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Show THE GEE AT TEDDY'S HEALTH. The cablegram which tells of Mr. Roosevelt's 'silent, almost secret, departure de-parture from London, may well raise a question as to thc stato of his health. There has been from time to time notations nota-tions in tho cablegrams that he was suffering from sore throat, that ho was much worn by travol and exertion; and it may bo that his silent doparlurc .from London indicates more serious trouble thnu tho dispatches had mon-lioncd. mon-lioncd. Tho contrast of this secrot departure from London isi so marked as compared with (lie blaze of publicity which has accompanied ac-companied his arrival in aud departure from othor places, that it may well canso anxioty as to Mr. Roosevelt's condition, AVc trust' that there is nothing noth-ing serious, but when a man who surrounds sur-rounds himself with a blaze- of sensa tionalism and torrent of volubility, all at onco slips away quietly and without, a word, then his friends aro justified in anxiety on his account, Tho remaining portion of tho dis patch which told of hid pedostriau tour through a forest is, in a way, reassuring; re-assuring; but something more posith'o, moro direct, as to tho condition of Mr. Roosevelt's health is, under tho circumstances, cir-cumstances, desirable. |