It Happened to Jane
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1:19:02
- What's he doing?
- We got the water!

1:19:13
More steam.
1:19:26
- What are you doing in here?
- I'm sorry, Harry. Sir.

1:19:29
But there's a whole army of reporters
out by my desk.

1:19:32
- I'm not seeing anybody.
- Just a moment, Miss Beardsley.

1:19:35
Will you please tell the press
Mr. Malone is preparing a statement?

1:19:38
- Yes, sir.
- No, sir!

1:19:40
- Now, wait a minute!
- No, you wait a minute.

1:19:46
I've got a few things to say to you, Harry.
1:19:49
Either you are going to listen to me,
or in precisely four seconds...

1:19:52
which is the time it will take me
to walk through that door...

1:19:55
you will be left without an ally
in the English-speaking world.

1:19:59
For the past several weeks...
1:20:01
you have,
with your usual devotion to detail...

1:20:03
managed to undermine
what I, as Chief Counsel for the E&P...

1:20:06
consider the most flourishing railroad
in the country.

1:20:09
- Undermine?
- Yes, undermine.

1:20:11
From the moment
that Jane Osgood attached old 97...

1:20:13
you've been acting as if you were in a fight
with an organisation...

1:20:16
approximately the size
of the federal government.

1:20:18
Harry, our antagonist
is one young, attractive widow.

1:20:22
Whom you, by your stubbornness,
have made the most popular American...

1:20:26
since Charles A. Lindbergh flew the Atlantic.
1:20:29
Now, you listen to me.
1:20:43
- More steam!
- All right, I'll give you more steam.

1:20:56
Boy, we'll be lucky
if we get to New York by Christmas.

1:20:59
Is Larry going to be in New York?

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