By EDWARD MA: JAMES J. WALKER opened his defense before Gov- ernor Roosevelt, and numerous wit- nesses were called to testify to the purity of his actions and motives. At the beginning of the week Walker's chief coun- sel, John J. Curtin, closed his plea to Su- preme Court Justice Staley to halt the re- moval proceedings, and with what seems to be his usual lack of tact wound up with the statement: “We can only go to court to avoid a physical conflict that might well ensue if a re moval order were made without juris diction.” Henry Epstein of the at- torney general's staff challenged the authority of the court to limit the gov- ernor's power. The mayor's first witnesses were the members of the city taxi board of con- trol. one of them being L. F. Loree, president of the Delaware and Hudson railroad. He and his colleagues testi- fled that Walker did not attempt In any way to limit the number of cabs after the bond transaction with J. A, Sisto which is the basis of one of Mr. Seabury's most serious charges. Four independent taxicab operators were called and swore the board of control had not tried to create a monopoly for the larger companies, Paul Block, the newspaper pub- lisher, was a loyal and stubborn wit- ness for the mayor. Concerning their joint stock account, he testified that each took £102,000 from it in one year, and he told the governor that he never entertained the thought that his per friendship for the mayor might be used to trade for “fa- Governor Roosevelt's question- forth illuminating £140,000 that L. F. Loree sonal or business vors."” ing brought mony regarding Block had put into a turing concern in which J. Hast Walker group, owned a large interest. It was brought out that none of the tile ever was sold to city. It shown that If the plans to ma ture tile had not been the city would have been interested In the product. Walker's claim has been that the en- tire investigation was inspired by the Republicans to embarrass the Demo- testi Mr. tile manufac Senator John gs, another of the the was also nufac- the dropped cratic party in the November election In the attempt to bol he summoned eight at the head of the list being Kingsland Macy, The governor, however, blocked this by refusing to hear testimony of the le ster up this clalm Republican state leaders, w state chairman. nove gisla ion regarding the motives tors ordered the Investigat that resulted In the ol} . the mayor. The hearing has taks time than had been governor dec ded who on SMITH, of the editor. LFRED E. tional leader Democratic party, is now an When the Outlook, now re-named the New Out- look, resumes publi- cation on October 1 Al will be filling the editorial chair, once occupied by Theodore Roosevelt. In his an- nouncement of the fact he said he would carry on the tradi tions of Roosevelt and strive to make the magazine “a plat- form for the free and liberal expression of progressive thought on the economie, civic and spiritual problems of the day.” As to its po- litical complexion he had nothing to say. The Outlook, which suspended pub- lieation last spring, was recently pur- chased by Frank Tichenor, publisher of the Spur, Aero Digest and other magazines, It was founded by Henry Ward Beecher in 1860 and has includ- ed among Its editors Lyman Abbott as well as Theodore Roosevelt. Four years ago it was combined with thé Independent, which was founded by H. C. Bowen as an anti-slavery organ, A. E. Smith ARMERS of the Middle West were meeting with considerable success in thelr “strike” designed to force produce prices to higher levels. The movement, which started In Iowa, spread to other states, and two vie- tories were scored in Nebraska where milk producers gained higher prices. At Omaha officials of the lowa-Ne- praska Co-Operative Milk association consented to pay $2 per hundredweight for milk, compared with a previous figure of $1.45, while at Lincoln milk dealers agreed to pay $150, an in crease of 40 cents over the previous figure, More than 1,000 agriculturists were assembled In camps along the malin highwuys leading Into Omaha, but there were reports that some of the picketers were in a dispute as to the best method of enforcing the farmers’ “holiday.” W. PICKARD Despite warnings from federal offi clals, the farmers in several instances interfered with rail shipments of live stock in Iowa and Nebraska, Wiscon- sin and Minnesota dalrymen were planning meetings to decide whether or not to Join in the strike, Tear bombs came into use at Coun- cil Bluffs, Iowa, wben sheriffs’ depu- ties employed them to scatter a crowd of 1,000 farm “strikers” and specta- tors who were blocking a highway. Each trucker en route to market was given a deputy escort and no violence resulted. HEN the White House ence on business and industry opened Friday with more than one hundred prominent men in attendance, President Hoover started the proceed- ings with a statement outlining the “scope of the parley. He proposed sev- eral specific lines of action. One alms to bring about Increased em- ployment and includes the five-day week, though Mr, Hoover did not rec- ommend its adoption universally. A second deals with easier and cheaper credit for certain industries that have not benefited by the loosening up that already has taken place. A third proposition is to seek better credit fa- cilities for marketing of farm prod ucts and live stock, both in the United States and abroad. Other speakers of the opening day were: Secretary of the Treasury Mills, Gov. Eugene Meyer of the fed- eral reserve board, Chalrman Atlee Pomerene of the Reconstruction Fi- nance corporation, Secretary of Come Ralph D. Chapin, Chairman Franklin W, Fort of the home loan bank board and Paul Bestor, farm loan commissioner, It was decided that small com- hould handle each specific problem of economic inertia, and that after the close of the conference the plans it may develop shall be given effect by local subcommittees, Officials predicted that as a result of the conference tee will include ggest bankers and business men country. This body, they point. may unify the activities of the business and Industrial committees of the 12 federal stricts and become the spearhead of the recovery drive. confer- merce mittees a central or executive be formed to the bi on? 3 ne ed out, reserve od i | | OUTH TRIMELE, * S house of representatives, clerk of the made good his promise and gave to the pub- ic a statement of the transactions of n Fi corporation from July 21 to July 31 Inclusive. During those eleven days, the the cor authorized 437 new loans aggre gating $45007.500, and increases of for mer loans totaling £1858500 to banks and other credit in- stitutions and to rail roads, The total =o was $40.711.056. Later It was revealed that some of the loans au- thorized to banks had not been drawn upon. Chairman Steagall of banking committee sald he believed the publicity given the loans would tend to strengthen the confidence of depositors in the banks concerned. Mr. Trimble was accused by Con gressman Treadway of Massachusetts of acting as he did in order to gain favor with Speaker Garner, who ad- vocated publicity for the reports. In reply the house clerk sald this charge was ridiculous and that he acted on the legal advice of his son, who held the law gave him no discretion In the matter, the Reconstructio nance directors of poration South Trimble loaned the house DONGRESSMAN BHANNON'S com- mittee Investigating the results of federal competition with private con- cerns in business went to South Bend, Ind, and there heard a lot more com- plaints against Uncle Sam as a trader, Manufacturers, business men and rep- resentatives of various industries de clared they were being pushed to the wall through competition from gov. ernment boards and bureaus that are financed by taxpayers’ money. Their wall was presented by the Federation of American Business, and the lines of competition ran all the way from pickles and rubber stamps to depart. ment stores, wheat, coffee and cotton, The Association of Rallway Execu tives presented a brief attacking the Inland Waterways corporation, the government barge line that operates on the Mississippi, llinols and Warrior rivers, The rallway men argued that the government should get rid of the barge line as an unfair competitor of the rails, Manufacturers in Illinols presented a brief giving specific lines in which competition by the government is re- dueling their business, cutting into the normal revenues, reducing their pay rolls and number of employees, mean. while piling up the tax burden. One item of complaint is the growth of prison Industries, TRUBEE DAVISON, assistant * gecretary of war, has announced that he is a candidate for the guber- natorial nomination at the New York state Republican convention, The an- nouncement followed formal notifica- tion to him that the executive commit- tee of Nassau county Republican com- mittee had adopted a resolution pro- nouncing him the candidate of the Nassau county Republicans. ROSPECTS for civil war In Ger- many were heightened when a court at Beuthen, Upper Silesia, sen- tenced five National Socialists to death in connection with the killing of a Commu- nist. Seven other Na- zis were sentenced to prison at hard labor, Adolf Hitler and his followers arose in mighty wrath, de- nouncing the sen government of reich and pardon for There were demonstrations in places, with attacks on Jews and So- clalists, and the police and more con- servative Nazl leaders had a time curbing the enraged Hitlerites. Franz von Papen the is a added: minute He “from this our honor.” question “It is made this possible. Heaven ture upon torture, send the may but to finish this guillotine led by Von Papen.” To meet the storm of protest and de- nunciation, the governments of the reich and of Prussia issued a Joint manifesto that made it plain Von Pa- pen's cabinet would not tolerate any revolt against the laws of the reich. It declared that the severest penalties would be invoked against "every law- breaker, regardless of person or party,” and that the government eld to no political pressure in considering government would 3 the cases of the five condemned men. ERHAPS the best piece of news of the week was the announcement by Myron C, Taylor, board of the United States Steel cor poration, that it spend $35,000,000 for replacer chairman of the would new equipment. The expend the corporation's plant Alabama to be made In in Ohlo, I “It would seem the buying n cannot long be delayed” sald Taslor, and his further remarks that the tors of the ment Mr. indicated huge corporation believe it is now safe for them to plan for better times in the industrial world. On the is injected in the ch ' dire other han group of eminent engineers known as Technocracy more than ten years have been analyzing Ameri. can industrial and social der the auspices of These who for the system un lumbia univer nity. men, usir a yardsti have con cluded that Industry has reached the point pansion Is vir of efficiency where further ex and an al ure has passed They predict two {mpossible creat debt on ready overiaden struct its growth 20 006) (00 years If a commodities period of unemployed within downward trend of basic and services continues, nnd consider futile such efforts at re five-day the Finance corporation and low-cost housing schemes Technological efficiency, has increased production to such an extent that employment-—no matter how many new industries are initinted ~will continue its steady decrease suscitation as the week, Reconstruction they hold, ment of all American industry has risen to “the fantastic figure at $218. 000,000,000-—-a debt claim on poster. ity.” of Wales is going to take a bride, and again the rumor is that the lady chosen is Princess Ingrid of Sweden The prince is to open a British exhibition at Copenhagen on September 24, and he is to attend the wed ding of Prince Gustaf of Sweden at Coburg on October 20. Be tween those dates, ac cording to the uncon firmed story, he will pay a visit to Stock. holm, and It Is ex pected the marriage will then be arranged. The prince of Wales was thirty-eight years old last June. Ingrid, a pretty blond, Is twenty-two, She is distantly related to the prince and Is a frequent visitor in London, where she Is often the guest of the British royal family. She is also one of the most eligible of the princesses in Europe. Prince of Wales APT. JAMES A. MOLLISON of Great Britain put his little Moth plane down at Roosevelt field, New York, and went on record as the first person to make the solo flight west- ward across the Atlantic, His start was from Ireland and he landed first forty miles from St. John, N, B. He planned to fly back to Ireland as soon as the weather was propitious, © 1922, Western Newspaper Union, IGHT now is certainly a great time R to get rid of road worn, tread bare tires and replace them with tough new rubber. Goodyear quality is the highest it has ever been. Goodyear prices are lower than they have been in 30 previous summers. Read them and be convinced. These prices buy Goodyear Speedways = built to Goodyear standards —marked with the Goodyear name~the tires that have been making such a sensation in this low-price year. Goodyear can give you such values be- cause Goodyear builds more tires —mil- lions more —~than any other tire-maker. “Why buy any second-choice tire whea FIRST-CHOICE costs no more?" GOODYEAR Eat: HE ht SPEEDWAY Full Oversize we 4.40-21 Ford Ford 249 | ° Each Io pars ‘350 Per siogle tire Y C CLE LE od Full Oversize we. 50-20 Chevrolet 79 Each In pairs s fo Per single tire % 83 \ Each Ia pains Full Oversize 8. 75-19 Ford Chevrolet Plymouth 450 | ° Each Is pairs S463 Per single tire tire troubles for new Goodyear Full Oversize w§.00-20 Nash Each Io pars $495 Per single tire Essex 72 s Each Io pair ALL-WEATHERS You can use your old tires for money - turn them in for gener: $ ous cash allowances—and got the extra safety, the extra mileage, ex- tra quality of the world's best known tire the famous Goodyear All-Weather Full Oversize §.2§-23 Buick Dodge Nash 82 Esch In pairs ‘cas Per single tire 5 sex 3%: CL Ford Model T 30 Each io pairs 330 Per single tire HOUSEWIFE NOT TO dog bra ing, But anyone who has tried to do it will deny that. The planning, BE GREATLY PITIED | ine carrying « ga f any hou : out of the daily chanics of is a led business, changit — ——— compli cated and detal Her Work No More Tiresome Than Business Life? y to day. The preparing of appetizing, varied meals, them with every dish just ready at the same time, is a job ¥ ines of * Serving o A popular argument against house work is its monotony, the repetition of the same tasks day after day, the wash them, the cooking of food only to consume it and prepare more. jut it seems to me that these things are not more tiresome or more endless than filing cards, or teaching from the same textbooks year after year to children who probably do not hear and will not remember the texts, or indexing books and pictures in a library, which 1 did before | was married, or even sitting at a typewriter and pounding out hun- dreds of words, says Louise Owen in the American Mercury. They are perhaps more tiring, since they involve a great deal of physical effort, but they are on that very account more wholesoffie. For, after all, they are the very stuff of dally living, the fundamentals upon which existence itself depends. Another argument against house- keeping as a profession is that it Is a waste of time for women with itsel The that runs most smoothly, most pleasantly, is run by the woman of intelligence and indus who feels the dignity and portance of her profession, and en- joys freedom and leisure it allows, establishment using of dishes only to ry, sions that allow so much latitude in of work, so many hours of freedom in the course of the day; few that magazine, at almost when the spirit moves, any moment strongly that she is paying her way in the world, that she is not only self. respecting but self-supporting. Finally, housework is probably the only job in which the woman-——em- ployee and partner-—enjoys the priv. {lege of being in love with the boss, with no fear of another woman's having a greater right to her lover. To be good is also inexpensive. THE HOTEL MONTCLAIR Lexincron AVENUE, 49a TO 50TH STREETS, NEW YORK 800 OUTSIDE ROOMS Every Room with BATH and Free RADIO Single Rooms from $3.00 per Day Double Rooms from $4.00 Short walk from Grand Ceoneral and B. & 0, Mover Conch Sta, 10 Min. Taxi to Penn Sea, Notable Restaurant Serving American Home Cooking OSCAR W. RICHARDS, Manage His Poetry Popular i id shoemaker-poet job at Frosinone, {0 write verse on The his it women's shoes he inside of ymen’'s footwear y when 0 scharged employers learned the { were going to the market with bits of | sentimental inscribed on the Customers convinced that the poetry was the footgear more popular. ¥ had been d poetry { inner leather i the employers making Skywards | Ticket Agent—Yes, gir, we can sell you a ticket to anywhere, | Wise Guy—How about a ticket to | heaven? Ticket Agent—Yes, sir—right down at the redemption window. a "= uw Ie IS the dollars thet circulate among ourselves, in owt own community, that in the end build our schools and churches, pave out streets, lay oursidevialks, increase our farm values, attract more people to this section. Buying our merchan- dise in our local stores means keeping our dollars at home to work for us all,