NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
4CORRUGATED FLOUR 
Bread makers who know what a 
good Flour is say CORRU- 
GATED is the BEST FLOUR 
TODAY AL THE «PRICE. 
VEGETABLES IN CANS! 
Just at this time when fresh vegetables of these kinds are im- 
possible to secure from market gardens, we offer as a worthy 
substitute a line of canned specialties that possess a flavor and 
deliciousness most pleasing. 
This Combination For $1.10 
Take particular notice of 
: 3 Cans Sentinel Peas, 3 Cans American Beauty Tomatoes, 4 
1 $7.00 bbl. 90c bag 3 Cans First American Corn, 3 Cans Booth’s String Beans. ; 
; $6.75 at our door All for $1 10 ‘ 
% % sas> Two deliveries weekly in Beverly Farms and Manchester. % *% fe 
PHONE 1300 Essex and St. Peter Sts., pe 
) Private Branch Exchange COBB, BATES W YERXA COMPANY, SALEM, MASS bs 
WEEN ERR RRARE EEEEEESEEERELETTTTT TATE EEESEEERENETTTETTTITITTTITIA 
HOURS WITH LESS KNOWN WRITERS 
Continued from page one 
present day; Dr. Doune was Dean of 
St. Paul’s, a man of devout and con- 
templative mind, and a poet of no mean 
order of the mystical school; of his 
preaching the high praise is given, of 
** carrying some to heaven in holy rap- 
tures, and enticing others by a sacred art 
and courtship to amend their lives, here 
picturing a vice so as to make it ugly to 
those that practised it; and a virtue so as 
to make it beloved By those who loved it 
not; and all this with a most particular 
grace, and an unexpressible addition of 
comeliness.’ Sir Henry Wotton was a 
scion of a family distinguished for gen- 
erations in letters, in public service, and in 
all worthy living; he was himself a great 
scholar, a skilfull and honest diplomat, 
and withal a humble andsincere christian ; 
~ 
rejoicing as he neared the end of a life 
in which he had not always floated on a 
calm sea, but had met with cross winds 
and storms, that God had prevented him 
from “‘ making shipwreck of faith and a 
good conscience, and that now I see that I 
draw near my Richer of death, that har- 
bor that will secure me fom all the 
future storms and waves of this restless 
world; and I praise God that I am _ will- 
ing to leave it, and expect a better; that 
world Phen dwelleth tighteous 
ness; and | long for it.’’ Richard 
Hooker was the author of the “* Ecclesi- 
astical Polity,’’ a most grave and rev- 
erend divine, a profound scholar pre- 
ferring the quiet of a country parson- 
age to the scenes of the Court and the 
honors of a bishopric; a most humble 
man, meek and patient, leaving behind 
him not oniy the reputation of learning 
and intellectual greatness but the aroma of 
a godly life. Of George Herbert, the 
youthful poet of the ““ Temple,’’ and the 
saintly parish priest, cut off by early death, 
born to affluence and a family name, but 
setting higher value upon the privilege of 
"ministering to the poor and lowly, of 
fine musical taste, playing his viol and 
singing his way to heaven, wearing life 
out in constant vigils and devotion, the 
frail body at last yielding to the pressure 
of the keen and earnest spirit, it is 
enough to say that no finer or more 
beautiful soul ever ado:ned the history of 
the venerable Church of which he was 
so devoted and loyal ason. Dr. Robert 
Sanderson, the least known perhaps of 
the group, deserves a place in the bead- 
roll for his learning, piety and services, 
a valiant disputant and doughty champion 
of the Church, an able and judicious ad- 
ministrator, a man of vast learning, 
dying in the eighty-fifth year of his age, 
‘“*4 pattern of meekness and_ primitive 
innocence.’’ 
The style of Walton abounds in 
archaisms, is at times dignified and 
stately, and at times easy and flowing, 
and carries the reader on with an_ ever- 
increasing sense of the author’s virility 
and grace. Of the “‘Lives’’ those of 
Sir Henry Wotton and Herbert have a 
special charm; the latter especially is a 
classic, and has often been reprinted with 
editions of the “‘Temple:’’ it is one of 
the most gracious and graceful pieces of 
biography in the English language, a 
rarely beautiful story of a rarely beaut ful 
life, a story and life that breathe of the 
lily of the valley and the hills of frankin- 
cense. 
Walton was a most pronounced 
churchman and royalist; he treats all 
nonconformity with scant respect; he 
could see no good in Puritanism, though 
it numbered in its ranks such men as 
Milton, Cromwell and Hampden, John 
Cotton, John Harvard and ‘Thomas 
Hooker, and many another whose names 
are now ‘writ large’? among the 
world’s true heroes aud helpers. Her- 
bert, with all his churchliness, was of 
broader calibre and wider outlook, as 
witness his famous lines which narrowly 
escaped the ban of the Censor, 
“‘Religion stands atip-toe in our land, 
Ready to pass to the American strand. ” 
Walton lived to the great age of ninety 
years, and to the last day of his life pos- 
ce 
sessed all that should accompany old 
age, as honor, love, obedience, troops 
of friends.’’ He was laid to rest among 
the virtuous and wise in Winchester 
Cathedral. Upon the marble slab in the 
pavement above his grave is this in- 
scription: 
Here resteth the body of 
Mr. Isaac Walton 
Who dyed the 15th of December 
1683 
Alas hees gone before 
Gone to return noe more: 
Our panting breasts aspire 
After their aged Sire 
Whose well-spent life did last 
Full ninety years and past 
But now he hath begun 
That which will nere be done 
Crowned with eternall blisse 
We wish our Souls with his. 
ET TUUUU ULE EMEC UCUUMGMMMUUUUU GE Mme WLLL 
Chisholm’s 
JEWELRY STORE 
Established for 34 Years at 
Main St.,. GLOUCESTER 
A= 8 
i 
UU 
I 
161 
POCO U UCR MMC OLLI 
il 
UU 
Particular attention paid to Repairing. 
WL POU, Wl 
SUH HIIL ua TUNIUNILE 
DUNN’S 
Manchester, Beverly and Salem 
EXPRESS 
Orders left at the usual places 
in Manchester, Beverly Farms, 
Beverly and Salem, will be 
promptly attended to. 
Bul 
PUR U UUM UUIUMUIT CUCL WLLL RI fal 
Agent for the 
Salem Steam Laundry, 
Telephones: 37-3 Mane., 239 Salem 
Central St., Manchester. 
STIMULI UU UU ML LLU 
3) ATM Ue 
SalI NULL 
