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| 22,000 shares of Vanadium and shares of General Motors. ly Steel is nearly ¢wice as as any other stock, n stocks, so-called, tncluding im and Replogle showed most the former rising nearly points. Other steel issues were ly lower, attempt was made to I:ft the iF group because of the rising trend of sugar prices, but this was partially sucessful, Barrett & which was conspicuous all last Decause of its strength, showed rable susceptibility to profit "taking sales and lost three points dur- 4 ‘single transaction in Union ¢ up to noon. ing influence on the mar- ‘& new outbreak of the outlaw strike in Philadelphia and 1 This was feared might »made recently in fees iattede © date Se cama 4 “ Progress up the virtual freight block- of railway lines. . Y y Tenewed at 7 per cent. and ie of the fact that the statement Of copdition of Clearing House banks 7 shows a deficit of reserves it is not % per cent until the latter part n per cent. unt e par a week, if then, The statement the influence, the favorabl have had. nd sterling was one cent if at $3.97 3-4. Other foreign ex- Fates were steady, Liberty were irregular. t Cotton was sold by Liverpool | " 4@rests and by the South. This sell- ¢ appears to be prompted mainly “by weather condttions throughout the cotton belt. Initial declines ranged | from 20 to 30 points and were later extended to as much 98,70 points. # pect : CURB. ~~ Opened steady. Wihite, 901-4; Gilliland,. 32—04 1-2; Sub. Bout, 12 1-4—18 1-4; Inter. Petroleum, 33 1-3—35; 21-42 3-8; TI 19 3-4— Ryan, 3 1-! Maracaibo, 24 eCarib, 171-2—19; Merritt, 16 3-4 161-4; Producers & Refiners, 71-4— Retail ‘Candy, 141-4—15; To- 7 Prod. Export, 13—17; Nipissins bad 8. “The Stoneham WEEKLY MARKET LETTER ev Friday since 1908, aren tie “erkive lente of the . Oils, Industrials, i and Curb Securities one interested in the mar- either as an investor or tor, should fail to place name on our mailing list, to ve a copy of this full-of- . ; LIBERTY BONDS es Ee John 3174-8-6-7. 34 Pine Ne a Nx _ NEW TORK, Juse 14, 1920, ‘A etiti-annva! dividend at the rate of 5, FOUR PER CENT, Ys ‘per annum has been declared ang will be cx to depositors on all sums of and upward and not exceeding * $8,000 which hall have becn deposited | ‘ft Jeast three months on the first day ef July next, and Will be payable on and after Monday, July 19, 1620, deposited on or before July 10 receive deposits HENRY A. SCHENCK, President. F. KNOX, Vice-Pros, & Comptrolicr, jO8EPI -G. LIDDLE, Secretary, uu FOUND AND REWARDS. cane poner eu . 8A both sc ea IANTED ae 1, Peer ye HELP MALE. AP ENT EN CAMPBELL FUNERAL Tuoeday, 11 A. M. Auspicos 4. "onunen yn i FUNERAL DIRE ‘CTORS, An where é “Campbell Service” Call “Columbus 8200" VIANK BE, CAMPBELL “THE FUNERAL CHURCH" Ine, (Non 8 eral 1670 Broadway at 66th St. ‘St. & Bin Av, Downtown Oliice, id HN SLOGANS, ENFORCE THE LAM res ype ~ PEOPLE WANT, WHETHER WET OR DRY” (Continued from Page One.) more or less suMficient unto itwelf the same emotions and ambi- tions that stitred the founders of our own it Republic.” in the recog: nat liratand and tre tren ir struggle for self- ” the Governor eat believe, be promote y th cones of Nations. The League would permit them to present their case to the conscience of the whole world.” if As to the League of Nations itself, Gov. Cox sald: “The guarantee against war is a credit against which a debit charge must be made, and, after all, this is ‘the very crux of the controversy over |the League of Nations. “There can & no i. a oon worth CUT TAXES TO REDUCE HIGH COST OF LIVING. An inquiry upon the agonizing sub. Jeot of the high cost of living, go! only as far as the’ words “high gost, when Gov, Cox opened his batteries, “The excess profits tax should be repealed,” he declared, aiming with the fotefinger, as his voice detonated. “That tax has been a tremendous factor in the high cost living. Every business concern sets ide re: profit for ot and addi mer that, obv rofits tax ie added in many, many times. “This is done, in turn by the manu- facturer, the jobber, the dietributer and the getailer, the inevitable result being a staggering cost to the con- sumer, ‘Approximately $4,000,000,000 will be Nnecbasary to conduct the department ot Gov be derived by applying a tax of from 1 to 1% per cent. on the volume of buainess done by any going concern. Collection of such a tax woujd be bs om the taxpayer would not be confused would be Simms, 18—! prices, “There are too many of these turn- overs, for one thimg, and for another, the Government must lay the hand of regulation upon all cold stor: activities, for it is the excess profi tax and the cold which haye added enormously to the present burdens of existence. must be should be kept for Preservation, not speculation. “ENFORCE THE LAW,” HIS STAND ON DRY ISSUE. “Tt is the duty of the Government to be helpful in demonstrating what the States can do toward regulating and ting marketing conditions, and I am gure that profiteering could be prevented if the Government took charge of the marketing of foodstuffs, So far as the cold storage people are concerned I am to say that I procedaded against and obtained the conviction of several who Were caught holding food products overtime to keep up high prices, “To return for a moment to the subject of taxes. I believe that the Federal inheritance tax should be abolished just as soon as we can get on without it. This method of tax- ation should be left to the States. ‘The distribution of a man's estate by will is through the agency of ‘local Government. The Federal authority has nothing to do with it, and com- pensation for services rendered Should be to the States.” has ldng been @ ruthless onb in Ohio, and the drys have more than once denounced Gov. Cox. So when the question of his stand upon Prohibi- tion was put to him, out came the hand, @ fist this time, instead of a forefinger. who ever o! loons tight on Bun why | Was beaten for a jn term in 1914 by Frank B. Willi who, by the way, nominated Sen ator Harding at Chica: It wa) the jaw that the shoul be closed and | closed them.” VIEWS ON ARMY, NAVY AND MERCHANT MARINE, When the Governor was asked his views reiutive to the size of the armed forces of the country, the army and the navy, he deemed best ited to its needs, he replied with- out healtation: - ize of th. two branche: of defense will largely be deter- mined by what comes of the League of Nations” was the reply, “The basic benefit of the League is the reduction of armaments, Neither army nor navy must bi any larger, as | see it, than is ab: solutely necessary under th ons oreated by the Leagu ‘Not the least valuable effect League would bé to prevent nation: from arming to the teeth and thus ex- Ing resources they cannot afford 80 to pend, resources. which might | far better be spent another way. “Reference to the navy calls to mind oUr merchant marine, and in | this Tam the staunchest believer, be- cause te United States should have a great merchant fleet, I'd like to go a step further in this matter and say that modern agenoles of exchanyo with foreign countries should plished as soon as possible. }, “Before the war, when we traded in South America, for instanos, we ex- | ghanged through London and Berlin. Mhat was not only iMogical but ab- We should conduct ow , and it is my belief t mplished by the estal nt of branches of tho Federal ‘Reserve Bank In every trade centre throushout the world Then Would be profitably Independent of Tandon, or any other money centre abr in this matter. We should conduct our own exchang ALIENS, A telephone call from a distant elty in the Biate took the Governor away ‘The conflict of the drys and the wets } Opn Hah Niaaka Cold 1% 1% i} Aleve June a 2 sn Chamient Tk Aw 40% Am 198% [for a few minutes, for even to his Am wy country home he carries on the busi- 4. My oo Ot ness of his office, being Governor of Am. ” be 88 Ohio twenty-four hours every day, 4%, Locomotive bids J * and when he returned he droppe Safety Kavor 17% iw upon the wide arm of a low chair and Bhiy ke 4 aM 4 caught his knee in his clasped hands, . oo & n Oo “I'd like to say a word or two,” he Set Fo: » a vald, “about aliens and treason and ‘Te. & 'Te!, Oo, 90% betel that sort of thing. in, Wool 1, Ty OM “In the first place, we must be | Am. Tov. Beuntion 08 96 4 OB absolute! ire, in ire to | Ann Anor Rt 12 12 Ro son, that we do not | Atobison ity ....., 70% 80 impose an order of Governmental (Atl Gut & Wii. 18) 16iy 16t ism. Baldwin Loro ...., 118% 410% 118% he thing above many others Malumore & Obio.. 30, 20% we've got to do now is to put the Merrett «co, 4 1BI% 148% melting pot to work, We've got lo Het, Glad B FO% 0% be helpful in creating an understand- B'kyn Rep Tran 2 ing between those I've just referred Surns Brow to as aliens and our own people and our Government, je you understané—wh ur country haven't of 9! we believe them to be for the best of all, we do not want to visit ter- rorism on them; they should b taught, not terrified. oe 1 sure IT can speak upon the subject of aliens because, owing to the great coal mines of Ohio, we em- ploy great numbers of so-called aliens. I know these men and I know their leaders, and no man ever had a bet- | ter chance to estimate them than! IT had last winter during the rike, That wi serious time for us, | an 40,000 men went out, but I seemed to see a way to bring peace, and I had conferences In,my office at the Capitol with operators and operatives, and when they were ended I was glad to be able to send word to Washing- ton that not only would Ohio be able to mine enough coal for her own usé but might mine a surplus for ship- ment to meet other needs, “And not only was coal mined, but it was produced with a better und standing between the owners and the workers, There is always 1 way, I Delieve, to reason out and settle in- dustrial conflict. I am completing my third term as Governor of Ohio, and in those six years I've never fired a shot in an industrial strike. I may have had the militia in readiness, but I've never called it out. Not a sol- dier was brought to the scene on a single strike, so sure was it that rea- son would prevail ® “During the steel strike in Ohio, which involved more than 150,000 workers, peac and order were main tained. "The right of free speech was | in no way infringed, damage to prop- erty was prevented, and this also without resort to a single soldier. Local public officials were instructed that peace and order must be main- tained, that there must be no rioting nor, on the other hand, any interfer- ence with the right of t en to or- wanize and express their grievance: ‘Also the right of other men to work must be safeguarded from interfer- ence, In order to enforce this policy it was necessary for me to remove the Mayor of one of our large cities, though he was a Democrat and the Vice Mayor,,his successor, a Repub- works this Gov. Cox lighted a cigar and watched the match burn down, and then as if he either saw some- thing in the flame or had been im- pelled by something he had said long before, he went on in the same jevel, resonant voice. “When the fathers of our great Re+ public founded our Institution, they did three things which had never be- fore been done in the history of the world; first, they produced a written constitution; second, they contrived a description of human freedom, and third, they established the safeguards of that freedom, What was in their rhinds at that time was not a fear of what people might do, but what alarmed them was the possibility of, govermmental abuse rather than pub- lic abuse, And ‘that brings me down to this: Now that the great war is at an end, all the powers which were delegated to the Federal Government in the supreme emergency of that stopping conflict, should be returned to the sources which hitherto had e: ercised them. So you can see where I stand upon that question.” 1,000 FIREMEN AT MEMORIAL SERVICES we/|ling, demand, lire c| , WOULD TEACH, NOT TERRORIZE “ March to Cathedral to Honor War Dead and Those Who Died During the Year. , ‘The annual memorial services of the New York Fire Department were held yesterday afternoon in St. Pat- rick's Cathedral. More than 1,000 members of the department attend- ed. The services were conducted by the Rev, Father Patrick O'Connor, chaplain for the Boroughs of Man- hattan, Bronx and Richmond, address of welcome was made by Mgr. Lavelle, The firemen assembled at the quarters of Engine Company No. 23 at No, 215 West 68th Street, and headed by Deputy Chief ‘Thomas: J. Hayes marched to the Cathedral, Following vespers and benediction, taps were sounded by Fireman Alex. Muir. There were 464 firemen World War, of whom. fift listed and 410 were drafted. ‘Thr died in Brance and five in this cou try. Since Jan. 1, 1918, twenty mem: bers of the department’ wero Killed in the performance of duty and ninety- nine died from natural causes, Father O'Connor said the Fire D partment of New York Is, in tho character of its men, its discipline and its organisation, the admiration of the whole country, “We thank God for the good fath- In four the ers and mothers who have given to thio elt ch fine specimens of man- hood." 2 FIRM. 8.97 1-4, up! FORBIGN EXCHAN' Demand sterling open 4-8e.; franc checks, 12.57, up 6 cen.; | lire checks, 16.57, up 5; Belgian ca- bles, 12.00, up 5; Swiss cables, 6.4 marks, demand 8 8. dolla Argentine pes 1.0440; cables, cable 4, 19.55 bles, 36. demand, 1.0470 francs, demand, ders, den PARTY BOSSES SEEK WAY TO “DITCH BRYAN’ | Hon is eagerly anticipated by men ‘The | dieab! | whom Mr. MoAdoo could have count- THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 21 0. M & BL PL Ry 40% hi, Poeun, ‘Tool, oo Omi, BR 1, & Pac, 0%, Cohm. Grigio, Coma Colle... Commol, Gas Oo, Cont, Candy». Corn Prot, Com Prog Go. 1084 104% Cruntinle Steet 45% 142% Cute Cane Super. IY BIG Cae Cade Bog. vl 80 80 KO Om, Am, Srmr... oe Sou, Text, Comp Del Lac & Went Den & Mio Gr., Fikhom Coal, nd-Johnaon bre. Famous Playem ., Fiok Rutiver (as Wil & Wie General Motor Gen De. Gteat Nor Ry pi, Great Nor Ore Greene Cananea ... Hankel & Barbe: Tlinoia Cont Inspiration Cop. Interboro Con 88% TOM RNG BG 1% 17% IT 1TH 78% 70% 70 0 COMPLETE STOCK QUOTATIONS —2 P, M. Keymone ‘Tire Loema Ine Lackawanna Sie! Lehign Valley Loft Lue, Lomita. Louie & Nash, Mexican Petroisum Millie Body Midvale Stee! Mimouti Pac, Middle States Oil. Manat! suger Nationa) Aniline N.Y, N. H&B. ath 4 10% 137% OR, 1TV4y 8 a 16% ‘ Hy 178 as 41% Ay 18% Northern Pac Nore Scotia Staal. Souat, Stuatetbad ar mn ong noLe Bu mK aL & nus nh Mel T, & 7% «5% Rae Cs, 4 Ig 10% ‘Teh, Prod, ‘Trams, & Wwe, ‘Dwin Olty Rapid. Vaio Pacific Weet Maryland. West Pac, Corp West, Airbrate EARLY CONVENTION (Continued from Page One.) pendent drys will, eventually, have to line up behind the man who led| the Democratic Party to defeat three times and is coming to San Francisco with @ brand new issue, the single standard of morals, in addition to a determination to commit the party to unflagging support of the Eigh- teenth Amendment and the Volstead Act. In the matter of submerging Mr. Bryan it has been decided pot to allow him to get away with afiything. He 18 to be fought every meh of the road. Great hopes of halting Mr. Bryan are centred around Goy. Smith of New York, The Governor's roputation as a ready debater in a rough and tumble way hi spread all over the country and his active partict- pation in the affairs of the conven- who have been more or less stepped on by Mr, Bryan in nearly every convention for twenty-four years be- cause they were afraid of bis gift of excoriation and sarcasm, With Goy, Smith as the ant!-Bryan commander in chief, backed up by men with loud voices and experience in debate such as Senator Pomerene of Ohio, the leaders figure that the Nebraskan can be broken down. As & Matter of fact, they know that Bryan must be crippled or completely led before he gets an oppor- tunity to rally any considerable fol- lowing around him. There can be no compromise on this issue. One of the things Mr. Bryan will have to explain is whether he {s participating in the convention as a delegate from the State of Nebraska, where he spends very little of his time, or as a paid attorney of the Anti-Saloon League. iis explanation on that point will have to be full and explicit, As to candidates, there is a pro- nounced difference of opinion over the effect of the withdrawal from the field of Willlam G. McAdoo, The pre- Pc srenc’ of sentiment is that Mr. CAdoo's announcement that he is not a candidate is on the level. It would appear from casual considera- tion that with McAdoo out the chances of Goy, Cox of.Ohio would be strengthened, Many astute leaders, however, fig- ure the other way. They think Mc- Adoo's withdrawal will help Attorn General A, Mitchéll Palmer. While Gov. Cox has not personally com mitted himself, he 18 regarded as a wet, and nothing but a definite dec. luration to the contrary will disabut that impression, Of course if Gov. Cox should declare himself dry he would automatically separate himself | from the big wet delegations, without which he cannot hope to get the nomination OS bm 2% G2 BM OK! ‘ Kennecott +. 4% Ws 2% 26%! % 18% OOH 116 kind, Under gihe two-thirds rule a combination between them, with some outside aid which either might ob- tain, could block the convention and cause a deadlock. But such a com- bination is not concetvable, The question is which of tke two is the more likely to obtain enough votes from the outside to exercise the controlling influence—that is, an in- fluence which would enable ‘him, by virtue of lining up solidly, say, 378 votes, to throw a monkey wrench into the machinery. At this time, accord- Ing to men on the ground who are familiar with the personnel of the delegations, the advantage rests with Mr, Palmer use he has the greater number of delegates to start with, arid he 1s reasonably sure of the Federal office holder support, which would, in the natural course of events, have gone to joo, Mr. Palmer id manage to show on the or third ballot that he controlled more than a third of the delogates and that these dele- tes would stick to him he could have the convention eatinz out of his hand, because, in the aspect of the situation as it stands now, Gov. Cox would be unable in the early stagos to get a third of the votes, because his reserve strength is scattered and much of it is paceet: However, this is all early bird stuff. Anything might happen. The very air ie full of possibilities, Headquarters for Gov, Edwards will be opened to-day and his advance agents aré claiming he has a great wany More votes in reseryy t41n he is credited with. The trovble with the advance agents, who get on the ground early is that they claim too much, ° For instance, they claim 63 out of the 88° New England delegates after the first ballot, It is true that prob- wbly 65 out of the 88 delegates from New England are wet, but they arpn't all for Edwards. The Edwards advance @ are claiming the votes of Florida after the first ballot. Florida's delegation will be practi- cally all wet, but there is nothing to indicate it will go to Edwards. , However, the Edwards forces are arranging for a hot campaign before the convention. A surprising devel- opment ig the positive assertion on behalf of the wards scouts, which is backed up by others, that the South is gradually falling away from) ita adherence to national Prohibition and that this will be shown in the convention, although a majority of the Southern delegates are dry and one State, South Carolina, is in- structed dry and will not vote for a wet candidaté or a plank that has any suspicion of dampness about it. ee CHURCH FOLK DO PAINTING; SAVE $500 Pastor Helps Brooklyn Congrega: tion to Redecorate His Parsonage, G Reformed Church, Lincoln Road and Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, has solved partly the problem of reducing the high cost of living. Whe parsonage needed painting. The lowest bid of contractors was $500. So the men of the church, after talking the matter over with Pastor Goorge William Carter, decided to do the Job themsely Attired in overalls and sweaters, A majority of the delegates upon | i ed are believed to be | and Gov. Cox ix in, the wet column, But they would yote for Attorney Generale Palmer, who is a consistent Prohibitionist, nd on that account 7.00 cents per pound and aver: awed 94,00 Comle ver pound.—nvdvL ed by William Jennings Bryan. Cox, it is estimated, wilt rn convention with frou: 100 stick to the last dich’ delegates. each man, with a paint pot and brush, went to work Saturday afternoon, Bome tackled the sides, others thy cornice, while some busied themaelyes onthe porch, ‘The pastor busied him- x GERMAN. ARMY officer, A Kast EB cf black soldiers Africa, ‘They intend They descend upon He is « swears revenge and. strips himself comes Tarzan of the Apes. Prussian vultures. nition, ing of which is an encounter with a massive lion. atte? a terrific struggle and succeeds in trapping the lion in his lalr. | Resuming his journey, he discovers Teader, Schneider, renlizes ‘Tarzan means to feed him Schnoider ty placed within easy reach of the savage beast at the mouth of the cave, while Tarzan continues on his way to the trenches. succeeds in killing a sniper, which machine gun against the enemy. the lion, and-——— Li The Evening World. A T last he stood upon the floor) of the guleh, Silent as & disembodied spirit he. ad vanced toward the tree He was half way there and no sign of Numa, He reached the scarred bole from which the famished lion had devoured the bark and even torn} pleces of the wood itself and yet Nu-) ma had not appeared. As he drew himself up to the lower branches he | commenced to wonder if Numa were in the cave after all. Could it be possible that he had forced the bur- rier of racks with which Tarzan had plugged the other end of the passage) where it opened into the outer world | of freedom? Or was Numa dead? The ape-man doubted the verity of the latter suggestion as he had fed the lion the entire carcasses of a deer and a hyena only a fow days since—! he could not have starved in so short a time, while the little rivulet running across the gulch furnished him with water a-plenty. Tarzan started to descend and in- vestigate the cavern when it occurred to him that it would save effort were he to lure Numa out instead. Acting upon the thought he uttered a low growl Immediately he was re- warded by the ‘ound of movement within the cave and an instant later a wilé-eyed, haggard lion rushed forth ready to face the devil himself were he edible. When Numa saw Tarzan, fat and sleek, perched in the trée he became suddenly the embodi- ment of frightful rage. His eyes gnd nose told him thit this: was “the creature responsible for his predica- ment and also that this' creature was good to eat. Frantically the lion sought to scramble up the bole of the tree. Twice he leaped high ‘enough to catch the lowest branches with hig paws; but both times he fell back ward to the earth, Each time he be- came more furious. His growls and roars were incessant and horrible and all the time’ Tarzan sa. gnening down upon hjm, taunting him in jungle Billingsgate for his inability to reach him and mentally exulting that always Numa was wasting his al- ready waning strength. Finally the ape-man rose’ and un- slung his rope. He arranged the the coils carefully in his left hand jand the noose in his right, and then he took a position with each foot on one of two branches that lay in about the same horizontal plane and with his back pressed firmly against the stem of the tree. There he stood hurling insults at Numa unti» the beast was again goaded into leaping upward at him, and as Numa rose the noose dropped quickly over his head and about his neck. A quick movement of Tarzan's rope hand tightened the coil and when Numa slipped backward to the ground only his hind feet touched, for the ape- man held him swinging by the neck Moving slowly outward upon the two branches Tarzan swung Numa out so'that he could not reach, the bole of the tree with his ra&ing talons, then he made the rope fast after drawing the lion clear of the ground, dropped his five pigskin sacks to earth and leaped down him- self, Numa was striking frantically at the grass rope with bis fore claws ‘At any moment he might seyer it and Tarzan must, therefore, work rapidly i) First he drew the larger bag r Numa's hea@ and secured it about his neck with the draw string; then he managed, after considerable effort during which he barely escaped being torn to ribbons by the mighty talons, to hog-tie Numa—drawing his four legs together and securing them in that position with the strips trimmed from the pigskins. a By his thme the lion's efforts had almost ceased: it was evident that he was being rapidly strangled and as that did not at all suit the purpose of the Tarmangani the latter swung ‘again into the tree, unfastened the rope from above and lowered the lion to the ground where he immediately followed it and loosed the no about Numa’s neck. Then he drew his hunting knife and cut two round holes in the front of the head pag opposite the Hon's eyes for the doubio lpurpose of permitting him to see and giving him sufficient air to breathe, This done Tarzan busied himseif, fitting the otaer bags, one over eact of Numa's formidably armed paws. ‘Those on the hind feet he secured not elf takiag down the awnings and helping in other ways The job was completed by 6 o'clock, and true to @ promise given, the mem- bors of the Ladies’ Auxiliary invited the tired and hungry workers into Mn, Palmer ‘u fieured (o (ie ebapel, where they served @ sup- jossness of Bara, the deer. | [have from 400 to aa) of the same ‘ now only by, tightening the draw strings lbut also rigged garters that fastened tightly around the legs above the hocks. He secured the froat-fest bags in place similarly above the great knees. Now, indeed, was Numa, the lion, reduced to the harm- A New, Thrilling and Se The Evening Wowld on Tuesday, June 15, began the publi- cation of “The Return of Turzan,” @ thrilling piece of fiction Here isa synopsis of the preceding ahapters: “ritz Sekmelder, von Goss, are marching through the African jungle with an army lish nobleman, who is none other than Tarzan of the Apes. people of that section are not gware that a state of war exists be- tween “ngland and Germany. Meanwhile Lord Greystoke returns from his trip across thé Jungle and learns of the war. home, only to see it razed, and finds his family charred beyond recog- to identify his wife by the rings on her fingers. Heartbroken, he starts out in pursuit of rzan meets with many dangers, the most thrili- He takes his prisoner to the jungle. rn of the further adventures of th: chapter and the succeeding ones which are to be published daily APTER IY, (Continved.) |depend upon the efficac: Tarzan the Untamed | Edgar Rice Burroughs of the Ape Man. witir his Lieutenant, to invade what is known as British the home of Lord Greystoke, an The He hastens (o his He almost naked and once more bi Bnally escapes | | He the German camp and captures the | ‘The Germe to the lion’ he trapped’ in the cave. | He earns for him the command of a | Before his position is discovered his bullets are responsible for many German fatalities. Fleeing to the British camp, Tarzan is welcomed and volunteers his services. ing to the German lines he decides to pay a visit to the cave of Numa, While returns | pe-man by reading this of returning life. He-* gasped for breath and struggled; but the strips of pigvkin that held his four legs to- gether were numerous and tough. | ‘arzan Watched and was sure that they would hold, yet Numa is might- ily muscled and there was the chance, always, that he of his bonds after of Tarzan's bags and draw strings. After Numa had again breathed | normally and Was able to roqr out his | protests and his rage, his struggles In- | creased to Titanic proportions for a| short time; but as a lion's powers of endurance are in no way proportion- ate to his size and strength he soon tired and lay quietly. Amid renewed growling and another futile attempt to free himself, Numa was finally forced to submit to the further indig- nity of having a rope secured about his neck; but this tin it was no noose that night tighten and strangle | him; but a bowline knot, which does not tighten or slip under strain. he other end of the rope Tarzan | fastened to the stem of the tree, then | he quickly @ut the bonds securing Numa’s legs and leaped aside as the beast sprang to his feet. For a mo- ment, the lion stood with legs far out- |spread, then he raised first one paw and then another, shaking them ener- getically in an effort to dislodge the strange footgear that Tarzan had fas- tened upon them. Finally he begun to paw at the bag upon his head. The ape-man, standing with ready spear, | watched Numas efforts intentty. Would the bags hold? He sincerely hoy 80. all his lwor prove fruitiess? As the clinging things upon his feet and face resisted his every effort to dislodge them, Numa became frantic. He rolled upon the ground, fighting, biung, scratehing, and* roaring; ho leaped to his feet and sprang into the) securing him to the tree tautened. | Then raan stepped in and rapped him smartly on the head with tho shaft of his spear. Numa reared upon his hind feet and struck at the @pe-man and in return fecelved a cuft on one ear that sent him reeling side- ways. When he returned to the at- tack he was again sent sprawling. After the fourth affort it appeared to dawn upon the king of beasts that he had met his master, his head and tall dropped, and when Tarzan ad- vanced m him he backed away, though still growling. : Leaving Numa tled to the tree Tar- zan entered the tunnel and removed the barricade from the opposite end, after which he returned to the gulch and strode straight for the tree. Numa Jay in, his path and as Tarzan ap- proached growled menacingly, The ape-man cuffed him aside and un- fastened the rope from the tree. Then ensued a half hour of stubbornly fought battle while Tarzan endeay- ored to drive Numa through the tun- nel ahead of him and Numa persist- ently refused to be driven. At last, however, bv dint of the unrfestricted use of his spear point, the ape-man succeeded in forcing the lion to move ahead of him and eventually guided him into the passageway. Once inside, the problem became simpler since Tarzan followed closely in the rear with his sharp spear point, an unremitting incentive to forward movement on the part of the lion, If Numa hesitated he was prodded. If he backed up the result was extremely painful and so, being & Wise lion who was learning rapidly, he Mecided to keep on going and at the end of the tunngl, emerging into the outer world, he sensed freedom, raised his head and tail and started eft at a run still on “his hands and inside the entrance, was n unaware, with the result that he was sprawled forward upon his face and dragged a hundred across the rocky ground before was brought to a stand. It w seratched and angry Tarzan who scrambled to his feet. At first he was tempted to chastise Numa; but as the ape-man seldom permitted his temper to guide him in any direction not countenanced by reason, he quickly abandoned the idea, Having taught Numa the rudimepts. of being driven, he now urged Mia \forward and there commenced i: strange a journey as the unrecorded history of the jungle contains. ‘ihe Yoalanee of that day was for Tarzan and for Numa. F. rebellion at first the lion through stages of stubborn resi and grudging vbedience to fir render, He was a very tired. and thirsty lion. wh them, but there was to be |him that day or the next—Tarzon did not dare risk removing the head bag, lthough he did cut another hole, waieti permitted Numa to quench his thirsc ntful both om open passed Nuss wee ahowias signs to @ Lies, eougdt food for bimsor aad stress Sesion nsational Story | most a purr. | a.vattle; 1 air; he charged Tarzan, only to be) brought to a sudden stop as Thecrope [heroic methods of lion taming that he shortly after dark, ‘Then he tied him m stretched out among the branches above his captive for a few hours sleep. Barly the following morning they resumed their journey, winding over the low foothills south of Kilimanjoro toward the east, The beasts of the jungle who saw them took one look and fled, ‘The scent spoor of Nume, alone, might hate been enoysir to have provoked flight In many of the lesse: animals, but the sight of this strange apparition that smelled like a lon but looked like nothing they had ever seen before, being led through the jungles by a giant Tarmangani, was too much for even the more formid ble denizens of the wild Sabor, the lioness, recognizing from @ distance the scent of her lord and master {intermingled with that of « , Tarmangan! and the hide of Horta, the boar, trotted through the aisles of the forest to investigate. Tarzan and Numa heard her coming, for che voleed a plaintive and~ questioning whine as the baffling mixture of ovors aroused her guriosity and her fears for lions, however terrible they may appear, are often timid animals and Sabor being of the gentler sex naturally, habitually dnquisitive well. Tarzan unslung his spear, for he knew that he might now easily have to fight to retain his prize. Numa halted and turned his outraged head in the direction of the coming she. He voiced a throaty grow! that was al ‘Tarzan was upon the point of prodding him on again whe Sabor ‘broke into view, and behind he: the ape-man saw that which gave him instant pause—four full-grown lions trailing the lioness, To have goaded Numa then into tive resistance might have brough! We Senote herd down upon tim, and so Tgrzan waited to learn first what their attitude would be. He had np idea of relinquishing his lon without but knowing lions as he did he knew that there was no as#irance as to just what the noweomers would do. The lioness was young and sie and the four males were In theif prime—as handsome, lions as he ever had seen. Three of the males wer scantily maned, but one, the foremost, carried a splendid black mane that rippled in the breeze as ho trotted majestically forward. The Honess halted a hundred feet from Tarzan, waite the lions ¢: stopped a few were upstanding and their with curiosity, ‘Tarzan could not even guess what they might do. The lion at his side faced them fully, standing silent now and watehful Suddenly the lionéss gave vent to another little whine, at which T. zan's lion voiced u terrific rour and leaped forward beast of the bla of this awesome ture with the strange face was too much for the n toward which he leaped, drag- ging Tarzan after him, and with o growl the lion turned and fled, fol- lowed by his companions and the se. Numa attempted jo follow them but Tarzan held him in leah and when he turned upon him in rage beat him unmercifuily across the with his spear, Shaking his head and growling, the lion at last moved again in the direction they had traveling; but It was an hour befor: he ceased to sulk. He was very hungry—half (mished, in fact-—and consequently of an ugly temper, yet #0 thoroughly subdued by, Tarsan's was presently pacing along at thi ape-man's side like some huge st Bernard, . It was dark when the two ap proached the British right after a slight delay further back becauae of « Gernian patro} it had been necessary to elude. A short distance from the British line of outguard sentinels ‘Tarzan tied Numa to a tree and con- Unued-on alone, He evaded a sentinel, passed the outguard and support and by devious ways came again to Col. Capell’s headquarters, where he appeared before the officers gathered there as a disembodied spirit materializing out of thin air. When they saw who St was that came thus unannounced they smiled and the Colonel scratehed his heed th preplexity, “Some one sholild be shot for this," he said. “1 might just as well r establish an outpost if a man c filter through whenever he pleases. Tarzin smiled. “Do ‘not blame them,” he said, “for Iam not a ma n T am a@ Tarmangant, Any Mangani who Wished to could enter your camp aimost at will: but if you ad thera ‘or sentinels no one could en' < out thetr knowledge” | "oT Wit “What are the Mangani?" the Colonel. "Perhaps we might eniise? a bunch of the beggars.” Tarzan shook his head. ‘They are the great apes,” he explained; “my people; but you could not use thems They cannot concentrate long enough upon a single {dea. If [ told them of this they would be much interested for a short time—I might even hold the interest of a few long enough to get them here and explain their duties to them; but soon they would Jose interest and when you needed them most they might be off in the forest searching for beetles instead of watching their posts, ‘They have the minds of little children—that is why ey beh what they are.” “You call them Mangani ro! self Tarmangani—what is the aie ference?” asked Major Preswick. “Tar means white,” replied ‘and Mangan, great ape a apa the name they gave me in the tribe of Kerchak—means White-skin, When t P T was @ little balu my skin, T pre ume, “looked very white’ indeed j the beautiful, black coat of my foster mother, and so they me Tarzan, the’ Parmangani | you, too,,Tarmangani,” he jconcluded smiling wee | It is no reproach e paid; “and, by Jove it would be a mark of distination tt a fellow could act the part, And now |how about your plan? Do you stil think you can empty the treneh wp- | posite our secto “In it still held by Gon “ Jasked Tarzan. igs “What are Gomangani? inquired the Colonel. “It ty stil held by ng. [tive troopa, 4g jo what’ yeu (nh