:40:01
I felt like a kid in front of a candy store.
:40:04
Tonight, six years later,
I got my candy, all of it.
:40:08
Welcome, gentlemen, to the Inquirer.
:40:10
Make an extra copy of that picture
and mail it to the Chronicle.
:40:15
It'll make you all happy to learn
that our circulation this morning...
:40:18
...was the greatest in New York: 684,000.
:40:23
684,132.
:40:26
Right.
:40:28
I hope you'll forgive my rudeness
in taking leave of you.
:40:31
I'm going abroad next week for a vacation.
:40:34
I've promised my doctor for sometime
that I would leave when I could.
:40:38
I now realize I can't.
:40:40
Say, Mr.Kane,
as long as you're promising...
:40:43
...there's a lot of pictures and statues
in Europe you ain't bought yet.
:40:47
You can't blame me, Mr.Bernstein.
:40:49
They've been making statues
for 2,000 years.
:40:52
And I've only been buying for five.
:40:54
- Promise me, Mr.Kane.
- I promise, Mr.Bernstein.
:40:57
- Thank you.
- Mr.Bernstein?
:41:00
You don't expect me to keep
any of those promises, do you?
:41:05
And now, gentlemen!
:41:07
Your complete attention, if you please.
:41:16
Are we going to declare war on Spain?
:41:27
Oh, mama, here they come.
Shoot me while I'm happy.
:41:39
I said, "Are we going to declare
war on Spain, or are we not?"
:41:44
The Inquirer already has.
:41:46
You long-faced, overdressed anarchist.
:41:50
I'm not overdressed.
:41:52
You are, too.
Mr.Bernstein, look at his necktie.
:41:56
Let's have the song about Charlie.
:41:58
- Is there a song about Charlie?
- Is there a song about you, Mr.Kane?