The Omaha Daily "WHEN AWAY FROM IIO.ME Tho Boo is Tho Paper "yon Mk fori If Ton plan to be , absent more than f w day, jbAY Th Be mailed to you; THE WEATHIP Fair; Warmer XLIH-NO. 197. OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 14, 1014--SIXTEEN PAGES. On Train anfl at EoUl Kwa Btanda, So. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. EE VOL. '"" ... ' M RULING OF SUPREME COURT N RYAN CASE IS SENT TO CHICAGO Certified Copy of Judgment in Dy namite Conspiracy 'Forwarded to Court of Appeals. IBlMIMIsM I M. IVI M V ft N. Ilf.l.ll T r". I I "Aftlmti Mow ka WitiitiAiri Pptininn1 Further Proceedings. APPLICATION FOR NEW TRIAL Motion Probably Will Be Argued During April Term. PETITION FOR PARDON DRAWN Attorney Zollne Expect to Preaent Application for Clemency to ! President WlIon In Wnih ' Inston Today. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 13. Tho certified copy o tho Judgment of tho United States supreme court. In the dynamite cases, decided last Monday, was received by United States District Attorney Frank C Dalley hero today. Mr, pally Immediately forwarded It to tho court of appeals at Chicago for tho court's action. It Is tho understanding here that the. Court of appeals will remand tho con Mcted men to Fort Leavenworth peniten tiary. Petition for Pardon. CHICAGO, March 13. An application for pardon for the men convicted In thd dyanmlte conspiracy trials In Indianapo lis will bo presented probably tomorrow to Presldont 'Wilson. Attorney Elijah N. (Zollne, counsel for most of the defend ants, said today that ho had prepared an application for pardon and later left for iWoshlngton to present It to tho president. The Issuance of a mandate by the United States circuit court of appeals, either royrnlng the convicted men to' the penitentiary at Leavenworth or re manding them to the federal district in Indiana, It was declared today, would probably be held in abeyance until tho re viewing court rules on the motion of tho Prosecution for a rehearing of tho six appeals in which a new trial was granted. Under the ordinary procedure the mo tions for a rehsanng would be argued in the April term, end this course, in the opinion of counsel for tho convicted men, will probably be followed. MAN WHO BURNED HIS YACHT GETS FIVE YEARS BOSTON. March 15. Captain John A. v3;ieh p New Tork today 'was sentenced to five years in tho federal, prison at At lanta, for burning Ills yacht Sen tit, in Edgertown harbor on October a, 1310, (n order to obtain $15,000 Insurance money. An appeal on a writ of error was taken end this acted as o. stay, but in default of security Fish was sent to Jail. In moving sentence United Slates Dis trict Attorney French stated that Fish when 21 years old deserted from the United States army. At the time ho wan an orderly at "West Point. Friends of the prisoner from New York asked the, court to be lenient and told of acts of bravery while In the British army in South Africa, which earned him service medals. ' Judge Hale said that the maximum penalty for barrantry was Imprisonment for life, but that In view of the fact that Fish had saved the lives of those on board the burning yacht, ho would sen tence him to five years only. CONGRESSMAN IN BAD WITH POSTAL OFFICIALS WASHINGTON, March 13.-Rcprcsenta- ttve George J. KIndel of Denver, who for months has been agitating a reduction of parcel post rates and who recently spoke on the subject In tho house, has run afoul the postal authorities In adver tlslng the salo and the distribution of his speech by means of a printed stamp on the back of copies he has mailed under frank as part of the congressional record. Third Assistant Postmaster General Itoper appealed to tho Department of Justice, which gave nn opinion, stating the postal law was being violated. Mr. KIndel cays he defies the department. The Weather For Omaha, Council Bluffs and Vicinity Fair .and warmer. Temperature at Omafen .Veatcrday. Hours. Deg. 5 ii. in 35 6 a. in 31 7 a. m 33 8 a. in 3G 0 a. in Sfl 10 a. in U It a. in i 12 m S3 1 p. m... M 2 p. m 62 3 p. ni ffi 4 p. in B1 6 v. in 67 ti p. m 8S 7 p. in 63 5 p. m ill Comparative Local llrcord. 1911. 1913. 1912. 1911. Highest yesterday 69 85 23 65 Lowest yesterday Zi 46 Mean temperature SI SO Precipitation 00 1.26 Temperature and precipitation tures from the normal: !Normal temperature 9 3t 18 44 .20 .00 depar- , .M Kxces for the day 17 Total excess since March 1 ....47 Normal precipitation 03 Inch Deficiency for the day 03 Inch Total precipitation since March 1 T Deficiency since Mhrch 1 60 Inch Eicefa for cor. period. 1913 85 inch Usees for cor. period, 19i; 68 Inch Kcport from Station nt 7 I. 31. Etatlon and stats Temp. High Rain- of weather. 7 Denver, clear Des Moines, clear Dodge City, clear Lander, cloudy North Platte, clear .... Omaha, clear Pueblo, clear Rapid Cit, cloudy ... Salt Ijke nty, Uenr Santa Ke. clear Sheridan, pt. cloudy . in. est. fall 01 74 .00 M 0 .00 0 76 .00 W GO .00 Gl It .00 3 0) .W W 70 M 81 72 . M W .00 (4 M .00 S4 64 .00 64 70 .00 72 .00 Valentine, clear . T indicates trace of precipitation. L. A. VvLLSH, Local Forecaster. VILLA TARESJYER RANCH Paul Fleming,. Omaha Man, Loses His Mexican Property. REBELS ARE IN POSSESSION Land la to De Operated for the Unl et le of the Constitutional!!)! anil the Proceed .Taken. BLi PASO, Tex., March 13. (Special Telegram.) The big ranch of Paul Floni lng, said to have formerly resided in OninliH, and one of tho eluding ranchers In the western part of Chihuahua, Santa Gcrtludls rancho, has been confiscated by order of Pancho Villa, the rebel lender. Tho ranch has been seised and will bo operated for tho benefit of tho constitu tionalist cause. Fleming claims to hnvo purchased tho ranch In good faith from Alberto Lujan, cno of the Tcrraxas families In Chlhuuhua City. Villa claims that the ranch whs only turned over to him to prevent Its being confiscated with nil of tho other Tcrrazaa and Cientltlco lands In the state by tho rebels. Fleming has filed a pro test with American Consul Marlon D. Letcher at Chihuahua and will make an effort to recover1 his property. The Santa Gcrtludls ranch Is only one of many that have been seised by Villa and tho proceeds from their operation Into tho stato treasury. All of tho lands of General Lula Tor razas, whose estates were valued nt 3i, 000,000, have been seized and nn ordor of confiscation entered against them. Fleming has been engaged In tho ranih lng business In Mexico for u number of years and is well known In Chihuahua and on tho border. Correspondence School is Charged With Stook Jobbing BOSTON, March 13. Charges of stock jobbing by the International Correspond ence school of Scranton, Pa., were made before a legislative committee at a hear ing today on a bill to regulate tho finan cial conduct of such schools in this stato. Tho charges wero made by J. A. Rob ertson, formerly manager of a branch of tho school at CapetownAfrica, and for mor Representative Clarence A. Barnes of Mansfield. Mr. Robertson said that It was the cus tom of the directors of the schools to buy properties and either sell them direct to text book companies at grossly Inflated values, or sell the stock to students. "Tho directorates in all the companies are Interlocking and are controlled by tho directors of tho parent company at Scran ton," he said. "These companies specu late In securities, undeveloped properties or on future 'prospects, and the stock is' sold by agents. For Instance, a chicken farm .was purchased. ipt long ago for $15,090. capitalized for f 300,000 in bonds and 50000 in stock, and then sold to the Hover, Incubator Manufacturing company as the International Poultry Bales com pany, with a capital of over J1.0OJ.000, all from one orielnal investment of tlB.OOO." Mr. Barnes urged the passage of a bllL which would place correspondence BChools under the control of the commissioner of corporations and compel such schools to file a yearly statement of their financial standing, together with a list of stock holders. Vice President C. E. Lawrence, of the International Correspondence Schools, In charge of the New England district, de nied that stock was sold to or by stu dents, but admitted that agents of the schools might have sold them as side lines. He said that the schools would welcome Investigation. Sick Benefit Fund of the Siegel Stores Employes Missing NEW YORK, March .-On the eve o: the closing of the two great New Tork department stores once controlled by Henry Siegel and Frank E. Vogel, both under Indictment, charges were laid be fore District Attorney Whitman today that the sick benefit fund of the stores' employes was hopelessly Involved with the deposits In the Siegel private bank, now defunct. More than 2,000 employes, who will lose their Jobs tomorrow when tho stores are closed by order of the fed eral court, heard that they were likely to suffer tliis loss In addition to their sav ings, which more than half of them had deposited In the Siegel bank. The latest turn In the big department store scandal was discussed today by the district attorney and Robert McMeakln, a secretary of the Siegel Stores corpora tion, and by an examiner from the state banking department. It was said that thus far the district attorney had been unable to learn tho whereabouts of the sick benefit fund or get an Inkling of Its size. The fund was accumulated by weekly assessments of 2 per cent on the salaries of the employes. Court Hands Down Alimony "Don'ts" SAN RAFAEL, Cal.. March 13. When Judge Arthur T, Book of tho superior court learned that an applicant for a re duction in alimony payments had re married, he handed down several "ali mony don't." Here are somo of them: Don't remarry to beat the alimony game. It won't work. Don't spend No. l's stipend on No. 2. It's unfair. Don't try to hide behind No. 2. It's unmanly. Don't plead the high cost of living. Jail meals cost 17 cents. Don't buy honeymoons with No. l's all- I roony. JAILER KILLS PRISONER WHO ATTACKED HIM SAN RAFAF.L. Cal., March U.-Jolin Andrews, an ex-convict, being held in the county Jail on a forgery charge, waa shot 'and killed last night by Joseph Bicker staff, a Jailer whom the prisoner at tempted to slay by hitting lilm on the head with an iron bar. As flicker taff fell he drew his revolver and sent a bullet through Andrew's heart. I'.ie Jailer Is n the hospital with a possible fractured skull. Andrews waa recently brought her from Philadelphia, ENGINEER IS KILLED BY CAR Three Other Ten nded When Thieves eight Are THREE OF B CAPTURED One of Injured is Deputy Sheriff and Another His Son. POSSE ASSEMBLES IN HURRY Two Hundred Men Scouring Woods Near Place of Shooting. FOURTH OF QUARTET ESCAPES nloodhonnd Arc Taken to Scene In Attempt to Him Down Only Man "Who Ha Got Away. PEORIA, 111., March lt-Frelght car thieves early today killed one man and wounded three others when surprised stealing goods from 'if car near Manltus, 111., forty-flvo miles north of here. Two of the thieves wero captured by a pos,e. Tho victims of the thioves were Arthur Fisher, a Chicago & Northwestern rail road freight engineer, who was klllel; Bert Skoglund, a deputy sheriff of Bu reau county, fatally woundod; Leslie Beyer, son of tho sheriff, wounded in thet leg, and the fireman of the frelctit train, also shot in the leg. The., attempted theft and shooting oc curred about 4 o'clock this mornivg. Tha conductor and brakeman at tho freight train surprised the gang while they were pitching merchandise out of a car near Manllus The train was stopped and the thieves Jumped from the freight cars. They ordered the conductor and brake man back into the caboose and demanded that Engineer Fishor detach the icnglns from the train and proceed down the tracks. He hesitated In meeting the re quest and was shot through the head. He died Instantly. The fireman was shot through the leg. Fosse Assemble Quickly. The station agent at Manllus tele graphed Prlnoeton. In Bureau county, and Langley, a small station near Man llus, for help. In an hour a posse of nearly 200 men was scouring tho sur rounding woods for the holdup men. Near Sheffield, III., the posse overtook the thieves. The latter opened fire and Bert Skog lund, deputy sheriff of Bureau county, was shot through tho face, shoulder and throat. He Is believed to bo fatally hurt. Leslie Beyer, son of the, sheriff of Bu reau county, was shot In the leg. Tho wound is not serious. The two bandits who were cantured had been shot by their pursuers,' tfjitjiot sorl uueiy wounoca. One of the thieves was found lo bo seriously hurt. He had been shot In the abdomen. He was removed to a hospital at Springfield, 111. Bloodhounds wcie taken to the scene In ail attempt to traco the fourth bandit, the third having been taken at ICcwanee. Third Bandit Caught. ICEWANEE, III., March 13.-A third member of the band of freight thieves who killed Engineer Fisher 'at Manllus was captured east of here today. The officers were close on the trail of the fourth man. Ifovr It Happened. CHICAGO. March 11 The slain en gineer was Arthur Fisher of Escanabo, Mich., according to the records of the Chicago & Northwestern railroad here. He had been with the road about ten years. The report to the general superintend ent's office was that Conductor Collins and a brakeman came to a car on a sid ing that had been opened and a box thrown out The two pitched the box back and then found four men hiding in the next car. The quartet Jumped out on the opposite side and ran for the engine, where they ordered Fisher at tho points of their pistols to detach th locomotive. Fisher demurred, explaining that an other train was due and there would be u head-on collision. Then Fisher was shot. Barber Estate Will Pay Omitted Taxes ROCK FORD, 111., Marcn 13,-Aftcr long litigation an agreement has been reached by which tho estate of A. W. Barber, millionaire, who died at Crystal Lake, III.. In 1914. will pay' omitted taxes amounting to 182,000. Barber, It waa said, paid taxes on an assessment of only 120,00) during the ten years he resided at Crystal Lake, The money will be di vided among the various taxing bodies of McIIcnry county. The National Capital Friday, March IS, 10141. The Senate. Met at noon. James Brown Scott of the Carnegie peace endowment testified before tlm lobby committee. Senator Owen introduced a separate bill to repeal tho Panama tolls oxomptlon. voted fwu.ow ror a municipal Hospital here to be named after Senator Gallinger of New Hampshire. Opposition to the Hughes bill to restrict tho sale of couvlct made goods developed at an Interstate commerce committee hearing. The lluuse. Met at noon. Debate on agricultural appropriation bill continued. Morchant marine committee conoludod hearings on LuKolletto seamnn'a bill. Foreign affairs committee again con siders bill to enforce Canadian boundary fisheries treaty. Interstate and Judiciary commlttoej heard arguments In favor of manufac turers and wholesalers fixing retail prices. Falcon Joelyn, president of a rallru&d at Fairbanks, Alaska, told territoriej committee the AUskan railroad tax law 'tv. vaumIIv "oiiflcetory. Lieutenant Governor Ingalls of Kansas , testified on rural credits before a sub 1 committee. Naval committee reported a bill to I restore the grade of admiral and rice ad miral, witb iacreaaes of pay. RiBERjp These Are Anxious Days for From the Baltimore American. NEW WORK FOR GRAND JURY 9 McGovern Says He Will Report the Paving Promoters. SEVERAL ..AFFIDAVITS FILED Statement 1 tudc that the Kind of Material to Be Used Wa CbanRCrt After the Peti tion Were Signed. P&vlns Dromoters who have been guilty of violations of tiio law may havo to anawsr to the grand Jury, .fop Clty'Cora mlsstoner Thomas McGovern will ask he city commission to turn ovldence now In the hands of the council over to tho grand jury at once. "These promoters have been qulot for a while," said Commissioner McGovern. "but they havo broken out again. We'ro thoroughly tired of them, and I will ask tho council to place the evldenoe we havn against them In the hands of the grand Jury before It adjourns." City commissioners wilt meet Saturday morning and McQovcm will lay the mat ter boforo his colleagues then. The evidence In the hands of the coun cil consists of several affidavits charging paving promoters with changing tho name of the paving material after peti tions had been signed. A rotary publlo Is also Involved, affidavits having been made that this notary publlo acknowl edged false signatures. While tho council has secured evidence against several promoters through -Its legal department and Wood Hartley, city abstracter, tho grand Jury will be asked especially to consider the cases of the men who promoted a strip of paving on Forty-first street and the promoters of certain paving on Templeton street. Baby Burned to Death by Explosion of a Bottle of Alcohol ALLISON, la., March 13. The Infant child of Mrs. Herman Waller Is dead hero today and the mother probably fatally burned, as the result of an ex plosion, when a bottle containing alco hol fell on a hot stove Isat night. Herman Waller, the husband and father, was ar rested early today, and will be held for sentence to the inebriate asylum as Knox vllle. He Was present at his home when the accident occurred. FORTY-THREE SHIPS ARE WRECKED OFF MOROCCO MELILLA, Morocco, March IS. Forty three ships lie wrecked today on the shores In the vicinity of this port, having been driven cm the rocks and shoals by a terrific hurricane which started yester day. The wrecked vessel include five steamers and thirty-eight sailing craft. Th" storm increased In violence today and a number of'large vessels put to sea to avoid being smashed against the Jet ties. FAMOUS BRITISH SOLDIER VISITS UNITED STATES N13W TORK, March t3.-Colonel Sir Francis Kdward Young, husband of the British army, the first white man to lead a military forte Into tho Sacred City of Lhassa In Thibet, arrived today on tlx fteqmxhip Mauretunla to make n tour of the I'nlted Htutf.t Tomorrow lie I1I go ( to Washington where he will meet Presi dent Wilson and other guvernme nt of ficials The famous soldier is now CI years old- I Wonder Who's Kissing Her the Hard-Working Congressman Who Fifth Assailant of Kansas City Trained Nurse is Captured ICAN6A8 CIT1 Mo., March- 13,-Wlth the arrest of n fifth man early today, the police say they have all except one of tho six men who Inst Monday afternoon lured Mrs. Gertrude Shldler, a trained nurse, to a Grand avenuo room and at tacked her. Four other men. Identified by Mrs. Shldler as her assailants, are held on a statutory charge and will be given preliminary Wearing tomorrow. Following a report that they wero pre paring to leave the city to avoid testify ing at tho preliminary hearing, Mrs. Jes sie Freeman, keeper of u rooming house, and Miss Grace McGee, wero nfrcnted. Tho Council of Women's clubs of Kan sas City today appointed a committee "to extend all aid possible to Mrs, Shldler in tho prosecution of her assailants." Tho county prosecutor's office has been flooded with petitions demanding speedy Justice Chargos of being accessories after tho fact were placed against Mr. Freeman, Miss McGee and Miss Florlne Case by the county prosecutor, who explained that he took such action In order that tho women might be held under heavy bond until the trial of Mrs. Shldler' alleged assailants. Eockef eller WiU Give Fifty Millions to City of Cleveland CLEVELAND, O., March 13. That John D. Rockefeller Is the guiding genius be hind the Cloveland Foundation, recently launched by F. 11, Goff, president of the Cleveland Trust company, and that tho oil king plans to leave not less than $X, 000,000 to tho trust fund, the Income of which would be used for bettering Cleve land, was the substance of a report In circulation among bankers here today. It is said Mr. Rockefeller desires to leave a memorial In this city where hU early Ufa was spent, and has decided on the foundation as the beet method. Goff was a former momber of Rockefeller' legal firm and a close friend of the Standard founder. Suit Filed to Test Income Tax Measure NEW YORK. March 13. To test the val idity of the federal Income tax act, suit was filed in the United States district court here today to restrain the Union Pacific Railroad company from paying taxes under the new law. The petitioner, Frank R. Brushaver of Brooklyn, a stockholder, maintains that tho Income tax law Is unconstitutional. Tomorrow the Best Colored Comics with Tfae Sunday Bee Now Has Political Interests at Home. OPENS REV. WILLIAMS CASE Rehearing of tho Mandamus Suit is Granted by Supreme Court, TIME IS SET FOR. MAY 18 Judge ISnEllah Had 'Decided Case In Favor of Father "Wllliawa and Ordered III Name Registered- A rehearing of the mandamus suit brought uy Rev. John Williams against th election commissioner of Douglas county as a result of tho commissioner's rofusal to register Father Williams be cause he failed to produce naturalisation papers has boon granted by the Nebraska supromo court. A former opinion of tho supreme Court sustained the election com missioner. May IS was tho date sot for the rehear ing, according to advices which reached Omaha. The action of the supreme court followed tho filing of a brief by the city legal department. In which tho question, "What Is the remedy?" was emphasised. This brief pointed out that undor the former doclslon Election Commissioner Moorhend would bo tho sole arbiter as to tho qualifications of a voter, and that he might decline to rcglstor whomever he desired without feor of having his de cisions reviewed by any higher authority. The Father Williams caao first waa de. elded by District Judge English, who held that no distinction should be made as to the kind of evidence required from native and foreign born voters, and Issued an order of, mandamus requiring tho elec tion commissioner to register Rev. Mr. Williams. The question Is not one of Interpretation of a new law, but of Interpretation of a clause of tho old election law lifted bodily Into the new statute. Election Commis sioner Morohead changed the meaning of tho clause which had been In use many years. Hundreds of Arabs Killed by Italians BBNOASI, Tripoli, March 13.-Severe fighting, In which tho Italian troops killed 263 Arabs, took place on Wednes day In the neltrhhnrhnml nt th ! ..r Seuetlna, according to dispatches brought nere toaay by couriers from the In terior. An Italian column, composed chiefly of native levies, was attacked on the march by 2,000 Arabs and a sharp buttle ensued. The Italians lost two officers and forty two native soldiers killed and a number of officers and 100 native soldiers woundod. MISSING MISSIONARIES ARE REPORTED SAFE LONDON, Slarch 13. The safety of the two Misses Black of the British-China Inland mission, who were reported miss ing after the burning and looting by unganaa or tne town ot Lao Ho Kow, Hu Peh, was confirmed In an official dis patch from Peking to the Foreign office today. Tho two women escaped and ar rived today at Fan Cheng, further down me river nan itiang. JAMES BIRCHARD, GRANT'S BODYGUARD IS DEAD NBW TORK, aMroh II. James Birch- 1 ard, 81, who wan bodyguard to General Grant nil through the civil war, died yesterday nt his home at Darlen, Conn. lie. was of small htature. but u physical trnriel Ma rtrcngtii and astllty being f jiix.ua in war tunes. U. S, EXPRESS VOTES TO DISSOLVE PARCEL POST HELPED 'DO IT' Directors of Company- Take Action to Liquidate Its Affairs and Wind Up Soon. RATE REDUCTION AtSO BLAMED Cut of Sixteen Per Cent by Inter state Commission a Blow. ENDS SIXTY YEARS' ACTIVITY Piatt and Family Long Dominant Interests in the Conern. EARNINGS RECENTLY DECLINED Believed tletnrn to snarenoiucr Will Be from Ninety to One Hundred Dollar a Share. vnw YORK. Maroh 13. Directors of the United States Express company voted unanimously today to liquidate Its affairs and dissolve It In tho shortest possible time. Tho resolution under wnicn mis action wns recommended follows: "rtnanivoii. That nursuant to the power and authority conferred upon tho board of directors of tho United states express company by Hs articles of association, tho board unanimously declared tnai 11 is for tho best Interests of tho company that It bo dissolved na soon ns may bo, without nwaltlnir tho' expiration of Hs term of existence: and that Its business mil nffnlr hn settled 11 n and finally ad- Justed ns promptly as may bo done. Tho president Is directed to Inform tho share holders of tho company of said action of tho board." Committee Appointed. A rnmmltteft on llnuldatlon. which am- brace tho lendlnc Interests In tho com- nniiv Inelnrllncr Charles A. Peubodv. Pres ident of the Mutual Life Insurance com pany; William A. Read, ex-Sonator v. Murray Crano of Massachusetts and Haley FIske. vice president of the Metropolitan Life Insuranco company, was appointed to unaertake me worx or dissolution. Tho precise means to bo adopted for realising on tho company's assets were not disclosed, but It Is thought likely that a syndlcato will bo formed to tako them over so that they may bo disposed of to the best advantage. Varlon Etltuatr. There have been various estimates of the company's assets, but persons famil iar with their value assert thai Uie return to the shareholders will be between $90 arid $100 q. share. There Is Considerable real estate of value, ns well na costly equipment ana outstanding contracts' with railroads, which, it is expected, will bo transferred to other express, companies at a' fair profit. Tho stop taken by the directors today was foreshadowed a few weeks ago, when the etock, which had sold down to 3S last December, suddenly rose on large dealings from fw to 81, Its price of last Wednesday, and Wall street was soon of tho opinion, despite oflctal denials, that disintegration was under way. Parcel Post niamed in Part. Tho success of thei parcel post and the recent order of U10 Interstate Commcrco commission, resulting In a 18 per cent re ductlon In express charges,- are held di rectly responsible for tho company's re tlremcnt from business after sixty years of continuous operation over soma of the leading railroads of the country, arnlngs of tho company for tho five months of tho fiscal year, so far reported, showed steady declines, with a deficit of 333,000 for November. Holiday bualnc.s was atlrly large, but earnings continued to dwindle until somo of the more influ ential Interests became outspoken tor liquidation. Piatt; Interest Dominant. The lato Thoma C. Piatt and family were for years the dominant Interests In United States Express company. In fact, their control was so complete that they succeeded In warding off 'numorou de mands and protest on the part of minor ity Interests and for many years prac tically nothing was known by the, public of the affairs of the company, no roeet- tContlnued on Page Two.) All aboard for prosperity Fooplo aro beginning to spell prosperity with a big P. Things aro gotting back to normal. Industry Is holding Its head up and is going back to work to make up for lost time. Spring will soon be here with Its countless activities and re newed energies. Businesa, it is certain, will bo bigger and better apd cleauer than ever. Advertising, the dynamic force that drives most businesses, will do more for the manufac turer, tbo retailer, and the reader of good newspapers than ovor before, Spring and Summer adver tising in The Bee will bo his tory making. If you a reader, 'don't neg lect it. If you are a retailer, can you afford not to use it? to get aboard for Prosperity? If you are a manufacturer make note of this fact which exemplifies tho modern spirit of co-operation: The best ad vertising help you can give to your agencies and. the dealers who sell your product Is to ad vertise it in dependable news papers like The Bee.