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8 MODERN YOUTHS •TYROS AT LOVE’ Geraldine Farrar Says So— ‘They Lack Souls.* BALTIMORE, Md.„ .lane 9.—“ Making repeated Geraldine Farrar • • • for it -was indeed jshe, talking In fcoa TeUegen's dressings room at the Academy of Music. “Makliig love? “The modem young man and young woman know nothing about it. “They do not know how to make love these Cays,” Misa Farrar repeated. Lou Tellegen swore softly at a balky cellar button. “Modern representative young men or women, either on the stage or off, can not make lote because they have not the souls,’’ Miss Farrar went on. “They lack the souls for lovemaking, because they have not been trained to soul responsiveness. “Comedy—light farce—yen, but the deeper emotion—the soul, that can bear the call of passion, they lack. “Love making, you know, is not a mere matter of encircling the form of I another with one's arms and murmuring meaningless words. “It is the sort of thing I do in ‘Zaza’— a series of passionate meetings, leading up to final wild renunciation only pos. sible in one greatly endowed with soul. “In ’Madam Butterfly’ it is a tender thing. “But the wild passion and the tender loving all are the came. “Capability for one means capability for the other.’’ Ifc Society ffil A pretty wedding of the month -was that of Miss Florence Waggoner, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Waggoner, 854 South Sheffield avenue, and Herbert J. Blata, which took nlaee this morn ing at the Assumption church. Rev. Jo seph Weber officiating. The bride wore g handsome gown of ivory satin with pearl trimmings. Her veil was arranged In cap effect, held in place with, a ban deau of pearls. She carried a shower bouquet of bride rosea. Miss Kathryn Holland, the bride’s only attendant, wore flesh-colored Georgette crepe and carried pink roses. Miss Car rie Foltt sang the “Ave Maria” during the service. She gave a group of bridal numbers preceding the ceremony. Baltes B. Blata was best man. A breakfast at the home of the bride s parents followed the service. Mr. and Mrs. Blatz will be at home after June 15 at 1516 English avenue. •\ • Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Okey. 1605 Ash land avenne, announce the marriage of their daughter Gertrude to George Bri ner of this city, which “took place quietly yesterday. • • • Mrs. T. C. ClarP- 2433 North Delaware street, will be the hostess- for the Altru istic club luncheon tomorrow noon. Mr9. Frank C. Smith is president of the or ganization. • • • H. P. Plass, of Milwaukee, who is at- ! tending the convention of the Associated Advertising Clubs of tflie World, is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Fitts, Beverley court. Miss Ruth Ralstoh, who has been at Purdue university, has returned to spend ■ the summer with her panents, Mr. and • Mrs. Samuel M. Ralston. • • Mrs. M. -T. Ready and Mrs. John V. Coffield entertained today with a lpnch eon at' the Columbia club, in honor of Miss Evangeline O’Conner, a bride-elect. Following the luncheon the party was given a theater party by Mrs. F. T. O’Conner. * • • The marriage of Mrs. Ella B. Dailey and L. Charles Ballard, which took place Sunday afternoon at the home ©f the bride, has been announced. The only attendants were Mr. and Mrs. J. M. j Heaton. Mr. and Mrs. Ballard will be I at home at 034 West Thirty-fourth street after June 15. • • A recital will be given by the Co-opera- ! tive Piano Teachers’ association Satur day at 3 o’clock in the studio of Miss Bertha Jasper, 900 South East street. David Walterhouse. Leo and Loretta Mar tin, Nellie Randell and Dorothea Peng more, pupils of Mrs. XBarks, will give a group of numbers. Mary Williams, Jose phine Pearey, Marie Wallman, Lucille Toll and Marie Siener, students with Miss Jasper, will also play. * • • Out-of-town guests who have come to attend the wedding of Miss Phyllis Hahn and Raymond Childs Adler of Dayton. 0., which will take place this evening at 6 o'clock in the drawing room of the In dianapolis club, include Mr. and Mrs. M L. Adler, Mrs. M. CbiidSyMr. and Mrs. “Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets” sQ.3fcSfo r <nrt*' II National Bread Made With Milk I • A PLATE of fine, even slices of I jrl National Bread has a great appe tite appeal. Try it at your next meal. Serve this bread every day. Note how well it keeps, due to its large ’ convenient, pound -and -a - half NATIONAL BISCUIT i o n al^ \ mMSmw Th Red Eagle WrappenMeans National Bread Stands Out as Convention Worker m i t GEORGE B. SHARPE. As chairman of-the resolution commit tee of the 1920 convention of the Asso- | ciated Advertising Clubs of the World, George B. Sharpe. Cleveland, 0., has been j one of the outstanding figures la con vention procedure. Mr. Sharpe Is connected with the Cleve- | land Tractor Company and is one of the j authorities on the possibilities of adver- i tlsing tractors. j A. M. Childs, Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Adler, j Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Shaffer, Lawrence Ranh. Jane Krohn, Frieda Ileiner, Dor othv Margolis, nenry Rathenberg, Mar guerite Boreless, Jean Hllb. Edgar Rauh and Norman Cramer, all of Dayton, and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Rosenthal of Lafay ette. • • • Miss Doris Langdon has gone to Chi- | cage, where she will spend a week with j friends. • • • Mrs. Hester Johnson, who has been the guest of Mrs. W. A. Langdon, 428 East J Twenty-first street, has returned to her home In Denver. • • • Mrs. B. R. Batty entertained this aft ernoon at her country home, “Rose Hills,” in honor of Mrs. Hazel Hulva- Basham, who is the gnest of her mother. Mrs J. 8. Hulva, 1T22 North Delaware street. The guests included members of the Fortnightly Music club and a few other close friends of Mrs. Basham. ALGERIAN CIGAKBTS. Algeria, which makes more than one j billion packages of clgarets annually, is gradually adopting American tobacco pre paring and cigaret forming machinery SAY “DIAMOND DYES” Don’t 9treak or rain your material in * poor d'ye. Insist on "Diamond Dyes.” | Easy directions in every package. GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH; WHITEN Make Lemon Lotion to Double Beauty of Your Skin Squeeze the jniee of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White which can be had at any drug store, shake well and you have a quarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach for few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion Into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly note the beauty of your skin. Famous stage beauties use lemon juice: to bleach and bring that soft, clear, j rosy-white complexion. Lemons have always been used ns a freckle, sunburn and tan remover. Make this up and try it. —Advertisement. —■ dyes ! - 35G Happy Mother is certainly to be Congratulated MwTIER'sFrIENO Preserved her strength and made motherhood easier. Used externally. At all Druggists. Special Booklet on Motherhood and Bfcy free. Bradfield Regulator Cos. Dpt. F-17, Atlanta. Ga. PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS FAILURE Ratings Found Unsound Basis for Hiring Men. NEW YORK, June 9, —Application of psychological tests in hiring and classi fying employes in industry was not gen erally favored here at the annual con vention of the National Association of Corporation Selioolß. Rating scales and inteililgence tests in psychological examinations as conducted in many mercantile establishments have °Tso' LS Ayres &Cos C S" X Can You Imagine Its 100 Beautiful Serge Dresses To Sell at ; It doesn’t really seem possible, does it? Yet the seemingly impossible sometimes happens. Frankly, these dresses were never intended to sell at such a small price. Again there are times when a manu facturer wants cash and wants it quickly. Under such circumstances there’s only one thing a maker can do —sell. And it isn’t always a question of price, either. The dresses are here —100 of them —styles of the hour —practical dresses of navy serge, the most prac tical and popular fabric fashioned into dresses. New Serge Dress —Only $12.50 We repeat the price—simply because it’s so unusual to buy such charming serge frocks for so little money. There’s a variety of models. Trimmings of silk braids, buttons, tassels and cords —ideal dresses for street and travel. And now —once more permit us to say Ayres Serge Dresses at $12.50 All Day Thursday—ls They Last —ln the Basement Apparel Shop Make \our Dollars Do Double Duty / DOES your purse pay for tradition—or for calory values ? The calory, or unit-food value, is the measuring rod of nourishment. Medical authorities say that the average person needs 3,000 calories per day. Children around ten years of age need 1,800 calories per day. Consider the difference in cost of Again, Fruited Wheat or Fruited the following: Oats save sugar bills because Veal Cutlets cost 57 cents per thc " atural fruit su £ ar Provides thousand calories. • ncarly all the * weete *ing. Round Steak costs 41 cents per Thus, Fruited Cereals are ideal thousand calories. foods—Nature’s economical Salt Cod costs 78 cents per 00<^# * thousand calories. Jn short> thcse dtlightfu , edi . Fruited Cereals cost S cents per bles—Make Your Dollars Do thousand calories. Double Duty. IIBIKSiII to ! ft !l via" Wa AHULiKm v*i Ar 2*asm Jblh- fflSSßv}ftag^B^lte INDIANA DAILY TIMES. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1920. not been raised to a high enough plane of perfection aytd development of de tail to warrant general adoption, it was stated. In a report submitted by a committee it was asserted that it cost one com pany $1.50 each tie psychologically ex amine applicants for jobs for the first year and $1.30 the second, and it was questionable whether the outlay was worth it at this time. “It was originally assumed,” the re port stated, “that a general intelligence or alertness test could measure the de grees of intelligence of any group of men. “Difficulty arose, because it was found A intelligence would make a good ex ecutive or production manager; that grnde B would make a good foreman, grade C a good conductor, mechanic or clerk, or grade D a good sweeper or watchman.” Housewives’ League Meeting Postponed The regular monthly meeting of the Housewives league of Marion county which was to be held this afternoon in the Chamber of Commerce has been post poned until tomorrow. Reports will be rend from the league's city market stand sales. Mrs. Thomas Gardner is in charge of the Housewives stand tomorrow. TRY BOTH-Less than a penny a dish United Cereal Mills Ltd. Quincy, illinoia Open at 8:30 Continued Patronage Proves Our Luggage Reductions Drastic Trunks Are Greatly Reduced Not a trunk of any kind but that is repriced radically lower than heretofore. This applies to recent purchases as well as to several groups of- trunks ordered and re ceived when wholesale costs were lower than today. GENERAL PURPOSE TRUNKS are to sell it 913.25, $15.00, $15.50, $16.50, $17.75, $19.00 and bystages upward to $34.50. STEAMER TRUNKS will be repriced $13.00, $15.75, $16.00, $16.75, $21.50, $23.50 and up to $28.50 and $34.50. WEEK-END TRUNKS, only sixteen of them, but at prices not likely to be duplicated—sß.so, $10.50. $11.50 and $12.75. WARDROBE TRUNKS, a very comprehensive assortment, will be offered at $38.00, $39.00, $43.50, $48.50, $52.50, $56.75, $57.50 and on up to $155.00 for the finest produced. Understand, please, that America's finest trunks are represented in the assortment and none unworthy. Likly’s, Belber'h and Beals & Selkirk’s predominate. —Ayres—Basement. Suit Cases Fare “Downward” Too Now's the time to stop patching up your—pardon if we call it suit ease—adhesive tape shows no decrease in price; these eases do. At $8.95, black or brown suit cases, made of Dupont fabrikoid. Craftsman’s quality heavy leather corners and leather bandies, good locks and catches, cloth linings and shirt pockets • i At $11,95. black or brown cases of the same order, only extra deep; heavy cowhide corners and wide cowhide straps all around; good locks and bolts. At $14.95. smooth cowhide cases with heavy cowhide corners, short strap stitched on ring handle, good lock, linene lining, shirt pocket in lid; brown and cordovan; 24 and 26-inch sizes. An especially fine value. At $19.95, brown and tan cases, made of genuine cowhide, with heavy cowhide corners, heavy cowhide straps all around, handles stitched in ring, good lock, linene lining, shirt pocket In lid; 24 and 26-inch lengths. At $25.00, smooth cowhide cases, genuine cowhide; extra deep, straps all round, fancy leather corners riveted on, good locks and catches, cloth lining and shirt pocket in lid; sizes 24 and 26-lnch. At $20.00, black Gladstone bags, Craftsman’s quality, plaid lining, sure lock; sizes 20, 22 and 24-inch. * Women s Fitted Cases , $35 Os long grain cowhide and enamel, end locks sold plated, fittings consisting of ten composition ivory toilet articles. Traveling Bags Follow Impressive Values , All Genuine Cowhide IS and 18-lnch walrus grain and long grain bags. $6.50. 18-tnfh long grain and walrus grain bags. $8.50. 18*inch long grain bags, very good values, $8.05. 18-lnch long grain bags, very good values, $0.75. 18-lnch smooth cowhide brown bags, $10.75. Asa Gift y Send Some Scent Houbigant’B Quelques Fleurs perfume, the bottle. $5.25 Houbigant’e Ideal perfume, medium fcixe bottle. $8.25. Miro Deua Chantticleer toilet water, $4.75 Roger & G&llet Fleur d’Ar mour perfume, a bottle, SB.OO. Air Embaume perfume in an attractive bottle at $5.00. Vantine’B wistaria toilet water at $1.25. —Ayres—Street floor. GROCERIES “Through the Turnstile " Coffc*. Batavia, uniformly good, two-pound tin*, $1.20; pound cartons, 620. Salad Dressing, Premier brand, 43(‘; mayonnaise. Batavia, 45f*. Corn Flak**, Washington Crlapa, the package, lOC. Milk, Borden’s evaporated, with the cream left in. Tall cans. 12C : small cans, 6C; case of 48 tall cans, $5.75. Macaroni and Spaghetti, Fould s or Bed Cross, the box, 9*l. Coco*. Hershey’s. pure and rich, pound cans, blf pound cana, 23 *. Prunes, Santa Clara fruit, medium size, pound, 20<f. Apple Butter, Libby’s pure and per fectly spiced, two-pound cans, 37c > pound cans, 22C. Breakfast Bacon, Arnold’i Diamond A brand, machine sliced, pound, 44C. Graham Crackers, fresh and crisp, Sunshine brand, the package, 17<*i bulk, the roupd, 22tf. —Ayres—BasementM 18-inch smooth cowhide black bags, $12.00. 20-ineh cordovan smooth cowhide bags, $13.50. 18 and 20-inch walrus grain bags, leather lined, SIB.OO. 18-lnch long grain bags, leather lined, 5- plece, $15.00. 18-lnch real pigskin cordovan shade bags, $25.00. —Ayres—Street floor. Timely Wash Silk Petticoats Included in Our Usual $6.45 HY ART June Shipment JUST RECEIVED One of the above is a beautiful extra quality, good wearing, washable silk petticoat, with “JTJSTO” ad justable top and rustproof fastenings. Has double panels in front, making it “shadowprnof/* Che other model is a beautiful taffeta silk petticoat of splendid quality with “JTJSTO” top, in newest spring colorings. The above are everything one could want in a petti coat, yet the price is only $6.45 —possible only because of our co-operative plan with a large number of city stores, each of whom receive their proportion of the monthly output of the $6.45 HY ART petticoat fac tories, thereby eliminating the numerous distritm : ug and producing expenses. This” factory has no dull seasons and no 'wbolesala selling expenses, all of which is yours in the value of the petticoats themselves. ’Twill pay you to see them, as the June allotment will go quickly. Only $6.45. —Ayres—Petticoat department, third floor. That 1920 Indianapolitians much prefer traveling in a Pull man or parlor car to an ox drawn prairie schooner, despite such inconvenience as the lug gage might suffer should it ex perience a fall from our new ele vated station, is manifest by the trunk and suit case purchasers. Lest some of them forget about it in these hurried centennial days, we would remind them of our reorganization sale and that Close at 5:30