The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 267, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 10, 1964 Page: 6 of 6
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O'. T
TftADE MARK
TIFICIALLY SWEETENED $
SPECIAL DIETARY
ARBONATED BEVERAGE _
118 Diet Drink of Seven ty) W|1
Copyright 1964 by Th« Saven Up Company
' . /'
has a diet drink
CHRISTMAS
IDEAS
LADY’S ELEGANT WRIST WATCH
Berning & Wagner
JEWELERS
letter Frets
WATCH REPAIRS
Cuero. Texas
CHAPTER 14
QICHARD Rolllson iollownd
the girl down the street,
making little sound. She was
malting utue wuuu. ----- ---
heading for the Champs Elysees. girl had gone, and also along
and within a few minutes turn-
ed along an unlit path, oeneath
the chestnut trees. The head-
lights of cars, moving fast
He ordered a beer and took) Latimer, with his coat coder
It to a table ear the door turned up against the thin ram,
- ——— ------ didn't turn round.
Tm beginning to think yoa*re
worth your reputation "
"What have 1 done now?"
“M’sieu le Comte Is de Vlg-
Frotn here he could see the en-
trance to the house where the
the street in each direction. Two
couples, a gendarme, an old
wom.ui with a dog on a long non. and one of the more un-
_____mop ahrmrcrmH nnd Tlimwt "It#
°h*f Mum
his shoulder, and the girl also
looked round. Rolllson paused
by a scat, looking behind nim.
There was no one else in sight,
but be would take a lot of con-
vincing that he wasn't being
followed
There was a pause In the
stream of traffic and the girl
hurried acrosa She was nearer
the Place de I'Etotle than the
interested j mer shrugged and turned Tvs
There was a telephone in a told you that M'sleu le Comte
corner ot the cafe, an open and Madame Thysson are not
box — but he was ui a hurry j considered good friends.■
After he'd asked tor the Hotel
Rtvolt, there was a long wait.
■'Rtvolt.- a girl said finally.
"Mr. Latimer," RolUson said
"Please wait one moment.
Know anything more about
him ?"
"The de Vlgnon family nearly
died out under Madame Guil-
lotine's orgies, but one brandi
One moment grew into many survived Why do the worst
More people passed the open 1 branches always seem to have
the Place ae 1 e.ioue man me k***—— — - _
Place de la Concorde and ther doorway, but no one else came the luck He s an aristocrat by
SANDRA DEE
ROBERT GOULET
a«y WILLIAMS
-Maurice CHEVALIER-
A UN<V!i<-l flCTUM I
were buildings on either side 01
the wide road He crossed the
main road running to avoid a
car; the horn blared out strid-
| ently. perhaps enough to warn
! the girl that somerne else was
in the road She didn't seem to
UWI *»UJ, l/ut • ■ v.».v ------ -
tn. Then Peter Latimer spoke! birth and a rogue by vocation,
quietly. ’How ditJ vou get on to him?**
"Hallo?" | “He sent me a messenger.
“Pete, get a pencil," Rolllson Any luck with Madame Thys-
said in English. json?"
“Ready." j "Luck is the word” said Lati-
-Try to find out who lives'mer. “I’m assured that ahe will
LAST DAY
Box Office Opens 6:45
Adults 65c—Children 33c
JHIK
notice: ‘and i Pans there -as[ at 1. Rue de rArbre near the
nothing remarkable in a car
j horn blanng without good rea-
son.
another lull In the traffic en-
abled him to pick out the sharp
1 Lap-tap-tap of ber heels She
Champs Elysees on the river
side." said Rolllson. ‘Especially
tf there's anyone with a real or
Quai de Bayeruie. Near the Qua!
de Bethune. Number Twelre”
“I‘m going to have a chat
walked beneath the trees then non.
past a row of shops and cafes “Rue de I’Arbre—Number 19.
VAiVA V U v*,v - - — - - V- • *--- - —
courtesy title of 'Count' or if It's , with M'sieu le Comte. Rolllsaa
associated with Madame tn any i said. “I'd be a happier man tf
way. Or even your pal de Vig- i someone were nearby with a
taxi, ready to get me away if
I'm driven out by the scourges.
nwm
CALL
CR 5-4622
1 H TIFFIN. Manager
llll BARRERA
TV Technician
Tel-A-Win Co.
Ill It Esplanade
said
He rang off, aware that in the
cafe people were looking at him
openly or covertly. He went to
the door and glanced out. There
Next she turned left.
He Knew that there was a
rabbit warren of streets on this
side of the Champs Elysees, It
would be easy to lose nex be-
tween here and the Seine. He
ran as far as the corner and a
traffic gendarme, swinging his
white baton. looked at him in-
quisitively. So did several people
who were coming towards him.
He Ignored them and turned
after the girL
She reached another corner,
and turned left; he would have
lost her had he not run. When
he reached the next street, ne
saw her beneath the light of a
lamp. He was only lust in time,
tor she turned into one of the
doorways and disappeared
“Now 1 wonder if M'sieu le
Comte could live in there."
murmured Rolllson. “And
whether he'd like to see me." j which he could see Number
He walked briskly past the 19 and ordered another beer
Latimer was quick. "And Of course, you could come tn-
I side with me, but we shouldn’t
“If you feeJ energetic, meet have a taxi to get away in,
me at the corner of the Rue i should we?
de 1‘Arbre Ui an hour's time." j “We shall have a taxi, said
“Which corner?" 1 Latimer firmly. “How long ars
“Champs Elysees," Rolllson I you going to be?"
“If I'm not out In an hour
and the police should come to
investigate. 1 wouldn’t object*
said Rolllson.
Latimer gave a strangled
was a spitting of rain in the laugh In the poor light with
air and the ground was damp I the drizzle coming faster and
and greasy Rolllson looked both j cars swishing along the wet
ways, but particularly towards, roads, there was an uneasy mo-
Number 19 j ment oi waiting.
A man came out and walked
towards him; the man's face
showed up in the cafe light, but
Rollison had never seen him
before. RolUson ioked at Ills
watch, as If impatiently, went
across to a comer table from
MODERN
RADIO
FOR
MODERN
He had been there for a
quarter of an hour when Sam
Downing walked past and disap-
peared into the house.
DETER Latimer stepped out
* of a taxi a hundred yards
away from the comer and
strolled briskly along. Rolllson
was in a doorway, and the
newspaperman did not see him.
No one followed Latimer, who
went beyond the comer so that
he could not he seen from the
Rue de l'Arbre. RolUson crossed
the road and approached Lati-
mer from behind.
house into which the girl had
gone The door was closed, but
the next one was open. This
showed a narrow courtyard
with doorways on either side;
typical French style. Almost
Immediately opposite was a
bistro, where half a dozen men
leaned against the counter,
drinking, and a few couples sat
at shiny-topped tables.
No one took any notice of
Rolllson, who went farther along
and entered a large cafe. Here
there were red-leather chairs,
red-topped tables, an inner
room with tables round the side,
and everywhere, bottle® of wine. “Looking for someone ?"
Published by arrangement with Harold Ober Associates. Revised version Copyright C 1964 by John Cressey.
Distributed by King Feature* Syndicate.
“Seriously.” Latimer said, “if
you want me Inside, I'll come U
like a shot."
“I’d much rather you stayed
outside."
“You know that you're asking
for trouble, don’t you? There’s
a nasty stratum In Pans, and
this is IL You wouldn’t be the
first man to disappear without
leaving a trace if you were to
interfere too much.”
“1 have been warned," said
Rollison sepulehrally.
“And you can’t call on your
friends of the East End of Lon-
don to get you out of the mesa"
"Well." said Rollison philo-
sophically, "the press is behind
me.”
Latimer wasn't amused.
RolUson It spotted as •
"trespasser'’ behind the Iron
curtain of organised ertma
The story continues here to-
morrow.
named
tklis.”
PARIS — The French Com-
munist party on the recent ous-
ter of Nikita Khrushchev as So-
viet premie" •
"The motives ter sdiich com-
rad Khrushchev had lo be re-
placed show that the Soviet
comrades were right."
CELINA, Tenn. — Weiby Lee
on his 20 year search ter evi-
dence against the man who
killed his father tn a hit-and-
run accident:
"Never at any time during
this investigation have I had
hatred in my heart for him. I
oniy want to see justice done.’’
Steals From Police
HALIFAX, England (UPI) -
Laborer Michael Kelley of Glas-
gow was jailed for three
months for stealing a type-
writer from the Halifax police
station.
[QUOTES FROM
THE NEWS
Reg. t. ft. Pm Off.
By United Preen International
WASHINGTON - Idaho Gov.
Robert E. Smylie when asked
if other governors agreed with
his views that the Republican
party must return to the mid-
die of the road Eisenhower
yean:
“I believe that a great maj-
ority of them believe that we
need to broaden the base of the
party and revitalise its leader-
' ship.*’
WASHINOON - President
Johnson or the results of his
election victory:
"America’s role and influen-
ce ter peace and freedom in the
times to come will be strength-
ened by the unity and agree-
ment demonstrated by our eleo-
two more encores.
Since arriving in London,
Miss Garland has been admit-
ted at least twice to nursing
homes for rests. She has given
only occasional and token per-
formances.
M
HOUISOAT GOES
TO THE DEVIL
BY JOHN CREASEY
ftob!i*h«4 by Amuifmrncitt with Harold Ober AMOflftte*. RwtoH tend**
Copyright © UK by Jofaa CiDistributed by Kin* Fetter** fiy*4ta*l»
SIX WEEKS TO MOSCOW—Leon Gillls, 43, Richmond, Va., waves a greeting as he leads his
covered wagon and family into Moscow, completing a six-week trek across Russia. The
arrival ended a tour of 11 nations that began in Antwerp, Belgium, last December.
H THE CUERO RECORD, Tuesday. Nov- 10, 1964
Judy And j
Daughter
SingAg
IDNDON (UPI) - Applause
ind shouts of approval swelled
up over the footlights and Judy
Garland, beaming with joy, im-
pulsively bugged her 18-year-
old daughter Liza Minelli.
Sunday night was the first
joint performance by the 42-
year-old singer and her daugh-
ter. and the audience at Lon-
don’s Palladium, where Miss
Garland can do no wrong, en-
thusiastically ratified their ef-
forts.
‘ Oh my, I am nervous.” Miss
Garland conceded after a false
start on the first number. The
audience murmured encourage-
ment.
“Isn’t this disastrous?' she
asked her audience.
The London fans, whom Miss
Garland always has considered
her friendliest, didn't think so.
There was cheering ... and en-
core ... more applause ... and
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Jennes, Ernest H. The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 267, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 10, 1964, newspaper, November 10, 1964; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth695989/m1/6/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.