THE SCTRANTON TR1BTNBSATURTAY MORNING MARCH 10, 1894. 11 8upenntendont Byrnes Talks About Crime and Criminate. Eduction and Law-brtaks?. Tho Criminal iVit.'--.. ! of Difleient Nationalities. Women mora Inclined to Vico than to Crime. -Tho Physiognomy of Habitual Criminals Clue to Thoir Char actcr. There, seems to Is' a pretty general im pression, oven among those who know Superintendent llyrnos -head of Uio Now York police IhTOi Mil J well, that hu is it largo man. Thoso who know ot him, and vIid does not, but who have never noon him, imagine him to ho a stern implacable EMII, capable oi i ttl Isiag a hypnotic In BaHMN over tin' criminal with whom ho is brought Into oontset, sad with a power, well nigh luperaatora of reading tho thoughts of men. Although not a large man. Superintendent J'.yrne.s would at fact moro than a second giumv from a stranger pasaing him lu tho Street, Ba is about llvo fe vt algM Inches lu height, and weighs not loss than MO pounds, and this without IllllkiaMlJg any superfluous Hosh. He should wear a seven and uu eighth hat and measure thirty uino inches round tho breast and tho sumo above the hips. Hia head slightly bald and well covered ou the sides with short gray hair, is OattJe in oatUae, but then is a mill tar mi to it, whleh taken in connection with the heavy, iron grey moustache, the tlrm chin and ivaibutivo nose, reminds the traveller of a French ,hlnk that tho law, in self-dofonoo should reveal such unions ?" " At the first glance, it docs look as i( sueh a course would bo prudent, yet, if such a law wen- passed to-uiorrow, I am satisfied that i! would not only bo inoperative, hufthat il would defeat its own pu.-nHo by making the numbor of murders or homloldos, in this State, for Instance, with tho number of casus in which tho death poiuilty Is onforood. Ow ing to this habit of carrying murderous knives and their readiness t use thorn when their in flammable tempers are uroitied, there nrn mora homicides among the iguoruut thing?- worse. So long as tho law sanctions j Italians than In any other class. The once cotesel of oavabrv, and lies in it a attain such unions, there is a oirliin t.art of loyalty between tha men and women, and the law may be able to compel them to eiirc for their offspring. ' But to liar the marriage ot the criminal classes would not prevent their as suinitig the relations of hustvind and wife, nor stop tin- birth of children. Soth.il bid us thing - are now, and shocking ns it is to think of a race ot criminals propagating ihelr own ktad this would continue under circumstances tar mora revolting and criminal, It we took legal measures to suppress it." The Super intendent spoke with uu earnestness o! man ner that showed this was not the tiist lime he had had this importoiit subject under BOB' tdenttoa. "As compared with (lie foreign born, how do the American rauk as criminals? " " Do you mean in proportiou to their num bers, or In shrewdness?" " Both," 1 replied. "Iu proportion to number there U no comparison. I tlnd not a little comfort aud pride iu tho knowledge thut our American DOTS oit.zeiis ari not nearly so vicious nor so criminal as tho of foreign birth. Iu the (ace of this thoughtless runt about tUSBOBSSt) iii hwtilnoaa ami immorality in private life, I know ot no people, it statistic nrv to lie truatad, a ho at alt oompan with the Amu loons. Uuf whan an American get 'crooked,' to use the slang ot the outlaw, he is so much shrewder and orookeder than the ordinary criminal, thut thcro la no comparison. With all their tricks and cunning, tile criminal classes are at all times puerile in their moth oils and frequently idiotic. It is well for i.s that this Is so, for the dourer of the criminal i-: proportioned to bia hrewtinoM and Intel- tjgeaOa, Now, these are the qualities that pro uailnuntly distinguish the American, whether ha starts in to build a dying machine or to rob u bunk. He docs the head work, the generalship, and so baoonaa a leader, using other men as his tools. " It is a curious tact that ivrtaia uu'.iouull- Uaa shew a peculiar leaning to wards aud aptitude tor certain kinds ot crime. The Gar mans are excellent mtilianlcs and draughts raen, with gnat patlaaaa in working out de tails. And, as might be expected Wl Bad men of their ruce th-- most skilful forgers and aoontarMtaro The meobaalos still of the Garroan makes him an expert in ois-uitig a -a!' , but he seems to lack the ihrewdneai or THE TRDB JOHN Y. McKANE OnUMO habit of oarrytng concealed weapons Inn ceased to a grout extent, except among our southern and western visitors, as lint also the habit of drunken orgies, to which tho pistol carrleii) were almost invariably ad dicted, and these improvements have reduced the death into from homicide. Alter all, it we hunt vtee and crime back to thoir lairs we will be pretty sine to Hud them In the glu mill. Drunkenness is the prolific mother of most of tho evil doing." " But don't you think, superintendent Bynaa, that poverty and the vile Hiirrouud tngii ol w i niched tenement ottiiotid men to tha gin mill?" 1 asked. "Thut Is undoubtedly true. Totlieuiau oi women living In u fetid air ol tha aver uge East side tenement, tlieaveiuge liur, with Its mirrors and gildings, uud its wiirm lire on u cold day, Is a comparative u nulls '. Then, too, it would seem that the Kmrly nurtured bodies cruvo for a stimulant of some kind, and then the shivering wretch can't hang about the bur very long Without ordering something. But this (act does not dostro) my llrst pro.Hwitlon, and that is that drunkannas i li the prime oauM ol ail the tnaible." " loe-s erimo keep iu"e with tin increase of iHipaluliou, or is it on (Id wane?" " 1 think. It Would bo sul'c to say that It Is de lei in,;. The study ot the statistic! of ON The Inner life of the Great Gravesen i Boss Portrayed A Temperance Man, Who Itutainal Giu Mills A Virtuous Han, Who hi censed BrotheU A Penoefnl Han, Who Enoouragod Priio FighU A Church Member, Who Fa cilitated Sabbath Breaking, and on Honest Man In Private Who Openly Plundered ho Pnhlio. 'TCB STl'UV 0$ . iricsanso.' IllUiaillllllaaa Ot tha lute Marshal JlacMahou. I audaeity to plan tho plund W ot a bunk, or the II it is added that tho Superintendent's eyes ! odroitnoi to maka hLs plundsr protituble are so light a browu as to swai nearly when he has MOUrod it. Wherever these grey, and that the expression is shrewd and ' men or.' .oucerned in safs opaoiagi you may kindly rather than sean-liing and aggress- j be very sure there is an Irishman orm . mer iTf. a fair Idea of the personnel of the greatest ' lean K'hir.d the Job, usually th lortncr. living detective may be had. Very suave and approachable, when ho wants to be, is Superintendent Byrnes. He places a comfortable chair br cue near the desk in his private office at Poliae Head iiuarters. and sitting down on the arm of another chair facing me, he talks with an e:isy fluency, ind with so much aorcTsd sclso that the rratest stickier for grammati cal purity of speech finds that his colloquia lisms give a decided force and pi iunncy to what he says. "Busy!" repeats the Superintendent, in response to my inquiry, " I always find plenty to do, but have time to give you." Do you llnd from your experience." I asi "that tho tendency of edinatioa such as Is to be had in the 'ommon schools of this :ity for instance i.s to reduce crime?" crime is most interesting. Indeed, there I.s so little variation In thu numbur of certain crimes from you to year, that one can come near tailing what it will be for the Doming year." Superintendent Byrnes reaohad uadar his desk, touched un tdaotrlo button, uud a police clerk. i:i uniform came m. He was told to fetch a certain pap.'r. When it was br. oght, tha Bopartntandant rood off long lists' oi Bgima in proof of his statoment, ns to lac number of offenses from year to year iu New York city. Here are a few : Larceny. Kobbery. Shooting. Suspicion 1890, lb'sl. 1891 1898. 5,'ii4. 5,884. 5,211. 5,317. 1ST, 198, :i,0"u. 237. 103. 4,225. tttU. 109. 4,')i8. 188. 119. MOT. From his own country the Irish luw-breaker hM also brought with him a natural funiuosj f r illicit whiskey, aud un unswerving belie! that it la sweeter to taste and more profitable to sell, If disposed of in detlaaoe or tho law g warning licenses. ' Somc'f our most expert pickpockets and I sceak thieves are Englishmen, and since long j befor" the ds.ys a tine art, the purse or watch without arousing his suspic l -,ns. Ta t.i?li-n imiww is also un cxma c i With cards, but whoa it comes to this kind of I frie!,w w,ml1' 'ou tlut 18 "' The numb rimes of arrests lor all the other ( of Fagm, tbvv had rslu.H'd to v """" " ,e skiU to relieve a man of his r"4med' '""bn'sl th.. same uniformity. "aup'rintonuent, you have soon as many arimlaala as any man living; from your c- wiingas u (listine! eriuiinal physiognomy? " Peoph) can always see the crime in thu faoc after they know Uio nun is u criiuinnl ; I and I will eoueed I that there are villanous I faces which even a child could not mistake. I But the lac., alone does not mean so much. ! Show tho a Tenure man or woman a lot of photographs, and tell them that some ot them cheating the American takes the eake. or would it one were offered for such question abla dexterity. It is, howevor, in the line of swindles that the American c riminal excels. His green-g'sxls dodga varies a little in Its ' methods, but it la still worked principally in Yes, and no. Mark you. lam a strong j Jersey now and mil continue to be ,iwrt.M,t. r.f mm alia ..n:, k !.., miMUm worked so lorn? as tho lllltlilli farmer vrrns to rel and write is now so general! pa'ni-u- ! to swap off the good greenback ha has atowrf " er" f! ouw,a"t out larly among young criuinals, that it 7d,ffi- away in tho old woman's stocking for the sup- lnvariaWy P' out u"s ' cult I reason, when they -e nearly iw bad Pd coonteneits w.th which he hopes to " . 1 take in bus neighbors. Pogirs banks, awlnd- ' ling insurance and st,, !: npanies, grand ! mlhtthmk ha'"'"'"- ''" yon take tha cnterpri.scs that promi. ' fortunes tor ,iuie j whole ,mraon of tho habitu il criminal, that is mor.ev and no ..(Tort all are meth.sls of nlun- , " W"t. manners and so on and ,t,.r at.ral nowerfullv to the inennitv of I 'ou "ndnrstand your tm BlBM the llrift on Kort Humter in till, no event has no nr.. I the Indignation id the people of New York Stab., and Ui none ex. tent of the whole country, us John Y. Mu Kane's open detluiu'e of tin, writ of tint Hupruine Court last November, and his un blushing roglnlrat ion of over 11,000 names tn a district ol barely B.OUil inlmhitutits. Tho history of this mini's iudi' tmoiit, trial uud conviction hits become well known to the loading puhllo from one end of the lund to the other, uud, outside his tiiiiucdiute follow lag and tha boa SOS of the same stamp In dlf tereiit parts of the country, tho verdict id tha Jury that bund hhn guilty has been heartily uppioved. A v si: ir Brooklyn gentleman, who owns a gnat dial of property id Hlavpahoad Day, uud who lives th to In the summer Una, communicates tho fulloivuig lnterestiiii; pal Uouiara of the notorious boss's inner life, with the UDdarotandJng that his name shall hot be usim! : "I hale known John Y. BfoKane since I was eleven yOKI ot uge, that Is forty yiurs. He u just six weeks my aanlor, Evan us u boy he manlfaitrd tho bo spirit, uud wus oon slderad a lighter, though i iriUny, I never knew him to Jump on a boy younger or sjnallar than nlniaslf. bul i bavo often known bin to dafan ' th itu. "John was bom Iii Ireland and was only about a yanroM, whan his Fathar oamo over aiel Mttiad a' BhwpabOad Buy. Here llvo more children i.ere bOrn,all but ono of whom uro living. Tim oldar KaJFjuia was hard ivorking market gardanar, And the f.ict thai he Was u staunch Methodist diatlogul du d hiin iu u notloaahle way from the many catholio Irishman about him. lie was u sober, hard handed, hard-working man w ho died only a few years uge, I saving his wife, who still Uvea with bat son John, though all the other children ure in comfortable circumstances. "As u wh le the population "f Hboi iph 'a I Buy ut this time and partioniarly in the summer sauson, In not what might be aallad Salaot, but it is eultiir 1 and high -tola . I eom iiared w ith what it was when John and I were I boys. Then my father moved into the Oity every winter, in I do now, and I recall that John Y. MeXane - it was spelled "MoKnln" then -was the only boy in the neighborhood he eared for mo to play with, for John did not swear, nor 0M tobneeo, nor drink, and alter all these yenrs, amid ussix'iations a', times the vilest, he never contracted any of these habits, "Whan about fifteen, John gave up aohool and never wen! Uiek, and from that duy to this, I doubt If be has over loud u book through. He was apprenticed to a eurp utcr and builder about this time, and M might be that boy's shortly beeoining a voter did not lessen his Interest, 0 " Early In his polltioa.1 career, ScKuuo ba eanio tho friend of an older and abler bons than himself; this was a mn:i or tho sumo not, and who, though a Oathollo, had rnuoh thl sumo habits-tlie tfotoriOUl Hugh 11c Iltlghliu of Brooklyn. Dp to Ids n. il with this man. .MoKaiie seeim 10 le vel moderate in his aspiratioufl, and certain it II that his connection with the BOlltlOl ot tho j town wus nn expense i.-.iher than a giln. lu IHHHhe quurridled with KoLaUghlln, tad iots eonsnqunnce was fired out of the Bu!M ol (Supervisors for Kings County. How well ho avenged himself nil know who understand how New York State went for Harrison. " After this HttKanti oaaaad to be a looal pTlHtintarii His voice beOaalS potanl in Wash ington and men, who ut heart despised him, like QaMml Traoy than Baantary of the Navy, anil who wus chief comncl IgafalSt him, were glail to see him In private, and to respect his wishes as to tho distribution of Uio Federal utroiiugo In New York. " KaddtMd at whtt tic y ragarded ai tha porlldy mill trnnson ot John Y. M' Kuno in tho I'rcrtidetituii ekwttoB, tha Democratic Leglalatun at Albany , In the winter ot iw, dcUirmliiisl to clip his wings by curtailing his power. A bin was paesod amending the election law as applied tOOOUntry towns, by providing thai there should be no election district with more than loo votes, The pur- I the law was to wisikeli the power Ol McKunii who, up to tbl time had voted all his folloWari at the town hall. "Any man but John Y. Mi Kimo would have bean ptusrJod to defeat the porpoaaaof this bill, but he had the two gnat re pii iles for luoaan audacity and cunning. Be dieoov and, or his lawyers did for him. that the bill was not mandatory, but oontalned the word may' instead ot ' shall,' and BO he paid lio hee l to It. but continued In his own S'.vee' way. "The uuxt year the ballot reform law, for which McKane's opponents worked so hard came Into os:ratlon, aud It required a war ato polling place for every 800 voters. Every goodoldten hailed this ballot law hs anion lu tic right direction, but the superintendent of the Bheepshcud Bay Sunday school laughed in derision and at one" prboeedod to defeut it. "There are six election dlatricta in the town of Qravasend, and KoXane at mice divided tho town mi . six sections of u coa , e.ch one of which had its ii!k:v or nUTOWeai point in tho very canter of the tOWO hall. Alj")jt the place where these points converged, h ; oaoaad all Hilling booths to be erected, ull under on" roof, and us we know, directed by one hand. "In 1892 pcae.. was again made betweaa le ss MoLuughiin and Boss MeXane, and in tiieeicctiop of 1888, tho Latter determined to snow his rani for the alii fUUN by easting nearly us many vot:-. lor tiie Democratic ticket as there were residents in the town; but the Indignation oaoaad by such Infamous registration induced him to cast only about one halt, though that was mora by several hundred than the town was entitled to. Hit refusal to let the lists be oopied on an order ot the court, and the cruel treatment and arbitrary arrest of many nepootabte inn, by his creatures, oappefl the Clin ol public wrath, and his present unenviable position Ik the conseauon v. "In the comic opera of the Klk&do there is a character, Poo Bah, who centers in himself WILL THE BLACK WIN? Tho Coining fight Between CarbeU and Jackson, the Bier Anptralian. n l a Vary Evtn M...:oh, say the E-tsru Tht Fightine Styles of the Hen Contrastetl Corbett's Peppery Temper and Jf.ck Eon's Hnifonn 3?lf-contrcl- 810, 000 and the Champirnahip to the Victor. It has imoii rcisvibidly usscrted by a certain ota . oi wiaeaona that pi lie lighting must soon IcHiome ii thing ot the jiast, In America at least. If one may judge fpm up)arui:ccs however, this Is very far from being thu case. TIid prizes of th j staked arena urn to day greater than ever. Another greet interuu- Uone onnteet tor the ahanxptoBghlp will own Ixi ilc'dd id, the prluciptls being Juan, , .1. Oorbett, the present ohasnpion, and Peter JnikHDii, the Australian. The cinb-st wdl ts. for IO,(mOa side and the championship ot the World. Already tho Impending meeting hi tween those fuiojii esponenti of the fistic art is Isiing dlBOQMed by the ssjrting man of two oontinentf. Bevenl cities am nuglBg Offera of big purse:; for the light. It is as yet uncertain whether the battle will ! fought on American or Engliah soil, us ird i.ris- :, ... . ; I AKiCS J. t'0'.HETT. dale Is using his InllueBea with admireri; of pugilism In Loudon to induce them to sub seriis. liberally toward a big pone, torefigbt next June. He says he is coaOdert ttiut neither Jackaon nor (,'orbott vould obleetto meeting in the ring under thjl auspices of one of the leading clubs, providing u purse satis- blows, ho dooj not lose his temper but coolly fights on, biding his ohanco fir retaliation. It may be, that in future contests Corbott will light with more judgment and not loso control of his teuior, as was tho ca .u in but light with Mitchell. One would sooner r i oil faith uisiii a cautious boxer than n hothaadad slugger, whoso aombativen, is tio hrgely doveloped for good ,. ship. Neither f.'orbett nor Jackson havuanymin , In common with the bis;tlo-browed, heav. jawil style of pugilist. Oorbett, however, has the more excitable temperament .-.ml un ions he schools himself to a less effervescent bearing, when acting us a principal here after, he may be at fault in this particular connection when he fuces the "ebony sphinx" as Jackson has been called. Willi regard to the outcome of tho conttsl, it Is iiii'.ucstionable that Cornell . with youta and agility on his side, should will. Jackson, in his light with I' rank 1'. Slav! i at the National Kjioiliiig Club In London, was bo badly punished that he took six weeks to recover from the effects of tho encounter. Still, as far IS physique II con earned, the men may Is) said to bo ubout ouuully matched, Jockson's extra weight being b some c.xt';nt offset by Corbett's elasticity oi lrame. Itlng experience and temperament must enter largely into Urn qneetton and tiicsij would be in Jackson s favor. He has fought many battles and has met with but one dates! which wan at th'i ontset of his pugilistic oereer. On tic other bend Oorbett has had but omj trying 8C00B liter tint with Joe (."hojski. and no inatb-i how clever he nmy be In the. ute of nature's wiipoiis, he must cecessa--ily Iw considered to be handlcappiid in the matter of experianeu, when compared witii Jacksoti. In their battie in San Fran cisco on May 21, 1891, no line could be drawn as to their relative ubiiHies, for bott proved thu. tiiey prjssijgsed wonderful leienoe, sumlna and pluck. 'I'hey fought ever four hourj without either sijerlng a victory. Jackson was cot in the bust condition for a battle, having ixx:i recently injured by being tiirovrn from a wag n. But Oorbett s eonaeoottve vletorjesj over suihvan und Mitchell, the great impvement he has made since he fought Jacks-jn. and tin i fact that the latter is probably not as for midable an opponent as he was in 1S91, must ull be couBiderod . Jackson II a native of the Yi Mt Indies and was born in UNI. Votreinnd. he weighs atxiut iio pounds, trained ubijut Ui pound1-. By tradt; he it, a macidmstatid l--gau to box at Sydney. V S. Y.. liuriLg the eerly purt of 18M. Jaeksrm's first battle was with Jaci: Hayes, which after i: stubborn light, ended in a dra a. A new match WU arrairei and fie-biry V; both il offered, boau9o they are Jackaon proved that he war. a tremendous M they can be. that but for the schooling they might, he worse. The tendency of dneation is to sharpen all the faculties, ln luding the criminal tendencies. Eut there hi eriacation and eiiucation. and that i.s what .retead to learning myself, but I still riMlllll vhat most of our teachers and professors atirely overlook, and that is the great llfference betwe'ii learning tad wlsVlhai. Ken learning, that is a knowledge of things, j may tend to make more dangerous a char- i Host people not understand. I do not fthe high cltss American Criminal, "Bar glare I well, you tlnd them of al nationalit.es and d"gri'cs of InuIUgenoeel curiously enough, some of the most daring have be;ii nes;roe. it Is very hard to tell where Vice ends and crime b'glns, for the I horderland between them is far from !ing! icter that is naturaily vicious. But thcro sharply Oaatoed, They Men to be relatin), are many well adnoitod men who arc not learned. Such an education as I understand it means the proper development of the head, the hand and tho heart , and of course, its tendency Is to draw out all that Is best and to suppress all that, is worst. But ns we do not llnd this sort of training, even among the children of the respectable and well-to-do, we should hardly expect It among liiose less forturjitely born. " I hove known cases, and I have one In mini now, where schooling to nso the gengnl term, proved nkeiem of what might have been a decent, hard-A'orking family. iicss, you will be ..!! to -i, r., them i -very line. 1 will iiii.I'T Uke that if twenty men, all strangers to iv.oh Other and to me, and all equally well drussed. are brought Into this room ami OKI of them Is an habitual criminal, to pick him out Within ten minutes. A man may act for u time a part different from his true oheraeter and assume to be what ho is not, but sooner IO. ,K .,. o llf ... ..K... nil n.l n.lt.nla u yit I IHO'I III) 1,111 Ill.lKO II BUkl UU'I TOMMI IIOU- more orless vicious, though I have known a few whose habits as to temperance were ex- " OrUYflJJKdOgl is ipute as Interesting as the ardent Women incline to vice rather than to I ,;"'l' "' fT " " """ Un- iRi.m.iv.,.i(n,j,i,,,f ri.,,,,. I '"rtiml I" society. When the tiiue uomes ure, or the natural timidity that would make t hem hMtate before running into danger. Some of th"m develop Int'r skilful pick- cally, that it is the culmination of a erimliuil lit... thai it N lie last, step taken by tho . BpeOSjte w r' tch who tKigao his career by MM act ot petty larceny. As a matttr of tact, the murderer, une where the crime Is pocket.-, and their dres enables them b be lOOC sjefll ai ihOpllfllCt. I need not re mind von that as hlenkraalleri women m more audacious and succssful than men. Mtirflcr Is the highest crime known to I thf Uw, and there Is n belief, uiaxig tho"'1 This man was a thrifty laborer, and his wife i wh" n"1 wi the (paction practl a shrewd, saving woman -kept a boarding house for men of the same class. This :ouple had two children, a boy and a girl. These iMMien became the Idols ol their fcrents, the one object for whieh they Hfggj They edncatcd them well, according to their notions, under the Imprsion that that was all that was necessary to keep thorn from nard work and enablo them to fight tho tattle of life to advantage. As thoy grew up with a contempt forlaUir, they soon be came ashamed of the old people who had doae so much for them, and whenever viirori earne, the old man und his wife ssjeiked off to thokitflhen. ft Is iinncccr.s-iryUi till In the story ; tho girl went to the bad, and the boy Is now In the penitentiary, victims of mls edu cation." " Ilavu you noticsl.Siiperinti ndent Byrnes, gggd the tendency to vice or crime runs in tamlllen?" " I have, and it is no new discovery. To bo sure, the children of the lower class of crim inals, are brought up in such nn atmosphere of vice, sueh a conntant contempt for, aud wiich a ceaseless struggle against the law, that '.hey may bo said to know nothing else. Un der proper eireumstanccis, such children might bo trained Into good clti.cni; I say under proper circumsbincee, hut this Is only A guess. As u mutter of fact, the children of criminals Inherit a dlsjiosll Ion toeriine. Cer tain (pinlities in the horse, dog, and other animals are Increase! hy breeding, and It. would Men that man Is no exception to the rule. I know of criminals whose fathers aud mothers wero criminals, and If we could traco them hock to their graiuliuf tier's und gTMt grandlathcrs, the chances arc we should find tho samo tendency, but growing stronger with each IgntlNllllHI generation. Kainllles with several members In the p'eiitenfiary at the same time have become so common as to excite no comment. I have known u latiier aud his two sons to bo iu tho same peniten tiary for dlffereut offences ; uud mothers and their dii'ightenJ nro often to be. found in the eamn jail." "As tho Inlormurrlugo of tun criminal (flosses tends to propagate crime, do you nut s- 1 , . I that i lorn! di aviso Is made the subiect of true ' sclentille investigation, thoro will bo less of It. to believe that, crime must Increase with population Is to lose faiih in human ad vancement anr the jriwnrd pr'sjrcss of the ages." Ai.rwiii It. OautOOV. ail the lucrative and bribable positions in tho exoectcd. he b;came a oklllful W Tkman. Bv ! Empire; UU th i; . iry er.ar..cti.r is uiodosty itself flom pared with John Y. Mc- j ''r l, "ml ituhouM -i'liil th.it v.h..re lio ili.i thl not hold an cflice, he eontroll-d it throuirli ono of his many cringing and despicable henohmen. "Until his conviction a few days ago, Ho- j KaTiH rnnresented Oravsssnd iu the Baaed of i . . . nn'TMiiiu isuu uiidi inc. inu.ciiueiit , ho had the temerity to control the Board and , muko himself president through the voto of a man whom he knew to be fraudulently si ted, and who has since bean busted by the Court. McKaue is the head of the lire department ' Orateaand, and be i- the Chief of Police, iritn thirty men under him In tho winter, and ihr." or four time; that number win n Coney Island is in full hi ist. He is tha town t.; assess. n , collector and treasurer, lie hasciuirgeol the town lands, though theae have been growing lose as bis own possession! hive Inareeeod. While running the ohunh, hi has fostered tiie Coney Islam! Athletic Club, an organise- i tioti of toughs uud sharpen, who have mad much money b) exhibiting in tie- rise ring, otiier tough ( who are no! 10 sharp. While he does not drink himself and his private life la believed to io entlrot) motel, ho has Hrirmied buiulndi of liquor plac m gambling 'fakes,' low concert belle, vulgar I dance houses, and lanctioned their being kept open on Sunday, when tin- working 7 'i AI..VWS i v.il njnjrrt voHm,' commilled to Have himself from dntecfJon, is rarely a mini of riruirinl aub eedeiits. 'I lei burglar, bank robber, or highwayuian may go out armed, Imt It Is that be may defend himself from Injury or arrest. Ho Is after plunder not 'blood, aud It Is only WhM cornered that he stabs or shoots. You min t not Infer from thin that the fellow hot) any ruKpeot fur human life; ho may bo ready to siind-liug a man or u dollar, but. he has al ways un eye t I he conseipienneH to himself. It he is detected. " In proportion to the number of hotnloldas or murders, very low are premeditated, ami it is premeditation that constitutes th os- iiouco of Ihe crime In the sight of tho law. Two men get Into a drunken brawlatul onu Is killed, und the next instant thu slayer would glvo his own life If he conld recall tho act. Love and Jealousy are rcloiiHiblo (or many ot these sudden deaths, and this Is almost invariably thu case whore a woman Is tho as sailant. That thu law takes this view of tho cum ou can readily sue, It you comuuro HE CAN TELL A GOOD STORY. One of tits Cleverest of Raw York's Clever AfUr Dir.r.er Spsaken. NbwVokk. Mar, II. -The nswnt marriag" of Hx-Judgn Henry I'.. Howbind of this city ton prornim nt widow of iloston, nails attention to a man who Is nesuudng proiniiienivi as an after dinner sjieaker. Judge llowland has long been reoognlnsl ns an utile lawyer and learned jurist. Some of his urgumeiltK at the harlmva attracbid the ftetrw of the legal profession of the mctrools. Only within a yisr or two, however, has he blossomed forth as a clever talker on post prandial ivcasions. lie Ih a graduata of Yale College uud is President of the Yale Ahiiuul Association. He suec.ssled tthuuuoey M. Dipett, who has been a sort of pereuulal presl dent, of the organiratlou. in that iiV!0lty, the ISedge Is eslliil upon to attend the dinners of other college a In mill and lepresent Yale. His Hn'och at the Prlneeton dinner, held at the Hot -1 lb uns tick u tew wisjks ago, was a i; in It evoked the loiidusl uppluusii from the ill' den - und euiissl gnvit merriment. While II possibly IuuIuhI the eiisy, graceful eloqiience of llepi'W, It. abounded lu clever hits und In the best type ot witticism. It is wife to say there never were more tunny stories crowded into a speech of llfteon mln uU'S dttratjon. They were especially bright mid new stories. If the Judge keeps a eel lection of current humorous biles, ns llepcw mid Porter are reputed to do, It must be M iiini'knbly well collated. Judg" llowland Is bottt H yeurs of uge. His hulr and moustache are iron gray. HIh voice Is smooth and his emiuiilation very distinct, lie tells Ids stories as though they were spontaneous und hud Just occurred to him. At the Princeton dinner, the funny narratives were so frequent tiiul they fiillowisl one another In rapid huccumhIou. Kvery point tluit was inudu was IllusliaUsl by a Itory. Ono of the oldest and most regular of the diners out In tho city, who happened to bo preueut, remarked Unit lu all his experience Im had never beard so many clever stories and so well told, snd not one of them uld nor tOiil the time he was twenty-two- -Ills', was along In 184, he was not only out of his time, but hl had been a Journeyman long enough to lay by some money, nII( with this he, started on his own account, the llrst planing null over seen on the Island south of Brooklyn. He made more money and then began to branch mit as u contractor and builder. He put up many of the Hull houaee iii und ! about Shis'pshcnd Hay, and he had a hand In many of the large etruoturea In thl wei epd of Coney Isliuul. Although his religion for bade his hotting Im was ever an ardent Mothodlet -he made a great dealol none) out of gambling ventures. He buiK the 9 labial and grand stand ot the Conoy Island Jockey Club, the Brooklyn Jockey Club, and ulaothoseof tho Brighton l!ach Hieing As-o-Olatldn. About ten years ago h i discovered that more money was to be made in easier work, uud so he Surrendered tho building business to his hroUict n, and branched out as a political boss and lain) IpeOUiator, " About tc time he started in as a build t. ha married Miss FannlcNintmnd.au exe-1-lent woman whoso family was d lOOOnded from the New Ainsterilam Dotoh, and after whom one of the most important streets in Brooklyn is naai'-l. 'rhmiehililren, twnUiys and n girl, were horn of this union, anil one of the former, u most nv lent young man, hai been blind alibis life, en aflUction that endeared him Ihe more to his doting pargets, "John, although not more than live fed our. Is heavily built, und thanks to his SMMtrj and his temperate habits, he Is a model of health, and but few man of half his age could ii . 'ni In 'n While incapable ot comprehend inn whut the word 'statesman' means, to my ntind John Y. MoKane Is a peffMI typeo! the district imllticlau ami Im.sm. a position Unit fortunately has no Mrsntorpifk in any otiier country under the sun. Keen us a briar Slid .nn hi as a fox. he hue that self control which is the llrst essential quality of lender hip, and that tld-lity lu his friends which whether real or assumed Is one secret of his autocratic sway nt llrsvesenil. He is down now, and I am glad ol It ; yet it Is only a tew years since th" rival candidates for the pre i den.-, thought thin i' i" ii i power to In' courted, snd It Is a matter of history that his desertion of his own party, owing ton pique In lHstt. gave New York State, nnrl with II. the 1'resi deney, to QeUOfSj Harrison. " About tiie time McKsne married, und that was soon after his coming of age, In. mode his tlrst nntrsnen Into polities by rtitUtltnj for constable of the bwii of llruvcsend. lie was elected, and from that time on, he sivms to have led a double life. In tho little church, which Ids fnther helped to found, h" contlnu'yl to he a worshipper and an officer; and no member ot the congregation woe so liberal as Im wliuu the plate was pasHed, or a sulwcrlp MM hud to Im headed. Why. at the very time when 1 know his lltical associates to bo of tiie lowest kind, and that he was plan nlng wltii them to make the ballot. Ikix a sliuiii and a deluslou, 1 have soon him lend lug iu prayer meeting, and exhorting sinners to righteousness with uu energy of maimer Uiat there was no need to assume, and which If uestnnqd. simply made him the mosl pel foot sutor I ever saw on or olf the stage. Hut, us I suld, thle woe one phase of the man's dual life. From ourly childhood tho fervor of Methodist worship, It not the tenets of the church, attracted his strong domonstrulivo Suture. And then there Is, I think something in the fact that ut the prayer meeting, us lu the politic! caucus, he liked to load, he v. ant ml to be boss, and he won boss. Tho Huuday school of whloh he wus superintend out, was to him a sort ot religious primary, und while he was no doubt eager to auvu tiie souls of every hoy present, tho possibility ut uware they will meet with u hrst-ciaes men tion nnd lair play. They ca:i also brii.g IT the contest without any risk of legal iuter ference or trouble after the hutUeis ended, t was through the energy and influence of Lord Lonsdale that the Sght between Joe HcAullCa and Frank V. Slaviri was held ut the Ormonde Club, and after both men were ar- retted betook up the cudgels on behalf of i feeble re-istanc the I "i"rs, employed Sir Ch .rles Russell and roundi-. Won thecuse, which has mad" glove contests in England legal ever si! c a oomparleon ot the proportions of Jackaon and Corbott will show that, iu most points they arc eseoediugly well matched. They are of exactly thl sucie height, each nit:, s-anding six feet and one-half inch iu stock - feat. The Australia:), however, has much b itte? devel ued shoulders of tiie two. A tipo en"ircling Should ers and chest would prove Jackson to have the more expansive driving machinery. Here are the oiact dimensions; hitter, for after Mvetttn d puate rouuua he knonlred Bayei Masel m. Hi was then niat.-t -d to tight Sam brittos lor $500: Juc SOn won this battle by knocking his burly opponent out in twenty minutes. Peter wus subsequi ntly matched to light Jar:... . Melbourne, for Uu) ehampionsliip i 1 RlW Booth Wales aud jsto, but be offered n very to Farnaii. who won In seven Jeekson and Furn&ti again reel for tb champianahip. and whu Farnen wot winning the ring was broken Into and a draw : ... . Jackson next dsfeotad Jack Doolcy ! : 11,00 in three rounds, putting bis opponent to sii'ep b9 34 miLatci'. His ni-xt mutch was with Lees fr r S2.0JD und the chamjiionship of Australia. Thirty rounds were ioUffht in one ' Onrbetti Jackson. Heigui tttl-tla.6ft.l4ln. Keaetirement of chu 43 1-2 in 42 1-2 in. Kejeeurement of waist us in. 881Sin. Il aidi in In, So In. M asun men! of Hugh 25 In. to 1-2 In. Width of shoulders M in. 2(1 In, Circumferenoo of neck is in it 1-2 in. kleaiurement of calf i" in. 1" 1-2 in. Jleasurementof bioepl IS 1-4 in. 16 in. Measurement ot forearm 14 1-2 in. 14 S-4 in. Weight 184 lbs. 199 lbs. Age 23 years lltyeais It II clear from thOM figures that Oorl t: hr.s the advantage in age and Jicksoa In Weight ;:inl slightly in length of reach Oor- beti is younger and praeumably itixuxger than Jaokaon,end he is probably quite as clever, although (rom. the difTcivaee in their stiles of lighting it would be difllrult to de alare which is the more effective. On his sid: Jm k,.n has weight r.iid experience and he naa aemonanrana neyona onapunwai m is ogaibM him. He also .."teate.1 i .ergot e.i not oeally " rattled" In the ring. As regardi j trey, Ooa XeAulifle, Pktey OartUff and othera, abtlitj in the ring, which ir.o.ludes in this ' SoaM time after hi arrival Jackson leeured 'I m i 1 Si -arv ess.- "S ';V;e -5 ; ;.' i Slfe; gap rinses Dames. Jacks.x s Bvcscr.. h at end 39 minuU-s. w him ffiflkfOT was elan d the winner. In 1S!':I. he lame to San rrauciseo pr?pimd to any one brdnght I connection clever fiKit-vvork. Jackson lias few ! ejuels. He is a h,.vr of the Mac sch.s.l man and Ids family go down to the democratic J and uses both har.ds and arms in on ca-. . ru west end of Con 'y Island for a bneth of salt air. Ho tins added to the facilities for de moralisation by supporting the r. onrsae. which tm (daims would go som piece else, taking the money with them if hi did not keep then near Corny island. "When John Y. KoSsni lurrandered the building busiiuws to bis brothers, ten years ago ho was not worth $75,000, to-dsy he Is worth over 1800,000, und his largo holdings Of nhl estate are yearly increasing In VSluO. Kroin the one Item of rentals he rivcvc gll'i.tmo a year. This shows the shndy side of the man's character, und It certainly is black enough, though he stoutly maintains that he got honestly every cent he owns. Of course, the word 'honest' Is very elastic with such men, uud It mttll bSOOUfSSOOd John's ethical standard is fur bOloW hll nllgloUl pretoD Ions, liven in Jail. 1 urn told he aks n blessing before meeis, snd l believe it. "There Is, however, something to lx said on IheotherHlde. The hoer and WlltSkoj selleis. and the fakirs and the kseperi ol dance hOttMl aresll iniide to xi license thut wo'ild be sim ply prohibitory In s less protl able field tb.in Coney Island. These lcens" lire assessed In the moit urtletie way, deissiding on the licensee's ospsolt) to pay. and the aggregate goes, to swell the town treasury, kepi by oXani Mrnsell but he pointi with pud" to the gnmt Inipt'oveiiieiits he has made uud the foot that thl taxes haie Ixxei itSSdily re diioed. Home years ago, a eharterml eom neny, without coniultlng with KoKane pOI down a water plant In till town, but he re fused to recognise it. In dellSIUlO of law. hut eertainly in (hi Intersil i ot the people, he built Water works on hi" mill SOO an; with town money, and the pa iple own them. (las and olectrie light eoinpilliien have Iksmi trying to enter this promising territory, but the Iniss bus frightened them uwny. and he wiirt planning to build gas works uud nn elce trie plant, ii he had the waterworks, wh a he ran against the law with too much force and hi i lout Ids head, " While his eUOOOM has made him oierb. ar lug und dictatorial, hohns never yet got out of touch with the people among whom ho grew up. Be is the custodian "f their petty secrete and thl adviser lu nil their undertsk tug.. No man of Ids iieuuaiiitaiice ever up pealed to his generosity in vain. While op posed to llnuor, llipior fellers and drinkers are his strongest friends, and the tough yearns to light his battles and i ever reudv to vote his tlckot. " With s bolter education and il higher moral standard, John Y. McKaue might lx famous Instead of lufaiuous. Not the least remark able thing ubout this remarkable man's charuotor Ih thu fact that he still stoutly be lieve himself to be a pure, hiiincoiit man, tho victim of cruel laws and a Vindictive pros." Leon Edwauds. On) and most effect'. vc manner. He it u co ital judge of distance and cun time Ins bl to a nicety : he hall rapid delivery and morv o ,er a wonderful faculty for avoiding returns. ' if 4 f Pins Jackson. He ducks with precision end when hard pressed can skip like a chamois. .Tsckson's left hand del cries ut head and body arc fris1 and telling, while his light hand "heart punches " have oft ci turn -d the tide of Kittle In his fsvor. OorbStl IS Squally clever OA this score as he demonstrated when he fought Jsekson. Sullivan, and ItitohoO, Besides he is a quick short -arm lighter, and a tcrrttla two handed lighter. He lands on an Opponent like a flash and by loaning to the right, keeps his own bead out of danger. His in iw.sant feinting with head, hund and test Is siifllnlent to keep a nut overi'uiiddent op ponent In a state of nervous trepidation and to wear him out by the exertion of avoiding imaginary blows. Corliett'a style would convey the Impression that he isa natural boxer rather than a tutornl on". (Juick ou Ills feet he I as elastic as rubbar mid apir ontly us llri'lcss as a wooden rocking-horse. Ho knows hovv to blivk u man from punish ing him "when closed. In the past, he has not. used hll light hand with remarkable frequently but he bus used it ipiito enough to show that he knows how to launch nt tho critical momunt. with disastrous results. tine grout advantage whicii Jackson pos sesses over Oorbett Is coolness, for even whjui facing the musiu und stung by the hardest ; an engagement a', the Boys) Aquarium and i for u fortnight offered u pur--, to any man i bar Mitchell and Bmlth) who could stand np he ton' him four rounds. Hint he lllmiBOsflllly de 1 dated sUeonen. The Pelican Cfab, Lond ... Oflbred n nurse of S.(V10. for Jae.ks.n to flphi. I Jem Smith the chaminon ol England, aesord- j ing to ijuismslwrn nites. and the cnite-t .. deekM In Jackson's Osvoi in thechib remit in Lindon. on November iO. IS.8:', imly two I rounds were fought. Jackson next fought a dr.a, with Bd Suiilb of Denver, which lasted live reiunis und ended in nn unsatisfaetorv manner. This contest . was divided en May IS. 1890. Ih Chic.:,- . Jackson then went to San Francisco and fatter returned to Australia whin he fought Jno O.xldard for the championship of Auatralta. (i.vddard had the Is'st of the lighting. I lit Jsekson it was claimed, was not in cond -tion. Jackson again came to San Francis, i and the Oalitornian Athletic Club offered a pure.1 of $lil.OH0. for a moving between Jaek- 1 son and Cobott. The bstM wus fought ou Jt i) 21. 1S91. Jackson bad never before met a. m.in who could avoid his dangerous straight left hand blows. Besides no antagonist ksul beoii able to plant n glow on his wind vvi; sufficient force to OSUSe anv aniiovan..e, hut Oorbett, When the fight had reached the thir tieth round the men had OOnolttded Hal rightly so that the oue who led was sun' t gid the worst of the elnsh. It bad been far the first Itftwn pteejldlng riuinds and I neither hud I paitiots of force to spare and neither vvn l.svsiiur for return MOWS, I iboth rctuscd tv lend, and then the " walk around " bi-gaii. Once In the fifty-eighth round Juck son sidd lo t'orhetl who wtis continuully walking awnv from him: "Why don't yen stand up IM lend once in a whil ? " When the referee called the men to the ropei at the opening of thl fiM round, he said to them -" tjenUenen youSe got to oorne together and tlnlsh this thing; you've walked n round each other long enough. JnckMon replied that he was ton tired to make every lead and didn't, propose to lay himself okii for Oorbett to fail at. After they had continued to walk around thni minute's longer without u blow Imin; struck the I'efenv de-dared the contest "no fight." After his liattle with Corbet! . JnokSOn agoili went rr. England and in the Spring of IStlsl, ho was mstohed to light Frank V. Slavln, for flO.O,KI, In the National BporttSgClub, London. The light took phUM on May t'O. 1HVW. It WSB a desperate Ivsttle and utter lighting ten round". Jack :.m knocked Slavln out. Oorbott's record is too well known to need rivltul. He was bom Kept. 1, IHOti. When a boy In his teens he was employed Ilia bunk, und Inter held a clerkship In the same institu tion. He entered th,' ring in ISM, and has since detested Dunesn McDonald, loeChoyn ski. Nike BrennSDj Joe MeAulitTc. Jain Kilrnin, Dominiok McCaffrey, and J. L. Sul livan. HIh lab'st liattle was with Chnrhs Mitchell, the English K.xlng champion, whom he dafieted at Jacksonville, Fia., iu January last, winning $2i),(KHI and the championship of the world. The mail he is now preparing to meet Is probably the strongest opponent ho has IVST faced lu tho prlM ring. Willum E. Hakdixo.