The Right Way to do Wrong - An Expose of Successful Criminals
51 pages
English

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51 pages
English

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Description

Originally published in 1906, this volume contains a wealth of information on the methods and history of various criminal art forms such as pick-pocketing, burglary, confidence tricksters and much more by legendary escapologist Harry Houdini. This is a fascinating publication highly recommended for those interested in the techniques and practices of the old fashioned criminal. Read & Co. Books is proudly republishing this vintage work now in a brand new edition complete with a specially-commissioned new biography of the author.

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Publié par
Date de parution 10 janvier 2013
Nombre de lectures 11
EAN13 9781447482826
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0350€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

THE RIGHT WAY TO DO WRONG
AN EXPOSE OF SUCCESSFUL CRIMINALS
By
HARRY HOUDINI

First published in 1906



Copyright © 2020 Read & Co. Books
This edition is published by Read & Co. Books, an imprint of Read & Co.
This book is copyright and may not be reproduced or copied in any way without the express permission of the publisher in writing.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Read & Co. is part of Read Books Ltd. For more information visit www.readandcobooks.co.uk


Contents
H arry Houdini
PREFACE
SHOT ONE
INCOME O F A CRIMINAL
SHOT TWO
PROFESSIO NAL BURGLARY
SHOT THREE
DIFFICULTIES OF BURGLARY
SHOT FOUR
BURGLARS’ S UPERSTITIONS
SHOT FIVE
THIEVES AND THEIR TRICKS
SHOT SIX
THE ARISTOCRAT OF THIEVERY
SHOT SEVEN
PICKPOC KETS AT WORK
SHOT EIGHT
BEGGARS AN D DEAD BEATS
SHOT NINE
BEGGING LET TER SWINDLES
SHOT TEN
TRICKS OF BUNCO MEN
SHOT ELEVEN
THE GAME OF WITS
SHOT TWELVE
FAKE! FAKE! FAKE!
S HOT THIRTEEN
BOG US TREASURES
S HOT FOURTEEN
FAM OUS SWINDLES
SHOT FIFTEEN
THE F AIR CRIMINAL
SHOT SIXTEEN
THE “BRACE” GAME
SH OT SEVENTEEN
CHEATI NG UNCLE SAM
S HOT EIGHTEEN
HUMBUGS
S HOT NINETEEN
HOUDINI
SHOT TWENTY
CONCLUSION



Harry Houdini
Houdini was born as Erik Weisz in Budapest, Austria-Hungary, on March 24th 1874. He was one of seven children, and when he was four years old the family moved to the United States. They first lived in Appleton, Wisconsin, where Weisz’s father served as the local Rabbi – and thereafter New York City. As a child, Ehrich Weiss (the family changed the spelling of their names on arriving in America) took several jobs, making his public début as a nine year-old trapeze artist, calling himself ‘Ehrich, the Prince of the Air!’ Weiss was also a champion cross country runner in his youth, demonstrating a high level of fitness which would stand him in good stead for later escapes. Several years subsequent, at the age of seventeen, Weiss became a professional magician and began calling himself ‘Harry Houdini’. At first though, Houdini had little success, playing in dime museums and sideshows, focusing initially on traditional card tricks, and even doubling as ‘The Wild Man’ at a circus.
Houdini’s big break came in 1899, when he met manager Martin Beck in rural Woodstock, Illinois. Beck was impressed by Houdini’s handcuffs performance, and advised him to concentrate on escape acts. Houdini was immediately booked for the Orpheum vaudeville circuit. Within months, he was performing at the top vaudeville houses in the country. In 1900, Beck arranged for Houdini to tour Europe, and this really was the start of his stardom. After some days of unsuccessful interviews in London, Houdini managed to interest Dundas Slater, then manager of the Alhambra Theatre. He gave a demonstration of escape from handcuffs at Scotland Yard, and succeeded in baffling the police so effectively that he was booked at the Alhambra for six months. From here on, Houdini’s success exponentially grew. In 1901, Houdini introduced his own original act, the Milk Can Escape. In this act, he was handcuffed and sealed inside an over-sized milk can filled with water, and made his escape behind a curtain. As part of the effect, Houdini invited members of the audience to hold their breath along with him while he was inside the can. This act was followed by many more, most notably the 1904 escape, where thousands watched as he tried to escape from special handcuffs commissioned by London's Daily Mirror , keeping viewers in suspense for an hour.
Another stunt saw Houdini buried alive and only just able to claw himself to the surface, emerging in a state of near-breakdown. Houdini performed at least three variations on this ‘Buried Alive’ stunt during his career. The first was near Santa Ana, California in 1915, and it almost cost Houdini his life. He was buried, without a casket, in a pit of earth six feet deep. He became exhausted and panicked while trying to dig his way to the surface and called for help; when his hand finally broke the surface, he fell unconscious and had to be pulled from the grave. While many suspected that these escapes were faked, Houdini presented himself as the scourge of fake magicians and spiritualists. After extensive research, reasonably early on in his career, Houdini published The Unmasking of Robert-Houdin (1908), in which he called his former idol Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin a liar and a fraud for having claimed the invention of automata and effects such as aerial suspension.
As President of the Society of American Magicians (from 1917 until his death in 1926), he was keen to uphold professional standards and expose fraudulent artists. Houdini was the Society’s only president to serve for more than one year – greatly growing the success of the organisation, which now embraces 6,000 members and 300 assemblies world-wide. In his lifetime, Houdini also made several movies, but quit acting when it failed to bring in money. He was also a keen aviator, and aimed to become the first man to fly a plane in Australia. In 1909, Houdini became fascinated with aviation and purchased a French Voisin biplane for $5000. After crashing once, he made his first successful flight on November 26 in Hamburg, Germany. The following year, Houdini toured Australia, bringing along his Voisin biplane. It is an area of great debate whether he was efficacious in his flight however. Fitting for a man with such a taste for the spectacle, even the circumstances of his death in 1926 were dramatic and mysterious.
In his final days, Houdini suffered from an acute fever and appendicitis, but refused advice to have immediate surgery, optimistically holding to a strong belief that he would recover. Houdini instead carried on with a show at the Garrick Theatre in Detroit, Michigan. Despite this optimism, his last words before dying were reportedly: ‘I'm tired of fighting.’ Eyewitnesses to an incident at Houdini's dressing room in the Princess Theatre in Montreal gave rise to speculation that Houdini's death was caused by a McGill University student, J. Gordon Whitehead, who delivered a surprise attack of multiple blows to Houdini's abdomen. One witness described Whitehead asking Houdini ‘whether it was true that punches in the stomach did not hurt him’, and then delivering ‘some very hammer-like blows below the belt.’ Harry Houdini died of peritonitis, secondary to a ruptured appendix at 1:26 p.m. on October 31, age d fifty-two.



PREFACE
O would the deed were good! For now the Devil, that told me I did well, Says that this deed is chronicled in Hell!
—Shakespeare
THERE is an under world—a world of cheat and crime—a world whose highest good is successful evasion of the laws of the land.
You who live your life in placid respectability know but little of the real life of the denizens of this world. The daily records of the police courts, the startling disclosures of fraud and swindle in newspaper stories are about all the public know of this world of crime. Of the real thoughts and feelings of the criminal, of the terrible fascination which binds him to his nefarious career, of the thousands—yea, tens of thousands—of undiscovered crimes and unpunished criminals, you know but little.
The object of this book is twofold: First, to safeguard the public against the practises of the criminal classes by exposing their various tricks and explaining the adroit methods by which they seek to defraud. “Knowledge is power” is an old saying. I might paraphrase it in this case by saying knowledge is safety. I wish to put the public on its guard, so that honest folks may be able to detect and protect themselves from the dishonest, who labor under the false impression that it is easier to live dishonestly than to thrive by h onest means.
In the second place, I trust this book will afford entertaining, as well as instructive reading, and that the facts and experiences, the exposés and explanations here set forth may serve to interest you, as well as put you in a position where you will be less liable to fa ll a victim.
The material contained in this book has been collected by me personally during many years of my active professional life. It has been my good fortune to meet personally and converse with the chiefs of police and the most famous detectives in all the great cities of the world. To these gentlemen I am indebted for many amusing and instructive incidents hitherto unknown t o the world.
The work of collecting and arranging this material and writing the different chapters has occupied many a leisure hour. My only wish is that “The Right Way to Do Wrong” may amuse and entertain my readers and place the unwary on their guard. If my humble efforts in collecting and writing these facts shall accomplish this purpose, I shall be amply repaid, and feel that my labor has not b een in vain.
HA RRY HOUDINI, Handcuff King and J ail Breaker .


SHOT ONE
INCOME OF A CRIMINAL
PEOPLE of respectability and inexperience, who have no knowledge of the criminal classes, usually imagine that every criminal is a hardened villain, incapable of even the ordinary feelings of family affection, and that of n

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