Viewing page 13 of 15

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

[[advertisement]]

[[image - face of woman holding hand to cheek.]]

[[St]]omach UPSET?
Indigestion? Nausea? Diarrhea?
[[Hosp]]ital Tests prove Pepto-Bismol works where Soda and Alkalizers fail!

[[image - stomach with intestines, two arrows, one marked 1. point to stomach, the second marked 2. pointing to intestine]]

1. Pepto-Bismol helps soothe [[underlined]] in the stomach [[/underlined]] ...where overdoses of soda and alkalizers may actually [[underlined]] prolong [[/underlined]] the upset!

2. Pepto-Bismol also helps calm distress [[underlined]] in the intestinal tract [[/underlined]] ...where soda and alkalizers never help!

[[P]]epto-Bismol's special medicinal formula
[[s]]oothes both the irritated stomach and intes[[tin]]al walls with a gentle coating action. Pepto-[[Bi]]smol helps retard gas formation; calm heart[[bu]]rn, nausea. Hospital tests also prove it con[[tr]]ols
simple diarrhea - without constipating.
No wonder Pepto-Bismol is America's leading family remedy for upset stomach!

[[image - bottle of Pepto Bismol]]
A NORWICH PRODUCT

[[?e]] Hospital Tested
Pepto-Bismol [[registered trademark symbol]]
...and feel good again!
[[/advertisement]]

[[end column]]
[[start column]]

[[image - orchestra performance stage with podium]]

A GREAT ORCHESTRA PLAYS BEFORE EMPTY PODIUM

100 musicians minus a maestro

The famed NBC Symphony appeared at Carnegie Hall and tuned just as it had on hundreds of other nights. But the podium was vacant. For Arturo Toscanini-who had threatened, cajoled, hum[[?]] and flattered it into a singing instrument-was in retirement (I. April 19, 1954). Though its maestro was gone, the orchestra refused to be disbanded and was reluctant to play for another conductor long as Toscanini lived. Instead it played alone. The performance electrifying. It seemed as though the motions of Toscanini's baton been indelibly engraved in the heart of every man that played.

[[insertion]] [[underlined]] LIFE [/underlined]] 37:40 (Nov 8, 1954]] [[/insertion]]

President Eisenhower appointed Benjamin Oliver Davis Jr., 41, to the rank of brigadier general, the first Negro in Air Force history to achieve the distinction. A West Point graduate, Davis flew some 60 combat missions during World War II, has recently been serving as director of operations and training for the Air Force in the Far East. The promotion served to establish a tradition, for his father is the only Negro to have become a general in the U.S. Army. 

[[image - Photograph of General Davis with headphones on]] [[caption]] GENERAL DAVIS [[/caption]]

Brando seeks a bride

Last February, Marlo Brandon abandoned his role in the Egyp[[?]] flew to New York to see his psychiatrist. There he met Josane Mar[[?]] Berenger, a 19-year-old French girl. Two hours later Brando propo[[?]] In June Josane returned to France. Last month, having finished latest film Desiree, Brando followed. Last week, in the village [[w?]] her parents live, Josane and Marlon announced their engage[[?]]

[[image - photo of Hermann Field with jacket and tie]] [[caption]] HERMANN FIELD [[/caption]]
The Warsaw radio announced that Hermann Field, an American who disappeared in Poland in 1949 while searching for his brother Noel, had been "cleared of all charges and released from prison". Poland said Field had been framed by Josef Swiatlo "an American agent." Swiatlo, ex-official of the Polish sec[[?]] police, fled to the West recent[[?]] revealed he had arrested Hermann.  His report that Field [[w?]] alive probably embarrassed Poland into releasing the prison[[?]]

CONTINUED ON P[[?]]

Transcription Notes:
[[note: paragraph partially cut off left and right side]]