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“The Bayer Cross—Your Guarantee of Purity” Bayer-Tablets of Aspirin pro- tect you against counterfeits, Every package and every tab- let of genuine Aspirin bears “The Bayer Cross.” Sold in Pocket Boxes of 12, Bottles of 24 and Bottles of 100 Bays,r'fl'?bl.ets AsSpirin RENIER, PIGKHARDT & DUNN: AMost Complete Display ‘Street Dresses for Spring Moderately Priced in a Host of New Fabrics and Shades. NEW PRETTY WAISTS JUST ARRIVED,\ A DAINTY STOCK: OF NECKWEAR. NEW COATS, SUFTS AND SKIRTS ARRIVING DAILY. NEW. SHOWING OF CHIDDREN'S COATS IN SERGES AND CHECKS. NEW COATS AND CAPS FOR CHILDREN. NEW 'WASH SUITS FOR BOYS, FROM 2 TO 6 YEARS. ALL KINDS OF JOB PRINTING | First Class Work at Reasonable Prices ' | Eastern Weekly Publ. Co. 53 CHURCH ST. 3 New Britain, Conn. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 1o, NEWS South Congregational Church, The Boy Scouts will meet this even- ing at 7:30 o'clock. The Home Missionary society will meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs, H. Dayton Humphrey at 3 o’clock. Mrs. William Carr will speak on the “Schauffler School.” A Wagner program will be given at the weekly organ recital on Wednes- day at 4:30 o’clock. On Wednesday at'7:45 the teachers of the Senior Intermediate department wil hold a departmental meeting. Under the auspices of the Maternal Association another sewing meeting in the interest of the Red Cross wifl be held _on, Thursday, frém k9 until 4:30, in the chapel. Some new wark wilt % #bne anda 'old work finished.: ‘AN fadies interested are in- vited and a luncheon will be served at noon. The Wide World club will Friday at 4:30 o’clock. The last church ‘supper of the season will be served Friday at 6:30 o'clock. An entertainment by the social committee will be a feature of the evening. At the sufper the girls of the Wide World club\. will offer candy for sale and the proceeds will be used for the benevolences of the club. meet Trinity' Methodist Church. There will be a meeting of th€ Standard Bearers tonight at the home of Mrs, Goodrich at 7:30 o’clock. The Women’s Home missionary soclety will have a sewing meeting Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Arrowsmith, 155 Cherry street. The Girl Scouts will meet Tuesday at 4:80 p. m. There will be a class meeting Tues- day at 7:45 o’clock. There will be a very meeting of the Sunday school boar on Wednesday evening at 8 a’clock. All teachers and officers, as well as the official board Sunday school com- mittee, are urged to be present. Mid-Week services will be held Thursday at 7:45 p. m_ Trinity Methodist Young People's monthly business meeting and social has been postponed until March 30. The foreign sewing school will meef Saturday at 3 o’clock. 4 The following officers were elected by the Baraca class vesterday morning: President, Willlam Hall; vice president, William Marsh; treas- urer, Leland Hart; secretary Russell Holcomb; assistant secretary, John Allison; program committee, Harry G. Hancock, William Hall and Alfred Bottomley; 'entertainment committee, John Buckley, Fred Rackliffe and Charlés Relay; pianist, Fred Rack- liffe; lussistant, Russell Holcomb. — First Church of Christ, The standing committee will meet at the parsonage tonight at 8 p. m. Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock the young people of the church will meet at the Burritt Mission. The boys' section - of Mr. Maier's preparatory class will meet Tuesday at 7 o'clock in he chapel, There will be 2 meeting of represen- tatives of the churches of the city in the chapel Tuesday at 8 p. m. to re- | organize the City Board of Religious i Education. The Girl Scouts will meet Wednes- day at 5 o’clock. FREETO T Naughton making an X-ray examination of the ungs, with improved Magnoathis Skiascope as an d to Diagnosis- This and other wonderful methods examinations are Free to all who call on him at Hours from 10 Hotel Beloin, Tuesday, March 20th. m. to 5:30 p. m, RREE FOR_THS VIS him should remember the day, date re You Sick? Are You Suf- i fering? If So Call on Him and Take Advantage of His Skill and Experience. [The rapidity with which he de- bes all discasés is truly wonderful #8tonishes all who cali upon him; his extensive practical experi- ..enables him to determine | HE SICK! A Remarkable Offer made to the Sick for this Visit oaly, by | Dr.NAUGHTON ‘|New England’s Wonderful Specialist —WHO WILL BE AT— Hotel Beloin disease, The sick multitudes and office hours of his visits and call whether a case is curable or whether it is incurable. Not only will you be surprised at his wonderful knowledge of disease, his plain, concise explanation of cause and effect. but at the marvelous rapidity with which his common sense treatment goes to the seat of the trouble; giving relief, and in all cases that have not progressed too far, a cure. NEW BRITAIN ONE DAY ONLY TUESDAY, MARCH 20th To all who call on bhim at Hotel Beloin, Tuesday, March 20th, Dr. Naughton will, give bis Consultations, Remarkable Diagnosis of ixaminations, All Medical Service)Surgical and office Trest- meats, absolutely Free of €harge. 3 Never before has such an opportunity been given the sick of this vicinity, and if you are Mehould not fail to take advantage of 1t. ery visit the young, the old, the rich. the poor, all apply to Dr. Nau, suffering, you crowd his offices from morning till night, and ge ghton for relief, so those wishing to see early to avoid the crowded last hours DON'T WAIT ! The sick multitudes crowd his of- fices from morning until night, and it you would avold disappointment you should call early- Dr. Naughton makes regular visits to ‘New Britain from time to time to personally attend to his many patients who are unable to visit his Worcester office. Doctor Naughton will positively be at Hotel Beloin, Tuesday, March 20th from B0 o’clock in the mornin all cases personally. i g until 5:30 o’clock in the evening, to consult with and examine DR. J. P. NAUGHTON CATARRH, STOMACH, KIDNEY AND CHRONIO AILMENTS. OFFICE: AND LABORATORY; MAIN STREPT, WORCESTER, MASS. Troop 4 of the Boy Scouts will meet Wednesday at 7:15 p. m, The Bible class for Armenian women will meet Thursday at 2:30 @’clock. Sewing school will Thursday at 4 p. m. Mr. Maier will begin a series of Lenten lectures on Thursday at 7:45 p. m, A meeting of the Home Mission branch of the Women’s society will be held Friday at 2:30 o’clock. Choir rehearsal will be held Satur- day at 7:30 o'clock, be held o First Baptist Church. The Freestone club will meet in the chapel tonight at 7:45 p. m. Church night services will ba held from 7:45 to 8:25 Thursday. The opening session of the study group led by Dr. Cross in Biblical literature and history will meet from 8:30 to 9:30 Thursday evening, The regular monthly meeting of the Men's Brotherhood will be held in th chapel Friday evening, March 23rd, ni 8 o'clock. Dr. T. Eben Reeks, M. D., will be the speaker. Special instru- mental music. Refreshments will be served. All men of tle church and congregation are cordially” invited to be present. : ' The Freestone club will give an Old | Folks concert on Wednesday, March | 28, at 8 o'clock, in the church. Agd-! mission is free. An offering will be Teceived, half of which will go to pay expenses of the club for music, etc., the other half will be set aside for | the purchase of a new piano for the chapel. All of the songs in the pro- gram are taken from Father Kemp's‘ collection of old time songs. The | chorus will appear in old fashioned | costumes, many of which will be; genuine, and some of which will be invented. After the concert there | will be a social hour in the chapel at which light refreshments will be served and the costumes may be ap- Preciated at close range. { 1917. GARDINAL MERCIER STILL UNSILENGED Praises Belgians for Courage in Lenten Pastoral Letter London, March 19.—A glowing tri- bute to the courage and devotion of the Belgian people in their fight for liberty is paid by Cardinal Mercier, the primate of Belgium, in his Lenten pastoral letter, which has been placed at the disposal of the Associated Press. Under the heading “The Moral Gran- deur of the Nation,” Cardinal Mer- cier says: \ “My beloved brethren, is it indeed necessary to preach courage to you And when I say ‘you’ I am thinking more immediately of the faithful com- panions of our misfortunes, but my thoughts go out also beyond our oc- cupied provinces to our refugees, our prisoners, our deported fellow-coun- trymén, and our soldiers. “Brethren of our armies of Liege, Haelen, Antaverp, the Yser, and Ypres, the Kameruns and East Africa, it is you who are our foremost purveyors of energy. On August 2, 1914, you sprang up from the bosoms of all the families of our national aristocracy, with splendid ardor altesting to the world at large that nobility has pre- served its traditional significance in Belgium; the middle classeg, the bul- warks of the nation, ranged them- selves beside you. * * * The working classes, too, furnished their contin- gent of voluntary recruits, who were all the more praise.worthy since their departure made a painful void in the home; military ¢haplains and stretch- er-bearers have gladly offered and lavished their devotion; the govern- ment, after two years.and six months of trial, is still in harness, with a courage that nothing can weaken; our good wishes follow in the wake of all these men; all form a guard of hon- or, proud and faithful, for our mag- nanimous sovereign, who, from a sandbank which is now all of his kingdom, gives to Belgium and to the ‘whole world a perfect exampleof en- durance and of faith in the future. Bravery of the Belgians. “Those who are fighting for " the liberty of the Belgian flag are brave men. Those interned in Holland and in Germany and who raise their fet- tered hands to Heaven on behalf of their country. are brave men. Our exiled compatriots who bear in silence the weight of their isolation serve their Belgian Fatherland to the best of their ability, as do also all those souls who either behind cloister walls or in the retirement of their own homes pray, toil, and weep, awaitiag the return of their absent ones and of our common deliverance. “We have listened to the mighty voices of wives and mothers; through their tears they have prayed God to sustain their courage and fidelity to the honor of their husbands and sons carried off by force to the enemy’s factories. These gallant men have been heard at the. hour of departure rallying their energy to instill courage into their comrades, or, by a suprema effort, to chant the national hymn. ‘We have seen some of tlrem on their return—pale, haggard, humjn wrecks; as our tearful eyes sought Ytheir dim eyes, we bowed reverently before them, for all unconsciously they were revealing to us 2 new and unexpected aspect of national heroism. After this can it be necessary to preuch courage to you? * * * “In our young days our professors of history rightly held up to our ad- miration Leonidas and his 300 Spar- tans, who, instead of seeking safety in easy flight, allowed themselves to be crushed by the Persian army at the pass of Thermogylae. * * * The teachers of the Belgian genera- tion of tomorrow will have yet other instances of military heroism and pa- | | 1 | % | i Uniformly Good Oranges California FruitGrowersExchange LAG triotism to evoke. And may we hope that our generation, too, preserve the memory of the unio has now fashioned, and that in future there will be among us deeper wish for national; union,. grudging respect for civil and | ligious authority, more general fi ity both before public opinion an the secret recesses of the soil to: motté ‘Unibn Is Strength’'—an @ of ‘the words of Christ ‘that they,& be one?" * The pastoral suspends the precept of fasting and ab throughout Lent except on4 ‘Wednesday and Good Friday. vised all who can, however, to and abstain Wednesdays and throughout Lent. The eating of and meat at the same meal i hibited, except for soldiers. REMEMBER l'urkish tobacco s world's 1€ most fumous tobac ftor cigur Murad has enabled thousands of smokers to enjoy for the first time the real delight of pure Turk- ish tobaccos. Murad‘is ‘made of 17 varieties of the finest Turk- ish tobaccos that grow. ity —M‘ 7/ FAIFTEEN CENTS