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August 19, 2025 • 28 mins
This detective series follows a private investigator as he solves crimes with a mix of toughness and humor, often getting entangled in complex cases. The narratives are engaging and fast-paced. Explore a world of immersive, ad-free audio experiences from nature sounds to timeless stories at https://www.adfreesounds.com
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The Adventures of Damn Spade Detectives, brought to you by
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that contains lenoline Wild Road Cream Oil, again and again
the choice of men who put good grooming hurt. Sam

(00:24):
Spade Detective Agency. Listen you fall down at the drug
store and tell him to sign up free gallons of
black coffee.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
Who is this?

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Are you saying you have the right number. I'm sure
I've got the right number, but I'm not so sure
who I am? Oh, Sam, it's you.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
You must have had a frog in your strong You asleep, Effie.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
Don't say things like that. I'm sorry, Sam.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Oh you poor here.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
You've been working. You're tired.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
That's it, hired. I've only just brought the last let's
back from the debt.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
Then you better get some rest.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
Dams. You can dictate your reply tomorrow, that's what you're saying.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Now, stay where you are.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
If I'm asleep, when I get there, wake me up
Bobby White's and dictate my pot on a Lazarus capernashal Hammett,
America's leading detective fiction writer, creator of Sam Spade, The
Heart Boiled Private Eye and William Spear Radio is outstanding
for Union director of Mystery and crimes.

Speaker 4 (01:18):
Come up join their talent to make your hair stand
on end with the.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
Adventures of Sam Spades presented by the makers of Wild
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(01:43):
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Speaker 4 (02:01):
And now with horrid up Darling, it's fade. Wild Root
brings to the air the greatest private detective about them all.
In the adventure the Man.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
Maid and Sam in your private office, Private, she says,
I like to know what's private about it?

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Have everything?

Speaker 1 (02:31):
What's this? I don't want to relax? I don't dare
there you go against Sam going un nerves?

Speaker 2 (02:37):
How long do you.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Think you can keep it off.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
For your help, I'll be in a coma inside three minutes.
Thank you, Sam.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
Now you just lie down here on the cock, not
your shoes, and take dictation nuts.

Speaker 1 (02:48):
Where is that black coffee? Say you're angry with me, lies,
don't glare me like that, Sam. I am not glaring.
I'm trying to keep them open. Now sit down. I
got to keep moving around and around.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
Rid yourself like this said.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
Please Effie, please date fill it.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
In your life.

Speaker 4 (03:09):
Go on bing us out a buddy.

Speaker 1 (03:11):
See two A J. Tatspar Claims Manager, All Risk Insurance Company,
TIEDE Building, San Francisco, from Samuel State Lights is number
onesday seven five nine six. Dear Sir, the following is
an accounting of my services to your company in connection
with the claim of m R. Lazars and the life
of the assured Timothy R. Lazaris. The latter called at

(03:32):
my office yesterday at approximately eleven thirty am, and he
was ball bald, gray faced from dusty. He looked as
if you'd been buried and dug up several times.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
This may sound like a poor sot of gifts, mister State,
but my name is Lazarus.

Speaker 4 (03:48):
And I want you to bring me back from the dead.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Ooh sounds interesting. Why did you die, When did you die,
and how did you die?

Speaker 3 (03:56):
I was declared dead by the Appellate Court of the
State of California August twenty eighth, last year, reason of
seven years absent.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
Who tug at the court? My wife Emma insurance?

Speaker 3 (04:05):
Yes, my wife and I agreed between ourselves to insure
my life and the amount of one hundred thousand dollars
that she would collect on legal presumption of death after
my disappearance and continued absence for seven years.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
That's the law, miss Spade. Yeah, it's been tried a
lot of time. What went wrong in your case? Wife?
Double cross it?

Speaker 3 (04:23):
If that's your attitude, I'm afraid I've come to the
wrong man.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
Oh oh, you're still alive with her? Well, that makes
it tough. You know, they'll nail her for pressuris you
prove you're still alive. That's why I didn't go to
the police.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
Even though we planned the deception together, she had reason
to believe that I was actually dead.

Speaker 1 (04:38):
Suppose you cover the whole thing from the beginning of
the LASiS.

Speaker 3 (04:42):
Yes, I married her back in nineteen forty and for
a while we were happy, and then she became risk.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
You me and you were not able to support her
in a manner of where she was accustomed. She was
young and lovely. You wanted her to have nice things,
but on your a mega salary, it was impossible. I
know it's an old story, but life is like that.
Well you said it, Well, there you are. I was
assistant cashier at the Golden Gate Bell. No, not that.

Speaker 3 (05:07):
I started taking small sums at first, meaning to repay
them a lot.

Speaker 1 (05:11):
Let's not go through the whole script. How much did
you embattle?

Speaker 3 (05:15):
Twenty thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (05:17):
Yeah, so you decided to take it on the lamb
before the auditors came in, and I.

Speaker 4 (05:20):
Was going to give myself up, but Emma wouldn't let me.

Speaker 3 (05:23):
We made our plans that night, and I left to
Mexico the following day. In Mexico City, I had plastic
surgery done on my face, and then I settled down
to wait for seven long years until I.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Would be declared legally dead. I suppose you might call
it poetic justice.

Speaker 3 (05:39):
But just before the end of the seventh year, I
contracted malaria. I was confined to a hospital for more
than eleven months.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
You have had it.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
The doctors gave me up for dead, and I asked
me to notify my next of kin.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
I gave the members address. I never notified it. It's
the contrary because it seemed to fit.

Speaker 4 (05:56):
In so well with our plan too well.

Speaker 1 (05:59):
Yes, I've been to see.

Speaker 3 (06:01):
Her, and she refuses to believe that I am her husband.
Of course, my appearance is very much altered.

Speaker 4 (06:08):
But there must be some way to.

Speaker 1 (06:10):
Prove my identity. He works in a bank. They must
have taken your fingerprint. I removed them from the fires
and destroyed them. How are you saith my key's faith?
Who is your dadist there in time? Oh?

Speaker 4 (06:20):
Oh, doctor Smith, the great professional building.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
He'll still have your dental X rays on fire as
good as fingerprints. You go there this afternoon. Don't give
you a name. Tell him you're Mark Hombone. Have a
new set of X rays taking and I'll do the rest. Huh,
what's your wife doing these days? By Emma? Emma's married again?
Who's the second button the man? Oh, he's a doctor,
Doctor er Wilhelm will help. He's quite well known, I believe, Yeah,

(06:47):
And the cops would like to know more.

Speaker 3 (06:50):
How about my faith, mister Stade, I have no money.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
Oh that's great. You have no money, and all you
want is to hire a man to bring you back
from the dead. And the more I succeed, the last
chance I'll have a collecting. If I might make a
suggestion with the Spade, I don't.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
Know the ethics, but a halfs the insurance company, you
would be doing them a great service.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
I think you're gonna love mister Lazarus. They can't keep
a good man down. I'll collect from them. I heard
there wasn't a chance in one hundred thousand shaking a
fee out of your company. After all, you have your
own investigators in the may row and contract work as
a deductivill under a new tax lab. And something about

(07:31):
Lazari's had gotten to me. Something else about him got
to me at the Blue Bottle Bar and Grow, where
I stopped for lunch. Mister Yes and Denny, I'm Emma Wilhelm,
missus food, Emma Lazar's Wilhelm. I see you do know
who HAI am? The lights of them, that's why that
was as well.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
Thank you.

Speaker 3 (07:54):
I'm glad to know you had a sense of human
It's the food it's about that name.

Speaker 1 (07:59):
Of course, surely you didn't believe the word of his story.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
Which word, Oh I've he said are like? Truth is
the truth?

Speaker 1 (08:07):
And he's reading My first husband seems to loves wasn't.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
In bus He did disappear.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
And it's quite true that I had collected the insurance
on his life.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
I might even believe that Jim is still alive, but
that man is not.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
D No, what are you so upset about.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
Oh, it's perfectly obvious what he wants.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
He's an extortions. You're wrong. He doesn't want money, missus Rolhelm.
He wants you. Oh, this is seed. How much do
you know about my husband? Which one? Doctor Ernest Rohelm.
He made his first man in panting lead nuggets out
of gang war casually is and lost it on the

(08:46):
stock muggt. He cut his second man in out of
nod Hill and called it surgery. He lost that on
horses blinds, and now practices. The last time he was
mentioned in the Favor there was a big picture of
him pumping sleeping tales out of the stomach of an
aging blessed queen. If may or may not have been
coincidence that she did not recover, and that she was
the ex girlfriend of one of our better known racetrack
habit dashes. And if he got one hundred bucks for

(09:08):
the job, he was paid off in boots.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
That for a girl.

Speaker 1 (09:16):
To me, Well, if you persist in helping that impossible,
you'll be responsible for whatever happened to me or anyone
else you're involved anything else I should know. Yees, both
you and your client are being watched and followed.

Speaker 3 (09:34):
You can't escape him. He's not quite the husband you'd.

Speaker 2 (09:37):
Like to think you.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
After she had gone, I straightened the tears off my butter,
finished my lunch, washed my hands with a nationally advertised soap,
and mushed on them. In the great professional building, I
found my clients. That is in his lab polishing out
a set of golden lads humbold years.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
Yes, his X rayser comes, he and they set the
data on the plant. There it don't touch them and ANDREI, oh, sorry, now,
what's your interest in police identity?

Speaker 1 (10:09):
You guess that's always happy to grow up? Instant? Thanks?
How about digging in your files for the X rays
and a patient named Lazarus? Oh, yes, the gradual of course,
there it's see.

Speaker 3 (10:20):
Now ladye lave Lawrence loss and Gluskin me that's gee,
what's that doing here?

Speaker 1 (10:26):
Ah?

Speaker 3 (10:26):
Lasses Timothy, that's your name. That's the name in the
April nineteen forty should have been even fidental hygiene after
the mins bg that's my name.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
These are pectures. How do they compare with us new
set where let's have a look.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
Switch on the light there would you let's see, I'm inclusion.
That just's hacked third rogan in.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
It's a very interesting you may not have the same
in both sets of pectures.

Speaker 3 (10:49):
Oh dear, No.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
Man's mouth could change a lot in seven years, because
especially the dental neglect.

Speaker 3 (10:55):
But that would never cause a man to grow new teeth.
Oh well, this is here Humbold has one more Lawrence
for more more is a lessness, and the whole cares
of the mouth is different. And these two men would
not look at them thanky like.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
Well like, has there been some mistake and filing?

Speaker 3 (11:09):
Oh dude, no, Miss Baker's been with me for ten years?
Have I made a mistake him?

Speaker 1 (11:13):
Can I talk to her? Not in today? Went out
since Tuesday?

Speaker 3 (11:16):
Cold say, by the way, you're a detective, how's this
for a mystery? She told me this morning and thanked
me for sending a doctor around to examine her.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Now this is the peculiar part.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
I have no recollection of having done so, and I'm
not acquainted with the doctor.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
She said, I send her. That wouldn't be a doctor,
Ernst Wilhelm.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Why yes, Willhelm, that was with me.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
They're another favor. When you call a doctor you're doing.
I'm tell him to get over that as fast as
he can.

Speaker 4 (11:49):
Come on, come on, open up as I can.

Speaker 2 (11:55):
What do you want to know?

Speaker 1 (11:56):
What's miss Baker's wrong?

Speaker 2 (11:57):
He's sick.

Speaker 4 (11:58):
I ain't heaven no calling.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
You can't cool me? Where your bed?

Speaker 1 (12:03):
If I had one, it would be around your neck?
Now much? Show me the way? You can't force me?

Speaker 4 (12:07):
I know my right?

Speaker 1 (12:08):
Oh you do? Do you know what my numbers? The
law that you have ventcer folli. You're wiring as illegal,
Your grains are unsanitary, and your apron is dirty.

Speaker 2 (12:15):
Jim rusty, I immediately here.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
Is made as a mob pine I get going before.
I haven't brought a health down on you, all right, but.

Speaker 3 (12:22):
You can't make me climb them stairs.

Speaker 1 (12:26):
He's a key, Okay, they're so right?

Speaker 3 (12:28):
What he.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
Thank you? Welcome xwell. She was stretched out on the bed,
her left arm twisted on her and her right dangling
over the edge. On the floor. Beneath it was an
empty pill bottle. A few red capsules were scattered ner it,
and some more west spilled at him on the bed clothes.

(12:53):
There was a standard sleeping filled suicide scene, but I
didn't below it. The body was still warm, but no post.
I didn't the way time getting in the mirror a desk. Instead,
I looked around for a bone. It was on the
table near a window. I meant to dial the police
numbers sat at one, two, row to row, but as
you it was as far as I got. It felt

(13:14):
like a beast thing, or a quick job at an engle.
I spun around and swung out Brian like a place by,
and that the sun tan and a shock of Iron's
gray hair. I was wearing the same white tooth grin
that got her aunts. Bill Helm always wore the newspaper photography.
I started towards him and he backed away. Show Brinny,
come ahead, speed, come and get me. But Harry, you
have only twenty seconds more? Shall I count them off?
So far?

Speaker 2 (13:34):
You have three four.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Sec seven eight nine before. I kept dropping up front
at the time as I walked toward him, and every
time I got to the bottom of the endcliine, it
turned it up the other way and I slipped back.

(14:00):
I'm dropping out of site. And every time I got
him back into my line of vision, it was fader away.
The walls of the room opened up and dissipline into
some clouds. The ceilings spun around faster and faster, until
it whirled away like one of those flying discs from
the floors and the ageloity, and I thank him.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
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(15:53):
Caper Slights adventure with Sam Spade. The dream last bit
about three hundred years around Christmas Simon the year twenty
two forty seven. Another bee stung there. I opened my eyes,

(16:13):
but the lights on the tree are too bright, and
Santa Claus was bending over me with a brandy breadth.

Speaker 3 (16:18):
Come on, man, come on, come a little real power punches.
That's it, that's it, sensation returning.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
Yeah here trand sit up.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
As a girl. How about her? Too? Late? Did everything
I could do, as I'd think one of your brothers
in the parlor. Was a little too handy with a needle.
There's the mark in miarm and you'll find one of
that stiff sleeping captules were a plant to make it
look like suicide.

Speaker 3 (16:46):
You'll be feeling better soon now coming wrong up on
your feet, must keep moving, stirsir condition, Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
Thanks, thanks. You're the man doctor Smith called. Yeah, so
you're a private addictive How do you feel now? Just dopy?
You give me something to pick me up, and I've
given you as much stimulant as it's safe to administer.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
For the rest you'll have to sleep it off, and
you will advise you to hurry home get into bed
before this way is how long? Have I got a
couple of hours if you keep moving?

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Maybe three? But if I were you, I wouldn't stay out.
They want to fall asleep in the middle of market street,
get run over by a bus. Worse things can happen
to her your own bad look at her murder. I
think you can prove it. I don't know. I couldn't
not on her, and I have been an autopsy decision
for twenty years. Well sure up, doctor, if you miss
on her, you may get a second chance. Eh, yeah, me,

(17:44):
those eyes are looking better. I think you'll live. I
wasn't so sure unless I could mail will I'm before
my three hours and up as a safe betty and
mail me again that needle. He had done me one favor.
He convinced me that my client was really the man

(18:04):
who claimed to be, and that Wilhelm and Ammon Millett,
my best off, was smoking an office. But they got
some solid proof. I spent ten minutes in my three
hours getting the Hallow records, and ten more finding out
there was nothing there on Roses, but the deathserted again.
I had a gam with a wanted pilot police headquarters.
They'd checked him out in August at forty seven, and
the court had pronounced I'm dead. I looked at my
watch for two hours and seventy three minutes of wakefulness left.

(18:27):
I just didn't have time. I stopped by Laz's hotel,
got a set of his fingerprints and several savage of
his signature, sent them to a ten and nineer down
on the mission and the plain Us. We forged the
most amazing set of documents ever assembled on one man,
all dated wrote her eyes certified with this registered one
even bore the great seat at the State of California
and the signature of the Governor. I squeezed them all

(18:48):
into a large briefcase, popped my eyes up and with
two picks while I drank half a gallon of black coffee.
Then phoned doctor Wilhelm's night number. I told him I
was one of Russian ros boys and a cop had
just win me on the lamb from the jew always
not a job. He agreed to meet me in his army.

(19:10):
Hello Willhelm, Okay, is that all you got to say
to the guy you're knocked off an hour ago? I'm
afraid I don't quite follow. Well, look, I know that
you know, and you know that I know, or even
wrote a song about it. So let's get off the diamond.
Don't reach for a needle. This gun is bigger and
it shoots father where I can see. Mean business, What

(19:34):
do you want first? I want to show you a
few things here. Take a look. Well this is very impressive.
I thought you'd be impressed. You need any more proof
that Lazarus is Lazarus? What's the matter? Spaid? Getting sleep

(19:55):
at your hopes up? I can squeeze this treagger in
my sleep these papers for safe? Why do you think
I brought him to you? What's the price has to
take on Lazarus's insurance? That's very high. I haven't finished
this time. Lazies has got to be really dead, and
you're gonna do the job? Come on, come on, stop starring.

(20:18):
I can't do that. Why not Emma? She would make trouble?
She said she will. She's still in a love room.
Why do you say that? I just wanted But the
reason did she give you for not wanting him? Knocked up?
The cops work harder at identifying a dead man than
they do it live bitterly. That looks and talks like
a crank. I have the same idea myself. Then you're stupid.

(20:42):
With him dead, she can tell me a story she
wants to. With him alive and all this proof of identity,
he's in a position to mail. Both have here for fraud, conspiracy, perjury?
Shall I go on? One thing? Does Emma know about
these people? Sure you're lie? Sure I'm lying? And those
documents are forgery. That's the way you want it. I
haven't got time to argue. I can't stay awake much longer.

(21:03):
You can't bring it off without me, I'll have laswas
at my apartment in thirty minutes. Bring your needle in
the fifty grand All right, Spade, I'll be there. I

(21:23):
made two phone calls and my way up I got
last was one to Emma and one to Lieutenant Earling Homicide.
Dundee was asleep. The lieutenant and Sigean's full house were
perched on the fire escape outside my window, and Emma
was waiting in the living room when we got there.

Speaker 3 (21:38):
Oh my good, down Heremma, do you recognize me?

Speaker 1 (21:42):
Of course down from the beginning, but I didn't have
to down events. I know mister Spade's total me. No
listening to you too. You're sure you can go through
with this?

Speaker 2 (21:50):
Oh? Are you sure?

Speaker 3 (21:51):
There's no danger that's gonna.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
Come out of Lazis? Get in the bedroom there, I'll
do what I told you. Don't worry about.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
I'm still frug with.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
Spade. I got here. Just it, Emma, what are you
doing here? Told me?

Speaker 3 (22:16):
I agree it soon he seems to you.

Speaker 4 (22:18):
I wanted you to know that.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
Well.

Speaker 3 (22:21):
I'm glad to see that you come to your senses
for the while.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
There, you see you're wrong Space. Did you burn this stuff?
Here's your money and the epidemic in the case here,
it's already loaded. We both need to still need to,
but easy and there on the bed he was asleep
a minute ago. The grogginess that have kept coming back

(22:52):
over me in ways for the last two hours swirled
over me again as Wellham leaned over the bed where
the lads with's life stretched up with his eyes closed.
For a split second, I blanked out, and I was
afraid that had already happened. Then I saw Wilhelm's hand
coming down on the bleak angle throw it Lass's foe,
and then my vision burnt again and my arms felt
too heavy to lift. It was on a scream that
joted me back. I clawed out. I'm going it.

Speaker 2 (23:16):
You get it in your own I'm a golf whine.
You'll double crossing.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
Here's a little taking medicine team. Okay, come and get
him right, good boy.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
We won't forget this.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
Yeah, a likely story. I get that broken grass for
a house, put it in the disy cup.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
I had the calf of one analyze that medicine. Okay,
all are these people sam accomplices?

Speaker 1 (23:43):
Yeah, but not the homicide. Don't worry, he's out of
circulation for good mister speed. Yeah, landsis I don't know
how to thank you. Yes, you don't know what this means,
Yes I do. Probably means another long separation. The state
prisons aren't co ed. But if you insist on being alive,

(24:07):
you have to take life as it comes. Period in
the bedtime story, Oh Sam, it's so sad.

Speaker 3 (24:26):
That poor couple so much enough, but you had to
do your duty, didn't Then.

Speaker 2 (24:33):
They had to pay their debt to society.

Speaker 3 (24:34):
Of course, that's why you had to be so hard.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
And I'm relented and not give in the better nature.
That's right, that's right. Never give into the ship though,
don't tread on me. It was Hobson's absence. What was
it that Hobson and you made fire? One rd?

Speaker 2 (24:55):
Some of these good types as all, and now listen
to this.

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oil hair tonic folks. Wild root cream oil grooms the
hair neatly and naturally relieves dryness and removes loose dandrops.
Now get wild root cream oil at your drug oor
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(25:30):
the choice of men who put good grooming first. Sam,
wake up? Oh wait here April thirty say, I'm not
wearing an April. Let me sleep, Son, you get to

(25:53):
wake up. Your coffee is here? Conference No, the.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
Black coffee, he said to Augustrud What I couldn't play
it all?

Speaker 4 (26:02):
I'll make another trip.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Twenty book hardboard containers.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
You have to drink it up that Now they're making
a vander ship.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
What am I going to do with it?

Speaker 1 (26:14):
Open a restaurant? Good night? The night said Number three
tour its open Fire. The Adventures of Damn Spade I

(26:40):
Shall Hammond, famous private Detective Artford Houston, directed by William Spear.
Damn Spade is played by Howard Dove.

Speaker 2 (26:46):
Loreen Tuttle is Effie.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
The Adventures of Sam Spade are written for radio by
Bob Colman and Gills Alan, Musical direction by Lud Bruskett,
with score composed by Renee Gallaghan. Join us again next Sunday,
when author Nashil Ammad and producer WILLIAMS. Spear joined forces
for another adventure with Sam Spade. Drop to you by
Wild Road Cream Oil again and again the choice of

(27:36):
men who put good grooming first. This is Dick Joy
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Child alone to Battican Wild Route Cream mile Chilyn, and.

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Shot came out on the Galloway.

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How your baldie get my.

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Road rider away.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
This is CBS, the Columbia Broadcasting System
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