This film's earliest documented telecast occurred Monday 5 March 1945 on New York City's pioneer television station WNBT (Channel 1); in Baltimore it first aired Sunday 11 July 1948 on WBAL (Channel 11), in Cincinnati Saturday 6 November 1948 on WLW-T (Channel 4), in Detroit Wednesday 23 February 1949 on WXYZ (Channel 7), in Albuquerque Thursday 24 February 1949 on KOB (Channel 4), in Washington DC Sunday 6 March 1949 on WMAL (Channel 7), in San Francisco Tuesday 21 June 1949 on KGO (Channel 7), in Chicago Saturday 25 June 1949 on WGN (Channel 9), in Atlanta Thursday 25 August 1949 on WAGA (Channel 5), and in Los Angeles Thursday 8 December 1949 on KTLA (Channel 5).
The Doris Day who appears in this film (and a handful of other Poverty Row titles of the 1940s) is not the same actress who was one of the top box office stars of the 1950s and 60s.
This film's copyright has expired and it can now be seen in its entirety (albeit in a badly transferred version) free of charge on YouTube.
To give you some idea of just how low budget this film was, silent stars Francis X. Bushman and Clara Kimball Young (both of whom spent most of the "talkie era" unemployed) were given "special billing" in the opening credits and noted as playing "themselves."