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this week was a check on the com-| mission's work, which hadn't pro- gressed very far, But aside from the death of the Chairman, which means | loss of time in acquainting his suc- | CTY BILLS TED UP Unless charter fs framed and ready for consideration there will be no occasion for un extraordinary ses- sion. Majority Leader Lusk of the Senute has been absent from the Capt INALBANY MUDDLE THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1922. called. The Meyer cominittes, which is to furnish the commission with the result of {ts findings in its inves- tigation into the affairs of the City| of New York, has unt] March 1 to Man She Hired to Wash Windows Is Suspected—Three Negroes LET RAILROADS only to the police powers of the Gov- ernment, Regulation, freight rates 100 per cent. reduced he sald, has raised roads should be allowed to conduct their own affairs as are other indus- tries and should be punished by Government for unfair or unjust. SAYS ATTERBURY ee paanees cent. of our population was directly dependent upon and supported by our export trade. In order to use the capacity of our industrial plants and to gliye full employment to our More corporations were organized in New Jersey last month than in any Previous month in history. The total was 284, Franklin Simon & Co, . For Ma cademoiselle (44 ta 20 jrs.) Z . ‘ ~ i ~ : tions just ag are other industries. = Legislation Held by G. O, P.jtot tor the Past few days, confined to in Custody. Governmental Regulation |'"Gen. atterbury sald that the pre- ae Bacel jhis home with the gripf In his ab-| CHICAGO, Feb. 10.—Mrs, fBesale} aan . |vailing industrial depression is based Ordefs for Extra Session Now | sence other Republican leaders declare |gccutere, forty-five, was drugged una} Causes Inefficiency,Declares on causes desper than the feptiation : finitely Post d it will be next to impossible t | a hi / ‘a efini 5 f. ° 0 Bet linen wtrangled in her home here, sup- rach 7 of the railroads, Ind Feary, © OStpOne the proposed charter in shape fof con- ert by burglars. The police and President of Penn. R. R. ‘ railroads are to:day suffering f a, — sideration before the primaries, in ey cnnntoned when emoke | _ tly the same causes that are MOOILATE FOR ACTION. | which event tt would be frujtiess to ven coming from the windows of | (en. W. AV. Atterbury, Vice Presl- all other lines of industry,’* t d x call the extra session until after elec- | V4" 5 a he explained. r y _ ttion. | the house, They oeea tia food burn- | dent of the Pennsylvania Railroad, in “Through the destruction brought . / weianl thet " the stove and then found the 5 ted a 7 ba Meastires Delayed for Charter P Their bane ence ge ME ae en Mrs, Greenberg in the dining |€"'Ee of operation, denounced Gov-|ubout by the war and its aftermath, $ ‘ sion will come up before the rogu- | ody o! the purchasing and consuming power . . . 4 Revisers Have Small Chance |r session of 1928. room, Her neck was bound with rags ernmiental resulation of the raflrouds (N°, Purchasing and Consuming power omorrow ¢ *of Passage-New That being the case, the question | ana a gag was in her mouth. inan address to the Retail Dry Goods| essential to our prosperity, has heen | f Fi: . Erect. D Ji . i *% aSSA SE . arises as to what is to be done with) ithe police learned from neighbors | Convention at the Hotel Pennsy | ed ata time v ur own fro , ashton ‘S f p, " i c 7 on at ot yivania|erippled at a tin hen our own pro: a CLL ' “ait with he legislation propoeed for Now | ist irs, Grecntere had hired a Negto| to-day, Ho declared that the ¢ | has outrun our own. conswn- I MILLER wale pitice : ork City. Only four New York bills dows earlier In the day it : 5 ity. . v : By Joseph S-Sordan. | nave thus tar reuched the calendar, |(0 wash windows earlier In the 409.) soi. ave ianucled by regulative! ME CHBHCI to Support the new Ploused Node ; (8taff Correspondent-of The Evening |but the Republican leaders, with u| ‘Three Nigro sunpects . orders issued by the Interstate Com-|turn of real prosperity until the world Semi-Annual ; f World) show of fairness, declare that they | N” gy + the mother ot six |merce Commission, the Labor Board, |in general finds poltical and industrial i ALBANY, Web. 10.—Rew York City| will get together with the minority | yaugnicrs, from the effect of | Aaa s ; ‘ “| peace, and the general interchange of SALE is going to come out of the small end |!eaders early pext week to clear the | chiorotorm, and not from stranglation, | Viitlous State Public Uulities Commis. | Pet odities between the great coun- | j Of the horn at ths, weno at the{ Way for the most important of the |nccording to doctors who exumined the !sions and — other Governmental | COMO es verid ie. resumed. Sth 4 e horn at this session of the | tries : ; . i ‘ ; 1 proposed measures. | body. aeonule ie 3 cds . Every Slipper in Lagisiatitre so far as securing legisla-| ‘This is not taken to med& that | ee a, , a OE ee eae E Store Re- th y conce they are going to pass any of them, The Government, Gen. Atterbury |the transportation wold, as in the very Store Re. ascetic ts ks haelony to the| but. that ‘the bile Will be given » |BUFFETTED BY GALE), .).663, anoutd be attipped ‘of its | industrial world, should be that when duced ey ae THREE DIFFERENT. MODELS Ve Miller in his message to the| » . . that time comes we shall be prepared i alues. Lagistatyre suggested to the solons| Chance far 8 Aght on the res wil 800 MILES AT SEA} esuiaiory powers to such an extent | that time tomas We Mieme conpetls ordinary os OV, = th the railrowds could n their}; he outside world. és of the’ Greater City: thdt they hold|not be an extraordinary session, but | ‘ Ition of t le wo | ‘eek with théir bills until the extruor-| admits the possibility of such a con- | Bridges Gone, Steward Killed and |business to sit themselves, subject ‘Before the war at least 10 per § HE rumor came ' dinary, “Gessibn, Which. Was to be) tingency. He said to-day that there/| neta dive duel = ——————— - - | called in the late summer for the re-| was a possibility of a change in his Captain Injured on Bessie | from P ris that 7 vision of the City Charter. policy as to the treatment of the! Dollar. : | Senate Minority Leader James J.|New York City legislation. | vee ‘ r : i q j Walker gounded the note of alarm at| ‘It depends," said he, “on what; SAN FANCISCO, Feb. 10—Thie| a em OIs e: (=) | the reading of the message and ques- |the commixsion may be able to do. The steamsiip Bessie Dollar is budly - tioned the calling of the extraor- dinary session. Not that he doubted the sincerity ‘of the Governor, but that he feared the possibility of a slip up on the administration programme. The New York members of both parties took the Walker hint and be- gan pouring in their bills, the ma- jority of them being in, the form of charter amemments, \ And-now there isn't ‘koing to be any extraordinary session, as wa: forecast in these columns two days ago. And mbst of the New York bills are tied up in committees. The Hp-State leuders of the G. 0. death of Judge Scott was a great jmisforune, and it is only natural that it would prolong the work of the com- mission, especially as it bad only got | started on its work, | “I bave not made any irrevocable | rule regarding the consideration of the New York bills at this session, 1 merely made the recommendation that bills affecting the city, matters | that the Charter Commission could deal with, should be left. think that these special matters should await the work of the Charter Commission, even though it is not finished in time to report until an- 1 still P. took the suggestion of the Gover-| other seuston.” nor a a mandate und” have done) It was not expected that the Char- what ‘the New York cofiingent did! ter tcvision Commission would re-| not do~they'hicld the bills back, port at the present scssion, but that| The déath of Chairman scott of the | ay soon as it was ready to report the | damaged in a storm 790 miles from Cape Flattery, Washington, accord- ing to a radio message received here | this morning by the marine depart- | ment of the Chamber of Commerc: Her bridge is gone, the steward | killed the captain injured, th: s mers M. &. Dollar ani Bearport were reported standing by acacia ‘ er January than at the be: | ginning of the month, according to} a statement issued last night by the Treasury. On Jan. 1 the per capita | circulation of money in the country 34th Street— New York Featuyed—Saturday Misses’ Tweed Suits Also Suitable for Women to 36 Bust. OPPENHEIM.CLLINS &C would blouse her bodice, and every frock that repeated the story added a little to it, until now the frock with the Paris-bloused bodice is an es- cessor with the details of <1 prelim | report. fl ] i cperating eMeiency and depreciated | workers, we must make every effort Pf : {nary work, the commisson has a| — the value of securities to such a low|to hold our own in the markets of “A Store of Individual Shops AL heobinpena bgt he ging He i |DRUG AND STRANGLE J. Jiovel that managements are unable to|*Re world” , S % regating the of the city in the obtain y 7 . “} a WOMAN IN HER HOME or popular Wnuson ite oxld tre saife|| teny SNMEMYL COMOP ET IUNY FIFTH AVENUE, 37th and 38th STS, . was $53.03, as compared with a cir-| Charter, Revision Commission early|extraordinary session should be culation on Feb. 1 of $ tablished fashion on Fifth Avenue. New Two-Piece mts Das Knicker and Skirt Models BONWIT TELLER & CQ, cS Ble Spealy Shp of Organs FIFTH, AVENUE-AT 38™ STREET Canton silk crépe or crépe de chine with chic lattice-work trimming ; gray, beige, French blue, navy blue. Specially Priced 25.00 Tailored sport models in the height of vogue. Fashioned on youthful straight lines. Extra quality Tweeds in all the favored new colorings. Misses’ Dress S$HoP—Second Floor Present In Three Acts and Countless Scenes the Springtime Fashion Successes in JEUNE FILLE SUITS MISSES’ FASHIONS—Sizes /4 bo 18 Years—Third Floor “Franklin Simon a Co. | cA Store of Individual Shops i : FIFTH AVENUE, 37th and 38th STS. The Last We ord of the Mode on The First Fashion of Fifth Avenue FOR MADEMOISELLE (4 ” 20 ys) TOWN TWEED SUITS ..... _ To Close Out Misses’ Fur-Trimmed Coats Also Suitable for Small Women to 36 Bust. Tweed Suits SPRING Suits are as versa- _. 27.50 to 55.00 tile as Youth, providing tweed suits for trotteur wear, box coat suits for town wear and three-piece costume suits for informal daytimeand after- noon wear, so that a miss -may be “‘suited”” for all occa sions with the gracious as- surance of Bonwit Teller & Co., suitability. “WINDSOR"—A Jeune Fille Slipper Introducing to Spring and Youth the 1-inch Jeune Fille Heel. 13.00 “Windsor” crosses its straps and com- bines gray suede with patent leather, thereby establishing a vogue which "stands on the fashion foundation of the Jeune Fille Heel. Also in all patent leather or black satin. Formerly 55.00 to 78.00 : Reduced to 38.00 | Coats and Capes of Bolivia, Elvora, Panvelaine and Normandie. Fur-trimmed with Mole, Fox, Nutria, Australian Opossum and Caracul. Misses’ Higher-Cost Wrap Coats | Exclusive models in the choicest fabrics. with Squirrel, Beaver, Mole, Caracul Formerly 98.00 to 150.00 58.00. 65.00 a 98.00 Box Coat Suits 49.50 to 175.00 ene ned hree-Piece . Costume Suits 55.00 to 165.00 With a Fringed Throw Scar 45. | TWEEDS AND SCARFS | ARE OLD FRIENDS, BuT WHEN THE TWEED SuiT ADDS A FRINGED SCARF COLLAR IT BE- COMES A NEW FASHION. va Fur-trimmed and Wolf. Misses’ Cloth Dresses Tailored models of Tricotine and Poiret Twill.| 1 8 00 Braided and embroidered. Values to 39.75) The Entire Remaining Stock of Girls’ a« Juniors’ Coats—sizes ¢ to rv _—— -—— At Extraordinary Reductions WINDSOR . , In violet, rose or Japanese blucs Shore box coat, silk lined throughout. SHOE DEPARTMENT—Fourth Floor MMT Misses’ Surr SHop— Second Fleer TM freer ss