Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 296, 17 October 1912 — Page 7
THlTlUCIOIOXD PAZiLAIlIUOI AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY OCTOBER 17, 101J
PAGE SEVEN.
THE COLONEL MUCH BETTER DOCTORS SAY
Continues to Improve in a Most Satisfactory Manner and Will Have Moose Meat Tonight.
(Continued from Page One)
cent in view of his improved condii tion. "If this had happened in the Held," said the patient to his attendants, "I'd ! have got first aid If I was lucky and then cleaned up the business in hand ; without further fuss." But there is no doubt that the colonel has been brought to realize the 1 seriousness of his wound which all the doctors in Milwaukee were unable to j impress on him in the exciting two ! hours that followed the shooting, j Mr. Roosevelt Boss. On Mrs. Roosevelt's decision the j time the colonel leaves the hospital t depends. She is fn absolute control of j the sickroom. Even the colonel admits 1 that. The former president is anxious to return to the campaign. He is cerI tain that he will be able to stand the i exertion early next week. He wants
to return to New York Saturday. Mrs. Roosevelt wants her husband to be very cautious. She does not want him to run any risk, especially that of
pneumonia which the physicians have warned might follow unusual exertion
with the wound in the colonel's side
Early this morning after one of her
brief visits to the colonel's room, Mrs. Roosevelt Intimated that It might be
some days yet before she would con-
I sent to her husband leaving the hospi
tal ana starting to Oyster Bay. She said no move would be made until the doctors were convinced there would be na complications. She believed that the ten days confinement originally suggested as necessary might be adhered to.
May Go Home Soon. Final decision may be made tomorrow. The last danger of Infection should pass by noon then, according to the surgeons, and if the colonel's condition then is as satisfactory as It was this morning it Is possible that the doctors will consent to his leaving for the east. They believe it might be better or, him to be in his own home where he could look after some of the details of his campaign than to re
main in the hospital here disturbed because he could not give personal attention1 to these things. Col. Roosevelt himself believes he will be able to travel Saturday. In fact, if the doctors would permit, he would be willing to start for the east today. He is planning confidently on addressing the Madison Square Garden meeting in New York October 26. The physicians were relieved when a successful X-ray photo deinitely located the bullet. While Its location was generally, determined by previous examinations it was not until late yesterday that its position was known. The fact that it is lodged against a rib ends the fear that it might be lodged against the inner chest wall and the fear that it might , penetrate the thoracic cavity and pierce the right lung. The slight fracture of the fourth rib the surgeons say is a matter of no consequence. The fracture accounts for some of the slight pain the colonel has experienced in breathing and the natural soreness of the wound itself is responsible for the rest. This has
Is Facing9 Trial or Murder
f
Lieutenant Charles A. Becker, of the New York Police Department, sketched in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, while listening to the testimony of "Baldy Jack" Rose, during Becker's trial for life on the charge of complicity in the murder of Herman Rosenthal. Rose told the jury that Becker had once said to him: "If ycu don't croak Rosenthal, I'll do it."
cleared away any apprehension In the
minds of the physicians that the sore
ness might be caused by infection.
The physicians were optimistic j in
the extreme this morning. Before the first formal bulletin was issued they pointed out the fact that practically
- - normal conditions obtained. None of them cared to discuss the case, how
ever, before a careful examination of
the patient.
To Have Moose Steak. The colonel will dine on moose steak and trimmings tonight if the
consent of the attending surgeons can
be obtained.
Some of the colonel's admirers dis
covered a quarter of section moose meat in a cold storage warehouse.
Dr. Terrell declared that the colonel
could have moose meat if ie wanted
It
It was definitely announced that Col.
Roosevelt will not be permitted to re
ceive visitors, except the members of
his family during the remainder of his stay in Chicago. While this precaution is not due to any condition which has
arisen since the patient's arrival here the doctors insist that there shall be no excitement whatever if best results are to be obtained. -
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TRAINING SHIP IS BACK MB PORT Happy New York Youngsters Gladto Be Back After Exciting Sea Cruise. NEW YORK, Oct. 17. The training ship Newport, an Uncle Sam gunboat without any guns, has returned from a 10,500 mile cruise and is anchored in the East river. The Newport came to town with a clean bill of health. The boys were bronzed and hearty and all were de lighted to see New York again. "The health of the cadets and the crew has been most remarkable," said Commander Tillman in bis cabin yesterday afternoon. "I have served in the navy thirty-seven years and I have never seen so little sickness on any cruise. The only real case of sickness we had was of a member of the crew who fell ill with an attack of pleurisy that developed into pneumonia, but he pulled through in good shape." The Newport succeeded the old schoolship St. Mary's as a training ship. Commander Tillman said he. was trying to correct a mistaken notion on the part of many persons that the New York Nautical Behool is a sort of reformatory institution. He is daily receiving requests from mothers and fathers with unruly, mischievous sons who have "the best hearts in the world" for their, admission to the school in the hope that the discipline will be a good thing for them, and he is kept busy writing explanations that the Newport isn't a reform school. The New, York Nautical School was created under an act of the Legisla
ture, approved on Ajril 24. 1873, authorizing the Board of Education to provide a school for the education and training of boys In the science and
practice of seamanship. Congress pass-1
ed a law, approved on June 12. 1S74. authorizing the Secretary of the Navy to furnish a vessel for the use of the school on the application of the Governor. By another act of Congress passed on March 4, 1911. the Secretary of the Navy . was authorised to appropriate a sum not exceeding $25,000 for any one port and not : exceeding any amount that might be appropriated by that port for the use of the nautical school, but the money has never been
forthcoming. The city of N-r York.
j therefore, has practically borne all the
expenses of the maintenance of the school. The Newport left New York on May 21 last with her sixty-three cadets and crew of thirty-four men and went to Glen Cove, where she remained until May 28. Then she went to New London and on June S she pulled p anchor and started across- the Atlantic for England, reaching Plymouth on June 26. They told stories aboard ship to the effect that much of the trip across the Atlantic was made in a stout gale. Commander Tillman spent many anxious hours on deck, refusing to send the cadets aloft, because he considered them inexperienced boys and wouldn't take the chance of having one of them flopped off a yardarm into the fast running sea. . "The commander was a corker," said one tanned youngster. "He was
more like a daddy to ns than a skipper." The Newport left Plymouth on July 2 and then sailed to Stockholm, reaching there six days later In time for the Olympic games. The boys took In the big show and rooted for all they were worth for the American athletes. "My. how those boys did rah, rah!" said the commander. "It surely would have done your heart good to have
heard them. It brought a big lump in j
my throat every time the American athletes won out. and you can readily guess how the cadets felt about it. "American victories in a foreign
country make you feel mighty glad that you are an American.
Making His Meaning Clear. Senator (just returned from TVajb mjrtoso Mr. Eeler. what Is the sentiment of the people In your town con cernlng Rising Politician (sternly interrupt ing) Senator, we don't deal In sentiment in our town: we deal with, fac's f. a. x. fac"s! Chicago Tribune. -
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