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Show 1 L THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH PHOTOGRAPHY & . ROLLS DEVELOPED I CS? 9 prima. I 6T Bilk rnlawniftitM. Lllj A or juur ehoW of 1A nrinta wiiIhhii I 15kWl. nlr"n,t,n,a60 coin. itiiitrinuMtiea. 0T NORTHWI1T PHOTO ttRVIC rif DmpU H North Dafcrta PEN AND PENCIL ABSOM'TEI.f FREE $1 OS pen und pen-cil et for IS miniili'.i spiire timf. I'ont curd brings details. VfcLXliX CO., Bir-mingham, Alabama. Brighten Tea Towel Set With Bluebirds "Lucky you to be embroider-ing us on a set of tea towels I" say these cross stitch bluebirds. We're in simplest stitchery and colorful floss so you're sure of a grand result! Pattern 1903 con-tains a transfer pattern of 7 motifs averaging 5 by 7Vi inches; mate-rials required; illustrations of stitches; color schemes. Send 15 cents in coins for this pattern to The Sewing Circle, Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y. Please write your name, ad-dress and pattern number plainly. Of Its Fresh Water end Deep Sea Fishing Of the Bountifulness of Its Game Of Its Year Round Sports Its Climate Its Truck Farming Opportunities All covered thoroughly in the new and delightfully written book "SO THIS IS FLORIDA" By Frank Parker Stockbrldge and John Holllday Parry Over 300 pages 63 full page illustrations beautifully bound Send $1.00 to Box 600, Jacksonville, Florida Salt Lake's NEWEST HOTEL v- - ) HI . t h' v -- " i s,o; JV-- " S f ,, i 'J ,.iniuiiWKi3gg$g5 Hotel TEMPLE SQUARE Opposite Mormon Temple HIGHLY KECOMMENDED Rates $1.50 to $3.00 Iff a mark of distinction to stop at this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C ROSSITEB, Mir. j JTL EO O 1 by TALBOT MUNDY . f PI O TAIBOT MUNDY WNU SERVICE t . THE STOKY TIIUS FAR I . i wnrwood has been sent from his native in th v,i ffV--l'o,n' with hi. indispensable manservani Moses OWv Jo.,ta 1. fUr.Vv.Cy.thc ,d,strict to determine mine temple priests or to the thl 'foduf. Norwood calls on the British Residency to pay hTs initial ;jIm, he catches iuelirnpse of two women in a palace carriage If tmlaantedr bfWtiluLTiw othtehre wyoomunagn hweokmnoawns isto abne tAhemMeriachaanranee eiri Sd5 who with her aunt Mrs. Deborah Harding, u a a T gh seeing tour Mrs Harding sprains an ankle, lS Kundhia. handsome spoiled nephew of the rule?s come! 1 '',d her back to the palace where he meets Lynn. At a ban Lh-X- "endd by Captain Norwood. Mr.. Harding takes riuve doc'or s pills, and become, violently ill. ace wall, riding slowly because the sais was following on foot He had ridden about fifty yards to a curve in the road when O'Leary stepped forth from a shadow. He didn't look like O'Leary. He was wearing a turban, and dressed like a dripping wet, dirty Hindu of no caste or os-tensible occupation. Norwood drew rein and listened, watching the road for pedestrians. "I didn't stable the mare in the city. She's back in camp. I'll need her later." "What for?" "As soon as I'm dressed decent again, I'll go back to the bazaar. I told a yarn about coming back to camp for more money. I'm going to need it" "Look at me." His eyes were hardly less fiery than the glowing end of his ciga- rette. They made Lynn's flesh tin-gle. He threw away the cigarette. "Lynn, you romantic girl, this ll r 0,1 , 5"" 1. .ed: "That's a testimo-- t 2 But thank you. I'll take I the doctor. He caught . eye. Rundhia came to mdmade signals to the who wanted nothing to have Lynn under her I lear, please do as the doc-'ro- u. Please, please." 7 waned and protested that i iarne to inflict Lynn on the - but she was overruled, tarried out on an impro-- - sand rushed to the guest-Ar- e Lynn's belongings " itted by the servants and i :lo the palace. I "You'd better leave that woman and her bully guessing, and show me the mine. Where Is it?" O'Leary pointed: "Two hours from now, when the moon's about there, I can guide you to a place where you can see along under the apron of water." "Very well, O'Leary. Which way did you come?" "Short cut Don't you try It. Horse might break a leg." "All right, I'll follow the road. Meet me in camp." O'Leary vanished. Norwood had ridden another fifty yards when he heard angry shouting, several times repeated. He wasn't sure, but he thought he also heard a girl's voice. He rode forward slowly and then, a bit alarmed by the' ensuing silence, stirred his horse to a canter. He drew rein, looking upward at Lynn, not much more than two or three minutes after Rundhia had left her. She was sitting in full moonlight on top of the wall, on a cushion, with one foot hanging over the wall and her back against the kiosk. "Hello!" he remarked. "Did Run-dhia leave you all alone here?" "He said he'd come back." "Well, he'll keep that promise. How well do you know him?" "I met him for the first time this evening." "Like him?" "Shouldn't I?" "At your age, there is danger In exotic likes and dislikes." "I'm twenty-two.-" "You don't look it I had guessed you as eighteen. However, no doubt you know how to take care of your-self among men of your own race. I'm taking it for granted that you're a nice girl with a sense of humor but a bit rebellious against certain sorts of restraint. All this is new, and you're enjoying It You like the scene enchants you because love has stolen on you unaware. Neither of us until now has ever known what love is." "Do you think you know now?" she retorted. "You know I know it You are cruel." "I wish you'd sit farther away," she interrupted. "Why don't you make love to your own countrywom-en?" "There isn't in all India such a lovely girl as you are." "What happened?" "Plenty. I was right about Noor Mahlam. They've ditched him. So I did too. He was only ground bait He talked too much, then tried to have me knifed to stop me talking. They'd a trap set for me and I walked straight into it A woman. I'll tell you about her later; she'd fill a dictionary." "Never mind about the woman. What happened?" "Nothing happened there. It couldn't I left your mare tied up to the veranda railing, military saddle and all, and your Initials on the bridle. So they couldn't take chances. And I could. And I did." "That's enough about you. What happened?" "Kindergarten stuff. Confidence game. The woman's bully flattered me I knew the woman's sister in Lahore, and he said the woman's sister'd given me a rep for being smarter than most and a man o' my word. Then he introduced me to the woman. She's all honey and poi-son. Sister my eye. Two words, and I knew she was lying about that." "How do you know? It's true, isn't it, that most of them are kept in seclusion and you're not allowed to see them? Is that why you make love to me? Why not burgle a ze-nana?" "Lynn," he said, "I don't make love. I am love. And you also. We are love itself, as a musician be-comes music. Why waste the glo-rious hours?" "What do you know about mu-sic?" she retorted. "Can you sing Indian songs?" "Yes, love songs! I play the gu-itar." "You can? What fun! Why not get it? There couldn't be a more ll CHAPTER V x was puzzled and Lynn She enjoyed it It was - wutiful beneath the moon- - i the garden. Lithe strangest mixture of a nd innocence that I ' ciset," said Rundhia. "You & with all this. You are - iy the exotic strangeness. ii old stuff to me, remem-- : i babe in the woods, too, ;jense. I'm as lost as Things and places don't iworth living. It's the peo- - a places, and the things :jether. If you loved me ' " Tdiyou - :either of us does," Lynn in-- i "We are East and West, delights you because you , sreally understand it. And araptures me for the same vethat much in common," :dhia. "Let me tell you :j else we have in com-tlik- e each other." !" 3te would have to be blind, aented, not to like you. ng with me?" i defensive tactic was a : times more shrewd than 'dd dream of giving her Sir instance, why do you jptain Norwood?" 4e same reason that he 5ke me," said Rundhia. a la femme. Thank the A mother who bred him, 'an Engineer. If he were 'I might feci jealous. Lynn, XL" any women have you said But I lied to all the (sometimes had to lie to 3U'm not nearly as prac- - as you must be. Let's :tg you the truth. I r3?s thought myself a cynic. I had a heart until I : I have found and lost it 3e moment. It is yours. :im do with it?" a crept around her. He how she slipped away - She waltzed away. She fte Path, her arms ex- - embrace the moonlit 'toe and view and per-er- s. By the time he over-Se- f retort was ready: JJou don't like men with S." he answered, "at 'want to bury my hands :Je ay face in it, breathe Indian setting, and the novelty and the moonlight and all that stuff." "Don't you?" "Yes. And I like you. I would not like to hear of you making a mess of your life for the sake of a spot of excitement You don't un-derstand India. You don't under-stand Rundhia." A shadow moved. Someone chuck-led: "Doesn't she?" Rundhia loomed on the wall with a guitar in his hand. He smiled down at Norwood. The moonlight shone on his teeth. "We were reaching a beautiful un-derstanding," said Rundhia. "Are you on your way to camp? Well, it's a grand night for a ride. Sorry you're tired and sleepy!" Norwood eased his horse a little nearer to the wall. He gave the reins to the sais. In another mo-ment he was standing upright on the saddle, with his head within six inches of the top of the wall: "I am not so sleepy as perhaps I look," he answered. "Give me a hand up, Rundhia." Lynn watched. This was some-thing altogether new in her experi-ence. Rundhia hesitated. Moonlight betrayed him. Rundhia felt tempted to refuse. But he hadn't the iron. He could have scared the horse and made Norwood look ridiculous. But he hadn't the nerve. Lynn felt sor-ry for him. With a shrug he handed the guitar to her, in order to use both hands to help Norwood scram-ble up the wall. "You weren't invited," said Run-dhia. Norwood stared. "No. I noticed it Can you strum on that thing?" Lynn spoke with all the malice she could put into her voice: "You like music, Captain Nor-wood? I supposed your line was en-gineering and ordering people about." (TO BE COXTISUED) ' "Never mind her lies, or whose sister she is. How much truth did she tell you?" ."Not much, barring that I'm the most exciting man she'd ever seen. She was true enough excited, so I knew the bully was listening in; and he weren't her proper bully nei-ther; he was someone who'd been rung in on her, and she scared o' him and not used to his ways. She said there'd be a thousand rupees for me if I'd act discreet." "Whose thousand rupees?" asked Norwood. "Trust your Moses O'Leary. I asked her that quick. She said it was Prince Rundhia's thousand ru-pees. So I knew it wasn't." "What does she want you to do?" "She told me a mess o' lies about Prince Rundhia having quarrelled with the temple Brahmins, and him wanting to get back at 'em, to spite 'em. She told me, and I acted sur-prised, that there's a diamond mine in the temple area. There's a thou-sand rupees for me if I persuade you to run your survey line slap through the temple area, so that the mine will belong to the Mahara-jah instead of the temple priests." "What did you tell her?" "I said you're easy, but you're honest. I said I'll have to find some way of artfully deceiving you if you're to do what's needed. I said I'd have to look into it, and I made her tell me where the mine is and how to get a look at it She came clean." "How did she know?" "She'd been told. And she was out of her depth already. She want-ed word with the bully, and she tried to get me to stay where I was. But I thought of the bay mare standing outside in the alley, and she fidgety, and you fond o' the mare and liable to find fault with me if she should come to harm. And I guessed it 'ud be wise to look into the woman's story first." "Hello! " he remarked. perfect place for singing than this garden wall in moonlight." Rundhia sensed that he had cast his fly too boldly. She wasn't hooked. She needed more subtle persuasion. He shouted to the servant to fetch the guitar. There was no answer; the servant had taken him too strict-ly at his word, he was out of ear-shot. Rundhia shouted again and again. He swore under his breath. Then he governed his anger and smiled at Lynn: "Will you wait here if I go and get it?" "Yes, but" "What?" "You look murderous. Don't whip the servant!" His undercover man was waiting . .. 1 4UI for him in the usual piace, ay i" gate in the wall that separated the Maharajah's palace from Rundhia's an unimportant-lookin- g but pecu-liarly unmeek Hindu, who spoke in a low voice without preliminary ges-tures of respect: "The priests have learned of Cap-tain Norwood's arrival. They sent me to speak with his Eurasian spy, O'Leary. who is a reptile. O'Leary has already detected the opening of the mine." Rundhia thought swiftly, and spoke slowly: "Go and tell the priests that Captain Norwood is here to line his own pocket. Say he is in debt and seeks an opportunity to pay his debts. His secret report will be in favor of the highest bid-der But don't say you heard it O'Leary was drunk from me. Say and you heard it from him. Make it perfectly clear to the priests that other officer than Norwood any fair, so let would be scrupulously them think about it" Then Rundhia found a servant in the garden of his own palace and sent him running to fetch the guitar. The palace front gate clanged Norwood. The sullen senfry ,SI at ease, then easy and re-used Norwood turned his snooze his horse along the road by the pal JiJep.aShed U and the wa" Jdhim again. Her black wished into shadow; she 'beautiful, disembodied Men aureole that asked: Norwood married? I didn't you ask him?" et care." Rundhia. "I'mgo-- . cTOu care about some-- . Come along, m be--- e this way." feu "5 S,eps t0 the t0P of enwalL There was fft h6 n the waU' a sort !i'Ji been swePl and cushions by a servant lr shadow. Rundhia j.."yant away. He went j tne foot of the steps. 4, "tcd a him and he ik Lynn int0 J Prmised," she said, J be'ieve men's promises ta, 1(ve? Are you as J?,'1 be silly. Let us look ill. U. S. Television Hits New High In Development Broadcasts Now on Regu-lar Schedule From New York. Trf pnrod hv Natton.il Genernphlc Society, WiishinBton, D. C WNU Service. Television broadcasts in the United States are now on regular schedule and manu-facturers have begun the wholesale production of re-ceiving sets as the American public begins to realize the value of this new form of education and entertainment. The inaugural telecast in this coun-try was produced on April 30, 1939, when President Roosevelt opened the New York World's fair. BEAUTY MAKEUP. The young lady clad in war paint is not preparing for a part in a horror thriller but is merely "rnaking-up- " for a regular tele-vision broadcast. Special skill in the use of rouge and paint i$ Since then television has launched Into the air an impression of the king and queen of England visiting the fair, of a canary circus, of a baseball game, a boxing bout a ballet, a swimming contest, a marionette show, a six-da- y bicycle race, the docking of the new liner Mauretanla, a track meet, and a fashion parade. Experts point out that important differences between radio and its sister science of long-distanc- e see-ing place difficulties in the way of a nation-wid- e television network to parallel radio hookups. Yet the American people who promptly In-vite each new scientific marvel into the living room, are showing a live-ly interest In television, although the majority of them are still beyond the reach of current programs. Twenty Tubes to Set. Television has put into American homes the most complicated instru-ment yet devised for popular use a radio set plus. It has about 20 required to give good picture reprmluction in telecasts. outer space and are lost. They usu-ally cannot be captured by televi-sion sets much beyond the horizon. Draw a straight line, representing the path of television waves, from any point on the earth's surface, and you will recognize that they soon part company with the curving earth. To be sure of "viewing in" on a television program, therefore, a receiving set should be close enough to the transmitter to be within the television horizon. From the lofty antenna on the Empire State building, sets within a radius of 55 miles regularly receive the program, as well as some sets from 125 to 150 miles away. Resemblei Ordinary Radio. Outwardly the television receiving set most generally In use resembles a large radio console with an extra row of buttons and a propped-u- p lid. The television Image a vision indeed appears beneath the lid, where the televised scene in perfect miniature comes to life on a gloss plate 8 by 10 inches. Presiding genius of the television receiving set is the h funnel-shape- d vacuum tube, standing up-- right like a lily. As a loud speaker translates silent radio waves into sound, this tube translates Invisible waves into a visible picture. Its narrow stem contains an electron gun primed with cathode-ra- y am-munition. Its broad top Is capped with a glass plate curved to shield the vacuum within from the atmos-pheric pressure above. The under surface of the glass is coated with a chemical mixture, zinc sulfide, which is capable of fluorescing (emitting light) when struck by elec-trons. An electrical impulse from the transmitter modulates the beam, or ray, fired from the electron gun; when the electrons hit the fluores-cent surface the glass shows a tiny point of light which is bright or dull according to the intensity of the modulated beam of electrons. Two Miles a Second. The electron stream is shot in machine-gu- n sequence across the face of the plate from left to right at a speed of two miles a second; then It zips back to the left at double quick time and repeats the bom-bardment With about 500 "shots" in 'a row, it makes 441 trips from left to right to fill in the picture completely from top to bottom. This action is controlled by electro-magneti- c force. (Whether each tiny "shot" of the electron bombardment I ft MASS PRODUCTION. With television sets now on sale at regular retail prices, manufac-turers have begun assembly line production of receiving units. This picture shows standard in-struments in the process of being assembled. tubes. One of them is the giant cathode-ra- y vacuum tube 27 inches long that creates the television pic-ture on the top of its flattened bulb by means of a tiny "pencil" of streaming electrons. It has sound controls for volume and high and low pitch adjustments. It has sight controls for focus, speed, size, and centering adjustments of the pic-ture. Television has also put into circu-lation a new vocabulary telecast to correspond to broadcast; video fre-quencies, as differentiated from the sound wave frequencies of radio; "ike," instead of "mike," for the Iconoscope, which corresponds to radio's microphone. Ultra-Sho- rt Waves Used. From the giant antenna on the Empire State building a quarter of a mile above the earth, the radio waves that carry the sound part of the program are launched into the air exactly as in ordinary short-wave radio transmitting. The ultra-short waves that carry the visual part are of such high frequencies that instead of kilocycles (thousand cycles) they are listed in mega-cycles (million cycles). Sound, even that of a symphony orchestra, usual- - AID IN CRIME WAR. Here is a test telecast being made to determine the value of television in criminal identification by re-producing fingerprints. Officials claim that in cases where speed is important, fingerprints could be broadcast to operatives away from police headquarters, elimi-nating the delay caused by mail-ing the prints to a central bureau. registers as light or shadow is de-termined by what the television camera has revealed of the object being televised.) The 441 scanning lines for each picture are completed too quickly for the human eye to detect the electron pencil in action, and the resultant illusion is com-parable to the illusion obtained from the movies, which project 24 still pictures per second to create the im-pression of movement The televi-sion image is created by a rapid uccession of 30 complete pictures per second. ly is transmitted in a group of fre-quencies not more than 5,000 cycles wide. But a good television image requires frequencies Jumping from 30 to 4,000,000 cycles within a sec-ond's time. In addition, two series of waves synchronizing impulses-m- ust be broadcast to keep receiver and transmitter in perfect step. A lag of less than of a second in the receiving set would make inperfect television pictures. From the outset it is apparent that television is at least three times as complicated as radio. An added difficulty is the fact that the very high frequency television waves do not bounce between the earth and a reflecting layer in the sky as do the longer waves used in sound broadcasting. Such repeat-ed reflection permits radio waves to reach far over the horizon in fact, to follow the curvature of the earth completely around the globe. Tele-vision waves shoot straight off through the reflecting layer into Zoo Animals Turn Popular Beliefs to Fables tor and curator of mammals, de-clared. "I never heard anyone who worked with them say their memory amounted to anything. Take Honey and Tembo, the baby elephants that Christoph Schulz captured and brought here. "When he found Honey, she was a baby, half starved and wandering in the jungle. He brought her here, feeding her by bottle, and she would follow him everywhere. When he left, she tried to trumpet, but when he came back eight months later she didn't remember him at alL Schulz," he added, "was very dis-appointed." Elephants, too, are said to be afraid of mice. The truth is, Mr. Bean says, that they ignore them, making the pachyderm house at Brookfield the hardest in the park to free of mice. Elephants like cats, however, and allow them free access to the stalls. The only animal most of them despise, Mr. Bean says, is man. An elephant's memory is no long-er than its tail. Humming birds, so fragile that they seem winged in-sects, are greedier than pigs. Mon-keys prefer popcorn to bananas. The house cat is more cruel than a beast of the jungle. In fact, name any popular belief about animals and it's a good two to one bet that it is wrong. That's the conclusion of experts after actual observation at the Chi-cago Zoological park at Brookfield. Consider the elephant, most ma-ligned of the animal kingdom. II" is supposed to live the 969 years of Methuselah, but instead lives only the three score and ten of man. The female is said to breed at the age of 40 or 50; in reality, she breeds at six and eight years. Her pregnancy is said to endure seven years; as a matter of fact, it is 19 months, which is short enough, con-sidering the size of her offspring. And the elephant's memory! Leg-end says it is enduring, tenacious elephant an injury today and Do an he will repay you in kind 15 years later. Brookfield officials say this is aP"An elephant's memory probably good as that of other am-ma- ls is not as " Robert Bean, assistant direc- - j Golf Played in Fortress El Morro, historic Spanish fort in Puerto Rico, now has a nine-hol- e golf course vunir its grounds. |