sept. 18 A speriat
venire of 350 was summoned Mon-
day by Jud(.e C. A Piopen of the
Dallas County criminal district
court for the trial on Oct. 1 of V
Ray Adams, Bartlett., for the mur-
der oi OrviUc Mathews here dept.
1. Mathev s was shot to death on a
downtown street romer during a
discussion over an alleged election
bet____-r.-—.. . -
W.T. Bailey & Co.
INSURANCE
All Kinds
SOLICITS YOUK BUSINESS
FIRST NAT. BANK BLDG.
^ . . . FBONB 78-
i j m
You Can Buy
i Them Cheaper I
But—
the slight differ- I
i know that your |
meets ere elwoya I
ty. well known E
are being perfected wherebv third
year English will be taught on each
Thursday night at the school build-
ing here. Several of the focal teach-
ers and others of Sanger and some
rural people- will attend
Sunday School Elects
At a meeting at the First Bap-
tist Church Sunday the following
officers and teacherj were etegt^b
for the Sunday School as follows:
Superintendent. W A. Selvidge; as-
sociate superintendent, W. E. Ty-
son. secretary. Miss Winnies Pearl
Seal: Assistant secretary. Miss Brick
Nance; pianist. Miss Marion Wil-
son The teachers Tfe as follow*:
Adult men. J w. Hale; adult wo-
men. Dr. J. C. Rice; young mar-
ried women. H. T. Bridges; young
men. S. C. Moore; Fidelis young la-
dies. J. Spillman; intermediate girls,
Mrs. D. H. Minick; D. H Mtntck,
intermediate boys; third ycard jun-
ior girls, Mrs. Tippen; second year
junior girls Mrs. J. A. McBride;
first year junior girls. Mrs. J. H.
Hall; first year junior boys. Mrs. E.
L. LeGear: second and third year
boys. Mrs. J. s. Stubbs; superinten-
dent primary-beginners' ('depart- .........
ment, Mrs. J. E. Burns; first year daughters
beginners, Mrs. M. J. Nance; second
year beginners. Mrs J. C Rice-
8t>r the City of Dallaa ln.< con trac-
tion with said Lake and landa. So
rz*
t)
Sanger Students .
in Colleges Here
11
I
r
i j i
i
I
f
LJ IjM
4..----i Pick your choice yourself at h
* the difference elsewhere.
w ' ‘iEZ?
14 A™
"t?—
SALE!
* Beginning Tuesday, September 11, and until all is
~ moved, our
r Varnish. Paint and Lacquer <
n Bteek will gtrat—.......................... * -----------—
Half Price
HODGSON BROS.
119,
Eurrive as sho< plw
ing the stamp of
which lias been erased elsewhere
Until iRtaty FIftta lawmui sud-
denly ceased, a little *oy ■ above
lOVth street, to be the abode of
millionaires, and became a-a*tc of
Cheep-up ailments. The traveler
stepped suddenly from an atmos-
phere cf wealth and seclusion into
streets where firs escapes protrud-
ed over the sidewalks from dingy
brick buildings lined with delicat-
essens and grocery stores and
butcher shops. »:t- o* —.
Now a bsurier of public institu-
tions is rising between ’"million-
aire's row," and the ragged north-
ern fringe of th» thoroughfare.
Mount Sinai hospital, the Hec>-
< lnr Foundation for Children, the
fifth avenue hospital, a new medi-
cal clinic, the home of the Daitgti-
ters of Isrftef '
ready sfan-i
municipal museum, a ski»*and can
ccr hospital and a Jewish maternity
home are soon to rise on sites har-
ed lor thefr erection. '' / £
The district north of this be-
comes part of Harlem, and the av-
enue. interrupted far A'tew*1 blocks
by Mount Morris perk, is just an-
other city street on up to Kt <1
where it runs into the Harlem
River. -
■■■
| -s|ARGE.
W" By a D. SEYMOUR
a. u-fi„
K ** .
I their places on “militonMret 1
TH while . In ten yuarx -the numb<
• • apartment.- —
the *avenue have increffaMt from 13
be filled with ■.parttnfnW aa Riv-
erside drive and Park »venue are
now, but it will be at least a gen-
traUon before the passing of the
la»t of the mansicns, if ti>e pres-
ent rate of tiisapoiarance- to. a cri-
terion.
Such imposing homes hs those
CORPUS CHRISTI, Sept 18 —
Sheriff Ben D Lee of Nueces
County and Constable Thad Davis
Under the direction of '. R ■ brere,ancated Monday on charges
oi conspiracy to violate the na-
tional prohibiUon act. •
The arrests were made by Dep-
uty U. 6. Marshal George Peters
followirl; a long investigaticn here.
Sheriff Lne; 50. has held that
office five oi' six years and was re-
elected last August; He was re-
leased under temporary bond of
82,500. Examining trial was not er-t.
Gcnstable Davis waived examin-
ing Irinl and was gl inted bail of
f2b00.
At the same time examining trial
for Police Chief S. P. Shaw, chkrg-
ed with conspiracy to violate the
for
BOARDING HOUSE KEEPERS
We have a cxunplrte line of Both new and used furni-
__ 1. Let us figure with you on your needs fdr the com-
k ing seaeion. " --------- __ . / .___
’> RX»>. KOI YARBROUGH BROS. 1
7 r-none 1401. ___________________231 W. Hickory. 1
Bread Bread Bread Bread Bread Brea* Br««g j
Invest With
Denton Building &
Loan
B? Iff b« nn 8
~ For” ■
BettaKnd
— L Try? |
WOMEN. GOOD AND BAD .
September finds publishers with
sleeves rolled up. manufacturing
the books which, presumably, per
fpiring -adjective experts scribbled
blurbs in August. So heavy is the
month's output that some ot the
subject matter laps.
| For injjtance, both Franz Blei. a
I German,4lffil Francis Gribble, an
1 Englishman, analyze the love life
of George Sand in "Fascinating
Women, Sacred and Prof ape." and
"George Sand and Her Lov*rs.”
Then comes Richard Wilmer Row-
an's “Spy and Oounter-Spy," tell-
ing about Mata Hart, the exotic
■; ttm " ‘ *■
k faMU
. ..r
a' 'n. * ■" ; ...... ' • ■ ■'
Bonded Transfer “
Phone 90.
Specializing in Careful Handling of Baggage,
h * • Roping, Crating, Storage. -
Long Distance Hauling Of All Kinds of Freight.
^MALCOLM JANUARY, Owner.
Denton, Texas.
Hvarv thh-H S ®u*"’(Quests of Jimmie D Bronaugh. mo'
ss
Personals »
J. T and Mr. and Mrs W B.
Chambers, Rob and Johnnie Ch'am-
bers visited relative* tn Decatur—
Mrs. Julia McMurtry and Misses vUle'
Nelle Harter and Genevieve Rice
visited in Fort Worth.
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. McClendon
and Jerry Cason visited at Collins-
ville.
Mr and Mrs. E. B. Brown were
in Fort Worth.
Mr and Mrs. Lester Caves and
Mrs. Earl Bates and daughter
were in Denton.
Mrs. Cearley of Union Hill visit-
ed Mis Bob Payne.
Fremont Chatfield and Frank
Harper of Crowell are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. John Schmidt.
A COLONY OF ECCENTRICS
louis Bromfield's forte is chaxn
ucterizatiun. It is not suiprising,
therefore, that he has poured un
abundance of it into "The Strange
Case of Miss Annie Sprang."
Love and religion are the twin
themes of this new novel, and most
of the characters are obsessed with
one or the other, or both.
Miss Annie Spragg’s death in an
Italian palace under circumstances
miractitoUD to Sister AnniUialsta,
‘‘the Mad One." provide tlA case.
Around this nucleus accuVivlate
the stories of the fanatical Sprags
family, the notorious American
Princess o'Orobelll, FVLher a'As-
tier. confessor to the worldly. Mr.
Winnery whose belated love wift
the most conventional. Bessie Cud-
lip "barmaid without a moral,"
and a half dozen others. The whole
is a bi;; story, tightly oound to-
gether.
LIKE NEW—AGAIN
: v«n will say sflrr we have dry clean-
V r<l >»ur last coat. And In n|>-
B iwarance it will be new, for our pro-
fl cexH thoroughly rejuvenates old gar-
fl ments, restores the original freahneaa
I of fabrics, removes spots and stains.
I You will be pleased with our work
H and delighted with our moderate
P charges.
OLLIR CAMP
Better ( leaning and Pressing
Now is a good time to let |
us clean that heavier woolen j
suit for fall. You’ll be de* S
lighted with its look of new*
”688—afid the cost 1 a »o H*- J
tie. Call 24. Prompt, effic-
C^^TT^ormg Co.
fife
to areT»-»r--cr._)___ .
7, ■ ;T-T i 'TcCT'”-
T~" . ..
[CLE. TUESDAY. SEFT. U, IBM
est who to another ct Blri s
xtang > wotf.sro’- .
igtlonj activities and military im-
portance" The point he makes is
that mortem espionage has devel-
oped so rapidly and quietly during
apd since the wcifld war that it
ttmy'ifjtes bn unrecognized men-
ace tc intenwittonal peace.
Ble"> purpose ’ apparently r as
merely to ?n>use. To that end are
written his satirical and sometimes
hutnerous notes on a group of 24,
women, who compelled interest in
mo1'* ways then the principal one
of lorini Indicative of the variety
ct types arc three picked at ran-
dom—St. Theresa. Madame Du
tarry unci the Masculine Christina
of Sweden.
CHILDRESS. Sept. 18.—Alfred O.
Yancy, 40. was ordered held on
bond of $5,000 after a preliminary
hearing on a charge of murder In
connection with the slaving of
George Barnes at » dance Saturday
night. Sheriff John Compton was
th# only witness te the slaying.
visited Miaa flbte'artdgai.^g,j& ^ratt tog Town." ~ 31
Philip D. Coury
108 Fry St. Phong 1111
- Moving?
Call
i Truck Linet
GRUBE BROS. BIG DANDY
•J And Pdrina Whole Wheat Bread fresh daily at your w
a iroceri.
—"'"'h L
*2 M-
! r
esre^d Bread Bread Bread Bread Bread Bread Brea.?,
clxildren vtaitod relatives in GalnOA- UHTl DRESa MXN GIVEN BOND
vUte. —r-rrr" AFTER SLAYING
Misses Alta Mae Crandall and
Viola O'Neal visited in Denton
Mr. and Mrs, F. A. Tippen and
Mr. and Mrs. J. c. Holland, were
in Fort Worth.
Mr and Mrs. Bryan Nance and
Mrs. Clyde Couch visited in Col-
linsville. T2 ;
Miss Grace Woodruff or c. I. A.
n sts£erary
* | AnTERN^Sj
i BY RICHARD G. MASSqCK
I m ■« —-1 . '• xy jjp ■•Mu—
| 0IVVT , gVgWk, OCpV. JO.—Cl OKI CUC . ,
fundamentals! qnd jntiva’cton
movements cf today there seems to"
run a trail, however faint cock
to Jclfi Wesley.
As an evangelist, the greet
preacher was a potent, force
against immorality and intemper-
ance. His etnctional appeal literally
floored his hearers. “As sincere, au
, pure minded a man Us ever lived,”
lie lortified himself with laith and
sought holiness.
This ascetic who launched one
cf the jrreatest of Protestant
churches, is picture 1 as a' man.
however, rather than an'influence
in a "portrait" by Dr Herman Lip-
sky. an iMtiuctor in x New York
highschool. •»—- -
Much attention is given to Wes-
ley’s “numerous but ineffectual Jove
affairs and his blind plunge into
matrimony with the wrong wo-
man.' Bui “the work of stirring up
religious emotion in great crowds
of people, mostly women, neutral- .
'rzed to a largi* extent his need of
loving one woman." In this con-
nection, Dr Lipsky has quoted ex-
tensively from Wesley’s diaries in
which are the interesting rules of
conduct he imposed upon himself.
tAt.—
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McDonald, L. A. Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 30, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 18, 1928, newspaper, September 18, 1928; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1335503/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.