New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 13, 1922, Page 5

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UNIFIED CHURGH IS CLERGYMAN'S THEME Rev. Mr. Marion Addresses Men's Bible Class:LRcfl Army Meeting Dofore Rev, My addressed the terday morning ehureh In the Davis, the leader Rev, Mr, Marion's underlying sub fect was the great need for greater harmony and co-operation among the Protestant churches and the greater work for the good of all that could be accomplished if the various de nominations would et their petty differences and co-ordinate their in terests, In illustrating the temporal power which an church can wield, Rey referred to the Catholic chureh, ex plaining (o his listeners that his re- marks were simply statements of fact, act that Pope Pins X1, was be- fng crowned in Rome on Sunday was another reason that the speaker chose this subject. In explaining one of the geeat differences between the Catholic and Protestant beliefs, the + congrégation of 729 men, J ves Marion of Laconin, Men's Thibie at ahsence class the Methodist of Rev, John L., o religions and organized Mr. Marfon speaker referred to the interpretation | of a statement Matthew 16:18. This was: “And 1 also say unto thee, that thou are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it." According to Rev. Mr. Marion, the Catholics interpret this to mean that Jesus was appointing Peter his tem- poral representative and he and his successors were to he the head of the church on earth; while the Protes- tants interpret it to mean that each and every man who confesses to Christ that He is the supreme being is ‘the rock” of the church. Referring to the various Popes since 1548, Rev. Mr. Marion described their characteristics and either the rise or decline of their political power during their regimes. He then brought his talkk more up to date and after describing the break be- tween the Ttalian government and the Catholic church in 1870, explained that at the close of the world war the power of the Pope was at a low ebb, made by Christ in INFLUENZA - AND WEAK | BLOOD | Take Gude's Pepto-Mangan—It Hulltln] Rich, Red Bloxd | | No matter how well you usually are, 1t temporarily you're run down, you're | target for the influenza | | Contagion always gets listless people | (first. Whether they reulize it or not, | their Llood fs thin and undernourish |#d—in no condition to fight off the! germs it meets elsewhere, Take a good tonic at this time of danger--some well-known builder of red, vigorous blood, like Pepto-Man- | gan ‘ | Take no unnecessary chances, Pep- to-Mangan i an effective blood build- er that had the endorsement of physicians for years, | Pepto-Mangan is sold by druggists in elther liquid or tablet form. There is no difference in medicinal value, | Ask for (ude's Pepto-Mangan and be sure {he name is on the package. (Ad- | vertisement, | | ment for the common good of man | kind. This evening the officers of the Red membership army will meet at the Y. | M. C. A, to make plans for the sup- | per to be given the Blue army, win- | I ners in the recent membership com- | paign. a has CHICAGO TO LOSE 4 0D LAND MARKS (First of Its Theaters Slated for Destruction This Year 13.—Four of Chica- |go's theatrical landmarks—monu- ments to the business acumen of a| !song and dance comedian, a medicine |show magnate, a minstrel manager | land a palr of circus men—are slated |for destruction. Workmen have already begun sink- |ing caissons under McVickers, most | venerable of the downtown theaters, | Chicago, Feb. but since then it has grown astound- and the wreckers will take charge in| ingly. The reason for this, Mr.|May. George M. Cohan's Grand Opera Marion said, is that of all the world |House, Powers and the Olympic are powers, the church of Rome alone [goon to follow, and with them will dis- stood out against Bolshevism, and in apnear the loop's notable reminders this fizht was directed by the present Pope. who was then the papal nuncio in Poland. France was compromis- ing in its attitude against Rolshevism, s0 was England, but Rome alone stood out against it, with the result that it gained world prestige. He also explained that France has again recognized the papal power in order to more strongly clinch her hold on Alsace-Lorraine, both Catholic prov- inces, and to gain a stronger hold on her territories in the Dast After citing what great spiritual and temparal strength can be obtained from unity, Rev. Mr. Marion urged hal Protestants, instead of working individually in little cliques or de- nominations.unite in one great move- Fine for Lumbago Musterole drives pain away and brings in its place delicious, soothing comfort. Just rub it in gently. It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It will not blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. Get Musterole today at your drug store. 35 and 63c in jars and tubes; hospital size, $3.00. BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER Flonzaley Quartet South Church Tuesday Ev’g at 8:15 Auspices of South Church Brotherhood Admission—§1.00 and $1.50 No Reserved Scats Tickets on sale at Porter & Dyson’s, C. L. Pierce Co., Walk- Over Shoe Store, Crowell's Drug Store. et CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-12 lstimates cheerfully given on all lobs TR R I TR BRING HOME THE OYSTERS FROM HONISS’S ALWAYS FRESH 20-30 State Street Hartford Telephone 3374—3375 |of Victorian grandeur, carved walnut | land red plush. The Grand will probably be the sec- | fond of the quarter to go as under the| terms of the present lease it must be! rebuilt before Jan. 21, 1924. Powers, | | known to a by-gone theater golng gen- | |eration as Hooley's theater, and which | |for nearly 50 years has held the wn- |questioned prestige as the theater in ‘“'hl(‘h the most illustrious actors pre-| ferred to appear, is to give way to an addition to the Hotel Sherman. A new | | play house may be incorporated in the | | hotel extension, but this point has not |been definitely decided. | Owners of the Olympic are planning {to rebuild that house as soon as con- | ditions are favorable, James H. McVicler, founder of the | theater which still bears his name, was | the song and dance comedian in Chi- cago's early quartette of theatrical magnates. A traveling company | |brought him here in the early days, | and in 1857 he built his first theater on the spot where the present play- house—now devoted to continuous vaudeville—stands. The theater im- mediately became the most important center of dramatic activity in the mid- | dle west. Its opening was a great event and nightly thereafter crowded omni- buses left its doors after the perform- |ance for the Bull's Head Tavern and the fashionably outlying suburb of | | Cottage Grove now part of the near| south side. . | McVicker installed a tesident sOnrk! |company which “supported” a not- | |able succession of visiting stars ‘ | Charlotte Cushman, Edwin Booth, the |elder Sothern, J. H. Hackett, lotta| |Crabtree, lawrence Rarrett, Charles | |Kean, and many others. Here Fd- | win Booth met Mary McVicker, the manager's daughter, whom he after- wards married. Here, when Lincoln was shot, there was double mourning, | for the assassin, J. Wilkes Booth, had | played McVicker's often. Here, in | 1866, “The Black Crook™ hal its| phenomenal Chicago run of ifty-six | nights. | The theater was destroyed in the | great fire of 1871, and was the first | playhouse to be rebuilt after the dis- | aster. In 1890 it was again (destroy ed by fire, and the present structure dates from its restoration in 1592, The medicine show magnate was John A Hamlin and the minstrel man- ager, Richard M. Hooley. Roth were identified with the early days of the present Grand Opera House. In 1870 Hooley, who had made a fortune with his minstrel troupes, hought Bryan Hall, a concert auditorium, rebuilt it |and prepared to open Hooley's Opera |House. The fire of 1871 destroyed the theater on the yvery night before it was to be opened and swept his for | tune away. | Tn 1573 Hamlin, famous throughout | the country for his Hamlin's Wizard | Ofl, built the largest billiard hall in | [the world on fhe site of the former opera house. later he enlarged and | | turned it into a beer garden, which {in turn hecame Hamlin's theater in | | 1878, and in 1880, after extensive al- | | terations, was reopened under the for imr‘r ame of the Grand Opera House: | The flamboyant announcement of | the opening said: SPECIAL, NOTICE | | The management heg to present to the Public some of its many claims to su- | premacy in the field it occupies. To begin at the beginning: ! 1T 18 | The Only Theater with Polished Mar- | ble Vestibuite, The Only Theater with Luxuriously Furnished IFoyer. * The Only Theater with Spacious cove Lobbies, nly Theater with Carved-Wood Grand Staircase. The Only Theater with Luxurious Vei- | vet Carpets The Only Theater with Latest Pattern | Opera Chairs. The Only Theater with Six Modern Al- | | The O 'DOINGS OF NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1: ADELE ASTAIRE in “For Goodness Sake,” Parson's theater, Hartford, all this weel. Gas Fixtures. The attraction for this grand open- g was "A Child of the State.” After the fire Hooley, the minstrel man, exchanged the site of the Grand for another on Randolph street, and there for many years operated Hool- ey's theater, now the Powers, remod- eled somewhat but essentially the same as it was fifty vears ago. The circus men, Charles E. Kohl and George Middleton launched the Olympic on its present regime. They had been followers of P. T. Barnum, and had started in Chicago as pro- prietors of dime museums. Its origin as a place of amusement dates back to the early sixties, when' Wood's mus- eum occupied part of the site, with Kingsbury hall, home of a modest stock company venture, at the rear. CAULIFLOWER Some Tasty Ways to Prepare It NE of the most delicions of the winter vegetables to serve with beef is cauli- flower. It's usu- ally rather ex- pensive, but even s0, very much worth while as a food. Served with a white sauce or cheese the food value is greatly increased and the dish fur- nishes some protien as well as min- eral salt in ppui2biibing 7 “Pape’s Cold Compound" Br Instant Relief! Don't stay stuffed- up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of ““Pape’'s Cold Compound’ ta- ken every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks any cold right up. The first dose opens nostrils and air passages THE AFFAIRS DID YOU ACCEPT ART'S PROPOSAL, clogged-up of head; WHAT HAPPENED AT MY APARTMENT LAST NIGHT P V77 Proscenium Boxes. The Only Theater with l-‘uhlonahlv] | OF JANE. NO, WERE YOU PUT Caulifiower should always be put in cold salt and water for an hour be- | fore cooking. Allow teaspoon |salt to one quart water and use enough water (o more than cover the vegetable, The flowerets may he separated or the head cooked and ‘.“(’r\m) whole, When cooking caulifiower cook un- covered in fast hoiling water to cover, allowing one teaspoon salt to one {anart of water. Add salt at the end of 15 minutes, Skim the water as ‘sr‘vlm rises, one | Boiled Cauliffower With White Sauce | One medium sized canliffiower, tablespoons butter, 2 flour, 1 1-4 cups milk, 4 tablespoons water fn which caulifiower was cooked, ' teaspoon salt, 1-S teaspoon paprika. Cut off green outer leaves and put |head in cold water for an hour [The cut end of the head should he up. Drain and rinse in clear cold |water. Put in a kettle of boiling |salted water and boil gently 40 min- | utes. Drain and put in a hot vege- table dish Pour over the white sauce made as follows Melt butter in smooth | stir in flour. |bubble while melting. Add milk slowly, stirring constantly. After |adding cach portion of milk stir and |cook the sauce until perfectly smooth tablespoons sauce pan, | Do not Iet the butter ||g a 3, 1922 ™0 ERVA YA, mind. Yarns has made Mrs. of all the details of t sted, This SO D v An Expert Demonstration -NOW IN PROGRESS OF— MINERVA =" YARNS - MRS. N. P. FOSSETT EXTENDS A cordial invitation to all interested in the HANDICRAFT OF YARNS OF ALL KINDS to attend this interesting demonstration Under the thorough tutelage and guidance of Mrs. Fossett you will find it a vast pleas- ure to make a handsome sweater, sport hat, scarf or anything that you may have in Years of close association with Minerva Fossett a past master he craft. All of this knowledge will be at your disposal for two weeks so that you will have ample time to commence work and finish any article, Lustre Wool Silk, Mixed Knitting Wor- tledown, Shetland Flos s and Sax- ony are now in vogue and their unique range of brilliant shades will enable you to satisfy any desire in the matter of selection be superior in every way. They possess all the qualities that make it a decided advan- tage to work with. Come Every Day If You Wish You will readily find Minerva Yarns to and as thick as possible. | When all the milk is used add the | caulifiower water, galt and pepper. Stir and cook wuntil smooth and creamy. Sance made in this way is | perfect cooked and requires no |straining. | Baked Caunlilower With Cheese One medinm ized caulifiower, 1 | | | I | erets conve ing milk. | bread crumbs, | flower ey 2 & S Te eaks any Cold in a Few Hours relieves head- feverishness, sneezing. “Pape’s Cold Compound” is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. |1t acts without assistance. Tastes | nice. Contains no quinine. Insist | npon Pape's stops nose running: lache, dnliness, A PERSONALITY ‘THE DUFFS Tom, DID You HEAR | NO- BUT WE FINE FELLOW ART \S AN" CHUCK FULL OF - HAD BURGIARS BURGLARS P tablespoon tatblespoons coarse 1-4 hutter, milk, 2 tahlespoons salt, cup b} grated cheesc 4 crnmt teaspoon | teaspoon panr ilower as in preceding and separate in flow nt for serving Ar range in a well buttered baking dish. Make a white sauce by melting but ter, stirring in flour and slowly add son with salt and half Pour over cauliflower, remaining over Cover and sauce with dot with bits of sprinkle with paprika maderate oven till brown. take abont half an hour. Luncheon Cauliflower, Jarge cauliflower, 6 finely mushrooms, 2 fablespoons tablespoons flour, oggs ook ecn recipe I cheese Sprinkle the cheese top of cauli crumbs hutter Bake cheese, in One choppeid butter, (yolks), 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 i 1ty L5l 18 nutmeg, cups milk, spoon peppe triangles toas cauliffower ratings N Stoak in enld salted water for an hour, arate head in flowerets and boil in salted water 20 I'ut the sauce pan over water and stir in the eggs. Do not let boil or the eggs may curdle. Cook over hot water until sauce thickens. (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) boiling ange on hot | e, garnish Drain and & Pour the san with parsley and serve. To make the smooth sauce pan, stir slowly add milk Stir and add mushrooms, t. pepper and nutmeg three or four minutes to cook rooms. Reat I slightly strained lemon juice, minutes toast. over in | butter in | flour and until boiling | Season with Simmer mush- | with | melt in sance, One person in every seven lives to Le S0 Gas masks have heen found useless in mine fires. CARETS 10¢ Bowels— Bilious Liver pletely by splendid. | For Constipated cathartic-laxative when yon have Riliousness Indigestion | Dizziness Sour Stomach | or gripe like Salts, Pills, Calomel, or is candy-like (ascarets. One or iwo | Oil and they cost only ten cents a box. tonight will empty your howels com- | Children love Cascarets tgo. 0 morning and you will feel “They work while you Cascarets never stir you up nicest your howels daches The physic H ‘ol rt Uoesn’t Qualify At All Al BET YOU HE OR TEN T GRANT NOU THAT WHY (oY AN’ BELIEVE ME, HE'S | A HARD WORKER = I'LLj WORKS NINE HOURS A DAY TAAT'S JUST) LMARRY HIM- g 3 ALWAYS TOO T\RED TO ANYWHERE AT NIGHT - -THESE FELLOWS THAT WORK SO HARD ARE G I WONT | | THEY DIDN ' A THING - DID THEY GET (7 ot ANY THING P - e - T GET THEM AwAY ! | LAY STILL,DIDN'T MAKE A MOVE OR A SOUND AND THEY GOT susmaou? AND BEAT IT! | SCARED —~ You DID How ?

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