:32:01
	- Evening.
- Good evening. Hello, doc.
:32:03
	Hi, Connie.
:32:05
	- Just coffee, please.
- Right.
:32:07
	Who's that, doc?
:32:10
	That's Mrs. MacKenzie.
She runs a dress shop.
:32:12
	She has a daughter
in the senior class, Allison.
:32:15
	Beautiful woman.
:32:17
	She's a widow. Born here,
but she had ambitions, and left.
:32:21
	Married in New York to some ad genius.
When he died, she came back here.
:32:25
	- I'd like to meet her.
- Wouldn't do you no good.
:32:29
	Bring your coffee.
:32:33
	Connie, you haven't met Mr. Rossi,
the new school principal.
:32:37
	- How do you do?
- Hello.
:32:39
	I hear about you every day
from my daughter.
:32:44
	You've been working kind of late?
:32:47
	No, I've been to the movies.
Allison's giving a party.
:32:50
	What does she plan to do
after graduation?
:32:53
	She'd like to be a writer.
I'd like her in college.
:32:56
	It's too bad she has
no brothers and sisters.
:32:59
	- Why do you say that?
- Just that I'm against only-child families.
:33:03
	Only children receive all
the attention of the parents.
:33:06
	- Good and bad.
- I don't think Allison turned out badly.
:33:09
	She hasn't turned out yet.
Her life is just beginning.
:33:13
	It's too late to give her
any brothers and sisters.
:33:16
	In your case, I'd say it wasn't.
:33:19
	If I didn't like you so much,
Matt... . No use...
:33:21
	Now, Connie, don't you go
proposing to me.
:33:24
	- For you, doc.
- Excuse me.
:33:27
	Would you like a cigarette?
:33:29
	- Swain speaking.
- Thank you.
:33:31
	I'll be right over.
:33:34
	Speak of babies and they appear.
Mrs. Runkle's in labor.
:33:37
	I'll see you later.
:33:39
	Thanks, doc.
:33:41
	- Bye.
- Bye.
:33:49
	Doc Swain's always talking
about babies.
:33:52
	- They're his stock-in-trade.
- Not a bad subject.
:33:55
	We teach schoolchildren English and
math and history, and yet...
:33:59
	...we neglect what gives them
the most trouble in life.