 Now, AutoLite and its 60,000 dealers and service stations present... Suspense! Tonight, AutoLite brings you Mr. Ralph Edwards in Ghost Hunt, a suspense play produced and directed by Anton M. Leader. Friends, replace worn-out narrow-gap spark plugs with a set of those new wide-gap AutoLite resistor spark plugs. Your motor will idle smoother, give better performance on leaner gas mixtures, actually save gas. These winning benefits are all made possible by a newly developed AutoLite 10,000 ohm resistor built right into every AutoLite resistor spark plug, making practical a wider spark gap setting, and that's what does the trick. What's more, AutoLite resistor spark plugs with this exclusive AutoLite resistor have greatly increased electrode life and cut down on radio and television interference. So folks, see your AutoLite dealer and have him replace old worn-out narrow-gap spark plugs with a set of the new AutoLite resistor spark plugs. Remember, you're always right with AutoLite. And also remember the AutoLite suspense show is now on television. Every Tuesday night in many parts of the country. And now, AutoLite presents Ralph Edwards in a tale well-calculated to keep you in suspense. Yeah, didn't that leave you high, huh? Left me feeling treetop tall. That was Louie Armstrong's I Can't Give You Anything But Love. And that's all we have time for on the hot and mellow hour tonight. Yes, yes, yes, this is Smiley Smith, your favorite disc jockey. I hope a hope bootin' the hot and mellow hour home for this evening. I'll be back again tomorrow night, minus the music, but with a little surprise for you. Tomorrow night, Friday night, as you know, is stunt night here at station WXP. And have I got a stunt for you? Last week, if you remember, I planted my wire recorder in the steam room at a lady's Turkish bath and let you listen in on the playback, remember? Well, tonight, as soon as I leave the studio, do you know where I'm going? Your friend Smiley is going to spend the night in a haunted house on a spool hunt. You heard me, a spool hunt in a haunted house. I'm bringing a little old wire recorder along with me. And if you tune in tomorrow evening at this time, you'll learn what it's like to spend the night in a haunted house. Ain't that something? A real haunted house. No kidding, four people are known to have committed suicide there. So tune in tomorrow night and share a real thrill with your old pal Smiley. I must be crazy Smith. Good night. Care for a cigar, Mr. Thorpe? I got some cigars in the dice there. No. Well, no reason for you to carry a chip on your shoulder, Mr. Thorpe. Oh, really? Well, I don't like this fool stunt. Well, I don't see it as a fool stunt at all. I really don't. I think it's the only way you're gonna unload this house. Ordinary selling methods won't work in a case like this. I don't forget the reputation saddling this house. Four suicides since 1939. You know what people call it? The death trap. Yes, it's a lot of nonsense. Sure, but try to convince people of that. Anyway, when this disc jockey offered me this chance to kill all the rumors about the death... about the property, I just naturally jumped and took him up at it. Especially since it don't cost a cent. You sure about that? I'm not liable for a penny. Not a cent. We're doing him a favor, letting him use the place he said. Thank me for the chance last night when I drove him out here. So one hand washes the other, as the fella says. He got a chance to pull off a stunt, and the wire recording will prove the people the property is a number one, and we increase the chance of selling the place. Well, as long as it doesn't cost me anything. Not a thing. He's using his own recorder, and I'm paying for the rental of a couple of walkie-talkies he hooked up to it. Well, what about this Reed? Does he charge anything? He comes gratis, too. Dr. Reed is a... whatchamacallit, a psychic investigator. Belongs to a couple of societies that do nothing but hunt ghosts. He showed me articles he's written about it in their magazine. Well, here's the house. Yeah, looks real nice in the sunshine, don't it? Man, smell that sea breeze. If you don't have to sell me, well, let them know we're here. Probably asleep up all night and everything. Why don't they come out? Do you think they've gone? I told them last night I'd pick them up around 11. Smith! Smith! Hey, Smiley! Dr. Reed! Yeah, fast asleep, I guess. We better go and wake him up. Of course they may have taken the bus back to town. No, no, no, it's a two mile hike to the main highway. Smith! Smiley! Where are you? Waker! You don't suppose... do you? Oh, no, no. Smith! Dr. Reed! What's that clicking noise from in there? Well, it's his wire recorder he left it running. These machines cost a lot of money. Doesn't he care if he uses up his batteries? Well, where is he? Where's this Reed? Maybe they're upstairs. Smith! Hey, anybody home? They must have walked to the highway and taken the bus. You wouldn't have left these machines. Well, where are they then? Where are they? Hold on, don't get excited, Mr. Thorpe. Don't tell me not to get excited. If something's happened to them in my house, I'm liable. Well, you try this side. I'll try that. All right. Smith! Hey, Smiley! Smith! Smith! McDonald, come here. Well, what, what it? Oh, no. Reed. Dr. Reed. No, no, don't touch him, Mr. Thorpe. You'll get your hands on... look. What? Is he dead? I can still feel his pulse. We better get him to the hospital fast. Cigar, Mr. Thorpe? No, no, thanks. Why don't I try to relax? A nurse said Reed would be all right as soon as he's had a blood transfusion. You told the radio station to be sure and call us as soon as they had any word about Smith? Yes, I told him. Why don't you sit down? No, I'm all at sixes and sevens. What do you suppose happened out there last night? We're gonna know in just a second, just as soon as I can get this recorder set up. You don't suppose Smith and Reed got into a fight, do you? Yeah, there. Huh? A fight? I don't know. Well, what's wrong? Won't it work? Yeah, it works. Take it easy. Testing, one, two, three. Testing, one, two, three. All set, Dr. Reed? Mr. McDonald? Okay, here we go. This is Smiley Smith speaking. Smiley Smith, the ghost hunter. I don't know whether to hope this will turn out to be a success for the sake of the program or a failure for my own sake. Anyway, all the preparations have been made now and it's up to the spooks. I better tell you where we are. Right now we're standing on the lawn of a house 12 miles above Malibu Beach. The ocean is 100 feet away, straight down. The house is perched on a cliff and there's a sheer drop of about 100 feet right into the Old Pacific. Maybe you can hear the surf pounding. I'll turn up the volume. You hear it? Now, I'm gonna have you meet two gentlemen who are here with me. Incidentally, we're the only people around for miles and miles. First, I'd like you to meet Dr. Clarence Reed of the British and American Psychical Research Guilds. Dr. Reed is a famous investigator of psychic phenomena and I'm very honored to be associated with him on this ghost hunt. He's smiling in an embarrassed sort of way. Yeah, much too kind, Mrs. Miss. Dr. Reed has conducted experiments in this field with such great believers in spiritualism as Oliver Lodge and Arthur Conan Doyle. He looks a bit like Santa Claus. He's short and stocky. You don't object to you, Dr. Reed. No, no, you need it. And he has a magnificent white beard, a truly great beaver. Dr. Reed is so enthusiastic about ghost hunting that he got out of a sick bed this evening to be with us. Excuse me. My lungs. I was gassed in the First World War. Yeah. Anyway, Dr. Reed and I are here on the lawn looking at the house. Can't see much. It's around 11 p.m. now. Seems to be a rambling sort of house, two stories high. Since it was built, there have been four suicides here. Is that right? That's right. Now, into the mic. Four suicides since 1939. I better tell them who you are so they won't think you're a ghost. Standing with the doc and me is a real estate agent, Mr. Charles McDonnell. He handles his property and he can tell you a lot more about it than I can. Well, the house was built by a man named Marcus. Toby Marcus, an orange grower. Built the house as a wedding present for his wife. A month after they moved in, she took her own life. On the day of her funeral, he committed suicide the same way. There have been two other cases since then. Did they all jump into the ocean? Yeah, all four of them, right over there. The last one was actually seen doing it. About three years ago, he was seen running like all get out the edge of the cliff and he was shouting and laughing and yelling as though there was people at his side running right along with him. You kidding? No, it's a fact. He was laughing and yelling and running and when he got to the edge right over there, he jumped and never came above water. As good an argument against cold bass as ever I've heard. Since then, people just refused to live in this house. Silly, I call it. Anyway, if you and Dr. Reed find any sign of a spook, I'll advise the owner to pull the house down and rebuild. But if you don't find anything, I'm hoping this will convince folks that here's a real buy. Yeah, okay, Mr. Smith, you and the doctor on your own. I'll be by in the morning to pick you up around 11. Goodbye, Mr. McDonnell. I hope there's something left for you to pick up in the morning. Well, it's almost pitch black, folks. And I guess Dr. Reed and I ought to begin. I don't believe in ghosts, never have. But what I say is this, if you're dead set on looking for them, this is a dandy place to do it. So long! Mr. McDonnell just checked out. And then there were two. Well, three. Oh, my dog, yeah. Folks, I have my dog Jeff with me. He's a wire-haired terrier, three years of age. And he can talk. Yeah, say hello, Jeff. Come on, Jeff, say hello. Come on. Well, anyway, he's a wire-haired terrier and he's three years old. Shall we go inside now, Dr. Reed? I was about to suggest you. Now, how do we hunt ghosts, doctor? How do we do it, huh? Well, we don't really hunt. If there should be any in the house, they will come to us. How cozy. And please, not ghosts. Do not refer to them as ghosts. We know them as apparitions. Now, remember, I've no desire to hurt their feelings. For ghosts are concerned, I say, live and let live. Now, we've opened the front door now. Maybe you heard the hinge squeak a little. Now, we're standing here looking in. Can't see much. Smell sort of musty and damp. What's the matter, Jeff? What's the matter, boy? Jeff, oh, come on now, come on. My dog seems to object to entering this house. He has all four feet braced and he's straining against the leash. Perhaps he senses something we don't. Like apparitions, maybe? Perhaps. It's not unusual. Animals lack the veneer of sophistication we humans possess and are more sensitive to such ammunitions. Yeah, come on, Jeff. Now, stop this nonsense. He probably smells a mouse or rat or something. Come on, Jeff, we're going in whether you like it or not. There's a short entrance hall and over there at the end of it is the second floor, Jeff. And over here at the left is what seems to be a large reception room. We're entering this large room now. There are windows over there, French windows, and through them I can see the ocean. The electricity hasn't been turned on, so all I have to see by is a flashlight. Not a very powerful one at that. Dr. Reed is now adjusting his walkie-talkie. It's hooked up to my recorder so that he can cut in while he's hunting and tell us what he's found. Here's a few words from Doc on his investigation through the house. Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Smith has introduced me as a ghost hunter. He spoke, I think, in a spirit of skepticism and levity. I'd like to assure you all that my purposes here are serious. I have spent my entire life seeking reliable proof of the appearances of apparitions. Have you ever seen any, ever? I have seen phenomena which lead me to believe in the possibility of their existence, although I have never seen any. I have never felt sensitive to the evidence of their existence. This house, for example, affects me profoundly. It doesn't seem to affect you in the same way. I'm not too happy about all this, if that's what you mean. You are not psychic and therefore not sensitive to these matters as I am. I imagine the question in the minds of those of you listening to us is, shall we find apparitions? I don't know. But I feel they are here and that they are evil. I shall soon know. Dr. Reed's leaving the room now to make a tour of the house. First thing I'm going to do is open the windows and let some French air in. Feels better already. Cooler anyway. I know that... What was... a bat, a bat, just flew, flew into the room. I think it's a bat, not a bird. I didn't actually see it. Just its shadow and its fan in my face. There it is again. It touched me. Is it fast? It's not here. Dr. Reed. Dr. Reed. Dr. Reed! For suspense, AutoLight is bringing you Mr. Ralph Edwards in Radio's outstanding Theatre of Drills Suspense. Oh, snap out of it. Oh, I'm reading a letter about the new wide gap AutoLight resistor smart plug tap. It's from Mrs. Clark Perry right here in Hollywood. 1948 station wagon has given constant trouble. Finally the garage man said all the difficulty with spark plugs and he installed a set of AutoLight resistor spark plugs. Now the car runs beautifully. The very first time my husband has been really pleased. Smart people to take his advice. Half you know as more and more people learn about wide gap AutoLight resistor spark plugs and how they make an engine idle smoother, give better performance on leaner gas mixtures and leave on gas. Why then more people will replace old worn out narrow gap spark plugs with sensational new wide gap AutoLight resistor spark plugs. Any more letters like that, Hono? Plenty, half plenty. Here's another one from New York City. Read it to me later, Hono. We haven't time because here's suspense. And now AutoLight brings back to our Hollywood sound stage Ralph Edwards left in ghost hunt. A tale well calculated to keep you in suspense. Jeff, Jeff, Jeff come back here. Jeff, you fool dog come back here. Dr. Read. Dr. Read. Dr. Read. Read speaking. What is it to me? Jeff has run off. My dog, he jumped through the window and ran off. Oh, so I told you he sent something about this house, didn't I? Yeah, you want to come and see if you can determine what it was exactly? It set him off? Soon. I'm making my way slowly up the stairs toward the second floor now. I'm halfway up. I'll be down with you soon. Folks, my dog's run away. You probably heard him howling. He jumped through the window and took off. Never did anything like that before. Brightened by the fat, I guess. Personally, alone here in this big room I can understand how he must have felt. This isn't a cheerful spot by any means. I may not be psychic, but I sure have a feeling this house doesn't want us here. Excuse me. I have something of great interest to report. I'm now standing in an alcove on the second floor trying to recover my breath. As I reached the head of the stairs I felt what I think is a definite psychic manifestation. I felt suddenly as though I had been punched in the solar plexus. That's the only way I can describe it. At the same time, I began to perspire. My head is still swimming slightly and I have difficulty in swallowing. My pulse rate is around 110 in a minute. The sense of evil is very strong. I feel very, what shall I say, profoundly depressed. You want me up there? No. I prefer to remain up here alone. The presence of a disbeliever such as you might interfere with my investigation. Folks, I'd like you to get a picture of what it's like here. Very quiet for one thing. I've never been in such a quiet place. And it's pretty dark. No light except my flashlight. Tell you what, you go now and douse all the lights you have on. Go ahead, put out the lights, and that'll give you a clearer feeling of how it is here with me. Go ahead, put out the lights. Hey, did you hear that? Real estate agent told me I'd probably hear rats and mice in the walls. I can certainly hear them now. Even you can hear them, I think. It's as though... Dr. H. speaking, I've been working my way toward the front room, the one directly above the one in which Mr. Smith is now. The vibrations have become stronger and more and more pronounced as I approach it. I think I am on the verge of an important discovery. Important discovery, did you get that? Now I can hear Dr. Reed moving about in a room above. I don't suppose you can. Have a try anyway, huh? Hear him? I hope he finishes his investigation soon because, quite frankly, I'd like to get out of here. I can well imagine people becoming unhinged in this place. Right now, I find myself pretty jumpy. Not being very brave, am I? Being alone in this room down here that does it, this darned old house, it's very, I mean, you know, the atmosphere. It's so very... I wish only to make this hurried report before continuing with the investigation in this room. I have carefully sounded out all the parts in this room, and the emanations are most strong from what appears to be a closet before which I am now standing. As soon as I open the door to this closet, I will have, I think, a thing of great interest to communicate. I find no key to the lock, and so I will attempt to remove the hinges with my pin knife, and I will tell you what I find when I open it. I'll tell you what it would cost to get me to open that door. In the basement at Fort... There's that bat again. It seems to like me the way it keeps... Each time it passes, it touches my face or my neck with its wings. Smelly things, bats. I don't suppose they bathe very often, if at all. I wonder how... Get away, you bat! Battle be the death of me! It's like a jingle, isn't it? Battle be the death of me, the death of me, the death of me, battle be the death of me. It isn't far from London. No, that isn't the way it goes. It's come down to Q in lilac time, in lilac time, in lilac time. Come down to Q in lilac time. It isn't far... I haven't thought of that since I was a kid in grammar school. See, I had a lonely childhood when you come right down to it. I mean, that's my affair, isn't it? Yes, it is. It certainly is. I have succeeded in removing the hinges to the door, and I find inside it is not a closet, but much larger. It is, I think, a dressing room. I have not yet been inside, but I am about to enter. What was I talking about? Oh, yeah, bats. Well, the bat flying back and forth in this room... Did you hear that? Did you hear it? Dr. Reed must have knocked something over in the dashing room. A chair. A chair, yeah, heavy chair by the sound of it. A chair, whatever it was, must have fallen right over my head. That's the way it sounded. I can see a small stain forming right on the ceiling, right over my head. I'm fishing grand across my foot, just that rat I think it was. I've always hated rats. Most people do, of course. That stain up there bothers me. It's gotten so big so soon. I think I'll take a chance and bother reading, asking what it is. Dr. Reed. Reed, can you hear me? Hello? Well, he didn't answer. I think he's just a little bit deaf. Think so. What do you suppose he's found, huh? I'm afraid there's rather dull for you listeners. I'm not finding so, of course. There. I heard him cough. Did you hear that cough? Hope he's all right. He got out of a sick bed to come here this evening, you know. He was gassed in the First World War and this place is beginning to get on my nerves a wee bit. Just a teensy-weensy bit. Reed. Speaking. Hello? He switched off. That's the bad cough he's got. I feel so lonely. Been alone so much in my life. Not so much now, of course, but when I was younger I was alone so much of the time, you know. Struggling to get ahead, living in a hall, bedroom, wondering where my next meal is coming from. I get the blues just remembering it. Seemed sad, young people having to spend so much time alone. Sad for old people too, of course. I'm saying a course a lot. Of course I am. Hey, that stain on the ceiling. It's grown amazingly. It's actually beginning to drip. I mean, form bubbles. They'll start dropping soon. Colored bubbles, they seem to be. Odd shaped stain, like a body lying on its back with its arm stretched out. It's tearful. I'll certainly advise Mr. McDonald to have this place pulled down. I'll go upstairs in a minute or two but you know, listeners, I really believe I go completely crazy if I had to stay here much longer. Where's your down? That's exactly what it does. It wears you down. It's a close and musty and here I feel sort of trapped. I don't know why I said that. That's what they call this place, you know, the death trap. There, what did I tell you? That stain started to drip drops, drip drops, drip drops. I'll catch the next one in my hand. Read! Dr. Read! I'm going upstairs now, listeners. I'm afraid something has happened to Dr. Read. Kidna, I mean, this is on the level. Which room could it be now, right? No, right, right, this is it, I think. Good evening, gentlemen. And madam, I'm so glad to see you. I was just aching to see somebody. Anybody. I've been so lonely down there. What have you done with the doctor? I know, I know he's been hurt. See the color of the bubble on my hand? What have you done with him? Make way, please, gentlemen, make way. Well, this isn't the funniest darn thing. This can't be Dr. Read lying here. He didn't have a red beard. Don't crowd me, gentlemen. Don't crowd me, please. You want me to go where with you? You want me to do what? Speak up, gentlemen, to the cliff. Down to the cliffs? You mean right now? Well, all right, if you'll come with me. I don't want to be alone anymore. You will come with me. Oh, good, come on, man, to the cliff. To the cliff. He jumped over the cliff. He jumped over the cliff. McDonald, he jumped over. Mr. McDonald, Mr. Thorpe, you may come in to see Dr. Read now. What? Uh-huh. Dr. Read is conscious. You may see him now. Is he able to talk? Just for a few minutes. In here. Come in, come in, gentlemen. How are you, Dr. Read? We've been waiting to see you. Yes, and I must apologize, gentlemen. I had a most unfortunate accident. Hemorrhage. Hemorrhage? Yes, my lungs, you know. Now, gentlemen... Hemorrhage? Dr. Read, what happened in that house? What happened to Smith? We've just been listening to a playback of the recordings you made out there. Smith? Isn't he with you? We've just heard the recording, Dr. Read. Smith jumped over the cliff. Into the ocean. Oh, that poor boy. Dr. Read, will you please tell us what happened? From what we heard on the recording, there were... ghosts in that house. Ghosts? I didn't see any ghosts. But, Smith, what about him? If he went over the cliff, it was fair that drove him over. What, gentlemen? I didn't see any ghosts. As for that unfortunate young man, who was he? That unfortunate young man. Who can say now what he saw? Or thought he saw? Thank you, Ralph Edwards, for displaying your versatility by appearing as guest star on Suspend. See, Harlow, that Edwards does everything. A half note does. Don't use that word on our auto light show. Oh, come now, Harlow. Don't you use that word, as you call it? How? Don't you say that auto light resistor spark plugs make your car engine idle smoother? Yes, but... And your car gives better performance on leaner gas mixtures. Saves gas? Sure does. I mean, do. I mean, does. Are we devils? Ralph, you tricked me. Well, anyhow, it does my heart good to tell people that auto light makes 100 products for cars, trucks, airplanes, and boats in 28 plants from coast to coast. Auto light also makes complete electrical systems for many makes of America's finest cars. Batteries, spark plugs, generators, starting motors, spark plug wire, battery cable, coils, distributors. All ignition engineered to fit together perfectly, work together perfectly because they're a perfect team. The lifeline of your car. So, folks, don't accept electrical parts because they're good. Remember, you're right with auto light. And now here again is Ralph Edwards. I want to thank Tony Leder and his great cast of actors for helping to make my appearance on suspense a very pleasant consequence. Like all of you, I'm a great suspense fan and I'm looking forward to next week when radio's Outstanding Theatre of Thrills brings you Joseph Cotton in The Day I Died, another gripping study in Suspense. Tonight's suspense play was adapted for radio by Walter Newman from an original story by H.R. Wakefield with music composed by Lucien Moraweck and conducted by Lud Bluskin. The entire production was under the direction of Anton M. Leder. Make it a point to listen next Thursday to suspense Radio's Outstanding Theatre of Thrills. Remember next Thursday, same time here, Joseph Cotton in The Day I Died. You can buy auto light resistor spark plugs, auto light staple batteries, auto light electrical parts at your neighborhood auto light dealers. Switch to auto light. Good night. This is CBS, the Columbia Broadcasting Zessell.