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= Arms Says She Was Not Present When Husband ted in Mrs. Hall’s Room. gr mae Uy aba DAY EVENING, M. cH 27, |DR. R. C. FLOWER, AGAINST WHOM FIVE INDICTMENTS... FIGHT FOR AGED ; ‘1D WIFE WHO STANDS BY HIM. me) | BRIDE'S WEALTH HAVE BEEN FOUND, AN. SHOW'S WF oprietor of the Hoffman! MAKES MYSTERY DEEPER. | Mrs. Snow Declared To-Day, that She Was in the Apart- ment and Telephoned for a Doctor to Come. Additional mystery is thrown about @udden death of James Heman| Rese. the Standard Of] milllonare, In the apartments of Mrs. 5. Spencer Hall, th the Hoffman Arms, at Fifty-ninth street and Madison avenue, last aight, | by the conficting statements of Mrs, Snow, the widow, and “haclos A. Cer- “Tach, the proprietor of the hotel, » Mr, Gerlach says that Mr. Snow was a _ ‘frequept'caller and that he was known to |) Uuellie Spencer Hall, the daughter of! “Mrs. Hall, ay “uncle.” 80 far as Mr, Ger-| Mrs. Snow was never in| “the Hoffman Arms and he says she cer- was not there last night with her Mrs, Snow makes a statement in which Bbe declares that she was with her shusband last night when ho died and ~ that she was the first to try to summon @ doctor. She tells a very circumstan- “Hal story of her connection with the matter. In only one point does she gree with Mr. Gerlach, and that is in | the stupidity of the clerk on duty, who| M4 on a ae the police and other au- - thorities and succeeded in giving the » death a prominence jt might not other- ‘wise have obtained. /. Defends Her Husband, > Bhe received an Evening World reporter S) tnher home at No. 244 West Seventy- seventh street this morning, and said: “The imputations that have been cast upon Mr. Snow and Mrs. Hall in connec- fon with his suddon death are out- Why, in some quarters it has than hinted that Mr. Snow and I were separated and that he was living at the Hoffman Arms. This is a ‘eruel Injustice to a true husband and to @ear, good woman friend. “Mr. Bnow and I dined with Mrs. Hall Afterward we played cards fifteen-year- old Gaughter helped make the double “hand at whist. Suddenly Mr, Snow gasped and sank back In his chair. ‘There was a rattle in his throat and I ‘knew from past experience that he had @ stroke of heart disease. I had seen him come out of three previous attacks. Iran to the telephone and called Dr, follister, who was Mr. Snow's Bie 4s out of the city. en Mrs, Hall summoned Dr. Di who lives at the Hoffman Arms. we Mfted’ Mr, Snow to a sofa, but he Bad died before the dovtor arrived.” Mra, Snow Deeply Affected. Mrs, Snow is @ devout Catholic and ‘Das @ private chapel in her magnificent home, She had been praying before the altar before she received the reporter, ' @hd when she came to greet him she carried a rosary. She was deeply af- band's death. § award F. Cole, © nephew of Mr. Snow, said to-day, “1 was summoned to the Hoffman Arms at midnight by Mrs. Snow. I did not know Mrs, Hall, but she was a friend of my uncle's family.” Mr. Snow was born in Dennisport, Mass., fifty yeare ago, He had been eonnected with the Standard Ol! Com- Pany for thirty-five years. When he Was @ boy he went to the Pennsylvania regions and rose to be a manager of ‘the company’s pipe lines. Later he ame to this city and had many other Mr. Snow had his office at Nos. 14 and 6 Liberty street. $ Goldenkranz said to-day there mala Paine storey. Heli and her daughter have been the Hoffmen Arms since last (They had’ their own carriage ently unlimited income, It about the hotel that had a fine residence on River- which she rented at 4 hand- and also a splendid summer i Dr Di Zerega’s Story. Wes called into the case: d never deen in the hotel before, qn @ bed in @ small room with his coat and red and his collar and d, After making the 1 saw that the man informed a middle-aged took to be Mrs. Hal) “hat ele gall, up the . up the Snow. ‘alte busted her- ening play- robably died me. that he ad bass after ‘his relatives ae. re Po thas, be, had not i was in the apart: Hail with her husband. oo eel as HIM WITH SHOVEL. Parone Injures Angelo Gor- Dering Fight in Subway, the course of a free fight in the eavetion at One Hundred and wirect end Dieventh ave- JALPED wal Drains of Angelo Gordant fiovel. 7 wily section of his a the nolse ot BR TUHAND C. FLOR. oH 27, 1 When 73 Years Old Mrs. Bar- ker Married Youth of 28, Who Now Lays Claim to Whole of Her Estate. SISTER DEMANDS A SHARE. Old Woman Died Three Weeks After Her Third and Last Mar- tlage, Which Took Place In Flo-ida a Year Ago. — (Bent and shrivelled with age, Girs. Antoinette P. Harrison, of Cornwall, Comm., appeared before Justice Goott in the Gupreme Court to-day to establish her claim to a share of the $100,000 es- tate left by her seventy-four-year-old sister Jane, who died three weeks after marrying Cloyde Kidwell Barker, twe! ty-elght years old, in Florida a year ago. The young husband claims that his ancient bride did all the courting and TUGBOAT SINKS, [ese SMA TOC TLOWER. HI5 is the first picture printed of the wife of Dr, Flower. joyal to him {n ail the troubles that, have grown out of hs mining tranc- action and reports about the mysterious death of Theodore Hagaman, a part of whose fortune was turned over to him, GATES, IN PEACE, LETS J. P. MORGAN OFF EASILY. (Continued from First Page.) Bilsabeth Kowald, each proposing mar- riage, and that these letters would show an ante-nuptiel agreement by which he was to have her property, which com- Sihe has remained Police Think There. May Have Been Others in the Craft When She Went to the Bot-| Sr trarrioon ciatme the share of the IN THE . CASE, thing. We agreed to form a syndicate for the purchase of the stock. After- ward the agreement was reduced to writing.” “The agreement was that no member of the syndicate was to sell without the consent. of the other: None of {t could be sold without the consent of Harris, Gates & Co.," Mr. Gates replied. “When did you first begin negotiations with Mr. Morgan?” “In April. Charles’ M. Schwab came to my hotel at 2 A. M, 1:0 to see Mr. Morgan that day and talk over Louisville and Nashville, I told him certain people would follow me.” Capt. James Murphy, of the tugboat William A, Kane, and ‘one of his deck-| Se was Jane Elizabeth Pangman hands, were discovered by the crew of the tugbdat Senator Rice floating in the East River off East Tenth street, Man- hattan, to-day. Capt. Murphy was dragged aboard the | third. Rice and taken ashore, but died soon afterward. ‘The other man sank while Murphy was being saved, Tt was learned later that two of the men on board the Kane escaped. They | died intestate. were Thomas Ryan, the engineer, and | Cloyde Kidwell Barker's home was in Thomas Crawford, the fireman. They Key West, Fla. He ts an invalid, and swam ashore. e North ‘The story they told the ‘longshoremen who helped them out of the river was that after. they pulled out of the Wall- about Basin the tug began ae Water came in so fast that the two men below decks rushed up and yelled to Murphy and the deéokhand that the boat was sinking. ' \ Then they jumped overboard, with the iy Veo parting advice to Murphy and the others to follow them. They wouldn't. ie wimmers struggled’ beck for the east shore they saw the tug still head- ed for Manhattan, the deck hand sticking to her. didn’t think it wise to go then. “Detectives?” Col. Young asked. “No; newspaper men.” THOSE DREADFUL REPORTERS. “They're worse than detectives?” “Yes,” Mr, Gates said with a smile. Perkins told him that Mr. Morgan wanted to see me at once. the office and Mr. Perkins wanted me to sell one-third of the syndicate’s I told him that I wouldn't think of it. Then he wanted mé to put a price on the syndicate's holdings. He seemed anxious to get the stock. I told him that I would have to sea my colleagues; ‘I got into communication with Mr. Davis and Mr. Harris and saw Perkins the next day, April 12.” “Did Perkins say that you were a dangerous man to handlé the Naeh- “I gent my son around and Mr. holdings at cost. to eal, Mr, Gates laughed and said: “I don’t consider individuals in such mat- ters, except in rare cases. After that I saw Mr. Perkins again and he told me Morgan was anxious to get the Nashville stock. a third and an option on the rest. “Afterward I offered him 1-8 at 180 and 2-8 at 150, He thought that wasitoo much. He wanted to talk {t over again, “After that," Mr. Gates continued, “he came up to the Waldorf-Astoria and I told him that we had concluded not to sell except 1 with Murphy and He offered me 125 for in reaching the shore, out thelr clothes they disappeared. The police think there may have been| Turned Over to the Clerk. others in the boat when she sank. When the Rice discovered the two men in the river Capt. Willlam Lewis| The decorum of the proceedings in the could not make out’ what they were| Tombs Court was rudely shaken to-day doing. They seemed to be fighting. He headed his tug for them and one of the crow threw a rope to them. One of the |eession had Just begun, with Magistrate struggling men grabbed it and was pul}. | Pool on the bench, when a atrange pro- ed aboard. He immediately fainted on| cession marched into the court-room. being Hfted to the deck. Meantime the| First came @ negro with a big goose other man sank. ‘Phe rescued man was taken at once| except for a few white spots on Its to the Willard Parker Hospiia!, at the| neck: Then came John Smith, of No. 249 Tot at West Sixteenth atrvet, ut del Buono singel, & watoman ion! the O}8 tits ;we| Rominion Steamshi, y pler. snd evreet,| golewing him was Special Siniser Aa fected during her recital of her hus-|qwe sat in the cafe. 130 and 2-8 at 150," “Was there anything sald about your abflity to operate a railroad like the Nash- “No, except that I indicated who would ioperate the road for our syndicate.” ‘Did you ever have any experience in operating roads?’ » I said President Smith, of the Nashville, was a conservative man and that tf charges on the books were changed to different accounts the property: would become more valuable in the market." WOULDN'T FLING AT MORGAN, Nothing gould induce Mr. Gates to make any caustic reply to Mr. Mongan's statement that he was a dangerous man to control a railroad. “Tell us what was said about the management?" “Nothing, only in a general way. diol before he arrived there. an oddrese, No. 153 South iMiqoasburg, were found on a pleco of} James Clark, a driver, of No. 18 Park bape: ta one of his pocke: Word was sent there, and Murphy's] together @o that it could not get away, ‘orother-in-law, Wiliam Leyh, went to but the Morgue and Murphy had a wife and five children, He left his home early this morning and went to his tug, which ubually tied up| Pier to-day and take away the goose th Firat street, He | Clark Started across for the other side to get | like to wtate his al his tow from foot street, and that was the last Mr. Morgan, after I drew up the contract ‘wanted an extenaion of six months, He believed that if the Northern Securiti Company case wea decided favorably for the Nashville company it would hel Inorease the stock's value," “Didn't he say that he would then form a Southern Securities Company, and that by ‘putting ‘the stock in the new’ doncern’s control it would be worth 1 Mr, Gates eaid. “Didn't Mr, Morgan offer you Seaboard stock?" the body, Mr, Gates was then excused. Francis Lynde Stetson, Mr. Morgan's counsel, sald Then turning to Mr. Gates, he sai Evidently a truce had been fixed up between Mr. Gates and Mr, Morgan, As Mr, Gatos left the stand he was grested by a half-dozen railroad magnates d millionaires, who told him what a good witness he had made. Most of them st an exclusive scnool for young | wore disappointed. They had looked for trouble. Mr. Gates did not leave the room. He eat near the counsel's table looking happy. ‘Mr, Gates, It was expected that you would reply on the stand to Mr. Morgan's Dr. Di Zerega gives The Evening | accusation that you were @ dangerous man to operate or control a railroad,” sald Warld the following account of how]an Evening World reporter. Mr. Gates smiled 23 he out off the end of a big cigar with a gold nipper atudded ly before midnight I was eum-|with diamonds, From 4 handsome gold box he took a match, scratched and, as to the cight-room apartment of|he puffed on the cigar, laughed again. Holding up a blaclthorn etick in a p Hall to ettend Mr. Snow. whom! menacing way, although still laughing, he said: “Byery one there heard my testimony. That ts all I have to eay. It’ ful day, isn’t 1t,"" and he watked out of the building, minus @ top coat, still jaughing. YOUNG GATES TELLS OF THE DEAL, ©, A. Gates, son of John W. Gates, was called before his father took the stand, Young Gates {s about thirty-three years old, handsome, stocky, clean-shaven and altogether looks ike a chip of the old block, “Our firm bought the Nashville," he said, “with the idea that better results j] could be shown under different management. Xt was firm business.” Did you know @bout the 60,000 shares of treasury stock of the Nasbville?”’ at the foot of N “I have no questions to “I hope you feel better." Rivington A tnAy Williams- the Williamsburg police knew | S20se to Rdvantage, so I t cident was when the Now York | ,wegutrate Fool lice sent word of the finding of the What caused the at Larchmont. The daughter 1s a | q»,, re TRUCK CRUSHES BOY’S BACK, | {n'Spectal Beasions” ""e? 1* omen up Iding ‘witht merriment, ‘sald to Bpecial ‘with. merriment, 0 sipatsey | Ofte fleo order that, the . i AD o rn be taken to f ", roperty clerk ai t as By Six-Year-oll B. Under a Wh Bernard Lyons, a six-year-old pupil of Bt. Patrick's Parochial School, Mulberry | Houses Blown Down mnd Livestock street, between Houston and Prince, ran Killed in Big Storm. out of wchool with, weveral this wheel of a big double His, back ard Lyons Fell! TORNADO IN VIRGINIA. compan! fell under a hind) NORFOLK, Va,, March 21.—A tornado was crushed and his con-| swept the southern section of Princess His ‘home ie at No.| Anne County early to-day, blowing down ‘The vehicle belonged to| houses, uprooting trees and idiling lve re Bros., of No, $27 West Fitty-| stock. ‘ne damaged area was three ‘is, dition 4s critical, Personaily I had no interest in the Proposed marriage to him. He was in Florida in search of health and makes no pretense that it was a love affair ters from the venerable widow, Jane prised $90,000 worth of New York real estate and $10,000 in Tampa, Fla, The Jetters have disappeared. Aged Brile Left No W! Bhe left no will and Barker became estate which the laws of New York would give to a sister of one dying and leaving no will. Loutls J, Vorhaus, in behalf of young Barker, claims that ter jte-nuptial agreement to mve her prop- erty to him is binding, Mrs. Harrison testified about the fam- fly relations of Mrs. Barker, her sister, when she married Richard Henshaw in 1852, He died in 1881 and she became Mrs. Kowald. She was seventy-three when she took her boy husband for her Three Wills, None Executed. Three wills written by the old lady herself, but never executed, were in- troduced in evidence to show that she He isn tall, Stender, pale-ttced youné le is a slender, \e- man, and walks with the assistance of a stout cane. The two|James Clark Is Accused of in reacting the share, ene succeed’! Stealing the Bird, Which Was by the antics of a goose taken into court as evidence in a case, The afternoon under his arm, as black as ita master, 0 was leading by the ‘arm Row, who was a prisoner, The negro had tied the bird's legs (i it flopped ite wings and made muc! nolse. Wien the case was called Watchman Smith said he had seen the prisoner rip a board off one of the crates on the pleaded guilty, but said he ‘would ib of the case. “I was passing the pler when | saw the foose Jump out of a crate and run down he street. I thought 1 enle ee the the prisoner in $100 ball for trial o soner_ in all fo) Fa! Janes = 6 of y, eny. Pool, his eyes twin- ons (Bpecia] 0 The Bventng World.) miles in extent and the loss heavy, Col, Young asked, “Not directly," “How much stock had you bought before you discovered that there wore 60,000 shares in the Nashville road's treasury?’ “About 200,000 shares." “Did your firm get any of that treasury stock?’ “I don't know." “What proportion of the 206,000 shares was actually delivered to Morgan?” " Mr, Gates answered in surprised tones, as he adjusted andsome “all of the 206,000 shares,” aa oe NOT DONE FOR A CORNER, “Wasn't that stock bought to create a corner in Nashville?” “No, wir,” Mr, Gates replied. “On the contrary, Harris, Gates & Co, sent a letter to the @tock Wxchange on April 11 telling all brokers that there was no attempt et 4 corner and that the stock would ne lent to any one who needed it until the time that the contracts had to be closed. We wanted to give the shorts im A ony Ourone attempted to Mr. Gates 4 thet he te attention to the oritioal condtiton of the street and asired him not to corner Louls- He said that such was not bis intention and that his firm would loan Loutasyille and NeahyiNe to any one who was short of it, I told that to several persons, Mr. Kepplor was only a few moments on the etand, COMPETITION OF THE LINES, Mr. Culp testified that the competing roads were the Southern Geongla, the Cen- tral Georgia, the Seaboard and the Atlantic Coast Line, “Bince the Atlantic Coast Line got the Louisville and the Seaboard stock have you received instructions from these roads or any two of them to reduce rates or any kind of instructions?” asked Mr. Morgan's counsel, . Mr. Culp eaid, allway would have to enter into it,” “It has been changed that by thie combination the roads have bad an agreement that is detrimental to the business of the @outh. Heve you entered into any puch ville and Nashville. member of the New York Stock Exchange, All the while young Mr. Gates'e round face wore @ happy amile. He eaid thet brain, |at the time he was a member of his father’s firm and August Belmont wae chair- *alD | san of the Board of Directors of the Nasiwilie road, and that the object was te wet control of the road at any price without causing @ financial panic in the einest or equeeing amy one who was shorn of it. President Rudolph Keppler, of the New York @tock Hxohange, was called to £2 | thet there was “No, nor has the road that I represent.”" ‘Trac Manager Compton, of the Loulsvitie and Nashville Railroad, tod about of the road, He sald it was all confined to Gouthern Sta'es Gnd did litte business in the Kast. The Commission wanted to find out what roa's the freight carry’ “To make any agreement like that effective the Raltlway, At previous beariag Mr. Compton said business away from the Southern, At 1.40 o'clock because of lack of witnesses, The enraged. Cox sturdy strength of character to tell the honest truth about themselves. The following was written by a lady who calls herself an “old mald,” and the way coffee treated her is certainly interestin; W BRONX FEUD Magistrate Hogan Decides Against the Lawyer and His Wife in Fight for Possession of Property. THE WOMAN NOT STABBED. Witnesses Prove that She Cut Her Arm While Smashing Her Way Through a Window Into the Fortified Office. ‘The feud between the Willlam G. Murphy-Mulligans and the brothers Bar- @on over the premises at No, 771 Tre- Mont avenue, the Bronx, was up before Magistrate Hogan in the Morrisania Police Court to-day and was thrown out. On Tuewtay the property in dispute between the Mulligans and the Barsons was selzed by the jatter on a court order, antl the doors locked against the tenants, who claimed possession by r ca- son of a mortgage which they hold for $1,000. The Mulligans returned, ‘and, finding the place barred, the husband kicked a window in and effected an en- trance. Then there was a monkey and parrot tinre, Mrs. Murphy-Mulitgan, who, Hke her husband, {s an attorney, claimed she ‘was stabbed by John J. Cox, a ealoon- keeper, of Third and Tremont avenues, ‘who had been called In by Deputy Sheriff Metzger to witness the seizure. Bho had him arrested for assault. ‘The testimony to-day’ was overwhelm- ingly against the Murphy-Mulligans. ‘The cut in her arm, which Mrs. Mulli- gan testified was made by Cox, wit- messes swore, among them William Peters, Superintendent of Parks in the Bronx, was ustained by the woman falling headlong through the broken window, as she folloy her spouse meet the foe drawn up on the inside.) Cox and Mulligan had some trouble four years ago, and consequently when the jawyer saw the saloon-keeper in what he claims as Hie Epeney, he was ree hit him sald first and he struck back. ‘Then! an axe made {ts appearance, and, In the hands of the lawyer, {t caused the invading forces to beat a retreat, Mulligan ewore that ‘he threatenod the enemy with the axe only after his wife had been stabbed, HE SAW HIS CHILD CRUSHED 10 DEATH, Little Fellow Was Toddling Across the Street When a Car Knocked Him Down. George Geretsky, of No. 168 Chrystie street, while altting in front of his store at that address to-day, saw a hhoree car run over and kill his two- year-old eon David, The child started to cross the street to join some playmates, when a horse car, which was rapidly pass! through tthe etrect, ran him down andthe tron wheel passed over his body. The driver of the car, Andrew Davis, of No, 700 Bast Eleventh street, stopped the tar just as the rear wheel rested on the ohild's body, and it was necessary to Mft the oar off to release it. The driver was arrésted. ————————— WON A BEAU, Plumped Up and Was Advanced $10 Per Month, Not every one has the sound, She says: “ I was a coffee drinker and gradually became more and more irritable and nervous in the schoolroom, My complexion was sal- low and sickly, and as I look back now I know I developed into a very unpopular and disagreeable person. In fact I had little prospect of keep- ing my position last yi that, but I failed to p: he required examinations, This latter tact @roused me to the knowledge that coffee was deadening my brain and slowly destroying memory and rea- son, My sister had quit the use of coffee in her family and adopted Postum, and had been strongly urging that I do Mkewise, One day I started in; that was a red-letter day for me, I began ye sound at night Instead of lyin! Not only awake ‘half the time, and the change in my feelings from ner- vousness and irritability to comfort, peace and content cannot be told in words, 1 had been a trembling, broken- down, nervous, and, I felt, an ugly old maid, but after my restful sleep, in- creased strength of brain and body instead of weakness and iliness, 1 slowly changed in my whole appear~ ance, began to plump up, my com- plexion changed from a sallow, mud- dy-looking skin to a fresh pink and white, as nice as when I was 18, I took another examination and passed it easily. My high grades, to- gether with the improved work in fhe school and my changed charac ary ten dollars a month, and I will by teil you a secret. Whether it was an |} increased reputation for good sense, or tor some other reason, one of the ‘best citizens of the town, e widower, ‘has made a little contract with me that will be carried out some of these days, I shan't tell when. Don't you think I ought to say good ings about Postum, and do Hhink'r will ever’ go ‘beck to coe firinking?” Name of this lady will be given o Cereal LIC LAE FORO A WIFEIN THE BY Life-Savers Rescued the Pair, Who Were Clinging to Cap- sized Boat, After Three Hours’ Work. SKIPPER SPINS ~ YARN. Says He and His Men “Lightered the Salt-Water Cargoes of the Pair and Trimmed Them for Their Return to This City.” Frans Mangolt, of No. 400 Past Fifty- fifth street, came mighty near drowning himself and wife yesterday aa a result of too little knowledge of things nau- teal. to-lay by Capt. Pettinger of the Pel- ham Bay Life-Saving Station, who satd that his crew worked for three hours on the couple before they got all the salt water out of them that they had gulped down during a half hour in the water. Every one's a fisherman down around Locust Point, and there are some parts right. «anyway, this is how Capt, Pet- “Dhe thing comes to me this way,” wife takes !t into their heads to go fishin’; leastwise the husband does. He ‘lows that he Jnows all ‘bout boats an’ | she belleves him. ‘They go down Locust Point way and get hold of ‘n old flat- bottomed thing an’ start out. When they gets out ‘bout a mile the husband lifts his weather eye an’ says 't Uke pretty good fishin’ ground. lets his anchor go—a big rock—and they sit | other remedies and physicians fail. there contented Uke, takin’ no heed of; Millions of the world’s best people the weather as a proper saflor man’ now use Cuticura Soap, assisted by would, an' when they begins to think about other thinga besides fish it's blowin’ kinder stiff. “Now the man sayshe thought It was about thme to pull for shore, an’ he tries to get his anchor up, but it won't break out at all. He pulls and pulls, | ‘but nary move did he get. I don’t know what knives were made for. Anyway, he seggests to his wife that she bear @ hi on the cable, and the neat thing they both knows the old flat-bot- tom is bottom side up and they be in the water. Mangolt says he comes up on one side the craft and the woman on other, and they clasp hands an’ hold_on for their hives, "Bout 'n hour after this they pretty woak and just tihen there heaves In sight Capt. Nate Bell and Capt, Joo Wilson, as two fine lormen and oyster fishermen as isin our part. They bears down on the distressful persons and as they does Mangolt says he drew a pistol are The story was brought to New York | ot Balt, fealn in time [+3 to New York.” eal Arabia Sees Brilliant Comet, ADDN, Arabia, March 77.—A. naenif: cent comet was baneeee ae 7.20 o'cl yesterday evening. It passed nearly i he heavens. 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