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“sae wi his place. ‘Particular he ts rarely helpless. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 19 What the London Lady \ Wears in Her Boudoir Here Is a Charming Bit of Night Attire Which, Wher Display- ed ina London Shop Window, Actually Made the British Admirers of | Pretty Things Gasp. It Is a Study in Black and White. Its Clinging Black » Satin Effect Should Prove an Effectual Sleep Allure- ment. :-What Eve Said ABOUT BUSINESS By Sophie Irene Loeb Coprrtaht, 819, Wy Tee Prove Pubiiating Ca, (The New York Rvesing Word) EARN the work of the man just above’ you"so’ that you could take a Blessed is he who bas a trade for he shall inherit a pay-envelope. 4 man and his trade are never parted, Each man must know bis particular work, and if he makes that work Work and workmanship are ontirely different propositions. Fear never got anything but more fear. Make your desires fit your necds. | Watching the clock wins nothing but weariness, In business be busy. To be self-sustaining, to smile, is the safety road to success. Work and the sunny side is with you Buccess means doing it a littlo better than your neighbor. Faint chance never won fair results. x Business wires must not be connected with heart strings. (i A Job in band is worth two in the future. ‘The man who is continually getting it over lives to get over, Modesty and courtesy are the strongest assets of him who seeks to be the “man higher up.” As soon as a man js too important to listen and learn: he is worthless ‘ | fa bis enterprise. pat have any or get off the pay-envelope. GOING DOWN! Coperight, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co (Th New Tore ‘Brening World.) DFAR MARRIED WOMAN: There are two things you should guard as you do your Uite—your husband's HONOR and your husband's CREDIT. You know what honor is, but eo you know what CREDIT ts —HIS credit? Could any woman be 80 fool- tah as to say: “I'm sorry, Mr. Butcher, but my husband did mot leave me any money this morning and I cannot pay your" Read this in cold type and it Guts like a knife. It reminds a thoughtful per- @on of the gentleman who Knilled the goose that lald the golden esr. husband is not & goose, 18 the gollen egg and, something which must guard as The cry of the employer is, settle your domestic difficulties if you ‘When « man thinks that he has a sure thing the sure thing has him. ‘The making of one’mown system—therein lies the grouch or the grin. | uses the sun's rays for heating, light- By Matthew I want to thank you for oon- ferring upon me the honor of electing me as your President of this society. with my work as a member and now you have elevated me to the oMece of your chairman, Tt ts fitting that I say a few words to you on assuming the highest office within your gift I am the President of the club. Some of you voted for me, some of you didn't, The hent of canvassing for votes and electioneering ts I would be recreant to my duty WI harbored any iM will against those of you who did not vote for me. , It was the privilege of all of you to vote as you thought best for the welfare of the society and I honor you tor exercising that privilege. But I am your, Chairman, no longer @ candidate, I Chairman of the whole club and T must act as Chairman of the club and not in the interests of some of the members, Each of you is entitled to my best efforts for yourself individually and for the aspociation at large. At first I shall be feeling my , #0 to speak. Things may be strange at the beginning. 1 You are familiar am the Cagright, 1919, by The Pree Pubtsiung Co, (Tie Now York Drening Work), Y harnessing the sun, by set- B ting Old Sol to work for man- kind twenty-four hours a day 365 days in a year—instead of off and on, be tween sunrise and sunset— that is how the American sci- entist, Henry EB. Willsie, may put a crimp in the coal strikes of what ia even more the future and, important, protect the shivering hu- man race in the day not so long ahead when all our coal has been mined, all our oil has been drawn from the fields, all our great forests have been cut down. Mr, Willsie is the inventor whose gas mask with the Willsie hood wan adopted for use by the American Army in France, and w' did other valuatle work for ine United States Government during the war. But until the publication by Stokes of “Tho Forbidden Trail,” =a} new and intensely interesting novel | by his wife, Honore Wilisie, editor of The Delineator, it was not generally known that Mr. Willsie not only has invented but has operated successfully a sun-power machine which directly Brief Speeches for Busy Men J. Epstein Coprright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co (The New York Breming World.) Accepting the Office of President of a Society Mr. Chairman and Fellow Mem- they arise. I may fall down on some of my duties as Chairman. I can onjy plead in my defense that I am human. We ail make mistakes, we all commit errors or fail to do what we should do. But I would be false w myself and ur‘aithful to you if I did not correct the errors of omission or commission when they are pointed out to me. I would be society ts founded if I did not act ByMarguerite Mooers Marshall | vaPoRIZER CONS FILLED WI Gr ENGINE SULPHUR DIOKIDE VAPORIZED BY HEATED WATER LET (N AND CIRCULATED & This Sun Power Machine on Your Own Roo Will Solve Your Heating Problems. When Coal Miners Strike, Oil Wells Are Dry _ and Our Forests Cut Down WATER FRAME “TURNED To FACE THE SUN . HEATED WATER WoT WATER Cam 86 STORED and TuRNEr at Any Teen SAND LINING TO STORAGE Pune ENGINE RUN BY VAPORITED VLPH UR NOAIDE Prom VAPORIZER “TO 3 vower Machine, Ht ing and all sorts of mechanica! pur- poses, So much for “team gork” be- tween husband and wife! ‘The story of the erection and tost- ing of this machine in an Arizon. desert, after a fight with sandstorms, cloudbursts, thirst, loneliness, pois- vnous reptile life, is told in “The Forbidden Trail” with a realism which I understood on learning that the author “was there’ when her husband fought and won a similar struggle. “Girls have told me,” Mr. Willsic, remarked, with a twinkle, “that it was no place to take a bride. But! she got her first literary material out | of the experience, and this last novel as well. I only wish to say that am not the herof he had the temper of a fiend, and my disposition is lamb- “Now, please tell me about what your wife christened the Sun Plant,” T requested. “Is it going to be the answer to the alarmists who assure us that in a few hundred years, at most, all our sources of fuel will be exhausted and we shall huve to move to equatorial regions or freeze to death?" “Before that Lge the world is going to get heat, light and power di- cectly from the rays of the sun,” Mr, Willsie declared with conviction, “The sun has made all our fuel—the sun put the coal into the ground and the forests above the ground. When these fuels are exhausted we shall get more by storing in some other fashion the sun's heat and distribu- Ung ‘it to meet our needs. “The solar power machine which | have designed ts perfectly practical even now in a climate where most of the days are sunny. In such a climate any family could put a solar power machine on its roof and from the plant obtain heat, light and power for domestic use, The power from a sun plant can be vsed in as many ways as the power from a steam plant, and although the initial cost ix considerably larger it can be run much more cheaply.. To compete with it in producing power the steam plant would have to buy Its poal at 66 cents a ton.” Then Mr. Wilisie gave the follow- sun-power machine, built on a differ- false to the alma for which this IE: brief and clear description of his as my conscience and the good of the society dictate I should act. I shall. try to act as a President ought to act. The one point that I must bear in mind is to be fair, I must not be #0 overcome by the dignity of the offic as to olight any one merely because of the position I hold. By your votes you have placed faith in me and in my ability. It will be my endeavor to fustify that faith, I shall do my ‘best to serve the club and al! I ask is your géherous co-operation, I thank you, es bO YOU KNOW THAT—— Piano stools that are adjustable to several angles as well as heights have been patented by a Chicago inventor. Spain has more than 5,000, fig trees, of which about one-fourth are planted and cultivated ~ ent principle from any other, capabl: of producing thousands of horse- power, and operated successfully {n irrigating waste lands in Arizona: “My engine,” he said, “consists of planes inclined toward the south over which water runs from a feed trough down an inclined surface for about fifty feet. In this transit the temperature of the water will in- crease with the sun's heat to about 160 degrees, The planes, of course, ure under two layers of glass. At the bottom of ‘the Incline the heated water runs Into a trough which car- cles tt into a tank which is insulated with layers of dry sand. In this tank the water remains hot from four to ten days. “From the storage tank the heated water runs into,a sulphur dioxide FRAME Willsie, the American Inventor, Who Constructed This Sun- Proved to the Satisfaction of Recognized American “ngineers That tt ‘Can Predess Power So Cheaply That to Compete With It Coal Would Have to Be Sold at 66 Cents a Ton. 7 the subterranean water that ts used to irrigate the land. As sulphur di- oxide is an ideal gas for a lubricant, we do away with oiling the engine, for the steam takes care of that in ts traftsit, —* “The mechanism ts no different in ts features from the steam engine. t does not, however, exhaust into the open air. The cost of sulphur Noxide requires a condenser, and the ngine exhausts Into pipes over which is pumped the water for irri- ation, This condenses the sulphur one which is carried Back ipto the | oiler. “You cah see that such a machine does not have to be operated while| the sun is actually shining, We could <o out by night and turn on the solar power generated duriug the day sim- ply by allowing the stored ed water to do its work in heating the sulphur dioxide to the boiling point, In our camp in Arizona,” recalled Mr. Willsie, “we had electric Nght at ht made by the rays of the sun.” Could this machine be used w York?" [ asked. In its present state of development expense probably would be pro- hibitive,” he admitted, “because have so much cloudy’ weather, surfaces of water would have t much larger in order to get enough hot water on sunny days to make up for the inability to get it on dark e| two be | cloudy days, ot DOUBLE, THicte GLASS Covers RUNNING WATER sm, Be HENRY E. WILLSIE days. The problem of storing solar heat jn regions where it is irregu- larly received is something we have tu work out more carefully. “In the South, however, and even in climates like that of California, sun power can be used for every pur- pose now served by coul-or-oil-pro- duced steam power. Artificial heat. particularly at night, Is necessary in many ‘of these so-called warm regions; artificial Nght is as neces- sary as tt ls anywhere; and once a method is provided for the creation of artificial power cheaply the desert should become the centre of larg. | manufacturing plants and its agricul | tural possibilities should be developed enormously. There are valleys in thy arid parts of the United States and in Mexico where the land values | would be increased by millions of dollars in a single night 6y putting in action some cheap method of pump- ing the underground water over them. “Even before sun power is made practical for cloudy day countries, think how much coal and oll might he saved for these regions by depend- ing on the sun in countries like Ari- zona where Government records for c And in the future, instead of hitch- ing our wagons to a star, doubtless ‘we all can hitch them to the sun! ‘TWO By Herma MINUTES OF OP |__— Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (Tho New York Evening World.) TIMISM n-J. Stich ‘Desert of Sin “East is East and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,” but we of the West can at least borrow fashions fromthe bright Orient. This photograph shows a very unique design in evening wrap which has. been brought over from the Be- douin Arabs of the Desert of Sin. It is com- posed of moun- tain-sheep wool embroidered in stripes of gayly colored silk blended together ina truly Orient- al fashion. Of course there are fringes around the bottom and on the dolman which hangs from the neck. To those who have a passion for beautiful things this wrap should: prove most attractive. FRIDAY, NOVEMBE R21,1919% . Arabs Create Women’s Stiles THE GAY Country OC aud Newcomer were speed- ing along a country road ou’ of Paradise in Doc's high-pow- ered buzzer on their Saturday half- holiday, but the philosopher was in anything but his usual merry mood. He wah finding fault with the car continually and declared he was going to sell It and buy a flivver. Newcomer tried to cheer him up by reminding him .of the decision by & Wartime Act was unconstitutional, but even the fact that he had Provi- dence (R, 1.) on his side had no effect on his spirits, to a rabbit which ran across the roid in front of the car, but Doc only said that after bis experiences with the existing Congress he never wanted to gee a rabbit again, particularly « white one. Duty Plus. T was the EXTRA straw that I broke the camel's back, and a little EXTRA politeness that won a car conductor a $15,000 legacy and a stenographer a $65,000 one. Many track athletes can eprint a hundred yards in ten seconds, but every once in a while some- body clips off an EXTRA one or two-fifths of second, and bis name immediately springs from every lip in the land, ‘The granddaddy of all motor cycles was a small velocipede with a@ crude ooa! burning steam en- gine, Year after year it was per- fected, first one part, then another, now here, then there, always something EXTRA, until the tem- peramentai motorcycle, that ran in jerks and spasms and moods at three or four miles an hour, was made to run reliably over @ hun- dred miles an hour. Every time one man supplants ‘another it is because he can do something EXTRA; every time one commodity supersedes another it is because some inducement is offered, some improvement added, something making for EXTRA convenience, FXTRA_ economy, EXTRA enjoyment. That ts» why clacking wooden shoes, scratc! y, itchy underwesr; smoky, ch ky fireplaces and smelly, sloppy van- dies have become extinct. ine system. As sulphur dioxide ‘a low boiling point, you car™place tgn the boiler and heat it by allow- hot water to come into contact with the boiler containing the sul- phur dioxide, When the sulphur di- oxide in the boiler commences to For ordinary purposes there * used to be no more variety in col- ors than there was in bread—black and-white, Then a few men with the courage of their convictions made fortunes feeding man's pride and fancy with extra colors— crimson, carmine and scarlet from the cochinest esetet. copie from yuttetish, Indian fom i ieiedy Ais the camel; Prussian blue from horses’ hoofs and potassium car- bonate; Turkey red from the mad- der, plant of Hindustan; bistre from wood ashes, and hosts of others, which ingenuity and science wrested from nature's flora and fauna, “The best way to make some- thing different,” runs an ad., “is to make it better"—to weave into the workmanship EXTRA good- ness, oxtra STYLE, EXTRA qual- ity and comfort, And the ad. might have run on, the best way for a | man to be different—to stand out from’ the rest—is to do ordinary work EXTRAordinarily well, to do not only what he is paid for, but something EXTRA—to do his duty plus. The Mystic Copyright, 19199 by The Press Publishing Co. HIS is the Mystic Book, It is cut in half, contains @ ques- tion, hieroglyphics and funny figures, It is customary when seeking in- formation to open a book, but the Mystic Book will answer the question only when joined together. HOW TO JOIN THE MYSTIC BOOK. Cut out, the picture on the four heavy lines, fold across and back on dotted line No. 1; then fold this over until dotted line No, 1 just meets dot- ted line No. 2. This joins the book and reveals the answer, AN PON NY (Tee New York Byening World.) “The only people that seem to get ajong these times are the profiteers and lots of them are making money out of the actual necessities of life— coal, milk, whiskey, and things like that” f “Aren't the woods beautiful?” asked Newcomer, ' “Too late in the season; they were beautiful a month ago when the foll- age was all on, but not since the trees have adopted the new styles ip dress.” “The bay looks pretty,” remarked Newcomer at a venture. “Only water,” replied Doc gloomily, “1 can remember when people used to be horrified to read of the ‘water cure’ administered to our soldiers in the Philippines; who would ever have Book An Educational Puzzle WAAT IS TAE SHORTEST STREET IN NEW YoRK CITY? 2) RARE A LER APNG NAA RIOT IN Federal Judge to the effect that the} Then Newcomer called his attention | LIFE OF A COMMUTER . By Rube Towner Coprright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) As a Financial Genius Doc ‘s a First Class Chauffeur thought that the whole country would be given thef*water cur-?"" ‘Oh, up,” said Newcomet, “things are not so bad if people have plenty of money.” “That's just it,” replied Doc, “I don't know of anybody that's got plenty of money, except that Bol- shevik—Lenine—when he wants money he prints it" “If you're hard up I can help you out with a little,” said Newcomer “I've got a couple of hundred put By against the time when they begin re- leasing the stock held in bond.” anke, old man.” said Doc, “but I need more than that by a thousand; nothing desperate or pressings but J know where I can use it to make some more; I'll get it, don’t worry; we're out for a pleasant afternoon, ao let's enjov ourselves.” “I'm having the Ume of my Ife” sald Newcomer, “who-a! hold on— lets stop and get some of those chest- nuts.” boc pulled up by the aide of the road under a big chestnut tree and for the next ten minutes the two re newed their boyhood days when out- Ung was the favorite outdoor sport of torn 4 youths, : When they prepared to start again the car back-fired and im another moment @ part of the seat was afire and sending up @ huge amount ef pungent smoke, They leaped out and pulling the cushion off the seat threw handfuls of sand and dust from the side of the road upon it, but without effect. Then they tried the laprobes and succeeded ip setting both expensive robes afire. ‘The gasoline tank was under the seat next to the one on fire, but they continued thelr efforts to extinguish the fire with all the bravery of soldiers going over the top—have ing forgotten about the gasoline tank. Doc finally took off his big auto- mobile coat, the envy of every “hackey” In Paradise, and succeeded in_smothering the blaze, : Then he found that most of his wires were burnt out and had to be replaced, which used up about a half hour and a long list of Doc's best adjectives. When he inspected .the holes burned in his laprobes and the damage to his big coat, he added « few more words to the 460,000 odd in the English language, ‘or ten minutes after th started again they drove in slieane when Doc sald solemnly: | “Newromer, do you know that and Tare a connle of d—— fools cheer + “Well, T will have to hear some evidence hefore I can detide; eulpenes hel can devide; what do “In the first place,” sald Doc, "we have new esslv risked in the second "4 two beantifal prohes: in the third place, T (a snotled a perfectly gorgeous auto sont: in the fourth place, T need @ thonsand dollars ond that’ old hugeer, ig insured for fifteen hundred! "replied Newcomer, “ag @ financ'® eerivg you are a ‘rag. country chauffeur,” ‘se have g et ote fatal one 2"