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KELLOGG RECEIVES REPLY FROM CHLE Officials View Note as Prac- tical Acceptance of Secre- tary’s Proposal. By the Associated Press. Secretary Kellogg, acknowledging Teceipt 6f the Chilean note in reply o his recent proposal on Tacna-Arica today, was of the opinion that it amounted to “practical acceptance” of_his plan. No indication yet has been received from Peru respecting its attitude on the proposal, but Secretary Kellogg expected to hear from that govern- ment at a very early date. Questioning as to the meaning of the section in the Chilean note touch- ing upon Chile’s refusal to “abandon the solld juridical position, given her Ly the treaty of Ancon and the ar-| tral award, revealed that the State | Department felt this language did not fmply any reservation, so far as the major proposal for initiation of tri- party negotlations among Chili, Peru | and Bolivia is concerned. i Asserting that “we have the right | to make sure that the sacrifice we mre making in deference to a lofty | 1deal will not constitute a future dan- | wer to our exterior security,” the! Chilean note sald the demilitarization proposal “must be understood in its widest sense” and that “it would be | indispensable to stipulate that the territory whose cesslon is proposed could not be transferred, in whole or in part, by any of the contracting nations to any other power.” Bolivia, which Secretary Kellogg announced had not been consulted before the cession proposal was ad- vanced, also has consented to the ar- rangement, which involves payments by it to Chile and Peru to compensate them for public works in the provinces and certain other conditions, as well as the demilitarization feature. In presenting the plan, Secretary Kellogg explained that settlement of the 40-year-old dispute between Chile and Peru “on any basis of agree- tnent presents almost insuperable dif- ficultles o long as each applies to | every arrangement suggested the test | of whether it may conceivably enable the other to claim a moral victory.” ROBBERS GET $175 HAUL AT OLD DUTCH MARKET @tore at 3113 Fourteenth Street Is Entered and Safe Taken Into Refrigerating Plant. The safe in the Old Dutch .\la.rlfiel5 at 3113 Fourteenth street was robbed of $175 early yesterday morning. Robbers entered through a side door and took the safe into the refrigerat- ing plant, where, safely concealed, | they were able to rip it open. Police suspect the same individuals who robbed the Old Dutch Market on Louisiana avenue several months ago, as the two jobs were similar. BOOK SALE PLANNED. Bryn Mawr Club to Provide Funds for Regional Scholarship. ‘The Bryn Mawr Club of Washington will hold a_sale of books at 1627 H sireet on Wednesday, Thursday and ¥riday from 9 to 6 daily, it was an- nounced today. This sale is for the benefit of the regional scholarship provided every year by the Alumnae of Bryn Mawr College to some stu- dent in this city and the surrounding district, who i otherwise financially unable to enter the college: Mrs. E. W. Sturdevant, 3006 P street, urges all desiring to send con- tributions of hooks to do so before tomorrow afternoon. Mrs. Sturdevant 18 president of the local club. Georgetown Benefit Tonight. | A Dbenefit performance for the | Georgetown University Hospital will be given tonight at the National Thea- ter, under the auspices of the board of woman managers. Rev. Charles W. Lyons, §. J., president of George- town University, and many of the medical and hospital staff have taken boxes. The offering is “Craig’s Wife,” in which Chrystal Herne takes the leading part. Proceeds will he used to promote the charitable work at the hospital, which is extending its activi- ties on a wide scale. ¢ Former Anti-Saloon Iud?r Dies. MADISON, N. J.. December § (). — Rev. Dr. David James Burrell, 83 years old, former president of the AntiSaloon League of New York Btate, died yesterday. | to serious trouble. Soviet Air Route To Link Leningrad And Vladivostok By the Associated Press. MOSCOW, December 6.—Soviet aviation authorities have worked out a plan to establish an air line between Leningrad and Viadivos- tok. Huge dirigibles, more than 600 feet long, will be used and It is expected they will make the trip inside of three days. The line later will be extended to Yokohama and will also touch some of the large western Euro- pean cities, G saige o itaty JACKH LECTURE TONIGHT. Foreign Service School to Hear German Economist. Dr. Ernest Jackh of Berlin, who is here attending the second Conference on the Cause and Cure of War, will lecture tonight at 8 o’clock before the student body of the Georgetown Uni- versity School of Foreign Service. His topie will be “The New Germany and Its Present Relations With Europe.” Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, 8. J., re- gent of the Georgetown School, who has been absent for veral weeks, has returned to Washington and will preside at the exercises, which will be open to the public. The visitor is one of the leading economists of Lurope and a former delegate of Germany at Versailles, Lo- carno and Geneva. He is founder and president of the International Instl- tute of Politics, a school somewhat of the order of the Georgetown school. The National Education Association is a professional organization for teachers. More than 160,000 are mem- bers, says that organization’s bulletin. 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The intersectign is in front of ‘the south entrance to the Soldiers’ Home, Michigan avenue, running east from McMillan Park reservoir, traverses the ‘Southern Hmits of the Soldiers’ Home grounds until it reaches the in- tersection and resumes its journey about 50 feet south on First street. As a result trafic gomg either east or west on Michigan avenue is obliged to run almost head-on to traffic com- ing out of Soldiers’ Home or bound north on First street. Motorists must steer around such an uncertain angle that it is difficult even for cars tra- versing Michigan avenue to pass at All-Ironed, Ready-to-Wear (Ask our Telephone Operator prices on these services) MaNHATTAN NEw Way completely ironed; lowest possible price. M~ANHA1’TAN SysTEm is Better: particular pieces hand-ironed; - each piece identified by a Woven Red Silk Label. MaNHATTAN DE Luxe is Best: includes greatest care to the little “niceties” in the Art of Laundering. the housewife who wants the very best. AN » MONDAY, DECEMBER 6. 1926. the intersection without running the risk of at least scraping fenders. The plan of the Citizens’ Association contemplates cutting away the north- east corner of the Soldlers’ Home grounds to give westbound traffic a less abrupt turn and to cut off a sipilar section of McMillan Park, on thé southwest corner, to improve the curve for traffic going east or turn- ing into Michigan avenue. An il- luminated marker to guide traffic around a definite point also is recom- mended. , The plan was worked out by the as- sociation's committee on streets, side- walks and parking. - It was submitted to the Commissioners in the form of a blueprint, with a request for early is Good: pieces vice. money. to iron. Appreciated by THRIF-T Bl A wonderful ser- The most for the least All flat pieces ready to use; all apparel ready Washed in Nets action to remedy conditions at the in- tersection. The Commissioners were told that so many automobiles ve been forced upon the pavement at the corner that the curbing has been worn almost level with the street. e Marine Orchestra to Open Series. The United States Marine Band Or- chestra will give its first concert of the Winter season tomorrow night at 8:16 o’clock in the band auditorium at the Marine Barracks. The concerts thereafter will be given regularly on Tuesday nights at 8:16 and on Friday afternoons at 3:30. As in former ye: vited. , the public is in- SCHOONER GOES AGROUND Ship Abandoned on Ledges After Crew of Five Escapes. SYDNEY, Nova Scotia, December 6 UP).—The schooner Atlanta, with a cargo of potatoes, piled up on the ledges at Low Point, at the entrance to Sydney Harbor, during a storm, and was abandoned yesterday as a total wreck. The crew of five landed safely. The heavy northwest gale enabled the British colller Hindustan, aground on the West Mount shore of the har- bor, to work herself loose and back off into deep water with little damage. NEURALGIA Onear mn»mnhmdm ‘Dains aimost instantly. Almd sciatica, otc. Relieve women's Break «colds, grippe, fevers. Banish Be Sroscrived by doctors and Gen- ‘millions aness. 25 used e , flat tins, by all druggists—25c. mervou: tists for 85 Sold in ha A-K on every tablet. blet. L - fi-hamnia Rellet frem Poins and Ashes ET the party dress that Peggy wears, hasalready been laundered at Manhattan twelve times. Clean and sweet, snowy white, not a worn or a torn spot visible. The secret of it is the Net method of washing at Manhattan. Your family wash is sorted into “your own” Net bags. The Net becomes a wall of pro- tection for your clothes. As the hot, soft suds swish continuously through the giant meshes of the Net, the clothes get the wash—the Net takes the wear. 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