Newspaper Page Text
PAGE SIX
TARZAN OF THE APES.*.., THE MOST POPULAR
■ ROMANTIC HERO OF MODERN TIMES.
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I dflEl THE APES CALLED HIM TARZAN
MHuhA WsS>fe) MEANING WHITE-SKIN, AND
HE GREW UP AMONG THEM.
MRvIW KE LEARNED TO SPEAK
-MMFi ’<«■,!▼>’ - THEIR LANGUAGE
AND HE LIVED AS THEY
iXy LIVED, IN THE TREES.
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WHEN WHITE PEOPLE PENETRATED THE JUNGLE
AND WERE SEIZED BY THE APES, TARZAN RESCUED
THEM. THROUGH HIS KINSHIP WITH HUMANS. THE >
APE-MAN WAS PERSUADED TO GO BACK TO THE 1
LAND OF HIS FATHERS h
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ONCE MORE HE WAS ONE OF THE WILD LEAPING HORDE
IN THE MAD DEATH DANCE OF THE DUM-DUM.
I>IM tee - >«>iu«a M F.mou, Book. tM R ,„
D.STRTBL’TCD SOLELY BY UNTTED FEATURE SYNDICATE INC
Taffiaffik
by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Read Tarzan Every Sunday in the
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES
HE WAS BORN IN A HUT IN THE AFRICAN JUNGLE.
WHERE HIS PARENTS, LORD AND LADY GREYSTOKE
< HAD BEEN MAROONED BY PIRATES.
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WHEN HE WAS THIRTEEN, HE DID BATTLE
WITH BOLGANI, THE GIANT GORILLA. IN THIS
FIGHT HE WAS SAVED BY THE HUNTING
KNIFE HE HAD FOUND IN HIS FATHER'S HUT.
"l SUCCEEDING TO THE TITLE AS LORD GREYSTOKE,'
HE TRIED TO ACCUSTOM HIMSELF TO CIVILIZATION.
BUT THE JUNGLE WAS ALWAYS CALLING H1M....
B.CK TO THE
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WHEN HE KILLED NUMA.KING .» IHE BEASTS,
HE WAS HAILED AS LORD OF THE JUNGLE.
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 193«
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AS A BABY HE WAS CARRIED OFF BY A SHE-APE TO THE
TREES-.-AND THE BEASTS LEFT HIS FATHER DEAD.
77 | ZzC/ WHEN HE GREW TO YOUNG MANHOOD,HE
/77 y- / CHALLENGED TERKOZ, KING OF THE APES.
AFt,' Z-F TO BATTLE. AND WHEN TERKOZ CRIED,
C'KAGODA.J SURRENDER!". THE APE
“'I ' TARZAN AS THEIR KING.
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AGAIN HE SWUNG THk. , ~.l iREES
WITH THE GAY FREEDOM OF HIS BROTHERS
THE APES. \
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THE JUNGLE CAME TO RESOUND WITH TARZANS CRY-THE
MAD VICTORY CRY OF THE BULL-APE AT THE KILL —AND
EVER-ONWARD HE WENT, THROUGH STRANGE FAR-OFF
COUNTRIES, FILLING HIS LIFE WITH THE WILD JOY OF TIN
GLING ADVENTURE WATCH FOR THE NEW ADVENTURES
OF TARZAN EVERY WEEK.
ORGANIZED LABOR
NOW IN QUANDRY
OVER QUESTIONS
DIFFERENCIiS WITH STEEL
AND THREATENED SPLIT
CAUSE AN UPROAR
NEW YORK, July 1 (TP).—The
whole field of organized labor is in
an uproar today, with a program of
union expansion going forward while
danger increases of a split within
the ranks of the American Federa
tion of Labor.
The committee for industrial or
ganization, assembled by the Mine t -
Union Head John Lewis, is trying to
bring the nation’s steel workers into
one big mass organization. Steel
company owners say they will fight
the effort. The Lewis group said op
position would not stop its program.
The group is reported laying plans
to start similar mass union organiza
tions in the rubber, textile and auto
mobile industries.
Meanwhile, the president of tile A.
F. of L., William Grene, continues
his protests against mass union or
ganization. He favors smaller /raft
unions. As a.s result the powerful A.
F. of L. executive committee has sum
moned the heads of the Lewis com
mittee to show why they should not
be suspended for their defiance of
the parent body’s wishes. The execu
tive committee meeting is to be held
next week. Labor organizers predict
that it may result in a break between
Green and Lewis which would split
the A. F. O. L. wide open.
FLOODS SWEEPING
SOUTHERN TEXAS
NEW TERROR ADDED TO
ANNALS PAN HANDLE
STATE
GONZALES, Texas, July 1 (TP).—
At least five persons are known to
be dead and 12 others are reported
missing today as floods sweep
through south Texas.
A coudburst drenched Gonzales,
flooding thousands of acres of cot>
ton. The Guadalupe and San Mar
cos rivers are out of their banks,
•hundreds of cattle were trapped and
drowned in the lowlands.
The Gonzales municipal power
plant is surrounded by water. All
creeks and rivers are rising steadily,
cutting off traffic on many high
ways.
WELFORDVICTOR
IN NORTH DAKOTA
BISMARCK, N. D„ July 1 (TP).—
last vote of North Dakota’s neck-and
neck primaries has been counted.
Former Governor William Langer
lost out for the Republican guberna
torial nomination by a meager 500
ballots. His opponent, Governor
Walter Welford, got 90,888 votes to
Langer’s 90,381 in the elections.
POLITICALPOT
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
for the office. The possibility of such
a split is seen by some as the ex
planation of Talmadge’s reticence in
making known his intentions.
Rumors Rife
Rumors are rife that Abib Nix, one
of the losers in Talmadge’s successful
race for the governorship several
years ago, would seek the senate seat
whether the , race became three-cor
nered with the governor’s entry or not.
Nix is definitely not a candidate for
for the governorship, he has declared.
The reported trade between Sena
tor Russell and Talmadge, if true, has
been successfully hushed up, as no
substantiation has yet been obtained
and emphatic denials were immediate
ly forthcoming from both parties
concerned. Rumor had it that in re
turn for Talmadge’s non-entry into
the senatorial race, the governor
would be supported for re-election by
Russell. Also successfully quieted was
the suspected break between Chair
man of the State Democratic Com
mittee Hugh Howell, and Talmadge.
Howell still reiterates his statement
that he is “for Talmadge first, last
and always.” Talmad o e support would
probably go to State Senate President
Charles D. Redwine for the governor
ship, in the event of the
making a race against Senator Rus
sell, bub this in all probability would
not deter Howell from entering the
political ring. Others expected to en
ter the gubernatorial arena are Judge
Blanton Fortson, of Athens; Speaker
E. D. Rivers, of the house of repre
sentatives, Marlon H. Allen, of Mil
ledgeville, chairman of the Georgia
delegation to the national convention,
and W. W. (Wash) Larsen.
Rivers Is Busy
While the Talmadge camp is wrang
ling, the oppositi- is loading its
guns. Speaker Rivers will fire his first
broadside Saturday in a speech at
Gainesville, which he is preparing
while visiting friends on Lookout
Mountain. Judge Fortson is at home
in Athens mapping out his campaign.
Entry into the contest for lieuten
ant-governor was made yesterday by
DtLacy Allen, American Legion lead
er of Albany. The expected race by
Senator W. M. Lester for this posi
tion developed instead into an an
nouncement for the attorney-general
ship. A platform of complete co-op
er.at.cn with all state officials and
institutions was declared by the Au- ‘
gutta legislator, who has in the past
held important house and senate com
mitf.e assignm:nts, and is known as
a Talmadge supporter.
With rumor after rumor flying
around, wise political observers are
focusing attention on Talmadge and
Russell, knowing that some indication
of their intentions must be made by
July 4. Whether a political storm of
v.oknce will break before then, or
whether the clouds on the political
horizen will quietly disperse can only
be surmised. The situation is certain
ly, however, as tense as the lull ba
fore a tropical hurricane.