"San Francisco Times." "Editorial." "Just a moment, please." "San Francisco Times." "Editorial." "Mr Crocker?" "Just a moment." "I'll connect you." "San Francisco Times." "Editorial." "Oh hello, Walpole." "I was just going to call you." "Listen, kiddo." "I found a new fortune teller." "Yeah." "He tells your future by the shape of your head." "He gives you a sort of scalp massage with his fingers." "Oh boy, and what hands he's got." "When he got to circling round my ears .." "I just tingled with vibrations and felt that something was in store for me." "Gee, he went over my whole zodiac and did I get a thrill." "Gee, Walpole." "Bonnie Brewster has been hanging around all day to see Crocker." "You know, the society dame that's always on the front page in automobile crack-ups." "Always getting engaged to some Prince or other who's got an eye on her bankroll." "Huh?" "Talk closer to the phone." "You sound like you got a mouthful of checkers." "What's she like?" "Oh, she's the Grecian type." "No, not restaurant." "Classical." "Yes, Mr Crocker." "Listen, you boondoggle nitwit, I don't care if he's being embalmed." "You find me Packy Campbell." "Boy!" "I want a boy!" "Get me a couple of boys!" "Sorry." "Keep your ears open." "Concentrate." "Somebody find Packy Campbell." "We've tried every place." "Nobody has seen him." "Try the Fire Department." "Put an Ad in the lost-and-found." "─ Yes, sir. ─ And get this." "Tell that Brewster dame somebody carried me out of here in a straight-jacket." "Yes, sir." "Sorry, Miss Brewster." "You may tell your Mr Crocker that I've been bellowed at by experts." "And I won't leave until I see him." "Lady, can't you take a hint?" "He don't want to see nobody except Packy Campbell." "Never heard of him." "─ You wouldn't." "He's just the greatest newspaperman in the world." "Mr Crocker, I've been waiting for three hours." "Alright, wait three hours more!" "I haven't got time to see you." "I'm busy." "Oh gee Walpole, is everybody excited around here." "They can't find Packy Campbell." "Packy Campbell." "Don't you know who he is?" "He's The Times' ace reporter and what a guy." "When he walks in, my eyelids begin to flap." "No, Walpole." "Flap." "Flap." "Like what your Grandpa's got on the back of his union suit." "Oh kiddo, he's the big emotion of my life." "He just does things to me." "One minute I feel like I've been run over by a steamroller." "The next I'm pumped up like a balloon." "No, not a baboon." "A balloon." "Yeah." "But he can't see me for dust." "All I get from him is a red apple on Wednesdays." "And you know what you can do with a red apple." "Hello, Susie." "Where you been all day?" "Where have I been?" "Gee, Mr Campbell, you'd better go inside." "He's awful mad." "Now is that nice, Susie?" "So you want to get rid of me, huh?" "─ No, Mr Campbell." "No." "Alright." "Oh." "Sorry." "Where is the bulldog?" "Right here, waiting for a bone." "Hello, Chief." "Anything doing?" "─ Not a thing." "The opposition is running extras about the alien massacre." "While we sit here playing Post Office." "─ Mr Crocker." "Sit down." "I'll see you after the next murder." "Step right into the parlor while you're still able to walk." "You know, it's your liver again, Chief." "You ought to stick to straight gin." "Campbell, you're fired." "Okay, if it makes you feel any better." "But I got a scoop." "Yeah." "You and the AP." "And in our own territory." "Every blasted sheet in this town running our story." "Campbell, you're a great reporter." "Why thank you very much, Mr Crocker." "Look here: "Alien massacre"." ""Motor Cop murdered by alien shakedown gang."" ""Shakedown agents drown 17."" ""17 aliens dumped into reservoir."" "But I phoned you all that last night." "─ And I told you to follow up." "And you did a disappearing act on me." "What's up, isn't this alien shakedown stuff big enough for you?" "And how." "It's the rottenest racket in the book." "Read that." ""A lone survivor of the immigrant truck died today in San Reef hospital."" "Alright." "Why didn't I get that from you?" "Why did I have to get it from the AP?" "Why not?" "But the AP didn't tell you the real story because they didn't know it." "Yours truly was the one man on the job listening in on the deathbed confession." "Send in Hymie." "Give it to me. ─ Not so fast." "─ What did you get?" "Just a little snapshot of the guy that bumped the Cop." "Tell Joe to hold the press and strip out the front page." "Oh boy, this will increase circulation by 5,000 today." "Hymie, run this in a 180 point." ""Survivor names Cop-killer."" "Not so fast." "First let's nab this killer and slap him inside." "Then we'll print the real story." "What do you mean?" "We've a scoop and you want me to hold it?" "I want to nab this killer before he gets wise that we're on to him." "I've got a hunch how to find him." "You won't mind Mr Crocker if I take time out for tea?" "Take all the time you want." "Take a trip around the world." "Well, maybe I will." "After I've told Mr McBain to cancel his advertizing with your little newspaper." "McBain?" "I thought your name was Brewster." "McBain is my uncle Danny." "And your biggest advertiser." "Do I get a job or don't I?" "Oh, of course, if you want me to tell Mr McBain you can't oblige .." "Boy!" "I want a boy." "So did Dad." "But he got me instead." "Take this lady to the fashion editor and put her to work." "Oh thanks, Mr Crocker." "Cutting out paper dolls." "It's a rotten business." "Full of jokers." "Wait a minute." "I've just connected that face." "Bonnie Brewster, isn't it?" "Yeah." "The family is worth millions and she wants to be a newspaper reporter." "Give me that tip card .." "─ She's just what I need." "She'd make a swell front tonight at the 500 Club." "500 what?" "─ The 500 Club." "That's where Barreto is hiding out." "He's the killer, Chief." "Here's our chance to get the inside." "Maybe we'll snag the birds that are running the racket." "Boy, what a story." "Okay on her?" "─ Go as far as you like." "Here." "Buy her an arsenic cocktail for me." "Alright Hymie, the fire's out." "We go to print." "Boy!" "Boy, I want a boy!" "Hey, cub." "I'd like to talk to you." "Meaning me?" "─ Yeah, you." "We're stepping out tonight." "I'll meet you in the lobby at nine." "Sorry, I have a previous engagement." "You can skip that junior league stuff with me." "You're trying to crash the newspaper game, aren't you?" "Well, I'm cutting you in on the biggest break of the year." "Oh, you mean we're going on a story?" "Where did you think we were going?" "To a dance?" "I'll be in the lobby at nine." "Well, I don't know when I've enjoyed a chat more." "Are all reporters as amusing as you?" "I'm not paid for wisecracking." "Well, what's your lowest rate for pretending to be human?" "I don't get you angle." "Are you out looking for a thrill?" "If I am, I'm disappointed." "I'm not kidding about this job." "I'm desperately serious, Mr Campbell." ""Packy" to you, Cub." "Okay, "Packy"." "You brought it on yourself." "See, it's all on Dad's account." "Down to his last million and you're keeping him off the dole." "No." "Yesterday he read the riot act to me." "He said: "why you're nothing but a useless consumer."" ""A social parasite."" ""Why, you can't even earn your own lipstick and spinach."" "Can you?" "Well, that's what I'm going to find out." "I want to show him he's wrong." "Why pick on the newspaper game?" "Because I majored in journalism." "It's going to be tough on you." "I suppose you think I can't make good." "Well don't quote me." "I can be wrong." "Ladies and gentlemen." "Presenting Señorita .." "Carmen." "Now that we're here, do you mind telling me why?" "You'll see the first reason in a minute." "Hello Carmen." "Heard from Barreto?" "I'm making book." "Ten to one, he's parked in her dressing room." "Probably reading The Times." "Smarter hoodlums that Barreto have risked the noose for a dame." "Maybe it's love." "Barreto knows me." "If I crashed that dressing-room, he'd be wise." "So you want me to go crawling and see if he's in?" "Smart girl." "I hate to deal you a handful of trouble but you bid for it." "What's he look like?" "Or wouldn't you know?" "One hundred percent ratty." "Now if he is in there, you play drunk." "Say you thought it was the ladies lounge." "Hotfoot it right back here." "There's a Police net right around the building." "A Police net?" "I didn't know they wore them." "Can the wisecracks, kid." "You'd better know what you're up against." "Barreto killed a Cop yesterday." "He dumped that truck load of immigrants into the San Reef reservoir." "He drowned them like rats to conceal the evidence." "That's his racket." "Smuggling in aliens and shaking them down." "He'd make a ducky fourth at bridge." "Well, what do you say?" "Do you still want to be newspaperwoman?" "Uhuh." "Sort of ." "Good." "How's your nerve?" "Which one?" "They're all sending in a five-bell alarm." "You can't come in here." "This is the ladies lounge." "Snap out of it, stool-pigeon." "You're no drunker than I am." "Where's the maid?" "I'm going to have you put out of here." "Yeah?" "Wait a minute." "Help!" "One more squeak .. and I might get sore." "Now tell me." "Who sent you?" "Let me go!" "Hey!" "Open up in there." "Don't come in!" "He's got a gun." "Hold it, Barreto." "We got you covered." "Better come down easy." "Step on it." "Barreto is in there." "This is Packy Campbell." "Hold it!" "Don't forget our deal, Inspector." "I get the exclusive for tipping you off." "It's in the bag, Packy." "I wish he wasn't done." "I'd like to work him over." "Hurt bad, Johnny?" "─ He just winged me, that's all." "Alright." "Get him down to the ambulance, boys." "You okay, kid?" "That was my first K.O." "What happened?" "─ The Cops killed Barreto." "Let me by." "I must get up there." "─ No, you don't." "Alright Matt, I'll take her." "Come on." "Who are you?" "Let go of me." "Come on, we're going to church." "Just a minute, bright-eyes." "Where do you think you're going?" "The party is getting rough." "I'm leaving." "Sure you are." "The limousine is downstairs." "You can't hold me, I'm a newspaperwoman." "Oh, you're a newspaper woman?" "Where is your card?" "─ What card?" "A license reporters get to poke their noses into other people's business." "Well, if you want to keep your job you'd better handle me with care." "I'm Bonnie Brewster." "─ Well now, that's funny." "I thought you looked more like Mary Pickford." "Okay Flaherty, hold the wagon for the countess." "I'm warning you for the last time, take your hands off me." "Get going sister, before I help you down the stairs." "Please, you don't understand." "Take it easy." "No one's going to hurt you." "Sit down." "Hello?" "Hello Crocker, get set." "It's dynamite." "Barreto bumped off down at the 500 Club." "Trapped in Carmen's dressing-room." "Alright, keep on spilling." "Boy, boy." "I want a boy!" "Say Crocker." "Have you got a sob-sister hanging around down there?" "You mean that dame that writes that "Tell Your Aunt Lulu" column?" "Ah, she'll do." "Send her out to my place right away." "Wait a minute, Campbell." "Hello." "The Police want you, Mr Crocker." "Alright, wait a minute." "Rewrite .. rewrite .." "Cheal." "Okay." "Say Crocker, we've got a silk and satin dame here says she's Bonnie Brewster." "Working with Campbell." "How about it?" "Wait a minute, Sergeant." "Barreto, alien shakedown agent killed at 500 Club." "Violent retaliation of underworld feared." "Long sought-for identity of shakedown leader expected momentarily." "Wait a minute, Sergeant." "Nice work, Campbell." "So you got Brewster in jail, eh?" "You tell those vultures to treat her right." "Spring her the minute the Extra hits the streets." "Give her a police escort home." "Come on, pull yourself together." "Now you lay low here for a couple of days." "But that doesn't matter." "They're afraid I'll talk." "They'll kill me." "Not while you're with me, they won't." "A friend in need is a friend indeed." "Why don't you ease your poor troubled heart?" "That woman-to-woman stuff is terrific." "Come on, Carmen." "Ease your heart." "Nice work, Lulu." "You've talked her to sleep." "I'll be a dog's hind leg if I can do any more." "Yes, you can." "Stick right here until I get back." "Don't let her out of your sight." "I'm going down to check with the Chief." "Maybe he can figure an angle." "I'll be back in a couple of hours." "San Francisco Times." "Oh hello, Walpole." "Boy am I excited." "Did you read about Packy-pie being such a hero last night?" "Yeah, that's my pet name for him." "Packy-pie." "I ain't so burned up about that Brewster dame this morning." "He just took her along for a stooge." "And laugh this off." "She spent the night in the jug and boy is she sore." "She's waiting for Packy now." "Oh, here he comes." "Good morning, Horace Greeley." "─ Hiya, Brutus." "So you were going to show me how to crash the newspaper game." "I didn't mean to land you in jail." "Oh, I loved it." "The Sergeant taught me how to play blackjack and I took him for 7 bucks." "Do you call that a newspaper story?" "Ah, you read it, huh?" "─ Learned it by heart." "Using a girl as a decoy." "Packy Campbell, Times' ace reporter, leads Officers to Barreto's hideout." "Hymie miss-spelled my name again." "Well, at least it's in print which is more than mine is." "Yours?" "For what?" "It was my scoop." "I pulled it off." "While I amused myself by getting choked to death." "The least you could have done was to have mentioned my name." "Wake up little girl." "You're behind the counter now." "Waiting on the five-cent parade." "Behind, nothing." "I was the front line." "I win the medal and you wear it." "On that big, manly chest." "So nice to have met you, Mr Campbell." "I'll see that it doesn't happen again." "Ha!" "So you got out, eh?" "Yes, thanks to uncle Danny." "Why did you bother McBain?" "We had you sprung when the paper hit the streets." "Sorry, I couldn't wait." "But it was way past my bedtime." "You know, Miss Brewster, you ought to take a day off." "You need a rest." "You are positively psychic." "I came in here to resign." "Quitting the game already, eh?" "─ No." "Just starting with a real paper." "The Star News took me on this morning." "Doing what?" "─ Wouldn't you like to know." "Well, good luck, Miss Brewster." "Oh, by the way." "Here is your salary." "One day, pro rata." "One dollar." "Eighty-five cents." "There you are." "My share of the cab." "And keep the change." "Are you sure you can spare it?" "─ Want a reference?" "No, no." "Uncle Danny fixed that, too." "Hello?" "Advertizing manager?" "What does he want?" "Put him on." "Hello?" "What?" "McBain has cancelled his adverting contract?" "Why, he can't do that." "Wait a minute .." "Brewster!" "Brewster, wait a minute." "I want to see you." "Brewster!" "Wait a minute, Brewster." "I must talk to you." "Listen, you can't do this." "It's unethical." "Look Brewster." "You know what you're doing to me?" "You're putting me in the doghouse." "Well, you'd better buy a muzzle before you bark yourself to death." "Boy, boy .." "I want a boy!" "No." "Mr Crocker is busy right now." "Please Mr Campbell, stop talking." "I'm so tired, my head is killing me." "Alright, then why not spill your story and be done with it?" "Who was Barreto's boss?" "I tell you I don't know." "I don't know." "I won't say any more." "Give me a cigarette, please." "No story, no cigarette." "All you think of is stories, stories, stories." "You don't care what you do to me." "Do you remember Tosca?" "She said she'd talk." "She'd tell the Police how Barreto took money from her every week." "To let her stay in America." "But she never told." "She couldn't." "Because they killed her." "You're in a spot to save a lot of girls like Tosca if you'll only talk." "No, no, no!" "─ Yes, yes, yes!" "Look, Carmen." "Here's what I'll do." "You tell me what you know about Barreto." "And I'll get you across the line into Mexico." "I'll give you enough money to carry you until you get another job." "Is that fair?" "Alright." "[ Door knocks ]" "They're here." "[ Door knocks ]" "Who is it?" "Bonnie Brewster of The Star News." "Come right in, Miss Brewster." "Mr Campbell of The Times, I believe?" "You know United States district attorney Mr Joseph Carey?" "Hello, Carey." "Why the Marine Corps?" "Just a friendly little visit." "What a charming apartment." "─ Suppose we get down to business." "Where is she, Campbell?" "─ Who are you looking for?" "I don't suppose you know, do you." "Well, I'm no mind-reader." "There must be a lovely view from the bathroom." "Do you mind?" "Go right ahead." "Make yourself at home." "I thought so." "Carmen, don't be afraid." "We're here to help you." "I don't want help." "Leave me alone." "Oh come on now." "We won't hurt you." "What have you been telling Mr Campbell?" "He tried to make me talk, but I didn't." "Good girl." "I wouldn't trust him either." "Nice work, Brewster." "That was a swell double-cross." "I'm a very apt pupil." "Which reminds me, Mr Carey." "You promised me an exclusive on Carmen's story for the tip." "We'll take her right over to my office now." "Get your hat, Campbell." "You're under arrest." "Come on." "Wait a minute." "You can't pull me in." "─ Take it easy, Campbell." "Mr Carey tells me there is some sort of law against concealing a witness." "Concealing her?" "I'm trying to stop her being killed." "Her life is in danger and you know it." "We're perfectly capable of protecting her." "Like you did the witnesses on your last three alien cases." "They showed up in the morgue." "─ That's enough, Campbell." "Hello, Star News?" "City desk, please." "Hello?" "Oh, hello Mr Blair." "Bonnie Brewster speaking." "You didn't believe me when I promised you Carmen's story, did you." "Well, I have a big surprise for you." "First of all, I went to see United States District Attorney Carey." "And then where do you suppose ..?" "Hello, Blair." "Stop the press." "Get this story." "It's big." "Prominent socialite Bonnie Brewster leads Joe Carey to Barreto's woman." "Dancer found hiding in shower of Times' reporter." "Packy Campbell arrested for holding witness." "D.A. Carey promises to reveal identity of alien shakedown boss within 24 hours." "Right." "Thanks, Mr Campbell." "That's very sporting of you." "Look at this boundary." "Thousands of miles." "We can't police it all." "We can't keep them out." "But that's the labour department's problem." "Here is where I come in." "These agents are well organized." "Probably the same mobs who smuggled in liquor during prohibition." "Once they land an alien, they never let up on him." "When he gets a job or even government relief .." "They shake him down for all they can get." "Under threat of exposure." "Which means arrest and probable deportation." "Well, that's what I'm after." "These extortionists." "Barreto was one of them." "I had three of them in here last month." "You heard Packy Campbell say I couldn't produce the witnesses?" "The gang had wiped them out." "At the back of that gang is a brain." "A brain clever enough to shake a hundred million dollars a year from these aliens." "That's the man I'm after." "And you think Carmen knows him?" "Perhaps not." "But she might give us a lead." "Hello, Joe." "─ Oh hello, Gilbert." "Busy?" "No." "Just letting off steam to Miss Brewster." "You know each other?" "Everyone in San Francisco knows Mr Fender." "Mr Carey's ex-law partner, and one of our civic leaders." "Thank you, my dear." "Are you still making headlines?" "No, I'm writing them now." "For the Star News." "I've just been assigned to the alien shakedown racket." "A dangerous business." "I read about the Barreto killing." "The unnamed girl who discovered him in Carmen's dressing-room." "Yes." "Miss Brewster just steered us to Carmen, the dancer in the case." "You found her?" "─ No." "The boys have her in there." "If she talks, we may grab the big-shot." "The man at the back of Barreto." "What a wife she'd make." "She's the tightest-mouthed dame I ever saw." "Let me try, Mr Carey." "She might talk to me." "Go on, Joe." "Give Miss Brewster a chance." "Knock off." "We can listen here." "Pretty scared, aren't you Carmen?" "I wish I'd never come to this country." "Well perhaps I can help you to get back to your own." "Mr Carey says they'll put me in jail." "Oh, I can make him change his mind." ""I'll ask him to send those men away."" ""Why are you so kind to me?"" ""Because I feel sorry for you, and I want to help you."" "Would you like to use my compact?" "Thanks." "I suppose you want a story, too?" "Not about you." "Just tell me about Barreto." ""Who's his boss?"" ""I'm afraid."" ""Oh you needn't be, Carmen."" ""Mr Carey is going to take care of you and .."" ""Nothing can happen to you here."" "Let's start at the beginning." "You wanted to leave home didn't you." "And you couldn't get a passport." "Was that it?" "Yes .." "I wanted so much to come to America." "To work here." "To dance." "And you went to a smuggler?" "─ No." "No." "He came to me." "Two hundred dollars he charged to bring me here." "Besides the fare?" "Oh yes, the boat was extra." "What boat?" "A freight boat." "Not very big." "There were a lot of us." "And we stopped everywhere to pick up more." "You stopped at regular ports?" "Oh, no." "In the night-time." "Always way out in the ocean, off the coast." "And when we got to California, a big fishing boat took us all ashore." "Then they put us in a closed truck like cattle." "And drove for hours before they let us out." "Where, Carmen?" "I don't know." "It looked like a ranch somewhere in the hills." "How long did you stay there?" "Maybe a week." "Then Barreto came and took me away to San Francisco." "Don't be afraid, Carmen." "Go on." "I hated him." "He took half of my money every week." "He said he'd put me in jail if I told the police." "And if anything happened to him." "They'd kill me." "Who are "they"?" "I don't know." "Nothing we don't already know, Gilbert." "Carmen, what was the name of the freight boat you came on?" "The Northern Star." "Didn't you ever see Barreto with some other man?" "Someone who gave him orders?" "Once I saw a man talking to Barreto." "He told him to hide himself away." "─ Did you know that man?" ""Yes." "I know him."" ""Who is he?" "Tell me his name."" ""It was .."" "[ Gunshot!" "]" "Clark." "The door." "The alarm, Mac." "Get an ambulance." "─ Yes, sir." "Stay where you are." "Don't move." "Which way did he go?" "─ There." "Right in that door." "Through the head." "She died instantly." "That's protecting her, Carey." "She's safe enough now." "It's over." "Come on." "Hello Susie." "Give me the desk, quick." "Yeah, yeah." "I'm out on bail." "How about it, Brewster?" "Have you phoned your paper?" "Hello, Crocker." "Has the edition gone in yet?" "Then hold it." "Yeah, stay on the wire." "Come on Brewster, snap out of it." "It's all part of the job." "Here, this time spill the facts." "You know: "Carmen shot." "Federal Building."" "Yes." "Here it comes." ""Carmen." "Key witness." "Alien shakedown activities, murdered."" "Hello, mister .." "─ Skip that, Brewster." "Give me the desk, I mean." "Where is it?" "─ In there." ""Shot down in Federal Building." "Carey's office."" ""Whole joint in an uproar." "Cops all over the place."" "Has the edition gone in yet?" "Then hold it." ""Escaped murderer plugged the dancer as Carey tried to slap a story out of her."" ""Carmen murdered."" ""Federal Building."" ""Carey's office."" ""Shot while relating shakedown story to .."" ""To your reporter."" ""Girl shot while spilling story to unknown operator."" ""More later."" ""Murderer escaped." "No description."" "Oh yes there is, Brewster." "But I've got the exclusive on that and I never forget a face." ""Carmen's exclusive story is told to Bonnie Brewster."" "Yours in half an hour." "Some fun, huh?" "If you'd kept your pretty nose out of it she may be safe over the border by now." "Come on." "When I took this job I didn't want it." "I've been ready to quit a dozen times." "Don't blame yourself, Joe." "─ This is the last straw." "The gloves are off and the fight is on." "I'm going to run down these killers and wipe them out like rats." "Hiya, Captain." "What are you going to have?" "For me, I will have petite café noir." "I don't get you." "A black coffee." "─ Why don't you say so." "How many have you got this time?" "─ An even dozen." "Where to put them?" "I've already got 30 aboard." "It breaks your heart, doesn't it." "Squeeze them in any place." "They can stand it." "Just three days to California." "At a century a piece." "That's 1,200 smackers." "We'll anchor off Stevenstown." "Board them about midnight." "Four flashes of the starboard light." "Repeat twice." "That will be us." "Auf wiedersehen." "─ Cheerio." "You be a good man and fix for me to .. allez California, no?" "What do you mean "fix"?" "My cousin in California, she say in letter .." "Come here and you fix." "Let me see the letter." "Oh je brûle." "I burnt all the letters." "What's your cousin's name?" "Annette." "Annette what?" "Oh she says not to give you her name." "She say come here, give you 200 dollars, and you fix." "Parlez vous?" "The money." "I have here." "It will tough on you baby, if you ain't okay." "You look like a phony to me." "Phony?" "─ Yeah, "phony"." "Wait." "I look." "F O N E Y." "Ah .." "Ah oui, je comprends." "Hello?" "Bonjour." "Ça va ?" "Au revoir." "Fifi .. where is my Fifi?" "Ah, so you are very smart, huh?" "You run away from your husband, huh?" "You think your dad will not get you, huh?" "Hey, cut the rough stuff." "The same she do all the time, my wife." "All the time she run off with other men." "The Duke, the Count." "But the next time, my little cabbage." "Alright, alright." "Spread." "Just a couple of crazy foreigners." "So you think you go to California without your husband, huh?" "We'll see." "For me, my wife." "To get on the boat." "Two hundred dollars, no?" "─ Hey, pipe down." "You pay that when you get on the ship." "I'll pick you up here about 7 o'clock." "─ Pick up?" "Pick ..?" "Ah, oui." "For the boat, no?" "Put a padlock on your tongue if you want to stay healthy." "Oh, sure." "Giuseppe is a very smart man." "And now, for Papa." "One big kiss and then no more runaway, huh?" "Go on, make up." "We don't want no scrapping couples aboard." "Okay." "My little wife, she sure now how to kiss." "Which is more than I can say for you." "How did you find me?" "It's my business finding out things." "Besides, I hate to see you commit suicide." "You're here to protect me." "Not to get a story." "Well, it's a 50/50 proposition." "Half story, half protection." "Look here, Brewster." "I'll run interference for you." "We'll cut each other in on what we find out." "The way you cut me in on the Barreto case?" "If I'd spilled your name you'd be on ice now." "Right beside Carmen." "Go ahead, cheer me up." "Ah, that dyed hair is no disguise." "I think we'd better call the thing off." "Why don't you?" "Will you?" "─ No." "Alright." "Then you travel with husband." "Whither thou go-est, I go." "Or I'll spill the beans." "You're hateful." "I wonder what the bridal suites are like on the Northern Star." "I thought you said twelve." "These two are extras." "Basques." "French or something." "Say they're married." "Come on." "Dig out two hundred smackers for me." "And two hundred for the Captain." "Allez. 200 dollar." "I don't know where to put them." "Perhaps, the bridal suite .. yes?" "Not unless you can make a bridal suite out of a lifeboat." "Well, for 50 dollar, you find something nice, no?" "There is the third-mate's cabin." "Schultz." "Hello." "Take these two to Herr Braunmeister's cabin." "Braunmeister's cabin?" "Ah .." "Newlyweds." "Come, please." "You see, this cabin is not so much big .. but lovebirds .." "Don't mind." "Lovebirds only need a small cabin." "Sure .. oui, Herr Schultz." "This little love cage is big enough for me and my darling, Fifi." "Never, never am I so happy, so romantic." "As with a new husband and a new wife." "Ya, sure." "Darling." "You see, he is so very much tired." "Tired?" "Anything you want, just call for Schultz." "Good luck, Madame." "Happy evening." "Congratulations." "As a fixer-upper you're simply tremendous." "Phoo-ee!" "Well, what will we do now?" "You can do as you please." "I know what I'm going to do." "Very interesting." "Do you mind if I take a look?" "Love from Jim." "What kind of a guy was Jim?" "All-American half-back, huh?" "Never forget." "Bob." "Another All-American?" "Just a memory .." "Ed." "I love you." "Frank." "Music and moonlight." "Donald." "You've done alright for yourself, haven't you." "A little more time and you'll have a full team." "[ Door knocks ]" "Isn't it time for Herr Schultz to his to sleep?" "Poor Schultz cannot sleep at night." "His thoughts are for his new guests." "C'est tres bien." "That is good." "I also cannot sleep at night." "You must sit here." "Like that, until the morning." "Then Fifi, she go sleep on the deck in the sun." "That's them alright." "I thought she was a phony." "Yeah." "Two nights ago on the Northern Star." "Okay." "No." "We will handle them at this end." "[ German language ]" "Without her help, she would have died." "My little Fifi, she is very good with the baby." "Already she have eight, ten, twelve." "Oh this is good." "Wunderbar." "Ecoutez." "Un tablespoon de lait" "Yah, I see." "Alors." "Deux tablespoons." "Boiled water." "Mix in one teaspoon of sugar." "Ya." "Good." "Alors." "Make it warm and feed to baby." "Every four hours." "When she cry?" "No, no, no." "Not when she cry." "Every four hours." "And when we land." "Give orange or tomato juice." "Every day." "Comme ça?" "No more biscuits." "We shall always pray for your happiness." "Oh tres bien." "Tres bien." "Nice work, Brewster." "Where did you get your knack with kids?" "Well, that's part of an expensive education." "The care of other people's babies." "What a place to start life." "On a filthy smuggling boat." "None of them realize what they're running into." "They wouldn't believe it if you told them." "Listen." "We start a new life." "We make bigger money." "Eat a lot of spaghetti." "The agent .. he promise you a job too?" "He say .. he find everybody a job." "Me?" "I dig the ditch." "They actually believe that jobs are waiting for them." "Instead of a racketeer waiting to shake them down." "Get ready to go ashore." "Everybody get ready to go ashore." "Is that all of them, Pete?" "Alright folks, grab your bags." "Follow that path to the top of the hill." "[ Police siren ]" "Hold everything." "The Cops." "Wait a minute." "You're under arrest." "Come on, people." "Get out of there." "Make it snappy." "We get all the breaks." "Our whole game shot to pieces in the last three minutes of the play." "Hurry it up." "Hurry it up." "Alright, folks." "Pile out, all of you." "Come on, come on." "Come on, come on." "Hurry it up." "Hey, Coughlan." "Take these two down to headquarters." "Listen." "I'm Packy Campbell of the San Francisco Times." "This is Bonnie Brewster of The Star News." "You came off of that ship, right?" "─ Yeah." "Then you're going to headquarters." "You can do your talking there." "Get in." "The mitts, let's have 'em." "Okay." "Headquarters." "Why did they take us away from all the others?" "That's just what I was trying to figure out." "Stay there, you." "Pull over and no tricks or I'll put the pair of you in the morgue." "Alright." "Stretch." "Get their guns, kid." "Under the left arm." "You'll get life for this." "Now, the key to these handcuffs." "You heard me, the keys!" "Open them up." "Get over here." "Snap them on Rolo." "Looks like he's got the jitters." "Wait a minute." "Move over here and close the door." "But Packy, they're Cops aren't they?" "Not even a good imitation." "Here, get behind the wheel." "Now see if you can figure out where we are." "Didn't I tell you I never forget a face." "Carmen's killer." "I bumped into him in the hall right after he did the shooting." "Don't you get it?" "We were spotted." "Then the whole raid was a fake?" "They were just gangsters masquerading as policemen." "Bright girl." "They didn't want forty witnesses to their double murder." "So they fixed us up with a private car." "How did they know we were aboard?" "Maybe our boyfriend can answer that." "How about it, Rolo?" "You think you got me, don't you." "Well, shake your brains and get 'em straight." "You're marked for the coroner's office, both of you." "Five feet of dirt." "Worm-feed." "That's you." "Yeah, and we'd have put you there, too." "You and that dirty little .." "Alright, kid." "Go right ahead for The Times office." "San Francisco Times, Editorial." "Gee Walpole, I can't talk now because we're all too excited here." "Packy phoned and said he was bringing in Carmen's killer." "Ain't he a marvelous hero, though." "I'd like to surprise him and buy him a present." "You think he'd want a pass?" "Huh?" "You think, what man wouldn't?" "Listen Carol, I'm serious." "I want to buy him something that will just knock his eyes out." "What do you suggest?" "A baseball bat?" "Oh Walpole, here they come now." "So that's the killer." "─ Nice work, Packy." "What a star." "─ Come on, bring him in here." "End of the line, kid." "This is where you get off." "What do you mean "get off"?" "I mean you're the greatest little woman in the world, but this is my party now." "You go on home and get a good night's sleep." "Who is the brunette?" "Well, if it isn't little Bonnie Brewster." "What a break for Packy." "San Francisco Times." "Editorial." "Susie, do me a favor will you." "Get me U.S. District Attorney Carey's house." "Sure, I will be glad to." "It will only take a second." "Gee, I'm sure crazy about your hair." "I think it's simply ravenous." "I was thinking of lightening my own hair .." "But my girlfriend Opal says I'm too light headed already." "Just a moment, please." "Will you take it over there, honey." "Hello?" "Mr Carey, please." "Bonnie Brewster speaking." "Oh." "What's Mr Fender's number?" "Well, I'm sure you can give it to me." "Thanks very much." "Susie .." "Mr Carey is at Gilbert Fender's." "Can you get me his number?" "It's not listed." "Gee, I can't." "Not if it ain't listed." "They keep them numbers sacred." "Then I'll have to go to Mr Fender's house." "Listen, you guys." "Why don't you say something?" "Hit me in the face." "Call the Cops." "What are you waiting for?" "Ah, I remember this one." "He squealed like a rat when they put the rope around his neck." "He bounced like a rubber ball when they sprung the trap." "There's one I covered back East." "Jersey City Jake." "We sneaked a camera in and got a some shots just as they turned the juice on." "Ha." "For some reason or other, sourpuss Clint didn't like the guy." "So they gave him the juice in jerky little doses." "Ha .. you know, sort of teased him along." "Then just as the guy doubled up .." "Clint gave him the whole current." "You know, I've often wondered which hurts the worst." "Electrocution or hanging." "Sure, hanging hurts the worst." "But juice gets it over with quicker." "Now, when they hang you as they do in this state." "Well, take Red the Rattler." "The rope snapped twice before they finally broke his neck." "It's funny they don't try out the rope first. ─ They do." "I was up at San Quentin last week." "I saw half a dozen ropes being stretched." "Each had a little tag on it .." "With the name of a guy on death row and the date of his execution." "They stretch the ropes with a big bag of sand the same weight as the murderer." "So his feet don't touch the floor when they spring the trap." "That was the trouble with Red the Rattler." "He ate so much in the last weeks that he put on a lot of weight." "Ha, he must have been a mess." "Three guys fainted before he finally croaked." "Why Red didn't talk and save his own neck is something I can't figure out." "Well, maybe loyalty is a virtue." "I don't know." "Don't you believe it." "There is no guy living worth another fellow dying for." "Red would still be rattling." "The D.A. guaranteed him immunity." "I guess Red preferred the rope." "I'll never forget the way he walked up those thirteen steps to the noose." "You know that's the toughest part of the hanging." "Those thirteen steps." "It's kind of an unlucky number for some guys, I guess." "[ Telephone ]" "Alright!" "Stop it!" "Stop it!" "I'll coöperate." "You want to feel that rope around your neck, do you?" "You don't want to walk up them thirteen steps, do you?" "Alright then Tony." "Spill it and you'll get off with life." "You know our broad-minded parole board." "You'll be out in a couple of years." "You'll be a free man." "Tell us, who is the big-shot?" "Gilbert Fender." "─ Fender?" "Why, you're crazy." "Lying won't get you anywhere." "You now Fender is our public citizen number one." "Give it to us straight." "You got it straight." "What's more I can prove Fender is the guy." "Get me the Federal District Attorney Carey." "I don't know his number." "You look it up." "Hurry up, will you!" "Come on, nitwit." "Get hold of the boys." "I want everything they've got on Fender." "Gilbert Fender!" "Is there a Mr Carey here?" "I'm Bonnie Brewster of The Star News." "Mr Carey was here but he left right after dinner." "With Mrs Fender?" "No, Miss." "Mr Fender is in, but I can't disturb him." "May I use your telephone?" "─ Why ..?" "I think so." "What is it, Judd?" "Oh good evening, Mr Fender." "I'm sorry to barge in on you this way." "Miss Brewster." "What a pleasant surprise." "I am trying to get in touch with Mr Carey." "It's terribly urgent." "Come right in, my dear." "We'll call him up." "I wouldn't have known you in the masquerade." "Been to a party?" "Yes." "I was the guest of honor." "Luckily, it broke up early." "─ Pardon me." "Let me speak to Mr Carey, please." "Oh, I see." "Will you ask him to call Mr Fender as soon as possible." "Thank you." "Carey will phone us when he comes in." "Then I won't impose on you any longer." "I'll drive over to his house." "Nonsense." "He'll call us right back." "Sit down my dear." "Tell me what you've been doing lately." "You sure I won't bore you?" "I'm sure you won't." "Remember that day in Carey's office when Carmen told us about the Northern Star?" "Yes." "─ Well .." "Right after that, Packy Campbell and I went up to Vancouver." "Well, Mr Carey, just a minute." "Mr Carey has just come in," "Hello, Carey?" "Packy Campbell." "Carmen's slayer has just spilled the beans." "He says the top man in the alien shakedown racket is your pal, Fender." "How about it?" "Why, your filthy sheet wouldn't dare print a libellous story like that." "Oh no?" "There will be an Extra on the street in one hour .." "That will shake this city like an earthquake." "See here, Campbell." "Either you're pulling a smart newspaper trick." "Or you've pumped a fake confession from some half-crazed hop-head." "Carey, get this." "When Carmen was shot, I bumped into the killer right outside your office." "He's here with me now." "We're on the way to put the finger on Fender." ""Thought you might like to come along."" "No thanks." "I just came from there." ""Well then, you can read the whole story in tomorrow morning's Times."" "Wait a minute." "If you have Carmen's killer, why haven't you turned him in to the Police?" "I was saving him for a feather in your hat." "Meet me at Fender's and Tony, the killer, is yours." "Alright Campbell, on one condition." "You'll hold that Extra until we've seen Fender." "Sold!" "See you in ten minutes." "Oh gee Mr Campbell, if it's true, it's awful what they'll do to her." "What who'll do to what?" "She tried to call Mr Carey at home but he wasn't in." "So then she tried to call Mr Fender." "─ Who are you talking about?" "The phone wasn't listed and I said you can't phone him if there is no listing." "So she had to go there herself." "Who?" "─ Why, Bonnie Brewster." "She's gone to Fender's?" "I've been trying to tell you all the time." "Come on, Spike." "What I try so say Is she was looking for Carey, see." "But he was over at Fenders." "Then she tried to call Fender but he has a non-listed phone and couldn't get him." "Oh gee, nobody ever listens to me." "Boy!" "Boy, I want a boy!" "After Packy took Carmen's killer in the office and slammed the door in my face." "I thought it was about time that Mr Carey taught him another lesson." "I think the young man needs a lesson." "A good one this time." "Isn't Mr Carey home yet?" "That's strange." "Yes." "The minute he comes in." "Thank you." "I think I'd better call a cab." "It's getting late." "I'll send you home in my car." "─ Oh, thank you." "But you don't want to let Packy Campbell get away with this, do you?" "I certainly do not." "That's the man, Mr Fender." "The one who put us into the truck." "Yes, I know." "No, no." "You don't understand." "He's the one who tried to kill us." "Easy, my dear." "This is my chauffeur." "He's going to drive you home." "This time, see you take better care of Miss Brewster." "Then you're in it, too?" "[ Door knocks ]" "Mr Carey and some men, sir." "Take her into the library Thomas, and keep her quiet." "Hello, Judd." "Is Mr Fender alone?" "─ Yes, sir." "Right in there, sir." "I don't mean to push in like a raiding party, Gilbert." "Nonsense." "You're always welcome, Joe." "Hello, Campbell .." "I haven't seen you since the unfortunate murder of Carmen." "Have a chair." "─ Thanks." "I think I'd rather stand up." "Judd, see what the gentlemen will have." "What will it be, Joe?" "Straight, or Highball?" "Nothing now, thanks." "Well Joe, what's it all about?" "I came here to keep Campbell's paper from printing a dirty lie involving you." "This hysterical rat says he knows you." "He claims he's worked with you for years." "He accuses you of being the top man in the alien shakedown racket." "Of course, I know he's lying." "But Campbell insisted he was going to run the story." "I see." "And you came here to accuse me on the word of this obvious dope-fiend?" "That's it." "And your publishers is insane enough .." "To print a story that would probably land both of you in prison?" "We have very drastic libel laws in this state, Campbell." "And I can promise you I'll see them enforced" "You remember this man, Joe" "Tony Gälleo on the Benton case." "He tried to pin a dope-running charge on our client." "Remember?" "Oh, yes." "I sent him to San Quentin." "He swore he'd get me someday." "So this is your revenge, Gälleo?" "They questioned you tonight." "You thought you'd even things up." "Get back at me .. by tying me in with the racket." "But you lied." "Didn't you." "Break out the box." "The kid is going to crack." "Yeah .. yeah, I lied." "They were driving me crazy, asking me questions." "So I said it was you to get even, for putting me in stir." "Wait." "Cut that, Tony." "Come on, this guy can't hurt you now." "Tell the truth!" "It is the truth, Campbell." "Even though it spoils a good story for your paper." "Alright Mack, take him down to headquarters." "I'll question him tomorrow." "─ Yes, sir." "I'm sorry, Gilbert." "Forget it, Joe." "I have." "Alright, Campbell." "Have you seen anything of Bonnie Brewster tonight?" "Bonnie Brewster?" "Is that the lady I met in your office?" "─ Yes, the little reporter." "Judd." "Has Miss Brewster called this evening?" "─ Miss Brewster?" "No, sir." "This seems to be your night for guessing wrong." "Forgive me if I don't see you to the door. ─ Of course." "Come along, Campbell." "Come on, Campbell." "I've had enough of your nonsense." "Wait a minute." "Carey, you're either crooked or you're as blind as a bat." "Cut it, Campbell." "Maybe you are on the level." "I don't know, but Fender is guilty and he lied." "That's Bonnie Brewster's bracelet." "I found it in the hall." "She's in there and I'm going to get her out." "Come on, Spike." "─ Righto." "Better go along Mack, before Campbell tears the house down brick by brick." "Oh no you don't, mister big-shot." "It's too easy a way out for you." "The State has got a nice little rope waiting for you with your name on it." "There's your tough racketeer, Mack." "You'd better put the cuffs on him." "It's true, Joe." "Ah, he had us all fooled, Carey." "I'm glad to know that you're not in it with him." "Hold it." "Well, we pulled it off." "You alright, kid?" "Yes." "But you got here just in time." "Yeah." "Me and the all-Americans." "Alright." "Hold that." "This is one the boss will really like." "Hey, wait a minute." "Star News?" "Give me the desk." "Hello." "Brewster talking." "Stop the press." "Clear the decks." "A bombshell coming." "Gilbert Fender arrested." "Head of alien shakedown racket." "Exposed by your reporter." "Federal Attorney Carey bags ex-law partner." "Coming right in." "Hold everything." "Nice work, Brewster." "Especially the table." "Thanks, Packy." "But I don't want to be a newspaperwoman anymore." "Hello?" "Hello Crocker, Campbell speaking." "Stop the press." "Clear the decks." "A bombshell coming." "Ready?" "Hold it!" "Rewrite!" "Shields, Hymie, Simpson, Owens." "Boy!" "I want a boy!" "Alright." "Spill it, Campbell." "Society girl to marry reporter." "Miss Bonnie Brewster of Burlingame to wed .." "Packy Campbell, ace news-hound of The Times." ""Holy jumping Jehoshaphat, what kind of a reporter are you?"" "What do you think I pay you for?"" ""What about Fender?" "What about the alien shakedown racket?"" "I don't care who you marry." "Nobody cares who you marry." "I want story." "I want action." "I want a boy!" "Maternity hospital?" "Congratulations, Chief." "It's a girl." "Yeah." "It's true." "Walpole, I feel as popular as the little black animal that throws out a scent." "And I don't mean no Lincoln Penny." "Ah well, as the French say: "if you're going to toot, Toute de suite."" "Goodbye now." "T-G"