The filament is as Grainger said but there are some notes in the data sheet:
If the filaments are paralleled, pin 5 should be the negative and pins 1-7 the positive. If they are in series, then pin 7 should be negative, pin 1 is negative, pin 7 positive, and there should be a shunting resistor between pins 1 and 5 "to limit cathode current to the value specified" - not very clear but I suppose some of the plate current will also heat the cathode, and the most negative end of the filament will carry the highest current.
Pin 2 and pin 6 are the plate.
Pin 3 is the control grid (grid 1)
Pin 4 is the screen grid (grid 2)
Pin 5 is the suppressor grid (grid 3) as well as the filament center tap.
I chose parallel filaments mostly so I could use two D-cells instead of four - remember the filament power has to float to allow independent bias of the two tubes. But at the very low plate voltage used in Quickie, the uneven current referred to above becomes much more of an issue, so parallel filaments will last nearly twice as long as the active end of a series arrangement - that's serendipity though, not engineering!