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DOSOADOQOHG eo GIVES LIFE IN SURF TRYING TORESCUE BRIDE AND CHILD Frank Plumridge of Brooklyn Drowns After a Desperate Battle at Rockaway Beach. THE OTHERS ARE SAVED. Life-Guards Dive After Mrs. Plumridge and Her Young Stepdaughter. While making a desperate effort to @ave the lives of his pretty young wife, | to whom he wan recently marriad, and hie sixteen-year-old daughter Katherine, by his first wife, Frank Plumridge, for- | ty-elght years old, of No. 119 Nineteenth street, Brooklyn, lost his life to-day at Rockaway Beach, ‘The tragedy occurred off Second ave- nue, between Seaside and Rockaway. Plumridge, his bride, Mrs, Kate Plum- ridge, who is only twenty-six years old, and his daughter went to the beach with a party of friends to spend the day. While Plumridge was resting on the sand after a long swim in the surf, Mrs, Plumridge and her stepdaughter attached what are called “water wings” to thetr shoulders and went out a little Way beyond the breaker line. The tide was down and there were many hathers out beyond the line, The young woman and girl ewam out so far with the water ways to support them that when they put thelr feet down they discovered that they could not touch bottom, Plumridge had been watching them, and when he heard his wife scream he realized the danger and rushed out. Hefore he got into deep water his wife and daughter had been caught in a strong eddy and whirled furthe where there ts a second line of bri Following Plumridge were Lieut. D, B. Manson of the life guards ané his brother, J mers. ‘The Manson b the eddy in w young girl had Mansop, both experts swim woman a but Plum. it ven ridge attempted to drive throu: proved too stron and as hi 0 to he in- of undertow which dragged him down. By the time the Manson brothers got to Mrs. Ply nd her stepdaughter thelr stréngth had given out anc had gon, e guards te Kare fc I times before they could reach the y which time the woman and the girl were uncon- selous, Lieutenant Clay Murray and #everal other din the rescue work Murray managed to ge pridge and pull him in to shallow water. But he had been onder several minutes and was dying By time Plumridge had been lifted to the beach the lust spark of life It was at first thought 1 her step- er man: It ned to eviving of Mr eas lo Once Upon a Time was an hour asness. nridge And it wasn’t any longer ago than last Sunday, The World printed 1,421 Summer Re- sort, Hotel and Boarding House Advertisements — 297 more than the Sunday Herald, Times, Sun, Tri- bune and Press COMBINED. Call at one of The World’s| Branch Offices and get a FREE | copy of The World's Summer Resort Guides, the most complete and valuable book | of the kind ever published. OOOO Q0O00. 000.0100. 0000) ett KE O00! OOSSOOSOSHOOSOOOSSOOOSE THE EVENING WORLD, DDDHDHOHHOGHHGHOHDODQSHOHODHGOGQSHOIDSGHGSHGDOSOSHGS Lcocvinanscieiniverensaoeen purposes. GBOSSHONGHOOHGOIGHSSHOOS 10OO) “No Reason Why Woman of Sixty Shouldn’t Look Like Girl of Twenty and Feel Like It, Tov,’”’ Says Dr. Julia Seton Sears, Director of Rejuvena- ting Regime. PAE | Mind Must Be Fixed, with Faith, Upon Ideal, and Diet and Outdoor Exer- cise Will Do the Rest. Class of Young Grand- mas Prove Claim. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. The woods are full ale Swowoen wnat - Me Look Ure WHEN THE TRANSFORMATION is oven ——" Dacawana - on - the - 3) Hudson, Which does not sound as though Oscawana and the New Thought Sum- mer School, founded by Dr, Julia Seton Sears, 18 exactly the place a gay young man would choose for his summer va 5 * cation. But it i believe me, it 1s. For the Oscawan: grandmas are not regular grandm That is to say, of course they have grandchildren somewhere, or they would not be grandmas at all, but they have not brought their ohildren, nor their | children's children, nor thelr knitting, | nor thelr caps, nor their cares, nor even the cat to Oscawana-on-the-Hudson, They are, instead, blithe, jolly, frisky grandmas who would a little rather beat | you in a quarter-mile sprint to the gar- den gate, than to turn you out an old- | fashioned batch of batter cakes. But they were not like that when they went to Oscawana. I, myself, went up on the train yesterday with a grandma on her way to the New Thought Schoo! | and the rejuvenating regime prescribed by Dr. Julla Seton Sears. The grand- ma on the train was much the same! as other grandinas. She said: “Thank you, my dear," when I helped her into the carriage which met us at the O: wana station, and she clung > a rather buttery looking box which I guessed had held a bite of lunch to fortify her for her travel. any one, no matter how firmly you fix your mind upon her. You could no more Brow to look exactly like her than I would look exactly lke you jn your clothes. You attain the features of the person upon whom you have fixed your mind, but their expression is altered to & great extent by your own soul.” “And if you were fixing your mind on some photograph and happened to mislay the photograph, would you know what you were going to look like when you were finished?” I suggested. “What nonsense!” chirped up the grandma with the tennis racket. “All you would have to do In a case like that would be to get another photograph.’ Mill I could not but feel that under’ such stress I might be a bit hybrid in my finish. Marie Dressler's general out- lines, for example, with @ disposition to be Billy Burkish, “But which is the more important to attain the youthful result,” I asked; ‘the mind fixed on the desired image, or the diet and exercise? “Oh, the mind fixed on the desired image!” exclaimed the group, “although you could not attain, the youthful ap- Pearance you Wished without the phys!- cal regime. But the mind; the grasp of New Thought is the thing. The whole! experiment would be a fallure if your mind was not strong enough to cling rigidly to the New Thought doctrines.” And as 1 drove away I saw that the grandma who had been on the train with me had dropped her somewhat MET BY GROUP OF GRANDMAS puttery luncheon box and was idly GROWN YOUNG. fingering the basoba}l b But the grandmas that swarmed u® us when the carriage stopped be- the Inn in the New Thought City! were grandmas for you! Grand- swinging tennis rackets; grand- mas In short nen walking skirts—that I should live to see the day!—a grand? ma with a baseball bat! “How do you do it? I gasped. “Pasting and New Thought,” they 1. “Fasting and New Thought, And when I had pleced thetr tale to- | sether with the ald of Dr. Sea 1 fqund it was something like this You cannot help being « gre ma, but you can helpdooking lke one. If your mind is strong enough you can grow to look Uke any one whose sppearance pleases you. ‘There is no real reason why & woman of sixty should not look STRIKE WON'T STOP GRAND OPENING OF CITY CONEY BATHS Union Men Want to Go Back If Cement Contractor Will Hire Unionites. mas cho! like a girl of twenty, and feel like one if she cares to. “and 1am xo sure of what I say,"| After waiting all night at Coney Isle added Dr. Sears, firmly, “that I am/and to try to get to the bottom of the “ to take ten women of sixty] strike on the almost completed muntet-! year age up here in Oscawana and] pat pathhouse, Aldermen Drescher and | xive them my treatment free of charge] suiivan of the Committee on’ Bath- | to prove what,I can do. houses came to town to-day to hunt! sut—of course there always ta a but—| e007) “y""ontiory, delegate of the] certain rules lald down by Dr. Sears} seryotural Iron Workers, and Thomas must be adhered to or she will not IM tha amant Wisnikera’ Union guarantee results, For example; Aad calla Sha eeenlaal| RULES ARE STRICT IF RESULTS hee ia, Acorn, to say that Mr. cher and Mr. Sullivan had ap- | ARE GUARANTEED, parently been misinformed, The cement The patient must have taitn in New contractor, G , Sald Delegate Far- | At all times she must follow’ the dl- n of the New Thought practitioner rds sleeping and exercise. ought principles. ley, had a force of twelve or thirteen | Bhe must have an income sumMetent | nion men at work on the Job. In for her ordinary needs. so that she eh ee ee eee ee |haa no financial worries, union had called the attention of | vuhermuat nak bevdlatiebed by angiouel (ce tow (HAS SARE LO8 ANAT OR nda of worrying relatives. _|fact, and ali the union men on the bulld- | "She must co-operate in the treatment etn ates Soir to the best of her ability . soon as Garber made it por= She must fast consclentiously for | £" ACK 8* 800 ware mene inte | twelve days, to be divided into periods | Mile for then Cf two days without any food and one |I"E nnn hile “as ecn | day with light nourishment. strlkg has -no $ of working. | After the fast she must have ten days| "TMG N18 mo inh) hotest nae Jog regular diet, which must be adhered |e eae ae once he cna wee to strictly, and after that more fasting |fo mss race wich Fie | whenever necessary, President Si Klyn told M nhouses we Drescher to so nearly fear ren ning snement of the wate ie nae rest, he beautifying process | iit to ate ‘le opening Aug. 1] SORE Me MAE H » can only affect a | 01 |ke a girl of twenty fixes her mind 1) leone of tie city who have been| definitely on the exact features and cole) ihe far months to use t | oring she desires, If she ts not sufctent: | oy ie to do so whil ly original to create an ideal self she!) 80 may fix her mind on the image of some oe one whose appearance she admires, or! Wanta Arbitration for Columbts, ||) even the photograph of some young gitl) odora. Colom ; eles | | who seems to her particularly beautiful, gone Rost Nila monsane to Cone |i] |MIND MORE IMPORTANT THAN gress w w tena | | PHYSICAL TRAINING. wal aay that there vi | "Of course,” explained an Oxcawana| 2°" Jf (Ne amoulticn Die | grandma whose gray hair was bound Panama, anil that he f with a pink ribbon—"of course you will dispute Ro, become mitting the matters | phe exec, cquoserpesy of tration. ty ar ood | yesterday Asiibai Cae NUDE BODY FOUND IN BAY. ed Henry W. Loulse Blenksend, Forty-elghth street. According to house late yesterda: but the plea: she sald, and money and jewelry frightened. her to the kitchen, tied her hands and of the kitohen table. Meanwhile the two a poker. As evid which Mr. ce was and the poker even a plec had attacked her, that he was, in a Coney theatre. Tslanc of witnesses by afternoon, the girl Then the man and when she fought nim off dragged | Swezey sald when he came iu, tled to the table legs, a rolled napkin tied in her mouth as gag and the room in disorder, THE afternoon, He was su about that gagged her feet to the Swezey the he found the At Grandmas Forsake Knitting ‘and Grow Young With Fasting and New Thought at Oscawana ty GIRLS wite SE annoys By FEMALE Piven sd BOUND AND GAGGED BY ASTRANCE MAN, DECLARES SERVANT Employer’s Dogs Fought for Her Is Part of Her Strange Tale. Tho police of Brooklyn to-day arrest- Ryder of No. 441 Fort sixth street, Brooklyn, @ salesman, as) Was the tide that waits for no man and the result of @ strange story a servant in the| Party even In the face of death that |household of George Swezey's of No. 624 | C4Used the trouble, but the plucky doo- told by she was at| work in the basement of the Swezey | nis wife, Mary. y. and Mrs, Swezey were out. A man came} toward the de to the door with @ letter, she sald,|gar Refinery letter was not addressed body Ving there, nt man that Loulse asked him to | river Capt. come in and have a glass of tce water. | ‘The man asked so many questions re- garding the prosperity of espectally Mr. to ch a the Swezeys, their she became attacked her | and legs dogs, one | a big white bulldog and the other an English terrier, had come to her rescue, The big bulldog selzed the invader by the leg and was only beaten off with a blow from an Indian Club, dog then went at him and was hit with Then the man ran, condition ‘The smaller STRONG MINDED WOMEN (AN ATTRACT CLOTHES AL WELL AS GOD Wont FIGHT WITH WAVES TO CARRY INJURED CAPTAIN T0 SHORE Doctor Goes Overboard and Others on Little Ambulance Boat Are Endangered. In a small boat that was tossed about on a swell off Willlamsburg to-day a hospital surgeon and two policemen had a narrow escape from death while trying to save the life of Capt. Joseph C. Green of the coal bargs Thaxter. It gives no right of way to an ambulance The prospect of having a pretty, clover girl for hin wife was not suM™- lent for Nathan Wetees! Me ad mitted to-day that because his flance's | papa did not come acrosa with $1,500 promised as a dowry he thought the engagement null and vold, But it It has available now more than $120,000,000 for Rapid Transit Let the Triboro contracts be let. Start the work : SOTOOBAOOGOOGHA DHODOOOOPOGOGDOGDAIGGHOAGOOHOGS WOULDNT WED NOW HES SUED Manufacturer Called Engage- ment Off When Prospective Father-in- w Refused. HAD SIG 3D CONTRACT. | | Arrangements Completed for Them Because — Erteschick Wasn't Strong on Courting. he did Mise iste R and she has inst! Hollander did not ited a sult for bre: f promise and has asked thkt Nathan 000. Miss Hollander 1s the Jullus Hollander, a women's unc manufacturer, residing at No. Hundred and enth street, ft hick manufactures garters at % Clinton atres World rej He told an Evening r to-day that the dowry Was to have been used to extend his business. 1 was Introduced to her by a shach- . Nathan, who is of a phleg- ni sposition, and from whose eyes no romantic did tt aul" One can understand this after a few moments’ conversation with Nathan, for it would hard to conceive of him giving vent to sentimental expression. HE WOULD MARRY HER NOW FOR THE $1,500. love lights glimmer, “He 9) SeeMeReRaTEeS WITHOUT DOWRY, HER AS WIFE Tt was in April that Nathan ber | Wonder about the dowry. In a letter to | father Nathan sald he could not 44 Into hs pockets to the extent of | daughter of | ee ee Nan A form of contract of value and Nost as good as lew 4 Miss Hollander say until April Nathan y much de. to her and even called her every Ay on the phone and wished the day ven they would become one would ww nigh quicker, But in April, she tvs she notteed a change and from ‘hon on his attentions ceased, NEEDED DOWRY TO SUPPORT t his prospective bride in the way accustomed to Ive out of the ness, and unless there | a dowry “I shall be obliged to ult until God will help me.” Miss Hollander's cousin, Abraham Goldberg, went to see Nathan and con. veyed to him the jnformation that his ex-flance was growing frantic than Is said to have remarked that she would get over it by the time h ad returned from his vacation. When this was told to Miss Hollander as was taken at once, with the r jan is now on $500 bail and het on his vacation, because Miss Hol- lander got an order of arrest. lelde Awa Jennie Garvey, thirty-four years , of No, 8 Rergen street, Newark, shot herself In the left breast to-day. She Is in the City Hospital in a critical condition, first attempt. 23d Near 1 Sale---Frida 165 “Her father was to give me $1,600 be- fore the mar * continued Nathan, tor made the tide carry his patient to the shore and to expert treatment. Capt. Green Ives on the Thaxter with Last night the barge came with a fleet from Perth Amboy ks of the American Su- at Second street, Will- |!amsburg. ‘They ched Williamsburg jearly to-day. As they came up the Green slipped on the deck of his barge and fell through the hateli- way into the hold. His wife pulled him to his feet and | helped him to his bunk, It did not ap- |pear then that he had sustained any serious hurt, but when the fleet drew up before the docks it developed that he had a fracture of the hip and serious | internal injurtes, The commander of the feet tried to dock his barges, but the tide prevented So he manned a small yawi hurriedly to shore for medical atd. sailormen pulled tn racing form soon had Dr, Gurtoy of the nd sent It The District Hospital back at the dock ready to care for the patient. The doc- tn| tor brought along a stretcher and two her| Policemen. They got into the little boat club lying on the floor, and of cloth which might have been torn from a man’s trousers, The police arrested Ryder because he had been seen with the girl she said that he was not the man who first | Phen she changed nad met moving her mind and asserted just as positively She said she him pleture Ryder presented a list of twenty names whom he could prove he was nowhere near the Swezey house Pollceman George Crefghton of the Harbor Precinct to-day found off Stapleton, 8. 1, the nude body, of al " ‘e man Was apparently thirty years old, five feet eight inches tall and smooth shaven ‘The left arm and both feet were missing. The condition of tt semed to show that it ha | the water for several months lice are searching the records Ing persons for a description that will fit the body and went out to the barge. placed Capt. Green on the streteh: the two policer Mfted him into little boat. they and At the moment there came a manful swell, It tossed the little boat and rocked !t dangerously. Dr, Gurtoy was thrown out, He took his ducking play |tully and climbed back to attend ab charge. Then the satiormen fought the swell in record time until they got to the shore. Capt. Green was taken to the where the doctors agreed that juries would Probably result fatally INSANE MAN ESCAPES. The police of the whole city were | asked to-day to look for Mortimer If Cabot, non of William 8, Cabot of No 21 Glenwood road, Vanderveer Park Young Cabot, who ts thirty-two years old, escaped fron: a private ambula n which he was being taken f | home to the Kings County Hospital fo | observation regarding anit Mortimer Cabot was recently dt m the Kings Paric Asy slight {nb na short bla dressed in a soft-collared taste as good as they look and A Box of 10 for 15 Cents Get them—INSIST if you must—but get them, _ Cigars burn splendidly ‘and when he did not do so I thought T had @ right to say it was off," “But If you get the $1,600 will you marry her?’ “I sald I would do so at once, A man who keeps his word,” guarded answer “Well, she is a nice gtrt Tam was his ck has bred a lawyer and Will fight the sult, Meanwhile, although her pw ers she quotes from the ay {t rise and Bees virgin sand of Israel not divide nor hie ney, the tre All share thelr pro y as is the custon | | “How do L know she ts a nice git?” she is not an being married than she w rh Miss Hollander is not grieving herself to death the loss of his affections, She told an Evening World reporter that the contract signed by both last | Now Year's day was sufficient to show that Nathan was quite willing to mar ver. ‘The untaue thing about this con: tract 18 that while In it dowry 1s men- tioned, the amount ft left blank AGREEMENT LEAVES POWRY,) AMOUNT BLANK, | SIX SMART MODELS, COTTON | GINGHAMS, LAWNS, DIMITIES, ALL COLORS. ALL SIZES. STORE CLOSES AT ONE P. M. FIVE P, M. OTHER DAYS JULY AND AUGUST ETHEL BARRYMORE ARRIVES BUT FLTS AWAY BY A RUSE: Ethel Barrymore (Mrs. Colt) arrived in New York from Los Angeles to-day on the Twentieth Century Limited, She had the elusiveness of @ phantom, slip- ping off the train at the One Hundred (, ; and Twenty-ffth street station and be- ing whisked away in a taxicab—whither, no one would teil. The Twentieth Century Limited was not scheduled to stop at the Harlem station, and It was eight minutes late when it crossed the Harlem River, Miss Barrymore, however, persuaded the conductor to let her off, and bidding a swift goodby to her cousins, Miss Louise Drew and Mrs. Georgie Drew Mendam, ‘The police say this is not her] who had accompanied her on her trans- continental Journey, ehe ftttad. . SATURDA YS— STREET, West Fifth Avenue, N.Y. MILLINERY aod OUTERWEAR & Saturday: RENARD MACHINE-MADE Tus DREssEs ULARLY SELLING. AT 7.50, 8.75, 10.00 AT 95 A SPECIAL PURCHASE OF | | 47 SuMMER AN EXCEPTIONALLY || FETCHING MODEL. OF COTTON VOILE, BLACK & WHITE STRIPE EFFECTS SAILOR COLLAR, BLACK TAFFETA AND WHITE CHIFFON. Dresses 102 Mabe To Set at 25.00 250,000 Birthdays every day in the year in the United States You can be positively sure of giving a most appreciative $ift in presenting a'box of, CAN IES Rare Quantity 250.000 people can be made I appy every day in the year yah presenting them a box of on their birthday. Ketay Stores ond Sats Aces Evorvwruas i models. They French shown i brims. Velvet or silks. Hat ab su iH an early date Wherever ately trimmed with dra of soft white wings or large knot of satin Hats for Seaside or Country Wear— med with white, ' ' ' ' ' ' = , agg iMPSON CRAWFORD CO., Sixth Ave., 19th to 20th St., New Yor Out-of-town buyers desirin; make a collection of early Hats would do well to look at these Taffeta Silk Hats, with velvet All Taffeta Hats. ofmoire andalso White Felts, trimmed, lightandairy is collection we consider the best we have ever shown Prices Range from %4,98 to$12.50 Simpson Crawford Millinery is shown it immedi~ establishes a style reputation for ¢! reflecting Paris in the latest and most _stunning | ‘creations, We are Also Showing New Straw Hats Eve: green or coronation purp! a a (“NEW YORK’'S COOLEST RESTAURANT ON OUR 8TH FLOOR! 0 32 Yount Loadewt SIX mS AVE. 19°70 20" S' iN \\ wierd Ca id NEW YORK. First Showing of Early Fall Hats ‘ball are all first copies of Hats, such as are being n Paris to-day. Hats, trimmed with satin ay—White Chip Hats, ith either French $4, 4.98 -Light as a feather; trim- - $298 searf., satin, wit + Renee tee