 In just a moment, Auto-Lite presents Suspense with Jimmy Cagney. Harlow, tonight I understand we have an Auto-Lite Suspense special. Every bit of special is your star performance as the Auto-Lite Resistor Spark Plug Maestro. Is that a plug for me or for my favorites Auto-Lite Resistor Spark plugs have? Well, with no offense to either Harlow, it's neither. Tonight, Jimmy Cagney and Auto-Lite and Suspense are dramatizing one of our great American tragedies. It's so tremendous a problem it warrants our entire nation warring against its grimness and the grim reaper who is its symbol. Tonight, Suspense's story will remind you to drive carefully behind Auto-Lite Resistor Spark plugs or any other, Harlow. Then let's join the Auto-Lite audience and listen. Suspense! Auto-Lite and its 60,000 dealers and service stations bring you Radio's outstanding theater of thrills. Starting tonight, Mr. James Cagney in Anton Leader's production of No Escape. A tale well calculated to keep you in suspense. The only thing I can do now is tell you how it happened. Without any bunk. I don't care what you've heard or read about me. I'm not a devil or a mad dog. I don't know what people think happens to a fella. Do they think all of a sudden I turned into stone? I'm no different than anybody else. If I don't eat, I get hungry. If I cut myself, shaving, I bleed. I'm just like the next guy and that's the whole idea. This, it happened to me sure, but it would have happened to anybody. It could have happened to you. It was supposed to have been one of them days you circled on the calendar with a red pencil. You see, with a little town like ours, 23 miles from the big city, right on the main highway, we get the speed artists going both ways. Yeah, and every couple of days they manage to leave something behind to remember them by. Like a kid with a broken back or well, well, you get the idea. So a couple of years ago the Chamber of Commerce started this safety campaign to name the safest driver of the year. Something to kind of keep the guys in their toes. And this year the fella they chose for the award was yours truly. And tonight was the big doings with a few well-chosen words from me, a lad who was a public speaker, was a wonderful bus driver. I got to the house a little after six. Teddy, my kid brother, was just leaving. Hiya, Big Sean. Hello, ladies and gentlemen in this corner of the world's champion driver. That's me, all right. Hey, that's a swell picture of you in the paper. You don't look so bad for an older man. All right, I'll beat your ears in. Say you've called to say you should wear your blue suit and try to look human. That I would like to see me too. Sorry, I can't wait, though. I'm late for a date. I'll see you in the morning and you can tell me how you slayed. All right, Ted, so long. I know myself the works. Shower, shave, the blue suit like the lady said. Eve looked laugh to me like I was at least five years old. I didn't mind a bit. Ever since Ma died in 42, I'd kept the house going for Teddy because a kid needs something like that. But he was getting out of school in June and then maybe Eve and I. Well, it was nice thinking about it. So nice that I guess I forgot all about the time that was passing. Yeah? Look, slow motion. You should be halfway over here by now. Okay, Eve, honey. You got the speech ready? I'll give you a bunch of empty chairs and dirty plates. Yes, mama. Be right over. Eve lived outside of town. I'd really have to step on it to pick her up and spend some time rehearsing the speech. I then get to the high school auditorium by eight. I got into the car and I decided to take the canyon road through the hills where there wasn't any traffic. I could make better time that way. Now, wait, wait, wait just a second. Let me get my thoughts together. I got to get this part exactly right. You've got to see it just like it happened. Or else it's all a waste of time. All right. I was on the canyon road that wound up through the steep hills, the wall of the mountain on one side of the road and the deep canyon on the other, about 10 to 7, but already dark. Nobody on the road but me, so I stuck pretty close to the middle and every turn, the scream of the tires. But I wasn't worried about that. Four brand new tires, hardly a week old and good brakes. I never take chances with things like that. Going about 50 miles an hour, maybe a little bit better. But I was all alone on the road, so what difference did it make? I was maybe two-thirds of the way up to the top, right where the road makes a wide curve. I remember I put a cigarette in my mouth and I pushed the dashboard lighter in. I heard the lighter click and I started reaching for it. And then a pair of headlights blazing out of nowhere. And then a screeching horn, a car coming the other way. I felt my inside double up like a fist. I slammed my foot on the brake, swung the steering wheel to the right. I didn't feel anything hit and I thought, oh, God, it's going to be OK. I jammed on the emergency. I jerked the door open. Now look back. The road was empty. I still heard the horn, though, but far away and another sound too, like a bunch of empty crates toppling over and over. And at first it didn't register with me. For maybe half a second I just stood there wondering what happened. Then I saw the reflection of the flame lighting up the whole canyon. I went to the side of the road and looked down. The car was about 500 feet below, burning. And the horn still blasting away like the driver's body had fallen against it. I started down the canyon. It was almost straight down. I fell and I rolled. I came to my feet again. Why didn't that horn stop? Why didn't it stop? And then it did stop. And I realized that I had stopped. I had stopped too. What was I waiting for? To get my wind, that's all. I went down another few feet. And then I stopped again. Holding myself against the tree. Come on. Come on, Harry. Get going. No. No. What good would it do to get down there? I couldn't help it while I was in that car. It was too late. Nobody could help. Far down the road I saw another pair of headlights starting the long climb. I went back to my car. I told myself I was going for help. I was at the top of the hill. There was a little gas station up there. I was almost there. I started slowing down. My whole life was about to be smashed. I had to tell them the truth. What good would it do? What about Eve? What about my kid brother Teddy? What's more important than a man's own family? I reached the gravel driveway to the gas station. The old guy heard me coming and started straightening up. No. I swung back onto the highway and pushed the accelerators to the floor. I got to Eve's house a little before 7.30. It was funny. I thought I was okay until I reached for the door handle. And then my finger seemed to go dead and my heart stopped. Started going a mile a minute. That's me. Sorry I'm late Eve. Where in heaven's name have you been? Honestly, if you aren't the most aggravated... Harry Graham. What? Look at you. You look like you've been run through a threshing machine. I'll go in and out. I'll clean up a little. What in the world happened? I had a flat tire. I had to change it on the road. Flat tire? Oh, fine. All right. Wait right here. I'll get the wisp room. All things to happen tonight. All right. All right. Happened. Now you off, will you? Harry. I'm sorry. Don't just stand there. While I'm doing this, take your comb out and start combing your hair. Took my comb out and turned toward the whole mirror. Funny. I didn't look any different than yesterday or the day before that. I was still Harry Graham. After he finished with me, we went back to the car. Get in. I tell you what, you're so upset anyhow. Why don't you let me drive into town? Okay, if you want to. See, now I turn left to the next block. Don't I, for the Canyon Road? Canyon Road? Yes, we can save some time going that way. No, no. Huh? No. No, I don't want to go to Canyon Road. I want you to go the regular way. But we're going to be late. Do what I tell you. I'll drive the car myself. But Harry, we always... Do what I tell you, Eve. All right. Don't have to bite my head off. What have you got against Canyon Road? It's too dangerous at night. Well, all I've got to say is that when they picked you for the safest driver of the year, Harry Graham, they really hit the jackpot. We got to the high school auditorium just a couple of minutes late. But it turned out we weren't the only ones late. We got to the main table. I saw that the chair next to mine was empty. Police Chief Blake, who was supposed to introduce me for my speech, hadn't showed up yet. And they... Then when the dinner was ended, Chief Blake came through the door. And he looked awfully. He went over to the chairman of the meeting and whispered something, pointing at me. And then he started for me, and I thought my heart would quit beating. I was looking for a way to escape, maybe when... Hello, Harry. Oh, hello, Chief. Hello. Folks, folks, please. I'm sorry I'm so late. I've just come from Canyon Road. Another terrible accident. Someone went over the canyon. Four people killed and burned. We still haven't gotten them out of the wreckage. It looks like they were forced off the road. Another dirty, hit-and-run case. My boys are up there now looking for traces of this other car. I don't have to tell you that we're going to keep on looking till we find out who it was. That's why I had one of my boys bring me back to town here at this meeting tonight. Because now it's even more important to let a fellow like our friend Harry Graham here know we appreciate his good work and wish to the saints that were more like him. Yes, after what I just saw on Canyon Road, I'm really proud of Harry Graham. For Suspense, AutoLight is bringing you Mr. James Cagney in Radio's Outstanding Theatre of Thrill's Suspense. This show hits with the zing of a set of AutoLight resistor spark plugs. It gets me right between the optics. I know. I've been doing a little research. Yes? The frigid facts on faulty driving should dispel the optical illusions of any automobile driver foolish enough to relax his vigilance for one single moment. Every 30 seconds, a man, woman or child is injured on our streets or highways. This year, 32,300 people are doomed to death. By Cornelius Hap, I never stopped to realize. You know, Harlow, it takes 10 seconds and 336 feet to stop a car traveling at 60 miles an hour. That's why brains are more important than brakes. Why the man behind the wheel should be aware of the speed at which he's driving. Why safe and sane are synonymous words to drivers who value their fellow's lives as well as their own. In other words, Hap, just because AutoLight resistors spark plugs give your car more pep. Don't try to use all of it, eh? Exactly, Harlow. But there's more. The good Samaritan is the gracious guy or gal who not only knows and keeps the rules of the road but also keeps his temper in his head when some bungling bunny gives him the roadhog treatment. Yes, Hap, it's sad but true that one right way to wrong driving is to always demand your highway rights. Be sure to be safe. Right, Harlow. And now, let's get back to suspense. And now, AutoLight brings back to our Hollywood soundstage Mr. James Cagney as Harry in No Escape. A tale well calculated to keep you in suspense. I had to keep my eyes on the table. I couldn't even look at the chief as he stood there praising me. All I could see was that burning wreck at the foot of the cliff, and all I could hear was that awful horn blowing. I had to bite my lips to keep him screaming. I did it. Harry? What? Oh, what? Open your feet, son. We'd like to hear a few words from you. If anybody wants to listen to me tonight, please, let's forget it. No, Harry. Now more than ever, we should hear what a fellow like you has to say. Come on, Harry. Go on, Harry. Oh, well, all right. I'm afraid I'm no great shakes as a speechmaker. Just a lucky thing my girl's a good English teacher. I don't believe we should honor a man for safe driving any more than we should honor him because he's never killed anyone with a gun. When a man gets behind the wheel of a car, he doesn't give up his responsibilities to his fellow men. No one can escape the responsibility of being his brother's keeper. And that goes for... that goes for... Harry? What's wrong? Listen to me. How can I stand up here and read a speech after what Chief Blake just told us? No. I can't do it. I'm sorry. I can't do it. I guess Harry's right after all, folks. I guess maybe we just better call the meeting off. I know I've got to get back to Canyon Road as soon as I can. Come on, Eve. Come on. Let's get out of here. All right, honey. Oh, Harry. Yeah, Chief. You can do me a big favor. A fellow brought me down here. I had to beat it right back to the accident. Oh, so? I've got to get back down myself right away. Can you give me a lift? Well, I sure like to, Chief, but, well, I've got to get Eve home. Well, you could take me home by the way to Canyon Road. But I'd be much obliged to you, Harry. What do you see, Chief? Harry. Okay, okay. Let's go. It's too bad the meeting had end like this. When I have a hunch, you feel like I do, Harry. Like you can't sit still until you find the rat who killed those people. Well, I promise you this, Harry. Whoever he is, we'll get him. Yeah. Wasn't that one for the book? Less than two hours after my accident with the other car going over into the canyon, on Canyon Road. Only this time with Eve sitting behind me and the chief of police in back. Harry, you know, mine could just step on it a little bit. I promise you I won't give you a ticket. Okay, Chief. Honey, push the lighter in, will you? The lighter? For my cigarette. Oh, sure, sure. The speed better, Chief? Fine. Harry hates this road. I wanted him to take it earlier tonight. That's all right. Have you got good tires? Oh, you don't have to worry about that. Last week. Oh, here's your light, Eve. Eve. Huh? Oh. Thanks. Oh. Her voice didn't sound right. Her voice didn't sound right. Then I remembered. When I picked her up tonight, I told the reason I was so messed up was that I'd had to change a tire. She was thinking about that now. I knew she was trying to figure out why I'd lie to her. Nobody said anything after that. When we reached the part of the road in the bend, I started slowing down. I, uh, hope I got you here quick enough, Chief. Yeah, you did fine. Is this where it was? Yeah, just around this bend. Yeah, that's right. But how did... Huh? Nothing. Again, again I'd said the wrong thing. What was the matter with me? How was I supposed to know that that axon was around the bend? I was cutting my own throat, but now I've made the turn and there was the red flags burning on the road and a big crash truck at the edge of the canyon. I was talking the highway. Just pull over the side, Harry. Okay. Ah, they're coming down there, Fraser. Oh, hello, Chief. You're ready to start bringing them up soon. That's, uh... That's a walkie-talkie he's working with? Yeah. He keeps contact with the men down in the canyon. Say, Harry, why don't you come along with me and really see how we work here? Oh, thanks, but I've got to get Yvonne home. The school teachers have got to get up early. Isn't that right, baby? Yes, come along, Harry. I don't mind waiting, Harry. Now, now it was me against all of them. Oh, I was sick about that car down there in the canyon, those four bodies inside. But, well, nothing could change that now. And I was fighting for my own life. Then they wouldn't break me down. I stood with my foot on the bumper and Chief Blake in against the fender of my car while his boys gave their reports about the hit-and-run car that didn't bother me a bit. Two of them told about the plastic cast they'd made of a tire mark they'd found on the road. Does it help you any, Chief? Not much, Harry. No tire. A lot of people have no tires. You, for instance. I kicked my new front tire for them, kicked it hard. They brought over an old fellow in white overalls. The guy in the service station where I'd almost turned in to report the accident. The Chief asked him if he thought the car he'd seen was a hit-and-run. Must have been, just about that time, you know. The way this fellow's scheduled away for no reason at all. I don't know what kind of a car it was, though. A black sedan, I'd say. Like this one, maybe? Yeah. Well, might be. Might be that. But there's too dark to be sure. Well, first thing tomorrow I'm going to get myself a green convertible. And everybody got a good laugh out of that. But I would have to be careful. Mustn't go too far. It was me against all of them. And I felt the kind of excitement that a guy might get from walking a tightrope. Thinking back now, sure seems screwy, but that's how I felt. And maybe that is the worst thing that happens to a guy in my spot. The way it turns you into a wild animal against the world. Hi, Charlie. It was the fellow with the walkie-talkie over near the crash truck. We're ready to start bringing up the bodies. Come on, Harry. Let's go away. Something flopped coldly in my stomach. And then lay still. This was the test. If they didn't break me down now they could never do it, never in a million years. All the people who'd come up in the town started gathering around the crash truck. I wanted to run and never stop running. But I didn't move. And just then the first party swung into view and you could hear everyone in the crowd suck in his breath and I bit down hard on my lip until I tasted blood. The brown blanket wrapped neatly around something and then the bundle rested on the ground and everyone seemed to edge away from it like it could hurt them. And the cable went down into the valley again and then there was a second bundle and then there was a third and then a fourth and over and over like a drumbeat like a prayer I told myself they wouldn't break me down. And then someone pushed forward from the crowd. Joe Mandel the little tailor. He seemed shy and embarrassed as though he had no business being here. Chief Blake Oh yeah Joe My boy Phillip he didn't come home for supper tonight. You want to look? Well you know how a woman is Rose will feel better if I tell her okay I looked and it wasn't well you know. Alright Joe doesn't hurt none. Thank you I'd better go back to my Rose. Sorry Joe I uh wait a minute Yes. Do you know who Phil was going to be with tonight? His best friend was Mike Roebuck. They were always together. The gold dust twins everybody called him. Thanks Joe. Excuse me Chief I must go to Rose now. Fraser! Yes Chief. Go over to Roebuck's. Don't tell him anything is wrong. Just see if Mike's home. Okay. I couldn't take anymore. I started back for the car. My legs felt like they weighed a ton. I heard a sudden movement in the crowd behind me. They wouldn't break me down. They wouldn't break me down. I opened the car door. And Eve was there. I'd almost forgotten her. And I was sure she knew the truth. Yeah. Harry. I don't want to hear anything now. I'm taking you home. Wait Harry. Listen I'm telling you. Kiss me Harry. What? Hold me and kiss me. I'm such a stupid fool. Hold me. All right all right now stop it stop it. Harry. If you know what's been going through my mind. Okay okay stop it. Just a fool a stupid fool. And then when I saw you come back in my car. The look on your face. Oh Harry. How could I have ever thought. All right all right. Now we'll talk about it later. I'll never talk about it again. Never Harry. So it was all over with. I was going to be okay. God I wasn't proud. I felt rotten and sick. And now that it was all over. The strength ran out of me like water running out of a glass. But what good would it have been to crucify myself. It wouldn't have changed anything. I wasn't a bad guy. It could have happened to anybody. And now. Now I was going to be able to take care of my own. Eve. And my kid brother Teddy. Was that a bad guy. A fellow who wanted to do right for his family. I started the car. And then look he had me through the windows. His chief Blake. Signaling me to wait. I turned the key off. Whatever it was. I was very tired. Come on out Harry. I've got to get Eve home. Come on out of the car. Harry. Do like I tell you. Come with me. What do you want? Come with me. You drove up here tonight. Yes. You know about it. Listen. You've got to believe me. It shouldn't have happened to a fellow like you. You've got to hear my side. Right here Harry. Huh? What are you? Take a look at this fourth body. Why should I? Pull the blanket back Harry. Oh. No. No. Harry. That's it. The whole works. I don't care what you heard or read in the papers. That's the story. Just like it happened. No bunk. And thinking back. I guess I kind of hit the nail on the head in that speech. That I made that night. You know that part about no man can ever escape the responsibility of being his brother's keeper. I'm James Cagney for a magnificent performance. Mr. Cagney will return in just a moment. Well, after that performance of Jimmy Cagney's and your heartfelt expressions on the rights and wrongs of the driving man, it's hard to switch the conversation to auto light resistor spark plugs. I'm sure you'll find a way. Yes. I think I'll just say friends, switch to a set of auto light resistor spark plugs just as quickly as you can swing into a service station. When you replace your narrow gap spark plugs with wide gap auto light resistor spark plugs, your car will idle smoother. Give you better luck with lean gas mixtures. Actually save you gas dollars. What's more, auto light resistor spark plugs cut down spark plug interference with radio and television reception. Switch to auto light resistor spark plugs today. And remember, auto light means spark plugs. Ignition engineered resistor spark plugs. Auto light means batteries. Stay full batteries. Auto light means ignition system. The lifeline of your car. And now here again is Mr. James Cagney. It's always a pleasure to appear on suspense, but I was especially pleased when Tony Leader asked me to do tonight's story. That's because I feel strongly about the kind of thing that happened to Harry Graham. I believe that any person who gets behind the wheel of a car assumes a great responsibility to himself, to his family, to his fellow men. That one moment of carelessness or recklessness or drunkenness can mean a lifetime of pain and misery for someone. And it might be you or me. Yes, when you're driving an automobile, we are our brother's keeper. Over the holiday season and all the time, drive carefully. Next week on Radio's Outstanding Theatre of Thrills, Herbert Marshall will appear in a story with a Christmas atmosphere. Another study in suspense. James Cagney is now appearing in the photo play of William Saroyan's prize stage hit The Time of Your Life. Copies of tonight's suspense play No Escape by Larry Marcus will be available for educational use by groups interested in highway safety. They may be obtained by Writing, Suspense, the Columbia Broadcasting System, Hollywood, California. Music was composed by Lucian Moraweck and conducted by Lud Bluskin. The entire production was under the direction of Anton M. Lieder. In the coming weeks, suspense will present such stars as Ronald Coleman, Robert Montgomery, Dana Andrews and Frank Sinatra. Make it a point to listen each Thursday to Suspense, Radio's Outstanding Theatre of Thrills. And next Thursday, same time, hear Herbert Marshall. Suspense show? All right, Mr. Wilcox. Autolight and CBS wish to thank the radio editors and columnists of America for electing suspense as the best history show in the annual balloting conducted by Motion Picture Daily for the magazine Fame. Good night. Switch to Autolight. This is CBS, the Columbia Broadcasting System.