Radio-TV mirror (July-Dec 1954)

Record Details:

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caa. See Next Page els it will help him in his attempt +o win Mary. 5. Elise, still determined to win Larry, pays no heed to her father's warning not to pursue a married man. gambler — the king of gambling — whose tremendous power had made many people fear him. Stratton agreed to Elise's proposal that he be her partner in buying Larry's play, and that Elise's interest in the deal — for reasons of her own — would remain a secret between them. The first step in her plan of attack accomplished, Elise arranged for Victor Stratton to meet Mary and offer to buy the play. Fortune was even more in Elise's favor because, from the moment Stratton met Mary, he was attracted to her, and he made up his mind then and there that he was going to have her, come what may. Little did Mary realize that, in selling the play to Stratton, she was being drawn into another web of emotion. For, now that Stratton owned the play, Mary had to be gracious to him, for Larry's sake . . . and yet, is was vital that Larry should not be misled into thinking she herself was in any way becoming interested in Stratton. With each passing day, Stratton became more obsessed with the idea that Mary was the only woman of any importance in his life. And, as Mary had feared, this only served Elise's purpose of winning Larry's 67