Box 10
Contains 43 Results:
Police Department New York., Uniform: Rogues' Gallery (in colors), plate 52a Police Dept. Annual 1911
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Bureau of Physical Examination, Civil Service Commission. Joseph A. Ruddy taking fingerprints of candidates. Picture taken by Brosnan, Bd. W.S., Dec. 12, 1915
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Daktyloscopie. Portrait of Johannes Evangelista Purkinje, 1787-1869. (This name is pronounced: Poor - keen - ye). In "Biology and its makers;" by W.A. Lacy, N.Y.: Holt, 1915, p.267 (Best portrait found)
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Portrait of Sir William J. Hersohel. (from a recent photograph from life)
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Criminal Photography. Collection of weapons and instruments from the Criminal Museum at Christiana, Norway, 1912
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Criminal Photography (Murder case). Girl baby, nine months old, strangled Apr. 4, 1912, at Ralambstorg, near Stockholm, Sweden, by her father Earl Ludwig Nordahl, a shoe-maker. He concealed the baby in some underbrush near the road just outside of the town
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Review of Bureau of Police. Dept. of Public Safety, Philadelphia, Oct. 1910, at Philadelphia Ball Park
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Portrait of Mary E. Holland, (nee) Trowel, born Urbana, Iowa, Feb. 20, 1857, died Wesley Memorial HospitalMar. 27, 1915, (Chicago, Ill.) Presented by J. Herbert Taylor, Mar. 30, 1915
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Portrait of Sir William J. Hersohel. (In colors)
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System
Tattooing a Burmese boy
-Photographs for Lectures on Criminology, Fingerprints, and the Bertillon System