:10:01
I may not act it,
but I've been here 25 years.
:10:04
London man for the Globe
and they haven't caught onto me yet.
:10:07
How'd you manage it?
:10:09
Cable back the government handouts
and sign them...
:10:11
"Our London correspondent."
:10:12
- What's yours?
- Scotch and soda, please.
:10:15
Miss?
:10:19
Miss, please.
:10:21
- Scotch and soda, and a glass of milk.
- A glass of milk?
:10:25
I'm on the wagon. I went to the doctor
today about these jitters I got...
:10:29
and he said it was the wagon for a month
or a whole new set of organs.
:10:32
I can't afford a whole new set of organs.
:10:35
If I'd known you're on the wagon,
I could have got along without this.
:10:38
But as long as it's here...
:10:41
Good luck.
:10:44
Good?
:10:45
- Yeah, just like any other Scotch and soda.
- That's what I thought.
:10:51
Doesn't taste the way it did
when I was a baby. That's got poison in it.
:10:54
Speaking of that, I've got some pills
I got to take.
:10:57
Here's some cables that have been
coming over from New York.
:10:59
They love to cable. It makes them think
you're working for them.
:11:03
There's an invitation to that lunch
for the Dutchman Van Meer tomorrow.
:11:07
I guess that's your dish.
:11:08
This is given by the Universal Peace Party.
That's Fisher's organization, right?
:11:12
I don't know.
I don't follow those things very much.
:11:15
New York wants it, I send it.
That's the secret of being a correspondent.
:11:19
Been doing it 25 years.
:11:21
Twenty-five years, and I end up on milk.
:11:46
Good morning. How's the water wagon?
:11:48
Look at that.
One of them shook off this morning.
:11:52
I'm just on my way
to the Van Meer luncheon.
:11:55
I'm lunching with old man Clark.
He's the International Press...
:11:59
Here you are. I didn't know whether
to meet you in the grill or upstairs.