Page:Lynch Williams--The stolen story and other newspaper stories.djvu/162

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

The Great Secretary-of-State Interview

were coming out for Holliday, you'd think they'd tell everyone."

"Of course," said a Westerner, "they'd take pains to give it out as a public statement, wouldn't they?"

"If it were anyone but Reed," said one of the New Yorkers, "I would say it was clearly a fake to secure his own promised fat office through Holliday next fall."

"Reed wouldn't dare fake on a thing like that, even if he were that sort," said The Baltimore Sun man. "It would simply kill him, kill his political chances, and kill him as a newspaper man."

But The Evening Star correspondent wore a confident smile, and only said, "It's a beat on the whole country, and will nominate Holliday as soon as these Western jays regain their heads." But he turned around, relaxed his confident smile, and swiftly wrote this dispatch to the home office, like a good newspaper man: "How about interview? all others say non-committal. Did you have a private interview? I say so here. Better verify before you go to press."

144