Box 10
Contains 43 Results:
Daktyloscopie. Finger Print Bureau, Christiania, Norway, 1906
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Daktyloscopie. Bertillon System. Tripod set up with camera in position. Berlin, Sept. 19, 1907
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Daktyloscopie. "Finger-prints" of an armless vagrant, Scientific American, June 8, 1918
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Tattooing
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Unidentified, including photographs of Sir Edward Henry, the Pacific Ocean near La Jolla, and misc. photographs on criminology
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Dr. H.P. de Forest tells of Famous Falley Seminary," scrapbook of clippings of article from Oswego Palladium-Times; 1943
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Illustrations of James Johnson and H.P. de Forest used in Finger Print and Identification Magazine
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Finger-prints on cards used in the Fulton Savings Bank, and in about one hundred other banks in the State of New York for identification of the depositors,June 12, 1912. Presented by William J. Lovejoy, Cashier of Fulton Savings Bank
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Personal Identity. The veins of the back of the hand as a means of identification as suggested by Prof. Arrigo Tamassia, Professor of Legal Medicine at the Univerity of Padua, Italy. Legend under each one of the four photographs
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Criminal Photography (Murder case). Amilon murdered for robbery, 1901 and put in a barrel. Murderer, Frederick Gustave Emmanuel Hanson sentenced to life imprisonment and died there in 1908. Stockholm, Sweden
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System