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Updated: May 8, 2025
From her description Cumnock got upon the track of Thayer's niece and her husband, found the proof of their guilt, had them watched until the News-Record came out with the "beat," then turned them over to the police. Also, Cumnock was keen at taking hints of good news-items concealed in obscure paragraphs. The Morris Prison scandal was an example of this.
All I mean is that caution, self-examination, self-doubt, calm consideration of the other side these are as necessary to success as energy and resolute action. All I suggest is that its splendour does not redeem a splendid folly. Its folly remains its essential characteristic." Three weeks later Howard became editor-in-chief of the News-Record.
He was disturbed whenever the News-Record published an item that might offend any of the people whose acquaintance he had gained with so much difficulty, and for whose good will he was willing to sacrifice even considerable money.
Why not? It would cost me nothing." But a man is the sum of all his past. Stokely arranged the loan, and within six months Howard was controlling owner of the News-Record. There was a debt of a million and a quarter attached to his ownership, but he saw how that would be wiped out. Once more he threw himself into his work with the energy of a boy.
It was one of the historic "beats" of New York journalism. The reputation of the News-Record for fearlessness and truth-telling and news-enterprise was established. At abound it had become the most conspicuous and one of the most powerful journals in New York. Howard, riding in the Park one morning late in the spring, came upon Mrs. Carnarvon.
Mrs. Carnarvon's back was toward them and she was looking out at the harbour. Howard put his hands upon Marian's shoulders and they looked each the other straight in the eyes. "Lovers and comrades," he said, "always. And how strong we are together!" "While I don't feel dependent upon the owners of the News-Record, still I am not exactly independent of them either.
When Culver finally appeared he had in his trembling right hand a copy of the News-Record. His face suggested that he was its owner, publisher and responsible editor, and that he expected then and there to be tortured to death for the two illustrated pages of the "Great Fanshaw-Dumont Divorce! All the Testimony! Shocking Revelations!"
"I happen to know something about Coulter's will," he said to Howard. "The News-Record stock is to be sold and you and I are to have the first chance to take it at three hundred and fifty which is certainly cheap enough." "Why did he arrange to dispose of the most valuable part of his estate?" "Well, we had an agreement about it.
He has limitations, but he knows them and he is eager and capable to learn." It was a "shop" dinner, Howard doing most of the talking, led on by Malcolm. The main point was the "new journalism," as it was called, and how to adapt it to the News-Record and the News-Record to it.
But they all tell me the News-Record has become a dangerous paper, that it's attacking everybody who has anything." "Anything he has stolen, yes. But that's all." "You can't get me to sympathise with you. I like well-dressed, well-mannered people who speak good English."
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