:19:00
I don't need another guess.
:19:03
- It's quite obvious.
- It's obvious, huh?
:19:06
Will you step into the library?
:19:08
Sure. I'll take a chance.
:19:18
You know,
the Indians used to walk like this.
:19:20
E xcept the squaw always walked
in the back.
:19:22
You know why that was?
:19:24
That was in case of an attack
from the front.
:19:27
If the attack was from the rear,
she had to depend upon her papoose.
:19:31
Yes, papooses always had
bows and arrows.
:19:36
Of course, if she wasn't married,
then she had to protect her own...
:19:39
What country is this library in?
:19:43
Miss Schuyler, how about carfare
back to the front door?
:19:46
What are the initials, Mr...?
:19:48
Smith, Stewart Smith.
My friends all call me Stew.
:19:52
It's an in j ustice, too,
because I hold my liquor all right.
:19:56
Will 5000 be enough?
:19:59
- For what?
- For the letters, of course.
:20:07
You shouldn't do that,
Miss Schuyler.
:20:11
That's all right
for your lawyer friend...
:20:13
...but you shouldn't go around
thinking you can buy people.
:20:19
There are your letters.
:20:21
I don't know how to thank you.
:20:24
Mother'll be so grateful,
she'll probably want to kiss you.
:20:26
Your mother will want to kiss me?
Give me back my letters.
:20:31
That's the breaks I get. It's the
mothers that are grateful to me.
:20:37
You're a peculiar person.
:20:40
The other day, I pleaded with you
not to send in that story...
:20:43
I know, but that was news.
:20:45
This is blackmail,
and I don't like blackmail.
:20:48
I won't even pretend you haven't
done me a great favor.
:20:51
I wish there was something
I could do for you.
:20:55
Well, you can make this table
a little... A little less wide.