The editor-in-chief of the paper is Mr. Edwin B. Haskell,
who directs the political and general editorial policy
of the paper. He has the courage of his independence,
and is independent even of the Independents.
Since he assumed the editorial chair, the Herald has
fought consistently for honest money, for a reformed
civil service, for the purification of municipal politics,
for freer trade, and local self-government. The
editor of the Herald writes strong Saxon-English,
believing that in a daily newspaper the people should
be addressed in a plain, understandable style.
He has an unexpected way of putting things, his arguments
are enlivened by a rare humor, and clinched frequently
by some anecdote or popular allusion. The third
partner, Mr. Charles H. Andrews, is one of those newspaper
men who are born journalists. He has the gift
of common sense. His judgment is always sound.
The news end of the Herald establishment is under
control of Mr. Andrews, and to no man more than to
him is due the wonderful development of the Herald’s
news features. The executive officer of the Herald
ship is the managing editor, Mr. John H. Holmes, who
is known to newspaper workers all over the country
as a man of great journalistic ability. He has
the cosmopolitan mind; is free from local prejudices,
and can take in the value of news three thousand miles
away as quickly as if the happening were at the office
door. An untiring, sleepless man, prodigal of
his energies in the development of the Herald into
a great world-paper, Mr. Holmes is a type of that
distinctively modern development, the “newspaper
man.” Men of adventurous minds, of breadth
of view, and delighting in positive achievements,
take to journalism in these days as in the sixteenth
century they became navigators of the globe, explorers
of distant regions, and founders of new empires.
Years ago the Herald outgrew the provincial idea that
the happenings of the streets must be of more importance,
and, consequently, demanding more space, than events
of universal interest in the chief centres of the
world. The policy of the paper has been, while
neglecting nothing of news value at home, and while
photographing all events of local importance with
fulness and accuracy, to keep its readers au courant
with the world’s progress. In all departments
of sporting intelligence the Herald is an acknowledged
authority; its dramatic news is fuller than that of
any paper in the country; it “covers,”
to use a newspaper technicality, the world’s
metropolis on the banks of the Thames not with a single
correspondent, but with a corps of able writers; during
the recent troubles in Ireland one of its special
correspondents traversed that distracted country,
giving to his paper the most graphic picture of Irish
distress and discontent, and he capped the climax of
journalistic achievement by interviewing the leading
British statesmen on the Irish theme, making a long
letter, which was cabled to the Herald and recabled