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——- 4 LAWYER ENDS LIFE IV CIOMAN WRECKED ‘Model Husband’ Till 55 Years Parentiy w su name of Mrs. @hould be, never golng out alone in the evening and showing the tenderest af- Marriage, then fascinated him, he could not help himself, much as he death by violence in 182, when a special | 7 a pp noe BY SUICIDE IN PARK | Old, He Then Succumbed | to Charmer’s Wiles. HE LEFT WIFE FOR HER. But Woman He Deserted Will Bury John Roesch in Mem- ory of Happier Days. doin HW. Roesch, an attorney, died, ap- | tide, tn Central Park at 9! o'clock last night. Roesch was found by | Policeman Warren unconscious on a bench near the Weat Drive at One Hus. redth street, Warren summoned De Chickering from the fteception Hospital, | HE Roosch died while he was being pu | nig the ambulance. | orn’ card in his pocket bore the| Roesch, No, 125) Hancock | street, Brookiyn, and Mrs. Ada Roesch of that addres identified the body as that of her husband after It had been | removed to the Bellevue Morgue. Mrs. | Koesch was accompanied by her sun and daughter-t Ww when she visited “the Morgue early this morning. Mra, Roesch said that until her hus-| band was fifty-five years old, he had been everything in his home that a man fection for her and thelr son, who ts rown @nd married. A woman client ‘whom he secured an annulment of she said, and he began staying away from home, often for two or three days. His wife found out the truth regarding his conduct, she said, and he assured her would like to get rid of the worees | because she pursued him and even threatened hie life; he sald that the| woman had deprived him of everything he owned in the world; Mrs, Roesch refused to help him out by transferring wperty which stood in her name and Noesch left home. A year later he became involved in @ ecandal regarding a young woman client for whom he had secured a ver- dict in a breach of promise proceeding. After the case had been settled woman had signed a Roesch was trying wo make the d fendant pay out still more, On his promive to cease practice ar a lawyer the Bar Association dropped the charges. | “E do not know where Mr. Roesch has been living,” the widow said to- day \"I have heard that the woman who destroyed our home life deserted him when his money was gone. T shalt have his body brougat home and barted from the house where lie was a good husband agd father for so many years, A search of Rvesch's clothing revealed ‘@ torn label on which was printed | “eyanide.” An autopsy will be held | this morning to determine the cause of death. | Roesch had a narrow escape trom| policeman named Charles A. Doerne who had been a friend and Apsociate his, went crazy and sjot at him one night in his own home, barely missing him. Sipe ais SEES SCHOONER SINK OFF BATH BEACH SHORE. | Two Masts of Craft Believed to Be, Anna Belle Show Above Water. Edward Johnson of the schooner Amana Golfrey, # pred three-quat ofa mile off Beach, saw water at make out with his marie glass part of her name Was “Belle.” Johnson saw her sink unti! tops of her masts were aboy | water, He heard no cries for heip and} #aw no boats putting off. At 1 o'clock this afternoon he came ashore and re- ported his observations to the police of the Bath Beach station, adding that he! a that} he ly thought the schooner must be the Anna Belle, a coal carrier. Hurried calls were sent to all the} yacht clubs and docks along the shore | of Gravesend Bay arking for informa- tion regarding the schooner, Nobody | could remember havi eon the boat last night, but all ver the fact that her two masts were still visible above | | water. The harbor pollce were notified and will make an effort to find out whether the crew was aboard when the sehooner foundsied. pe DE LOCKS ON SUGAR BOOKS. ers of the Trust ed With Key Private Led to Be 0) | The Government's sult to dissolve the American Sugar Refining Company was continued to-day in the Mederal Bulld- ng, with W. Edward Joster, comp- troller of the defendant company, w has been testifying for the Inst two days, on the stan Mr. Foster produc as “private ledgers No, 1, 2% and 3." unlocking each one carefully with key which he carried with him. Mr, HMoster was accompanted by two clerks, who watched the heavy books when not‘in use, Mr, Foster sald that only | the president, secretary and treasurer) had access to t Each had a key. The testhnony to-day was not Inter- the books known eating. The Cleveland at Panama, WASHINGTON, Oct, 2% = Reports here to-day that the crulser and arrived at Panama last night a - a Child’s Natural Tendency Is to Be Good Famous Authority on Children’. s Diseases and Child Rearing Declares a Human Being Will Work Out His Destiny on the Level of His En- vironment. “A Child’s the Line Mind Follows| of Least Re- sistance on the Current of Amusement,” Asserts, He “and Will Be Pure or Bad, According to the Nature of His Surroundings.” “Every Person He Meets or Thing He Sees or Hears Makes a Good or Bad Dent in His Char- acter—What Is Called a Hereditary Criminal Is a Child That Has Got- ten Many Bad Dents.” it we A mighty host sons belleves in animal, Give a Child a Fair Startin Life . And t.e Will Win the Great Race, Especially it He Be BORN HEALTHY. T’: best inheritance any child can have is to be born healthy Every child is entit won't hear any more of hereditary criminals. DR. oi his superior birth in the midst of squalor, of environment he might have grown up to be hanged for sheep stealing. of welléinformed per- the exisence of the hereditary criminal and cite the history of the Jukes family to prove It. AS a result of this widespread several States have passed laws providing for the sterilization of called hereditary criminals, Indiana, I/ years or more for a child to develop, all do, bell believe, started t York joined the this year. They 0-| he movement and New sterilization sisterhood | Yet last week Dr, Charles Gil more Kerley of New York, a man known States as an dren’a (ise throughout the United authority on chik 8 and child rearing, told the members of the Congress of Hygiene in session at Wash- ington that there is practically no such thing as a hereditary crim nal and that if two babies—one horn in a hovel and the other in a pulace= birth, destiny, on the vironment, would remain on the child the hovet ing the prod ADVOCATES exchanged at id work out hie level of his en- The palace child hovel level, would develop uct of the palace, MUNICIPAL OR STATE SUPERVISION. Dr. terday, 1 asked | bla plan. “T haven't any plan Kerley replied. Kerley advocates municipal State supervision over children. or Yes- him to tell me more of to offer,” Dr. “I merely recognize the necessity for supervision over the lives and amusements on, because, individual benev of course, to be enthusiast of children, and I think ould be municipal or State super-| the longer I live, eas 1 think of private organtzations or They do good, | but they are Hable to vary, | lum: lence, ie about one thing this year, another the next. “& child's mind follows the line Dorm good. A child's natural ten- a nearer name or mem ae BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Copyright, 191%, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Wortd). “EVERY CHILD 19 ENTITLED To A Fan DEALS led to a fair deal, and when he gets CHARLES GILMORE KERLEY. You remember in “The Prince and the Pauper” how two little boys changed clothes, and the pauper was Ufted from @ hovel to a palace, while the little prince learned to know hunger and blows and the harsh in- Justice which may attend the child- hood of the very poor. But Mark Twain let the little prince recover his kingdom, and so left unsettled the point.as to whether heredity or environment has the larger influence upon human life. | According to the worshippers of the heridity fetich the prince-pauper, must have demonstrated the power| According to the enthusiasts of least rosistance on the current of amusement. A child is a little Sponge, soaking in infiuences which are good or bad, according to the nature of his environment, “Other young animals attain maturity |in a few months, but it takes sixteen and during that time every person he Meets, every thing he sees or hears makes a good or @ bad dent In his character, “What is called » hereditary crim- inal is simply a child that has got- ten @ lot of bad dents. “Heredity has undouoted influence on health and on mental eat clever man or woman ‘s apt more clever children than the ordinary clilgen, But environmen: controls chur- acter. Heredity has jittle or no ti- fluence," “Then there !s no such thing «s & {hereditary criminal in your be |Anterrupted. “Then how tice of our sterilizatton Ia | “1 took that question up in my paper," \Dr. Kerley answered, “I bellove In | prophylaxis against crime—in the pre nals, Which can be ac- tate supervision of chil- | vention of ' complished by dren, “There would be no criminals if 4% were possible to Know what ev- ery obild is thinking abont, “Why isn't it possible? Tammany Hall knows pretty well how every man ia going to vote, It has its districts, tts captains and sub-captains. It ought to be possible to learn by organized eitort, to know what is in the mind of every child. And it would pay any State to find out. BENEFIT OF RECREATION PARKS AND SCHOOL FARMS. “More recreation parks, more school farms, would mean fewer orphan asy- fewer reformatories, fewer drunk farms, fewer women of evil life, | “Pretty nearly ell children are is to and, ing b Au GooD AT dency is towara him with the right influenc 1B THE RACE WERE Even MY GOY WOULD HAVE A CHANCE TO VAN! GiRTH good, » give him the right amusements, and he will stay good. “Six months in a bad boarding school may ruin a boy or #0 inf that it will take his parents a year to overcome its evil effects, ence him “Im my opinion, the child who is most neglected and consequently most lable to evil is the child of the small city or the country, » bat a were, “By Me has few 1 when he gets ft, w any more of hereditary erimtnals. —- he 4 that's The fath all Just better air im the country, of left to Mimeelf, aeter- he chil- dren of very rich men #0 often di; pointing?” “They're not," Dr. “They're good, —most of them—and fath P- ¥ answered. ormal citizens thelr D> to get in right, to encounter a favorable opoprtunity | The best Inheritance born a healt STRIKERS GIVE ‘UP ARMS. CHARL orning ke the effect to-day that abc dred into the committee. moglern n in the pe withdraw W. Va, Oct. field b vince Ju n Saturday t two wen guns had TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND COME AND SEE OUR ATTRACTIVE NEW MODELS, BUILT ON OF THE UTMOST GRACE LATEST TENDENCIES OF FASHION, ITY OF THE SPIRELLA BONING ADAPTS THE SPIRELLA CORSET LINES 2. Six companies of West Virginia mill- | tlamen in the Cabin Creek and Paint Qoff, Creek coal districts broke camp this nd returned home, after hay- Other INVITE YOU TO THE FALL OPENING OF THR nun turned No Hereditary Criminals, ‘Says Dr. Kerley: DECENT AM PREVENT Tes ALL-NIGHT SEARCH er’s Arrival Restores: Her. Found Sitting on a Lawn, Sobbing. Miss Hazel Pulver, old stenographer of > late last night, unable to recall hi to her mother to-day, Miss Pulver was hyster! The young stenographer, complained lately of nervousness wi on her way home flees at No. 131 w it ‘Twenty-nint subway, She got out at Times Squai i and would finish the remainder the journey in the open alr. walted until 11 o'clock and then, we for h daughter, WILL ASK GOFF 10 RETIRE FROM TRIAL John Doe Inquiry Is Under Same Justice Is Ground for the Motion, Justice Goff will be asked by counsel for Polloo Lieut, Beoker to «iiminaie himself as the prewiding Justice at the trial of the accused policeman. to that effect will be made soon a8 the case I8 called to trial, The motion will be Vased on purely tochnieal grounds, in order to perfect t from the outset and to pay for an appeal to digher Becker Is convicted of th Herman Rosent It will be contended by John McIntyre, chief counsel for the defens that Justice Goff will not enter upon the trial Wh an unprejudiied mind, by reanon of the fact that he i4 con a John Doe inquiry, whi on Becker ait Jready involved the Indic | tenant. Witnesses have this proceeding befor man be called by the prosecution When the clerk calls Becker to the bar Mr. McIntyre will enter the motion vg for the reiirement A motion Monday as record the way ourte if murder of h Te teatified Dustioe ain Goit, of them belng persons who will Justice Goff denies the motion and orders the trial to proceed no further objections will be made dui the trial a To Deepen Sues Canal. rts from Boome W. Van) SONTREAL, Oct. 2 William efforts are under way to have|Garstin, @ director of the Sue# Cana) | miners surrender thelr rifles, were to| Company, announced to-day that th erway would y from thirty-th wed immedi feet to thirty. THE SPIRELLA COMPANY 506 FIFTH AVENUE SPIRELLA CORSET SHOP SATURDAY OF THIS WEEK, AND BEAU Tun YT, AND WONDER TO THE BEST EXPRESSION OF PRESENT MODES, IS MADE TO ORDER, OUR EXPERT CORSETIERE, FITTED HERE OK IN TOUR of Justice | tne mois tion. Mra. Sixth avenue, Mount ung girl poticed ay Mra, Howe went sobbing. herent answer. headquarters In Mount Vernon and something of her Id nor how she Howe's lawn in Mount Vernon, At m ver, and sent word that Mrs, Pulver should brought to Mount Vernon, Mra, Pulver burried by auto hospital early to-day her daughter and the girl on to The presence of the mother seemed somowhat Mise Pulver’ mory and the doctors allow restore er'a custody. But even though the blank memory wai etally bridaped M! A Fifth Avenue Address Ata Crosstown Street Rental Seventy-three Fifth Averiue, cor ner 15t! has oth and 7th and top floor still vacant. It's a beauti- ful new fireproof building with extra high ceilings--tighted on four sides andconventent to Subway, Elevated and Hudson Tubes, If you want the advantage of a | future need for it—write, possible all for further particulars, phone or This is not an ordinary rental proposition but a real opportunity, 73 Fifth Avenue, N.Y. Telephone Atuy resent 84, REALIZING THE FUL FLEXIBILe EVERY CORSET OWN MOME BY FOR MISSING GIRL ENDS IN HO HOSPITAL She Lost Memory Mornory ri War dered to Mt. Vernon—Moth- COULDN’T TELL NAME. Wandered for Miles and Was) a nineteen-year- . 610 West One Hundred and Fifty-second street, who was found wandering In Mount Vernon name or where sho lived, was restored From 6 o'clock last night, when the | young girl telephoned to her mother | that @he bad become tll on a subway train, and was returning home by way of the Fifth avenue ‘bus, until to-day, when the distracted mother approached her cot in the Mount Vernon Hospital, who had night from of- where she is employed, when in the and telephoned her mother that she was Mra, Pul- Mistracted with *, ae reported the girl's he West One Hundred to U an pitty. ruseond aac police s was ovar 10 o'clock when . mina Hag, who lives at No. ME uth Vernon, ting on the lawn in front of her house and apparently out and spoke to the girl but could get no co- | She called up police) policeman took the girl to the hospital. There every effort was made to learn Sho could not tell who she was, where ahe lived ame to be sitting on Mra, night the Mount Vernon police heard from New York of the Missing Milas Pul- since the description of the girl resembled that of the patient, they the She recognized the cot recognized her mother with a glad ery. im. hospital in her moth+ in her Pul- Fifth Avenue location now—or see af or th re ot be to od | ver could not recollect anything tnat happened after she telephoned from the Times Butiding. she took the Fifth avenue ‘bus she got ‘off at Grant's Tomb or ti ctossed Over and took the cubway egal to the end of the line she must have crossed from Yonkers to Mount Vernon, an hour's trip by trolle: It is presumed that if/the Canadian Pacific Railway pany at thelr annual meeting to-day asked for authorisation to increase the ordinary capital stock by an amount » not exceeding $40,000,000. The necessary sanction from the Federal Government — of the increase of thé company’s capital which now stands at $180,000.00, It fs un derstood, has been appiled for, Sumptuous Costumes Positive $30 Values $19.7 This is not an models and matetlals a New York has to present at $30, at this Lape apt when the pose ig | is oy wee the most desirable and suit offerings presented for years. Diagonals—Boucles, Velour de Laines; Two-Tone Cheviots Cutaway and Military Jacket Lets with rich silk braid tr: a th coat styles andsomely embroidered vestees; ited and draped skirts showing the ble new sithouette. Unques- tionably the best offering this season. Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES Viaduct, id have taken her to Yonkers. 14 and pes West ies Street—New York CastSt Bev Broad Stre t—Newark, NT ree I. 12th & Market Streets—Philedelphia Franklin ianos You must come to the FISCHER PIANO FACTORY to benefit by this great sale of reliable FRANKLIN PIANOS Special Terms tor this sale $10 down, balance in menthly sums J. & C. Fischer Factory Salesroom, 417 West 28th Street, Near 9th Avenue, | Oldest Piano Makers in New York rou NDED C p oe FOUNDED Announce me Extraordinary Silk Sale | $285,000 Stock of Foreign and American made Silks in plain and fancy weaves, the products of 15 of Europe's and America's foremost manufacturers, Will Continue -morrow, Thursday. BY COMPRESSED AIR IN FIRE-PROOF BUILDING FIRE-PROOF STORAGB FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS 438, 440, 442 WEST bist ST., E°RSGVE