107,014 research outputs found
Moe Cohen, alias Joseph Phillips. John Mackie, alias " Paddy Irish."
HEADQUARTERS OF THE POLICE DEPARTMENT,
BOSTON, MASS.
SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE, 37 PEMBERTON SQUARE.
WANTED FOR PICKING POCKETS.
Moe Cohen, alias Joseph Phillips. John Mackie, alias " Paddy Irish."
This Department holds indictment warrants for the arrest of JOHN MACKIE, alias PADDY IRISH, and MOE COHEN, alias JOSEPH PHILLIPS, professional pickpockets. They will be found about celebrations, fairs, horse races, etc.
If located, arrest, hold, notify me and I will send officers with necessary papers
for them.
WM. H. PIERCE,
Superintendent of Police.
BOSTON, August 1, 1901
$200 REWARD! For the arrest and conviction of one Frank C. Smith, alias Banty Smith, alias Bronco Smith, alias Harry Franklin. alias Charles Moore
$200 REWARD!
For the arrest and conviction of one Frank C. Smith, alias Banty Smith, alias Bronco Smith, alias Harry Franklin. alias Charles Moore, the supposed murderer of Minnie Taylor, who was called to her door and assassinated on the night of November 18th, 1897, Smith is described &s being 22 to 25 years 'old: height about 5 feet 5 to 7 inches; slightly stooped in shoulders; weight about 140 or 150 pounds; rather chunky in build: rather short face; dark hair an<l dark hazel eyes; has habit of winking or drawing his eyes up when talking: mean countenance: rarely looking you in the eye when in conversation: is addicted to the cigarette habit; when left, here had abort, stubby, dark moustache (but may be clean shaven now); wore dark or dark blue cloths, brown overcou.t and stiff hat. The State of Illinois offers 200 Dollars reward for the arrest and conviction of the murderer. Anyone arresting Smith and wiring S. Loveless, Mattoon, Ill., will be paid t1100 of the above reward on his conviction, of which I feel sure, the balance to defray expenses.
A. H. MESSER,
Sheriff Coles County, Illinois.
January 121, 189
will be paid for the capture of C. E. Wagoner, alias Charles Evans, alias Charles E. Edwards, Dead or Alive.
Colorado State Penitentiary
$100.00 Reward
will be paid for the capture of C. E. Wagoner, alias Charles Evans, alias Charles E. Edwards, Dead or Alive. Wanted for Murder. Escaped from this Penitentiary January 22d, 1900.
DESCRIPTION
Age, 34; height, 5 feet 8 ½ inches; dark complexion; slate
blue, sleepy looking eyes; black hair; weight, 150 pounds; build,
medium; small moustache when last seen; seven vaccination marks, right biceps; large red birthmark, back of neck, left side; large scar right side of chin; scar inside left knee; large smooth scar right shin; two scars between the base of right thumb and wrist; scar base of right thumb inside; scar on end of left index finger.
E. H. MARTIN WARDEN
CANNON CITY COLORAD
Henry E. Hamilton, alias H. E. Hammond, alias. H. E. Dailey
POLICE HEADQUARTERS,
OAKLAND, CALIF., Feb. 4, 1901.
WANTED For Grand Larceny and Felony Embezzlement.
Henry E. Hamilton, alias H. E. Hammond, alias. H. E. Dailey ; Age, 39; Height, about 5 feet, 9 inches; Weight, about 150lbs;; Eyes, gray-blue; Hair, dark; Complexion, medium, rather sallow; wore steel rimmed spectacles, (may discard them); smooth face, rather sharp features; one or two front teeth filled with gold; clerical appearance; well-educated and a thorough hotel man; not a drinking man, but very fond of women. Trouser and coat measure: waist, 32; leg, 33; breast, 37; sleeve under arm, 19¼; wears No. 7 shoe. On underclothes and linen when he left here, laundry mark 567F; on some, initials H. E. H.; on others, H. E. Hammond.
For a month past has been in the employ of R. M. Briare, at Hotel Metropole, this
city, as bookkeeper and night clerk. On the morning, of February 2nd, 1901, this man stole about $1,600 from hotel safe and jumped town.
I hold warrant. Please arrest, hold money and notify
S. C. HODGKINS, Chief of Police, Oakland, California
Genetic Algorithm Assisted Minimum Bit Error Rate Multiuser Detection in Multiple Antenna Aided OFDM
The family of minimum bit error rate (MBER) multiuser detectors (MUD) is capable of outperforming the classic minimum mean-squared-error (MMSE)MUDin term of the achievable bit-error rate (BER) owing to directly minimising the BER cost function. In this paper, we will invoke genetic algorithms (GA) for finding the optimum weight vectors of the MBERMUDin the context of multipleantenna aided multi-user OFDM
Measured impact of crooked traceroute
Data collected using traceroute-based algorithms underpins research into the Internet’s router-level topology, though it is possible to infer false links from this data. One source of false inference is the combination of per-flow load-balancing, in which more than one path is active from a given source to destination, and classic traceroute, which varies the UDP destination port number or ICMP checksum of successive probe packets, which can cause per-flow load-balancers to treat successive packets as distinct flows and forward them along different paths. Consequently, successive probe packets can solicit responses from unconnected routers, leading to the inference of false links. This paper examines the inaccuracies induced from such false inferences, both on macroscopic and ISP topology mapping. We collected macroscopic topology data to 365k destinations, with techniques that both do and do not try to capture load balancing phenomena.We then use alias resolution techniques to infer if a measurement artifact of classic traceroute induces a false router-level link. This technique detected that 2.71% and 0.76% of the links in our UDP and ICMP graphs were falsely inferred due to the presence of load-balancing. We conclude that most per-flow load-balancing does not induce false links when macroscopic topology is inferred using classic traceroute. The effect of false links on ISP topology mapping is possibly much worse, because the degrees of a tier-1 ISP’s routers derived from classic traceroute were inflated by a median factor of 2.9 as compared to those inferred with Paris traceroute
Comparison Between Uniform and Nonuniform Interpolation Techniques for Digital Alias-free FIR Filtering
In this paper, we propose three grid-based nonuniform interpolation techniques to find the AUC of the convolution operation of a digital alias-free FIR filter. Up to the authors’ knowledge, these techniques were not addressed in literature before. We call them composite 3-nonuniform-sample (C3NS), composite 4-nonuniform-sample (C4NS) and composite 5-nonuniform-sample (C5NS) rules. They are named after the traditional composite Simpson’s 1/3 rule which is usually used in second-order polynomial interpolation of equally-spaced sampling points. The proposed new rules shows better estimated results than the uniform-based ones when the number of sampling points doesn’t match the required Nyquist rate. Moreover, we prove that composite Simpson’s 1/3 rule is more accurate than composite Simpson’s 3/8 rule mathematically and by simulation
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Please look out for and ·arrest Walter alias Adams
Please look out for and ·arrest Walter alias Adams a Ginger cake colored Negro about 20 or 21 years old about 5ft 6in high and weighs about 140 lbs. is a Dude kind of a Negro and usually goes well dressed; is a Gambler and is fond of lewd women. I hold Warrant for his arrest charging him with rape in one case and conspiracy to commit rape in another case. He has a mother living in Texarkana by the name of Mag Washington, a schoolteacher. He is well known in the following towns: Longview, Terrell, Dallas. Fort Worth and Tyler and will probability to one or the other places. Is fond of playing Baseball and usually wears a red sweater over his shirt and a striped cap. He is a slick young negro and will run at the drop of a hat. Should you find him in Tyler or Fort Worth he will in all probability be with Negro woman by the name of Cora who is a relative of his and an all-round sporting woman; also a Negro girl by the name or Laura Morgan who accompanied Cora Moss from this tow:n about a ·week or so ago , Please Arrest him and wire me and I will come at once and pay all expense.
J. H. Bell Sheriff, Harrison Count
Sub-nyquist sampling techniques
A number of novel theoretical methods have been developed in an attempt to analyse data produced by sampling a signal at below the Nyquist rate and the limitations of the approaches have been investigated. A technique is developed that allows, under specified conditions, the frequency and amplitude of a band-limited sinusoidal signal (with no harmonics) to be determined when the signal is sampled simultaneously with three uniform samplers at below the Nyquist rate. The three samplers operate at slightly different rates. Each has its output ideally low-pass filtered with a cut-off frequency at half the sampling rate. The frequencies of the signals output from the ideal filters are analysed to determine the input sinusoid parameters. The frequency of the sinusoid can also be found within a calculated tolerance when approximate filter output frequencies are known. Two approaches extending this technique for a band-limited periodic signal consisting of more than just the fundamental, enable the frequencies of the harmonics to be found for the signal, but there is the possibility that other erroneous harmonics may be identified as part of the signal. The probability of this occurring can be reduced by uniformly sampling simultaneously with a greater number of samplers. This probability cannot reach zero. Furthermore, as the number of samplers increases or the number of signal harmonics increases, the computational workload imposed in determining the harmonic frequencies rises dramatically. The approaches are rendered impractical and sampling at irregular intervals is suggested as an alternative to using a very large number of uniform samplers. A modified discrete Fourier transform and its inverse are developed to allow an estimated spectral analysis of a continuous periodic signal sampled at irregular intervals. Additive pseudo-random sampling and periodic sampling with dither are rigorously defined as two proposed irregular sampling schemes. The periodicity and symmetrical properties of the modified transform are derived for the two schemes. Consistently alias-free spectral analysis of a band-limited periodic signal is demonstrated using additive pseudo-random sampling with a maximum sampling rate below the Nyquist rate. This does not apply when using periodic sampling with dither
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