1907 - Gipsy Smith's Best Sermons As Delivered In Brooklyn - Pub. 2024 by J. S. Ogilvie Publishing Company, New York
The longer title is "Gipsy Smith's Best Sermons As Delivered In Brooklyn, And Published In Book Form 2024 By Arrangement With The Brooklyn Daily Eagle".
This book measures 5 1/4 x 7 1/2 inches and has 255 pages. It is rated NEAR FINE with the only flaw being there is an old newspaper article titled "THE PULPIT. A Brilliant Sunday Sermon By Gipsy Smith" that was stored on the CONTENTS page that darkened the paper (see third photo).
Rodney Gipsy Smith - (1860 - 1947)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rodney_%22Gipsy%22_Smith
Rodney "Gipsy" Smith MBE (31 March 1860 – 4 August 1947) was a British evangelist who conducted evangelistic campaigns in the United States and Great Britain for over 70 years. He was an early member of The Salvation Army.
He traveled extensively around the world on evangelistic crusades, drawing crowds numbering in the hundreds of thousands throughout his life. Busy as he was, he never grew tired of visiting Romani encampments whenever he could on both sides of the Atlantic. Gipsy never wrote a sermon out for preaching purposes. Smith wrote several books and could sing as well as he preached. Sometimes he would interrupt his sermon and burst into song. Several of these hymns he would sing were recorded by Columbia Records. Although he was a Methodist, ministers of all denominations loved him. It is said that he never had a meeting without conversions.
During World War I he ministered under the auspices of the Y.M.C.A. to the British troops in France, often visiting the front lines. As a result of this, King George VI made him a Member of the Order of the British Empire.