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Faster than a speeding bullet or powerful than a locomotive able to leak all buildings at a single-bound
Up on the sky. It's a bird. It's a plane. It's Superman
Yes, it's Superman strange visitor from the planet Krypton who came to us with amazing physical power
Beyond those of mortal men and old disguised as Clark Kent mild-mannered reporter for a great metropolis in newspaper
wages a never-ending battle for truth and justice
They metropolis becomes the scene of a spectacular series of robberies when the finger of suspicion point directly to Superman and his friends
and the transcribed case of double trouble
Our story begins at central police headquarters in the trouble us where we find Superman and his guys of mild-mannered Clark Kent and
Cut reporter Jimmy Olson waiting for Inspector Henderson to give them the latest report on a death robbery which took place the night
What's taking the inspector so long, Mr. Kent? He doesn't come out soon. We're gonna miss the final addition
Well, they put 20 suspects in the lineup Jim can't expect Mrs. Vendike to identify the criminal just like that
You know, I'm between you and me, Mr. Kent. I don't expect how to identify him at all. Why not?
She said she never saw him. She only remembers his voice
Where is she recognized it anywhere?
This funny guy stealing paintings. What's so funny about it? They worth almost $50,000
I saw them myself only last week. You did?
Uh-huh. I went up to Mrs. Vendike's home to do a story on them, and I said
Oh, here comes the inspector now.
What does Mrs. Vendike? She doesn't look too happy, does she?
That's right. I'm looking too glad to do whatever I can. I do so want to get my paintings back. Oh, Inspector
Oh, hello, too. Hi. No luck. Nope
Mrs. Vendike, would you care to make a statement for the press? What? Why you?
You're the reporter who came to interview me last week up to. Yes, that's right. I'm very sorry to hear about the robbery
But I know Inspector Henderson will catch up with the criminal very soon. Well, thank you, Ken.
Inspector Henderson has already caught up with the criminal. Oh?
Inspector, arrest this young man. What?
Mr. Ken? He is the one. I'd know his voice anywhere.
My boy. arrest him in such a way. He stole my painting.
The case of double trouble. A new Superman adventure complete in one episode. Well, continue in just a moment.
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And now back to the adventures of Superman and the case of Double Trouble.
Standing by at Central Police headquarters with Jim Olson waiting for the latest developments in the robbery of an art collection valued at $50,000.
Heartket was astounded when Mrs. Van Dyke, owner of the stolen paintings, suddenly claimed that she recognized his voice and accused him of the crime.
Now an inspector Henderson's private office can't try to laugh off the accusation.
Oh, it's ridiculous inspector. Mrs. Van Dyke made a mistake, that's all he swears.
Her guilty can't be reasonable inspector. You don't think I am, do you?
Or do you? I don't know what to think.
Oh no, wait a minute inspector, you can't accuse Mr. Cannot.
I'm not accusing anybody of anything and you keep out of this.
Oh yes, sir.
The fact still remains that Mrs. Van Dyke positively identifies your voice.
Wish you would have a ears examined for a head.
Olson, I am warning you.
I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
So she's positive. I'm guilty and I'm positive. I'm not. Now where do we go from here?
Do you want to book me? Get my fingerprints, put me in a cell.
Now look, Kent, understand my position. We're just sure.
Mrs. Van Dyke has a lot of influence in Metropolis.
And unless I investigate you thoroughly, well, she'll go right over my head to the DA.
So, cooperate. Would you? Okay, okay. Start investigating and that's better.
Now, you admit you knew about the painting.
Of course, I did a feature story on them for last Sunday's magazine section.
You knew exactly where they were and Mrs. Van Dyke's home.
Yes, she took me around herself.
Now look here in Spain.
Maybe the inspector's only trying to get his fat straight.
Go on, inspector.
Well, there's one thing that'll get you off the roof.
Proof of your wear about for last night at the time of the robbery.
Midnight.
Oh, no, we're getting somewhere.
I was up in Bayville from about 10 in the evening until two in the morning.
Bayville?
Doing what?
Well, nothing is a turned out.
What do you mean?
The chief, uh, Perry White, told me around nine and asked me to meet him at a hotel up there.
He said he was on the trail of a story.
So, I caught a train at 915 and was there by 10.
But, I don't know, somehow we missed connections.
I never did see the chief.
But, but Mr. Kent.
Yes, Kent?
You couldn't have been.
I mean, uh, that is...
Oh, stop scammering, Olson, and I have nothing.
I made a mistake.
A mistake, nothing.
What were you going to say?
Well...
Go on, Jim, don't try to hide anything.
Mr. Kent, did you forget you called me at 10 o'clock and asked me if I wanted to see the main event at the arena last night?
I want to.
Well, well, I was also surprised.
You know I usually go to bed around 10.
Wait a minute, wait a minute, Jim, let me get this straight.
I phoned you last night and asked you to go to the fights with me.
Uh-huh.
Oh, I'm sorry, Mr. Kent.
I didn't mean to get you into trouble.
Well, Kent?
Believe me, Inspector, I never called him.
I was in Bayville as I told you, Jim.
You must have made a mistake.
Yeah, yeah, that's what I said.
I forget it.
What, Inspector?
I'm afraid I can't.
Well, look, all you have to do is talk to Curry.
Why, he'll tell you.
That's exactly what we're going to do.
And right now...
Oh, puppy cock.
I never sent you to Bayville last night.
I never sent you anywhere.
But chief, I talked to you myself.
You said you were at the hotel.
You were going to wait for me.
Kent, I didn't leave this office until after tonight.
I didn't talk to you or anyone.
Oh, all right, Kent.
How do you explain it?
I can't.
Chief, are you sure you haven't forgotten me?
I forgot.
How could I forget a 30-mile trip?
Good job, Blasca.
Come in.
I brought you a coffee, Mr. Boyne.
Coffee?
Who wanted coffee?
Why, you did, sir.
It's back right called up five minutes ago on night.
I read as fast as I could.
Great Caesar's ghost.
What's going on around here?
I never asked her for coffee.
Oh, gosh, Mr. White.
If you forgot something you did only five minutes ago,
then maybe you really did call Mr. Kent last night.
I said to you why I didn't call.
Kent, if I didn't order call me either.
Hey, calm down, chief.
You're both here.
All of all the idiotic things.
Well, I still think...
With what?
With what?
Shut up.
Yes, sir.
Yes, the coffee's getting cold, Mr. White.
Well, are you taking that coffee out?
Hey, wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Will they come back out?
Yes, sir.
Did you see me last night?
Yes, sir.
Where?
Right here in your office.
One time.
Oh, 11 o'clock.
You called for some coffee and donuts
and I brought them up to you.
Thank you, Willie.
Thank you very much.
That's all, and you can leave the coffee here.
Yes, sir.
Will you be wanting anything else later?
No, thank you, Willie.
Goodbye.
Well, Mr. Olson, are you satisfied now?
Yes, sir.
So, where do we stand, Henderson?
I'm a great kid.
It's standing on a great big spot.
Let's have the truth.
Kent, I've told you the truth.
Inspector, I did not steal those paintings.
And why did you make up the alibi
about being a baby?
I didn't make it up.
But she called me and told me to meet him there.
And I know you didn't commit that robbery,
but you're not helping yourself by lying.
Chief, I'm not lying.
Believe me, I can't found it.
Can a man have any peace in this whole office?
I don't want me to answer, Mr. Olson.
I'm not a couple, Olson.
Sorry.
Hello?
Oh.
Oh, well, put it on.
It's the worst thing.
Yes, sir.
What?
Well, calm down.
Calm down.
Will you, I can understand the word you're saying.
What?
You're well?
Great Caesar's ghost.
The matter.
Lois is in jail.
She's one jail.
Yeah, she's being held on suspicion of robbery.
Thanks.
And as you got me out of that awful jail, Chief,
I felt like a criminal.
Oh, watch the story, Lois.
I don't know, Chief.
Believe me.
I don't know.
Lois, they wouldn't hold you for nothing.
What do you think they're doing to you, Mr. Canne?
You.
Are you in trouble, too, Clark?
So it seems.
Oh, here's Henderson.
He'll get us to do it.
Well, did you get the report from the detective
who arrested Miss Lane?
Yes, I did.
And it looks pretty bad, I'm afraid.
I didn't do anything.
I was minding my own business.
Not just around the Lois, just a minute.
Let's inspect the housing talk.
It seems that a woman dressed in a gray suit
entered her private home on Ridgewood Drive,
held up the button and the downstairs made,
stole two main coats valued at $15,000 a piece
and made her clean get away.
A woman in a gray suit.
Gosh, you're wearing a gray suit, Miss Lane?
Well, whatever, Jim, there's more than one gray suit
in the troublemaker.
But you were picked up only three blocks away from the house
five minutes after the robbery took place.
And the butler and the maid both identified.
She was the woman who stole the first.
That's ridiculous.
They were mistaken.
Inspector Henderson, do you mean they saw Lois?
Well, no.
No, they didn't really see her face.
She was wearing a heavy veil.
I never wear a veil.
I hate them.
But they recognized her voice.
Her voice.
She.
Lois.
What are you doing on Ridgewood Drive?
Waiting for Clark.
You what?
You heard me.
I was waiting for you.
You told me to meet you on the corner of Hillcrest
in the drive.
And the next time you keep me waiting, Clark, can't I?
No, wait a minute.
Wait a minute, Lois.
When did I tell you to meet me there?
You found me only two hours ago.
I.
What is the matter with you, Clark?
Lois, I haven't spoken to you all day.
What?
Two hours ago, I was down at police headquarters with Jim.
That's right.
And he didn't call any?
No, wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
This is going to be fine.
It certainly is.
First, Olson says, can't call him and can't deny it.
Then Ken claims you called him and you deny it.
Now, Miss Lane says, can't call her.
And he denies that.
Don't get no mixed up.
Hey, what kind of a song and dance are you
people giving me anyway?
Well, I've also known this thing.
No, no, no, no.
If you tell me to meet Ken.
And you, too, Miss Lane, $50,000 worth of paintings
and $30,000 worth of furs have been stolen.
And you're my only suspect.
What's the matter with you?
I'll have you.
If you want to tonight to mess up your minds about who
or who and who was where.
And if your stories don't make sense,
I'm going to put wind.
We'll be back in a moment with part two
of the case of Double Trouble, a complete supermanventure
story.
Souls and fires.
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I'll be back in a few minutes with the address,
so be sure to keep listening.
And now, back to the adventurers of Superman,
and part two of the case of double trouble.
Suspected of having committed daring robberies,
Clark Kent and Chosline find themselves entangled
in a web of circumstantial evidence, unable to prove their innocence
without the help of Terry Wright and Jimmy Olson,
who in turn have unwittingly become the chief witnesses
against the two reporters.
Now, early in the evening, we find Kent and Lois
in the little coffee shop located in the lobby
of the daily planet, the line trying to unravel
the confusing threads of evidence
before Inspector Henderson can fulfill his threat of arrest.
Let's go over it, point by point, Clark Kent.
OK.
You say the chief called you from Babil
and told you to meet him there and the chief denies there.
And Jim said, you called him to invite him to the fight,
and you say you did.
That's right.
And you claim I told you to meet me on Ridgewood Drive,
which I did not do.
Right.
So where is that limit?
Behind the eight ball.
Well, eh?
Yeah, Mr. Kent.
Give us a repeat here, will you?
Do I can't buy a gift?
Still cost me some amount of money.
Well, trouble hasn't affected your appetite, obviously.
No, I should, both know we're innocent.
Yes, but I said to Henderson doesn't
and was too positive at identification,
how can he help putting handcuffs on us?
No.
You know, it's funny we should both be accused
after we wrote stories on the stolen articles.
Me on the paintings, you on the first.
Me on, Mr. Kent.
No.
Lane.
And Berger's in court.
Oh, thanks, Willie.
Put it on the tab, will you, Willie?
Say, I understand you and Miss Lane are in hot water.
Oh, boiling water, Willie.
If you need me as a character witness,
it's something that gets sing out.
Oh, Willie.
I'll tell them you're both the couple of 12 guys.
Thank a lot.
We just hope it won't be necessary.
Well, if there's anything I can do.
OK, Willie, thank you.
OK, I've got to go out for a minute.
If anybody comes in, will you tell them the way
I'll be right back?
Yeah, sure, thank you, Willie.
Hello, dear.
You know, Clark, I've been thinking,
we both received phone calls.
We didn't green them up.
So if you didn't call me and the chief didn't call you,
someone else must have been.
Brilliant deduction, Miss Lane.
All right, Smiley, but I know you're a voice talk
and you know the chief voice.
So how could we possibly make a mistake in a dedicated...
How did Mrs. Vendike identify my voice?
How did the butler spot yours?
Clark, do you think it's possible for someone?
Oh, that's Willie's phone.
You better answer it.
OK.
Hello?
Hello?
Mr. Kent?
Uh-huh.
This is Jim.
Jim?
How do you know I was down here?
Oh, I called upstairs.
Mr. White told me you were down in some coffee.
Oh?
What's up?
Listen, I think I'm on the trail of something pretty hot.
Can you and Miss Lane meet me right away?
Why, yes, of course.
Where?
Corner of Market in 27th Street.
Market in 27th, got it?
And will you hurry, Mr. Kent?
Sure thing, Jim.
See you in a few minutes.
It was Jim.
Oh?
He wants us to meet him right away.
Is on the trail of something hot?
He is?
Yes, and so am I.
Come on, lowest.
Let's make tracks.
Are you sure this is where Jim goes to meet him?
Positive.
Market in 27th.
Well, then where is he?
You got me.
Clark.
You don't think this is another one of those cranks?
There was Jim's voice.
Lowest house.
Where did that?
See, wait a minute.
Didn't Jim cover an assignment on some perfectly matched diamonds a couple of days
ago?
Why?
Yes.
The chief wanted pictures of the sounds for the road of reviewer, and he sent Jim along
with a bugger to get material for the cat.
Uh-huh.
Clark, you don't think.
I'm beginning to.
Who owned those diamonds, lowest?
A man named, uh, uh, uh, Carver.
Yes, Carver.
He lives over on the west side.
That's for an avenue.
But Clark, I don't.
Wait a minute.
Look.
Briefly cars coming on Market Street.
Yes.
To walk coming up the street.
As far across 27th street.
All converging on this corner.
What in heaven's name is going on?
I don't know.
Well, there's the chief.
He.
And?
Well, lower.
Yes.
What incarnation are you two doing here?
That's the same of you.
Why all the police cars?
Like the Henderson called them out on a general alarm and told me to go with them.
There's something going on in this building here.
There is?
What?
No, how do I know?
What chief the buildings vacant?
Baker.
How do you know, Clark?
Well, uh, uh, the windows are all dark, and some of them are even broken.
Why don't you think this place has been occupied in you?
Well, I'll be.
Now, what in places got into Henderson?
He calls squad cars from as far as the west side to cover this.
I have.
And his chief.
But chief, you mean there's no police protection on the west side?
I don't know.
I'm telling you the beat, but they can't move fast in case the trouble.
Chief, get these men back with them along and get over to the carbon mansion on black
and avenue as fast as you can.
But why?
Why?
You explain.
I've got to get moving.
Where are you going?
Where do you think?
Hurry up.
No, what is that idiot raping about?
I'll tell you about it on the way, chief.
We better do as he says.
We better do as he says.
We better do as he says.
We better do as he says.
We better do as he says.
We better do as he says.
We better do as he says.
What's going on here?
Why all the fireshots?
There you should know.
You told him.
I want.
Are you?
And why did you tell me to come in?
I don't know what you're talking about.
You called me less than 15 minutes ago.
That's devil I can't hear.
Here is the white.
You called me and the fire commissioner.
Where's your phone?
Him too.
Hey, listen, you're out of your mind.
Just a minute.
Just a minute.
I think I know the answer to this.
Inspector, did you order 10 police cars over the market street a few minutes ago?
I most certainly did not.
Do you mean to stand there and deny your phone and told me to go with the phone?
You called me?
I did not.
Do you understand?
Do you understand?
You've both been tricked the same way cars and I were.
I know Henderson's voice when I hear it.
Now listen to me.
Please, will you listen to me?
Maybe I can help you, Miss Laine.
I'm Superman.
And you?
Superman.
Superman.
Do you know what's going on here?
Yes, I've picked you up with the carver mansion.
I pulled him out of a pretty tight scrape there.
I'll say.
What happened?
The carver accused me of stealing his diamonds.
You fool.
He recognized my voice.
Oh, not again.
For the last time, I promise you, Inspector.
Now if you'll all go back to the daily planet.
Clark Kent will explain the whole thing to you.
I'll be back in a moment with the climax of the case of Double Trouble.
So, keep listening.
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And now back to the adventures of Superman
and the climax of the case of Double Troubles.
Drushing over to the daily planet,
first white chimos and lowest lane,
and inspect your hinders and find Clark Kent in his private office,
and immediately overwhelm him with questions.
Everybody know about that.
Take it easy.
Take it easy. I can't answer all of you at once.
I'm beginning at the beginning.
I will, just as soon as I have absolute proof that my theory is correct.
What?
You've seen this is just another one of your wild hunches.
It's not as wild as you think, Inspector.
Wait a minute.
What are you doing?
Someone's coming.
Stand back against the wall, all of you.
And be quiet.
What's the idea, Mr. Kent?
I don't want anyone to know you're here.
Go on now, and no noise will come.
Why is it quiet?
Who is it?
Well, he missed the Kent.
I got your call.
Oh, yes.
Yes, I forgot all about it.
Wow.
Willie.
Of all of it.
So what?
He's just new.
I do it, Mr. Kent says.
Oh, thank you, Willie.
Waking kind of late, aren't you, Mr. Kent?
Yes, I am, Willie.
Matter of fact, you know that mess, Miss Lane and I were in?
Yeah.
Now, it's all cleared up.
You don't say?
Uh-huh.
A little while, I expect to find out exactly who cost it.
You do.
Oh, that's great.
I'm glad they hear it, Mr. Kent.
I thought she would be, Willie.
I guess they'd better be getting back to the shop, right?
Thanks for the coffee, Willie.
I'll clean the kitchen.
Dr. Kent, would you please tell me.
Well, what difference does it matter now, Mr. Kent?
If you know anything, Spill it.
When the police and fire departments of this city are sent out on false alarm.
Well, it's high time something was done about it.
I agree with you, Inspector.
If your information, the police squad cars were sent in a wild goose chase across town
to keep them from interfering with the robbery of the Carver Mansion.
I never sent them there.
I know you didn't.
And why did I supposedly call out the fire department to create confusion near the Carver Place?
Draw a crowd so the real thief could make a getaway unnoticed.
Do you know who it is?
Yes.
Well, who are you?
I don't come on with me to the Chiefs' private office, and I'll give you a personal introduction to him.
Take it easy now.
No noise.
Why in places are we putting around like this?
Did you rather scare him away?
Who are we?
Quiet now.
Get close to the door and listen.
Why is somebody inside using your phone?
Who?
Who?
Wait.
And listen.
Hello?
How are you?
Hello?
How are you?
Good evening.
It's impossible.
Hey, the squad can't run away.
Yeah, it's on that robbery charge.
It's in his office at the Daily Planet.
Now step on it.
And the Chiefs, if you were standing here right next to me, Inspector,
I'd have sworn that was you.
Why?
It's unbelievable.
Listen.
It's putting through another call.
Hello?
This is Barry White.
My Chiefs.
I believe in you.
That's it.
It's about to hand us in when he gets there.
Tell them I'm absolutely convinced now that my two reporters
plot can't lose Lane or Gilly.
Have them pick out.
Why do you leave me out, I wonder?
I'm not all of you heard enough.
I'll say.
Open that door, Anderson.
No!
There's your man, Henderson.
Oh, what's going on?
I hope you don't think I'm doing anything wrong.
I had to make a phone call, Mr. Williams.
Don't try to waste a lot of it, Willie.
We know the whole story.
We heard you.
No, no.
You can't prove anything.
Oh, can't we?
You're under arrest.
No, won't get me.
You won't.
He's time to get away.
Not so fast, Willie.
Oh!
What a nice going, Mr. Kent.
Why?
A guy never knew you had it in you.
Well, Kent, what's the story now?
And how did Willie learn he to do all this?
Well, Willie's an excellent doubler and imitator, as you heard.
He certainly is.
Uh-huh.
Well, tonight at the Art Collection robbery,
he imitated your voice, Chief, and told me to get out of town.
Then mimicked me in a call to Jim to destroy my alibi.
And finally, in committing the robbery,
used my voice again to point suspicion directly at me.
That he must have done the same thing to me.
Exactly, and disguised himself in a grey suit and heavy sale.
Before the robbery, he imitated my voice and a call to you
to get you close to the scene.
Well, then I guess he imitated your voice again, Miss Lang.
When he called me to meet at the Carver Place.
And he imitated you, Jim, to send lowest and me across town
to meet you at Market Street.
No matter a fact, that's when I first got suspicious.
You did, how?
How he said he knew I was in the coffee shop
because the chief had told him I was down there.
And the chief wasn't in his office at the time.
On top of that, he asked for both of us, lowest and myself, to meet him.
How would Jim have known lowest was there, too?
Yes, that's right.
Oh, that's real smart detective working stick.
Oh, wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
How did you know so much about the places you rob?
Where to find the paintings and the purse?
Well, that's where we were all.
A little careless, I'm afraid.
Willie simply overheard us talking about our assignments
while we were in this coffee shop.
We talked too much.
I'll know better next time, I'll talk.
He's coming, too.
And just in time to go down to headquarters with me.
I'll take good care of him, Inspector.
And for heaven's sake, don't give him a cell with a phone.
We'll all wind up talking to ourselves.
And so ends the case of double trouble.
Another transcribed Superman adventure mystery
in the new half-hour series.
Superman is a copyrighted feature,
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Faster than a speeding bullet.
Or powerful than a locomotive.
Able to lead claw buildings at a single bound.
Up on the sky, it's a bird.
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It's Superman.
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And so ends the case of Superman.
