:18:02
Well, I'm sure he'll be
very successful at it.
:18:06
You really think that,
do you, ma'am?
:18:08
Yes, I do.
:18:12
You do?
:18:14
Well, I guess I'd better
be running along.
:18:16
- Good-bye, Mrs. Hilton.
- Good-bye.
:18:19
Mr. Mahoney.
:18:22
I think Mr. Hilton
might like to help Johnny
:18:25
get into the advertising business
when the war's over.
:18:27
Now, that is an idea.
It wouldn't have occurred to me.
:18:31
Mr. Hilton is in the advertising
business, isn't he?
:18:34
And I'm sure he'd be delighted.
:18:36
We've always thought Johnny
was a fine, intelligent boy.
:18:38
That he is, ma'am.
That and a whole lot more.
:18:41
And you've really given us
something to look forward to...
:18:43
me and Johnny and the missus.
:18:46
It was very nice of you to come
and visit with me this way.
:18:49
Not at all, ma'am.
Not at all.
:19:00
- Mother.
- Yes?
:19:02
Do you think that I could
be a good secretary?
:19:04
Ha, a secretary.
:19:06
Why don't you be a Wac?
You could be their mascot.
:19:08
All right, go ahead and starve.
See if I care.
:19:15
Dumb magazines.
:19:18
Everybody's got magazines.
:19:21
I know!
:19:23
Why don't we take somebody
into the house... a roomer?
:19:28
If you're going to throw away aces,
Jane, that's fine with me.
:19:31
Mother, why shouldn't we
rent a room?
:19:34
- There's such a terrible shortage.
- Go away.
:19:36
Down with five.
:19:38
It's perfectly ridiculous, Brig.
A stranger in our home.
:19:40
Where you get your ideas
is beyond me.
:19:43
Certainly it's ridiculous.
It's Communism... that's what it is.
:19:46
Oh, pooh.
We could get an officer maybe.
:19:49
And it might be
sort of like having Pop back.
:19:52
An officer.
:19:54
I think maybe she's right.
:19:56
I understand there's not
a room to be had in town.
:19:59
It might be very patriotic of us
to take an officer into our house.