Lgdi 51 04 09 (239) Uncle Harry's Bones
# Uncle Harry's Bones
When George Valentine answers a seemingly simple request to examine some old bones discovered in a garden shed, he stumbles headlong into a decades-old murder that someone very much wants to stay buried. The skeleton belongs to Uncle Harry, a man who vanished years ago under circumstances nobody wanted to discuss—until now. As George begins asking questions around town, the comfortable facades of respectable families begin to crack, and suddenly the mild-mannered investigator finds himself trapped in a web of lies, blackmail, and murder most foul. With each revelation, the stakes grow darker and more personal, culminating in a tense confrontation where the past reaches out from the grave to claim its due. Bob Bailey's assured narration carries you through the shadowy streets and sinister parlors of this small town where buried secrets prove far more dangerous than buried bones.
*Let George Do It* thrived on exactly this kind of storytelling—everyday mysteries that spiraled into genuine moral complexity. The show, which ran throughout the 1946-1954 period on the Mutual Network, built its reputation on smart writing and Bailey's masterful ability to inhabit the role of the everyman detective. Unlike the wisecracking gumshoes of other detective programs, George Valentine felt like someone your neighbor might hire, making the danger feel immediate and real. This episode exemplifies the show's golden-age formula: a puzzle that demands solving, characters with actual psychological depth, and atmosphere thick enough to cut with a knife.
Tune in for "Uncle Harry's Bones" and experience why radio audiences tuned in faithfully each week. This is classic detective storytelling at its finest—mysterious, compelling, and utterly gripping from the first moment to the final, shocking reveal.