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Are you really buying a car online on Auto Trader right now?
Really?
At a playground?
Yeah, really.
Look at these listings from dealers.
Wow!
Your search can really get that specific.
Really?
And you just put in your info and boom.
Cars in your budget.
Mommy!
Mommy's the second, honey.
You can really have a deliver?
Really.
Or I can pick it up with the dealership.
One sec, sweetie.
Mommy's buying a car.
Mommy's looking.
I think kid is walking up the slide.
Kyle, again, really?
Auto Trader.
Buy your car online.
Really?
Tyler Reddick here from 2311 Racing.
Another checkered flag for the books.
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Do you love romcoms?
Do you wish you could talk about Christmas movies year round?
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I'm Hollywood.
It's time now for Edmund O'Brien as Johnny Dulles.
That plane crash, Johnny.
Did you hear?
Yes, I just turned off my radio.
Oh, it's horrible.
Who is this?
Oh, I'm sorry.
It's Sam Harris, Columbia.
Oh, sure.
Does your company carry the policies on that airline?
Yes, but I'm not thinking of that.
That crash was planned.
They're definite about it now.
Yes, an explosion, some kind of a bomb.
There were 13 people killed in the plane.
They don't know how many in the houses that crashed into.
We've got to place responsibility.
The company wants to do whatever it can.
We've got to find whoever is responsible.
Sure, Mr. Harris.
You want me to go out?
Yes, we do.
Their airline representative is a man named Reed.
Go out and do everything you can.
In the mobile, there's a transcribed adventure of a man
with the action-packed expensive car.
America's fabulous freelance insurance investigator
yours truly Johnny Dollar.
Expense accounts submitted by Special Investigator Johnny
Dollar to Home Office Columbia All Risk Insurance Company.
The following is an accounting of expenditures
during my investigation of the fairway matter.
Expense account item 1, 250 cab fare
of the scene of the plane crash, which is
covered quite a bit of territory.
The fairway airlines plane had taken off at 8.20 p.m.
had reached an altitude of no more than 1,000 feet
and then had crashed, setting a fire to two houses
a short distance from the Springfield Hartford Airport.
I got there a little after 9.30.
One house had been partially saved,
but the other had been completely demolished.
The family of four living in it had been killed.
Appearance of one child in the first house
weren't expected to live.
And beyond twisted pieces of the plane
were scattered across a field.
Bragg went still smoking and turned white
by the phone from chemical extinguishing.
Mr. Reed.
Carl Reed.
Mr. Carl Reed.
Please, please, please.
No, I'm waiting at car.
We'll let you know soon as we're clear.
I'm a baby.
Yes, what you want.
My name is Dama.
The insurance company.
Insurance company.
Lord, this is hard to the time to worry about money.
I'm a private investigator.
They've hired me to help him anyway.
I can't fix the plane.
Oh, I'm sorry.
I'm misunderstood.
I guess I...
You have to excuse me.
This is good here.
There's some things I have to do.
Come along, Mr. Dog.
The chief doesn't know about the explosion.
And she thinks it's a chance where a daughter
wasn't on the plane.
She was.
She was a stewardess.
You haven't told me.
I can better hope for a couple of more hours.
Why shouldn't I?
I've had to tell too many people.
It's just horrible.
I think even worse than if it had been an accident.
When you know it was premeditated,
when you know someone planned it,
a kind of person would...
Would you have to beat him?
To plan something like this.
It's an end of a lay in the street,
but we have proof.
There was an explosion in the extreme after-section.
It destroyed all the control cables to the tailors.
I know it's both the civil aeronautics man as well.
Oh, that's right.
It's ending one of their best.
S. W. Newton.
Captain, then, how do the state police is here, though?
Oh, and I'd like to speak to him, then.
You have any idea where he is?
The last time I saw him, he would go by the dammit.
It's left.
You had to see the group of men over by the hangar?
Yeah.
They collected the bodies there.
They did as many identifications as possible.
I know it's bad, Mr. Rees,
but don't you go to pieces now.
I wouldn't help you.
I'll be alright.
I'll see you later.
Yeah.
I remembered Captain Jim Lennard in my case
we shared last year.
And I found him in the group of silent men.
The silence and the expressions
told better than words.
How they felt about the roar of sheet-raped bodies
on the ground.
I was Rees making up.
I thought it was going to pieces a little while ago.
He's still in pretty bad shape.
No, he's not alone.
But for us, anyway, dollars could have been worse.
Plain could have been filled.
Yeah, I trust my mind.
And you and I are thinking together, Captain,
that our approach will be to find out
if we can which victim was the planned victim.
What we have now, I don't see any other way to start.
Do you?
The possibilities, as I see them,
murder with a motive, suicide disguised
or a homicidal maniac that must cover it.
I have been covering the airport
for two miles circle around it.
Their orders are to question everybody they spot
and search every car.
It's about all we can do tonight.
Now I'll see you in the morning,
and if it's alright for you, it sure is.
Glad to have you on the case.
I'm in your mouth, is it mine?
Good.
No.
There's no other ambulance.
And get the rest of these poor devils into the morgue
to find out who they are.
The next morning, the official findings were released.
The explosive had been nitroglycerin.
They had been detonated by some electrical means,
which it was assumed was connected to a timing device
that had not yet been found.
Captain Lenhart's men had questioned
the number of suspicious characters
near the airport without result.
But he himself had received an anonymous tip
on a possible suspect, a Wilbur Quilo,
who was a member of the ground crew
that had serviced the plane just before its takeoff.
Quilo was shown to the captain's office
about 40 minutes after I'd gotten there.
Why'd you pick me to come up here?
Why didn't you get straker or mills?
They're over me.
It's just routine, really.
Routine, but you must have a reason.
I got a right to know if you got a reason, haven't I?
What do you think we started with you?
Well, I'm asking you, aren't I?
Don't be an ace of Wheeler.
Can't you say you don't know?
The stewardess who died in that crash, surely good you.
I know.
I know it.
We understand that she meant something to you.
What do you want to love with her?
Yes.
We understand that you made quite a pest of yourself
phoning her at home, waiting for her at the airport.
And then a week or so ago, you learned
she was going to marry the co-pilot who was killed, eh?
What's his name?
Bill Strand, wasn't it, Wheeler?
Yeah.
You're saying that you think I caused that crash, right?
You wanted to know why you were here?
I told you, it was just routine, Wheeler.
And it would have been if you'd acted differently.
But it sounded as though you were trying to hide some facts from us.
I won't anymore.
I don't have any reason to.
And why did you?
I don't know.
I've been going crazy since I heard about it last night.
I was still at the field, and I got sick, and I had to go home.
Yeah, we heard about that.
I got home, and I turned on my radio.
Then I heard what caused the crash and explosion.
I knew that a lot of things I've said and a lot of things
I'd done were going to make trouble for me.
Even getting sick and coming home was bad.
What were some of the other things?
I'd sent some pretty bad things to Shirley when I heard
she was going to marry Strand.
Then I had a fight with him.
You had a fight with him over the same thing?
Well, I guess for me, it was really over that.
He ordered me around one day, and I didn't like it,
and that's how it started.
He beat me up pretty bad, and then he'd have my job.
And I told him that I'd see the day is plain.
And when he a minute would be plastered to get some hill.
I know that it sounds like not, but it didn't mean anything.
It was just talk.
It was plenty of that, all right?
You heard enough, don't you?
I think so.
That's all I'm willing to do.
I can go.
Yeah.
Nobody would be stupid enough to compromise
himself the way you did, and pull a job like this.
And sure made a lot of mistakes, I know that.
Yeah.
Just be around, or we can find you if we want to talk to you
But I can't go back to the airport, sir.
I was going to call him and quit if it's all right, would you?
Just be where we can find you, that's all.
And we'll.
I'm sorry.
A lot of people are, Willer.
No.
Well, goodbye, Willer.
Thanks for coming down.
Yes, sir.
What do you think?
The only reason I'd say we get him is because he's the first one
we've questioned and things don't work out that way.
Yeah.
Colin?
The man just leaving my office.
Name is Willer.
Willer, willer, willer.
Have two of the boys get on him and stay.
I'll arrange to relieve him tonight.
Yeah, I think.
I'd like to know it's in his background.
I'd like to get a psychiatrist reaction, wouldn't you?
We'll learn about him.
No, let's get on this list of passengers and see
what we can get from their survivors.
Tyler Reddick here from 2311 Racing.
Victory Lane?
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Hi, I'm Alicia.
And I'm Stacy.
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And if you're like me, you're trying to figure out how artificial intelligence
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We spent the rest of the day in the efforts of six more of Captain Lenhart's men
preparing files on the ten dead passengers.
One file contained nothing but a name, Rupert Stone,
gotten from the ticket office records, is that of a man who had paid cash
for space to Augusta Maeve.
The hard-footed dress he had given was non-existent in the phone number
rang a bakery where no one had ever heard of a Rupert Stone.
That one we dropped until the accurate identification of the bodies was complete.
Lenhart and I started out to follow up a couple of the others that evening.
This is a lot of work.
And check.
Mrs. Graham?
Yes.
This is Mr. Dollar.
I'm Captain Lenhart of the State Police.
We'd like to talk to you about the death of your husband.
No.
I've talked too much.
It only keeps in my mind the things I saw in that field.
And the women's crying.
We know Mrs. Graham, but it's our job to fix the responsibility.
We only want to ask you a few questions.
You've got to help find whoever caused all those deaths if you could, wouldn't you?
How can I help?
Maeve, may we come in?
All right.
But only a little while.
I haven't slept.
Thank you.
No, Skipper. Be quiet.
He knows poor old dog.
Very soon he will die.
And then I'll be alone.
Please sit down.
Thank you, Ms. Graham.
Yes, thank you.
Mrs. Graham, your husband?
Yes.
Well, he bought space to Boston, didn't he?
Yes. His brother is very there.
He was a religious man.
Quite often he would go to visit his brother's grave.
I see.
I think that's all we needed.
Wasn't it a dollar to recheck his plan?
Yeah.
Yes, I think that was all.
I think we better go.
We're sorry to have bothered you, Mrs. Graham.
And thank you very much for seeing us.
All right.
Yes, thanks very much.
Oh, well, don't bother to get up.
You don't have to come to the door with us.
Good night.
Good night, Mr. Graham.
Quiet.
You won't come back.
I couldn't cut it.
I think that dog did it.
Sorry.
You don't know what that means to me.
How the...
It's happened at least since I was a rookie, forget it.
But grilling a pole when I defined out of her husband's cancer
might have driven him to suicide.
I couldn't go through it.
A whole rotten mess.
I get to getting it so old.
Why don't we have a couple of drinks in the way downtown?
Forget it for tonight, huh?
Well, try to.
That suits me.
You know, I was in front street.
Yeah, it's fine.
Anything.
So let's go then.
I'll hold it there and have problems.
Check me off, duty.
Here you are, sir.
Oh, your friend didn't leave.
Now he had a phone out, can't you?
$1.66.
Thanks, good afternoon.
Thank you.
Oh, here you come.
I don't drink up, dollar.
I guess I'll have to waste mine.
Because it seems I'm not all-beauty.
What happened?
I'll go back to that stewardess again.
The explosive has been checked as early equipment.
Well, I have men say some twisted heavily from,
used to be their first aid box.
I think it was in there.
And Prince Wilbur Wheeler back again, too.
And he's been picked up right now.
I don't think I need this drink to get through a session with him.
Yeah.
We will return you to the second act of yours,
truly, Johnny Dollar, in just a moment.
Lee Tracy plays his role of Hilda Johnson,
newspaper man,
in Hector MacArthur's perennial comedy,
The Front Page, tomorrow night,
on CBS Broadway Playhouse.
It's an all-fun cast,
headed by Lee Tracy,
as Chicago's Hector MacArthur farce about crime reporters,
comes to life once again,
on Broadway Playhouse, tomorrow night,
over most of these same CBS stations.
Now with our star, Edmund O'Brien,
we return you to the second act of yours,
truly, Johnny Dollar.
Well, not necessarily.
We learned not necessarily.
I heard you do.
Did you locate Carl Reed, Dollar?
Yeah, I was at home.
Well, guys, been under doctors' camp,
and I think I got what we need.
I've YouTube been getting along.
And we were just got here.
We were covering the point of whether or not
I have a life to have him brought down here.
Maybe I'm wrong.
You are.
Didn't you want to come, Wilbur?
I guess I don't like the idea of being ordered
into a police car twice in one day
with everybody in the block gawking at me.
A lot of people have been loaded into police cars today, Wheeler.
They were glad to come in and do anything they could
to help clear this thing up.
Well, I want to help too.
I didn't mean it that way.
We're glad to hear that.
How long have you worked for the fairway airline?
About a year and a half, I guess.
What'd you do by the way?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
About a year and a half, I guess.
What'd you do before that?
What do you mean?
You still think I had something to do with that crash?
That's what you mean, isn't it?
We'd like to find out who did.
Wouldn't you?
But you think I did it and I didn't.
I told you I didn't.
Even you said I didn't.
And it sounds like you've got nothing to worry about
so calm down and answer our question.
I want to know why you're asking questions like that.
Why did you bring me back here?
Because some new evidence has turned up.
That's why.
What does that have to do with me?
It has to do with surely good news.
I don't know what you mean.
I don't know what you're talking about.
I told you everything there was about her and me.
Did you know that she carried a first aid kit
about the plane last night?
First aid kit, I don't know what you mean.
You don't?
After working there a year and a half?
What did you do on the plane?
I brought food on.
Checked the water and a few other things.
And things that the stewardess would be involved in.
She'd be there with you, wouldn't she?
Yeah, but I don't know what you're driving.
And I don't know what you mean.
In the back part of the plane?
Yeah.
Surely it was there.
And you were there last night.
Yeah, but I would.
Where did she put a first aid kit, Wheeler?
Why do you ask me that?
I don't remember.
I didn't notice.
They had a place.
They kept it.
But I didn't notice it.
Was it open?
I don't know.
I was in it.
If I know what you meant, I don't know why you're asking me these days.
I saw her to Mr. Reed.
So I know about these things.
Fairways, non-scheduled clients.
So they have their own particular routines.
One of them is that this first aid kit is the stewardess's responsibility.
Each one is a kit.
They take it off the plane when they leave.
They bring it aboard when they report for work.
I don't know what you're talking about.
The explosive Wheeler.
The nitroglycerin that was hidden in that first aid kit.
I didn't put it there.
That's what you mean.
But I didn't do it.
I didn't know anything about it.
Enough explosive to tear off the whole tale of it.
I didn't do it.
I didn't.
13 people in that plane, Wheeler.
Four people in one of the houses that crashed into.
Probably two more in the other.
I didn't do it.
I didn't do it.
I didn't do it.
Wilbur Wheeler was turned over to the police psychiatrist
because we couldn't get any farther with him.
And I lied to take the test as arranged for the following morning.
The web that was tightening around him was only so substantial.
And the question was, did he know that he could keep on saying he hadn't done it
and that we couldn't do anything without physical proof?
Or was he innocent?
Our last move that night was to go to Wheeler's room.
We were looking for wire that could be checked with that used with the explosive.
We couldn't find that or anything else that could be a definite help.
But a couple of things we didn't find seemed strange.
Chey.
He said he came home and turned on his radio.
Well, there isn't radio here.
Maybe we've got him on a real line there.
Newspapers, Landhound.
Can you find any?
Well, I hadn't noticed.
No, there aren't any.
Unless he's got him on a site somewhere.
Why would he do that?
I'm in the waste paper basket.
You'd think a man is closely connected to this as he was
would want to find out what the papers were saying, wouldn't you?
Guilty organism.
Yeah.
Oh, I don't know, darling.
I'm bushed.
Let's drop it for tonight.
I'm ready.
I will try again tomorrow.
I'll drop you at home and see you about a mile in the morning.
Yeah.
The next morning, Landhound and I talked to the psychiatrist
and spent a couple of hours with Wheeler.
In technical terms, what he said was that Wheeler was definitely
suffering from a severe guilt complex.
Whether that meant he had actually committed the crime,
or had only wished secretly that harm would come to him as good you
wasn't clear yet.
In terms of evidence, that meant nothing.
Back of a radio or newspapers in his room, the doctor tossed off his
meaning merely that Wheeler was hiding from actuality.
His cap put it.
If that doctor thinks he helped my mental condition, he's wrong.
And afternoon, there were two developments.
The first one was the report that the results of Wilbur Wheeler's
lie detector tests were negative.
But his reactions put the mark of guilt all over him.
The second came from the fairway office of Carl Reed.
He'd been unable to locate another of his stewardesses.
And when finally he'd sent someone to our apartment,
she'd been found.
Shot to death.
We met Mr. Reed at the scene of the second crime.
I simply had to get back in the job today.
Two of our flights were delayed just today because it might
go into pieces.
You better watch it now, Mr. Reed.
I don't know if I take it easy.
You try to phone this girl and tell her to report to one of your flights.
And when you send somebody out here, she was found dead, right?
Yes.
I hadn't tried to contact Alice before because I knew that she and Ms. Good
You had been close friends.
Tyler Reddick here from 2311 Racing.
Another checkered flag for the books.
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And I knew she must have felt almost responsible for her death.
Why, I must have read.
She was scheduled for the flight the other night.
I thought you knew that.
No, we didn't.
I wish we hadn't.
But I told you that night at the scene of the crash I was talking to a mother.
Mrs. Good you.
Yes, I remember that.
You said she thought there was a chance that her daughter wasn't on the plane.
I told you the other girl was scheduled.
No, no.
You made it sound like Mrs. Good you thought her daughter was on a different flight.
You didn't say anything about another stewardess.
It's all right.
It's all right, Mr. Reed.
The human mind isn't infallible.
But it can correct its mistakes.
Go on, tell us now.
Is that...
Well, that's all.
With everything else, I suppose it didn't seem important.
I know our procedure is less exact than the larger companies.
The girls often traded flights.
When did you find out about this trade?
Not until Mrs. Good you told me that her daughter had gone to work that night.
You didn't discuss it with her by any chance.
Oh, hi.
I didn't discuss it that night.
Well, I think we better go see Mrs. Good you a dollar.
I think so.
Sergeant Collins over there will be in charge here, Mr. Reed.
You may want to ask you a few more questions.
All right.
Collins, I'm leaving.
I'll see you at headquarters.
Right.
You know what this probably means?
The case against Wheeler is shot.
The second stewardess, that's a pattern.
Everything we've tried to do has been done nothing.
Circumstantial evidence sometimes does it.
But we were close.
We settled on a stewardess anyway.
That's the intended victim.
Yeah, but it doesn't help to think that maybe all those people died because of a mistake.
The wrong stewardess died in the crash and the killer had to come back to take care of the right one.
Of course.
Of course I'll tell you anything I can.
Well, we've just learned that your daughter wasn't scheduled to be on that plane Mrs. Good you?
No, she wasn't.
Do you know why she happened to be?
We understand that she and Alice Turner exchanged flights quite often.
But do you know how it happened the other night?
Well, no.
Shirley was here at home and the phone rang.
Go what time was that, please?
Oh, I hardly remember.
We'd had an early dinner.
The plane took off at 825. How long before then?
Well, an hour at least.
No, it was less than that because Shirley left in such a hurry.
Well, what did she say?
Well, she said that one of the girls was sick and she was going to take her place on a flight.
Just up to Maine and back, she said.
She said she'd be home soon after midnight.
I've never liked rushed decisions and I've always worried when Shirley left in a hurry like that.
She did it quite often?
Yes.
Yes, they all did it.
Six of them live here in Hartford.
I never liked it.
Did she trade more often with Alice Turner than the others, do you know?
Well, I don't think so.
No, it was an agreement almost to code.
If one of them couldn't work, one of the others would fill in.
Well, then it's possible that Alice Turner calls some of the others before she calls your daughter.
Yes, it is possible.
And I wish that I could.
Naturally, the hope that Captain Lenhard and I had was that we'd find another of the stewardess as Alice Turner had talked to.
And learn the reason she had wanted to get out of the fatal flight.
We didn't.
She hadn't called any of the others and we were left with nothing.
Nothing but the prospect of starting the whole investigation over from the beginning.
The enormity of the crime had been in all of our minds from the first night.
We'd never thought it might have a positive quality, but it did.
The horror of it led to the solving of it late that afternoon.
Lenhard and I have found no place from which to start over.
I went back to my apartment building and in the car just outside my door.
Did you name it, Dad?
Huh?
Yeah. Can I help you?
I want to talk to you. I think we put it inside, eh?
I'm busy.
I know you. I know you are.
I want to talk about the plane explosion.
Huh?
All right, come on in.
Look, I can't stand anymore.
I read about Alice Turner this afternoon and I...
I can't stand it, that's all.
What do you know about it?
Just that, all those people killed, killed for nothing.
And I'm partly the blame, too.
I'm ready to get myself up.
All right, you come to me then. Why didn't you go to the police?
Why you can talk to somebody like you?
The police always put on the camera to stay.
Okay, I'll get you anyway.
But you'll know what I really said.
All right.
His name is Church.
I'm at the church.
Who is at the church?
He's the chief pusher for a... for a big narcotics outfit
and you ever thought they was.
We've had a few cranks in this case already.
I know, crank, no crank.
Alice Turner was carrying his stuff for him.
She wanted to get out and church one letter.
So she's got smart.
She set up a meeting with a federal man the other night.
That's why she was killed. All the rest.
Doesn't make sense if she'd made this day.
Don't you think the federals would have been in on this?
Alice didn't tell him who she was or what she did.
How do you know, Alice?
I'm the one that told her church was on her way.
I told her to drop her not to go.
That's my part of it.
I told her church was on her way.
Let it stop her some way, some way.
I told her to drop her no matter what.
Oh, my God.
Why would she put Shirley good here on the spot?
Well, Alice didn't know what would happen.
I didn't know.
Who couldn't know it?
Well, he'd do anything like that.
Why did he?
If what you say is true, he could have stopped us some other way.
That's my doing, too.
I kept her out of sight.
And the other night, I told her to do anything to stay where she was
and not to go to the field.
She believed me, then.
I called Shirley good.
She went told her she was sick.
And that's why she didn't go.
You know how the explosive was that wrecked the plane?
I read today.
The first aid kit.
That's what Alice carried the stuff.
And it was her kid.
How did the good you girl get it?
Because she was called at the last minute.
And Alice had a thing in a lot of the field.
And I looked, Mr. Dollar, I wouldn't be here.
I wasn't telling the truth.
It's a peddling hut for me.
But I've been reading these stories about the people that got killed.
And the families that I left.
I couldn't take it.
Couldn't take it.
I knew the truth.
And when Alice was killed,
there was no reason for not telling what I knew.
Are you ready to go to the police woman?
You heard what I got to say.
I'm giving myself up.
You're a witness to that.
Do you know where this other church is?
Yeah.
Yeah, here and I, we live together.
And you'll come with us.
If I have to, sure.
Sure, I'll take you to home.
This is what I left him.
You go in there and tell him who's here.
All right.
Just calling Matron, I know.
All right.
All right.
All right.
All right.
How do you hear?
I'm here, your turnie.
No way.
I got it.
Expense account item two,
miscellaneous $23.45.
Expense account total $25.95.
Remarks?
But the cost of the other people,
the total hardly seems important, does it?
I think it would be easier to forget the $25,
than the rest of the matter.
So let's do it.
It was truly Johnny Dollar.
Yours truly, Johnny Dollar, stars Edmund O'Brien
in the title role and is written by Gildoud
with music by Eddie Dunstetter.
Edmund O'Brien can soon be seen
in the Paramount Pictures production warpath.
Featured in tonight's cast,
where Peter Leeds, Ray Hartman, Martha Wentworth,
Bill Boucher, Victor Perron, and Virginia Greg.
Yours truly, Johnny Dollar,
is transcribed in Hollywood by Jaime Doveye.
This is Dan Fiberli inviting you to join us next week
at the same time when Edmund O'Brien returns
as yours truly, Johnny Dollar.
Every time you buy a United States defense bond,
you help in our defense effort,
and you help build your personal security.
Yes, defense bonds are good for you,
and good for your country.
Remember, defense is your job.
Buy United States defense bonds.
Many people find their way to the police line-up,
the innocent, the vagrant, the thief.
A surprising number of action-packed police cases begin
when interested parties survey the line-up.
And that's where our thrilling line-up story begins.
Tomorrow night, over most of these same CBS stations.
Listen for these authentic dramas
about bill-policed kids on CBS.
This is CBS, where you'll never lose
when you follow the news on the Columbia Broadcasting System.
Tyler Reddick here from 2311 Racing.
Another checkered flag for the books.
Time to celebrate with Jamba.
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You're a jamming near a favorite song.
And while you aren't missing a beat,
you could be missing a signal from your body.
It's an SOS from your kidneys,
and it doesn't sound like music at all.
It's silent.
High blood pressure.
Type 2 diabetes and other risk factors
can quietly stress the kidneys,
leading to negative impacts on the heart.
That's what you should ask your doctor
about a simple urine test called UACR.
Most miss the signal for hidden kidney disease
and related heart risk.
You shouldn't.
Visit, detect the SOS.com today to learn more.
