HARD PROBLEMS IN RECLAMATION PROJECT DO KING UZZIAH HUMBLED MOTIVES Three Episodes and a Climax Suaitf Scbool Unoa for May 7, 1911 Specially Arranged forThi Paper By M. J. TiMWIiJI'iNJUl (Coirilglit, iuii. by Atiuciaed Llitriy Frew) A lino of blue-shlrted men come relllng over (he entrenchments. The KpanlnrdB swurmed out tho otlier lido In haste. C'npt. IyOiilR Olfaro of tho Koyal Twenty-ninth Infantry was tho last to leave. Hefore he hnd re treated far he found himself engaged In a suber duel with an American alio pursued. The Amerlcnn wore the yellow cord 3f the cavalry, and his hat wan (ilnn fid upon one aide. He swung tils huge paber with fierceness and ak 111. Captain Olfaro, a swordsman of note In old Madrid, was hard put to It to it fend himself. The Spaniard took heart, of grace piicn he saw that the odda had turned. I'ho other Americans had Hopped at the trenches, a hundred yarda In rear of the duel. One of the captain's own men paused long enoiiKh In hlR fllKht '.o fire point blank at the American. The bullet merely gave the Amer icans hat a more rakish tilt than be fore; but It ulao distracted tils nt ' : ut ion. Cuptaln Olfaro atruck quick ly, and pave hia adveraury a gash urosB the right forearm. Then, with i cruel smile, he prepared to kill at Hid leisure. liut the American waa not ready to die. The grazing bullet and the slash simply spurred him to renewed efforts. Ho leaped at the Spaniard like a mountnln rat; hi blade flick ered bewilderliiKly in the hot Cuban lunllght. Olfaro, In doubt, gave ground. "Yow-yow-yow, whe-e-e e-oe!" the American's ball leery, a high pitched (fell of sheer delight In conflict, broke out. It was more than the Spaniard rnuld stand. It told of a strength of fiber, an uneonqucred determination, which he could not match. He turned suddenly and ran. In blind panic, he threw away his ma ihete as he fled. "Whe-e-e-e-ee!" roared the Ameri can again. "Hun, you piker, run!" "Doris," said Jack Ilurnham, Third, M be sat or. the stairs, "there'a some thing I want to say. If it Isn't said pretty Boon, I'll bo ashamed to open my mouth. Why, I'm a doddering ulil man!" "You poor old thing!" scoffed pret ty Doris Van (iilder; "you're all of thirty-two." "I kiiow; but you're only about twenty." "I'm nearly twenty-two!" flashed the Indignant Doris. "Well-" Hut just then Tommy Puttersly claimed tits dance. The next day there was a flurry on the street, and Jack Hurnham lost all Us money. After waiting two months for him to call and finish the conversation, Doris went away. Senorlta Isabella y'Nogales, fellow of Vnssar college, and well versed In things American, from fourth dlmen (Ion to college friendships and fudge. Bat on the porch of her plantation home, province of Santa Clara, Cuba. The planter whose tobacco fields joined her own vast estate on the outh half reclined In a long chair. A third chair beside the senorlta In tllcated that the party which was now two recently bad been three. A frown crossed the planter's face when he looked up to see a man con fronting them a man with tanned face, wide shoulders and slim hlna. His khaki clothes were dust-covered. His light Bhlrt rolled open at the neck. Tho planter was an aristocrat, ae rustomed to crushing or Ignoring those without money or position, and to, after an Insolent glance, lie fin ished what he was saying: "And I have decided to marry her. She Is American, but handsome. And her father has much gold." Ho spoko In SpuniDh. As for the senorlta, she gave a Ut ile shrug of disapproval or doubt. "A moment, senor," she replied. Then, In English, to the man on the palm fringed walk: "What Is It?" "A driuk of water, If you will be to kind." The tap of a bell brought a black servant. While he was gone for the ater, the senorlta, who had Imbibed democratic ideaa at college, motioned the man to ho seated. She studied hlni, at first casually, then with In terest. He was Americano; one could tell "hat by the aet of the shoulders, the l"ise of the head, the firm, humor mis mouth. She apoko with quick resolve. "Perhaps the senor desires work?" The man's face lighted as he an swered: "Yes." "I have a place, as overseer. If you could speak Spanish" "UM.... - mu aro yoji miiiKing of. sono- rlta? broke In the planter, harshly. ''The man Is an American a' tramp. He win rob you, or worse." SWITZERLAND Salary of the President Is $3,600 a Year Some Officials Receive 30 Cents a Day. Tho Swiss governruont as a political Institution, Is tho most economical In Kurope. The official salary of the pres I'lent of the. Swiss confederation Is fcMOO. The federal councilors, or members of the cubinet, and the heads u' the different departments, receive a year during office. The state councilors of tho cantons f "ale and Zurich are the best paid f their class, receiving $2,000 and ll.SOt) u year, respectively, while Lu Pefne and Schaffhausen como next, h $1,000 per annum. Then the salaries assume . a rapid downward- scale until small cantons, "kp I'll. Schwytz, Claris, Zug, N'id M and Appenzell, are' reached. hcre the councilors are paid 40 cents tla during 'session. The hair-canton of Obwald pays Its j""lam:iian (president) $80 a your and l stuto councilors 3 J cents a day dur PHILLIPS A rur.tle; they all turned. In the doorway stood a girl; an Amerlcnn girl, of the kind men love and cher ish and din for. Tho Amerlcnn Blood up. "I apeak the language, as you see," he said. In excellent Spanish. "I accept your offer, and thank you." Harris, which was the name the American gave, fitted In. The negro workmen of the plantation knew him for a master. They Baw him take the great machete left by the foreman, a giant of a man, and weigh It fondly. It was a blade as heavy as a broad ax. They worshiped, lie was an Americano, and a man! He had a peculiarity. Very seldom waa he In conversation with the sen orlu or her guest; but he watched over them. When the two young women drove through the plantation the overseer, on his horse, was In front or behind. He was always hovering about. Just out of sight. , As the days wore on, the planter whose estates adjoined came more frequently. Always he scowled when ho saw the overspor. One ufternoon, following an Inter view with the senorlta alone, he flung himself away In deadly mge. That evening she wna very quiet and thoughtful. The workmen noticed that the over reer seemed to redouble hla watchful ness. They saw him slip away a few days later, melting Into tho Jungle like a panther. They did not know that he waa following one of the maids from the big house, and that he trailed her to a tryatlng place with the planter. It was bright moonlight, and two o'clock in the morning. The traitor ous maid had left the front door un barred. The overseer, hlH machete across his knees, a revolver on his lilp, sat In the gloom of the old stone house. The planter, for whom he was wait Ing, came. He swaggered up the pnlm walk. Recuro in the feeling that the American senorlta was unguarded. The plantation workmen were snor ing In their kennels half a mile away; the overseer was also asleep In hia quarters. And ten of the planter'a own men waited by the road. Twenty paces from the bouse, In the center of an open apace where the while moon beat down, he stopped A tlgure with a naked machete ad vanced to meet him. Tho planter's own weapon leaped out as he hissed curses. He recog nlred the overseer. At the clash of blade on blade the planter'a bullies came running from the fringe of the palma. With a laugh the American presaed his attack until his adversary gaye ground. He heard the patter of feet and saw the ad vanclng wave of his enemies. The cave man who overcame hla enemies with a stone ax awoke in the American. He ahotited aloud In sheer" delight of the conflict. "Yow-yow-yow, whe-e-e-e-ee!" At the high pitched yell the plan ter's thoughts tied back to the scene of twelve yearB before on San Juan hill. Again he was Capt. Luis Olfaro, of the Hoyal Twenty-ninth infantry; again he was crossing blades beneath the fierce sunlight with an American. No wonder he had hated the overseet Instinctively It waa the same man. In bis fright and amazement he lowered hla guard for the fraction of I a second, and the: American's machete laid open his cheek from nose to ear. Wood streamed down his fare. He wavered, retreated, turned. And then, In sudden mad panic, he threw awaj hla machete and fled, hlr, bullies about him. "Whe-e-e-e-ce!" roared the victor "Hun, you piker; run!" A hand was laid on his arm. He turned to look into the face of his fall countrywoman. "And now, Mr. John Harris Ilurnham, third," ahe said calmly, albeit with a little tremble In her voice, "perhapa you will flnlah that llttlo conversation we began on the stairs?" "Hut, Doria," he remonstrated, "I'm thirty-three now, and broke, besides.'' "I don't care If you were a nun dred," she flashed; "and I have money enough for us both." So he dropped his machete and took her in his arms. How the Ostrich Travels. Ordinarily two feet Is the stride of the ostrich, but when the bird In frightened It Is known to have run 30 miles un hour. When It runs It takes both feet off the ground at erery stride; Its progress being made in a aeries of Jumps bo rapidly performed that It seems one foot Is on tho ground while tho other Is plarral Birds of lesBer leg length usually cover four or five feet of ground at every normal step. IS ECONOMICAL ing the Besslon of parliament. Xew York Tribune. Italian Celebration. With the dedication of the elghtti wonder of the world, a gigantic statin of Victor Emmanuel, which has been under courso of construction for th past twelve years and cost $12,000,000 Italy commenced on March 2C a cole Iiration of the fiftieth anniversary ol tiie Italian chamber's proclamation 01 the country as an Independent king dom, which will last during an entlrt year and open to the world exhibition! of art, scletico, Agriculture, and me chanics. His One Experience. "Weren't you ever on a motor carT' "Yes, once." "What make was it?" "I don't know. I was only on the front of It for a second or so, and li got away before I could pick mysel up," embolic Standard. Sit ifit THK Halt Klver reclamation project In Arizona, the greatest ever undertaken by the government, Involved the solution of problems of stupendous magnitude. Some of these concerned tho building of the Hoosevelt dam, which was opened recently by the former president, for whom It was named. In order to render the dam Bite accessible nnd to convey to it the vast amount of material needed tho engineers wero compelled to build a lemarkablc wagon road, the construction of which involved 40 miles of rock blasting. KANSAS FARM LANDS Values Greatly Increased in Last Ten Years. State Makes Very Favorable Showing In Agricultural Statistics Just Issued Smaller Farms Have Diminished. Tupeka, Kan. The I' lilted States :ensus bureau litis Just Issued the agrl :ultural statistics for tho state of Kan sas, aa collected at tho thirteenth decennial census of last April. The figures are given out a year ufter the dato when they were collected, but tho time of the census bureau has been devoted principally to population statistics since the work of taking the census was completed. Kansas makes a very favorable ihowlng In tho agricultural statistics as Just Issued. The total value of farm lands increased three-fold In tho deceiinlum from l'JOO to 1!U0, or over $1,000, 000,000. Owing to tho Increase In population and the advances In Ir rigation, tho farmed area Increased during tho period by four per cent. There are 4,000 more farmers in the state than ten yearn ago, more farms, more tenant farmers nnd more farm owners. Tho number of farm mort gages Is about the same, which docs not mean that the farmers are no richer than ten years ago, but, on the contrary, that they have been in creasing their holding and placing Improvements on their farms. Per haps a few farm mortgages may be duo to nutos, but the number Is prob ably not large. During the ten years the number of smaller farms, with the exception of truck patches, has diminished. Over one-third of the farms of tho state nre 175 acres and over. Thn number 0r negro nn, Indian farmers Is de- creasing. The farmers of tho stale spent less for farm fertilizers in 1910 than In 1900, but this Is probably due to better conservation of the fer tliity of their farms and the uso of barnyard fertilizers. Statements relative to the acreage of crops anil the yields will be made later by Ceiisus Director Duiand 11s the tabulation of this data has not been completed. The principal rates of Increases In Kansas In 1910 ns compared to 1900 are: In the total value of all farm land alone, 1SS per cent.; In tho av rrago value per acre of farm land alone, 178 per cent.; In the total valuo of farm land nnd buildings, 109 per cent.; in tho average value per acre of farm land and building. 159 per cent.; In the total expenditures for la bor. 90 per cent.; In the total valuo of farm buildings alone, 79 per cent.; In the total value of all farm Implements and machinery, 64 per cent.; in the total Improved farm acreage, 19 per cent.; In tho total farm acreage, 4 per cent.; In the viole number of farms, 2 per cent., nnd In the average acres per farm, 1 per cent. Tho o?lly decrease during tho decade occurred in the total expenditures for fertilizers, 73 per cent. The statement shows In detail that the number of farms reported In 1910 was 177,299. as compared with 173,098 In 1900, an increase of 4,201, or 2 per rent. TRAMP RESCUES ""hourar.ds of Well-Dressed and EvN dently Well-Fed Pedestrians Pass by Soulful-Eyed Canine. Chicago. Like "yon Cassltis" he had a lean and hungry look, and until a playful wind blew him off his "pins," West Madison street pedestrians Jocu larly referred to him us "Romeo with "he soulful eyes." Whim he lay In the street, with his paws limply banging over the curbing and his bony ribs udvantngeously dis played through his muddy white skin, n. crowd gathered round him and "Ro meo with the soulful eyes" was given 'ood in the forai of ham and beef sandwiches bonsht nt a nearby res taurant. Whatever Romeo's thoughts were, he was too weak to utter them, even In everyday dog language, and the Btumpy tail moved ineffectually back and forth and the cadaverous Jaws dripped, while the ham and beef sand wiches remained untouched. Romeo as too far gono to eat. Romeo was The total value of farm lands and buildings was given in 1010 us $1,7:13. li.'li.ooo, us agniiiKt $M3,firi3,O0O In l'JOO, an Inert aso of $1.0'JO,000,OuO, or 1G! per cent. The total value of all farm land alone was reported In 1!H0 at $1,534, i"i2.noO, as compared with $:.;;:', 1SS.000 In l:oo, a gain of $1,002,364,000, or 1S8 per cent. The total valuo of farm buildings alone was given In 1910 nt $190.101,. 000, us against $111.4f:.,000 In 1900. it 11 increasu of $S7,G2t,00, or 79 per cent. In 1910 the valuo of tho farm land alone constituted 89 per cent, of the total value of land and buildings, as compared with S3 per cent. In 1900. The reported volue of farm Imple ments and machinery was $ 18,24 1,000 In 1910, as against $29,491,000 in 1900. a gain of $18,753,000, or 64 per cent. The total acreage reported In 1910 was 43,201,000 acres, as compared with 41.r,3,0.iO in 1900, on Increase of 1, r9S,000 acres, or 4 per cent. The improved acreage wos returned in 1910 as amounting to 29,858,000 CUPID BUSY AT BRYN MAWR Girls Deny New York Clergyman's As sertion They Are "Puffed Up" Forty Per Cent. Marry. Philadelphia. The New York clergy man who recently declared that only an Infinitesimal percentage of tho graduates of the big women's colleges were able to find husbands is refuted by the statistics Issued by Hryn Mawr college. It Is asserted here. Figures In the annual register of f umnae and former students show that 28.4 per cent of the entire grail unto body, numbering 2,721, have mar ried, while of three classes graduating since 1SS9 more than 50 per cent are married, and of seven other classes, a'so since 1889, nearly 40 per cent, have been wedded, a general average of about 40 per cent. Tho New York clergyman declared that graduates of wouvn's colleges wero "IncomiH'tent In the domestic art s, puffed up with a llttlo super ficial knowledge and entirely too ex pensive a luxury for the average man to undertake to support." This asser tion the Hryn Mawr girls Indignantly deny and point to tlw statistics to bear them out. DOG CATCHER USES AIRSHIP Hopes With W-roplane to Trap Stray Canines That Have Become Wary Has Amassed Fortune. Montclair, N. J. David Stelnfeld, who Isolllclal dog-cntcher In ten towys in Essex, Union and Morris counties and who has amassed a Ktiiull fortune from his work, announces that he has awarded a contract for a small aero plane ond n largo net for use In his work. He adds that he will try it on the stray und unlicensed dogs lu Mont clair first. Stelnfeld has been hunting dogs so long In the three counties that the ani mals recognize him half a mile away and rush for shelter long before he gets within striking distance. HUNGRY DQG too dirty and bedraggled to entitle him to the respoct of any Oodfeorlng or otherwise deserving pedestrian Ro meo was too weak to muke use of his skinny legs. Romeo's eyes blinked as he looked up at the muddy sky and down at tho muddy street, and there didn't appear' to be much encourage ment in either, for ho closed his eyes. No one ventured to soothe his poor feelings, and liomeo might have died a suffering martyr or hero or something, If a man w hose appearance was not greatly different from the starving bound, had not otune along nnd picked him up. As it was, Romeo let his head rest ngolnst the tattered coat of his unshaven benefactor, and In some manner gave vent to vibratory glad ness by means of his tall. The man and the dog went away, while tho crowd stood looking after them. Girls, Take Notice! A wealthy Yonkers tN Y I man hn Just married his housekeeper because she tmule such capital apple pies. ApXW-"- -- i --r -. vV' J'r1 ai res, as against 25,041,000 In 1900, an Increase of 4,817,000 acres, or 19 per cent. The Improved acreage formed 69 per cent, of the total acreage in 1910 and 60 per cent. In 1900. The average acres per farm report ed In 1910 were 2U. as against 241 In 1900, an increase of three acres, or 1 per cent. The average value per aero of farm land and buildings In 1910 Is stated as $10.07, ns against $15.45 In 1900 a rise of $24,62, or 159 per cent. The average volue per acre of farm land alone In 1910. was reported ae $35.47, while in 1900 It was $12.77, the amount of gain being $22.70, or l"f per cent. Of the whole number. 177,299, ol farms reported In 1910, there were 175,618, or 99 per cent., opera ted by while fanners nnd 1,681, 01 1 per cent., by negro and other non while fanners, as compnred with a total of 173,098 In 1900, of which 171, 2"2, or 99 per cent., were conducted by white farmers, ami 1,866, or 1 per cent., by negro and other rionwhltn The Increase iu the number of farm of while farmers during the decade nmounted to 4.3S6, und tho decrease In the number or farms of negro and other nonwhlto farmers to 1S5. He has repainted hla wagon, put or false wigs nnd whiskers and resorted to other expedients In bis efforts tc fool the unlicensed dogs, but without avail. Now ho says he will try the aetopVine, soar a few feet above the ground, load his machine with frest beef bones, and then, after all the dogi assemble beneath bis machine, dror. the net over them and alight and sep a rate the licensed from the unlicensed dogs. FLYING TESTS FOR BERLIN Airships Will Start and End Summei Competition at German Capital Limited to Germans. Merlin. A great flying competition limited to Herman aviators, will tak place early In the summer. The fllghi will be over a circuitous courso be ginning and ending In Berlin and wll Include Magdeburg, Hamburg, Premen Dusseldorf and Dessau. The declsior to hold the eontwst Is the result of thi failure of plans for a Joint eompeti Hon by French nnd German flyers caused by the objections of tho chau vlnlsts Withdrawal of the French avlton aroused much bitterness in (lermanj nnd the olllclals of the Aviation Kngl neers' Vereln, who nre In charge ol tho preparations, are on their mettl to make the Independent eompctltlor a brilliant success. The contest hat unique interest from tho fact tba' special attention will be paid to tin military phase of aviation. It is pro posed to offer a special prize for ma chines carrying two passengers, so at to admit of their taking military ob scrvations. Zeppelin to Carry Passengers. Dusselderf, Rhenish Prussia. Count Zeppelin's dirigible ballooi Deutschland II arrived today froir Frankfort on-tbe-MuIn and will be Eta tloncd here permanently to carry out the contract with tho municipality foi passenger flights. BIGGEST SHERIFF IN WORLC He Is 6 Feet 7 Inches Tall am Weighs About 440 Pounds More Popular as "Big King." Atlanta. Ga. Certainly not th. least, among tho city's pronilnen' guests last week was W. 13. King o Anderson, S. C, widely known ns tin iargest sheriff In tho world. I.oomlni C feet 7 Inches in the air, tipping tin beam at the 410 mark, he wos mak Ing big fellow delegates look like I.ll llputlans, and even the bulk of th nation's chief executive Bank Into lu significance besldo the embodiment o the majesty of Carolina law. Up In Anderson the sheriff Is fa--ill arly known as "Dig King" to every body, nnd ho accepts his nlcknam with a ready good nature which lis, made him the friend of all. That hh constituents do not think his size 11 feels bis nblllty as sheriff Is shown b; the majorities which be always re reives Rt election time. Mr. King visits his friends here set oral limes each yeur. By HENRY F. COPE TKXT Thim ili'Ni well that It wna In blue heart.--! Klines, 8:111. l!y their motives men are both le-aMired ami made. These are the .notors, the engines of our humanity. Fortune may offer many allurements md fate may seem to lay many a lash ju our shoulders, but when tuid bow c shall reach the goal and whether :hat goal bu worth tho race depends .in the character and power of the Meals and desires within us. Many a II fn lies by the waysldo, on he Junk heap that on superficial ex initiation seems to be an admirable ,)leco of mechanism. It lies there be- aiiM) It Is Just that and no more, only mechanism, Intricate, adjusted, pol shed, but powerless, valueless for aek of a sullielent dynamic force, a ;ower and motion of Its own. Kfllclency Is a plendld thing, wholly leslntblo anil essential, but life mands also sufficiency, motive as we!l M mechanism. Schools and daily ex perience give us tho training In cm ?lt ney, but from within must arise the lynninlc forces, the motives, passions, aM'Irutlons, and real poucrs of the ,'iersoiiallty. Tho sun of our motives makes the Purvises of our lives and this deter mined the course we go, the work we .lo, the character we have, and the Jeitlny thut Is ours. The deepest need :if every lifu Is a passionate purpose In living, on end and goal that calls forth all the possibilities and enlists ill the powers. I.lfo's purpose depends on Its philosophy; that, Is your aim and goal will depend on your Interpretation of the meaning of life, on the answer which you mako to life's significance. What Is the meaning of it all to you? Is It but accident or chance' vn vou will drift without purMi Is Is a bloody tight? Then you will wago war for yourself and against ail oth ers. Are there yet higher purpose running through all? Then you will si ek them. Iu a most lmKirtant sense this an swer which a man makes to the etilg ni.i.of living constitutes bis religion and religion becomes the dominating motive In life. For religion surely for us all. as for all people and In all time, is our conception of tht which, for us. is highest mid best, that which, because it seems to us to give mean ing to existence, furnishes the motives for whatever we may be and do in the world. This has been ot the root of all high endeavor; this spirit accounts for all great and worthy work the world lias seen, llecause they have believed that existence bus meaning only as It contributes to progress, only as It rinds fruitage In larger, nobler being, they have rejoiced to lay down life if need bo that tho nice might find larger life. Faith In the future, hope for our fel lows, love of 1 hat which Is highest and best fuse together and mako a Rllfll cient motive for living and tolling. And life is a tedious business, without such motives. A man becomes merely a part of the bread winning nuicfiino, a slave bound to the wheel, unless he has some sense of his own life as do ing worth while for the contribution It makes to all life. Youth abounds with high motives normally; the years often blast them with the curse of cynicism. We des poil our own hearts and steal our own happiness whenever we allow the em bittering experiences of dally living to take from us tho faith that it Is pos sible to do good, to Increase the world's store of joy nr.d strength and hope, and to make our lives worth tioniething to our times. When all has been said and all otlier ways tried we find that tho only motives that give perennial satisfac tion and constantly strengthen tho heart tire the unselfish ones. Oiie gets weary of gaining, but never of giving. Ambition falters on Its wings. !!ut the aspiration to serve, to help, to bless, to cheer, to love never dies down. You may rueasuro any man's re ligion by tho extent to which It acts as a constant motive In bis life, whether It gives him a vision of tho life that awakens an enthusiasm for living, of a world that Is worth liv ing in and dying for and a race that has such promise In Itself as to call for tho Investment of all that is worthy In us. In Christ Our Hope. Prayer Is not the most effective thing in the Christian's life. Jesus Christ is better nnd more effectlvo (ban th-"! hest prayer ever offered. In him. and not in prayer, lies our whole hope. One who dated the beginning of bis richest Christian life and experi ence from li time of prayer when ho bail asked everything nnd received everything, was reminded of this as he prayed later, in gratitude for his new blessings: "Not because it was an effective prayer, but because thou art on effective Christ, was my prayer so gloriously answered "! Those who ata .ailed "mighty In prayer" think least about prayer ns such, and most aboil Christ. Yet the more we think about rhrist and the better we come tn know him, the greater will be the place that wo give to prayer In our lives. Cod's Plan For Us. The great apostle, writing to th Kphesinns snys that "n are "crenteo In Christ unto good works, whirr Clod hath before ordained that wt should walk tn them." The works lire ready, waiting for us, all we havo tc Jo Is to be willing to be led Into them How many disappointments we should have been spared -In II To if we had al ways acted on this conviction! God knows what we nre fitted for far bet ter than we know ourselves. He wht nuule us knows whereof we nre made . . . If we would be useful tr Christ's service our wisdom Is "tr. have no plan except to enter Into bis plan for us," and Ray with Paul. "Lord what wilt thou have mo to do?" l.FHfiOV TRXT-2 Chronicle 2. Mm ary 'ci 19, To. Cot.IiKN TKXT-'TrM" oeth before Oust n"-tl.in. ami an tuuighty spirit b T.ir.. u fall ITiiv. If:: IS. Tl.tr frzlali'ii rHfti otnril (llrech mi from 11. . MM ! c. 7:5; (llastlneii) tl 1'. Sal 1.1 7W t'rimii may linvo birome 1 l'-j.-r ul.out n '. 7', Jotham bring- the n K'-nt ft. in that tlino. I'l.Ai'K The 'lniil" In J'TiisaMm. KIN'HM In lured. .Trrotmiim II. In AnxyrlH, Khulinaiwii-r III. lit()lilL;TS-A111.M. Iloa.-ii. Inulali, the Z liurluh of our Icison. On tho murder of King Joush h was succecle.l by his eldest son, Aniazlah, a man of piety and force, who slew the murderers of his father, sparing their sons, and then turned up on the enemies of bis country, the Kdomltcs soutii of the Dead Sea, who had been ravaging southern Judea. He hired thousands of mercenaries from the Northern Kingdom, to aid lilm In the war. When ;i prophet re buked him for thus involving himself with an idolatrous nation he dismiss ed the mercenaries, ho, 011 their way home, plundered the cities of Judith. Amalah went on, however, and with Ills own troops conquered tho Kdom lies in tho Valley of Salt south of the Dead Sea, and thoroughly sub dued the cruel nation. He brought homo with him some of the Kdomlte Idols and worshiped, them, thus dishonoring Jehovah, who had so signally helped him, In favor of gods w ho bad proved their-on a I powerlessness! A courageous prophet 1 relinked him, but we are told what the ! effect was. I In his pride of success, and perhaps 1 to avenge the towns which tho Israel j III: h mercenaries had plundered, ha I sent a boastful message to Joa.ii king ! of Israel, challenging him to fight. Jo I ash promptly accepted the challenge, ! completely worsted Amalali, ruptured ' Jerusalem, und went U'.vay with all tho j treasure of tho Temple and royal pul I IK.', and with many of the cltifeiiB IU j hostages. Aina.iah continued to I reign for fifteen years, but his sub- Jeeta never were contented, ami nt last 1 they 10.se in revolt and murdered him. ! The son of Atnaiah, l'..lah, n lad I ,-if sixteen, was chosen by the people, j He continued bis lather's conquest of the Fdoinitcs by fortitying Kloth, aa Important city at tho bead of the east era blanch of the Red Sea, thus put Mug Jii'l.ih In a position to renew the rich commerce with India which Solo mon bad establish d. I'.iah's was a religious life. He did that which was right iu tho sight of the Lord, lie followed Aiua.lah In the better part of hi lllo, and not la his Idolatry. TJieiv Is no better prep aration for the eyes of the world thaa to be conscious ever of Cod's cyei upon us. The period of U.ziah and Jeroboam wus the golden age of Israel. As a result of conquest und of coniuirrci.J enterprise the accumulation of wealth was greater than bad ever been known before. The rich lived la palaces of hewn stone and of Ivory. They reposed on couches with damask coverings. They lay i:;on beds of ivory, and stretched themselves upon botus. They ute lambs selected out of the flocks, and calves fattened iu the stall. They sang to tho accom paniment of harps hongs that they thought us tine u-s those of David. They drank beakers of rare w ine, and anointed themselves with precious ointments. This prosperity, however, was restricted to thu upper classes. While the nobles flourished, the poor grew constantly poorer. Tho peasant proprietors were crowded out, and all tho land came Into the hands of n few great nobles. The lice-born Israelites mink to tho position ol serfs. Pros perity has more perils than adversity, ujni pride is one of them. Dressed, ac cording to Joseplius, in priestly attire, und perhaps on (lie celebration of sumo high national feast, I'zziuh presumed to enter tho Holy Place, which It was death for any but a priest to enter, und to offer Incense upon the sacred ullar. I'zziuh appears to have desired to become supremo pontiff as well as king, and to exercise the same dual inactions us the Kgyptlan Pharaoh were wont to do. He had to disregard tho direct command of Jehovah that the priests alone should burn Incense, on his ultar; ho had to dei-plse the his tory of his people, to defy the holy tiaiiie by which he himself was called. Thus a reign of tltly-two years wa spoiled iu an hour. What terrible punishment came to I'zzluh? Tho inlliction of that most loathsome, Incurable disease, leprosy. Thus Miriam had been punished, and tiehuzi. According to Joseplius, it wan ut this very moment that the famous earthquake of I'zzlah's reign occurred. For tiie rest of his lifo ho lived In a separata house. It wa-s perhaps some place In the country to which the king confined himself. We are not told whether he repented of the sin that he had committed; but wu may per haps a.-sir- tiiat be did so. The story of Ainu reinforces the warning that coir.es to us from the story of Czziali. The prldo of Abas was pride of opinion; that of I'zzah wus pride In accomplishment. Prldo may spring from good looks, fine clothes, plenty of money, a keen Intel lect, distinguished social position. hoy n.ay be vain of his ball playing and a girl of her white hands. What ever may be the source of It, prldo i ulwuys a terribb? danger. It alienates from un tho sympathy and uffivtton of others. No one loves a proud 1 orson. It bunt's our eyes to our real condition. Vt t. think we are stronger or brighter cr better than we are. it shuts us away from the sources of wisdom nnd strength, be cause we do not ft el that we ticod strength or wisdom. Tho most learned teacher cannot teach a sell-sullkient scholar, who thinks that ho "knows It nil." Worst of all, It shuts us away from God. Only those thut will hum ble themselves and become like little children can filter hia Mrgdom. Tho meek inherit tue earth, and the poor lu spirit luherit bevt-n.