Word: answers
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Pennsylvania's lone Senator, haggard David A. Reed of Pittsburgh, helped answer the first question by admitting that Mr. Moore had asked him to use his influence with President Coolidge. It also became known that William Randolph Hearst was planning to sell three of his gumchewer sheetlets-the Mirror (New York), Advertiser (Boston) and American (Baltimore)-to Mr. Moore. Perhaps Mr. Hearst helped persuade President Coolidge to please his customer. If Publisher Hearst has such influence with President Coolidge, it may well mean that the latter's disinclination to another nomination is decreasingly adamant...
...Assuming for the purposes of this letter that I am a candidate for President, which I am not, and assuming for the purposes of this letter that the implications and inferences and statements in your questions are based upon facts, then I answer your interrogatories as follows...
...interrogatory No. 1, my answer...
...interrogatory No. 2, my answer...
...interrogatory No. 3, my answer...