DEROUSSE SCANDAL, CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY Copyright (c) 2001 by Vincent E. Summers (vsummers@nrao.edu). ************************************************************************ USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. The submittor has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. ************************************************************************ Daily Courier Thursday, June 18, 1903 (Camden, NJ) Mr. Derousse Intended To Drown Himself In The Schuylkill River By "The Courier's" Own Wire. Baltimore, Md., June 18.-Postmaster Derousse, of Camden, N. J., turned up in Baltimore on Wednesday night between six and seven o'clock at the home of his old friend, William H. Swindell, 422 North Carey street. He is undoubtedly in a demented condition, and Dr. George D. Wedforth is attending him. From his rambling remarks, Mr. Swindell has learned the following: Derousse left his home in Camden with the intention of going to the Schuylkill river and drowning himself. He got as far as Fairmount Park and sat down on a bench. What subsequently transpired is a blank to Derousse, save that when he arrived over the Pennsylvania Railroad in Baltimore he went to Mr. Swindell's. He had only fifty cents in his possession when he arrived. Mr. Swindell says he is afraid to let Derousse out of the house lest he carry out his original intention. -------------------- Daily Courier June 18, 1903 Postmaster Derousse in Balto.; Shortage Reported In Accounts __________ Judge Pancoast and Bondsmen Alleged to Have Ordered Investigation---Inspector's Report Will Not be Ready For a Day or Two---Congressman Loudenslager Reported to Have Gone to Visit Him. __________ Alleged Mrs. Derousse Was Endeavoring To Secure Divorce __________ The mystery surrounding the disappearance of Postmaster Louis T. Derousse is rapidly clearing. At his home, 326 North Sixth street, the following statement was given out this morning: "We believe that Mr. Derousse has gone away while suffering from depressed spirits and melancholia and think he will return in two or three days." This theory proved to be correct, as was shown when J.. Hampton Moore, City Treasurer of Philadelphia, who is a great friend of Postmaster Derousse, telegraphed to this city shortly after 12 o'clock that he had received a telegram from Baltimore, Md., stating that Mr. Derousse had been found in that city. No details were given except that the Postmaster's mind was affected. It is learned that Mr. Derousse is at the house of a former Camden man, and it is presumed that it is William T. Swindell, who was formerly janitor of the Court House in this city. Mr. Derousse wandered in there about midnight, very ill, and is now in the care of a physician. Undoubtedly A Shortage. There is little doubt but what the Postmaster is short in his accounts at the Postoffice, although authentic information is not obtainable. The postoffice inspectors are not through their work and as they are the only ones who know just what and where the leak is, until they are ready to make a report no figures can be ascertained. It is said, though, that the shortage will foot up into the thousands. The inspectors will be at work for a day or two yet and may not make a report until Saturday. As soon as the information that Mr. Derousse had been located in Baltimore was received in this city, Congressman Harry Loudenslager made haste for a train for that point and sent for William J. Browning to accompany him. Mr. Browning immediately dropped out of sight, but it is not known whether he went to Baltimore or not. Sayrs In Charge. Assistant Postmaster Sayrs is in charge of the Postoffice at present and stated that he had no information to give out until the inspectors were ready with their report. He said he received a letter from Mr. Derousse late last night, in which the Postmaster said that things were not all right at the Postoffice and he would probably not be heard from again. This was interpreted at the time to mean that he intended to commit suicide, but later developments show that the construction was wrong. Postmaster Sayrs said as far as he knew no warrant had been issued for Mr. Derousse's arrest, although the indications were that he would be brought back to this city as soon as it was advisable. United States Commissioner Morgan is in Trenton to-day and could not be seen. It is further said that considerable of Mr. Derousse's paper has gone to protest in local banks and he is indebted to well known men for various sums of money. Judge Harrison H. Voorhees is said to have endorsed one note for $1,200, and Wilson Fitzgerald, his father-in-law, is reported to have loaned him $2,000 only recently. Was Mrs. Derousse Applying For Divorce? Another phase was added to the muddled affair this afternoon when it was given out that Mrs. Derousse was about to have commenced divorce proceedings against her husband. This information comes from an authentic source, but the informant said that matters had not proceeded far enough to warrant publication of the details. Papers, it is said, were being prepared and only yesterday morning Mr. Derousse was made aware of the fact that he would soon be called upon to reply to his wife's alleged proceedings. Judge Pancoast is mentioned as being the counsel for Mrs. Derousse and was approached upon the subject on Market street this afternoon. The Judge's reply was a curt "I have nothing further to say." Hints Of Double Life. Just what led up to the sudden visit of the inspectors to the Postoffice is still a matter of speculation, but it was reported this morning that ex-Judge Pancoast had ordered an investigation of Mr. Derousse's accounts because of information to the effect that the Postmaster was leading a double life. A "Courier" reporter called on Judge Pancoast shortly before noon, and said: "Judge, there is a report current to the effect that you have ordered an investigation of Mr. Derousse's accounts on information you received to the effect that Mr. Derousse was leading a double life. Is it true?" Judge Pancoast's Significant Remarks. "Well, now," said the Judge, "I don't think I ought to make any statement at this time." "Will you deny or affirm it?" queried the reporter. "I think I shall make no statement just now," answered the Judge. The reporter then informed him that Robert Smith, a clerk in the office of Mr. Derousse, had informed him that the inspectors had dropped into the office casually and without any orders. At this the judge smiled broadly and remarked that he didn't care to make any statement just yet and went on with his work. Later Judge Pancoast said to a "Courier" reporter: "I was aware there would be a special investigation of Postmaster Derousse's accounts a day before it occurred. He further stated that he was aware of further misdoings on the part of the Postmaster and hoped the matter would be sifted to the bottom. Judge Pancoast is one of Mr. Derousse's bondsmen on a $20,000 bond. The others are former Judge Burdsall, J. Willard Morgan and Wilson Fitzgerald. Conferences and tete-a-tete have been the order of business all morning with men high in the official life of the government. Congressman Loudenslager, Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives William J. Browning, Collector of Internal Revenue, Isaac Moffett and Assistant Postmaster Chas. P. Sayrs were in conference at the Postoffice for a long time this morning. Mr. Derousse had charge only of the moneys of the Money Order and Registry Departments of the office. The stamp money and money of other departments passed through the hands of Assistant Postmaster Sarys and Clerk Smith. The money, Mr. Smith stated, is banked every day. The inspectors will continue their work to-day and to-morrow and no report of the financial condition of the office is expected until to-morrow afternoon or Saturday. His Family Much Affected. At Mr. Derousse's home his family is much distressed over his absence. Mrs. Derousse is said to be in a very nervous condition and the other members of the family are so worked up over the affair that they have refused to talk further than make the statement given out. Mrs. Derousse, it was stated by a friend last night, had been in poor health for some months, and this fact greatly worried her husband. It was said, however, that there was nothing alarming in her condition and that there was no need for worry on his part. How He Disappeared. Mr. Derousse was at his office as late as 11 o'clock yesterday morning, and two inspectors were there examining the accounts of the establishment. Just before that William Casperson, a painter, of Market street, who had known the Postmaster for many years, called upon him in relation to a business matter and was surprised to find him sitting at his desk with bowed head on his hands. "He did not look up when I spoke," said Mr. Casperson last night, "but asked in a dazed sort of way who I was and what my business was. I was surprised, but unable to get anything from the Postmaster I left him." Soon after 11 o'clock the Postmaster left the office and that was the last seen of him by any of the attaches of the office, and as to his movements all sorts of rumors and stories were afloat last night. It was stated that at about 3.30 o'clock former Judge D. J. Pancoast, who is one of the Postmaster's bondsmen, and counsel for Wilson Fitzgerald, the aged father of Mrs. Derousse, received a message from the family stating that the Postmaster had committed suicide. The same word was carried to the Postoffice, it is stated, and Assistant Postmaster Charles P. Sayrs drove hastily to the Postmaster's residence, where he was informed that the Postmaster was not at home. Seen At Ferry. Joseph Orr, a special officer at the Pennsylvania Railroad terminal in the city, declares that he saw the Postmaster at 1.40 o'clock yesterday afternoon with the crowd that was making its way to an Atlantic City train. Orr says he put out his hand to Mr. Derousse, but that the latter seemed to be dazed and failed to recognize him. Many Strange Actions. Thomas Samani, who keeps the lunch café on Federal street, had the Postmaster for breakfast on Friday morning last. Mrs. Samani took the order for breakfast. "You don't appear well to-day, Mr. Derousse," remarked the lady behind the counter. "Well, I guess I am well enough," came the reply, "but I've got an awful case of the blues." Mr. Samani says he did not appear to be the same man. Not a great while ago, the Postmaster, in conversation with Mr. Samani, said that twenty-five years ago he was obliged to give up the grain business, then paying him $25,000 a year, on account of the despondent feelings that came over him at times of mental anxiety. "Why," said he, "all sorts of thoughts used to occupy my mind, and a horrible one among them was the thought of going out into the woods and blowing out my brains. My cooler judgment, however, brought to me the awful reaction on my family, and I dismissed the thought." Bondsmen Had Concern. Mr. Pancoast, a brother to the Judge, one of the Postmaster's bondsmen, was a very intimate acquaintance of more than twenty years. He frequently called at the post office and spent many a happy hour listening to the humor for which the missing official was famous. Mr. Pancoast says he made one of these visits only last week and had been in his company but a short time when he knew by the actions of the official that something was bothering him. He had apparently no time to listen to conversation, but amused himself looking over stereopticon views, a pastime so foreign to his usual business notions, that it caused great concern to Mr. Pancoast. At one o'clock yesterday he was seen in the vicinity of the "Courier" office and mounted and quickly descended the stair approach to an office, with which he certainly had no business. Other close friends can remember now, peculiar actions in the morning. Instead of that characteristic warmth and hearty greeting, he passed old time friends unnoticed. He appeared in an extremely excitable frame of mind. Something Of His Life. Louis Theodore Derousse was born in Philadelphia May 29, 1844. He is by profession an accountant. He was formerly in the flour, feed and grain business, but was forced to retire from it owing to ill health. He was a member of the Board of Freeholders for one term, 1881, and declined a renomination. He was City Comptroller of this city for three years, 1888 to 1891. He was elected a member of the Legislature in 1895, was made Speaker of the House in 1896 and was returned as a member for a third term in 1897. He was appointed Postmaster of this city by the late President McKinley in 1899, and was reappointed for a second term about six months ago. Mr. Derousse has two grown daughters, one of whom is married to a prominent physician in Philadelphia. -------------------- Daily Courier June 19, 1903 (Camden, NJ) Starting Page 1 Postmaster Derousse Will Be Brought Back Here To-Day __________ Friends Have Gone After Him and He Will be Moved as Soon as His Condition Will Permit It---Inspec- tors Are Through With the Postoffice and Are Working on the Sub-Stations. __________ There Will Be No Prosecution And His Accounts Will Be Squared __________ Postmaster Louis T. Derousse will be brought back to this city to-day. A friend left this city last night for Baltimore with instructions to bring him home as soon as his condition would permit it. The Postmaster is still very ill, but it is thought best to bring him to this city where he can be among friends, who will look after his interests. Dr. Iszard is mentioned as the man who has gone after him. Latest reports from Baltimore indicate that the Postmaster is in a dazed state of mind and all efforts to get a statement from him have been futile. It was further announced this morning that he would not be taken to his home on North Sixth street. Inspectors About Through. The government inspectors finished up their work at the Postoffice late last night and early this morning started on the sub-stations scattered throughout the city. This should take but a few hours to complete and, then the exact conditions of affairs in the local postal service will be known. The inspectors, however, will not talk and will only make a report to the authorities in Washington. In the meantime, Acting Postmaster Sayrs, who probably knows about as much as anybody about the affair, will not talk. He volunteered the information this morning that as soon as the inspectors made their report he would have something to say. There Will Be No Prosecution. That there will be no prosecution of the Postmaster seems certain. It is said that his offenses have been more on the outside than at the Postoffice, the alleged shortage at the Postoffice being described as technical. By this it is meant that the Postmaster's checks have been offered to square his accounts and have been found to be worthless. The amounts of these checks have not been made public. That there will be no prosecution seems to find favor with everybody in general, for Mr. Derousse was a popular and well liked man and only sorrow is expressed by those who knew him. This does not include those who have suffered by his actions. Will Square His Accounts. It is believed that after he is brought home and the inspectors make their reports, his friends will get together and make up to his bondsmen and to the government whatever shortage may be discovered, if there is any. His outside transactions, it is understood, are also to be squared and he is to be landed squarely on his feet as far as finances are concerned. There is hardly any possibility of the government taking any action in view of these transactions. His resignation as Postmaster will then be forthcoming and a new man appointed in his place. Several names have been mentioned, but none of them will hardly make the position . Mr. Derousse had barely finished six months of his second appointment and his successor will have three and one-half years to serve. The Physician's Statement. Dr. Wegerfarth, who is attending the Postmaster at Baltimore, in speaking of the case, said: "I have seen the patient twice to-day, and I must say that there is no change for the better, and, in fact, if there is any change at all it is for the worse. Mr. Derousse is not in any immediate danger, but I do say that he is in a wretched condition mentally. His breakdown was not sudden, but is the result of several months of worry and trouble combined, possibly with overwork. "I have tried at both visits to carry on a conversation with the Postmaster, but all efforts have been to no avail. He will make a few remarks about one thing, and then, without the slightest provocation, take up a new line of thought and break into the previous conversation with it. I feel that my patient has gone without sleep for several days, and I am satisfied that if he has a good sleep and rests well during the night he will be greatly improved in the morning. If I find this to be the case, I will allow him to be seen by his friends and the press, if he so desires." Sub-Stations Are All Right. Temporary Postmaster Charles Sayrs said that while the deficiency in Postmaster Derousse's accounts will aggregate $2,500, the sub-postoffices are considered in good shape. "We allow them to carry but $50 stock or a total of $650 for the city. The Philadelphia papers make a wrong estimate on the business of this office in stating that we do but $4,000 a month. The receipts of the Money Order Department alone aggregate from eight to ten thousand dollars a month." Judge David J. Pancoast, who, as one of the bondsmen of the absent Postmaster, is pushing the investigation, was out of town when inquired for at his office to-day. ______________________________________________________ Derousse Has Left Baltimore. Baltimore, Md., June 1.-Postmaster Derousse has gone home, it is believed. "He left with Mr. Swindell," said Mrs. Swindell this afternoon. "Mr. Derousse was still in a bad mental condition, and had to be cared for. It is supposed that he is now at home, in Camden, N. J." she continued. ______ A number of government and county officials went across the river this afternoon, and Mr. Derousse is believed to be in Philadelphia, where he will remain for awhile. -------------------- Daily Courier of June 20, 1903 (Camden, NJ) Starting Page One Mr. Derousse Returns And Is Reconciled To His Family __________ The Postmaster Rapidly Regaining His Mental Faculties and is Being Cared for at His Home. __________ The Bondsmen Made Good His Shortage This Morning _____ All seems to be happiness again at the Derousse homestead. Mr. Derousse is home and is apparently showing signs of returning reason. Mrs. Derousse met him affectionately at the door last evening as he returned. Everything had apparently been forgotten for the time being and husband and wife were most cordial in again meeting each other. In a great measure the man to whom is due the credit for Mr. Derousse's return home as well as the loving reception by Mrs. Derousse of her unfortunate husband, is Dr. W. H. Iszard. Dr. Iszard brought the Postmaster from the home of William Swindell, 422 North Carey street, Baltimore. He bore to him a tender note from his wife pleading for his return. Hesitated About Coming Home. Mr. Derousse felt at first the heavy weight of troubles resting on him and refused to even consider returning home. He talked of meeting, of facing his friends again. What would they say? And his family, what would they think? Dr. Iszard told Mr. Derousse that friends were ready and eager to come to his assistance. He informed him that he would be welcome at his home and that he need not fear anything but a cordial reception there. Dr. Iszard handed him the note which he bore from Mrs. Derousse. Mr. Derousse read it, then said he would not return. He read it over and over again, and then he said he guessed he would. While in this frame of mind he was hurried to the Pennsylvania station and with Dr. Iszard took the 5.07 train for Philadelphia. They reached Broad Street Station, Philadelphia, at 7.07 where Met Friends At Station. They met several friends, among them Congressman Loudenslager, ex-Sheriff Sell, William J. Browning, J. Willard Morgan and Frand H. Burdsall . They went to Kugler's and had lunch, then took a car to the ferry. On their arrival here Dr. Iszard and Mr. Derousse got into a cab and were driven to the latter's home, 326 North Sixth street. A group of people, attracted by the rumbling of the carrage , gathered around the door of the Derousse home. They just got a glimpse of Mr. Derousse as he was hurried up the steps and ushered into the house. In talking this morning over Mr. Derousse's condition, Dr. Iszard said that if the unfortunate man is notified that his position as Postmaster is to be taken from him he will take a serious turn for the worse. Mr. Derousse has not yet been notified that he will have to relinquish the Postmastership. In order to save him from further humiliation it is said his bondsmen will make good his deficit and to save him from suspension will have him send in his resignation. Again Started To Commit Suicide. Mr. Derousse's last day at the home of his friend, William Swindell, in Baltimore, was not without incident. At four o'clock in the morning, unbeknown to anyone in the house, Mr. Derousse got up, dressed and walked down to the Chesapeake Bay with the intention of committing suicide. When he reached the wharf he changed his mind and returned home. Mr. Swindell was awakened by the slamming of a door. One glance at the bed sufficed, and the next moment he was bounding down the steps, thinking his friend was leaving the house. However, to his surprise, he found the Postmaster in the hallway in the act of hanging his hat upon the rack. "Why, where are you going, Derousse?" he asked. "Not going, William," replied Mr. Derousse. "I am returning." This naturaly caused a series of questions to follow, and the Postmaster admitted that he had left the house at 4 o'clock, and had gone down town for the purpose of finding the docks, and to there end his life. "I got there all right, William," he said. "I even rewrote the note and put it in my hat, but still I hesitated. It was not from any fear, though, but merely the fact that I determined I could not bring your name into so much trouble. Thought For Friend. "You have taken care of me, and I appreciate it from the bottom of my heart; so I thought it would look base ingratitude if I killed myself after having sneaked from your house while you slept. Some people might censure you and say you did not do a friend's duty by not watching me; so I decided to come back an wait ." Mr. Swindell said nothing, but walked over to the rack and picked up the hat. Sure enough, there lay the note-a page from a memorandum book-and upon it was writen: "To Mr. William H. Swindell, 422 North Carey street. " That was too much. Mr. Swindell tore the note into pieces without opening it, and with tears in his eyes begged his friend to give up his rash idea. Then followed a good long talk, during which Mr. Derousse connected his lines of thought better than he had ever done since his arrival, and told much of his trouble to his friend. This seemed to cheer ----- [con]siderably and after breakfa[st he w]as much brighter. Blame It On Domestic Affairs. In an interview in Baltimore Dr. Iszard is quoted as having said: "I have known Derousse for many years, having been a close friend both politically and socially and his medical advisor as well. His condition, I know perfectly well, has been brought on through domestic affairs, and not the $2,000 shortage that has been discovered during his absence. I will say frankly that anyone could notice the change in the man this morning almost immediately after I arrived here and gave him a letter from his wife. He has braced up wonderfully since, but his condition even now is serious. "No, indeed; his trouble has been caused mainly by his wife and their domestic relations, but all of this has been remedied. Mrs. Derousse sent by me a letter which was so pathetic, so loving and so good in its purpose that it has assured the postmaster that the breach which existed between the two is healed forever. Of course, I cannot tell you the exact contents of the letter because it is of a personal nature, but I will say that all the way through it the wife pleads with her husband to come back to her and his children; that she loves him more dearly than her own life and that the past is forgotten. "Such a letter could not help but have its effect and the man gave vent to his feelings, which was more important at that time than one hundred doses of medicine. However, I think all will end well and matters will be arranged in Philadelphia to-night or to-morrow morning." Asked if Mr. Derousse had shown any signs of mental trouble or worry recently, Dr. Iszard answered that he had done one very peculiar thing just a few days before leaving. It seems that the postmaster owned a very fine collection of photographs of actors and actresses, and on last Monday evening he gathered them together and requested the physician to donate them to Lodge No. 293, of the Elks, of which he was a member. On the evening the presentation was to have been made the postmaster was missing. The fact that he was going to part with the collection seemed peculiar to the doctor, for he knew that Mr. Derousse valued them most highly. The postmaster, besides being an Elk, is a Mason of high standing, and a member of the Order of Odd Fellows." Shortage Said To Have Been Paid. The post office inspectors who have been going over Mr. Derousse's accounts as postmaster, since Wednesday, completed their investigation to-day. When Inspector Buck was seen in reference to making a statement he said that he had reported to the bondsmen of Mr. Derousse, who could give out any desired information. J. Willard Morgan, one of the bondsmen, was seen and gave out $2,178.71 as the accurate deficit in the Postmaster Derousse's accounts. "Will Mr. Derousse be asked to resign?" was asked Mr. Morgan. "It is understood," said he, "that Mr. Derousse is out." Inspector Buck said that all of the money Postmaster Derousse took from the post office accounts was taken from the bank with the exception of the moneys taken from Clerks Auble and Simpson, for which the postmaster gave them his personal check. The money placed in bank to the credit of the office Mr. Derousse had access to at all times. Mr. Buck also stated that he could say that the shortage all happened during the last year, or since the books were audited before. The last time the books were audited was just a little over a year ago. It was stated shortly before noon that some of the bondsmen have already paid their proportion of the deficit. -------------------- Democrat June 20, 1903 Page 3 Derousse Gone Wrong. __________ Shortage Discovered in His Post- office Account. __________ City Stirred To White Heat Degree. Bondsmen Became Anxious Over the Double Life of the Official, Institute an Investigation, and Discover Marital Disturbance-Mr. Derousse Collapses and Disappears-Subsequently Discovered in Baltimore ----------------------- The community was startled on Wednesday by the rumor that Postmaster Louis T. Derousse, of this city, had committed suicide. Diligent inquiry at the residence of Mr. Derousse failed to establish the truth of the rumor, but sufficient was learned to prove that the Post Office accounts were in bad shape, that there is a deficit amounting to about $2,500; that the domestic affairs of the Postmaster are not merely infelicitous but strained to marital rupture; that the bondemen are anxious over their financial liability, and that an investigation was ordered and at that time was in progress by the Post Office Department. The suspense as to Mr. Derousse's condition and whereabouts was maintained until Thursday noon, when City Treasurer Moore, of Philadelphia, received a telegram from Baltimore, stating that Mr. Derousse arrived in that city on Wednesday evening in a condition of physical collapse. Information was at once sent to this city. At a late hour Mr. Derousse was still in Baltimore, at the home of William Swindell, formerly of this city and a close friend of Mr. Derousse. Simultaneous with this information it was stated by two of the bondsmen, former Judge Pancoast and Harrison H. Voorhees, that Derousse was a fugitive and that a shortage of $2,000 was discovered in his accounts by the postal inspectors, William J. Mehary and D. W. Buck. The cause of his disappearance is said to be marital infelicity. It was through Mr. Derousse's family that his double life was made known to his bondsmen, and the Postmaster was called upon for an explanation. This he could not give satisfactorily, and the Post Office Department was notified and requested to make an examination of his accounts. The inspectors appeared at the local Post Office Wednesday, and Derousse was taken unawares. He was surprised, but betrayed no unusual emotion. After the inspectors had formally begun their work, he excused himself ostensibly to go to luncheon. That was the last seen of him about the Post Office. He did not go to his home, 326 North Sixth street, but was seen at the Pennsylvania Railroad ferry house a few minutes before 2 o'clock. Subsequently, the rumor that he had shot himself became widespread and there was much excitement in Camden. By his bondsmen the suicide story was ridiculed, and they immediately notified the police to search for him. Former Judge David J. Pancoast was the first of his bondsmen, of whom there are five, to learn of Derousse's difficulty. He said: "Late last week I was informed by a member of Mr. Derousse's family that he was not all that a husband and father should be. There was another woman mentioned, and the story told me so aroused me that I sent for Derousse and demanded an explanation. This he would not give, and I was painfully surprised, for I had known the man for years and believed him to be all that a man should be. Then I called a meeting of his bondsmen, J. Willard Morgan, the State Comptroller; Harrison H. Voorhees, Mr. Morgan's law partner; Frank H. Burdsall and Wilson Fitzgerald, Derousse's father-in-law. "We met in my office, Monday afternoon and decided to send for the postal inspectors, for I had been led to believe that Derousse's dual life had caused him to outlay more money than he received for his salary as Postmaster. About his disappearance you know. "I am not at liberty to tell who the other woman is because of the confidential nature of the information imparted to me. But it is true that he has not been a loyal husband and father, and we are satisfied that his extravagances are the result of his double life." It is stated that Mrs. Derousse has employed counsel to look after her interests. Mr. Sayrs, Mr. Derousse's assistant, is in charge of the office by request of the bondsmen. -------------------- Democrat June 27, 1903 Page 3 (Camden, NJ Newspaper) Derousse Removed. __________ Assistant Postmaster Sayrs Temporarily in Charge-The Shortage Made up by The Bondsmen. -------------------- The bondsmen of Postmaster L. T. Derousse paid that official's deficit on Saturday. It amounted to $2,178. Besides this there are said to be debts amounting to over $5,000 due private parties. The examiners removed Mr. Derousse on Wednesday. Charles P. Sayrs, his assistant, was put in charge temporarily. The action was taken at the request of the bondsmen of Derousse, who are unwilling to take the risk of continuing their responsibility. The condition of Mr. Derousse, who is at his home, 326 North Sixth street, is reported to be somewhat improved, although it is such that his family physician will permit no one to see him, and it may possibly be a week before he will be able to discuss his affairs. -------------------- Government Inspectors at the Post Office _______________ Friends of Postmaster Derousse Looking for Him in View of a Strange Rumor. __________ A rumor spread throughout the city this afternoon that Postmaster Louis T. Derousse had committed suicide. The rumor was started about 4 o'clock this afternoon and spread like wildfire. In a few moments the post office was besieged with anxious inquirers. It was rumored that a tragedy had occurred at Mr. Derousse's home, but this was denied by Assistant Postmaster Sayrs, who had gone immediately to his residence, 326 North Sixth street. (PHOTOGRAPH) "Mr. Derousse is not at his home," said Mr. Sayrs. "I was there and state positively, he is not there." "Do you know where Mr. Derousse is?" was asked of Mr. Sayrs. "No, I do not. We have made every effort to locate him, but so far have been unsuccessful. All we know is that it is rumored he had taken his life. Beyond that we know nothing." Inspectors At The Office. Two post office inspectors from Philadelphia are now going over the postmaster's papers. Congreesman Lousenslager is in the postmaster's private office with them as is also the assistant postmaster. The latter in explaining the presence of the inspectors said that he and others had sent for the inspectors, as a matter of duty, after failing to locate the inspectors. A Strange Message. Just how the rumor was started is not authoritively known, but it was stated in the post office this afternoon that Mr. Derousse's family received a message from him that he would be dead when the message was delivered. This communication, it was reported, was sent to Former Judge David J. Pancoast, who is one of Mr. Derousse's bondsmen. Judge Pancoast admitted receiving such a message from the family. Mrs. Derousse was taken ill when she received the message and is now under the care of a physician. At 5 o'clock word was received at the post office that Mr. Derousse was seen preparing to go to Atlantic City, Revenue Collector Isaac Moffett, a close friend of the missing postmaster, immediately boarded a train for the shore. -------------------- $2,000 Shortage Reported in Postmaster Derousse's Accounts __________________ A Telephone Message Says the Missing Official Is Ill at the House of a Friend in Baltimore. __________________ Assistant Sayrs In Charge Of Office __________________ Derousse Sent a Letter to His Assistant, Postmarked "West Philadelphia," Hinting at Intent to Commit Suicide. ___________________ Inspectors Still At Work Investigating Accounts ___________________ Missing Official Had Borrowed Money From His Friends and His Note Went to Protest.-Inspectors Were Sent For by Bondsmen. ___________________ City Treasurer J. Hampton Moors, of Philadelphia, telephoned the Post-Telegram at noon that Postmaster Derousse was at the home of a friend in Baltimore, under a physician's care. It is reported that the missing postmaster is short in his official accounts. The defalcation, it was stated this morning by one of his bondsmen, is approximately $2,000. The bondsmen at a conference in the post office this morning agreed to put Assistant Postmaster Charles P. Sayrs in charge of the office. Mr. Sayrs late last night received a letter, postmarked West Philadelphia, from the missing postmaster, in which it is said, Mr. Derousse practically admits that his accounts are not right and hints at a purpose to do away with himself. ______________________ Camden has not for many months received such a shock as was experienced yesterday when it was first rumored that Postmaster Louis T. Derousse had committed suicide and later it became known that he was missing and that inspectors were examining the accounts of the office. That Mr. Derousse left the city to avoid the consequences of exposure of a shortage in his accounts now seems apparent. His fight was unaccounted for at first, but later developments lead to the conclusion that he feared to face the inevitable. The visit of two Post Office Inspectors to examine his accounts is said to be due to disclosure made to Former Judge D. J. Pancoast, who is counsel for Wilson H. Fitzgerald, Mr. Derousse's father-in-law, and also one of his bondsmen, that there was something wrong in the office. After consulting with one or two of his fellow bondsmen, Lawyer Pancoast decided that the best thing to do was to send for the postal inspectors. The visit of the inspectors was unlooked for by the Postmaster. He visited the establishment of Emil Moebius about 10 o'clock yesterday morning and procured two photographs of the post office building, saying that he wanted to present them to two friends. He also visited the Camden Wood Turning Company's mill at Front and Arch streets, and ordered six racks for rubber stamp sawed out. From his actions up to the time the inspectors arrived he had apparently no thought of going away. He was chatting in his office with a Post-Telegram man a few minutes before 11 o'clock. Shortly afterward the inspectors arrived and at once took charge. His Flight. The postmaster must have known that he could not avoid the disclosure of irregularities in his accounts. The inspectors at once took charge of the office. He tendered them his aid for a short time and then said he had to go out for a few minutes and would be back to give them further aid. Suspicion of the Postmaster's flight was not aroused until about 2 o'clock. Then it was reported that he had committed suicide at his home. The report spread like wildfire. It was found to be untrue, but at once search was made for the missing man. The last trace of him was found at the Federal street terminal. Joseph Ore, a special officer there, saw him in the crowd. He spoke to him but the postmaster, who looked worried and distrait did not answer. Ore, who is an old friend and fellow G. A. R. man, thought this a strange action. Later when he looked for Derousse the postmaster had disappeared. It is believed that he went across the river, as Assistant Postmaster Charles Sayrs received a letter about midnight, postmarked "West Philadelphia," in which Mr. Derousse said things were wrong at the post office and he thought of ending his life. The letter was mailed late in the afternoon. After reading the letter it was shown to Postal Inspectors Mehary and Buck and also exhibited to the bondsmen. The inspectors suggested that Chief of Police Foster be called in to the case. Found In Baltimore. Friends of the Postmaster continued the search for him all night. Telegrams were sent in every direction. The first authentic news of his whereabouts was received this morning. City Treasurer J. Hampton Moore, of Philadelphia, called up the Post-Telegram at noon, and said he had just received a telephone message from a friend in Baltimore stating that Postmaster Derousse was at his house. This message said that Mr. Derousse arrived there about midnight, that he was in a state of high nervous and mental excitement and talked of suicide. A physician had been called in and was treating him. Treasurer Moore would not give the name or address of his informant at whose house Mr. Derousse was said to be sheltered, but said he was a former Camdenien. It may be that the former Camdenien is William H. Swindell, who was janitor at the Court House some years ago, but has been a resident of Baltimore for four or five years. Shortage In His Accounts The post office inspectors are still at work. They were busy in the private office of the postmaster until midnight and resumed their work early this morning. By 10 o'clock they had reached a conclusion as to the finances of the office and the postmaster's bondsmen were summoned. These bondsmen, who are liable for $20,000, are Wilson H. Fitzgerald, father-in-law of the postmaster; State Comptroller J. Willard Morgan, Judge Harrison H. Voorhees, Former Judge D. J. Pancoast and Former Receiver of Taxes Frank H. Burdsall. The bondsmen were informed that a shortage of about $2,000 had been discovered. They agreed to put Assistant Postmaster Sayrs in charge of the office. In addition to this alleged shortage Postmaster Derousse is said to have borrowed money or got indorsements from a number of his friends. One of these is Judge Harrison H. Voorhees, who about two months ago was induced to loan the postmaster his credit on a note for $1,200. The note, which was for 30 days, went to protest. The Postmaster subsequently paid $100 on it and renewed it. The same day that the original note was made Mr. Derousse is said to have borrowed $2,000 from his father-in-law. State Comptroller Morgan is an endorser on some of his paper. The amount of his personal indebtedness is not known. His father-in-law, Wilson H. Fitzgerald, was at the post office this morning. Mr. Derousse transacted some of his business and he is now going over his papers. The wife of the postmaster is under the care of the family physician, suffering from prostration due to the disclosures. Former Judge Pancoast, one of his bondsmen, when seen this morning said: "I hope the inspectors will make a rigid examination of the accounts of his office." The inspectors in their investigation discovered that the stamp clerk was carrying a personal check of Postmaster Derousse for $412. This check the inspectors took possession of. The work of investigating the affairs of the office by the inspectors may not be concluded until tomorrow. They have (Continued On Fifth Page.) about completed their work in the main office and are now going over the accounts of the twelve sub-postal stations. Mr. Derousse's Career. Mr. Derousse was born in Philadelphia on May 29, 1844. He was only a lad when the Civil War broke out but promptly enlisted and served throughout the struggle. After the war he was engaged as an accountant and later managed the flour and feed business on Market street below Front, owned by his father-in-law, Wilson Fitzgerald. He bought out this business but was compelled to give it up owing to ill health. He was a member of the Board of Freeholders for one term, in 1881, was City Comptroller from 1888 to 1891 and served in the House of Assembly in 1895, '96 and '97, being elected Speaker in 1896. He was appointed Postmaster in 1890, succeeding the late Harry B. Paul, and was re-appointed for a second term a year ago. He is a member of William B. Hatch Post 37, G. A. R. Investigation Going On. Assistant Postmaster Sayrs, who is in charge of the office, was closeted with the two postal inspectors in the postmaster's private office all day, giving them such information and assistance as they requested in the examination of the accounts. From time to time one or another of the clerks would be summoned to give information. All the accounts are being gone over with scrupulous care and attention. The acting postmaster at a late hour this afternoon when requested for a statement of the affairs of the office said he could say nothing until the inspectors concluded their report. He said they expected to complete the investigation by to-morrow afternoon. Asked as to Postmaster Derousse's whereabouts, Mr. Sayrs said: "We know that he is in Baltimore, at the house of a friend." "Has anyone gone to Baltimore to see him?" "Someone will go this afternoon. More than that I cannot say." It was learned that Congressman Loudensinger, who was one of the first notified by City Treasurer Moore, of Philadelphia, of the whereabouts of Postmaster Derousse came across the river and had a conference with Internal Revenue Collector Moffett and Former Postmaster William J. Browning, both close friends of Mr. Derousse. Arrangements were made to send someone to Baltimore to look after him. It was reported that the government officials had taken steps to locate the Postmaster, and that he will be placed under surveillance, pending an official report from the postal inspectors and a decision as to further official action. Government Is Secured. A federal official is discussing the reported shortage in Postmaster Derousse's accounts said the government would lose nothing, being fully secured by the bond. The bondsmen, it is understood, have agreed to make good any shortage. The same official said: "I am utterly unable to account for Postmaster Derousse's flight, even in view of the reported shortage. Had he made known his financial difficulties to his friends they would gladly have come to his relief, rather than have this happen. Mr. Derousse has been worried a great deal of late and talked of domestic trouble. He has spent a great deal of time at the post office, even sleeping on a couch there at nights occasionally of late. I think he anticipated something of this sort." The physician in attendance on Mrs. Derousse said this afternoon that her condition is critical. He broke the news to her as gently as possible of the locating of Mr. Derousse in Baltimore and he at once noticed a slight improvement in her condition. The family had no news directly from Mr. Derousse. _____ Bondsmen Pay Shortage Of $2,178 For Derousse __________ Check Given as Soon as Inspectors Made Their Official Report and Notified the Bondsmen. __________ Postmaster Brought Home And Is Much Improved __________ The postal inspectors having made an official report of a shortage of $2,718.71 in Postmaster Derousse's accounts, his bondsmen met this morning and arranged for immediate payment of that amount. The bondsen are Wilson H. Fitzgerald, Frank H. Burdsall, David J. Pancoast, J. Willard Morgan and Harrison H. Voorhees. It is understood that the bondsmen divided the amount of the shortage in fifths, each assuming one share, and that Mr. Morgan made the settlement with the government inspectors at the post office. When State Comptroller Morgan was seen, just before noon, he said: "Settlement has been made in full for the reported deficiency in Postmaster Derousse's accounts. Payment was made by me as attorney for the bondsmen. I now have the receipt in my pocket. That's all there is to say about it." At the post office one of the government inspectors who was tying up some papers preparatory to leaving, referred the Post-Telegram man to the bondsmen for information as to the settlement. He said that this did not relieve the bondsmen altogether, as they had consented to Assistant Postmaster Sayrs taking charge of the office and were responsible for the finances of the office until a new postmaster should qualify with new bondsmen. He would not say that Postmaster Derousse would be compelled to resign. Derousse At Home. Postmaster Derousse arrived at his home, 326 North Sixth street, about quarter past 9 o'clock last night. A small crowd gathered in front of the house as his cab drove up. Former County Physician William H. Iszard, who had been commisisoned to go to Baltimore for the missing man, was the first to step out of the vehicle. Dr. Iszard placed his hand in that of Derousse and the postmaster stepped out of the cab. He looked around for a second, and appeared entirely dazed at the sudden end of his peculiar flight. Derousse walked up the steps of his home with the gait of an invalid. Dr. Iszard had to hold him by the arm and assist him into the house. There his wife, daughter and Assistant Postmaster Sayrs, who had entered the house a few minutes before, were waiting to greet him. The scene that took place when the postmaster and Mrs. Derousse met for the first time since he went away is reported to have been a most affecting one. Dr. Iszard, who was present, said afterwards that it was all that one could expect from the most loving couple. Assistant Postmaster Sayrs spent some time with Mr. Derousse after his return last night and when he left the Postmaster had fallen asleep. It was reported this morning that Mr. Derousse was improved physically and seemed to be more contented, now that he was at home. He was kept secluded from all but members of the family and Dr. Iszard, who called to see him shortly before noon. Rest and medical treatment will, it is believed, soon restore him to his normal mental and physical health. Dr. Iszard's Trip. As told in yesterday's Post-Telegram, Dr. Iszard went to Baltimore yesterday morning on the 10 a. m. train. He arrived at noon and drove at once to the residence of William A. Swindell, former custodian of the county buildings in Camden, at 422 North Carey street, where Derousse made his unexpected appearance after his flight from Camden. The visit of his Camden friends had a tendency to cheer Mr. Derousse up in a measure. After a talk with him Dr. Iszard decided that the postmaster was in a condition to be removed to his home. The doctor brought with him to Baltimore a sealed letter from Mrs. Derousse to her husband, which had been placed in the former's hands by Dr. Frank Neall Robinson, the family physician. The letter was a pathetic plea from the wife for her husband to return home and that everything would be forgiven and forgotten. It was after reading the letter that Mr. Derousse declared he would not return home. The letter he gave to Dr. Iszard. On the train he asked for it, and pondered over its contents, while tears trickled down his cheeks. Putting the letter in his pocket, he said, "Well, I may go home, after all." Cheerful Greeting. It was a cheerful greeting which Mr. Derousse extended to Dr. Iszard at Mr. Swindell's hospitable home. He appeared the same "Lew" Derousse that everybody knew in Camden. But almost the next instant he was reverting to his troubles. "I want to say that I owe my life to Will Swindell," he exclaimed. "Had he not received me as he did I would have killed myself." "Did you know what I did this very morning," said he. "I stole out of the house at 4 o'clock, went down to the steamship docks and picked out a place where I was about to jump overboard. But I thought of Swindell, my best friend-he my keeper, you might say, Leaving his home where I have been so well taken care of to commit suicide. I hurried back, and after wandering about the city for a couple of hours I returned to the house about 6 o'clock." That Derousse had really contemplated suicide is indicated by the fact that when he returned Mr. Swindell found a card in the postmaster's D---- hat on which was written: "Please notify Camden Lodge of Elks, No. 293." "How did you get to Baltimore?" he was asked. "Do you know I cannot tell," he replied. When I came over the river from Camden on Wednesday I went to a dry good store in the neighborhood of Sixteenth and Market streets, Philadelphia, where I wrote a letter to Charles Sayrs, assistant postmaster, telling him I had gone away and hoping that he would be appointed postmaster. Then I found myself out in Fairmount Park. Do you know that more than once I was about to leap into the Schuylkill?" "Where did you next find yourself?" was asked. "Oh, yes," was the postmaster's reply, "Now, where was that? Darby, Darby, that was the place. I boarded a trolley car and went to Chester. Arriving there I walked down to the river. There I again thought of ending it all, but there was a Providence that kept me back. How I got to Baltimore I cannot tell. I remember I had $5 with me at Chester. When I arrived in this city I had just fifty cents." With a knowledge that efforts were being made in Camden by his friends to straighten out the postmaster's tangled financial affairs it suggested that everything would come out all right. Back To Meet His Friends. "Yes," he exclaimed, "but I am going back and face my friends in a city where I have striven for thirty years to establish an honorable reputation. How am I going to meet my friends who have placed me in high positions? Oh, if those postal inspectors had not appeared just when they did. Why, I could have gone out and gotten thousands of dollars to make up any deficiency. Yes, they say there is a shortage of $2,000. I could have gotten ten times the amount in a very short time. "They say I have led a dual life," Derousse continued. "My home life has not been pleasant. If my wife had not written that letter to her attorney there would have been no such stories circulated as you hear to-day. If I did not give an account of my every action there was trouble." Here the poor man broke down and sobbed. "I have had plenty of chances to make money. When I was Speaker of the House I could have made a fortune, simply by holding up bills. In the three years that I served in the Legislature at Trenton I could have made thousand of dollars. But my hands were clean. Why, do you know, I have had chances to make money in Philadelphia and elsewhere in some big transactions. I had a big deal on only a short time ago with a Philadelphian who is now dead. When he died the enterprise failed and the money was lost. "I defy any one to show me a postoffice better conducted than that in Camden. I have more than once been complimented by the postal authorities at Washington on the standard maintained by the Camden post office. I had loyal support in the office, but I was a strict disciplinarian, possibly too strict. I don't know." Says He Will Not Resign. "Will you resign the postmastership?" a friend asked Mr. Derousse. "I will not," was the emphatic reply, which is somewhat at variance with his letter to Assistant Postmaster Sayrs, to whom he had written saying he hoped Mr. Sayrs would be appointed postmaster. When Mr. Derousse was about to take the train for Philadelphia he was very much agitated. "Do you not feel better now that you are going home?" asked a newspaper correspondent. "No: I cannot say that I do. Give me my library and I will seek a boarding house." Then again the suicidal mania manifested itself. "These rivers down here!" he exclaimed. "How I wish I had gone to the bottom of one of them. Do you know that coming down here Wednesday I was going to leap off the train int a stream. But, believing the conductor was watching me, I hesitated. A man who commits suicide is not a coward." Talk With Physician. Derousse's benefactor, Mr. Swindell, and his physician, Dr. Wegefarth, were at the depot when the postmaster left for Philadelphia. Dr. Wegefarth and (Continued On Fifth Page.) Dr. Iszard held a consultation at the Swindell home regarding Mr. Derousse's condition. Just before the departure of the train Dr. Wegefarth said: "Mr. Derousse was in a serious condition yesterday, but to-day he is much improved. His mind still wanders, but his mental condition does not seem to be as bad as it was. He has slept fairly well since he has been in Baltimore. In fact, he told me that Wednesday night he had the best night's sleep in weeks. I believe that if he is able to keep quiet and get plenty of sleep he will be all right in a few days."