:17:00
Let's go and start
packing at once.
:17:02
First I'd like to take
a look at the home
:17:04
of Alfred Pettibone.
:17:06
Come along Watson.
:17:33
Why Doctor Watson,
:17:35
what a surprise.
:17:36
And Mr. Holmes,
:17:37
won't you come in?
:17:39
Thank you.
:17:40
I'm frightfully sorry
:17:41
but you've won't
find my son in
:17:42
he's gone to Washington.
:17:44
Some business or other.
:17:45
Poor fellow I'm afraid
that he'll never...
:17:47
never get used to the
climate over there.
:17:50
Would you mind if we
:17:51
looked over
your son's room?
:17:52
Why of course,
it's upstairs.
:17:53
Thank you.
:17:54
Some friends tell
me very, very muggy,
:17:55
very sticky.
:17:58
You'll find his room
:17:59
in a dreadful
pickle Mr. Holmes.
:18:01
Quite a mess he is.
:18:02
And I'm not allowed
to put my nose inside,
:18:04
as if I cared
anything about
:18:05
his silly old collection.
:18:17
This fellow, Pettibone,
:18:18
seems a curious
sort of a fellow.
:18:20
Sort of a collector
of collections.
:18:22
Postage stamps,
:18:25
military buttons,
:18:27
butterfly,
:18:28
oh, bugs,
:18:31
snapshots,
:18:34
all sorts of rubbish.
:18:36
Yes, I shall write a
monograph some day
:18:39
on the noxious habit
:18:40
of accumulating
useless trivia.
:18:49
Please be so good as
to stop pacing Watson,
:18:51
you distract me.
:18:52
All right, all right.