Episode Transcript
Rob Hollywood.
It's time now for Edmund O'Brien as Johnny.
Speaker 2Dollar, the insurance investigator that's working on the bar and Hey's killing.
Speaker 3That's right, who's this?
Speaker 2I got a few things to say about the shooting.
I can't say him to the police, but if you leveled with me, maybe I can say him to you.
Speaker 3All right, But I've got to be sure of you too.
Who are you?
And how'd you find out about me?
Speaker 2One of the papers mentioned that you'd come to New York.
I guess you've read about me too.
And what they call the chief suspect object of a widespread.
Speaker 3Search, Roy Corona.
That's right?
Speaker 4Now?
Speaker 2Do you want to talk to me?
Speaker 3Sure?
Roy?
Anytime you say, I thought so.
Speaker 2I'm going to give the phone to a friend that's with me.
He'll tell you where to go and what to do so he can pick you up.
Speaker 1Edmund O'Brien and another adventure of the Man with the action packed expense accounts America's fabulous freelance insurance investigator.
Speaker 3Yours Truly Johnny Dollar.
Speaker 1Expense account submitted by special Investigator Johnny Dalla to Home Office Corinthian All Risk Insurance Company.
The following is an accounting of expenditures.
During my investigation of the Byron Hayes matter expense account I had have won twelve dollars transportation from Hartford to New York.
Speaker 3There wasn't much to be done that first day.
Speaker 1The police had their theory on who had killed Hayes, and I hadn't had time to form mine.
And then that evening I received a phone call from a man who called himself Roy Corona, the basis of the police theory.
Twenty minutes later, according to instructions, I was standing on a Seventh Avenue street corner holding a copy of Life magazine in front of my face so i'd be recognized.
Hey you, Yeah, what's your name?
Speaker 3I'm your man?
All right?
Speaker 5Come on, oh ay dollar?
Speaker 3All right?
Speaker 1He didn't do anything I told you not to do on the phone, did you?
And he told you I wouldn't do anything, didn't.
A lot of people make a lot of promises they don't keep maybe soon.
Well, I guess all I can do is either trust you, drive fast enough and far enough to shake a tail if I don't trust you, or you can drop me if you don't want to go through with this.
I didn't ask to come.
You know that's right, and I don't think you should have been asked.
But it's Roy's neck, not mine.
I'll just pretend there's a tale on me so I won't.
Speaker 4Get out of practice.
Speaker 1The doorway next to the poultry store there, thanks for the ride down on the ground floor, thicking door back.
Hell, Royal shot out here for a minute and then park the car.
Speaker 3Sure tell on my being in a little while.
Speaker 6Yeah, yeah, Roy, Yeah, my uh friends stay outside.
Speaker 3Yeah, he said he was going to park the car.
Speaker 2I'm not so sure I did the right thing calling you, but I guess they couldn't make things worse by doing it.
Speaker 3I guess not Roy.
They want you a real Band's sure they do, cause I'm a natural.
Speaker 5Once you've been in prison, you are natural for anything.
Speaker 3There's more to it than that, isn't he according to the papers?
Speaker 2Yeah, but not really.
Speaker 5I didn't kill this Hayes guy.
Speaker 2I didn't even know him.
Speaker 1The police don't seem to think that's important.
They figure that a guy who spends two years in a prison, it was out to find this girl mixed up with a lot of men.
Speaker 3It's gonna get me oot balance.
Yeah, I guess that part of It's true.
Speaker 2It did hit me pretty hard, but not hard enough to make me kill anybody.
Speaker 3They think it did.
Hayes was one of the men.
Speaker 1You lost your girl too, so they figure you wouldn't have to know him to kill him.
That you were waiting outside her apartment when Hayes came out you blasted him.
Speaker 2Sure, they get it all worked out.
The anything wrong with it is that it ain't true.
They don't care about that, but I do.
Speaker 3If you can prove they're wrong, you got nothing to worry about it.
Speaker 2My proof that I was someplace else is a couple of ex convicts like myself.
Statements from guys like that have broken down before they even make them.
Speaker 3Isn't that right?
I guess they could be better alibi?
Why did you bring me here?
Roy?
Try out your alibi on me?
Or to tell me who killed Byron Hayes.
I don't know who.
Speaker 2Killed him, but it would help if you believed that the proof I was someplace else, it'd.
Speaker 1Stand up if you have something else to back it up.
Let's assume that I do believe it.
Speaker 5It's something that police won't find.
Speaker 3And now Rita was blackmailing his How do you know that.
Speaker 2I heard him right after I came out.
When I was having a bad time over Rita.
I was in the hallway one night and I saw him go into her apartment.
I listened at the door, and I heard him.
Speaker 3Talking about it.
That would make it pretty careless, wouldn't it.
Speaker 5Though it was him that was talking, so I could hear it.
Speaker 2He told her he couldn't afford to pay her anymore, but didn't have to stop.
Speaker 3It.
Wouldn't do you any good to make this.
Speaker 5Up, roy, I know that.
Speaker 2And if she was taken him, she must be taking the others.
A cop wouldn't get the truth out anybody, but you might be able to check it if they'll trust you.
Speaker 3All right, I'll look into it.
Speaker 2What about the police?
You gonna tell him?
And I got it from you?
Speaker 3Yeah?
Speaker 1It either taught me to a cellar, lab me out of town if I did.
Unless you'd like to stick around and back me up, huh, I don't think I will.
Speaker 3I gave it in.
Speaker 2By the time my friend gets you back to your hotel, I'll be out of here and hold up someplace else.
Speaker 3Sure, I thought you would.
Speaker 1The only reason the tip from the number one suspect meant anything to me was at the date, no progress at all had been made.
Speaker 3Rita Cobb outside of his door.
Hayes had been killed.
Said she'd known him only casually, that he just dropped in.
Speaker 1Nobody else could be found who knew about the association, and even the widow, Agnes Hayes said she.
Speaker 3Had never heard of Rita Cob.
Speaker 1After I was dropped at the hotel, I decided to try out a new lead on the widow.
Speaker 3First.
Speaker 7I've told the police everything I know, mister Dolla.
Speaker 1I'm afraid it wasn't very much, Missus Hayes, and I wondered if there might not be something you didn't tell them because you didn't want to.
What do you mean, I'm not a policeman.
There are no reporters around.
Speaker 3Everything you say to me will be kept in confidence.
Missus Hayes.
Didn't you really know that your husband was seeing Rita Cob.
Speaker 7If I'd thought he was, do you think I wouldn't have done something about it?
Speaker 3You didn't suspect anything.
Speaker 7No, even now, I don't think he was seen as.
Speaker 4You put it.
Speaker 3Do you know why he would have dropped in to see her?
As she said he did?
Speaker 7No I knew nothing about it.
Oh please, mister Dollar, you must understand that this has been very difficult for me as far as I'm concerned.
My my husband always was a man above question, his friends, his business associates.
Everybody looked up to him.
I looked up to him, and now you and the others asked me to believe that he knew this woman.
Speaker 3She said as much.
No, she was lying.
Speaker 7There must be something else she's hiding.
She's saying she knew Byron to hide something else.
Speaker 8She didn't know him.
Speaker 7She's lying.
Speaker 3We'll learn the truth, Missus Hayes.
Someone told me that Rita carb was blackmailing her husband.
Speaker 5That's not true.
Speaker 3That he was heard saying he couldn't pay her any more.
It's not true.
Speaker 7Why should he pay her anything?
Speaker 3He didn't know it, all right, Missus Hayes.
I only wanted to tell you what somebody said.
It's not true, all right, Missus Hayes.
Speaker 1I thought a little more of Roy Corona's lead after I got the widow's reaction.
Nobody can deny so vehemently and not be doubted.
I wondered how the beautiful blonde in the case would.
Speaker 3Take the bait Hello, Miss karn, Hello, I'd like to talk to you.
Speaker 8Why I told you on the police everything I know?
Speaker 1Answered Missus Hayes told me just a little while ago.
I think i'd better come in.
Speaker 3No, I have no right to do this, I suppose not.
But you have no right to hold back information from the police either.
Speaker 8I haven't held anything back.
Speaker 1I want to be sure of that.
So far, the police and I have been working completely blind.
Nobody has known anything.
Hayes is shot to death right outside your apartment, and nobody has the faintest idea.
Speaker 8Why do you think I'm enjoying it?
Speaker 9Do you think I like seeing my face plastered all over the papers labeled the mystery woman.
Don't you think I'd like to see this guard up?
Speaker 1Would you like to see it come out that Hayes was more than a casual acquaintance of yours.
Speaker 8I met him once or twice, that's all.
Why did you say that?
Speaker 3How many other casual acquaintances do you have?
Speaker 8I don't understand.
Speaker 3What about a man named Donald Smith?
Speaker 8How did you find out about him?
Speaker 3That's not the point.
Speaker 9I refuse to have the names of my friends dragged into this.
It wouldn't do any good, wouldn't do anything but hurt.
Speaker 1Donald Smith is about the same kind of man.
Hayes was married, past middle age, good sized bank account.
Speaker 8Don't drag him into this, please.
Speaker 1How about your friend Earl Fisher, married past middle age, good sized bank account.
Speaker 8What did you learn about him?
Speaker 3I've learned about two or three more of the man.
Speaker 8The police know not yet.
You got to tell them.
Speaker 3I may have to.
Speaker 8I wish you wouldn't.
I didn't mention them because I didn't think there was any reason to.
None of them had anything to do with Byron.
Speaker 3How did you know that?
Did?
Speaker 8Could none of them move about him?
Speaker 3Because he was such a casual friend.
Speaker 8No.
I lied about that, but not to hide anything.
Speaker 9From the police.
Speaker 3And why I don't know.
Speaker 8I was afraid to tell about him.
Speaker 1I can see why a lot of things that aren't being told about this, But it'll come out if everybody in town has to be dragged into it.
I'll think that over readA in case you feel like coming clean.
She didn't feel like saying any more to me anyway.
At about ten PM when I left her, my first stop was a phone booth a half block away from her apartment building.
I dialed a number and got what I'd expected, a busy segment.
There was nothing definite, but I would mistaked my expense account total on the hunch that she was warning somebody to bear me out.
The phone was ringing in my hotel room when I got Johnny Dalla.
Speaker 4This is Little Fisher, mister dollar, Earl Fisher.
Speaker 1Yes, you mentioned my name to beat a car a short time ago.
Eh, I had a feeling I should have talked to someone before this, That's right, should I hope you can understand, however, my feelings.
I naturally didn't want my name to enter this public Naturally I have a great deal to consider a family reputation.
Speaker 3Yes, yes, Aster Fisher, but.
Speaker 4I feel that I have to talk to you.
Speaker 3Did you tell rider car that you were going to hardly?
Speaker 4Did she threaten me with dire consequences if I did?
Speaker 3All right, mister Fisher, where can we get together?
Speaker 1I'd have to know that I could count on your confidence, at least temporarily.
Speaker 3I think you can count ann Could you meet me this evening?
Speaker 4Where do you know Ricky's Club on Lexington near Eighties?
Speaker 3I can find it.
Speaker 4Then, Shall I see you there?
In thirty minutes?
The bartender will point me out to you.
Speaker 1I'll be there, mister Fisher, thanks for calling.
That was the first real result of the lead given to me by Roy Corona.
The second was quick to follow.
I would have done another bed that a warning by Rita Cob had decided somebody else to correct the.
Speaker 3Situation in another way.
It happened when I left the lobby and called for a cab.
Speaker 1Hey, the shots came from a car double part.
First I saw the pistol come out of the window.
Then I dropped him from a prone position.
I heard the rest, and I remember lying there.
I didn't wonder so much about who was shooting at me.
Then I wondered how many people in the city of Greater New York wanted to see me and my information out of the way.
We will return you to the second act of yours, truly, Johnny Dollar in just a moment for another great crime hunting drama, Spend a half hour with CBS's Gangbusters.
Every Saturday evening.
On Gangbusters, sheriffs, police chiefs, and district attorneys from American cities and towns tell the story of their manhunts.
Speaker 3Fine cast of top.
Speaker 1Actors joined them to reenact these real dramas of crime busting in action.
Gangbusters has heard every Saturday evening on the list of these same CBS stations.
Be listening this Saturday, won't you?
Speaker 3Now?
Speaker 1With our star Rip O'Brien, we return you to the second act of yours, truly, Johnny Dollar.
I didn't want to talk to the police right then, but I didn't have a chance not to.
A patrolman was on the scene almost before I could get up off the sidewalk.
Twenty five minutes later, I was in my room with the sergeant of detectives i'd met earlier in.
Speaker 5The case What's going on?
Dollar, who's out?
Speaker 3Afty?
I think I was mistaken for somebody else.
Now you know better than that.
Speaker 5I've got witnesses that for ten minutes the car was still parked in front of this hotel, and that time four or five men came out of that lobby.
But a minute you step out, they opened fire.
That doesn't sound like a mistake, does it?
Speaker 3Still could be?
Speaker 5Are you holding out anything?
Speaker 3Dollar?
I don't know who shot at me.
That's what you mean.
Speaker 5That's the only part of what I mean.
I don't want anybody killed.
Working on one of my cases.
Speaker 3I want to get dug up.
Speaker 5If you don't give it to me, I'm going to put you under wraps for your own gut.
Speaker 3Okay, mayor oh, then you do have something well.
Speaker 1I didn't think much of it at first.
Was a lead on Ritak what kind of belief on what might really have gone on between her and Hayes.
Speaker 3And where to come from?
Speaker 1I took it to the word so first, she still denied knowing her husband was acquainted with a cobwoman.
But she may have realized that by admitting it, she'd be giving herself a motive that's not new, No, but the possibility of blackmail is.
Speaker 3And she could have known about that too.
Speaker 5Blackmail.
Speaker 3Where'd that come from?
I can't tell you, but I think it's worth something.
Speaker 1I have a list of names men who might be on the same spot that Hayes was.
Speaker 3Got it written down, yeah right here, wait to get this.
Speaker 5Dollar, names, addresses and occupations.
Speaker 1Sorry, I can't tell you that you're going to refuse to answer police question, just that one.
I'm not trying to hike a case ejud Middleton or trying to be hard to get along with.
Speaker 3But you've got to understand you.
Speaker 1Must have given your word to an informer somewhere along the line.
Speaker 5All right to let it pass for now.
Speaker 1Thanks, And I guess you understand too that you are probably holding the names of some potential suicides if you break this publicly right now?
Speaker 5What about a potential killer?
Do these men know you're onto them?
Speaker 1I'm not sure how many.
I tossed a couple of names of Rita generalized the rest.
Then one of them phoned me when I was leaving the hotel.
Speaker 3I was on my way to meet him.
Speaker 5Probably baited you out onto the side.
Speaker 3It could be.
I couldn't tell where he was phoning from, maybe right downstairs.
Speaker 5Which one was he?
Speaker 3This one?
Speaker 1Earl Fisher, married family fairly big gun on.
Speaker 5The stock exchange, would have enough to make.
Speaker 3A try on you.
Speaker 1No proof that he fired the shots, but I'd pick up Rita Cobb as a material witness or something.
Somebody might think of putting.
Speaker 3Her out of the way if they haven't.
Speaker 5Already, No, not if they know you have their names.
Trying to get you right, But I'll pick her up anyway.
Speaker 3Let me get on the phone.
Just try it.
Chick on Earl Fishing.
I called the bar where Fisher said he'd meet me.
Speaker 1The answer I got didn't do much to alibio for the attempt on my life.
The bartender told me that Fisher not only hadn't been there that night, but that he the bartender, had never heard of them.
While Sergeant Middleton went out to pick up Rita cob, I hopped the cab went.
Speaker 3Back to the Hayes address to try their widow again.
Speaker 7M Is it a necessary, mister Donna?
I'm so distarughted.
Speaker 1I'm afraid it is necessary, Missus Hayes.
A number of things have happened since I left you very well.
Speaker 7I hope you won't stay long.
Speaker 3I'm trying not to.
Speaker 7Would you like to sit down?
Speaker 3I think all right?
Speaker 4Come in here.
Speaker 7I hope you will forgive for the appearance of the apartment I haven't had.
Speaker 1The servantine might have been better for your hand rather than staying here alone.
Speaker 7I couldn't.
I couldn't face her.
I don't know how I'll be able to face anybody ever.
Speaker 4We've been not what you.
Speaker 7Call prominent people, but certainly quite acceptable.
Then have Byron killed in that sordid place under these circumstances?
Speaker 3What circumstances, missus Hayes, girl.
Speaker 7No one will ever really believe that Baron didn't know and no matter what the truth is.
Speaker 3I think you know what the truth is, but you've had reason to deny it.
Now what reason?
What are you trying to save?
Save?
Speaker 7What is there to save?
Now?
Speaker 1I can't think of anything except what's left of your pride, Missus Hayes, If you'll excuse my saying.
Speaker 7So, you're a cruel young man.
Speaker 3I don't like to be, but sometimes it's worse to be too kind.
Speaker 1You've taken advantage of the police and me by holding back the truth of purely selfish reasons.
Mister Dollar, you're less interested in seeing your husband's death cleared up than you are and what your neighbors will.
Speaker 3Think of you when the truth does come out, And it has.
Speaker 1Come out, mister Dollar, and you're in danger of having to answer impeding the investigation of the death of your own husband.
Speaker 3Now, what will your neighbors think of that?
Speaker 9Mister Dollar?
Speaker 5What are you saying?
Speaker 1What do you mean to carp admitted to me that your husband was more than a casual friend.
She's like another acceptable husband.
Admitted to me that she was blackmailing him.
There are others, so it's only logical to assume that she was blackmailing her husband.
Speaker 7That's not true.
Speaker 3How do you know it can't be true.
Speaker 1The state was spent a year looking into mister Hayes's money transactions.
Speaker 3They have to and there's something else.
I'm convinced that you knew about it.
Speaker 1I was convinced by the way you reacted when I told you earlier tonight.
Speaker 3I'm so confused.
Speaker 1I told the police how you acted.
Their first thought was that possibly you'd kill your husband.
Your motive would be that you knew about Rida Cob, so naturally you wouldn't want to admit it.
Speaker 7Don't that they can't my own husband, no matter what he did.
Speaker 1Police minds go that way when people don't cooperate with him.
Speaker 8I was wrong.
Speaker 7I thought it didn't make any difference.
I thought nothing did.
But Byron's death.
Speaker 3You knew about this carb, didn't you, miss Cobb?
Speaker 7Yes, I knew about that.
Speaker 3Why didn't you tell us?
Speaker 7I don't know?
Speaker 3And you knew about the blackmail?
Speaker 7Yes?
Oh, I know why I I didn't tell you.
I I've been trying to spare myself, as you said, but for far worse reasons.
I'm responsible for Byron's.
Speaker 3Death, how missus as because.
Speaker 7I was a righteous wife.
It wasn't enough that I found out about her and her blackmail.
But I wasn't big enough to forgive him or even think calmly.
If I had been, it would have ended.
Speaker 8Then there would have been no reason to consent a blackmail.
Speaker 3You learned just recently.
Speaker 8Then, Yes, I made.
Speaker 7Him go to this woman.
I made him going tell her that he was through and that he was going to report her to the police.
That's why he was killed.
I sent him, and I was afraid to admit my responsibility.
Speaker 3He was killed night before last.
You must have learned that day.
Speaker 7A man came here.
He said, Byron knew that woman.
I didn't believe him.
But when I faced Byron, im you this man?
Speaker 3Did he give you his name?
Speaker 4No?
Speaker 3What did he look like?
Was he dark?
Quite as tall as I am?
Speaker 8Yes, at least go.
Speaker 4I've told you.
Speaker 1I've told you.
No, I want you to go.
I and took with me one more piece of the puzzle that looked like it was ready to fall into place.
The man I had described to her was my original informant, Roy Corona, and now.
Speaker 3It's a serious dollar.
Speaker 5You shouldn't have met with Roy Corona without telling us about it.
Speaker 1I don't think your best squad car could have telled the guy that drove me sergeant.
After I met him me he moved someplace else, So it probably doesn't make any difference.
And when do you think his game the way I said he was in love with Rita Cobb.
Two years in prison, he comes out and finds her involved with these men.
He did enough listening at doors to satisfy himself that she was blackmailing Hades.
Speaker 3As far as I can go, he's hoping to frame her for it or whether he talking.
Speaker 5Well, you shouldn't have met him.
Speaker 3My door was coming up.
Speaker 9Yeah, did you bring me down here for your witness?
Speaker 8But it looks like you and what's downstairs?
Speaker 1It's some fast explaining reader And Hayes, I told you for blackmailing hay I found that out.
Speaker 8If it wasn't blackmail, I borrowed some money from Byron once in a while.
Speaker 3That isn't what Roy Corona told missus.
Speaker 8Hayes, Oh, I should have known.
Well, I don't care what he told her.
Speaker 3Go through.
Speaker 5Just what happened the other night again it's the same as before.
Speaker 9Byron left.
Speaker 8I heard some shots and ran out.
Byron was lying there.
Speaker 5You ran right out, didn't say anybody.
Speaker 8That's right.
Speaker 3You're sure you didn't see anybody.
Speaker 8If I had.
Don't you think I'd say so?
Speaker 3You didn't see Roy Corona.
Speaker 8I wish I had, But I don't care what you've got on you.
I'm not changing my story.
I heard the shots, ran out and Byron was lying there.
Speaker 5Have you seen a lawyer?
Speaker 8Is there a long inser?
Speaker 5Are you sure you didn't run out first, then hear the shots and then see him lying there?
Speaker 8Are you asking me if I killed him?
Speaker 3If you didn't, who did.
Speaker 8I heard the shots, ran out and he was lying there.
Speaker 3We figured how to motive for you.
Now.
Speaker 5Byron's wife got after him, made him come down and tell you he was going to turn you in.
Speaker 3Didn't he say that?
Turn me for what?
Speaker 8Byron and I are good friend.
He dropped in, So you proved that's.
Speaker 3What he said.
Speaker 1We've got pretty good proof that you were blackmailing five men at least.
Speaker 8Oh, I don't think you'll find anybody who'll say that's what it was.
Speaker 3Yeah, you had enough dollar.
I had had a note.
Speaker 5I am gonna see her charge with murder tomorrow.
Speaker 3He was certainly got it here.
Speaker 1That's the way things stood that night and until my hotel room phone rang in the morning.
Ah, Johnny Dollar Dollar, this is Roy Corona.
Speaker 3Yeah, what are your warring?
Speaker 2I read in the morning paper they're charging reader with murder.
Speaker 3That's right.
Speaker 2She didn't do it.
Speaker 3I did.
Why are you talking?
Ile's the matter with it?
Speaker 2Nothing's the matter with me.
Speaker 3Only she didn't kill him.
I did.
Speaker 4I shouldn't have it.
Speaker 2When I found out she was seeing him and she wouldn't see me, I went crazy.
I saw him come out of her apartment and I killed him.
I want you to come in.
Speaker 1Nobody has to come and get you, Roy, nobody's interested in you.
If you want to make a statement, look up Sergeant Middleton and make one.
Speaker 2I can't do it that way.
Look I'm where you first met me.
Bring the sergeant and come out after me, and do it fast before I change my mind.
Speaker 3Hello.
Hello.
Speaker 1After working half a night, that Sergeant Middleton even more than it did me, But it.
Speaker 3Was something that we thought we should look into.
Speaker 1About forty five minutes later, we were knocking on the door of the dingy.
Speaker 3Room next to the poetry shop.
Who's that dollar?
That's right, Roy, it came too late.
Speaker 4I told you I might change my mind.
Speaker 3Well I have.
Oh come on, Roy, don't be ridiculous.
Speaker 2Oh I kill him if there's no chance of working out my life with Rita.
Speaker 3You might just look, Roy, everything is okay.
I'll let him happ.
Speaker 1Roy Corona made a good try as well.
He might have, since he went to missus Hayes and started the whole thing.
But his shots went wild, and the sergeant's mind it too.
When we dragged him out, he was still telling the same story.
He didn't stop trying to save her until he heard about the confession made by Rita Cobb after I'd left her, about her motive, and about the murder gun that turned up in her apartment find and closed.
Speaker 3His reaction to that.
Speaker 2I'm sorry I started it.
I wanted to get her away from these men.
Thought I could scare her away from the things she was doing.
That's why I went to Hayes's wife.
Speaker 4I never thought it would lead to this, and I'd take the rap.
Speaker 3For Rita if I could.
I wanted to get her to come back to me.
Speaker 1Now, look, expense account Item two one hundred and forty dollars miscellaneous expenses in New York item free same as Item one.
Transportation back to Hartford expense account total one hundred eighty dollars and eighty cents.
Remarks Earl Fisher, the man suspected of shooting at me, was brought in for questioning because there was no.
Speaker 3Proof he survived at but I felt sorry for him.
Speaker 1I saw his wife, and what lay ahead for him at her hands was obvious.
He was a condemned man.
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar.
Speaker 3Yours Julie Johnny Dollar.
Speaker 1It stars Admiral O'Brien in the title role and is written by Gildad with music by Wilbur Hatch.
Edmitd O'Brien's latest picture is the Paramount Pictures production The.
Speaker 3Redhead and the Cowboy.
Speaker 1Featured in tonight's cast were Jim Knusser, Lee Patrick gene Bates, Ed Begley and Jack Moyles.
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar is produced and directed by him del Vaie.
This is Dick cutting and finding you to join us next week at this time when edmitd O'Brien returns as Yours Truly Johnny Dalla.
It's faster, it's funnier, It's got new life and a brand new punch Because Jan Murray is taken over.
It's CBS's Saturday Night musical quiz, Sing It Again, an hour of murr, melody and money that's heard on most of these same CBS stations.
Yes, Jan Murray is your new host, Alan Dale, Judy Lynn, the Riddlers and Ray Block are your music makers, and there are still loads and loads of cash for identifying the new phantom voice.
Be sure to hear the new Sing It Again starring Jan Murray tonight on CBS.
Stay tuned now for Von Monrose Caravan, which pombled immediately on most.
Speaker 3Of these same stations.
This is CBS where you lack many everynight.
Speaker 1The Columbia Broadcasting System
