:29:01
They've been coming in like this all day.
Thirty-five in the last hour. Think of that.
:29:04
I'll read them later.
Oh, now you're being modest.
Not every invalid...
:29:07
How do you do. Not every invalid
gets a wire from the White House.
:29:09
You ought to have that framed.
Go have it framed,
will you? Now!
:29:12
Yes, I will. Here's one
from Walter Winchell, the journalist.
:29:15
And Jascha Heifetz, the musician.
:29:18
And here's one from...
:29:21
I smell something.
Do you?
:29:23
No, I don't think so.
I don't, either.
:29:25
It's a very distinct odor.
:29:29
Oh, yes. It's the oil furnace.
The fumes come up from the ventilator.
:29:31
You should have that corrected.
:29:33
Run down and tell them
to have it fixed, will you?
:29:36
I most certainly will.
That's not good for you.
:29:38
Here's a long wire
from Leopold Stokowski.
:29:40
He'll be in town the day after tomorrow
and wants to visit. We'll see about that.
:29:45
I wish you'd go out
and have that furnace fixed.
The fumes are killing me.
:29:50
Is it that bad?
Of course I will. L...
:29:56
What's that?
That's steam.
I've got hot feet.
:30:00
Very peculiar symptom.
:30:03
"Fumes from the oil furnace."
:30:06
How old are you, two years?
:30:10
You behave like a baby.
:30:12
No use trying to tell you to do anything.
:30:16
Hey! That's a two-dollar cigar!
:30:19
Where did you get it?
:30:20
Don't look at me.
I smoke a pipe.
Bishop gave it to me.
:30:23
Very funny.
Fine thing
for a two-dollar cigar.
:30:26
Where are the rest of them?
I haven't got any. There aren't any more.
:30:29
Oh.
:30:32
Trouble with being sick is
you've got to associate with doctors.
:30:35
Thank you very much, my dear.
That fellow goes around behaving that way.
:30:41
Stokowski's
a friend of yours?
Who?
:30:44
Stokowski.
Oh, I know him.
We don't agree on Brahms.
:30:48
You talk to him?
Not about Brahms.
:30:52
And he...
he really comes here?
:30:54
Oh, yes. He eats here
when he's in town.
:30:57
Two-dollar cigar.
He does?