iftANTlC CITY i RAISES DEMAND FOR 20-FOOT CHANNEL n.t..,.nn Prnnnrp.dness and $ jjeiw" Pork Bnrrcl, wesort rmws the Latter if Its Want Can Be Satisfied ' t c I KB" IBii feoMBN "COPS" URGED i-nlANTlC OITV. Jan. il8.-Atlnntlo dl -want a su-iooi c......... -.......- C , f.lMtlon. Atlantic City docs not minute to confess that at this Juncture ffl for tne por m...... .. 5 ..'hjrbora bill will help to obtain that "hlch It regards as necessary to Us wet- vi,v the city's "hotclkccpcra and bnsl ilmtr Tcver thoUBht a channel 12 feet 5e!lhroURh the sand bars would meet '&mmfrSl"l needs, Is now a subject of W "?.?. . ainrrt the 12-foot channel has .due and It Is seriously proposed to "! Vi'5 .Yi which did the work to r-.M May, the resort Is quite convinced r?ffift channel Is little more than a b'kshlft. Bi.... if will take caro of private ynclits 'i ..'.rtii th resort to become a yiiclit- S,' Trrndevzous In courso of time second ?.Vo Newport, but Atlnntlc City wants L.thln more than Hint. Bhoro men say. now covets rccoffiiltlon Dy coastline ii'rtltrs At least to the extent of ImvInK norldaibpund liners stop here to take n nd disembark .tourists. Jt wants also lint cutslon craft to brltif? thousands '. tuuro seekers hero from New York hd Philadelphia. Tho present 12-foot channel Is Inadequate for these pur- fpoies. t filvcrs and Harbors Committee, It 111 pointed out, will sUKsest that Atlantic niy ahOUKl lirsi proviuu uwm mm ivii.tr." II... facilities. This i.ccessnry adjunct hns t'oi ret passed the blue-print stni?c and $: nilnn dollars. However, one 12-foot tteamshlp brouKht thousands nf wator- irOUtO tOUnsis licrc iiuiii .it-n iuik luai Biummer. Aiiomer vessel, wiiicn is cx- KpecUd to ITIEIHC reKUliir ruua iiciu irum Ihillmlclphlft next summer, ousht to ahow fillll .better results. KBenCh authorities are expected to wel Sini the sUcRcstlon of shore clubwomen that female policemen uc umpiuycu next lummcr to deal with mashers and en force a Btrlctcr regard for tho conven tlohs on the batlilnpr Krounds.. Ucach front patrolmen will bo very glad to bo relieved of tho task of Informing yonriK women who go to extremes In the brevity f their strnnd raiment that officially Hfjitlantlc City docs not miprovo of that lOrt 01 tninx. ueacii uircciur iioenuri oc Vitts that a Kindly word from a moth erly looKlng woman will bo quite as ef fective ana mucu ichh eniuurrn.HHinK uinn ' harsh command from a uniformed no- llceirian, accompanied Inevitably by tho collection or n crown of curious onlookers. SfBoardn-nlk cabaret men are making a nllant attempt to convlnco tho public that they are not nlnr-id over tho burn ing denunciation which ICvnngcllst Stoush hii poured upon their establishments. Several of them arc lUlvertlsitiK for tho Brit time at this season of tho year, announcing the onKfiBcment of allo . inters and vocal cntertnlncrs. This, In the eitlmatlon of Slouch's supporters. signifies a falling off In business. Last lummer, except for one or two of tho places, wai anything but n prolltablo one. t Mr. and Sirs, Charles Wester have re. '.turned to Chelsea nfter a visit to I'hlla- delphla. t-Vtr. Inlin lfnlnM nnl Ml LVlttli Jfce" " w .jS "1 5K -'JKfi'i: IJKiSMrfloHat? - BYEKlNq LBDGBB-PHIIJADBLI'HIA,. ytnsai)AYt TAyUARY 18, dUl r BIG AMERICANIZATION TOMORROW FOR 2 DAYS Great Interest In Col. Roose velt's Speech in Opern House Thursday Night Will Talk on Preparedness Includes specimen of work In nil tho arts nnd crafts. Mrs. Kdwanl T fltotesbury, who Is a vice president of the National American ization Committee, has done much toward to do the netual butchetlnx' Tea it Is v deadly murder The soldier at lfrnst faces danger He risks life, but the munition manufacturers and the Government cllquo which sustains them arc In perfect color, sculpture nnd crafts oxKlblts; $JO0 I for Illustration, and two prices, one of I J100 nnd one of f2.". for etchings. The Jury ' which will make the awards Includes NOTED MEN WILL COME . fllln Itenux. Jessie Wilcox Smith, Kd K.r V. Seolcr. Oeorse Walter Dawson ! nnd Charles Orally. Al 8 o'clock tomorrow tilRht Mr. and A.rs. Stotesbury will jtlve a dinner lo the members of the committee at their home, 1523 Walnut street. brlngln the collection to this city. The ' safety and security." Philadelphia committee, which has been I "If f had nny doubts about the motives nsslstlng her. Includes Mrs. Cornelius of President Wilson before, his message Stevenson, Miss Emily Sartaln, Howard to Congress left no doubt In my mind," Fremont Strntton, Edward Atleo Hnrber, she said at mother point, when rcfcrrl-K John F. Lewis, Samuel Flelsher and John I to ibe fact that tho President has come A. Myers. , out for preparedness at this time. "Why Liberal oHim lmvi h-n nnr,1. IVtt fnr that address was simply a chenn appeal the winners In the oil nnlntlmr.. water-" ? l!1ft gallery. All that tnlk about dls- . . . ;. .....'. im.Aii.i ...m ..i. () 'oiirsc jinn ran nerrr be lite us. Hi I be s Ilkr u as yoii'rr oblc In be DIl. VON HEYDKBRANDT Leader of the Conservative party, who declared in the Prnsslnn Diet yesterday that America wants to prolong tho war. Knight, of Vcntnor, have gone to Day lona, Fin... for tho res! of the winter. The first "leap ,-ear" pnrty was given by Miss. Dorothy Clements, with class mates as her guests. They were Miss Stella Henry, .Miss Irene Forte, Miss Harriet Hess, Miss Gertrude Coffey, Miss Etta Elder nnd Miss Mildred Noff. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew McAllister have returned to Philadelphia after a shore sojourn of n week. Mrs. ltlchard L Oreen, of Herman town, hns been the guest here of Mrs. Georgo Franco. Mrs. Thomas II. Nuttall and Mrs. Al fred Johnson were hostesses for tho nrts ami crafts department of tho Women's Itesenrch Club. Their guests wcro Miss Ella jiood, Mrs. Clara Warren Vnscy, Mra. C.eoige T. Wlngntc, Mrs. Arthur Wts'cott, Mrs. Hubert Willis. Mrs. II, T. ItliodcM, Mrs. W. Chandler Stewart, M:ss Hill, .Mrs. J. M. Whclnii, Mrs. Edgar Trout. MrB. Clarence L. Cole, Mrs. Milton L. Alunsun, Mvu. C. F. Kent, .Mrs. A. Lincoln Myers. Mirs Louella Hubley, Mm. II. II. Donkyno, Mrs. Chnrlos C. Ilnrrlnon, JII3S Kane and Mrs. Kntheiino Worcester. HELD. AS M UNDER SUSPECT AmorteanlTnllont The making of aver age Swedes. Itnltans, Icelanders, Span lards nnd others Into men as near like us nn h possible for men from other contin ents to be. This In the theme nnd work set before the National Conference on Im migration and Americanization which will stnrt .a two 'Jays' session In this city be ginning tomorrow. Colonel Theodore Ilonsevclt will be one o the spenkers. He will tell why ,'t Is reinetulously worth while to1 mnke for elonerii Inln the Ideal tvne Ithe Ameri can), provided the proper men are ruling over the development of Hint type. Ho ; will speak on "Fii-lni nnd Keimomi.! itc paiedness for Peace and Unity" Thurs day night. The slognn of this speech will be "Fear God rfnd Tnkc Your Own Part." The pre- 1 pnredness point that Colonel Itoonevelt 1 Will make Is undcrntonit to be decidedly 'mportint to the military prepaledncss I mnvom"iii. and It In even Intimated that I the standard bearer of the Piogrcsslve party In the Inst national election will make his speech the first trumpet blare of hla (innpalgn. If he can t.e said to hnvo a umtpalgn, us yet, In connection with tlic national election less than 10 months from now. So much Interest Is felt In whnt Colonel llooacvctt tnny say on his most Importnnt public appearance In this city since the European wnr stinted Hint thousands of applications for. seats In the Metropolitan Opera Hoilre, where the big Thursday night meeting will close the conference, have been lecolved. It will be llrst come first served for those who want to go, and the nppllcntits who aio sending In applications will bo accommodated to the capacity of tho building with little chance left for thero being any left over nfter tomorrow or per haps todny. The conference will begin lit 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon with the opening of an nrt exhibit ami tea nt Memorial Hall, in Falrmount Park. Tho exhibit will show the contribution of Immigrant races to American nrt and also Mrs, Harry Payne Whitney's prize competition on the Immigrant In America, recently exhibited In her otudlo In New York city. -"Americanization Through Art" might be the title of this pnrt of the confer ence. Tho collection which will bo placed on view hns been brought together In Mrs. Whitney's studio In Xow York. It PREPAREDNESS POLICY. ATTACKED DY GOLDMAN Contlnnfil from Pnae One manufacturer ns a coward, because he stays at home and under the protection of the Government makes money bv man ufacturing material with which to blow his fellow men to pieces. In this connec tion she said with n dramatic expression. "Is It less murderous to furnish muni tions for the butchery of men than It Is t not strlko oftener." loyalty was chenp clap-trap the kind of tnlk thnt excites the nrtilnnry man of tho street, without mnwng mm think. Wil son, without a doubt, hns been nppronched by the big Interests and he has found out thai If he wants to bo President again I that ho will simply have to bcllcvo In pre- i tilt A1 Itrlta " Miss Goldman says she la glad that the women of the country are awakening to the real truth of the preparedness cry nnd that they arc now forming woman's peace, party movements. She denounced the press In general, de claring that most of the papers are nlso controlled by "the big Interests," adding: She expressed satisfaction that the gar ment workers of Philadelphia are on a strike, although she Is not here In con nection with the strike, but to mnke a speech this evening at 7IS North Ilroad street, when she speaks on tho subject, "The Message of Anarchism." "I nm glad to hear thnt the girls are on a strike, ami I nope they win. Tho wonder of It nil to me Is that they do WHOLE FAMILY SLAIN, Turks Kill Willinmsport Man's Parents, Brothers and Grandparents ,, WILLtAMSPOItT, Pa., Jan. lS.-Znrnh Toroslnn, nn Armenian photographer here, Is nil nlone In the world, for ho hns Just received word that his whole family back In the mother country has been slaughtered by tho Turks for the sake of their religion. It was several yenrs ago that Znrah came to America, his "land of promise," nnd settled In Willinmsport, where he worked at his trade of photographer and later opened a postcard gallery at 3M Court street. Ho worked and saved, for ho planned to return to his loved ones back home. Then, the other day, nfter months of nnxloUs walling, he received the fearful news. Zarah's father and mother, bin broth ers and his grandparents all were slain by Turkish soldiers In whoso hnnds they had fallen. Thousands of Znrnh's fellow townsmen were put to the sword or cru elly tortured. A boyhood friend, who escaped from the Turks Into a friendly country, sent him the news. Others of his frienda wiio survived th mas.ai,re, the letter told, )iave been sedlteflrii U all points of tho compass. - ,s A sympathizer cal'.ert tb seo Zurah tot day. "At night." he cried In broketf J5 Hsh, "all the llmo X sleep, tne sets moMi. father, brothers md rec friends; toowwb chlidrcn-nhl cut down, Ilka that! lhtt wait," hft exclaimed, his eyes nshtn and his shoulders trembling, 'wnltl tret Armenia but moot Turkey when h has no one to help her! Ah. then," and Ji drew In his breath till his chest heaved with tho exertion, "then kill we fight till Turkey no more, no more!" MICHELL'S 1916 SEED BOOM t now ready (or distribution. It contains 340 pages of Useful information on farm, garden and truck patch. Send for your copy now, lts fr. luILllELL S 618 Market St. Ogontz Police Probe Killing of 7-1-ycnr-old Thomas Barrett John Hart, who gives his nddresi.s ns South Ilcthlehcm and Phoenlxvlllo, Pa., Is being held nt the Ogontz police station, accused of vagrancy, but hold ns a sus pect In the murder case of Thomas Bar rett,. 74 years old. found dead In a stnblo at Souderton. Tho old man wns beaten to dcatii with r. heavy bolt, with robje. evidently ns the motive. Hart Is held nt the request of Chief of Police Lever, head of the Cheltenham department, and District Attorney An derson and Coroner McOlathory. Lever has been detailed to the case and hns taken ph itographs of tho blood-stained linger prlnt3 which npprttred on tho wnlls of .ho otnblc, where the dead man wns found. An Inquest will bo held Thursdny, Only Takes a Minute to Phone Walnut 4911 for Samples and wo'll solid them to you by mall or representative whichever you prefer. There's 2Sn designs of the 1916 pat terns to chooso fiom. Ileautlful colorings. MADRAS SHIRTS TO YOUR ORDER Mado of Andorsou's Imported Scotch Madras. Style, tit nnd workmnnshlp I guaranteed. Cost (11 elsewhere. Won- i drrtul value. TARTAN TIES (Silk) . . .".I Scotch clans reprocnted. 65c COULTER, 710 Chestnut St. I: United mSkeadr ' 12f0? J're .... I Why 'Usco'-- l: H, Make something wonderfully good and you say, "This is mine," you call it by your name. That is exactly our case. We have made a tire so fine, so sturdy, so responsible that we want it known as ours. So we named it 'Usco (U. S. Co.). Because we have put our name on this tire because its success was a matter of business pride, of business honour we pledged ourselves to see that it "made good" and it has. Think of it a really wonderful new anti-skid tire priced at only a little more than plain treads. New Prices of Usco' Tread Tires 30 inch x 3 inch, $10.40 30 inch x 3 2 inch, 13.40 32 inch x 3 e inch, 15.40 34 inch x 4 inch, $22,40 36 tnchx4,z inchi 31.55 37 inch x 5 inch, 37.30 United States Tire Company JlW- 'Chain' 'Nobby' 'Royal Cord' ' Plain' Tread "Individualized Tires' ' I I Fifteen years ago a man of sixty, broken in health, found himself out of a job and with less than $500 in the bank. Today he owns, near Topeka, Kansas, his own poultry farm. It gives him a good living. Was it easy? No, it was a struggle. But he has won by applying to poultry raising the hard headed common sense of a practical farmer the same kind of sense you find every weeK hi Ktf CabIF TKftineff What this man has done, an inspiration to every man, young or old, prosperous or jobless, is told in the January 22nd issue of The Country Gentleman. It is just one incident in the poultry news and the poultry knowledge which this great national farm paper brings week by week. THE POULTRY CALENDAR is a weekly reminder and guide for everyone who keeps chickens. It provides a timely schedule for every detail and gives the best methods for the fancier, the commercial egg and meat producer, and the amateur. And this is but one of twelve regular departments that give you definite, valuable ideas and infor mation about each of the departments of your farm fruit, live-stock,- dairying, market garden ing, farm buildings, farm cooking, sewing, etc. And every week there are from six to ten special articles by special farm investigators. Send the coupon to-day and get The Country Gentilemanfoir ayeaf 5issuesfof only $1 Or subscribe through any recognized Curtis Agent X jr Country o GmtUpMuif .1 Ua- v x is lit Curti PubtitMac CtatuT -x ... .... ....r... ,:. . .'.. '. ' CP . Encloicd pleue find M -.V lCidUn price $1,751, H rV ttrfd Tit Ciualn fieatlriam tr uL yeto the tddreu-bcJowi p'l i Nme Addrcti . w&msmi'.s. R. F, D. Route fcVW lftiWM V