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BUILDING ASSOCIATION | Pays 6 Per Cent on shares matiring in 45 § or 83 months. It Pays 4 Per Cent on shares withdrawn be- fore maturity. Assets More Than $8,000,000 Surplus More Thtan“ $800,000 - Corner 11th and E Sts. N.W. [JAMES BERRY President | JOSHUA W. CARR, Secretary || tion of rallway matter il | ported statements by Mr, WAL HEADCRTIES SHIPSTEAD'S D. C. TALK Senator-Elect Wrong: About Ce- pacity of Roads and Wage Neg- - lect, Says Felton. CHICAGO, January 3.—Samuel M. Felton, president of the Chica, Great Western rallway and chatrm of the western rallway -presiden committes on public relations, has | sent an open letter to Senator-elect ‘il | Henrik Shipstead of Minnesota ‘critl- representa- n a speech before the City Club of Washington on December 5. Felton declared rail- way union leaders who supported Mr. Shipstead in his campulgn seek adop- cl3ing him for alleged il | tion of the Plumb plan of government ownership and employe management of the rallways, but that the public || will determine the. future of the souds. The letter, in taking up several re- Shipstead, said: “Another statement made by you was as follows: “A raliroad train operated by five men can row carry ten tl s much as could be carried twenty years ago, yet in spite of the great iabor cost reduction per ton mile, it costs the farmer more to ship and labor does not get enough to keep it from striking.” . Labor Cost Imcrease. Mr. Felton sald that the average train now hauls only twice as much as twenty years ago. Instead of a labor cost reduction, he added, there bad been an increase from 4.16 mills per toa. mile.in 1801.to 8.02 mills per ton mile in 1921, While freight rates have advanced 47 per cent in twenty years. T “This great ‘increase in cost of operating the railroa of course,” P;‘t su‘l,d. “lD“'M Lo A wages, and -has been..the % ance in freight rates ‘mers complain, he continued, “the cause of the a of which many “You also sa inefficient_management’ of the rail- road operators in declinlng to settls the strike last summer when the strikers practically offered to give in, will_also help to rob the farmers through expensive operation result- ing. Four constituents among the farm- ers can hardly overlook the fact that the real cause of the ‘expensive.op- erating’ to which you refer was the strike of the shop employes, and that that strike was entirely without justi- fication.” oesn’t hurt 2 “#! Drop a little eczone” on an aching corn, in- #ntly that corn stops hurtmg, then WOMAN ADMITS MATE Your druggist sells a tiny bottle | Tells Denver Police He Came Home af “Freezone” for a few cents, suf- 26 x 3 Ricnt ‘to remove- every hard corn.|* With $10,000 Done Up in $8it corn, or corn between the toes, Bundle. #Ad the callouses, without soreress, : ! P oz irritation. L 3 = By the Associated Press. - DENVER, January 9—Martin Ryan, allas James Martin, arrested here Saturday night in company with a woman giving the namg of Margaret Yard, aged twenty, yesterday was im. plicated in the robbery of the Drov- ers National Bank in Kansas City on December 12, in & confesfion made and signed by the woman, accordin to the Denver police. Ryan refuse to admit the truthfulness of the state- ments in the confession. Will Send for Them. Kangas City authorities will send officers for the pair. Police said an investigation showed that the cou- ple had no connection with the bandit gang which on December 18 ob- tained $200,000 in a federal reserve bank truck at the door of the gov- ernment mint here. Police found more than $8,000 hid- den in a coat in a trunk belonging to the couple. According to the girl, who says she has been married, she been employed in & restaurant in Kansas City for about five months prior to meeting Ryan. She met Ryan about two weeks prior to the rob- On the day of the robbery, she de- clared in her confession, according to ice, Ryan came home in the ith a bundle wrapped in & newspaper. She declared he told her that he got the $10,000 in bills it contained from the Drovers National Bank. . She continued in her confes- sion that coming to Denver on De- cember 22 she and Ryan- went to Chicago. * Ryan and Miss Yard were arrested at the depot Saturday as they pre: pared to leave for.San Francisco. MR JUNIORS— Littie NRs One-third the regu- lar dose. Made ot same ingredients, then candy coated. For chil- dren and adults. Peoples Drug Stores, Inc. Steam-oven Blended A - HE beans are the choicest—: At All Stores At All Times. Martin Wagner Co. ) /V'First Aid to Hunger 'THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, ANDREWS IS PROMOTED BY SOUTHERN RAILWAY Washington Man Named Assist- ant Vice President by Of- ficial in Atlanta. By the Associated Press, ATLANTA, Ga, January 2. : it of W. 8. Andrews of Wash. s assisiant vice president of {he Southern Railway em by H. Miller, vic fons, pointm in, in charge of nou! here to- Mr. And: has been with the stem for twenty years: Entered Service In 1902. Mr. Andrews entered the service of the Southern rallway at Charlotte, N. C, in 1902, s assistant train mas- Prior to this time he had served with the Illingis Central, Chicago diyislon. From the position cf assistant train | j, ' he was promoted to train mas. ter, superintendent, general superin- tendent of transport: tant to the vice president an vice president. Mr, Andrews is tive of South Caroiina; o home in Washingtén in "t ward apartments. Grand Raplds, Mich,, boasts of & wom- an who became a grandmother af the age of thirty-three years. A Exchange yo’_,ur-‘1918 War Savings Stamps | for Treasury Savings Certificates FIVE ARE SHOT, ONE DIES, +IN NEW YEAR FESTIVITIES . !*ro Held in Richmond-—Admits Shooting in Vicinity Where Woman Was Killed. RICHMOND, Va., January 2.—Wiille Johndon, negro, was arrested in con- nection with the killing of Mrs. Fran. cesca Trafierl, who died early yester- day from a pistol wound inflicted dur- ing the New Year celebration. Mrs. Trafier] was shot in the head when she : leaned from the second-story window of her home. g According to the polic mitted that he fired a air in the vicinity of the Trafieri home, but claimed that he did not know any one was hurt. Johnson ls -held simply as a suspiclous character, pend- ing further investigation of the shoot- ng: A Four others were shot, but not seri: ously wounded, during the celebration in various parts of the cit; | - GIVE NOTICE PACT WILL END. l BERLIN, January 2.—Miners of the Ruhr region In conference at Bochum | have declded to give notice that their | overtime agreement which is now 1 ration will terminate on Febru o 627 F St NW. TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1923.° UPHOLSTERING : Expert Work. . - 3-Piece Parlor Suites —reuphol- g Nl stered ‘and $ & finished like. i new, . special this month at Labis ity BEAUTIFUL TAPESTRIES, VELOURS AND SILK MATERIALS AT COST PRICES AMERICAN UPHOLSTERY CO. Man Wit ‘Bring Sampies Phone Main 8139 RADIUM | Our Preparations Contain Actual Radium For Use In All Blood, Nervous and Glandular Disorders Inexpensive Effective On Sale at O’Donnél’s Drug Stores and RADIUM PRODUCTS CORPORATION 1105 Conn. Ave. . Tel. Main 6797 SOund investment ! ~your first resolution Sfor the New Year Sound investment and constant rein- vestment! Thgt’_s the secret of success: Your 1918 War Savings’ Stamps be- come due January 1, 1923. Reinvest this money in Treasiry Savings Certificates — one of the safest investments in the world today. Until" January 15, 1923, you can do this as of January 1, 1923, without loss of interest. 4 How 1918 War Saving: Stamps may be exchanged Take your War Savings Stamps to your post office or bank, Ifyouhave $25in War Savings Stamps you can now obtain a $25 Treasury Savings Certificate and $4.50 in cash. If you have $100 in War Savings Stamps you can now obtain a $100 Treasury Savings Certificate and $18 in cash:. . If you have $1000 in War Savings Stamps you can now: obtain a $1000 Treasury Savings Certificate and two $100 Treasury Savings Certificates and $16 in cash. { These examples show what you can get with your War Savings Stamps. You can make similar exchanges in other amounts. : K] St;me advantages in owning Treasurj Shvings Certificates - 1 Baclged by the credit of the United States Government, Treasury Savings Certificates are one of the soundest investments in the world today. Issued in denomina.tions within the reach of all. A $25 Certificate costs you only $20.50, a $100 Certificate $82, 2 $1000 Certificate $820, one series. At present prices Treasury Savings Certificates earn 4 per cent per year, compounded semi-anrually, if held to maturity. Each cettificate matures five years from date of issue. 2 3 Each’member of the family may buy up to $5000 }flhtufity value of any 4 1f cashed before maiurity you receive 3 p—er écntfsimple interest, - 5 6 The certificates are exempt from: normal Federal Income Tax, and from all:State and local taxation (except estate and inheritarice tages). TREASURY DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON,