This one gets a bit confusing, and not just because the contents description at the link is for an entirely different comic book. And, although the link says the issue is from May 1938, this actually seems to b=e a reprint of Sheena, Queen of the Jungle #6 from Spring 1950.
Sheena was basically a female version of Tarzan. Sheena is the young daughter of Cardwell Rivington, an African explorer who died after accidentally drinking a magic potion. she was then raised by the witch doctor Kobo, who taught her the ways of the jungle and several African languages. Sheena is skilled with knives, bows, and spears, and is able to communicate with animals. As an adult, she becomes the Queen of the Jungle and acquires a pet monkey named Chim. Sheena's "mate" is white safari guide Bob Reynolds (his last name changes over the years). According to comics historian Jess Nevins, over the years Sheena has battled "hostile natives, hostile animals, giants, a super-ape, the
Green Terror, saber-tooth tigers, voodoo cultists, gorilla-men, devil-apes, blood cults, devil queens, dinosaurs, army ants, lion men, lost races, leopard-birds, cavemen, serpent gods, vampire-apes, etc." Suffice it to say, Sheena is one tough lady.
Sheena is modeled in part on Rima, the Jungle Girl, from William Henry Hudson's 1904 novel Green Mansions. According to Will Einsner, who has been credited with creating the character with Jerry Iger, Sheen=a's name was derived in part from H. Rider Haggard's novel She; Iger disputed this, saying that Eisner was not involved in the character's and that he got the idea from the word "sheenie," a derogatory term for Jews. (Eisner and Iger had a sometimes contentious relationship.) Iger's Universal Phoenix Features, which created various comics for syndication, came up with the character (drawn by Mort Mesklin) for Editors Press Service, which sold the first Sheena story to the British comic book Wags, where it appeared in issue #46, January 1938. To disguise the fact that Universal Phoenix Features consisted only of Iger and Eisner, the pseudonym "W. Morgan Thomas."
In America, Sheena first appeared in Jumbo Comics #1, September 1938, from Fiction House. the feature appeared in every issue of Jumbo Comics, ending with the April 1953 issue. She gained her own title in 1941 with the first issue (of eighteen) of Sheena, Queen of the Jungle, dated Spring 1942 -- making her the first female comic book character with her own title -- edging out Wonder Woman, who first appeared in a Summer 1942 issue.
Later on, Sheena would be rebooted and reimagined and given supernatural powers, as well as the iconic two-piece leopard outfit many associated with her. But, for now, she is still wearing the one-piece skimpy leopard skin dress that has served her well for many adventures (I should note that in the original story, the character wore a red dress, but a red dress does not a jungle queen make).
This issue gives us three adventures of Sheena, two apparently original and one reprinted from Jumbo Comics #63. In the first, Sheena rescues Kazembe, the chief of the peaceful Basuto tribe. An evil white man, Kessler, and the fierce Dango tribe have overpowered the Basuto. Kessler is not afraid of sheena because his magic fire spear (rifle) never misses. silly man.
In the second episode, Bobtail, the king of f6ang and claw and a tawny terror, has been terrorizing the territory so Sheena has set a trap for the killer lion. In the meantime, an Egyptian prince has started a hunt for a lion, unaware that several of his servants plan to kill him so a rival can come to power. Sheena puts a halt to that plan -- actually bobtail does, by killing the man bad guy who was about to kill Sheena. Then, simply because there are more pages to go in the story, Sheena stumbles upon a safari under attack by normally peaceful Cheetahs. Turns out the great white hunter of the safari had killed a cheetah just for fun and that peeved off the other cheetahs. Turns out the bad hunter is in search of a pygmy tribe that can magically change the size of animals, either larger or smaller -- power like that could be worth a fortune in the right unscrupulous hands. Sheena and Bob are captured, left to die, escape, fight a giant warthog, chase the bad guys down the river, capture all but the bad hunter, who escapes and then is caught in a bear trap that Bob set for Bobtail. Bobtail lives to fight another day. this is the story that was a reprint.
In a two-page text story, Lady Beddington-Smythe, a noted sports huntress tries to shoot Chim. Sheena warns the huntress off, but as an Englishwoman, Lady Beddington-Smythe does not take orders from a...a savage! Sheena has to call in Simba the lion to convince her otherwise.
The final story sheen=a comes across a wounded man who is under attack by a pack of gorillas. The man, who had been shot, mutters something about the lost city of the Portuguese before he slips into unconsciousness. The evil Taluki has captured Bob and will kill him unless Sheena leads him through the swamps to the lost city. The lost city is actually an ancient castle with a treasure room of gold along with the long-dead bodies of ancient Portuguese soldiers. Bob reappears and he and Sheena defeat Taluki's men. Taluki escapes with some gold, but without Sheena to lead him back through the swamp, he falls into quicksand and gets sucked up. Once again there is peace in the jungle.
Better than many of the other comic books of its time. BTW, the cover has absolutely nothing to do with any of the stories within,
Enjoy.
https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=97636&comicpage=&b=i