the close of 1918, when he retired. During that period of 25 years the budget of the Associated Press had grown from $500,000 to $6,000,000 and it had come to furnish more than half the news printed in American newspapers.
See the Autobiography: Fifty Years a Journalist (1921).
STOREY, GEORGE ADOLPHUS (1834–1919), English painter, was born in London Jan. 7 1834. He was partly educated in
Paris, but in 1850 returned to England and commenced studying
in London at J. M. Leigh’s school, subsequently entering the
Royal Academy schools. His first picture was hung in 1852.
He was in early life a follower* of the Pre-Raphaelite school, but
gradually changed his style, becoming well known both as a
subject painter and for his excellent portraits. He was elected
A.R.A. in 1876 and R.A. in 1914. He became teacher of perspective
at the Royal Academy in 1900. Among his best-known
pictures are “The Old Soldier” (1869); “Christmas
Visitors” (1874); “Mischief” (1897) and “The Love-Letter”
(1901). Storey published several books, the most important
being Meissonier (1886) and Theory and Practice of Perspective
(1910). He died at Hampstead July 29 1919.
STORY-MASKELYNE, MERVYN HERBERT NEVIL (1823–1911),
English mineralogist, was born hear Wroughton, Wilts,
Sept. 3 1823; he was descended on the mother’s side from Nevil
Maskelyne, the Astronomer Royal. He was educated at Bruton
grammar school and Wadham College, Oxford, and studied
for the bar, but in 1850 was invited to deliver lectures at
Oxford on minerals, where he stipulated for a chemical laboratory,
then a complete novelty in the university. He was prominent
in the struggle over the proposal to erect a museum of science
and in 1856 became professor of mineralogy with a laboratory in
the new museum; but from 1857 he combined the work with the
keepership of the minerals at the British Museum and resided in
London. In 1880 he resigned this post, but retained his Oxford
professorship until 1895. He had inherited a Wiltshire estate
from his father, and in 1880 he entered Parliament as Liberal
member for Cricklade. In 1885 he was reelected for N. Wilts
as a Liberal Unionist and sat until 1892. He studied especially
crystallography, meteorites and gem-stones, and was the author
of many scientific papers, and of a book On the Morphology of
Crystals. He also possessed a valuable collection of antique
gems. He died at Bass Down, near Swindon, May 20 1911.
STOUT, SIR ROBERT (1844–), New Zealand judge and
statesman, was born on Sept. 28 1844 at Lerwick, Shetland Isles, where he was educated at the parish school and became a pupil teacher. He arrived in New Zealand in 1863, and became second
master in the Dunedin grammar school and afterwards in the
Duncdin district high school. On July 4 1871 he was admitted as a
barrister and solicitor of the Supreme Court of New Zealand, and
he then matriculated at Otago University which opened in that
month. In 1873 he took first-class honours in mental and moral
science and political economy, and from 1874 to 1876 he was Law
lecturer at Otago University. Elected a member of the Otago
Provincial Council in 1872, he became provincial solicitor in 1873,
and he held that position until the abolition of the provinces in
1876. In 1873 he was elected to Parliament as Liberal member for
Caversham and in Feb. 1878 he became Attorney-General and
Minister of Lands and Minister of Immigration in Sir George
Grey’s Ministry. But in the following year he resigned owing to
the serious illness of his partner, and he did not return to public
life till 1884 when he entered Parliament again as member (M.H.R.)
for Dunedin East. On the defeat of Sir Harry Atkinson’s
Government he joined with Sir Jules Vogel in forming a Ministry,
which lasted less than a fortnight (Aug. 16–28 1884), but after
another Atkinson Government had held office for a few days
(Aug. 28–Sept 3) a second Stout-Vogel Government was formed
which lasted three years. In both the Stout-Vogel Governments
Sir Robert Stout was Premier and Attorney-General. At the general
election in 1887 the Government was defeated and he lost
his seat by a narrow margin.
Refusing the offer of other seats, Sir Robert Stout remained out of politics till after the beginning of the long Liberal-Labour regime in 1891. Both by Ballance and by Seddon he was offered a portfolio but he declined both offers. In June 1893, however, he was elected at a by-election for Inangahua as an Independent Liberal, and at the general elections of 1893 and 1896 he was elected for Wellington City, to which he transferred his residence and his legal practice. In 1898 Sir Robert Stout resigned his seat, and in June 1899 he became Chief Justice.
In politics Sir Robert Stout was a strong Liberal of the individualistic school, devoting special attention to the land and labour questions and to educational and temperance reform. Among his principal measures were the Land Act of 1877, the first Land Tax Act, which he drafted in cooperation with Ballance and which became law in 1878, and the Civil Service Reform Act of 1886, which threw the doors of the service open to women and made examination and competition (the latter being added by the Legislative Council) the tests of all appointments except those of experts. As a member of a Royal Commission appointed in 1881 he helped the late Mr. Allen Holmes in forming the Code of Civil Procedure, which was enacted in the following year and made the Supreme Court Procedure of New Zealand one of the simplest in the world. A life-long abstainer, Sir Robert Stout was always a keen advocate of temperance reform. The local option bills which he introduced in 1876 and 1893 did not get further than their second reading, but the second of these measures forced the hand of the Seddon Government and led to the establishment of local option by a less liberal measure in the same session.
He became a meihber of the New Zealand University Senate in 1884, and also of the Victoria University College Council, Wellington. In 1903 he was elected chancellor of the university. He was made a K.C.M.G. in 1886. Besides writing many essays and lectures on social, literary and legal subjects, he was the author, jointly with his son, J. Logan Stout, of New Zealand in the Cambridge University Manuals of Literature and Science, and of the article on New Zealand in the Oxford University Survey of the British Empire, fie married in 1876 Anna Penrhyn, daughter of Mr. J. Logan, official clerk to the Superintendent of the Province of Otago. He had four sons of whom two served in the war as medical men and one obtained the D.S.O. and two daughters.
STRACHAN-DAVIDSON, JAMES LEIGH (1843–1916), British
classical scholar, was born at Byfleet, Surrey, Oct. 22 1843, and educated at Leamington College and Balliol College, Oxford.
He graduated first class in literae humaniores in 1866, and was
elected to a fellowship of his college the same year. This he
held until 1907 when, on the resignation of Edward Caird, he
was elected to the mastership of the college. His whole life was
devoted to university teaching and administration, as classical
tutor, examiner, delegate of non-collegiate students, pro-vice-chancellor,
etc., and to the study of Roman history. Amongst
his published works were Cicero and the Fall of the Roman Republic (1894), Problems of the Roman Criminal Law (1912), as
well as articles on the Roman Constitution in Smith’s Dictionary
of Antiquities. He died at Oxford March 28 1916.
STRACHEY, JOHN ST. LOE (1860–), English journalist, was born at Sutton Court, Som., Feb. 9 1860, the second son of
Sir Edward Strachey, 3rd Bart., and Mary Isabella, daughter of
John Addington Symonds. He was educated at Balliol College,
Oxford, graduating with a first-class in modern history, and was
subsequently called to the bar; but he adopted journalism as his
profession from the age of twenty-four. In 1886 he became
assistant editor of the Spectator, and after the death of R. H.
Hutton (1897) and the retirement of Meredith Townsend (1898)
he became proprietor of the paper, which under his editorship
not only maintained but increased the high reputation it had
gained (see 19.562) for sober political criticism and well-informed
appreciation of art and literature, so that he exercised great influence
upon English opinion. St. Loe Strachey also edited
(1896–7) the Cornhill Magazine. He was specially interested in
problems of rural housing, pauperism and local government
generally. Amongst his publications are: The Manufacture of
Paupers (1907); Problems and Perils of Socialism (1908); The
Practical Wisdom of the Bible (1908) ; A New Way of Life (1909).
STRAIGHT, SIR DOUGLAS (1844–1914), English lawyer and Journalist, was born in London Oct. 22 1844 and was educated