>* «Wr V^/V * **V- ,-V1 !'^ ^ . , ' k ^ v - J ^ p ; ; ( i i » » . i j j < g t « > < i w t . ^ ^ -»ft^^-ii«bii>. •«*&»%.'>< nip^nin l,;-:i>:; • *5f; .* -. * *t. >: *«# PLAINDEAIJ5R, MeftfiJiRY. ttW * - | ?#I IMII MESSAGE FROM PRESIDENT BEAD BY CLERK Important Legislative Recommendations Made in Document Sent From Parti UBOR UNREST CHIEF POINT ,Wa-*.-*.\j' L Necessity for Intelligent Dealing With ^tuation Which Constitute* 'Ment ace to wiyMd Pointed Out-- Domestic Measures to Be' ' Dealt With, ^•Waiaitnjtrtni May 20.---The message . of President Wilson, cabled from Paris, was read to the congress today by Patrick J. Halligan, the reading clerk of the house. Substantially, it was as follows: "Gentlemen of the Congress: I deeply regret ray inability to be present at the opening of the extraordinary session of the congress. It still sterns to be my duty to take part in the counsels Of the peace conference and contribute what I can to the solution of the innumerable questions to whose settlement it has had to address itself; for they are questions which affect the peace of the whole world and from them, therefore, the United States cannot stand apart. I deemed it my duty to call the congress together at this time because it was not wise to postpooe longer the provisions which must be made for the support of the government. Many of the appropriations which are absolutely necessary for the maintenance -of the- government and the fulfillment of Its varied obligations for the fiscal year 1919-1920 have not yet been made: the end of the present fiscal year is at hand; and action upon these appropriations can no longer be prudently delayed. It is necessary, therefore, that I should immediately call your attention to this critical j need. It is hardly necessary for me to urge that it may receive your prompt attention. "I shall take the liberty of addressto* you on my return on the subjects which have most engrossed our attention and the attention of the world during these last anxious months. ' Domestic Legislation. *'? • "l hesitate to venture any opinion Mar press any reconjnendation with regard to domestic legislation while absent from the United States and out of daily touch with intimate sources ; of information and counsel. I am con- «fidous that I need, after so long an absence from Washington, to seek the .advice of those who have remained in constant contact with domestic problems and who have known them close at hand from day to day; and I trust that it will very soon be possible for pe to. do so. But there are several '^fcfistions pressing for consideration to wbicb I feel that I may, and Indeed y must even now direct your attention, ' if only in general terms. In speaking of them I shall, I dare say, be doing .little more than speak your own thoughts. I hope that I shall speak your own judgment also. "The question which stands at the front of all others in every country •midst the present great awakening is the question of labor; and perhaps I can speak of it with as great ad van tage while engrossed In the consideration of interests which affect all countries alike as I could rf home and •midst the interests which naturally most affect my thought, because they the interests of our people. Rights of the Worker. wj ."By the question of labor I do not mean the question of efficient industrial production, the question of how labor Is to be obtained and made effective in the" great process of sustaining populations and winning success •midst commercial and Industrial rivalries. I mean that much greater and more vital question, how are the men And women who do the daily labor of the wprld to obtain progressive improvement in the conditions of their labor, to be made happier, and to be served better by the communities and the industries which their labor sus (•ins and advances? How are they to be given their right advantage as Citizens and human beings? "We cannot go any further In our present direction. We have already gone too far. We cannot live our right life as a nation or achieve our proper success aft an industrial com munity if capital and labor are to be antagonistic instead of being partners. IX they are to continue to distrust one another and contrive how they can get the better of one another, or what perhaps amounts to the same thing, cal dilate by what form and degree coercion they can manage to extort On the one hand work enough to make enterprise profitable. on the other justice and fair treatment enough to make life tolerable. That bad road lias turned out a blind alley. It is too thoroughfare to real prosperity. We must find another, leading in another direction and to a very different destination. It must lead not merely to accommodation but also to a genuine co-operation and partnership bused upon a real community of interest and participation in control. "Labor legislation lies, of course, chiefly with the states; but the new spirit and method of organisation which must be Effected are not to be brought by legislation so much as by the common counsel and voluntary co-operation of capitalist, manager, Jnd workman. Legislation can go only a very little way in recommending what shall be done. The organization of industry is a matter of corporate and individual initiative and of practical business arrangement. Those who really desire a new relationship between capital and labor can readily find a way to bring it about; and perhaps federal legislation can help more than state legislation could. Industrial Democratization. "The object of all reform in this essential matter must be the genuine democratization of industry, based upon a full recognition of the right of those who work, In whatever rank, to participate in some organic way in every decision which directly affects their welfare on the part they are to play In industry. Some positive legislation Is practicable. The congress has already shown the way to one reform which should be world-wide, by establishing the eight-hour day as the standard day In every field of labor over which It can exercise control. It has sought to find the way to prevent child labor, and will, I hope and believe, presently find it. It has served the whole country by leading the way In developing the means of preserving and- safeguarding life and heajth in dangerous industries. The members of the committee on labor in the two houses hardly need suggestions from me as to what means they shall seek to make the federal government the agent of the whole nation in pointing" out, and if need be, guiding the process of reorganization and reform. Duty to Returning Soldiers. 1 am sure that it is not necessary for me to remind that there Is one immediate and very practical question of labor that we should meet in the most liberal spirit. We must see to It that our returning soldiers are assisted In every practicable way to find the places for which they are fitted In the dally work of this country. This can be done by developing and maintaining upon an adequate scale the admorable organization created by the department of labor for placing men seeking work; and It can also be done. In at least one very great field, hj^ creating new Opportunities for individual enterprise. The secretary of the interior has pointed out the way by which returning soldiers may be helped to find and take up land in the hitherto undeveloped regions of the country which the federal government has already prepared or can readily prepare for cultivation, and also on many of the cutover or neglected areas which lie within the limits of the older states; and I once more take the liberty of recommending very urgently that his plan shall receive the Immediate and substantial support of the congress. . '< " ' Future Commerce.. "Our new merchant ships, which have in some quarters been feared as destructive rivals, may prove helpful rivals, rather, and common servants very much needed and welcome. Our great shipyards, new and old, will be so opened to the use of the world that they will prove Immensely serviceable to every maritime people In restoring, much more rapidly than would otherwise have been possible, the tonnage wantonly destroyed- in the war. I have only to suggest that, there are many points at which we can facilitate American enterprise in foreign trade by opportune legislation, and make it easy for Amerieen merchant ships where they will be welcomed as friends rather than as dreaded antagonists. "And credit and enterprise alike will be quickened by timely and helpful legislation with regard to taxation. I hope that the congress will find it possible to undertake an early reconsid eratlon of federal taxes, in order to make our system of taxation more simple and easy of administration and the taxes themselves as little burdensome as they can be made and yet suffice to support the government and meet all its obligations. The figures to which those obligations have arisen are very great indeed, but they are not so great as to make It difficult for the nation to meet them, and meet them, perhaps. In a single generation, by taxes which will neither crush nor discourage They are not so great as they seem not so great as the Immense Rums we have had to borrow, added to the lm mense sums we have had to raise by taxation, would seem to indicate; for a very large proportion of these sums were raised in order that they might be loaned to the governments with of which we were associated In the war. and those loans will, of course, constitute assets #ot liabilities, and will not have to be taken care of by our taxpayers. "The main thing we shall have to care for Is that our taxation shall rest as lightly as possible oh the productive resources of the country, that its rates shall be stable, and that It shall be constant in its revenue-yielding power. "Many of the minor taxw provided for in the federal legislation of 1917 and 1M8, though no doubt made necessary by the^'presslng necessities of the war time, can hardly find sufficient justification under the easier circumstances of peace, and can now happily be got rid of. Among these, I hope you will agree, are the excises upon various manufactures and the taxes upon retail wiles. They are unequal in the incidence on different industries and on different Individuals. Their collection Is difficult and expensive. Those which are levied upon articles sold at retail are largely evaded by the readjustment of retail prices. On the other hand. I should assume that It is expedient to maintain a considerable range of indirect taxes; and the fact that alcoholic liquors will presently no longer afford a source of revenue by taxation makes It the more necessary that the field should be carefully restudled in order that equivalent sources of revenue may be found which „ot •jiill be legitimate and not burdensome to draw upon. , Import Duties Correct There is, fortunately, no occasion for undertaking in the immediate future, any general revision of our system of import duties. No serious danger of foreign competition now threatens American industries. Our Country has emerged from the war less disturbed and less weakened than any of the European countries which are our competitors in manufacture. So far from there being any danger or need of accentuated foreign competition, It Is likely that the conditions of the next few years will greatly facilitate the marketing of American manufactures abroad. Least of all should we depart from the policy adopted In the tariff act of 1913. of permitting the free entry Into the United States of the raw materials needed to supplement and enrich our own abundant supplies. Asks Woman Suffrage. . "Will you not permit me, turning from these matters, *tn spealf once more, and very earnestly, of the proposed amendment to the Constitution which would extend the suffrage to women and which passed the house of representatives at the last session of the congress? It seems to n» that every consideration of Justice and of public advantage calls for the Immediate adoption of that amendment and its submission forthwith to the legislatures of the several states. Throughout all the world this long-delayed extension of the suffrage is looked for. The telegraph and telephone lines will, of course, be returned to their owners so soon as the retransfer can be effected without administrative confusion; so soon that is, as the hange can be made with least possible inconvenience to the public and to the owners themselves, The railroads will be handed over to their owners at the end of the. calendar year; if I were in immediate contact wlfh Jhe, administrative questions which must govern the retransfer of the telegraph and telephone lines, I could name the exact date for their return also. Until I am in direct contact with the practical questions Involved I can only suggest In the case of the telegraphs and telephones, as In the case of their railways, it is clearly desirable in the public Interest that some legislation should be considered which may tend to make of these indispensable instrumentalities of our modern life a uniform and co-ordinated system which will afford those who use them a complete and certain means of communication. The demobilization of the military forces of the country has progressed to such a point that It seems to me entirely safe now to remove the ban upon the manufacture and sale of wine and beers, but I advised that with out fhrther legislation I have not the legal authority to remove the present restrictions. I therefore recommend that the act approved November 21, 1918, entitled, 'An act to entitle the secretary of agriculture to carry out during the fiscal year ending June 30. 1919, the purposes of the act entitled "an act to provide further for the national security and defense by stimulating and facilitating the distribution of agricultural products," and for other purposes,' be amended or repealed In so far as it applies to wines and beers. "I sincerely trust that I shall very soon be at my post in Washington again to report upon the matters which made my presence at the peace table apparently Imperative, and to put myself at the service of the congress In every matter of administration or counsel that may seem to demand executive action or advice. "WOODROW WILSON." ACC0RDIM8 TO TERMS KICK I hi LOOK IMOIANAPOLIS NEWS. MMJJAAV9- WINNIPEG IS TIED UP RETURNED SOLDIERS AND LABOR FORCES CONTROL CITY. Neither Employers Nor Workers Are Attempting to Settle Differences- Newspaper* May Quit. Winnipeg, May 17.--With, the labor forces and returned soldiers in complete control, commercial, industrial and municipal Winnipeg was paralyzed by the general strike which was declared In sympathy with the strikes of building and metal trades employees. Sunday morning quiet marked conditions in the downtown district and no disorder has been reported to tfe police or newspapers from any source. The stereotypers and webb pressmen decided to Join the general strike. As a result all three Winnipeg daily newspapers will undoubtedly suspend publication. The strike committee Is considering the advisability of the Labor News, a weekly labor organ, publishing a daily edition. The telephone company employees Joined the strike. Gas and electric light plants were permitted to operate for the present atpjeast. Existing differences^' between the Great War Veterans' association and the unions, regarding the soldiers' attitude favoring the deportation of all enemy aliens, have been sidetracked for the time being as a result of the agreement in which the soldiers indorsed the strike and promised to use every available means to maintain law and order. As the unions' membership includes a number of Winnipeg aliens, it was stated by union leaders and returned soldiers that the alien problem would be considered by the two bodies after the strike Is settled. Neither the striking forces nor the industrial elements opposed to unionism have made public moves of importance, and the situation was referred to as an airtight deadlock. Formal approval of the strike by the returned soldiers has been the overshadowing development since the strike was called, and it Is understood that this action is being considered by government officials at Ottawa. In some quarters it Is expected that the next move in the situation might be fnade by the federal government. TO CUT WHEAT PRICE REDUCTION REACHING FROM MILLER TO BAKER PLANNED. CHINESE CABINET RESIGNS Government Ministers Quit, but the President Refuses to Relieve Them of Jobs. Paris, May 19t--The Chinese cabinet has resigned, but the president has refused to accept the resignation, according to a telegram from Peking tot the peace conference. The peace conference at Shanghai between representatives of northern and southern China, the telegram adds, has broken up. MEXICAN REBELS DEFEATED Routed by Federal Troops, Leaving Afveral Dead on the Flald \ Near Sonora. Washington, May 19.--Rebel forces which recently raided Canea, Sonora, were defeated by federal troops under Major Meza, the Mexican embassy was advised by Gen. Miguel Plna, governor of Sonora. General Plna said the bandits were routed, leaving several dead and wounded and a number of horse* Director Barnes Says Representatives l of Grain Industry Agreed to Pro- J posal at New York Meet. *New York, May 16.--An immediate reduction in the price of wheat, reachlag all down the line from the producer to the baker, Is believed assured. according to a statement issued by Julius Barnes, wheat director, following a prolonged conference between Mr. Barnes and representatives of the grain Industry, Including grain hnndlers, millers, Jobbers and bakers. The statement issued by Mr. Barnes says: "There a general agreement that in order that all the wheat producers of the country should secure equal benefits, the various trades cpuld be bound by contracts to see that wheat trading should be only on the guaranteed price and, if a lower t>asis was justified with the development of world factors as the season advanced, this lower basis should be nlade to reach the consumer by trade agreements with millers and manufacturing facilities, the wheat director leaking the readjusting basis effective by the payment of the difference as allowed under act of congress. "In return for protection against a fall in price, after the guaranteed price had been made for wheat bought, the wheat director would require from the various trades contract obligations by which their trade practices and margins of profit would be subject to review and control by the wheat director. "The bakers were willing to enter Into a craitract by which they would reflect at once in their products the lower price of flour made effective by the mills. In this way, down to the retail trade there Is .thought to be an assurance that a reduced price of wheat should be effective immediate l y a l l d o w n t h e l i n e . " . . . KILLS TWO; WOUNDS TWO Wisconsin Man In Jealous Rage Runs Amuck at Port Washington--- Posse in Pursuit. Port Washington, Wis., May 17.--- Because he found another man with the girl he loved, Ray Schwartz, said So be a traveling salesman for a Chicago firm, short and killedt the girl ailtl the man here and probably fatally wounded the girl's little sister and another man. The dead are: Amelia Barry, twenty years old; Frederick Terkes. The wounded are: Marie Barry, eight years old, sister of the slain girl; Albert Ratz, an 'Innocent bystander." FIGHT FINLAND RECOGNITION Rats Harm Airplanes. An inspector in the aerial department of the bureau of construction «nd repair in Washington writes in .American Machinist: . • "It has been noticed that since the 4ise of casein glue at the Burgess plant tjlhe rats have Increased in alarming numbers. After the workmen quit in the evening the rats immediately appear on .the floor and make a raid on the casein glue cans. In the opinion H>f this office this could be very serious, panel In their attempt to get the glue. It is suggested that some poisoning be introduced Into the glue or something be done to make the casein glue less delicious to the taste of the rodents. It would be dangerous to leave machines In storage which were made up with casein glue." . Naming a Trio. - In a civil court of North Carolina a judge was hearing a lawsuit regarding some road construction matters in tips no doubt rats could destroy a wing j which three contractors--grandfather. father and son--were concerned. One of the engineers who testified was asked how he designated the three men of the same name. His reply made everyone, Including the judge, laugh. "I called them Grandpap, Pap and Papoose," he said.--Youth's Companion. Only Real Weaith.,r , wealth consists rather of character than wealth True wealth dollars. Great possessors are better than grept possessions. m Why Children Have Bad Tonsils. ' The treatment of "bad tonsils" ^ Should begin in childhood. There is fz?s*!t»o more reason why children should r „ Jiave hypertrophled tonsils than there §$?;• ',|S' for having any other of the diseases ||f.' of childhood. Those children which are $|yV i*>verfed from the day of their birth, ;«nd are given. peat, potatoes, pudjSings. pie, cake and other cereal prodplvf j ticts, soon after weaning, and often |>efore that period, most commonly K' suffer from "tonsils." Warm water %«* Jmtbinjg, over-heated bouses, lack of exerclse, fresh air and sunshine, and suppression of acute diseases--all tend to a retention of poison and congestion of mucous membranes, and hence "colds" and tonsllltls. Milk and fruit juices should be the sole diet of a child up to two years, and then fruits, Juicy vegetables, nuts and a very few of the cereals should gradually be adaedT---EicKange|/ . ' How to Command Succe^i. The man with vim and dash is everywhere crowding out the one who is inclined to go to sleep at his post. The man who would win success must be wide awake, Intelligent, and as quick as a lamplighter. He must keep his eyes open for new Ideas that will bridge over difficulties and facilitate business. So get into the thick of the action. It is not possible t« have too many irons in the fire if you are truly Intelligent and know how to make the most of your time. Get something to do and then Just peg away until you , have made a success of it. To Protect lllegitimAis, Stuttgart, May 20.--To save Illegitimate children embarrassment In future life, the ministry of the Interior has Issued a decree permitting the omission of data concerning their parents on birth certificate^ • To Fight the Redi Basfe, May 20.--Count Jufife Wftr&fyt, nephew of Count Michael Karolyi, former premier of Hungary, has set up a government in opposition to the bolshevlkl at Arad, Hungary, according to Vienna newspapers. GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER has been a hoosahold remedy •& vrw the civilised world tor mor^ than half a century for constipation. Intestinal troubles, torpid liver and the generally depressed feeling that accompanies such disorders. It Is a most valuable remedy for indigestion or nervous dyspepsia and liver trouble, bringing on headache, coming up of food, palplta* tlon of heart, and many other symjh toms. A few doses of August Flower will relieve you. It Is a gentle laxative. Ask your druggist. Sold In all civilised countries.--Adv. S Animal Diseases. . Animal diseases, such as hog cholera, the foot-and-mouth disease, etc., are costing the farmers and the general public an enormous sum each year, although agricultural, leaders have been waging an effective fight upon such epidemics. Ultimately the farmers will be enjoying the use of about $200,000,000 which they now lose each year through these causea, _ Cutlcura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring in the hot eads of Cuticara Soap, dry and rub in Cutlcura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This 1s only one of the things Cutlcura will do if Soap, Ointment and Talcum ate tor all toilet purposes.--Adv. NttVOflS Maybe Overcome byLycU ~ ; E» Pblduun'i Vegetable / " :V;' J Compound --fhi» ^ Letter Proves It -Really Had Something Coming. Pat recently dined In one of the smartest hotels in the city of Dublin, selecting the best of all that was good and expensive on the menu, and then he prepared to leave. "Shall I bring you your bill, sir?" asked the waiter, putting himself in the way. "Begob, an* ye needn't," returned our hero. "I Intended pay in' with the pearl I expected to find in the oysters, but bad luck to the wan could I find in thim at all. So ye may go to the dlvU," and he moodily passed out." W««t Philadelphia, Pa.--"Daring tb» thirty ysars I have been marri<KL I nav« bean In bad health and had several attacks of nervous prostration until it seemed as if the organs in my whole body were worn oat. I was finally persuaded to try LydiaE. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound and it mad* a well woman of me. I can now do all my housework and -advise all aOinr women to ttf Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound and I will guarantee they will derive great benefit from it."--Mrs. FRANK FITZGERALD. 25 N. 41st Street, West Philadelphia, Pa. There are thousands of women everywhere in Mrs. Fitzgerald's condition, suffering from &ervousn&ss, backache, headache* and other symptoms of a functional derangement. It was a grateful spirit for health restored which led her to write this letter so that other. women may benefit from her experisma and find health as she has done. Fttr suggestions in rega*d to four condition wnte Lvdia PinkhamMedicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of their 40 years experience is at your service. DABYFintt PLACED ANTWHKKS ATTRACTS AND K1LL8 ~ ALL rLIES. wmnm uniima frtpaid, H.2B. KaO>Avk.BrooUjiv.N. X. BNp.t Contents 15Pluid 1 CUSTOM ForjEnfanta and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria; algohol-3 per cent. . AVc^cfabfeFreparatioafcf Ai 1 similatfr$theFood tjn^theStonadis^Bqtfgisai Russian Conservatives Protest to As- •ociatsd Powers Against Reov V ' ognitioi*. Washington, May 19.--The Russian political conference at Paris, composed of prominent members of former Russian governments, has protested to the associated powers against the recognition of the independence of Finland by the United States and Great Britain, according to a cablegram received at the Russian embassy from former Foreign Minister Sazonoff. - s! ^ Nearly 2,000,000 Huns Klllai. Berlin, May 20.--Germany lost more than a million and a half in killed during the war, the latest authoritative casualty figures show, as follows« Killed, 1,676,000; missing, 873,000; wounded, 4,207,000; total, 6,256{ti9Ui • Would Bar Cotton for Year. Tallahassee, Fla., May 19.--Prevention of cotton growing for one year to eradicate the boll weevil, which causes $100,000,000 damage annually, is * proposed by Representative Eli Futch. • • Break Plarfe Loop Record*. Washington, May 20.--Making 45$ consecutive loops during a flight lasting one hour a"hd 54 minutes, Lleuta, Ralph J. Johnson and Mark R. Wood-' ward set a new world's record at Carls*rom field, Arcadia, Fla. '•7 ^ '• T - r. 4.< 7 ;Ur0« Equality for Women. * ; St.' - Louis. May 19.--Recommends* tlons for granting women equality with men in church affairs, were laid before commissioners of the Presbyterian church in the United States here at the second day's session. Thereby Promoting Cheerfulness andltestGoo^ neither Opium,Morphine n« MincraJN^NABCOTiC tfrtfOdlkSA wt nndFevwishnessMd LOSS OF SLEEP ItioSJnulc Boars the Signature JJgB gektwjr SsxMA new Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over Thirty Years CUSTOM Gasp at Yank Gallantry. The following passage is quoted from an article about the soldiers of the American army of occupation in a Coblenz paper: "These gentlemen from abroad . . . stand up in the crowded electric cars and offer their seats to any woman, even though they be peasant girls! This is a custom that surprises us, habituated as we are to the rough ways of war time, like a memory from the ancient past. They make way for ladles on the sidewalk an,d step aside to let them enter the shops first. Indeed, the ladles in Coblenz have been mnch astonished at the excessive gallantry of the Yankees." Not the 8ame One. "Can I have leave to visit me wife, slrr* asked Pat of his ship's officer, as they dropped anchor in DnbUn bay recently. "To visit your wifeT' thundered the officer. "What the devils are you up to now? Were you not granted leave ten or eleven days ago to bury your wife?" "Yes, sir, and I did bury her," replied our hero, "but that was the wan belonfcln' to the last port we wor in, sir." The best friend yon haw on efcrth Is a better friend to himself than he Is to you. They Didn't. Mary Ellen had received several Caster presents--the latest of which was a new hat. With all the wisdom of a three-year-old she looked at the aunfie who had "presented it, and purred, "I love Aunt Grace." Aunt Ruth locked up from her book. "Then I'guess I'll take that new dress I bought you back and give it to Virginia," she threatened. For a minute Mary Ellen was troubled. Then relief came to her face. "1 love you, too, Aunt Ruth," she purred again, "and everybody else who got me something. Now," wisely, "I guess nobody will take my flngs baefc" ^ * Co-operation. : • - Elizabeth must have heard someone talking about "co-operation." She doesn't like to have her hair curled, which her mother curls around her finger, and it takes a long time and "pulls" like the mischief. However, Elizabeth often bliqks back the tears. One day she said: "Mother, do you know people ought to cooperate in everything they do? Even when it comes to making curls, yoo and I ought to co-operate, oughtn't we, mother?" She was certainly doing her beati and mother was, too. < Some girls -see in every bachelor of their acquaintance a possible husband. Gas Killed Four. Chicago, May 19.--Frank Swinlarskl and his wife Mary are overcome with grief because of an accident which ended the lives of their four little children. gas. They war* victims Few Officers Ask Jobs. , Washington, May 19.--Only $ per cent of the 103,524 commissioned 'oificers who were discharged from the army up to May 1 requested the asslstance «f the federal agencies hit Breakfast is Ready; when you have /Sa package of • '&• Grape-Nuts far this tasteful blend of r wheat ab^rley^ cooked.^ Not a bit of waste; " Usable to the last crumb? Usual price 15t per pockagup^ ..'-"A' liSfek