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Tarzan
and the Foreign Legion
PROBABLY not
all Dutchmen are stubborn, notwithstanding the
fact that stubbornness is accounted one of their
national characteristics along with many virtues.
But if some Dutchmen lacked stubbornness, the
general average of that intangible was
maintained in the person of Hendrik van der Meer.
As practiced by him, stubbornness became a fine
art. It also became his chief avocation. His
vocation was that of rubber planter in Sumatra.
In that, he was successful; but it was his
stubbornness that his friends boasted of to
strangers.
So, even after the Philippines were invaded and
Hong Kong and Singapore fell, he would not admit
that the Japanese could take Netherland East
India. And he would not evacuate his wife and
daughter. He may be accused of stupidity, but in
that he was not alone. There were millions in
Great Britain and the United States who
underestimated the strength and resources of
Japan—some in high places.
Furthermore, Hendrik van der Meer hated the
Japanese, if one can hate what one looks upon
contemptuously as vermin. "Wait," he said. "It
will not be long before we chase them back up
their trees." His prophecy erred solely in the
matter of chronology. Which was his undoing.
And the Japs came, and Hendrik van der Meer took
to the hills. With him went his wife, who had
been Elsje Verschoor, whom he had brought from
Holland eighteen years before, and their
daughter, Corrie. Two Chinese servants
accompanied them—Lum Kam and Sing Tai. These
were motivated by two very compelling urges. The
first was fear of the Japanese, from whom they
knew only too well what to expect. The other was
their real affection for the van der Meer family.
The Javanese plantation workers remained behind.
They knew that the invaders would continue to
work the plantation and that they would have
jobs...
 The
Tarzan Twins
THE Tarzan Twins, like all well-behaved
twins, were born on the same day and, although
they were not as "alike as two peas," still they
resembled one another quite closely enough to
fulfill that particular requirement of twinship;
but even there they commenced breaking the rules
that have been governing twins during the past
several millions of years, for Dick had a shock
of the blackest sort of black hair, while Doc's
hair was the sunny hue of molasses candy. Their
noses were alike, their blue eyes were alike;
alike were their chins and their mouths. Perhaps
Doc's eyes twinkled more and his mouth smiled
more than Dick's for Dick did much of his
twinkling and smiling inside and inside the boys
were very much alike, indeed. But in one respect
they shattered every rule that has been laid
down for twins from the very beginning of time,
for Dick had been born in England and Doc in
America; a fact which upsets everything right at
the beginning of the story and proves, without
any shadow of a doubt, that they were not twins
at all...

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