Mr. Keen, Tracer Of Lost Persons (0416) 1940 06 05 The Case Of The Woman Who Wasn't Needed (pt. 3)
The clock strikes nine on this June evening in 1940, and listeners across America lean closer to their radios as Mr. Keen steps into the shadowed corridors of human desperation. Part three of "The Case of the Woman Who Wasn't Needed" finds our intrepid tracer at a crucial crossroads—the missing woman's identity hangs in the balance, and with each clue uncovered, the web of deception tightens around suspects who had every reason to wish her vanished. The tension builds with each carefully placed commercial break; will Keen's methodical detective work unravel the truth before another disappearance occurs? Tonight's episode delivers the kind of mounting dread and clever revelations that had made this program appointment listening for millions.
Since 1937, Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons had established itself as one of radio's most addictive detective series, setting a gold standard for mystery storytelling that influenced countless shows to follow. Unlike the fantasy-tinged adventures of other sleuths, Keen operated in a realm of gritty realism—tracking down runaway spouses, missing heirs, and lost souls caught in the machinery of urban life. The show's serialized format, where three-part cases unfolded across consecutive episodes, created an unprecedented narrative tension that kept audiences desperate to hear the next installment. In 1940, with America's social anxieties mounting as war loomed overseas, these intimate mysteries of domestic crisis and hidden identities struck a chord with listeners seeking both escape and reflection.
Don't miss the climactic resolution of this gripping case. Tune in tonight and discover whether Mr. Keen's keen eye will pierce through the lies and locate the woman everyone wanted forgotten. The truth is waiting in the static.