Episode Transcript
This episode from the Life of Sherlock Holmes will be transmitted to women and women overseas by short wave and through the world wide facilities of the Armed Forces Radio Service.
From the stage of the Paramount Theater in Hollywood.
Pet Tree Wine brings you Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce in the New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.
The pet Tree Family, the family that took time to bring you good wine, invite you to listen to doctor Watson tell us about another exciting adventure he shared with his old friend, that Master Detective Sherlock Holmes.
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And now for our weekly doctor's appointment, let's knock on his library door and see if.
Speaker 2There's no point in doing that, missus petric I'm right behind you.
Speaker 1Hello, doctor Watson, don't tell me you've been stalking me.
Speaker 2M was on the patio and I heard your footsteps, so I thought that i'd.
Speaker 3Come in and fetch you.
Let's go back and sit out there.
Shall wait.
Speaker 2It's a beautiful evening.
Speaker 1At fine with me, doctor.
Ah, Here we are.
Speaker 2I'll settle myself down in a churn and light a cigarette if you have one.
Speaker 3I'll get on with my story.
Speaker 1Last week, who told us a concern and adventure that you and Sherlock Holmes had in Flanders during the First World War.
Speaker 3That's right, the society did.
Speaker 1I thought that you and the Great Man had retired at that period we had my boy.
Speaker 2But it was unly natural that as soon as the war broke out we both offered our services in any capacity that might help our country.
Speaker 1Of course, and odd it's a night story again, doctor.
Speaker 2It was in the winter of that first year.
Things weren't going very well for the Allies.
The Germans advanced on Palace and the picture.
Speaker 3Was looking very black.
Speaker 2It was just twenty four hours before the famous Battle.
Speaker 3Of the Marne began.
Speaker 2The battle had changed the early course of the war.
When Holmes told me that we had to go up to the front lines on a secret mission.
We'd been in Paris for several weeks, but Homes just solved the case of the missing Atacoon.
Speaker 1I was anxious to get back to Aland and my work.
Speaker 3In the war hospitals.
Speaker 2But of course this new summons was in the nature of the command, and so late on a rainy September afternoon, Holmes and I, with a boom of gunfire and ar eas, found.
Speaker 3Our doves in the front seat of a staff.
Speaker 2Car, flushing and jolting its way towards the battle.
Speaker 1I haven't too fast, you gentmen, you're.
Speaker 2Not at all No, No, you're doing a splendid job.
Man, look out, considering the state of the road, Like you said, hello, the gunfar is getting near at homes?
Speaker 1Yes, I imagine we're much further to go.
Have this urgent, sir, We're nearly there.
Speaker 3Have you noticed the two civilians and the back seat homes?
Speaker 4Yes, answered woman.
And a distinguished looking man several years have seen you there.
I'll tell you he's a Shakespearean actor of some note who never achieved the faint which he thinks he's entitled.
I shouldn't get all surprised if he feels that he's been slighted in not perceiving a knighthood.
Speaker 2Well, it's amazing, saying, how can you possibly reduce all that from just looking at man as.
Speaker 4Got into the car elementary, My dear fellow, I didn't deduce this.
We saw him twice last year in the London theater.
If you're ron, his name is Michel Morris.
Answer his biography.
He's a friend of my brother Mike Crofts.
He told me about him.
Speaker 3What do you suppose he's doing up here in the front line.
Speaker 4His brother is General Sis Stanley Morris, who's command of this particular front stand.
Speaker 1It would seem reasonable to presume that he is brother.
Speaker 4Has come up here to get the performance with the front line troops.
I suppose this hut is as far as we can black Sergeant on Frida se sir, we're four miles from the front line.
Now you have to clear your papers.
Speaker 1Here.
See that ruined farm house there, sir, Yes, sergeant, the.
Speaker 2General's headquarter, Yes, sir, Come on, Watson, good lord, it's pelting with ray here.
Speaker 1Let's take a dash for it.
Speaker 2Who goes there?
Speaker 1Friend, give the boss Saint Crispin past friends and show your papers.
Speaker 3How did you know the past word holmes?
Speaker 4I was given it the formular tennis check slock Holmes from Dr Watson, isn't it.
Speaker 1There's Captain and Captain Maxwell.
General Morris's day.
You can't.
Speaker 4He asked people to scort you up to his headquarters by the way, where Mason Morris and his wife in the car with him.
Speaker 1Yes, there just behind us.
It was splendid.
I'm afraid I her to last be your papers.
Speaker 3Here's here's my permit.
Speaker 1Captain Maxwell, thank you.
Speaker 4I know you're both.
Of course, if we can't afford to take any chances when they're good close the gat mid Lions.
Speaker 1Let's see.
Oh yeah, this that's fine, doctor.
Everything's in order, is yours?
Speaker 3Please?
Speaker 1Mister Helms, here you are?
Thanks?
Who goes there?
Friends?
This is quite in order, mister Helms, papers, there you are, Captain Max Hello, missus Murrett.
Oh are you getting nex well?
Speaker 4And you've both met mister Kellock Holmes and doctor Watson.
I suppose no, we haven't, even though we drove up in the same car.
Natural reserve of us British as I suppose.
Speaker 1Oh, miss Holmes, how do you do some I know your brother Micraft very well.
How are you doctor?
Speaker 2Knowing there to me choo to Morris, I saw you a couple of times the third last year and Georgia performances with my phone.
Speaker 3Thank you sir.
Speaker 1But then you must know my wife, my leading lady.
Speaker 5How do you do?
Speaker 1Gentlemen?
How can I see your papers?
Mister Mortters, it's just a matter of reform you want.
Speaker 2Yes, yes, missus Morris, I assume you and your husband are going to give her performance tonight.
Speaker 3For the men going up the front line.
He is doctor.
We're very flattered.
Speaker 5They've asked us to do some Shakespearean things, although I should have thought something a little lighter would have been more appropriate.
The general he's Baker's brother, you know, thinking dips.
Speaker 1Where my dear show Captain Max for your papers.
Speaker 4Then we can all go along and see my brother Stanway very well.
Amazing, mister Morris, dyes will look forward to curing your reading of shakespeare Saint Cristian speech from Henry the Fifth tonight.
Speaker 1P press my soul, Holmes, How did you know I was planning to do it?
Well?
Was setting us so perfect in the times?
So appropriate?
Speaker 4I can't conceive an English actor who could resist the temptation.
I noticed that your brother appreciated the fact in naming today's password.
Yes, it's amazingly appropriate.
You know it's almost five hundred years ago to the day that the Battle of Agincour took place.
Speaker 2Well, let's hope that the results of the forthcoming battle will be equally successful.
Speaker 1For yes, indeed, oh, by the way, homes.
Speaker 3This will probably seem rather stilly, do.
Speaker 4You, But I'm an invetered autographic collector, and I have my.
Speaker 1Book Shore with me.
I wonder if you'd minds signs reglected, mister Morris give me a fin what.
Speaker 4Home you'll find yourself and quite distinguished company in that book, sir, So I see Andelia Patti Pincer Norwich.
Oh no Feltis.
Oh yes, she was one of my admirers when I.
Speaker 1Fill in Munich before the war.
Speaker 4I suppose now that our countries are fighting, I should tear that page out.
Speaker 1Do you know I cannot help but feel that art the appreciation of art are independent of national hatred.
Speaker 4Criit so, sir, I myself still have a medal presented to me by the University of Leipzig for some trifling services no one, mister Morris, Oh, thank.
Speaker 1You very much, Miss Hopes, a notable addition to my collection.
Speaker 2I shall be regret to sign your for him tomorrows if.
Speaker 1You'd like mature.
That's very kind of a doctor, Captain Maxwell.
If in order, don't you think we should be moving along?
Speaker 4It's just what I was going to suggest by So I'll take you all straight up to General Morrison's headquarters.
General Morris, they I introduced mister Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson.
Speaker 1How do you do so?
How do you know a lot about?
Speaker 4You?
Speaker 1Were long way from Baker Street, to do it.
Yes, where is that brother of mine?
Oh there you are, Maitland, Cincia.
How nice to see you both again.
Speaker 3Hello.
Speaker 1The men will be glad you arrived, looking forward to your show tonight.
We're very flattered that they want to hear us do some Shakespeare.
Oh rubbish, old boy.
With you and Cynthia up there on the platform, you could read the telephone book and they'd love your father very kind.
Speaker 4Either way, you will find the stage very primitive, just a few trestles in a large tent and a curtain made of army blankets, and your dressing rules will be eaten worse.
Speaker 5Oh, don't worry about our comfort, Stanley.
As long as we cheer the boys out, that's the important thing.
Speaker 3Yes.
Speaker 1Of course.
By the way, what program you have mapped up?
Well?
Speaker 4I thought we'd have two shows.
The tent's not large enough to hold everybody at once, anybody anyway.
Speaker 1We have to keep up an alert all the time.
I think you can manage two wear separate shows off because I can stand it.
I may look over and I don't feel it.
You don't look.
Speaker 4So you can take a look at the stage and equipment, and certainly Captain Maxwell take them over to the tent and show them what the facilities are with you, right, would you follow me?
Speaker 3Yes?
Speaker 4Of course, all right, I'm glad you're here, homes.
I'm so I can speak quite freely in front of doctor Watson or yes, with perfect freedom, zoned, he's my colleague.
There's no old army man himself?
Speaker 1Really?
What regiment first?
Speaker 2Nor fomland Fels later a text the butchers in Afghanison wanted in the battle of mainline?
Speaker 1Really?
And then I'm sure I can speak pretty and while from Holmes.
You know why you're up here so near the front line, don't you.
I have a very shrewd suspicion, sir, I thought you had.
That's why I asked for you to be sentire.
You asked for me to be sent here, General, Yes, I understand.
Speaker 3Well I did.
Speaker 1You will doctor in due time.
Speaker 4In the meanwhile, gentlemen, I'll have an orderly show you to your quarter.
Speaker 1Thank you, sir, and home, sir, take.
Speaker 3A look around and keep your ears.
Speaker 4Were comparatively a little distance from the German front lines, and yet there's a very puzzling silence just now.
Speaker 1I noticed that half an hour ago, on our way up first, there's quite not a shilling exactly.
Speaker 4It's unnatural and rather frightening at a time like this.
You see, we're attacking at dawn.
The enemy might be trying to infiltrate spies, and the old success of this battle depends on a surprise attack.
Speaker 1I quite understand Sir Colm Watson.
Speaker 3Home Home.
Speaker 2The first performance starts in a few minutes.
You know they're all there waiting.
Why are you travling about up here in the mud in the.
Speaker 1Rain for the pipe to the open air, But cheer our brains.
Speaker 2Pipe in the open air is one thing that the piponer down over.
Speaker 1Rains another is it raining?
Didn't even notice it.
I was listening to the silence.
Speaker 3What do you mean?
Speaker 4Thousands upon thousands of Germans, armed, Germans full of applying's and ethical hatred and desire to kill.
Speaker 1I've crouched in frenches only a mile or two from the air.
Speaker 4Surrounding outside an equal number of English boys, also armed and for the will, if not the desire, to fight, because they know their cause is the cause of freedom and justice.
All these thousands poised, ready to pounce on each other and fight to the death and get beyond that patter of rain.
There isn't to it but the sound to break the stillness of the September evening.
Speaker 1H strange world.
Speaker 3We live in old chap you'll be unusual tollical home.
Speaker 1Yes, I am not that.
Speaker 4Let's be a little more practical, charlw I wonder what is wrong with the actors tonight?
Well, you asked, Well, a little while ago I noticed missus Morris in a great state of excitement, surging towards the farmhouse the General is, and she went back to her own quarters.
Speaker 1And now she seems to be headed in our direction.
Anything wrong, missus Morris?
Speaker 3Maitland, what's wrong with the Madam?
He disappeared?
Speaker 1What's happened?
We were the tend together.
Speaker 5Making up rop upon when in orderly came into the message.
Maitland said it was from his brother Kit on the raincoat, and without seeing me back in a few moments, I waited and waited, and after a while I got worried.
Now we don't miss the general myself.
He said that he said, no madage, and that he hadn't seen.
Speaker 1Any sign that Maitland, good, Laura, what kind of I don't know this, but I've frightened it what you.
Speaker 3Like, do mister Holmes.
Speaker 1You're a brave woman, Missus Morris, brave.
I don't know, mister Holmes.
Why the show must go on?
I shall take your husband's place at home.
Speaker 3Something's happened to make for Morris.
Speaker 4You can daan jer to button two, but a thousands inside that tenter in mortal danger too.
Speaker 1Tomorrow morning, any of them maybe.
Speaker 4Copses on the fields of Pandas, But tonight they've been promised to show.
Speaker 3Do you think that you can do it?
Speaker 1Home?
Oh?
Speaker 4I think I can with the help of Missus Morris.
I can't do it this home, can Missus Morris, And you will, if only to uphold that great tradition of the kitter.
But the show must go on.
Speaker 1Well the rest of Dr Watson's story in just a few seconds time.
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And now back to tonight's new Sherlock Holmes adventure.
It is just before the Battle of the Marne in the First World War and Sherlock Holmes and doctor Watson are at headquarters a few miles behind the front line trenches.
A famous Shakespearean actor who was to get the performance for the troops has mysteriously disappeared, and the great detective has taken his place.
At the last minute, we rejoin our story.
Sherlock Holmes, alone on the improvised stage, is delivering a Shakespearean speech before a spellbound life.
Speaker 4Happy, This little world, this precious stone, set in a silver sea, which serves it in the office of a wall, or as the most defensive to a house against the envy of less happier lamps.
Speaker 1This blessed plot, this earth, this rome, this England, homes that shot.
Speaker 4Are you all right, yes, old chap Fortunately I started to believe the stage as the shot was fired.
Speaker 1The bullet just missed me.
It's splinter some wood nearby.
Speaker 2But who on earth would want to shoot you?
Speaker 4That's what we've got to find out.
I think it more likely that the shot was intended for me.
It was not intended for me, but for Maitland Morris, the man for whom I'm substitute.
Speaker 2Even so, who'd want to shoot him?
Speaker 4Don't ask me any questions, author, Let's see what clues we can find now.
The shot was fired from outside the tent, from behind me.
Yes, look there you a hole in the tent.
Speaker 3There by show vius footlights without climb your.
Speaker 2Shadow on the back of the tent.
Whoever it must have as a found at your silhouette.
Speaker 1The question is where did the bullet in bed itself?
Huh?
Speaker 4Look here, Watson, we've got a pen knife.
Yeah, they shouldn't be hard to expect.
Look at this splintered tent pole.
A minute, Okay, here we are excellent.
Huh, very interesting?
Speaker 3Well, what's so interesting about him?
Speaker 4Just to revolve a bullett, Watson?
But that's far from just a revolve a bullet.
This bullet was fired from a German Luca pistol.
Speaker 3A German pistol must have been a pie here behind our lines.
Speaker 4That's a reasonable enough, his sumpson, as we may be sure that no English soldier would carry such a weapon and face inspection.
Come on, I want to talk to missus Morris, Missus Morris, I want you to be very frank with me, so to cause, mister Holmes, you know why your husband's missing, don't you?
Speaker 1No, No, I don't have you found out about why I keep up this pretense any longer.
Speaker 4I know that your husband is a spy or a fist, a great sympathizer with the German cause, the General's brother spy good law.
Speaker 1How can you say that?
Speaker 4Because it's true by an artist has been suspicious of his sympathis for some time.
His own brother knew it, as why I asked to have me sent up here to keep an eye on him during his visit.
Speaker 1It is true?
Speaker 5Why should I keep up the pretense any longer?
Speaker 3You see?
Speaker 5Maitland was a disciple of Stuart Houston Chamberlain, who was his student.
Speaker 4Houston Chamberlain an Englishman who married one of Richard Wagner's daughters and became a German citizen and an arch enemy of England.
Speaker 5I'll try to dissuade Maitland.
I implored him to consider his British heritage, his brother's name and mind.
Speaker 1But Nathan was a strange man.
Speaker 5His life was one of frustration, in envy, enry of his brothers.
Bose Yes, when Stanley was knighted, it it hurt Maitland terribly.
He said.
It was typical if the English wore kni a soldier and yet leave a great artist like himself unrecognized in Berlin.
They rarely understood and rewarded the artist.
Speaker 2Well if the thoughts knew, that's amazingly allowed him to cons al close to the front.
Speaker 5Lines at a time like this, which was at the general's request.
He wanted to plead with my husband to warn him that his secret was nttan.
And now Maitland gone over to the German line.
Speaker 1Oh, it's worse than that.
Speaker 3It's disastrous.
Speaker 2He can give them information.
Speaker 3This is strength of our troops here.
He knows the password, he might.
Speaker 1Even know the y.
Speaker 3The attack is time to start.
Speaker 4How did your husband expect to men of the German lines in safety?
Speaker 1Missus Morris.
Speaker 5He speaks fluent German matter, Holmes, I fancied the autographs will keep us carrying, containing his signature A field marshal Son Talkknitz with.
In reality, he's passed through the German line.
Speaker 1You told the generals that his father was done.
Of course I haven't been able to.
Speaker 5He moved up to the front line position immediately to the first performance, though I had warned him what I thought Maidan was planning to do.
I think he intended the idiot's performance first, then crossed the lines immediately afterwards.
But something must have made him change his mind.
Perhaps he suspected I'd warned the general.
Anyhow, as you know, when I got back to our quarters he'd gone, did he note, Madam, Yes he did.
Speaker 1Here it is thank you I have done.
Speaker 4My dear, try and understand, and if you can, it wouldn't come with me.
And so I'm taking what is left of my heart and my hopes where they belong among the friends that understand and appreciate me.
It is something stronger than love and blood and country that makes.
Speaker 3Me do this.
Speaker 1It is something dearer to me than life.
It's so dear to me than light itself.
Could oh Cordy the shame of this will kill for Stanley.
Speaker 3Litter home.
Speaker 1Will you break the news to him?
Speaker 3I know it's cowardly of me, but I just can't tell him myself.
Speaker 4I'll tell him, Dr Watson, I will ask Captain Maxwell to escott us to the General's front line headquarters in the meantime, trying to calm We'll.
Speaker 1Tell him.
Speaker 4If you were waiting in the dug art, Mister Helms, I will tell the General, but chere here, thank.
Speaker 1You, and be sure to let him know the urgency of the matter.
Speaker 3This is a dreadful business.
Speaker 1Yes, this is Watson.
Speaker 4If my plans work out correctly, I think the success of tomorrow's battle may not being kidled.
Speaker 3Listen, you know, Holmes.
Speaker 2A strange silence from the German line since we came here might be accounted for by the fact that they knew Maitland was making his getaway.
They wouldn't want to risk woundings such a valuables far quite possibly.
What I still don't understand is we shot at you with a German pistol, and why having.
Speaker 1Very dense help.
Surely it's odd music they come General Morris now this is going.
Speaker 3To be a dreadful shock to him.
Speaker 2Hello, Holmes.
Speaker 4Dr Watson, Denyl Morris, I'm afraid that I bad news for you.
Your brother has gone over to the German limes.
Speaker 3Maitland did go there.
Speaker 4I should have put him under an arm god as soon as he came here, but I thought I could reason with him, appeal to his sense of honor, instead of which you tried to shoot him there.
But fortunately for me you missed.
You see, I took his place at the first performance.
Speaker 3That shot was fired from a German patrol.
Speaker 1That was when I first knew the General at fired shot.
Speaker 3But I still don't see how you could.
Speaker 4Now only a high ranking officer not subject to inspect and could carry a non regulation firearm.
Speaker 1You no darmy man.
Speaker 4You know that in any case, you'll observe that the General carries a lugud.
It is way straight Heaven's homes are.
I thought I was firing at Maitland.
Speaker 3I have no idea that that it was you.
Speaker 4You intended to kill your own brothers, yes, and I'm sorry I failed her.
Rather see my brother dead alive on a traitor to his country.
But now he's safely in the German lines.
Heaven knows what secrets he may be imparting one thing, we can be certain a chance of a surprise attack in the morning is gone.
Speaker 1That's been answer.
Speaker 4What do you mean do you took the liberty of alter brother's credentials quite extensively p I knew of his German sympathetis Micat had given me a great deal of information about him, and so I took it on myself to decide that it was unsafe to allow him so near the enemy lines with his own identification on him.
Speaker 1Well, what did to do?
Speaker 4I took the liberty s earl of stealing his autograph book, the one containing the magical signature of Field Marshal on Toknitz.
I have it in my pocket now I think we shall find with his pages of code concealed in the various autographs giving valuable information to the enemy good law.
Speaker 1I also switched to military permits on him.
Speaker 4I felt that in the event that he did go over to the German lines, his work might be less cordial if they were under compression, that they had captured shlock homes to make that identification.
Speaker 1W sure.
Speaker 4I also slipped in his pocket a slight.
Speaker 1Soupernir of my own word Jerhomes.
Speaker 2You mean that medal was presented to by the University of Life.
Speaker 1Six that actual fome I no longer wish to own a decoration.
Speaker 4Given me by country of barbarians, and it seemed to have a neat and effective way of returning it to them.
Speaker 1So the Germans will think they captured Charlotron.
Yes, sir, and as I much mistaken, he'll receive very short script at the hand.
Speaker 2Yes, I hate you.
Speaker 1As your answer, sir.
Speaker 4Sorry, don't be sorry, Holmes, It's better that way now his secret can die with him.
Speaker 1Excuse me, sirm, Yes, net Fel.
What is it would it be in order for me to return to headquarters?
Speaker 4Tauser, It's very dearly time for the second performance, and i'd still been now able to trace the word batacle.
Speaker 1Brother.
Speaker 4My brother will not be acting tonight, I'm afraid, Holmes.
How one time might ask you to take his place once again?
Speaker 1If you want me to general, I do.
Speaker 4Maitland had planned to do the Sat Crispin speech from Henry fit he knew how much I loved I realize that, sir, But.
Speaker 1I was told the password up here.
Speaker 3Can you remember the speech?
Speaker 2Home?
Speaker 1Oh?
I think so?
Speaker 4At any rate I can fry, then do it for me, my dear fellow, Will you for me, I'll be very planned to do it.
General, goodbye and good luck, Thank you, Holmes, Faptain Natwell take them back to headquarters.
Will you will be waiting for the performance.
Speaker 1Christians will now go by from this day to the ending of the world.
But we in it were remembered.
Speaker 4We few, we happy, few, we band of brothers.
Or he today that chants his blood with me shall be my brother be in ass or file this day, so gentle his condition, and gentlemen in England now a bed shall think themselves a curse.
Speaker 1They were not here, and all their manhood's cheap.
While then he speaks that fuck with us upon Saint Christian's Day.
Well, Michael, that was a bit of an exciting adventure here.
Speaker 5You know.
Speaker 2I can still remember that awful feeling I had when I heard the.
Speaker 3Shot in the tent whom if someone.
Speaker 1Had tried to kill home he did have a narrow escape.
Speaker 2Holmes always said, no such thing as a narrow escape.
He said, you are escaped or you didn't.
If you a worry, and if you didn't, you couldn't worry.
Speaker 1So quite a philosophy.
I'd like to discuss it with you further over a bottle of wine.
Speaker 3How else, what kind of wine?
Speaker 1Uh?
Naturally, Uh, naturally, you couldn't ask for a more delicious wine than Petree.
That's because the Petrie family knows how to make good wine.
They are do.
They've been making fine wine ever since they started the Petree business way back in the eighteen hundreds.
And because the business has always been family owned and operated well, they've been able to hand on from father to son, from father to son all they've ever learned about the art of turning luscious grapes into fragrant, delicious wine.
That's why, no matter what time Petre wine you buy for any occasion, you can be sure it's good wine, because Petree took time to bring you good wine.
And now, doctor Watson, I was about giving us a clue the next week's shirlock Home.
Speaker 2Next week, miss Clatter, I'm going to tell you and I must unusually venture much Holmes and I are trapped in an airtight metal chamber.
Only competant being a murdered scientist sounds like a story we don't want to miss.
Speaker 1Doctor.
See you next week, Oh, just a second letter before we go.
Speaker 2I just want to tell our listeners that tonight we're broadcasting from the stage of the Paramount Theater here in Hollywood on behalf of the Seventh Warloned Drive.
The ticket of admission to the theater was woar bonds.
Speaker 3I'm inntioning this to.
Speaker 2Remind you, our friends, that you have an important part to play in making the Seventh War owner success.
Speaker 3Buying bar and buy bigger bonds than ever before.
Speaker 2They're needed to pay for new super faults, hu jet propelled fighters, newer and bigger.
Speaker 3Weapons to lick Japan.
Remember, in spite of the magnificent.
Speaker 2Achievements of our force in the Pacific.
Speaker 3The Japanese War has just begun.
Speaker 4Let's go all.
Speaker 1Out for the mighty Seventh Warlons the Night.
Sherlock Cohn's adventure is written by Dannis Green and Anthony Botcher and is based on an incident of these Arthur Conan Doyle story, The Adventures of the Blanche Soldier Mister Rathborn appears to the courtesy of Metro Gogan Mayor mister Bruce with the courtesy of Universal Pictures, where they are now starring in the Sherlock Holmes series.
The Petfree Wine Company of San Francisco, California invite you to tune in again next week, same time, same station.
Oh, the pet Tree Family took its time to bring you such good wine.
Cool when you eat and when remember pet Tree Wine to make good food taste better, Remember.
Speaker 3The three.
Speaker 1This is Jack Slattery saying good night for the pet Tree Family.
This is the mutual Broadcasting System.
