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{, SENATOR = f WEATHER—Fatr to-night; Sunday cl: RA PRICE ONE CEN HANNA OTILL ALIVE, BUT FEVER (a fGen, Oxygen Administered at Intervals of Ten) Minutes This Afternoon, and There Were Three Saline Injections During the Day,| Showing the Blood Needs Nourishment. ' SHIP'S. PASSAGE A FURIOUS ONE The E. A. Sabean Had a Con- stant Succession of Storms Coming Up the Coast from the West Indies. FRIENDS EXPRESSED GREAT HOPE BEFORE HIS TEMPERATURE ROSE, Early Afternoon Bulletin Showed That It; Had Been Reduced to 100.8, but Later It Was 104—The Senator Retained Nour-| ishment and Slept During the Afternoon. | BOATSWAIN LOST, CREW ALMOST DISABLED. (Special (o The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, Feb. 13.—Senator Hanna is sleeping this evening, al- though his temperature is much higher than it was at half-past two o’clock, At that hour It was 100.8, but rose later to 104, within one degree of the highest point of the day. Had " Abandoned Hope at One Oxygen continues to be administered at intervals of ten minutes, a Since morning three saline injections have been given. Mrs, Hanna and) Time When It Seemed Im- the rest of the immediate family have denied themselves to callers since! possible for the Little Craft neon, except in the cage of the President. to Survive ne Mr. Hanna's condition at 2.30 o'clock was such as to encourage his family. His brother came out of the sick chamber at that hour and said: | “My brother's temperature hus been reduced to 100.8. All conditions| are favorable.” 2.30 Mr. Dover made the following statement: 30 DP. M. the Senator wassleeping quletly. At noon ture was 10%, At 100 - after a bath it was 100.8, p + respiration He continues to take and well” Phis was the official bulletin us signed by Drs. Rixey and Carter. At 2 o'clock the physicians had decided to resort to more oxygen, and this was administered. At noon the following bulletin was Issued: Senator Hanna is resting quietly, His temperatare is 103.8; pulse, 115; resp) tion, 34. He inues to take nourishment well, There change in hin general condition since the morning bal- ued, Senator Hanna's condition Is still exceedingly critical. His tempera- ture was higher during the night and this morning than at any other time during his illness. Drs. Osler, Rixey and Carter say there ts the faintest possibility for his recovery, but they are not very decided on this point. This bulletin was tssued early to-day: It was a stirring tale of the sea that the lttle frult schooner E, A. Sabean brought into port with her to-day. For over a month she has been buf- fetted about by wind and wave, helpless for whole days at a time, her crew ex- hausted and sick, her best sail carried away and her rigging so crossed and tangled that an army of sailors couldn't straighten {t out now. On Feb, 7, when the little schooner was tossing about in the trough of the sea, A wave swept across her decks and carried John Seboyer, the boatswain, with it, Nothing could be done for him and he was drowned before the eyes of his comrades, sargo of cocoanuts back with her and the public which eats them will never know the trouble and suffering they Senator Hunua had a comfortable night; the temperature wan | cost Higher, 105 degrees this morning at 9 o'clock, the pulse wan 120+ Capt. 4. A. Sabean Is the commander respirations 32, Hix temperature at 9.30 o'clock ¢his moruing parthownerof the schooner whiolt Jana |bears his name. Just five months ana n days ago the schooner left here for the West Indian avd South Amert- an islinds to gather ca nutsy On Jan 11 she was a witha full cargo, and on the ning of at day she left for he home port, ving a crew of nine men, besides the ptain. Storm Wan 104,09. He in (aking nouriniment well, RESTED DURING THE NIGHT, Despite the high temperature Senator Hanna rested well last nigi this morning he was said by the doctors to be in better condition than he was last night. Ho is believed to have slept considerable, but hecause of hig weakened condition the doctors are unable to state just how many hours he slept. | Practically all of the night he was either in a sleep or a dull stupor. The stupor, the physicizos say, was almost as beneficial as sleep, as it allowed him to rest and recuperate from the almost fatal attack of yesterday. He was given oxygen at intervals during the night, put at 7 o'clock this morn. ing had not been given any for more than an honr. The doctors are graduaily withdrawing tne oxygen as the heart be- go of cocoa: ht and Carthagena Became Furtons, a day out before she ran Her topmast was carried blow. ‘The next day the She wasn't into a storm. in the ® Stor was catried miles out of her - Sabean was helpless, he rigged a new sail the g ineveaged tu fury and the schooner course, carried scomes stronger and is able to do its work. The most powerful stimulants, |! *¥¥: His men were a0: SBOUE nitroglycerine, strychnine and saline solution, were given during tha | sity nite grey at Ht was with ali: ight and early this morning, but tuoee have been discontinued except at | time and aguin the scee sept tne It intervals. | and swep' ie ‘. tle vess: | Dr. Osler said this morning that h2 velieved the Senator's heart Hit se be strong enough to do its work unaided during the day. ‘The oerealht seem do not look for another attack such as the Senator passed through Inte wane terday afternoon. This, they say, was not incident to the typhoid ana 8 though nothing eould save f thelr disabled coni tion, #ut an attack which the Senator is subject to during illnesses * ¥ | : or ti lements bravely When t storm of great excitement. MCB) would abate for few “hours’sthe Daniel B. Hanna, a son of the Senator, was expected to arrive at 8.g0| Would e their course In, mean- orclock this morning from Cleveland, but did not get here until after 10| time, “epulring whut dumuge — they o'clock, He was taken at once to his father’s apartments. Mrs. Mabol Par- | Cua; _ Then another heavy | storm sons, of ‘Cleveland, a daughter of the Senator, is expected to arrive thia| Vout, come. slong and undo all thine afternoon, together with his two sisters from Thomasville, Ga, aad root ac vied This sans | thing kept up er day until the Melville H. Hanna. the Senator's brother, continues to he th 8 tul member of ths family. He has not desnaired, and despite the crepe: | DiS, blow came long that cost the life ments of the doctors, insists that his brother will recover, ae Se Ee Ae cate ate SEES “He is having a little harder time than usual,” Mr, Hann, seit athe Abies bgtahe will: pull through all cient’ a Said t-day, | aids om i though the ship could Representative Dick. of Ohio, one of the Se SERS UID Tae, Loner friends, was at the Arlington before 8 o'elock this ba deaeerneiee talke t r. Osler, ut she id et or two days more, ‘then there was a let up and the bi babe g | captain Improved the opportunity to rig PRESIDENT CALLS AGAIN. up a sail and bring his tue The President arrived at the Arlington at 1.30 P, M., and whe toward the const, Last night tho of the slight reduction in Mr. Hanna's temperature during tata eee HEE MIRT aR ea oer said:' “Oh, I am so glad. I will go up staire at ones.” Bad Hottie taaea licen © the c nator's closest political a morning, He saw ‘There is just a faint chance,” he said on italy Hs walked over from the White House. Hts Brennan, ¢ ha hen resident Roosev: 5 ays ton, raided an alles room on the; When the ®ix men butiadit be dalied with HORA A Cae ene fee (My. Hanna, | Gf ihe nine men of the crew four were {second oor of No. Houston | operating the room had Hc Just before President Roosevelt arrived Senator poled of the family, in such bad shape that they had to be| street late this afternoon, [under arrest’ the remainder of the his nurse. He was asked {f ha world like a littl sitet conversed with| attended by ambulance surgeoos to-| The place was known as the Meserole | crowd was permited to go. voice’the Senator.replied: ee le whiskey. In a feeble}day. The other tva were so cut and|Club, and at the time of the raid is} Racing charts and other appli: * y bruised that they could hardly move,| said to have been run in full blast, | used 4 ing the races were seized “Yes, give me some of that whiskey Mr. Carnegie sent me.” [ “ Ciccutation Books Open to AU.” | ‘The Sabean brought a] 4 GREAT ARMY OF COPS IN — ‘(BRUARY 13, 1904. “NEW YORK, DAY. 1 ‘WEATHER—Fnir to-night; 8 110°CLO NIGHT EXTRA } “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ | l STRIKING INSTANTANEOUS PHOTOGRAPH SHOWING HOW A TORPEDO EXPLODED UNDER A WARSHIP DOES ITS WORK. SY pineal tre ge te” ROUE WINS THE BIG RACE AT NEW ORLEANS. Carries Cff De Soto Handicap-at the Good Price of 30 to |—Tribes- Hill Wins Once More. RACE TRACK, New Orleans, Feb. 18.— |"he frat good track of the week pre- THE WINNERS. MILLIONAIRE IN | GRIEF A SUICIDE Brewer Wiliam J. Lemp Pining After Son Who Died, and Fur- ther Depressed by Death of Old Friend, Shot Himself. GAVE UP BUSINESS AND LOST INTEREST IN LIFE. Denied Himself to All, Except ISSIAN FLEET HOLUG BAGK AN AMERICAN SHIP. —— ee CENT. Detention by the Czar’s Men of‘UnitedStates Vessel in Port Arthur Calls for a Pro- & test by the Owners, and the State Depart. ment Orders an Immediate Inquiry to Be Made of Government at St. Petersburg. ~ BIG BATTLE SAID TO BE — RAGING AT PORT ARTHUR Boi Report Comes from Chinwangtea, Where the Manchurian Railroad Almost Touches the Sea—Japan’s Two Big Fleets Are Said to — Have Effected a Junction and May Now Be Engaging the Russian Fleet. iy (By the Associated Press.) ° ‘:, Mee WASHINGTON, Feb. 13.—The State Department has instrdcted Ambassador McCormick to ask the Russian Government at St. Peters- } burg for an explanation of the compulsory detention in the harbor of Port Arthur of the American steamship Pleiades, which conveyed a carga * of flour to that place from Honolulu just before the outbreak of hasey tilities. The ship is owned by the Boston Towboat Company, which has made formal complaint to the State Department, hence the instruc- tion to Minister McCormick. ‘ey By some officials here the opinion is expressed that the detaining of sented :tself to-day, and the result was! FIRST RACE—Our Nugget (12 to "i : fa. decide’ improvement in’ the sport.| 1) 1. Four Leaf Clover (7 to 1) 2, Jo-| Those Close to Him, and Fi- Hdme of the best sprinters at the track | geste g, H as Beat ESTE imete chtnnaieae ac] Seema ii nally Killed Himself —Long eiwo'te tetwinuen, “Ke “™* "| BECOND RACE—Dallas (10-to-1)| Prominent in St. Louis, ‘The races will not commence until 2.30/ 1, Yo'San (3 to 1) 2, Lelia 3. P. M. ch Munday and Tuesday on ac-! = i count of the Carnival parades. ’ 55 Plain (8 to 5),| 97 LOUIS, Feb. 18—Willlam J, Lemp, Moxe Goldblatt offered $2.00 for Over] THIRD RACE—Fort re i fe )+} president of the Lemp Brewing Com- Hand this morning, but the owner of|1; Leo Dorsey (6 to 5), 2; St. Tam) on omitted mulcide today at his the gelding refused to sell. Over Hand] many, 3. racigatoa tie ot a is a five-year-old and was never trained residence, No. S82 South Thirteenth until this winter in anticipation of =a street, by shooting himself in the right largelyincreased.. play. during the Mardi] FOURTH RACE—Roue (30 to 1) Witemple with a revolver. He died an Gras carniyal. Scorpio (5 to’2) 2. New York 3. hour after firing the fatal shot. Grow- Twenty-four books went on to-day. eas ing depression over the death of the This Is the jargest number of layers] FyETH RACE—Tribes Hill (3 to 5).| [MVorlte son, Fred Lemp, three years ever ween in line at ‘4 . .{480, and the loss of Frederick Pubst, of BIRST fe firet; Ethice (2 to 1), second; Hz) Miwuukee, a lifelong trend, 8 believed | Five and a half furlongs; purse $400; for! zah, third. to have been the cuuse of the rash act four-year-olds and upward, ‘selling. < ane nnenmmmnnrmmin | Mr, Lemp, wiu was alxty-elghit 3} Starter. webx Wit-Fin. ik P| to have won by a good head, but the eld and a native of Germany, had lived | Our Nugget Bey 4| judges gave the race to Dallas in St. Louls for forty-eight years. He | Four Lchiver: i | THIRD RACE. stood high in business and social circles | reeds oie, One mile: puree $100; entrance $10; for] aud Was reported to be u millionuis Dan ig| three-year-olds and up. Betting | Mr Lemp jost interest in tire three it be J Sur years ago when hin son Brederick died. ST _ 3 He wus the brewer's favorite sou, the peered 40 superintendent of tie brewery and the ct gf chlet re ve of lls father, He dled 07, 0. Marvin 6 ay ne. Tne f heart fuilure, and the blow} jp Ml@et woo.’ Won’ driving. Ilace sane Time 1 OS 4.5, | rt Plain raced ke Hemlock started-out to make @ run see trata tree touny Of it He led lis tel until tige ins the tof therback stretch, whers f J the end Hit moved up und passed him, Tn home s ng finish (he Juiter managed |. 0 to last long enough to win by a head | 4% furlongn: the ire aaa Teat Clover, who. finished Betting Was weathig the winner | WelghtJockey, St HIfKin. Str I tas SECOND RACE Five furlongs: for three-year old fillien purse $400; Rotting. St Mit Hy 1% Scorpio, with elght NeMarnte4 to his credit yan divin hi i auld do Julia M » made ub wround the fur a runaway ever Was turn, Yo Sun drew away. dn the ti ood us left final furlong Da and jat the * gross value of the moved Hip Joined issue with Yo San, and the two |stake $1,7%, the fought it out to the end) Yo,8an looked jot which was $1,495 whiners portion A RAID ON A POOL-ROOM. ete Seventy-five Policemen Led by Inspector Smith Surround the Meserole Club to Take Six Prisoners. \ smal five in all spector army ot poli but’ had no permanent or serious. {1 Juries, Al). hunds are suffering from rheumatism, but Capt. Saboan didn't € care much about that to-day. He was’ “He recognized his daughter Ruth,|#o glad to get bis men, his ship and While it was being poured out the nurse said: you'to take this whiskey before you go to sleep.” ‘ During the morning the Senate He is conscious ahi peatectle Par Eb ae aroused two or three times. “Senator, we want escape the large force completely sur- The police had warrants for but wx} ‘7 persons, but In order that none should were locked up in the jouxal Street Station, rounded the bufiding and three patrol ther Was so severe that hel the seemed tu resist the im-| pulse to withdraw from active lite, but after atime he 3 and! was seldom seen at Without 1 mp wie he had at curn he death of Mr py none latives and very close friends of mily were admitted to the vesi- | des Uwe sons and his widow e ————— BRAVE GIRL STOPS RUNAWAY | Theown from 'Teup, but She Halts | Iden, World.) Feb, 13 Miss Mildred Gedney, a belle of Mamie rongek, while driving: it day hud a vemarkanle © eWay. De f ecorner of Beach ap Miss * excaped GIRL KILLED BY WAGON. An unidentified old, git was run at Killed Sieventt Forecast for the thirty-six hours ending at 8 P. M. Sunday for New York City and vicinity: Generally fair to-night; Sunday partly cloudy |\JAPS CARE: FOR WOUNDED RUSSIANS. | ST, PETERSBURG, Feb, 1 ol, von S , commanding the: ne body: wits ta Woo iF mens sa Gern: s hich tne Ine Hundxed and Fou Emperor Alexander Regiment of the German ¢ rds, of whigh te, ee { Czar is Honorary Colonel-in-Chiet, i here day from Berlin, WEATHER FORECAST. He will present to His Majesty an ygraph letter from Esonerng | William, the ship is not a violation of international law provided adequate demur- rage is paid to the owners of the vessel, It is assumed that the vessel is Fi detained for strategical purposes, and naval otlicers point out that her departure at this time might enable the Japanese to learn important facts about the condition of affairs at Port Arthur, i BOSTON, Feb. 13.—The Boston Towboat Company, owner of the steamer Pleiades, received word to-day that the State Department at: Washington has begun an investigation of the conditions under whith © the steamer is detained at Port Arthur, and that if it is found that she improperly held her release will be demanded at once. y WASHINGTON, Feb. 13.—A cablegram has been received at the ~ Japanese legation, from Tokio, stating that upon a request made through the British Consul at Chemulpo, thirty-four of the’ Rus. sians wounded in the recent naval engagement should be placed ig charge of some Japanese charitable institution. Consent was readily given and they were put in the Japanese nurses’ hospital at Chemulpo fe and are being treated by Japanese doctors. ee Ogee GREAT NAVAL BATTLE SAID TO BE RAGING, Feb. 13.—A great naval battle is most. likely being The firing can be heard in Chinwangtoa and has = TIENTSIN, fought off Port Arthur. been reported from th Chinnwangtoa is on Gulf of Liaotung, 150 miles from hereon” ase side of the bay, ad, at this point, is water. That branch of the road extends to this place, ‘ This engagement was expected to occur at any moment. The Japanese fleets of Admiral Togo and Admiral Uriu have madg a juncture and were last seen heading for the Gulf of Liaotung. Ito that the engagement will be with Port Arthur, as. they must pass point to reach the gult. The combined fleet is the most powerful Japan has ever massed and. may be as powerful or more powerful than any power ever assembled in 2 time of war. —-o+-— PERSONAL LETTER FROM — KAISER TO THE CZAR, (By Associated Press.) ana addressing the d or eaid: aml this morning?” his ‘cargo safely into port that hin Iebevicindah phd taro oh ae ae ed i and wigne | nn Lor staln Burr, . A SO URCE OF wo. nie Fons doing well. We Ranta yal one scemed ‘email. aBhnee: uted amen ware inthe place | itkens, No. 6 Het ORE LONWON, Feb, 13.—News from the war regions tod f & pee, >| Se. Morphine or Polsonous Di i @ signal given’ by plain: | George Willlama, No: @ Macdougul si isers from Viadiyost “n ‘ei aie Ca Sale" eloties men. who, mad upined nant: otheet 0000000 Around, the, Russan deet of raweihiel: i a m bei lun pa ia iN Sh at a Nia AE acca OCA i laa MNS ols kb ko alibi aa abil deo aS ey oo ug ell poorer 2 7" alt ee 4 Oe