The evening world. Newspaper, May 10, 1911, Page 3

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| - LUPRINTS OF FINGERS 'Divicle 6 May Dances by a Rain and the Answer BATHBEACHGOATS y / BEAT PHOTOS FOR f (DENTIFICATIONS Lieut. Faurot Testifies at Burg- lary Trial That They Are i More Reliable. NEW EXPERT Judge ‘Rosaisky Admits Ques- tions That Establish a Legal Precedent. TESTIFIES. ra A precedent y Judge Rosalsky, jeneral Sessions, by «being made to convict Cha was established in the ‘ore whom an effort to-day jCourt of ies Crispi on the evidence of nts found on a plate of removed from the door 171 Wooster street on ich was ot a loft at No. Feb. 2 last Lieut. Faurot, who has been In charge of the finger-print bureau at Police Headquarters for the thirteen years, was asked by Attorney opinion, was Aw ant Wistrict Wasservogel whether, in the finger-print tdentifteation than photographs or Ber M. Moore, Crispi's counsel objected to Faurot answering this ques- 1 that there was no Witness Answer. “This is a new scienc satd Judge Rosalsky, “and the law must keer prog: ress with the times, We must not per- mit the law to ‘become stagnant. 1 will permit the witness to answer question the theory that the trlet Attorney is trying to prove ity of the finger-print identification the as al The question was then repeated to the witness. ‘Yes,’ said Faurot, “the finger-print fs surer. I Avill endeavor to prove tt. The Bertillon method is capable of de- ception, One operator might take loose measurements, the other close Photographs not to be de upon at all, after a lapse of tir every one knows time changes many features and expressions. prints never chang: Then Faurot sho of twine—Frank and Ohar! theatrical people whose act is the o * fon of identities. They offer priz +, those in their audience who can di: ‘he heads are shaped alfke, every separate feature of their heads are alike, the cotor of their hair is the same, and they dress alike, But Lieut. Faurot showed their fnger-prints, and they are dis- similar m every respect, one being ulnar and the other radiant. Many Experts on Hand. ‘The court was crowded to-day with handwriting experts and pathologists | who are interested in this new sctence. Among those who acrutinized the prints closely were Handwriting Ex- Kingsley and Osborne and Prof. varkin and Drs. Lehane and O'Hanlon The only other witness called by the prosecution, and who qualified as a fingerprint expert, was A. P. Brown superintendent of the Identification Bur- eau of the Jersey City Police No attempt was made by the defense | to controvert the testimony of the| finger-prints, Louls Spiegel, one of pi's lawyers, called to the Joseph Manfredona, the brother-in-le and Mantredona, his siste on the day of the robbery they hie wife and daughter spent the afte: noon at a@ theatre and the evening at the Manfredona home in Brooklyn. Crtept then took the stand in his own behalf and denied having been where in the vicinity of place where the burglary occurred Otto Rothschild, a whole miliiner, testified that Crisp! had been employed) shipping | him first as assistant clerk, then in complete charge of the shipping department. He discharged jim when the police informed him that Crispt had been arrested for burglary in 191, ‘aime ART WORKS DESTROYED WHEN YONKERS HOME BURNS Mistress of ‘Buena Vista” Has Nar- row Escape and Japanese But- ler Is Hurt Jumping. The “Buena Vist’, one of the finest by mansions in Yonkers, and for many vears the home of the late Mayor Norton Otis, was totally destroyed by fir ‘The loss {a estimated this morning: at 676,00, the articles including severa works of art, The residence was occupied by Mrs, N. P. Bailey and yer daughter, Mrs. W. G. Morris, and Mr. Morris, Mra. Batley had a narrow eacape from death, being carried out y her son-in-law Valuable paintings and works of art executed by Mr. Batley and other art ste and valued at $75,040, were saved from the fire. Among those who assisted in carr ing out the artist gresaman Joun aoroma the = stree president of the ing Company, and Capt intendent of the Otis Elevator Com pany. The fire was dissovered about 7 rok ry George Mazlak, the Jai iter Ife goused a!) the inmates ttempt some new Maalak y the flames and was 4 ualy injured jumping from a ™ in Bt. John's Hospita McGinnis of Engine Compa Lieut. Kelly, of 1 and several fh gine Corny The finger- | Is Not “23” With These Schoolgirl Athletes THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1911. GET JUDGE'S GOAT | | Fourth Annuai Park Fee | of the Girls’ Branch of the Public Schoois Ath- letic League a Huge Success and a Fine Spectacle. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. ort tut aft 4 sotten the more aterial point of Fourth Park Giris’ Bre Sohools Ath+ League was @ TrtsyD FATT letic Great success. There were three thousand Park, Brooklyn, 1 mean, t! very spick and span little senting thirty-five different Brooklyn schools in a festival of dance and | games. Crowded against the ropes of the {nclosure were fond mammas ar brothers and sisters with a sober black sprinklir rather s Perhaps the horridest p that insisted ol vals throug ee thousand KO It Was Provok What earthly use was there in a lit: tle girl having gone to bed the night before with a head fuil of pigtails only to have a nasty old storm com 0189 ELIZABETH BURCHENALEL i H way ard . yt ea dampened lanha 1 have the U ymeedio Malin ie WovId yume pol ” yestentay on Long Meadows in Prospect | a Uttle | BABY GIRL, ALONE, "ON WAY TO COURT of py Hold Up|e | Trolley Car on Which Ma- gistrate Voorhees Is Riding. |GOAT DAY IN THE COURT | | Owners of Twenty -seven, Five of Them Women, Called Up on Summonses. Rath many Reach ts used to monta, dwellers amid the classic its are fond of mots, bu and flats therer when t comes toa pase where an long 4 goat walks rent tnt limbs up into the nuseo: baby's sy ry, ¢ house, ¥ and eas oom, it's time something was So Magistrate Voorhees expressed | if in the Coney Island Pot twenty-seven goat owners e arraigned befire 6 Court thelr wid foraging of th ttoe Pri to roam at large vers who had becw Pp’ int on sum Honses nis by Poti familiarly Hh station as were women Loomis furnished the Court with a b: “man Clarence i wn in the Bath “Clarence the Cop MAPLE DANCE fetting forth that the Bath Beach goats isles one ix commonly sui Were so thick that they stopped the un one’s toes up to, bi trolle; +8. het lemonades UP A PERSISTENT WOMAN TESTIFIES Gar Hole Up by Gate, aah hs pet a bed ‘I can well believe that,” responded | SEE ei ae i | staal strate Voorhees, “Only this morn: fer she: ReeG Ck tee ed twenty out on (he tracks, and i} arg dt: nabestoe:(ahe athletes oh Che I tues seemed to be engaged in eating Shey ani ea | Ne connecting bolts from the rails, 1 r Ail ‘ a -” acai woul hot be surprised to hear at any To balong to these classes te pursiy|Eretty Miss Mooney Tells Son Interprets Signs in Annul-| tls The motorman of my car was | a very kindly man and would not run 2 5 down the Ile got off to shoo ne ase Before e ment Case Before Brook them away 1 of shooing halt a turned on and butted him severely The work is d 1ours it is more ing the ehildven ing them to join. tonal What She and Four Others Did to Him in Havana Cafe. goats. indu dozen lyn Supreme Court. nt the ex Then he got sist in teaching them folk dances. 15: a3 J and charged them with his car. they do have thelr basketball and other | & . ey all got out of the way then and & as well | Miss Helen Mooney of No, 179 West) Mrs, Ada M. L, Davis, both deaf and| some of them stood at one side of the “One point we particu- Fifty-third street, a pretty eighteen | gum, to-day told Juatice Putnam in t and gave us the laugh, ‘They are | year-old girl who arrived alone to-day aay in these ries ff ead Ward inant i He, (8 e Court, Brooklyn, the story upon | the nerviest lot of goats that exist and normal within the next two days. Come at once and the possibility of all the honors being | 0! are ner Havana from Ha-) which Hawley D, Anderson ¢ nan- they must be chained up or aboll#hed,” ! carried off by one or two little girls. | vana, had a story to tell of an experi- iat of his marriage eet Bless That ie true, vents Honor.” spoke} SAVE 25 TO 40 PER CENT. Honors Go To Groups. ence which befel her there before the | 5 Anderson. Guy Davis, a © eon up Policeman Loomis. “I have here} H the dances or gamos are divided | SUP salted. |of tho affitcted woman, who satd that he the complaint of Mrs, John Benson| $60 ‘into groups. Thus a sroup wins, but| Miss Mooney was a member of an ives at the ¥. M. C. A. Eastern Dis-| who lives at Sixty-seventh street_and | one child HA Ba esiee: toe one boy | American vaudeville team that hasbeen | 140) house, waa tue deft medium by |New Utrecht avenue about a goat Tat WARD- Pte tay Reape h haa Trek arcs | playing at & Havana theatre called the | oi ich tne myetio elgae.we tranaiated | ate her baby’s shoes and then gave | prowess {n a game or race, was found) Payiet. Because of an attack of fover, Th aati h © be one of the main causes of friction! ghe said, she quit the troupe and re- | to the court | her hasan Pe Sabla tk aD oaat a Ci | ROBE jamong the athlet sea ror boys, | turnea home. Cuban imitations of the | fs. Davia was an excitable witness, | dirty yellow whiskers, ked right Ue | With the little girls we ha Hed to! ew ¥ ? Ie and she sent lier fingers flying through | {nto tue house and went upstairs T | |avold that unpleasantness, You Will noe|NO™ York's stage door Johnnies pestere. "i cvtion ot ner testimony at arate | All Danied’ Ownership: RUNKS TRUKKS the races to-day are relay races. ( }e ec y a lo Phere ‘ e st of Judg bf S{A team wins and not an i viduai| Was one young gallant in particular | that, excited, ti Nh lis pap oie 4 Chal indie ipha iy ta eae Leal child.” who wouldn't take “no” for an answer. |the Job behind the gesticulations ana | MARtetrele: Voorhees SUrHBG 8 WrAEA Although the fete held yesterday w “On the night of my last appearance | got them over the bar to the Court) ful eye upon the twenty-seven de- the fourth of its Kind given by thejon the stage this fellow followed me) Rytnout a hitch | fendants | Brooklyn schools {t was but the second | and four other girls into a cafe adjoin-| anderson {x a surveyor for the New| ‘Not mine!’ boomed the prisoners in one given in the open air in Pros- "ing the thes where we had gone for | york Board of Fire Underwriters and) shrill chorus, | pect Park a bite to eat a lives. at Mountainy N He) “Ot course not,” retorted His Honor, | | Mrs. Alfred Seton Post ts president of | sald “When we refu charged that he married the defendant | sarcastically “IT suppose all the four vice-presidents | to notice him he grew insulting and | April 4 upon her statement that a | "*"° beet er t sland, H. Dodge, Mrs, $.| finally tried to put his hands on me. I] oniid then with her was hers by a| Boats are perfe wen | R. Guggenheim, 3 struck him and he struck ‘back. former marriage with one John B. Rich= les, Mrs on Le “The Cubans who were present made | ards, to whom, she said, she had been! "My goat is a good gout," broke in » Ellsworth ts ¢ | a Mrs. John urer. no e to protect us. All five of us turned in and gave that tittle spiagotty the licking of his life, We w hat, tore his clothes, scratched his ace, all and that Richards was a myth. and, finally, we threw him bodily into rs. Davis told the story on her fing he street | giving all the julred details, He talked about having us arrested, | “Did you know this Mrs, And he had been made the Fs ed counsel of Havana already, and I gues ng Davis wigwaggel the question hanged his mind, for we didn't hear | mater oe. wine gia There by tholemew's {that the girl had never been married at Father Chureh, Ahearn He St alleged Mrs, Lizaie Foccario, "He never got away from the house tili yesterday, 1 had him fenced in with a six-foot fence, He saw a cartload of carrots going by and Jumped the fence. You couldn't blame a goat for that, could you, Judge? Ho didn’t hurt anybody.” Magistrate postponed th married Mag’ r | Ba vett Underhi:i but ex: the defendants un- | h to his amination anything more of him," came back a quick response ul May 5 pumas SLs ; “ane sare the girl came to Berek But don't think any of you are going jiyn trom. Ob eA eta nt eplandel adi hl HP “1 would ad- 4 GRANTS SECOND DIVORCE | seven years ago a nd that her name was | Oe ait to bring at least $2 with DUE TO RAID A YEAR AGO. 1A of visite made! you WILL DIE FR | ho gald ihe enila | Tony Orlo of New Utrecht avenue and Mrs. Heiser, Wife of Brooklyn Law-| HC ieerre ea eee pet ai ery pees ites pes one bi i yer, Gets Decree on Evidence ei i Piterety I'm not going to He about my goat,’ That Freed Cullinan 1 by, DIUMLLY. AAYIEE he oe up and T never kept Aim Father and Mother Started| * "econ? aivorce has been erante Bg Haar bare ie EL rife igen Vise aie asa result of a sensational raid mi: on” apartments in the Hotel a Latham, | Weat Twenty-elghth street Early for Work and Neigh- thelr we near Fifth Ve er to at loose than @ goat Cpr venue, more than a yenr ai At LOND The preamble and | Cheaper a; 69. up. bor Discovers the Tragedy. | that time trends of ‘tedward taltinen | clase of the. Veto biil were dispowed | ted UP" kuch i and Mrs. Charlotte A. Helser descended | of in the House of Commons 1 am glad to shear ¢ Is honest con upon the hote’ and found that Henry | M&DY At on ne Home Secretary |fession,” sald toe Court, and I will parents In three st ma on|torney with offices st No. 21 wWitlem | ouy ix, ancciates were Tee hareafiee and pine (nolley, CATA the top floor of the tenement g| street, was living at the hotel with ener New Chambers street, played with | Helen W., the actress wife of Cuilinan. | linatches and mortally burned herself jan wae granted a d Ju (this morning. Netther of the parents] ‘°° ‘iP | {knew anything about the tragedy unt Tuatlon Putnam in the f ns It Bellevue Hospital a , ii, 1 os ne 1 vorning oO inh ” € \1 mother leaves short after the | d@ugit fw \ n » o'elo © morr it had | tande ° para tr 7 eon band, following the diser t i : : Seen q WON'T TELL, GOES TO JAIL, 5c For 1000 | wa o ‘ NOISELESS MATCHES FURNITURE ta, 4 eneamdor ' * ef . * q , " > F _Albanees Iwas veritensed Dp Judy FREE TROLLEY RIDE ' Misa Gat send 46 Cut-outs and Mention t ty | a Thbs Advertivement, e ot fate f ° r etles Vr Oh bnened 8 HUBS BAD bond Khem, Giebiogd im changed with | him | REV. PHILIP RHINELANDER Tice, otro nh ah NEW EPISCOPALIAN BISHOP, | W2* cower on the second ballot, reeety ng Rev, Mr. Fhinelander ts the cholee a © High Church People Victorious in| the Mair churcn clase and was given ¢ att " majority over the n candidates of the ction for the Diocese of low ehureh clas Alexander Man Pennsylvania of Trinity Church, Boston, and Dean o4 Willa Groton of the Divinity hoo: PHILADELPHIA, May 10.--Rey, [of Philadelphia Phiitp Morcer Rhinelander of the F Prior to the election of a bishop the *Teonvention voted to Increase the salMey Jehop from $6,500 to $10,000 and y an additional sum of §1, eo expenses copal | Mase. Theological School, was to-day elected {aay itsor of the Protestant To- Morrow, Thursday, ( 15,18 & ‘20 Tailored Suits Now Reduced to | *10 “May time” means “reduction “ " hence to-morrow’s great ¢ saciifice sale. Do net continue D to wear a suit Nae shakby ge when $10 will buy a gecuire ~) $18 or $20 rew model. One Style Illustrated As fascinating in their varicty as in their great diversity of fabrics and colors. Space permits vs o ly to hint of them, but, cur word for it, all are authentic up-to-the-minute mocels, mannishly severe or charm- ingly dressy, and fully woith their tee’ prices. All shades. Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 4 14-6 West Idth Street New York 460 and 462 Fulton Street-—Brooklyn 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J. BE FASTA HUN Sacrifice Sale of Wardrobe Trunks We have manufactured too many of these high-grade trunks, and find ourselves overstocked. Stock must be brought down to Buy Frem [thn Maker ALL OF THESE TRUNKS ARE HIGH -GRADE TRUNKS, BAGS and SUIT CASES Of Every Description at MONEY-SAV.\NS PRICES NEWARK TRUNK CO. 15 West 424 Street | OPEN EVENINGS LIVE OSTRICHES ON 34TH STREET Two lusty, full grown ostriches from our reservation n Africa are waiting here to show New Yorkers how an ostrich looks before his periodical hair cut for the plumage industry. Incidentally, the public, for the frst time in tale country, will have the opportunity of seeing every stay of plume making from the time the feathers leave t ostrich until they are converted into beautiful A, This free exhibit will be interesting instructive, too, because not one person in fifty can tel! a good plume from a bad one after it is put together, The exhibit will start to-morrow and will continue as long as the ostriches are happy here. Lectures at intervals. Everyone invited, THE LONDON FEATHER COMPANY New York, 21 West 34th St 12 Gold London, n Lane, BE. € Lee Jaorclens EAGLE BRAND CONDENSED MILK Has Nourished Three Generations of Babies and Started Them on the Road to a Healthy Maturity

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