
August, 2006
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Semaphore Lizzie Borden
Friday, August 25th, 2006How does Lizzie Stack Up
Wednesday, August 23rd, 2006MLB Late Night Music by The Beatles
Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006Ghost in My Suitcase
Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006
Ghostinmysuitcase.com is an online guide to Haunted Travel in America. Areas covered include, Haunted Places, Ghostly Travel Guides, Ghost Walks, Paranormal Conferences, and a Ghost Blog.
You would think that the Lizzie Borden B&B would be covered what with its recent notariety as a haunted destination and the the number one World’s Creepiest Destination by the Travel Channel. It is still a kewl site.
Neverwas Haul
Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006
The Neverwas Haul is a mobile, 3-story, steam-powered Victorian mansion, constructed for Burning Man 2006. I want one. KEWL!
The Neverwas Haul represents a reimagining of the victorian era, an era when technology and exploration fueled the imagination of the Continent, and gentlemen and ladies of leisure set out in pursuit of the strange and wonderous. Inspired by the works of Jules Verne, the neverwas haul represents a combination of the Victorian love of comfort and imposition of its own values on to the primitive landscape of the old and new worlds and pure, unadultered belief in the overaching grace of technology.

Shilling Shockers on DVD
Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006
On August 13, I posted on what I called “The BEST Lizzie Borden take off video I have ever seen!” Many have agreed with me. Penny Dreadful’s Shilling Shockers produces quality work and I want to support them any way I can.
I just got this email and wanted to share it with you:
Hello Dreary Ones, Season 1 of Shilling Shockers is now available on DVD! It’s a 7-DVD Box set, each disc containing an episode as well as a full-length feature film of terror. Also, most discs have delightful Easter Eggs you can hunt down. Shipping is free to fan club members! Check it out at http://www.shillingshockers.com Click on the “store” option. Take Scare …
zombie Lizzie Borden
Monday, August 21st, 2006Newport
Sunday, August 20th, 2006To continue the series on Newport, the city where Lizzie Borden relaxed in following her acquittal in 1893, I present for your viewing pleasure The Newport Postcard Museum—-a sweet site that has a gallery of postcards that depicts turn of the century Newport, Rhode Island.
The examples shown are from our personal collection of over 800 Newport cards. There exist over 5,000 different Newport cards. We will exhibit cards by area : downtown, waterfront, beach, etc. and by type of building: mansion, church, public buildings,etc.. Displayed will be about 10 cards in each classification with a short paragraph about each card. To view an enlargement of the card, just click on the pictures from this page.
It is very generous of this site to provide such large scans of the cards included. One can easily see the details of the photos and examine the places represented without effort.
I really like #18:
18.Titled: ‘Aquidneck National Bank and Thames Street South, Newport, R.I.’ Published by Berger Bros., Publishers, Providence, R.I. The view is at Thames with the side street on the left being Green Street. The building on the left titled the Kinsey Building was built in 1892 and housed the National Bank of Rhode Island until recently and is now the Blues Cafe. Traffic on Thames (the locals call it Thãmes not Timmes) is still two way in this card. Time: 1905-10.

On another page within the same website, is a large collection of Newport Mansion postcards. Kewl!
This card is striking because I was just there and took a similar image! First the postcard and the description, then my photo from August 8th, 2006.

APC 40. Residence of Senator Wetmore: Chateau Sur Mer. Owned by The Preservation Society and open to the public today. Built in 1852 Chateau-sur-Mer is one of Newport’s grand ‘cottages’. In 1857 a “Fete Champetre” was held for over 2000 guests. Built for China trade merchant William Peabody Wetmore who died in 1862. His son George Peabody Wetmore inherited the bulk of his fortune. The home was remodeled in the 1870′s under the direction of Architect Richard Morris Hunt in the Second-Empire Style. Wetmore was Governor of Rhode Island and U.S. Senator and passed away in 1921. He had two daughters, Maude and Edith who never married. The Preservation Society purchased Chateau-Sur-Mer in 1969. “There’s no use talking about it,” says Miss Edith Wetmore of Newport’s “Chateau Sur Mer,” “we’re the end of an era, if you please.” Miss Wetmore, whose grandfather, George Peabody Wetmore, built Newport’s first large mansion just a hundred years ago, has in her will left “Chateau Sur Mer” to the Society of New England Antiquities; she feels that, socially speaking, Newport is within eight of being a complete ghost town. “I mean to say,” she says, “if you know what I mean, there are just eight families left. Fortunately I like very few people.” * From “The Last Resort” by Cleveland Amory.

MLB Late Night Music by Tiny Tim
Saturday, August 19th, 2006Fingerprints
Saturday, August 19th, 2006Project Guttenberg has posted a copy of the FBI manual The Science of Fingerprints—Classification and Uses. The download is free.
This booklet concerning the study of fingerprints has been prepared by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for the use of interested law enforcement officers and agencies, particularly those which may be contemplating the inauguration of fingerprint identification files. It is based on many years’ experience in fingerprint identification work out of which has developed the largest collection of classified fingerprints in the world. Inasmuch as this publication may serve as a general reference on classification and other phases of fingerprint identification work, the systems utilized in the Identification Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation are set forth fully. The problem of pattern interpretation, in particular, is discussed in detail.
Criminal identification by means of fingerprints is one of the most potent factors in obtaining the apprehension of fugitives who might otherwise escape arrest and continue their criminal activities indefinitely. This type of identification also makes possible an accurate determination of the number of previous arrests and convictions which, of course, results in the imposition of more equitable sentences by the judiciary, inasmuch as the individual who repeatedly violates the law finds it impossible to pose successfully as a first, or minor, offender. In addition, this system of identification enables the prosecutor to present his case in the light of the offender’s previous record. It also provides the probation officers, parole board, and the Governor with definite information upon which to base their judgment in dealing with criminals in their jurisdictions.
From earliest times fingerprinting, because of its peculiar adaptability to the field, has been associated in the lay mind with criminal identification to the detriment of the other useful phases of the science. However, the Civil File of the Identification Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation contains three times as many fingerprints as the Criminal File. These civil fingerprints are an invaluable aid in identifying amnesia victims, missing persons and unknown deceased. In the latter category the victims of major disasters may be quickly and positively identified if their fingerprints are on file, thus providing a humanitarian benefit not usually associated with fingerprint records.
The regular contributors who voluntarily submit fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation play a most important role in the drama of identification. Their action expands the size of the fingerprint files, thereby increasing the value of the files to all law enforcement agencies. Mutual cooperation and efficiency are resultant by-products.
The use of fingerprints for identification purposes is based upon distinctive ridge outlines which appear on the bulbs on the inside of the end joints of the fingers and thumbs. These ridges have definite contours and appear in several general pattern types, each with general and specific variations of the pattern, dependent on the shape and relationship of the ridges. The outlines of the ridges appear most clearly when inked impressions are taken upon paper, so that the ridges are black against a white background. This result is achieved by the ink adhering to the friction ridges. Impressions may be made with blood, dirt, grease or any other foreign matter present on the ridges, or the saline substance emitted by the glands through the ducts or pores which constitute their outlets. The background or medium may be paper, glass, porcelain, wood, cloth, wax, putty, silverware, or any smooth, nonporous material.
Of all the methods of identification, fingerprinting alone has proved to be both infallible and feasible. Its superiority over the older methods, such as branding, tattooing, distinctive clothing, photography, and body measurements (Bertillon system), has been demonstrated time after time. While many cases of mistaken identification have occurred through the use of these older systems, to date the fingerprints of no two individuals have been found to be identical.
The background and history of the science of fingerprints constitute an eloquent drama of human lives, of good and of evil. Nothing, I think, has played a part more exciting than that enacted by the fascinating loops, whorls, and arches etched on the fingers of a human being.
[Signature: J. Edgar Hoover]
J. EDGAR HOOVER,
Director.






































