Some of the Wm Horace White. THE trial of tbe Halns broth ers at Flush ing, N. Y.. fur the slaying of William E. Ann Is nt the Bnyslde Yacht club last summer Is a proceeding that nat urally excites more than local Interest on account of the promiuence of the families concerned and the sensational JUDGE CRANE. character of the tragedy. Military, society and literary circles are espe ctally absorbed In the outcome of the trial, for the name of Ilains has been an honored one In the army and a noted one In literature, white In lead ing social circles lu Washington, Bos ton and New York the families now enjoying so much undesirable public ity were formerly conspicuous. The distinction of presiding at this trial one bound to become celebrated In legnl annals belongs to one of the younger judges of the supreme bench of the state of New York. Frederick E. Crane of the borough of Brooklyn. On the opening morning of the trial when the court attendants rapped for order the standing audience saw Judge Crane advance In his black robe, very fair In complexion, clean shaven, youthful looking and Indicat ing by every action that be was brim ful of energy. The lawyers had al ready learned that he did not purpose tolerating any delay that could possi bly be avoided. lie had Informed them that he would hold night ses sions, and from .the outset he expedit ed the preliminaries. Judge Crane is a graduate of the Adelphla academy and the Columbia Law school and before elevation to the bench was counsel In many noted civil and criminal suits. Joseph Pulitzer, who Is accused by Tresldent Roosevelt of libeling the United States government through publications in his newspaper, the Kew York World, celebrated the twenty-fifth anniversary of his connection with the World only a few weeks ago, As the president's recent special mes sage to congress was devoted chiefly to the alleged offenses of the World In connection with the charges of scan dal In the negotiations associated with the purchase of the Panama canal, the personality of Mr. Pulitzer is thrust into the foreground. It Is an unusual thing for a private citizen to ibe mentioned specifically and singled out for criticism and denunciation as the proprietor of the World was lu this message. Mr. Roosevelt's action was based on his belief that the circum stances of this case Justified a de parture from precedents. Mr. Pulitzer was born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1847 and, coming to this country in 1804, entered the array and served until the end of the civil war In a cavalry regiment. Taking up his residence in St. Louis at the close of the war, he Joined the Westllche Post, 3erman, as reporter, rising to the managing editorship. In ' 1878 he flxrotfht the St Louis Dispatch for a price aid to have been $500. "and ex pensive) at that." He united it with the St. Louis Post, and by application of his ideas be turned the Post-Dispatch into oue of the best paying and strongest papers in Missouri. In 1883 be bought the New York World and JOSEPH FULRZEB. duplicated his Post-Dispatch success. He served lu the Missouri legislature And In 1885 was elected to congress from a New York district, but resigned after a few months' service. Frederick: Kohler, chief of police In the city of Cleveland, O., Is the best chief of police la America, In the opin ion of President Roosevelt. That crime in the cities can be reduced to a minimum. If not actually checked, by the simple observance of the Golden Itule Cblef Kohler thinks he has prov ed. A year's trial of this policy In dealing with crime and criminals In Cleveland has convinced him of It, and now other cities are preparing to follow the example of Cleveland In ln atltutlng the Golden Rule policy. It Is only a question of time. Its advocate a. until It will be adopted every wVre throughout the United State Cblef Kohler was the first man to em- ft 5 Men Hour PS : Chief Kohler. ploy the Golden Rule In treating with crime, so to him belongs the credit of whatever success It has attained. The Goldcu Rule policy was put Into effect a year ago, and statistics for the first nine months, which have Just been compiled, prove It to be an un qualified success. The Earl of Warwick, who Is on a visit to this country and who has been talking over with Tresldent Roosevelt the subject of game lu Africa, has made a number of hunting trips to the section the president expects to visit. He prophesies that Mr. Roosevelt will have no end of sport and would not be sur prised if he bagged n elephant, though the earl himself has not been fortunate enough to get one. The British noble man has been brought to notice in this country more on his wife's ac EARL OF WAKWICK. count than his own. The Countess of Warwick, who has been in turn bril liant society lender, philanthropist and Socialist advocate, visited this country not long since for the especial purpose, It was said, of studying the condition of the Socialist movement here. It was reported at one time that the earl had a leaning toward socialism, too, but his utterances during his American visit do not bear out such a view. In deed, he intimated that his wife was like a good many women, somewhat changeable in her Ideas, and therefore he did not like to define her position ou economic questions because it might have shifted a little by the time of bis return. The earl and his accomplished wife expect to entertain President Roose velt at Warwick castle during his stay in England, and the earl has undertak en the commission of having a pair of hunting boots built in London for Mr. Roosevelt specially suitable for serv ice In the African jungles. Douglas Robinson, President Roose velt's brother-in-law, whose name fig ures in the Panama canal controversy, has made specific denial that be bad POPGLAS UOBINSON. anything to do with the transactions regarding the sale of the canal prop erty to the United States. He is con nected with banking and railway en terprises In New York and is at pres ent coreceiver with Adrian H Jollne of the Metropolitan Street Railway company. He Is a brother of the pres ent Mrs. Roosevelt and Is reputed a man of considerable wealth. Much general Interest attaches to the investigation of methods of finance In Wall street which Is to be made by a commission recently appointed by Governor Hughes of New York. The commission is charged to report if any changes are desirable In the laws bear ing upon speculation in securities and commodities or relating to the protec tion of investors. At the bead of the commission is the noted author and editor Horace White. Mr. White was born In Colebrook, N. II., Aug. 10, 1834. and was gradu ated from Belolt college, Wisconsin, In 1853. He early went Into newspa per work, becoming city editor of the Chicago Evening Journal in 1854 and Chicago agent of the New York Asso ciated Press in 1855. In 1857 Mr. White Joined the CbU cago Tribune In a position which brought him froquently into relations with Abraham Lincoln. He reported the entire series of Lincoln and Doug las debates for the Tribune and In ! 1800 was secretary of the Illinois Re ; publican state committee during the : presidential campaign. During the civil war he spent four years lu Washington i nnd with others formed the first syn ' dlcate of newspapers in this country for the reception of a Joint news serv ice from the front. From 1805 to 18T4 he was chief editor of the Chicago Trib une, resigning because of ill health. He Joined the New York Evening Post on Its reorganization by Mr. YUlard In 1881. He has for years been known J as one of the greatest financial author ltles In the United States and is the I author of a half down scholarly works. CP sS&r: t 3 is sO. 4 ? ? BILLY AND "B 112." By COLIN S. COLLINS. I t Copyrighted. 1908. by the Associated 4 Literary Press. x To Billy Baxter every moment he spent In the theater was to his liking, but the best of all was when the band tiled lu and. the house lights went up. Then the music and the rush of arriv als made a delightful stir. These were busy moments for the ushers, because in the teu minutes pre ceding the rise of the curtain half the house had to be sealed, and it was hard for Billy to bear in mind the managerial caution that the right hand nisle was uot a cinder track laid for his amusement. It is hard to walk when the music plays a lively air, and there were times when Billy would sprint up the aisle as though bent upon breaking all rec ords for the hundred yards. These teu minutes twice a day re paid the boy for the rest of the work, and It was work for all who were em ployed about the Century theater. Calkins, the manager, had spent his days devising a system that was al- HE WOULP STAND IN UAPT ADMIRATION. most perfect in its schedules. Every body cleaned house In the morning, with just time for a hurried lunch be fore squeezing luto the uniforms for the matinee, and as soon as the rush was over all but two of tho boys were taken off to perform other duties. Those who remained were water boys, parading the aisles with trays of glasses, which they offered to the patrons. Now and then a penny or even a nickel or a dime fell to the wa ter carrier, but Billy was content If the ladies smiled their thanks. Ail this was before "E 112" came. After that there was but one wuman lu the world for William, just as tnere Is but oue woman for each of us at some stage of boyhood. "E 112" was worthy of his worship. Even the box office boy had confided to Calkins, the manager, that it was "a dead swell dame who took up the seat for Tuesday mats," and the man ager had condescended to approve the statement, though Calkins' own pref erence was for blonds. "E 112" had dark hair of the soft, wavy kind that makes a fellow long to stroke softly, admiringly. But Billy remembered nothing but her eyes after he bad received one di rect glance. Ha could look luto those liquid depths clear down into the un troubled soul beyond. Every Tuesday afternoon the girl occupied the same seat. The Century reserved seats for its regular patrons by the season, and once when the head usher sought to shift Billy to the bal cony, where there was a better chance of making tips, Billy promptly forgot the fact that It was supposed to be a favor and pummled his benefactor until the latter promised to put him back on bis old aisle. To such an extent had Billy become enslaved that he even rejoiced In the water Job. He would work the front rows very slowly, waiting with pa tience for each patron to finish with a glass, and when "E 112" asked for a drink he would stand lu rapt admira tion, ignoring the request of others for glasses from the tray until she bad returned hers and there was no longer any excuse for standing nt her side. Long before the middle of the sea son Eleanor Golden, otherwise "E 112," had come to know the earnest, freckled little face, and the day that she pnsscd him In the street and gave blm a nod and a bright smile was a golden one In the Baxter calendar. Then came the day which even now Calkins hates to' recall because of Its one moment of nightmare. There was an act at the house that opened with the supposed explosion of an automo bile off the stage, the comedian enter ing with a tire and part of the rim of a wheel bung about his neck. The effect was obtained In the time honored fashion of firing Into the air a shotgun loaded with salt Instead of shot. The salt scattered harmlessly, and yet the report was louder than when powder alone was used. On this day a tiny bit of the wad ding was carried Into the air and flut tered against one of the huge drops hung above the stage. There were four of these hung close together, and no one noticed the spiral of flame run up between this drop and the next. The scenery was fireproof ed, but the rough surface of the can vas was coated with dust, and the dust carried the flume. A watchful fireman discovered the smoke and turned lu an alarm, while he gave the signal to the stage man ager to lower the fire curtain. As the great asbestus shield de scended one of the actors stepped be fore the curtain line and made an announcement that an accident had occurred. "There is positively no danger," he assured, "but merely as a precaution you are asked to leave the house as quickly as possible." Tho band was still playing and tho people In the roar of the house were moving toward the entrance when the stage hands in the files cut the ropes and permitted the scenery to fall to the stage, where the fire could be fought with greater ease. Until then there had been an orderly movement. At the speaker's sugges tion the people In front were waiting until those in the rear seats had gone that there might be uo crowding. Billy, watching over "E 112." had his sharp eyes on the people in liis section, and as the heavy battens from which the scenery was hung came erashlug to the stage one man sprang to bis feet. He was sitting In the fourth row, and In a flash Billy realized that should this man break the order of departure there would be a crush in which many would be hurt. Billy still carried his now useless tray, and quick as a flash he pretend ed to stumble and fall against the panic stricken man. In falling he i tnrust the fellow back into his seat, j and the lee cold wnter drenched the man's face and neck and trickled down inside of his clothing. Those near by laughed, and the crowd, which had been upon the verge' of a panic, cooled down. The panic was averted. But Billy had slipped on one of the thick tumblers rolling under his feet. T" nn Instant he was on the floor of ine aisle on top of the clutter of broken glass, and his face and arms wore badly cut before the girl In "E 112" could spring to his relief. Strong arms bore the boy to the head of the aisle, where already the doorkeepers were turning back the crowd with the nssurance that the fire was all over. And almost before he realized it Billy was lying on the sofa In the retiring room, and "E 112" was bathing tho cut hands and face with soft cloths, while Calkins stood help lessly by. "Gee," said Billy ruefully, "I bet I have to pny for a new uniform. ' This looks like I been working in a butcher shop." "Nonsense," broke In Calkins, who could be human nt times, though It was seldom that he exhibited this trait. "You saved the day, Billy, and you can have a new uniform every week If you want one. This lady tells me that In drenching that fool you stopped a panic." "Well, he had It coming to him," said Billy. "lie was a husky guy In D 112, and he had the willies, be was so scared. I says to myself that if he got 'em runnin' 'E 112' would have the chance of -a snowball In-well, you know where. So I plugged hhn wit" tho glasses, and then he was good for awhile. I wouldn't let them walk all over you," ho ndded to tho girl. The glorious eyes grew more tender as she realized what the boy was say ing. Men had sought to do great thing:? to show their love for their ladyloves, but this boy of twelve was as brave and as fearless as any knight who ever wore his lady's favor In his hel met. Ills thought had been solely for her, yet he had probably saved scores from death or Injury, and It was she who wns responsible for the deed. Slowly she bent her beautiful head and press ed her lips against his own. "It was very brave of you, dear," she said In a whisper. "I am very proud to think that It was for me you did so fine a deed." Billy blushed; then he looked with adoring eyes Into the brown ones that were senrchlnn his fp.ee. "I'd burn down the theater every Tuesday when you come for that," he declared ns ho lapsed Into uncon sciousness, and It was Miss Golden's turn to blush. Could he but know It Billy had for the moment become more than a boy. He was a man and the knight of "E 112." Russian Education, Tho "Intelllgeuzlu" of Russia, writes the Hon. Maurice Baring In "A Year In Russia," Is, properly speaking, com posed of every one who can read or write. But the term Is generally used to designate those members of the middle class who belong to the profes sional classes doctors, professors. I teachers and literary men. The nver j age man r womnn of the Russian mlddlo ciass is better educated than I the average English man or woman of j the same clurrs. They are saturated with the foreign clasFl -s. They often upeak two lan guages besides Russian, nnd they are I conversunt with modern thought In I tho various European countries so far ; ns It Is allowed to reach them. They , are taught at school things which will be useful to them. Every one receives a general fotin I datlon of knowledge. The overage Rus sian boy knows more about English history thnn the average English boy, let alone European history. A cultl I vated Russian of the middle class Is J saturated with John Stuart Mill. Rus. kin, Morley and Carlyle, and Shake : speare, Milton and Shelley are treated as Russian classics. The Mystery of the Yellow Room BY GASTON LEROUX ILLUSTRATED BY JOHN SLOAN A Genuinely New Sensation in a Detective Story to Be Published in This Paper For sheer originality and ingenuity we reckon this the best detective story published for some time . ... as original as it is fascinating. Nor often does a detective story end with so to tal a surprise, which, nevertheless, when known seems logical and natural. N, Y. Evening Post. The Foregoing from High Literary Authority Assures Our Readers that We Continue to Give Them the Best in Fiction Information Concerning Eighth Grade Final Examinations. 1. Dates: Three examinations annually. Each .:o.inty superintendent to solect months for his county. (a) January 21-22, 1903. (b) .May 13-1 4. l!)on. (c) June 10-11, 1J09. (d) September 2-3, l'.IOS. 2. Program: (a) Thursdays Arithmetic, Writ ing, HUtory, and Civil Govern ment, (h) Fridays Grammar, Physiol ogy, Geography, and Spelling. 3. Sourcei of Questions: (a) Civil Government United Stales Cons'.ltuii.jn. (h) Geography State Course of Study: He.lway and Minmau's Natural School Geography. (c) History LIU of topics from History Out lne in State Course of Study and Current Events. (d) Language Uuehlor's Modern English Grammar, no diagram ming. (e) Reading The teacher will sr;nd to the Cojnly Superintend ent the applicant's class standing in reading, which shall be; taken by such superintendent us the ap pllcants standing on the subject. tf) Spelling Eighty per cent H from Re ;d's Word Lessons, and twenty p.T cent, from manuscript In Language, (g) Writing Spuclmens of pen manship as Indicated In copied matter and from manuscript in Language. lie ipoel.fully submitted, J. II. ACKEUMAN, Supt. Public Instruction. The first Eighth Grade examina tion for tho year 1903 will be held January 21-22. Teachers pre;; a l:ig classes for this examination wl 1 phase report to this office tho number of applicants at least thirty d:iys before above date. Respectfully, J. C. CONLEY, Supt. of Schools. A Sprained Ankle. As a r;il a ma-i will fesl woll sat. IhT J f ho cim hobble around oi crutches In two or three weeks after spraining liU anklo and It Is often two or three months before he Is fully recovered. Thin Is an unnec essary loss of time, as by apply ing Chamhirlain's Liniment, as di rected, a cure may as a rulo he effected la lest than ono week's time, and lu mn'iy cases within threo days. Sold hy l!urnaii;h & Mayfield.