:24:00
- Where does it go, Miss Shelley?
- Right over there.
:24:04
- Excuse me, bud.
- No, right over there, Eddie.
:24:08
- You weren't expected till noon.
- That is becoming quite evident.
:24:14
- Bless you.
- Thank you.
:24:16
- You must've been caught in the rain.
- I was.
:24:20
- Your mother doesn't seem frightening.
- She's very changeable.
:24:25
- Why should I be frightening?
- Now, Mother, he wants to do his work.
:24:29
Get out of those pyjamas.
:24:31
- Why, Sam Yates! Look at you.
- Hello, Nora.
:24:34
I'm hiding in the middle of a parade.
:24:37
- Why, Sam Yates.
- Michael. I'll be doggoned.
:24:42
- How'd you know I wanted to see him?
- I didn't know you knew him.
:24:46
I went to school with him.
What did you call me about then?
:24:50
- I didn't call you.
- You didn't?
:24:53
- They gave me a message...
- Somebody must be cuckoo.
:24:59
- Have you been fighting?
- I fight three times a day.
:25:03
At school you had a tendency toward
riots. I thought you'd outgrow it.
:25:07
I hate the way this town
is going after Leopold Dilg.
:25:11
Anybody who believes what Holmes says
about him has got to settle with me.
:25:16
I take it you're Dilg's lawyer.
:25:18
I am not. That is, I am.
The state appointed me.
:25:22
But Dilg doesn't want me. He says an
innocent man doesn't need a lawyer.
:25:25
- Original thinker.
- He certainly is.
:25:28
He's the only honest man in town
and they want to hang him.
:25:32
Sam, really.
:25:33
He's been shouting for years
that Holmes is crooked.
:25:37
Mind you, he's just a worker with
gumption enough to fight the boss.
:25:41
Getting quite a following too.
So, what happens?
:25:45
He predicts the mills will burn down.
They do. One man is killed.
:25:49
Here's Holmes' chance.
"It was Dilg," he says.
:25:52
He lashes this burg into a frenzy,
he rigs this phoney trial.
:25:57
Dilg escapes because he knows
he hasn't got a chance.