(Washington, DC). 1937-07-20

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(Washington, DC). 1937-07-20 MOON MULLINS. Plushic Has His Dotted. TOONERVILLE FOLKS. Eye —By WILLARD -- F LADY I TOLD HIM T-t- >f;7 TO GO HUSBANDS SHOULDN’T HUSBANDS N, WELL,I ALWAYS SAID, PLUSHBOTTOM \ / AHEAD AND TELL HER NEVER TRY TO SELDOM \ "HONESTY WAS TH' y MAYBE AIN'T M IT WAC GONNA PlNkEY LUB FOOL THEIR WIVES. DEARIE. I BEST POLICY AND / SO, PET- GIVE HER AND LET HER CON s FESSION WAS GOOD BUT IT SURE , HUSBAND A BIT N LUMP IT/ FOR TH' -SOUL" / DIDN'T DO OF PEACE TILL SHE HIS EYE fI FINDS OUT WHO THAT | 1 ANY GOOD. WOMAN WAS THAT ^ PHONED HIM. I MR. AND MRS. In the Marhling Crowd. <c) 1931 N y. T*i&vm«,iate UJHy DID you APOLOGIZE To (juhx im "Timb DonT you Look* J—-—--- LOHAT NEXT < you RUN SUM That geeat oae T h&. Ujmerb yougE GoingT —I INTO A MAN AMOTrtEN RUMS IMTo you ANO you p- HIM To —1 MEEkLy SAy PAfeDoM ME f~~ 1 ExpecT apologize! —-- -■ ”■ ■ ISThERE 1 -1 tv-1- SAy AN/ftlNG GROWING PAINS I DolHATS RightT -—•— -—i ■—*—* By Phillips —.— TARZAN’S —]By EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS QUEST._ __ • E4^»' *>'• !»-• -TB Rt« a p. Of UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, ’inc! Copvnght. 1937 Fviuirf Ffatar**. Ine V*^w ——'—-----*■- Muviro believed It was to an In- hopeless attempt "They may be alive," Tarzan continued, "and we Far behind them a maniac in the Above him r silent stalker. He was 'DO YOU REALLY LIKE IT? I COPIED gibbered glided Ydenl, IT FROM AN EXCLUSIVE MODEL vasion of the Kavuru "But must dare all for them. village. your daughter Much that life holds for gloomy recesses of the forest. In every shadow the Kavuru. Ydeni this was for* I SAW IN THE DIME STORE.” smiled; good Buira is there,” Tarzan reminded him. 'Lady us is behind those can no gates. We admit ob- Prince Sborov seemed to see the ghost of the wife tune indeed. Kavandavanda was fond of maniacs, Jane, your Mem-sahib Is there: and another white stacles. We must do. or die!" The black war- he had murdered. He stumbled and fell, shrieked and here was a chance to please his master. Ydenl I .........1 girl who belongs to this man." He toward rior gestured answered simply; "Where the Big Bwana leads, and ran, until at last he was hopelessly lost in the dropped dowm, leaped upon his victim and bora the American. Muviro follows!" jungle maze. him to the Daily Cross-Word Puzzle ground. DAN DUNN. Secret Operative 48. —By NORMAN MARSH. ™ «■ "^vhhv'v \ __... «v*i> 11>iir ■-"■ YES, SHERIFF- Ttn ULFU I Ibo— IHLN Wt LL OUKKUU^U HELLO, DAN- THEY'VE ALL FIFTEEN SPECIAL THE PLACE AND AT TO EVERYTHING GONE TO BED- DEPUTIES--THEY'RE DAYBREAK TRY TAKE THE MEN ALL RIGHT?? EXCEPT TWO ALL GOOD SHOTS— THEM—WARN FINGER MURPHY- THAT TWO FINGER AND ZINGERS ARE KILLERS— K-im fn;n 1 -- ... MESCAL IKE. Now Go Ahead. —By S. L. HUNTLEY. HEBE'S VO’R. saw, Twer \ hougut i _ I A LoIIv <5^HS. LL -JEST 'TM/XR5 PQerW ) THEM STEAKS Gags SET DOWNJ AM’ S\WELL STEAK'. J * UP IS tT TRUE sue HASJ VEAr LUITW VUH T7-—_ A_ SECRET SORROW ?, Across. 4. Decompose. 1. Amulet. 5. Greek letter. 6. Have recourse. 6. Tropical medicinal 11. Highways. plant. 14. Country cottage. 7. Lizards. 15. Networks. 8. Portly. 17. Made of oatmeal. 9. The heaths. OM.-VES- WASMT 18. Parts of brick. 10. Register. SME TOCO VOO ABOUT 19. Geometrical figure. 11. Conjuror's tricks. IT Y£T 1 20. Place. 12. Dazzling. 21. Genus of gastropods. 13. Emotionally. 23. Bill of fare. 14. Plant bushwood. 24. Merganser. 16. Shabby. 26. Thistlelike plant. 18. Ice mass. by 8. 28. Accomplished. 22. Enumeration of (6opyT^t^ld37, Hantliy) population, (Trade Mark Kef U 8 Pat Office) r>-'^ I \ 29. Pendant. 23. Celestial body. Si. Indian of Arizona. 25. Envelop. 33. Pronoun. 27. Droplike architectural decorations. WAR ON CRIME- The Prison break in Ohio. ° 5 -By REX COLLIER 34. Despots. 30. Incensed. 35. Ingate in founding. 32. Telepnotographic lens. story of brunette and his crime rrOU BOS WARDEN NOW'S th' van / 87. Greek letter. 36. Low [The fart] time, drinking place. NCR. BEGAN ON A TOLEDO STREET IN 1031 j LIKE COUNTRY 38. Masculine name. 37. Approaches. I SHOWN YOU CAN \^E WALK FAST BESIDE ME. 40. Assigns to another legally. 39. Bewails. BEHAVE .WE'RE \ LIFE/ JULY 12,1936 HEAD FOR TH' ROAD AN 42. Sea bird. 40. Efficiently. THE IF 44. transferring you RUN THEY DISCOVER, Tibetan cereal food. 41. Wise men. TO THE LONDON DESPERATE 46. Backs. 43. Varieties of saltpeter. / />-< 47. Quick. 45. Tropical fruit. PRISON FARM. / PAIR ESCAPED 49. Men. 48. Drain by percolation. FROM THE 61. Silence by force. 50. Chairs. LONDON 82. Ceremonial. 53. Fare. PRISON B*RM 53. Gainsay. 55. Masculine name. 54. Bird of prey. 57. Affirmative argument. IN OHIO ..TO 66. Grating. 58. Sound made by pigeons. BEGIN A 58. Ship-raising devices. 60. Two thousand. SPECTACULAR 59. Stimulating secretion. 61. Marksman. SERIES OF 62. Covered with lichens. MOPS'Y —By Gladys Parker CRIME Down. EXPLOITS' 1. Prates. TOMORROW: 2. Cavity. 3. Field of combat. After five years in the ohio state BRUNETTE PENITENTIARY FOR THE TOLEDO HOLD-UP DISARMS / THE LAW / Solution to Yesterday’s Puzzle. THE FAIR RECEIVE GOOD NEWS and bestow special gifts. You will find many of them visiting posite each other on the stem and flowers and blooms profusely from Twizzler Answer. Nature’s Children The St. John’s wort Is a the blossoms the June until family regularly. are oblong. They clasp smooth September. There are six combinations pos- one. Its members the The to the effect that the small prefer plants prefer the waste lands, stem, as they are stalkless. Legends plant sible for A, B and C to enter the I warm and climates. There roadsides and fields. their is a "devil chaser" would also be a BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. temperate They attract After the insects have made offices at the same time through dif- are kinds of and attention their reason the St. John's several hypericum your by bright, yellow- call, the plant hastens to set her seeds. very good why ferent doors. Here are: Golden St. John’s Wort they are distributed. All of faced blossoms. a should find a in our gar- they widely They are about 1 Later the fruit will be found in wort place Door 1. Door 2. Door 3. Hj/pericaceae. leaves and for who would not like to have them have without stalks, inch across and there may be several handsome little brown capsule, where den, 1. A B C these flowers bloom on St. yellow flowers with three to six styles. in the terminal clusters. The the flowers were seen in June. a sentinel guarding our beloved flowers I gECAUSE calyx golden 2. A C B name is a Greek one and has of room and homes? There are s6 many vir- John's day they have been hon- The the five lance-shaped sepals, five If you have an abundance 3. B A C tues said to be the mem- ored with his name. Besides, the flowers bloom in June, St. John’s day, petals, all dotted with black, and in your garden, these flowers will add possessed by *. B C A of this that one hesitates plants are supposed to have magic which is the 24th. there are numerous stamens in three to the charm of it. There are several bers family 5. C A B or in to the out of our list of powers. And it is said that when the No nectar is offered the guests by sets. There are three styles. that will grow in rocky places leave plant 6. C B A witches and fairies are on the St. John's worts. olden In the where the has and there a wealth of frieads. One special direction for the abroad, Only places plant sand, develop ---- ■ ■ -•. .—. the eve of the day the flowers bloom, pollen is given to the insects for the the food it needs, the stem grows to foliage. There is one member that is plucking of the flowers Is to do so on Jim the haj they are visited by these night folks service they render. This seems to be a height of 3 feet, very erect and with a friendly little plant, growing to the Friday in the hour of Jupiter. This Mollison, English flyer, the Oxford Movement. * so that they may lp turn call on us satisfactory the pollen collectors. many braAhes. The leaves grow op- size of a shrub, and developing lovely makes the charm doubly potent. Group * I ~f» joined .
Recommended publications
  • The Tarzan Series of Edgar Rice Burroughs
    I The Tarzan Series of Edgar Rice Burroughs: Lost Races and Racism in American Popular Culture James R. Nesteby Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy August 1978 Approved: © 1978 JAMES RONALD NESTEBY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ¡ ¡ in Abstract The Tarzan series of Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950), beginning with the All-Story serialization in 1912 of Tarzan of the Apes (1914 book), reveals deepseated racism in the popular imagination of early twentieth-century American culture. The fictional fantasies of lost races like that ruled by La of Opar (or Atlantis) are interwoven with the realities of racism, particularly toward Afro-Americans and black Africans. In analyzing popular culture, Stith Thompson's Motif-Index of Folk-Literature (1932) and John G. Cawelti's Adventure, Mystery, and Romance (1976) are utilized for their indexing and formula concepts. The groundwork for examining explanations of American culture which occur in Burroughs' science fantasies about Tarzan is provided by Ray R. Browne, publisher of The Journal of Popular Culture and The Journal of American Culture, and by Gene Wise, author of American Historical Explanations (1973). The lost race tradition and its relationship to racism in American popular fiction is explored through the inner earth motif popularized by John Cleves Symmes' Symzonla: A Voyage of Discovery (1820) and Edgar Allan Poe's The narrative of A. Gordon Pym (1838); Burroughs frequently uses the motif in his perennially popular romances of adventure which have made Tarzan of the Apes (Lord Greystoke) an ubiquitous feature of American culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarzan the Censored
    TARZAN THE CENSORED by Jerry L. Schneider Forward In "Edgar Rice Burroughs: Master of Adventure" by Richard A. Lupoff, the author stated that the Ballantine Books' versions of the Tarzan series were edited (evidently for political correctness), not the "all complete and unabridged" as Ballantine stated on the paperbacks. So, armed with the earliest hardcover editions that I owned in my collection (McClurg, A. L. Burt, Grosset & Dunlap, Burroughs Inc., and Canaveral Press) and post 1969 Ballantine editions, I scanned through them for discrepancies and changes. There were changes from the early hardcovers that I found in some of the paperbacks. Some of the books in the Tarzan series were edited for "political correctness" with regards to ethnicity dialects and derogatory terms. Hard to read dialects (or hard to typeset) were changed to an easier form (i.e. hit's changed to it's, heat to eat, and hour to our), while extremely derogatory terms such as Jew (see Tarzan and the Golden Lion) and nigger were altered or eliminated (not for the betterment of the story as the alteration in the words has lessened the impact the originals imparted to the reader—the level of anger toward the character who spoke the words has been lessened). The term "black" remained in place in some books but removed from others—no rhyme or reason to the changes. Esmeralda's original dialect in "Tarzan of the Apes" remained in place through 1969, then edited downward to an easier and friendlier version. Because of these changes, an in-depth look at the various editions of "Tarzan of the Apes" is shown below, while the other books in the Tarzan series are only compared by using an early hardcover version and the first version that was edited, usually the Ballantine edition.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarzan's Quest
    Tarzan's Quest By Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan's Quest 1. THE PRINCESS SBOROV "My dear Jane, you know everyone." "Not quite, Hazel; but one sees everyone in the Savoy." "Who is that woman at the second table to our right?—the one who spoke so cordially. There is something very familiar about her—I'm sure I've seen her before." "You probably have. Don't you remember Kitty Krause?" "O-oh, yes; now I recall her. But she went with an older crowd." "Yes, she's a full generation ahead of us; but Kitty'd like to forget that and have everyone else forget it." "Let's see—she married Peters, the cotton king, didn't she?" "Yes, and when he died he left her so many millions she didn't have enough fingers to count 'em on; so the poor woman will never know how rich she is." "Is that her son with her?" "Son, my dear! That's her new husband." "Husband? Why, she's old enough to—" "Yes, of course; but you see he's a prince, and Kitty always was— er—well, ambitious." "Yes, I recall now—something of a climber; but she climbed pretty high, even in aristocratic old Baltimore, with those Peters millions." "But she's an awfully good soul, Hazel. I'm really very fond of her. There isn't anything she wouldn't do for a friend, and underneath that one silly complex of hers is a heart of gold." "And kind to her mother! If anyone ever says I'm good-hearted, I'll —" "S-sh, Hazel; she's coming over." The older woman, followed by her husband, swooped down upon them.
    [Show full text]
  • Back to the Stone Age
    BACK TO THE STONE AGE But Jason Gridley shook his head. “The rest of you go on,” he said. “I will remain in Pellucidar until I have solved the mystery.” Von Horst, von Horst— where are you now, Bill? Can you see that endless sun on high— can you sing those jazz- tune songs you loved and hear me calling? Or are your BACK TO THE STONE AGE dusty bones in some killer-cat’s lair and a ghost voice your only answer? PROLOGUE HE tale of the pioneer flight of the giant Zeppe - Tlin O-220 has already been told. In the Log Book of Great Adventures, written deep in red, have been inscribed the perils and privations, the victories and defeats, of those gallant companions from this land of ours who braved the mysteries of Pellucidar. Pellucidar — mocked by smug scientists who blind themselves to the proofs that our Earth is a hollow sphere, containing a habitable world within its interior! Pellucidar — scorned and derided by timid savants who fear to see beyond their own knotted brows, scoffing that here is no great opening at the frozen poles, that only two plus two makes four! But there were men of broader vision, of deeper un - derstanding, in that prize crew of the Zeppelin O-220; One was a tall man with mighty shoulders who walked with a cat’s soft tread; as Lord Greystoke he was known in London, though the creatures of the tropic wild called him Tarzan of the Apes. A second was Jason Gridley, the American explorer who financed the expedition.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarzan on Film Free
    FREE TARZAN ON FILM PDF Scott Tracy Griffin | 224 pages | 05 Aug 2016 | Titan Books Ltd | 9780857685681 | English | London, United Kingdom Tarzan () - IMDb From Coraline to ParaNorman check out some of our favorite family-friendly movie picks to watch this Halloween. See the Tarzan on Film gallery. The movie is about the life of Tarzan. Tarzan was a small orphan who was raised by an Tarzan on Film named Kala since he was a child. He believed that this was his family, but on an expedition Jane Porter is rescued by Tarzan. He then finds out that he's human. Now Tarzan must make the decision as to which family he should belong to Written Tarzan on Film Extron. They rewrote the whole legend. But Disney Tarzan on Film an unerring way of doing that. Anyone remember Pocahontas? They even changed Cinderella, Snow White, and every other Disney Masterpiece sitting on your shelves, so why does it matter that this, too, was changed? It matters on several different levels, but the most important reason it matters is because Disney, in their positioning among the children's entertainment market, is in the unique position to actually teach these legends, these snippets Tarzan on Film history, these morals and ethics, to the children of their audiences, rather than proffering sugar-coated, merchandized over-glorifications in exchange for the great American dollar. That having been said, this is still an entertaining introduction to the legend, but I highly suggest "Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes,"directed by Hugh Hudson. It is the most faithful adaptation I've ever seen, and a highly enjoyable adventure, which carries a PG rating and is Tarzan on Film for most ages to view.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarzán, Y El Imperio Perdido
    Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzán, y el imperio perdido I Nkima danzaba excitadamente sobre el hombro moreno y desnudo de su amo. Parloteaba y chillaba mirando alternativamente a Tarzán a la cara, como interrogándole, y después hacia la jungla. -Algo se acerca, bwana -dijo Muviro, subjefe de los waziri-. Nkima lo ha oído. -Y Tarzán -declaró el hombre mono. -El oído del gran bwana es tan fino como el de Bara, el antílope prosiguió Muviro. -Si no lo hubiera sido, Tarzán hoy no estaría aquí dijo el hombre mono con una sonrisa-. No habría llegado a la edad adulta si Kala, su madre, no le hubiera enseñado a emplear todos los sentidos que Mulungu le dio. -¿Qué es lo que se acerca? -preguntó Muviro. -Un grupo de hombres -respondió Tarzán. -Tal vez no son amistosos -sugirió el africano-. ¿Aviso a los guerreros? Tarzán miró alrededor del pequeño campamento donde una veintena de hombres luchadores estaban preparando su colación nocturna y vio que, como era costumbre entre los waziri, tenían sus armas preparadas y a mano. -No -dijo-. Creo que será innecesario, ya que esta gente que se acerca no viene con sigilo como lo haría un enemigo, ni su número es tan grande como para que les temamos. Pero Nkima, pesimista nato, esperaba lo peor, y a medida que el grupo se acercaba su nerviosismo iba en aumento. Bajó de un salto del hombro de Tarzán al suelo y dio varios brincos; luego, volvió junto a Tarzán, le cogió el brazo y trató de hacerle poner en pie. -¡Corre, corre! -gritó en el lenguaje de los monos-.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarzan the Invincible
    Tarzan The Invincible By Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan The Invincible 1. LITTLE NKIMA I am no historian, no chronicler of facts, and, furthermore, I hold a very definite conviction that there are certain subjects which fiction writers should leave alone, foremost among which are politics and religion. However, it seems to me not unethical to pirate an idea occasionally from one or the other, provided that the subject be handled in such a way as to impart a definite impression of fictionizing. Had the story that I am about to tell you broken in the newspapers of two certain European powers, it might have precipitated another and a more terrible world war. But with that I am not particularly concerned. What interests me is that it is a good story that is particularly well adapted to my requirements through the fact that Tarzan of the Apes was intimately connected with many of its most thrilling episodes. I am not going to bore you with dry political history, so do not tax your intellect needlessly by attempting to decode such fictitious names as I may use in describing certain people and places, which, it seems to me, to the best interest of peace and disarmament, should remain incognito. Take the story simply as another Tarzan story, in which, it is hoped, you will find entertainment and relaxation. If you find food for thought in it, so much the better. Doubtless, very few of you saw, and still fewer will remember having seen, a news dispatch that appeared inconspicuously in the papers some time since, reporting a rumor that French Colonial Troops stationed in Somaliland, on the northeast coast of Africa, had invaded an Italian African colony.
    [Show full text]
  • The Face in the Trees
    Tangor's Pastiche and FanFiction http://www.erblist.com 1 Tangor's Pastiche and FanFiction http://www.erblist.com THE FACE IN THE TREES By James D. Bozarth Part 1 and 2 Copyright © 1997 Part 3 Copyright © 2010 PART 1 THE CHASE HAD BEEN a long one, but soon it would be over. The Phantom stopped and scanned the jungle before him. Thickly overgrown, it was almost impenetrable; how- ever, the three fugitives with their prisoner had opened a path for him in their three month long rush to escape. Still, it would be foolish, if not deadly, to follow blindly where they led. He had not survived so long in the jungle by being care- less. He had no desire to become the ghost they thought him to be. Seeing no fresh sign of them he set out again, heading south along the west coast of Africa. Even though it was far from his native Bangalla, the jungle was as familiar to him as his own. He pushed aside a frond of leaves and stopped dead in his tracks. In front of him, where he never expected to see one, was a log cabin. He slipped back into the jungle and 2 Tangor's Pastiche and FanFiction http://www.erblist.com peered at the structure. He could see no movement, but he was in no hurry to announce himself to anyone within. He waited a while, scanning the area. He noted the general air of disuse and decay. However, some small things puzzled him. The door was open but it looked like it was still functional and could close.
    [Show full text]
  • Lecture Notes in Computer Science 812 Edited by G
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science 812 Edited by G. Goos and J. Hartmanis Advisory Board: W. Brauer D. Gries J. Stoer J. Karhum~iki H. Maurer G. Rozenberg (Eds.) Results and Trends in Theoretical Computer Science Colloquium in Honor of Arto Salomaa Graz, Austria, June 10-11, 1994 Proceedings Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg NewYork London Paris Tokyo Hong Kong Barcelona Budapest Series Editors Gerhard Goos Juris Hartmanis Universitiit Karlsruhe CorneU University Postfach 69 80 Department of Computer Science Vincenz-Priessnitz-Stral3e 1 4130 Upson Hall D-76131 Karlsruhe, Germany Ithaca, NY 14853, USA Volume Editors Juliani Karhum~iki Department of Mathematics, University of Turku SF-20500 Turku, Finland Hermann Maurer Institut fiir Grundlagen der Informationsverarbeitung und Computergesttitzte neue Medien, TU Graz SchielSstattgasse 4a, A-8010 Graz, Austria Grzegorz Rozenberg Department of Computer Science, Leiden University P. O. Box 9512, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands CR Subject Classification (1991): F, E.3, G.2-3 ISBN 3-540-58131-6 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg New York ISBN 0-387-58131-6 Springer-Verlag New York Berlin Heidelberg CIP data applied for This work is subject to copyright. All fights are reserved, whether the whole or part of the material is concemed, specifically the fights of translation, reprinting, re-use of illustrations, recito';~- k.~.~c~ ~ting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other way, and storage in data banks. Duplicntinn of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the German Copyright Law of September 9, 1965, in its current version, and permission for us~ must always be obtained from Springer-Verlag.
    [Show full text]
  • Mr. Burroughs' Prologue
    Mr. Burroughs’ Prologue he events related in this book may well test the credulity of even the most jaded reader of adventure fiction. Yet even so, this book is not a work of imagination. It is, rather, a factual account of actual people and events. TThe setting, Barsoom—or Mars, as we know it—is equally real. With the above in mind, I direct this work to the attention of scholars and scientists, even as I offer it to those who have followed the exploits of Tarzan of the Apes, and John Carter of Mars, through thirty-eight bio novels thus far. I hope to provide the former with useful information regarding Martian science, history, and culture. And to the latter, I wish to deliver a rousing good story in which those two paragons of heroic manhood, Tarzan and John Carter, cross paths for the first, but certainly not last, time. Satisfying my readers, alas, may be easier than persuading a skeptical scientific community that this book is any- thing but a work of whimsy. I should like to show my photographs. We took many and lost none apart from undevel- oped movie footage that was over-exposed by interdimensional radiation on our return voyage. However, I am not at liberty to share my trove of singular images. The task of persuading the reader that The Martian Legion is a record of actual events must take a back seat to an- other imperative, that of assuring the privacy of certain participants. I have never been a man to betray a confidence.
    [Show full text]
  • Here Is SHAM04
    Featured New Items On our Cover MIRAGE ART QUEST OF ALEX NINO Vol 2 Signed Signed, numbered & limited, 500! Our Highest Recommendation. A fabu- lous new oversized artbook, mostly in full color, with 5 gatefolds of new artwork. Much never seen before art work in a wide variety of SHAME TRILOGY Back in stock. Highly Recommended. By Lovern Kindzierski. styles and media. Contents Art by John Bolton. The purest woman on earth allows herself in this book are Niño’s art- one selfish thought, and conceives the most evil woman the work from the past 20 years, world has ever seen. A classic adult fantasy, with absolutely a companion to his 2008 gorgeous artwork, a rich story, and abundant nudity. Virtue gets volume 1, which is long out the daughter she wished for, Shame, releasing this powerful of print. Amazing fantasy woman to a world ill-prepared for her campaign of evil. Plus the images of other worlds, monsters, nymphs, creatures first 10 pages of the first book in the Tales of Hope trilogy, John and stunning alien landscapes. Alex Niño, 2019. Bolton’s original pencil layouts, an interview with Lovern and MIRAGHS. HC, 10x13, 200pg, PC $150.00 John, and background material. Previously published as three MIRAGE ART QUEST OF ALEX NINO Vol 2 separate graphic novels. Renegade, 2016. Mature Readers. with Drawing SHAMH. HC, 7x11, 224pg, FC $29.99 Signed and Limited to 500, with a 7x10 original pen SHAME Vol 4 Hope & ink drawing, each unique. Our Highest Recommen- A gorgeous, richly drawn modern fairy tale. Highly Recom- Alex Niño, 2019.
    [Show full text]
  • Reference Index to People, P Laces, and Things
    Gathol and Tara of Helium, granddaughter of Helium, Greater Mars. JC & DT. Helium, Lesser Corinthian Umak of Arothol, commanded by Marna, younger daughter of John Carter and Horz (Orovarian) the lame jed Quarr-Tan at the Battle of the Galoom Reference Index to People, P laces, andThings Inath Dejah Thoris. Canal. Jahar Pan Dee Chee, an Orovar, and the recently Kamtool Corphal, a spirit, especially of the evil dead. Aanthor, an Orovarian Martian city, now long Pellucidar’s great jungle forest. Aul-don means Teetan Valley. deceased husband of Llana of Gathol. Koal Cosoom, Barsoomian name for the planet Venus. abandoned. “tailed men;” closely related to the Was-dons and Korad (Orovarian) Bolgani, a word meaning “gorilla” in the language Tara of Helium, wife of Gahan of Gathol, Cranston, Lamont, the alternate identity most Ho-dons of Africa’s Pal-ul-don. Kovasta Ackerman, Forrest J., 1916-2008, sent letter of of the great apes. daughter of JC & DT, mother of Llana of used by The Shadow. See Appendix K. warning to Doc Savage. aumble trees, found in the Valley Dor near the Gathol. Lothar Bowmen of Lothar, led by the odwar Kar Komak. Manator Cranston, Margo Lane, wife of The Shadow (see grazing plains of the plant men. Thuvia of Ptarth, married to Carthoris, Adik-Tar, an apothecary serving at Asoth-Naz in Marentina The Shadow). Breede, Adam, a Nebraskan writer, world traveler, possessor of a unique ability to control the palace of Klee Tun, the Holy Hekkador. Aun-ee-wan, an Aul-don tribe of the Great Forest.
    [Show full text]