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y “Of Africa Are Wild Now Known Every Bush There Has a “Kick” and Natives Are Champion Hooch Makers. {fhe bushmen of Suuth Africa have it'all over the home brewers of Am- erica. The wonder no longer exists that the jungle savage is wild and tat he stays in the Jungle. Prohi-| their discretion for their pationts|which it was impowsible to revive him lige" the police belleve he waa hit by an bition hasn't been heard of yet in| Went into effect. Since that UUme, | for nearly an hour automobile and not blackjacked by able, that allows the according to “Judge” E. B, Hoinies,| Heroy admitted keeping a $250] huld-up men us at first supposed. | He muscles and tendons ot South Africa but the natives are pre- pared for it any time it may chance to pop up in the busb. The Rev. Dr. William C. Terrill, Methodist Episcopal missionary of Johannesburg, who is on a visit to Clileago, says that the savages of the Dark Continent have the distillers of andient Kentucky buried in the blue grass when it comes to the produc- tion and adaptation of alcohol. They get a kick in the bush that makes Brooklyn's beat bet of hooch a bush leaguer. It makes the savage | Harlem Court charged with burglary. |tini, of Canarsie, against his wife, 22 WEST 85TH STREET. walk backward with a circular mo-| Joseph Gadda, nineteen, of Columbia | Finken, with Detective Wallace at 84th | Simonetti denied knowing the al D WEReAtIN STREET. tioM, climb trees, fignt eiephante and| Street, Woodridge, N. J. was! Street and Third Avenue, attracted by Sear polonat tiie amenes | 89 HOYT 8T., BROOKLYN. chake monkeys out of the jungie. In] 4rowned in the Hackensack River |the raps of Patrolman Bekap for aid,| "Phe divorce action “was iomiiaed the best days of the Bowery there wag never anything like tt, It makes @ bailor ashore after six months at fed look like @ kid rolling his hoop, and the bright lights of Broadway when swinging doors were in, fashion would have blinked like tallow candles at’a wake. Mr. Terrill says that the natives of @outh Africa can make alcohol out of anything that grows in the bush. Oranges, limes, sweet potatoes, pine- apples, corn, cassava root, and any wld native fruit can be converted tmté any brand of booze overnight. Oranges are applied to the cocktails and eocoanuts growing on tall trees make the best highbails. There's a corner saloon on every other bush. Gaharets are still popular tn the buh and the best brand of jazz 1s the shimmy, and the bushmen can spear a drink with the accurate aim ‘of @ bootlegger. Jaze bands are go- {mg day and night, being equally pop- ular at fetes and funerals; and the best loved booze for bewildering re- sults is the liquor that comes from the juice of the cashew tree. ‘The juice ferments in the sun in a few hours, and the longer it stands the stronger it grows. When com- pany js expected at the week-end, they let it ferment for fourteen hours and the reverse English in two drinks would send an ordinary New Yorker eagt side, west side and all aronnd the town THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1021. Why Wild Men |ONLY 100GET WINE _|FAINTS IN COURT, ON PRESCRIPTIONS | sacwemnees | New York Either Has Few In- valits, or They Don’t Know They Can Get It. | The health of New York must be| While half way through the ex- very good or New York invailds/planation with which lhe accom- have not awakened to the fact that | panied his pleading of guilty of grand they can have all the wine they want, |larceny in the second degree before if omy they have the price. | County Judge Young in White Plains On April 15 the Palmer dictum that | to-day, Courtlandt S. Heroy, an au- physicians could prescribe wine at! tomobile dealer, fell in a faint from ADMITTING THEFT Auto Dealer Who Diverted $250 ‘Check Unconscious for an Hour. Assistant Director of Prohibition En- | check paid to the company, of which fercement in New York, prescriptions he was manager. He said the man for not more than 100 cases have|who wrote the check owed him that este much, After he was revived he was tg yaaidlios ge sai __|removed to the County Jail to await The maladies, according to pre-|semored scriptions, call for champagnes and other high-priced wines, and n some cases # is necessary for a sure curc t» have certain brands. > |250-LB. COP SPRINTS, GETS 6 —— > | captnres Saapect DIVED AGAINST ROCK. | — Whe “Peach ——— | Patrolman Finken, weight one-vigiith Swimmer Dead When) °f a ton, won a race to-day, with the | result that six men were arraigned in lef in Race, Others, Young Brought Ashore by Companions. yesterday afternoon. With three! saw two men being chased other young men Gadda had spent the day near River Bde. He dived into the shallow water and his heaa struck @ rock, His chuma, watching for him to come to the surface, be- came alarmed and plunged in after him. They got his body to the shore after atti ing the attention of oth- er camp While a goctor was being sought the boys disappeared. Gadda was pronounced dead by @ physician and his body was taken to Hill's under- taking establishment at Hackensack. pele Tati 69TH STARTS CAMP DRILL. N. ¥. Mewiment Up at 6 A. M. at Peekskill Training. The Gixty-ninth Regiment, which ar- rived yesterday at the Peekskill Na- tiona] Guard Camp, under the command of Col John J. Phelan, started a rigid programme of routine drill to-day. Reveille was at 6 A. M. and, after the men turned out, they were put through fifteen minutes of setting up exercises. They had fifteen minutes rest before mess, at 6.90. ‘The Frat Battalion, under Major Fellx J. McSherry, had rifle target practice. Col, Edward McLeor, Adjutant of the Twenty-seventh Division was in camp, and fater in the week Adjutant-General J. Laaile Kincaid and Brigadier-General Jamea Leater, Acting Commander of the New York National Guard, are ex- pected to review the regiment. — a fow blocks he had overhauled John ‘Tolosi, No. 37 Kast 4th Street Tolos! admitted robbing the dyeing and cleansing establishment of Jerome Black at No. 126 Hast 86th Street, and gave the police information that re- sulted in the reat of the crowd being caught at No. 149 East 16th Street The men gave their names as Walter Johnson and Richard Warren, thot ad- dress; Alfred Hoffman, No.’ 17% East Tith Street; John McDermott, ‘No. 66 Gansevoort ‘Street, and William Reed, with no home and a dishonoranis dis- charge from the navy $4.49, 2000 Vacuum | Bottles | PINT SIZE Regular Price $3. | BRASS CUP AND SHOULDER & BASE HEAVILY NICKLED Guaranteed to Keep Hot 26 hours and Cold 72 hrs. DIRECT TO PUBLIC AT MANUFACTURER'S COST | _ THERMOS and all make VACUUM BOTTLES repaired while you wait Pint Fillers 123 | Paes 12 John W. Weeks to Receive Rut- AUTO VICTIM FOUND HELPLESS IN STREET May Have Skull Fractured—Signet Ring “A. S.” Clue to His Identity. An unconscious man with a possible fracture of the skull was found at Fourth Avenue and 18th Street, Bro lyn, at 8.30 A, M. to-day by two mi on thelr way home. At the King's County Hospital he revived long enough tu say bis first name was Andrew. His signet ring bei he initials “A. 3." ‘As his money and jewelry were tn- is about thirty, ts five feet exht inches, has dark complexion and hair and wore @ brown sult with red stripe. eee PLEADS GUILTY OF PERJURY. Detective Te He Didn't Know a Corespondent, His Own Man. Paul Simonett! of No. 1970 62d Street, head of a private detective agency in Brooklyn, pleaded guilty to perjury before Justice Dike in Brooklyn Su when the employee's identity was es- tenced Monday. The perjury sharge grew out of a divorce case brought by Joseph Di Mar- like this in this news: cooking ute! this coupon & “Wear-Ever regularly for $1:30, coupon at store oD OF ‘Write on your ‘TheAluminum' SP RB Sa “WEAREVER” C! A atte aol in. nut when tabliahed, the employee's identity was es- | \ | | | A sntor that is comfort- | | the foot to function | normally, that strength- | ensand develops the | arches, gives the | natural grace and poise | which cannot other- wise be attained. A million people a | year find the Ground Gripper just sucha shoe. Ground Gripper SHOES | There are two == | more Coupons 2 a ‘name, address Date: x Utensil Company, New! Cooking Un ary tor oem OUPON Ever” aluminum Tantbartel to accept nt for hich sells (5 | Kensington.Pa. | lease send 60c. | ya one TODAY STORE OPEN 9 TO & PIE ARIN FOURTEENTH STREET Established 1827 1512 WOMEN’S SUMMER DRESSES WEST OF FIFTH AVE, TOMORROW De . '¢ operate mont i you write to Ks ¥ ’ Tho Rev. Dr, Terrill expecta to re-| sohn w. EAMANTREMSLATY Ot Wer, fervtee teclon Tee ska oley, | Leas ) Half Dozen Lovely Styles Colors Wert econ to South Africa, will receive the honorary degree of Doc- MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED | Ratan dlcrtita caiian f : 7 tor of Laws at the 166th Commence- Possage | gingham and voue, which are o!- include light and dark mont of hutgers College in New Bruns- fered in this sale at such an un- o-morrow morming. Mr. AMERICAN VACUUM) flowered, figured and ‘Cut out all Three bald wick, N. J, t : | Be Saye Allened Pickpecket Rear-| Werks will be the pritipal weaker at/ | BOTTLE and TRAY CO.) usual value, are illustrated above fi : ested While Out on Bail. — |aitended by between four and five hun- Sta fiee Pate | => and show the season’s new, dainty dotted effects in voile; Abraham Cohen, No. 136 Essex 6treet, | ‘et Ruteere_alumnt ———— = — es oe effects in collars of plain and lace black, navy, lavender, f hader $10,000 ball in Brooklyn pend- ing trial on @ plokpocket charge, wax trimmed organdie, eyelet embroid- pink and light blue checks q Sew ea] cairo > F iy Fig edgier a ery and self pleatings. in gingham. a Avenue elevated train yester- | ° ° | | 4 ined mn Rees we Special Offering | a cee | hee Ber reatncae cess June 13 to 16 only WEAR-EVER Each Coupon osexenanges No Returns | weve ierones aneiicanietids S| | AIERN M A See Page 17 for Other Hearn Advertising : ell. 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