ri: ¦-¦'. nished without cost, but by a convenient provision of nature are freely transported to the place of "use, which is wherever the reflector may happen to be erected. The usefulness of sun power will be by no means limited to irrigation, nor should It be inferred by the size of the present engine that ten horsepower bounds Its possibilities. The new motor will be used for various Industrial purposes, and prob ably quite largely in connection with min ing. Plants of 100 horsepower, with sev- tnan for a foitune. There are certain heroic exceptions to the rule, but the fact remains that :he conquest of the desert must be made easily If made at all. Here lies the chief significance of the new pow er, since its operations are necessarily limited, for the present at least, to the sunshine regions of the earth. Half of our own continent, most of Aus tralia and New Zealand, most of Africa and South America, a vast portion of Asia, Including India, belong distinctly to Wnlle the present successful motor ( has been- developed In the fullest light of ex isting scientific knowledge, the solution of the : problem is a triumph '¦ of ; American genius,; which -has built a' successful de vice on the ashes of past failures. The most obvious advantage of the solar motor is the saving of - fuel. It will be used over wide districts where the cost of fuel" is prohibitive, and will ' even .super sede allccher power In the uses for which it. is adapted in localities where ' fuel Is most abundant, \ since It ' is plain that no fuel Is cheaper than any fuel. The saving ls : ; effected not merely In the purchase price of coal or v/ood, oil or. gasoline, but also in, the Item of. handling these mate rials." -The solar rays are r.ot only fur- eral reflectors grouped about a central en gine, are already feasible, and It Is quite within reason to expect that with the im provements which will naturally be added as time goes on the present maximum will be much increated. It is In its relation* to irrigation, how ever, that the successful utilization of sun power will excite the widest public inter est. Mining Is an industry which flour ishes in spite of all obstacles. There is no country so far nor climate so " severe there Is no peril and no expense which can discourage mining, because the possi ble reward is so great and the ¦ hope of sudden wealth - bo alluring. It may bo sad and deplorable, but it is none the less true,' that a man will risk less for a homo the sunshine regions. Here solar power Is bound to be extensively employed In lifting water from under the ground and from the deeply eroded channels of In numerable rivers. Exact Information concerning the under ground water supplies is somewhat mea ger, sln ' whI1 e the ' architect of , the , famous Monitor brought his device so near perfec tion that scientific men began to build serious hopes' upon it in 1S84. But none of these \ inventions Vwere able toVstand the test of application to actual commercial uses." They concentrated the rays of the sun. They made steam. They even drove engines. But when brought to the crucial test of practical, "every-day "uses— cheap manufacture, > conoraical and continuous operation— they /ailed. And'so it has been with" many other less celebrated efforts. THE SUNDAY CALIi. 6 The Sun is Harnessed at last