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I 7 _ BOrienfal Cram Tm cnm nwte lor* the ovoaiog dine*, ■- for i weU'groosud too t * »l*«»iag ippeirmco. ( M. belt hMN WIT jtomach I Sv*i%£TS*: (Fever upset an upset stomach with jwverdoses of antacids or harsh phye j-lcs. Be gentle with it. Take toothing pMWO-a/SMOL. Not a laxative. Not j •** ewtecid. It calms and soothes your put stomech. Pleasant to the taste children love it. Ask your druggist f nPTO-BlSMOL when your atom ! mch it upset. I' A NOKWtCH BBODVCt ADVERTISEMENT. MANY NEVER SUSPECT CAUSE OF BACKACHES This Treatment Often Bring* Happy Relief Wany sufferers relieve nagging backache guicklv once they discover that the real •ause of their trouble may be tired kidaeys. The kidneys are Nature's chief way of taking the excess acids and waste oat of the blood. They help most people elhalaate about 8 pints a day. When disorder of kidney function permit* poisonous matter to remain in your blood, n may cause nagging backaobe, rheumatic pains, leg pains, swelling, puflness under Ike eyes, headaches and dizziness. Don't wait! Ask your druggist for Doan’a Pills, a stimulant diuretic, used successfully by millions for over 40 years. Doan’a give bappy relief and will help the 1* miles of kidney tubes flush out poisonous waste from rour blood. Get Doan's Pills. __ADVERTISEMENT. SAYS GOODBYE TO CONSTIPATION Famous Cereal Ends Lifetime Of Dosing Do you suffer from constipation t Then read this sincere, unsolicited letter: "I can truthfully aay that I hare barn !nor« or less constipated ail my life and have taken most all kinds of harsh laxa tives. But four months ago I began eating Kelloggs ALL-BRAN. I eat a dish of ALL-BEAN every morning, and have a nice aasy passage every day. I am now 74 rears old/’ A. A. Schaeffer, 3736 S. E. 2nd Ave., Portland, Oregon. . If you suffer from constipation due to lack of bulk in your diet, you may be free from this trouble for the rest of your life if you will eat • dishof KELLOGG’S ALL-BRAN •very day, and drink plenty of water. Try this for 10 days, and if Hot completely satisfied, send the empty carton to Kellogg Company, Battle Creek, Michigan. You'll pet double your money back. ALL-ERAN is not a purgative, but a wholesome cereal made of the vital outer lavers of finest wheat. Eat KELLOGG’S ALL-BRAN every day as a deli cious cereal, or in muffins. Get ALL-BRAN at your gro cer’s. Made by Kellogg’s'of Battle .Creek and Omaha. NO DULL DRAB HAIR When You Use Thit Amazing 4 Purpose Rinse In one,simple,quick operotion, IOVALON will do oil of these 4 Important things to give YOUR hair glamour and beautys 1. Gives lustious highlights. 2. Rinses away shampoo film. 3. tints the hair as H rinses. 4. Helps keep hair neatly In place. IOVALON does not permanently dye or bleach.lt Is c wre, odorless hair rinse. In 12 different shades. Try LOVALON. At -A : -L If A - :I-S I _ ! OPA Union Employes Plata Buyers’ Strike in Cafe Price Protest The OPA branch of the United Public Workers of America, CIO. to day prepared to call a buyers' strike 1 against the Government Services, Inc., cafeteria serving OPA employes in protest against an alleged 36 per cent rise in food prices. Members of the OPA branch voted yesterday afternoon to stage the strike and William Stafford, chair man of the unit, said it would be called within a week to 10 days. Mr. Stafford said the union mem bers would seek to have other OPA employes boycott the cafeteria which serves 3,400 OPA employes in the building at Third and D streets S.W. He added that the union would try to have the movement spread to other Government Serv ices-operated cafeterias. The local charged that not only have prices risen, but the size of food items had decreased. Charles Holloway, vice chairman of the OPA | branch, said that pats of butter sell ! ing for 2 cents at the cafeteria ; would cost $2.80 if sold by the pound ; at the same ratio. Officials of Government Services, a nonprofit organization, declared i that price increases were necessary ,if the company is to remain in ex istence. During the past few months government Services has suffered 'operating losses due to wage in creases granted its employes and the rise in food prices, officials de clared. In reply, union leaders charged jthat the organization has a surplus of $1,800,000 and that the cafeterias made $350,000 last year alone. They i pointed out that the nonprofit outfit Was given rent-free space and furn ! ished equipment by the Government. ‘One of the charges made by Mr. Holloway was that the organization was diverting profits from its cafe terias to operate less profitable proj ■ ects, such as tennis courts and swimming pools. Three Legion Posts Here Among Largest in U. S. Three District of Columbia Amer ican Legion posts now rank among ithe largest In the Nation, Legion headquarters in Indianapolis, Ind., announced yesterday. The three and their ranking are James Reese Europe Post No. 5, 86th place; Vincent B. Costello Post No. 15, 125th, and Sergeant Jasper Post No. 13, 227th. There are 15,113 posts In the country. The Legion also disclosed 422 posts have attained memberships of more than 1.000 during 1946, com pared with 128 posts of that size last year. ereToGo at To Do DRAMA. "Her Majesty the Kins.” presenttxi by i the Masquers of Roosevelt Center. Thlr iteenth and Upshur streets N.W , 8 o'clock tonight. The Curtain Rises," presented at Olney Theater, Olney. Md., 8:45 o clock tonight ^through Sunday. EXHIBITS. Victory anniversary exhibit, including display of Japanese and German sur render documents, among them 12 never displayed before: United States declaration of war against Japan and the Japanese declaration against the United States and England, at the National Archives. 8:46 a m. to A 15 p m weekdays and 1:30 to 6 p m Sundays and holidays through Sep tember. The original Act of Coniregs establish ing the Smithsonian Institution, through Tuesday 8tate Department maps, through August: books and personalia of Shalom Alelchem. Jewish author, for an indefinite fierlod: contemporary American etchings rom the permanent collection, throufh September 8. in the Division of Oraphte Arts: 10th annual photographic talon of the Photographic Society of America, through August, in the Arts and Industries Building, at the Smithsonian Institution, 9 a m to 4:30 p.m. dally. Captured German and Japanese elec tronics equipment, in the main lobby. De partment of Commerce Building, daily through Saturday. Paintings by artists of Washington and vicinity at the Phillips Memorial Gallery. 1] am. to ft pm. Tuesday! through Sat urdays: 3 pm. to 7 pm. Sundays and 11 a m. to 10 p m through Saturday. Water color rendering of early Ameri can designs in native arts and ertfti. at the National Gallery of Art, 10 a m ta 6 pm weekdays, and 2 to 6 p.m. Sundays through September Oil and water color palntinga by MUs Norma Boae, at the Petworth Branch. Pub lic Library, 9 a m. to 9 p.m. weekdays through September. Display of freah-water game and food fishes from Federal hatcheries and local waters, in aquarium under main lobby. Department of Commerce Building, dally through Saturday. Exhibition of work by member!. Art* Club of Washington. 2017 I street N.W. 11 a m to A o m. weekdays and 2 to A p.m. Sundays through September. Hardy day-blooming and exotic nlght biooming water lilies, Kenilworth Aquatle Gardens. Kenilworth avenue and Douglas street N E daily through Saturday. Paintings by American Indiana. Cen tra! Branch. Public Llbraiy, Eighth end K streets N.W., 9 a m. to 9 p.m. through Saturday. LUNCHEONS. President Cup Regatta Committee, Wil lard Hotel, 12:30 p.m. tomorrow. MEETINGS. Association of Military Colleges and Schools, today, Mayflower Hotel. TALKS. Picture of the week. Nattier's Madame de Caumartin as Hebe. National Gallory of Art. Gallery 53. 12:40 and 1:40 p.m.. daily through Sunday. FOR SERVICEMEN. DANCES. NCCE. 918 Tenth street N.W., 8:80 i o’clock tonight. YWCA-USO Seventeenth and K street! N.w . 9 o’clock tonight. Jewish Community Center. Sliteeeith and Q streets, 8:30 o'clock tonight. SUPPERS j U80 Club, Waffle Night, 9 o'clock to 1 night. Prove this yourself—Canterbury ^B makes perfect iced tea. Accept our amazing offer: Buy a package of Canterbury Tea at your Safeway Store. Compare the grand flavor of this thrifty tea with your favorite brand.We think you’ll like Canterbury just as well! It not, return the unused portion to your Safeway grocer and he’ll give you a like-size package of any other tea you may ' select from his stock. | Fa at ur ad at SAFEWAX STORES j npHHHHP Woodward 8c Lothrop 10™ 11™ r AND 0 Strut* Zoni 13 Pmoni district 5300 BRANCH STORES—Bethesda, Maryland Arlington Farms, Virginia Tlie Pentagon H OFFMAN r0twiji * r Barbary Coast Colors . . . bold checks, brilliant plaids co ordinated with solid colors . . . ours alone in Washington l Bright prospect for your autumn ... a longer-jacketed suit and very probably a brief and vivacious coat to top it ... in these cherished California by-the-yard exclusives Again, Hoffman has planned colors with the-way-you-will-wear-them well in mind . . . with two or three solid colors to go with each plaid or check. Straight into your life comes a share of that romantic, riotous era when California struck gold ... in a setting that was spendthrift with color. Listen to the names: Cancan Check, i Pack Train Stripe, Bella Union Check, Fandango Plpid, Pony Prance Stripe, Embarcadero Plaid . . . and every color in the group has a name as lively. But see for yourself the glowing possibilities ... to make up in fashions such as the McCall pattern suit we pic ture. 56 wide inches of loomed-in-California 100% virgin wool. Yard_ _*4-95 On Sale Wednesday Morning at 9:30 WdsL—Dress Fabrics and Patterns, Second Floor ■ —- ■.---i. * * A _ _ l