20 
NORTH SHORE BREEZE 
DO YOU WANT CLEAN COAL that can be depended upon 
to always run uniform? 
Do YOU want delivery in canvas bags by 
AUTO TRUCK? 
home in Beverly Farms, 
Then send your orders to 
Is your 
Magnolia? 
Sprague, 
Tel. 280. Reverse the charge. 
Wenham, 
Tel. 280. Reverse the charge. 
Hamilton, Essex, Manchester, or 
Breed & Brown Co. 
Beverly, Mass. 
Poultry and Game 
and Butter 
Eggs 
Fruit and Berries 
Best 
The Quality 
Beverly Farms 
JAMES B. DOW 
BREWER’S MARKET 
WALTER P. BREWER, Prop. 
Meats and Provisions 
Orders will be Collected Every 
Morning and Promptly Filled. 
Mass. 
J. B. Dow John H. Cheever 
JAS. B. DOW & CO. 
Gardener and Florist | Goal and Wood 
Roses, Herbaceous and Budding Plants 
Products 
Work. 
Cut Flowers and Greenhouse 
for Decorations and Funeral 
Hale Street 
REGINALD HEBER FITZ 
(From an address by Professor William 
Sydney Thayer of John Hopkins at a 
memorial meeting to the late Dr. Fitz 
held last night at the Harvard medical 
school.) 
It is not far from 30 years ago, 
though it seems but yesterday, that 
we sat in the precipitous amphithea- 
tre of the then new school building 
in Boylston street and listened to his 
brilliant talks. No one who heard 
those remarkable lectures could have 
failed to carry away a deep impres- 
sion of the strength, the ability, the 
learning of the man. They were re- 
markable lectures, remarkable in 
form and in substance; models of 
clear and precise exposition, admir- 
ably delivered in language, every 
facetted word of which seemed _ to 
have been so chosen that it, and it 
alone, could fill its place. Stimulat- 
ing hours which gave to many of us 
a lasting realization of the impor- 
tance of precision and accuracy in ob- 
servation, and thought and expres- 
sion. 
His Habits of discriminating pre- 
cision in thought, in observation, in 
interpretation, in exposition, gave 
him that penetrating clearness of 
vision which enabled him to extract, 
as could no one else, from a mass 
Beverly Farms 
We are now prepared to deliver 
coal at short notice to all parts of 
Manchester and Beverly Farms. 
Beach Street Hale Street 
Manchester Beverly Farms 
of apparently unrelated observations, 
the concise, clear clinical picture, cor- 
related with definite physiological 
and pathological processes and anato- 
nical changes. 
It is no small achievement that this 
one man should have given to the 
world the first clearly defined de- 
scription of two such important 
maladies as appendicitis and acute 
pancreatitis. 
How vivid is the memory of Fitz’s 
recitations and demonstrations. 
What student who attended them 
can forget the charm of that subtle 
and incisive but yet humerous and not 
unkindly irony—or rather, perhaps, 
that ironical facetiousness which so 
disconcerted some of his pupils and 
colleagues, and so delighted others; 
which was, I am sure, highly bene- 
ficial to many who did not fancy it 
at the moment. 
To some of this students his teach- 
ing and example were the great in- 
spiration of their school days, and to 
many this inspiration has been a 
lasting and a growing influence. His 
unfailing kindness and  thoughtful- 
ness, his friendly interest and wise 
advice, so freely and generously given, 
meant more to some of us than 
words can express. 
There must be many who owe to 
him their best ideals in medicine, 
and there must be others of his pu- 
pils who have been, as ‘have I, so 
jealous of his regard that any con- 
sciousness of lapse or shortcoming 
has been inevitably associated with 
the sting of the thought that they 
were unworthy of the confidence of 
Fitz. 
BEVERLY FARMS 
The Farms fire engine was_ ship- 
ped to Providence, R. 1. Wednesday 
to -have the tractor attached. The 
tractor-engine will be returned in 
about a month. 
Peter Gaudreau’s barber shop in 
Central Square will be open next 
Wednesday evening until 10 o’clock; 
closed all Thanksgiving Day. * 
Harry C, Howell, gate man at the 
West street crossing, is confined to 
his home in Gloucester by illness. 
Wm. Nolan has been taking his place. 
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Simmons of 
‘Bridgeport, Conn., have been among 
the visitors at Beverly Farms the 
past week. 
Thos. Brady, Howard FE. Morgan, 
Jr., and John L. McKinnon, mem- 
bers of the Beverly High football 
eleven, go to camp at Georgetown in 
preparation for the Salem game 
‘Thanksgiving. 
There are expected to be many 
family reunions at the Farms next 
‘Shursday, Thanksgiving day. 
S. John Connolly, Daniel Neville 
and James EF. McDonnell returned 
last Saturday night from a two 
weeks’ gunning trip at Newfound 
lake, N. H. They brought home with 
them two deer and other game and 
report having had an enjoyable time. 
All new subscriptions to the Breeze 
received during November and De- 
cember will be started at once, but 
receipt will be given to Jan. 1, 1915. 
Subscribe today! The rest of this 
year free. 
Not FoR ORNAMENT 
“Tt is a mark of distinction for a 
Chinaman to wear a yellow jacket,” 
said the summer boarder who tries 
to entertain with bits of information, 
“Yes,” replied Si Simling: “Ive 
heard tell about the smart things the 
Chinese do. But there’s nobody kin 
make me believe that a Chinaman 
nor anybody else kin tame a yaller 
jacket so’s to make it do fur an or- 
nament.” — Washington Star. 
There is a flourishing forest school 
in the Philippines, and 28 men were 
graduated with the class of 1913. — 
* 
