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Show wm mi. trail siif Hopeful That It Vli Upon a More Effi i Footing. CLOSE ALLIANCE BE' fit FORCES IN ALL G .i .. p. , n 'i & V reach Officers Dec! !' Crimes in. Old Vfii Planned in Aine s i M BY PAUL "VILLI A Special Cable to Tho Trfi Cl! PARIS, Feb. J2.-The po Jf-jt In New York, and in, fac the United States, Is bclngi' t& keen Interest by the Frond itW,J clals. as well as those of It jrl Germany and Russia Crlnfj ftf1 crime. Important crime, Isi r and as a result there la a between the detective polled '"Jm the country. This Is an l f.r cesslty. and this is why thi Jut head of the prefecture of p0' J. T tho heads of the detective fi S.Jc don. Berlin. Rome and SL P earnestly hopeful that thol the New York police force 0 iPr-fectlve iPr-fectlve footing will bo sued Is tlic Judgment of expel ' American police, and pnj ji New York force. Is tho wo r. r. tho chain. i. Accuses Amerlo A high official of the 5 who for reason of delicacy w in It. the use of his name, sj ft1, ccntly; "A good share a j1 crimes committed In Kiiropi in America and In many coj fkj nals como from America to fi visn This Is particularly true . crimes. While the AmcrlC PH0 always perfectly willing t( wllh us in the detection a m " of crime, nnd while thercj v American police detectives P can system on the whole la ,tili. fectlve. Take this white; for example. If It could n Tin etntlrely it certainly could 1 r". ly restricted If the America -. as effective as ours. TlioA tW Inclined to believe, is in j: 'i polities, party politics. plaMjli; part in the police direction Too Much Politics 'iiiEjjjff "With us the men at thljffefti force are reasonably perrnm.jt make police work their lintugf so in all the European dejff,f America, on the other lianwLi-tlcally lianwLi-tlcally every change of"M there Is a change In the hqBlll lice departments. 1,'orvHU many police comminsiunetSI heads of the detective fonBJIU been In New York wlthinjai years? A civilian is putl, . the police force, and beforjW a chance to learn JiardliOB ' of the business he goes oifjl man comes In Changes ar assignment of men for PL II l leal reasons, and the whip the force is lowered. Its cflljU docreased and its power groat crimes Is weakened. ,p. Americans arc beginning to. JJU weakness, and 1 have noTt tlicv do they will prompt l!?U remcdv. A thoroughly officii police force would be wclco prefecture in Europe andgfej great international crimes ml licult and much less frcqueu IB"". Here Is Terrible S TTnder tlie title of "A Fi Prisoner," the Paris Figaro ' Hi extraordinary artlclo conca l named Ernest AcquaroneJ years ago was Incarceratcdtj " provincial prison of Clairy ij comber last his sentence sh plrcd. but on tho Gtli of tin thp governor of tho prison (Uiarone and addressed hlmi "A vcek hence you vvcra j, . set free, but. as 1 am lnl "V English police that you thorn on a charge of ob under false pretenses fror man. 1 am sending you tli J2 Boulogne, whence you wJIt "T lo England. The Bnrir w state that your name is H you any money? K When the prisoner rcpll u penniless, his miseries bj T custody of gendarmes. Jti quently changed, ho mtrt P from Clairvaux to Boulog t matter of a week. T-mfJ English detectives appcara gat iiuarone complained to W W the Boulogne prison, 'tho "I can do nothing." Ncvcrt ?Q the prisoner permission advice. The. lawyer corisjl fco the Paris prefecture of 1 ministry of the interior an lstry of justice but Iho oi . received were te lJr Ing wa.s known' f his clica flclalccnteis. , ait Is Still in Prii The reason of this as M norancc was that Acnuart -e registered In the Boulogne m the name of Holt, and th had lodged his oomplnmM p authorities In that name, v adviser telegraphed to a Lg J who vaguely replied: TM f lice will have nollilnff toj affair." "However. cpntlt Mj garo. "Acduarono remains Ii jn the Boulogne prison. .aST' for the governor, who Wb T am very sorry, but I canji Will Eemain in mZ The Bishop of Maryland Wtjkt Nice till the beginning a with his family he will cl and Rome. After iastw S? , to Germany for the summ |