Days of our Lives - Monday, November 08, 1965
>> [ Giggling ]
>>> Carol: Julie, you did it. You're the greatest.
>>> Diane: We'd better get out of here.
>>> Julie: Now, don't act in a hurry. That's a dead giveaway. Come on.
>>> Officer Mike: All right, hold it right there, girls.
>> [ Like sands through the hourglass, so are the "Days of our Lives." "Days of our Lives," a new dramatic serial starring MacDonald Carey." ]
>>> Julie: You didn't give them your right name, did you?
>>> Diane: Of course I did.
>>> Julie: Well, that was pretty dumb, I must say.
>>> Diane: He asked me. I had to tell him, didn't I?
>>> Julie: Well, you could've played it smart. The next thing you know, your parents will be coming down here.
>>> Diane: Well, gosh, Julie, I couldn't help it.
>>> Julie: Sure you could. I'm not going to give them my right name.
>>> Diane: You're not?
>>> Julie: Of course not.
>>> Officer Mike: Ok. All right, young lady, you're next. Sit down. What's your full name?
>>> Julie: Julie Horton.
>>> Diane: Julie Horton?
>>> Carol: Shh.
>>> Diane: But that's --
>>> Officer Mike: Julie Horton.
>>> Alice: I wonder what Ben and Addie will think of for this year -- for Christmas.
>>> Tom: Well, Christmas is Christmas. Not much you can do about new ideas for cards.
>>> Alice: Do you remember the year that they were photographed in a real sleigh? Julie and Steven holding the reindeer?
>>> Tom: The kids looked scared stiff.
>>> Alice: Oh, they did not. Steven enjoyed it. Julie was proud as a peacock.
>>> Tom: Our granddaughter is always proud as a peacock. That's a natural expression.
>>> Tom: [Tom laughs] I -- I wonder what Mickey's girlfriends would say if they could see this.
>>> Alice: He was a beautiful baby.
>>> Tom: I think I'll use this to blackmail him someday.
>>> Alice: You wouldn't get very far. He's too good a lawyer. Ah, they do make a handsome couple. Don't they, Tom?
>>> Tom: I'm glad you approve.
>>> Alice: Oh -- that's another thing we have to do. We have to call the photographer and make an appointment for Marie's wedding picture.
>>> Tom: The wedding's two weeks away. You have plenty of time.
>>> Alice: Not during the holidays. Everybody wants family pictures, and I'm just going to tell Marie she better call him first thing in the morning and make an appointment. So -- oh, it's a lovely family. Isn't it, Tom?
>>> Tom: Think we should quit while we're still ahead?
>>> Alice: All grown-up, on their own. Marie will be the last to go.
>>> Tom: Then you'll have the one thing you've yearned for all our married life.
>>> Alice: What's that?
>>> Tom: Enough closet room.
>>> Alice: Oh, Tom.
>> [Tom laughs]
>>> Alice: Tom, you're too much.
>>> Tom: We'll be alone at last!
>>> Alice: Oh. You talk as if you're happy about it.
>>> Tom: Well, now, there's nothing against togetherness -- just you and me, I mean.
>>> Alice: I'll miss them.
>>> Tom: I know.
>>> Alice: I miss them already.
>>> Tom: You'll have them around you Sundays, holidays, any day they want to drop in.
>>> Alice: It's not the same, is it?
>>> Tom: Well, you won't have them at your apron strings, we won't have to go to P.T.A. meetings, and you won't have to sell girl scout cookies anymore. Won't that be wonderful?
>>> Alice: No.
>>> Tom: Feeling blue, darling?
>>> Alice: Yes. Yes, I am. I just can't bear to think of them all grown-up and out on their own, not needing us anymore.
>>> Tom: Well, they still need us. Mickey asked me to lend him $10 yesterday.
>>> Alice: I don't mean that kind of need!
>>> Tom: I know what you mean, Alice. I know. I miss it, too. But we can't keep them kids forever. At least we have grandchildren around, keep us busy.
>>> Alice: Not the same as having them in the same house. "Mom" this, "Mom" that.
>>> Tom: Look, why don't we go out and take a walk and get some ice cream?
>>> Alice: We've got two gallons of it in the freezer.
>>> Tom: Two gallons? How come we have so much? Oops.
>>> Alice: That's what I mean, Tom. There's nobody around to eat it up anymore.
>>> Tom: Do you know what we'd do if we were rich and crazy?
>>> Alice: What?
>>> Tom: Go on an ocean cruise, just the two of us.
>>> Alice: Without the children?
>>> Tom: Darling, you're hopeless. What children?
>>> Alice: Oh, Tom.
>> [ Laughing ]
>>> Mickey: Well, I was a gentleman, wasn't I?
>>> Tony: Oh, yeah.
>>> Mickey: I mean, at least I saw her home.
>>> Marie: Did you tell her you had another date later?
>>> Tony: He did not. He's too much better a lawyer for that.
>>> Marie: Oh.
>>> Mickey: Hi, Dad, Mom.
>>> Tom: Hi. Well, I'm glad you're here.
>>> Mickey: Oh. Yeah, well, Dad, about that 10 bucks, I just --
>>> Tom: Your mother needs cheering up.
>>> Tony: Listen, why don't you tell her about our double date, Mickey?
>>> Marie: There's nothing funny about that. What do you think of your darling son, Mom he takes one girl home right after dinner and then makes a late date with another girl.
>>> Mickey: Marie, there are girls and there are girls. One girl's a dinner date and one girl's an after --
>>> Tom: Never mind, Mickey. Your mother has a fond memory of you as a 3-month-old. She doesn't like to change that idea.
>>> Mickey: Mom, you've been looking at those old photographs again.
>>> Alice: Now, don't you dare tease me, Mickey.
>>> Marie: Darling, did you know that Mickey and Addie and Bill and I were perfect children?
>>> Tony: No.
>>> Marie: That's what Mom says.
>>> Alice: I never said that you were perfect. But you were endearing.
>>> Marie: See?
>>> Tony: Yeah.
>> [Phone rings]
>>> Tom: Oh, that must be the hospital. I'll get it in my study.
>> [Ring]
>>> Tom: Hello, Dr. Horton speaking.
>>> Officer Mike: Dr. Horton, this is the precinct station. We're holding your daughter Julie.
>>> Tom: You're what?
>>> Tom: What do you mean, you're holding my daughter Julie?
>>> Officer Mike: For shoplifting, Dr. Horton. She and two other girls were picked up in Bartlett's Department Store.
>>> Tom: Shoplifting? Julie?
>>> Officer Mike: That's right. I'd suggest you get down here just as soon as you can.
>>> Tom: All right. I'll be down there in 20 minutes.
>>> Mickey: What, the hospital need you, Dad?
>>> Tom: Mickey, close the door.
>>> Mickey: What's the matter?
>>> Tom: Julie's in some kind of trouble with the police.
>>> Mickey: The police?
>>> Tom: She and two other girls are being held for shoplifting.
>>> Mickey: What?
>>> Tom: I've got to get down there right away, Mickey. I want you to come with me.
>>> Mickey: How about Ben and Addie? Have the police notified them?
>>> Tom: Apparently not.
>>> Mickey: Well, why not? They're Julie's parents. They should be the first ones to know.
>>> Tom: Julie said her name was Julie Horton, not Olson.
>>> Mickey: Horton?
>>> Tom: The police think she's my daughter.
>>> Mickey: Why, that crazy kid.
>>> Tom: Julie's not crazy, Mickey, but she's in some kind of serious trouble. Now, the sooner we get down there, the quicker we can straighten it out.
>>> Mickey: Aren't you going to tell Mom?
>>> Tom: No, I don't want to worry her. I'll tell her it's an emergency at the hospital. You try to reach Ben and Addie while I talk to your mother.
>>> Alice: Now, you will call that photographer first thing in the morning?
>>> Marie: Oh, yes.
>>> Alice: All right. Now, about the music -- oh, Tom? Do you think that we should have an accordion player at the wedding reception or a pianist?
>>> Tony: I'm holding out for The Beatles.
>>> Marie: Or a jazz combo.
>>> Tony: But no folk singers. I draw the line at that "Shoo Fly Baby, Daddy's in the Cornfield." Not at my wedding.
>>> Alice: Now, Tom, what do you think?
>>> Tom: Well, anything Tony and Marie want is ok with me. Look, I've got to go downtown.
>>> Alice: Oh. Oh, that call was an emergency, then.
>>> Tom: Yes, in a way.
>>> Mickey: Dad?
>>> Tom: Mickey's going to drive me down.
>>> Alice: Oh.
>>> Tom: You reach Ben and Addie?
>>> Mickey: No. Their cook says they're out on some party, as usual.
>>> Tom: Oh, well, we'll try again when we get down there.
>>> Alice: With that chill in the air, this hot coffee's going to taste good.
>>> Tony: Mmm, thanks, Mrs. Horton.
>>> Alice: How long are you going to call me "Mrs. Horton"?
>>> Tony: Well, what would you like me to call you? I can't you "Mother" because I've already had one real mother.
>>> Marie: And "Mrs. Horton" is entirely too formal for a future son-in-law.
>>> Tony: Well, what do your other children call you, Mrs. Horton?
>>> Alice: Well, they call me "Mom" and "Mama" and "Mommy" and --
>>> Tony: Yeah?
>>> Alice: They've even called me "hey."
>>> Tony: Hey?
>>> Marie: Ben called you Alice.
>>> Alice: Oh, that's right, Tony. Why not call me Alice?
>>> Tony: Well, if it's ok.
>>> Alice: Of course. I'd like it.
>>> Tony: Ok, you've got a deal, Alice. Thanks. You know, I just remembered. I can't remember calling my own mother anything but "Mother."
>>> Marie: Never "Mom"?
>>> Tony: [ Shakes head no ] Or "Mama." I guess she just wasn't the type.
>>> Alice: I remember her very well. Your mother was a gentle lady, Tony.
>>> Tony: Yes, she was.
>>> Alice: You must have missed her a great deal.
>>> Tony: I did in the beginning, but I was 14 when she died.
>>> Alice: Well, I must say your father's done a wonderful job of bringing you up all by himself.
>>> Tony: He's a great guy.
>>> Alice: Oh, I just happened to think --
>>> Tony: What?
>>> Alice: He'll wear his uniform at the wedding, won't he?
>>> Marie: Oh, Mom, you're the absolute it. You've got a one-track mind.
>>> Alice: All right, I admit it. I'm square. But your wedding is the most important thing on my mind these days. Should I pretend it's not?
>>> Marie: Of course not.
>>> Alice: And, so I just happened to think that Craig looked so marvelous in his uniform.
>>> Tony: I'm sure he'll wear it for you.
>>> Marie: Do you know what? She tried to con my nephew into being ringbearer.
>>> Alice: Well, of course. It was a fine idea.
>>> Tony: Stevie? What'd he say?
>>> Marie: He just looked at Mom as though she'd lost her mind.
>>> Alice: Well, he said that he would play his drums at the wedding.
>>> Marie: [ Chuckles ] Oh.
>>> Tony: Oh, that would be a great innovation.
>>> Marie: A little Marshal, don't you think?
>>> Tony: Oh, I don't know. That's what a wedding day is, after all -- D-day.
>>> Marie: D-day? Is that how you think of our wedding?
>>> Tony: Sure.
>>> Alice: You know, this is really the first real wedding we've ever had in this family. Addie and Ben got married in Washington right after the war, and poor Dan married Kitty down at City Hall, just before he was shipped overseas. Of course, your father and I could never afford anything but a very simple ceremony.
>>> Marie: Well, I think Mom deserves a real wedding. Don't you, darling?
>>> Tony: Absolutely.
>>> Marie: Hey, Mom, are you going to cry just like in the movies?
>>> Alice: You bet your boots I'm going to cry.
>>> Tony: That's all right. I'll probably cry a little bit myself for my long-lost lovely bachelor days.
>>> Marie: Like Mickey?
>>> Tony: Oh, lucky Mickey.
>>> Marie: Tony!
>>> Tony: I am joining The Benedicts with tears in my eyes.
>>> Alice: Why don't you two go out and breathe some of that lovely Autumn air?
>>> Tony: I think your mother's trying to tell us to cool off.
>>> Marie: The house doesn't have to fall on me. I can take a hint. Come on.
>>> Tony: Good night. Alice? Thanks for the coffee.
>>> Alice: Good night, Tony.
>>> Tony: Your mother's right. It's a great night. Smells like burning leaves and pumpkin.
>>> Marie: And bayberry?
>>> Tony: I don't smell any bayberry.
>>> Marie: Oh, you'll smell bayberry in Boston.
>>> Tony: Now, why do you bring that up? Boston?
>>> Marie: Because you'll be there in a couple of days.
>>> Tony: Won't be much fun without you.
>>> Marie: Oh, you'll have far too much on your mind to miss me.
>>> Tony: Hey, why don't you come with me?
>>> Marie: Oh, now, Tony, we've gone over that before. You know it's better that you go alone for these interviews.
>>> Tony: Yeah, but suppose -- I mean, just suppose that -- that I can't get that teaching fellowship.
>>> Marie: But you've got to think optimistically. There's no question at all in my mind that you're going to get that fellowship.
>>> Tony: See, that's what love does to a girl. You don't leave any room for doubt in your mind.
>>> Marie: I certainly don't. We can't afford to.
>>> Tony: For the first time in my life, I wish I were a millionaire.
>>> Marie: Hmm, I don't. I'm glad you're you. Besides, with my working and with your fellowship, we'll have enough to live on. And we'll be together. That's what counts.
>>> Tony: That's my girl.
>>> Marie: Only --
>>> Tony: Only what?
>>> Marie: Well, sometimes I think we're plunging into this marriage too soon.
>>> Tony: Too soon?
>>> Marie: I mean, it doesn't seem fair to you. Oh, maybe we should have waited until you're really settled in Boston with an apartment and that fellowship and at peace with the world.
>>> Tony: Hey, how long do you think I'm going to be at peace with the world without you?
>>> Marie: Well, I could come up to Boston later, maybe even transfer to the university after next semester. We could have a quiet, little wedding in Boston.
>>> Tony: And rob your mother of all that fun?
>>> Marie: She'd understand.
>>> Tony: Yeah, but I won't. Hey, you don't seem to remember, it's -- the Thanksgiving wedding was my idea. I'm the guy who can't wait. I'm the one who's pushing this thing, and I'm doing it out of pure and simple self-interest. Don't you know how much I love you? Don't you know how very dear you are to me? I'm worse than your mother. I just can't wait till the day that I hear that -- that wedding march play -- Stevie's drums -- I don't care what kind of music they play, just as -- just as long as I can kiss my bride on my wedding day.
>>> Marie: Oh, Tony, you're a nut.
>>> Tony: All right, now, let's get down to practical things, like -- like where we're going to live.
>>> Marie: Well, if you get the fellowship --
>>> Tony: If I get the fellowship?
>>> Marie: When you get the fellowship --
>>> Tony: Ok.
>>> Marie: We'll have a bit more money, and we can look for a little apartment in Boston.
>>> Tony: Mm-hmm.
>>> Marie: And then I can find part-time work until I finish my degree. I can get it in the Chemistry lab.
>>> Tony: Or we can get a little houseboat on the Charles River.
>>> Marie: Do they have any to rent up there?
>>> Tony: Well, I don't know. I would -- well, I don't know, maybe that's kind of a quaint idea.
>>> Marie: Wouldn't it be rather chilly in the Winter?
>>> Tony: Well, if it is, we've got our love to keep us warm.
>>> Marie: Hey, doesn't The Charles freeze in the Winter?
>>> Tony: I don't know. If it does, we'll just skate off to class just like Hans Brinker.
>>> Marie: Oh. Tony, I wish we were there right now.
>>> Tony: Hey, first things first. I mean, first the wedding and then the honeymoon.
>>> Marie: You're so conventional.
>>> Tony: Yeah, well, one of us had better be. You wanton hussy.
>>> Marie: Oh.
>>> Tony: Do you know -- do you realize that you and I have our whole long, wonderful lives ahead of us? You realize that?
>>> Marie: Oh, Tony.
>>> Tom: I still can't understand why you'd want this.
>>> Julie: I don't want it. I didn't even take it.
>>> Officer Mike: Ms. Olson, you were caught right in the act of taking it.
>>> Mickey: What I don't understand is why you didn't give your right name.
>>> Julie: I am a Horton. Isn't that right, Grandpa?
>>> Tom: No, Julie, your name is Olson. I'm your grandfather but not your father. Have you been able to get in touch with her parents yet?
>>> Julie: No, they're still out, but I left word at the house for them to call down here as soon as they return.
>>> Officer Mike: Well, we're going to have to hold her, you know. I can't let her go until we talk to them.
>>> Mickey: May I arrange for a temporary release? I'm an attorney.
>>> Officer Mike: I know you are, Mr. Horton, but, no, not in a juvenile case. We've got to talk to the parents.
>>> Mickey: Yeah, that's right. Wouldn't you just know Ben would be out at a party at a time like this?
>>> Julie: That's why I didn't give my right name, Uncle Mickey. I knew they'd never be able to find Dad.
>>> Tom: Your mother and father haven't run away. They're just out for the evening, a perfectly normal occurrence.
>>> Julie: They're always out.
>>> Tom: Now, let's get back to you for a moment. What's behind all this, Julie? You have a fur jacket at home that's worth twice what this is. Why did you want to take this out of the store?
>>> Julie: I didn't take it. I was just going to try it on.
>>> Officer Mike: You took it out of a display case, you put it into that bag, and you didn't try it on.
>>> Julie: Well, it was just a gag. We were just horsing around. Diane and Carol dared me to take it!
>>> Diane: Julie --
>>> Carol: We did not!
>>> Julie: Oh, sure you did! You called me chicken, and you dared me to take it!
>>> Diane: Julie Horton, that's an out-and-out lie and you know it! It was your idea, not ours.
>>> Carol: That's the truth, and you better know it.
>>> Julie: Go ahead, gang up on me.
>>> Diane: Well, that's what you get for blaming it on us.
>>> Officer Mike: All right, all right now. Your folks will be here in a few minutes. You just simmer down. And as for you, I saw you take it, so don't try to blame everybody else!
>>> Julie: Grandpa, are you going to let him talk to me like that?
>>> Tom: Julie, this is a police station, not your own living room.
>>> Julie: Well, why is everybody accusing me without even a trial or anything?
>>> Tom: Trial?
>>> Mickey: Julie, get this through your head. This detective saw you take the stole with his own eyes.
>>> Julie: Well, what was he doing, following me?
>>> Officer Mike: No, Miss Olson, I was not following you. There have been a lot of thefts in that store over the past few weeks. I've been stationed there for one solid week just watching for shoplifters like you.
>>> Julie: Well, what am I, some kind of a criminal? I'll pay for the old stole! It was just a joke! I wasn't going to keep it!
>>> Officer Mike: Sure, sure, sure, that's what they all say.
>>> Julie: Why are you all against me? Grandpa, Uncle Mickey, why don't you do something? I'm not a thief! It was -- it was just a joke! It was all in fun! I wasn't going to keep that ratty old stole! It was just a gag! Can't you understand? Or maybe you don't want to understand. "Let's all gang up on Julie and watch her crawl." Well, I'm not going to crawl! You can keep me down here in this jail for years! I don't care! Why should I care? Nobody else cares! Nobody in the whole world!
>>> Tom: Julie!
>>> Julie: Nobody! That's what I said, nobody!