"BRAVE I.OVI,1, Ife'd nntlilng l.nt his violin, IM nothing lnt my Hut wk wern wed when skies worn blue Anil summer ilnys wore long. Ami when w rested by tho hmlgo The ro'ilns cjiin mill libl How they hnil ilnrml to woo nil. I will When curly spring was nohl. Wi' sometime suppm! nn dewberries or slept among th liny, pill ort (ho fanners' wives nt ev ( Kill" nut to hiMir ill tiliiv The rurniiM tunes Ihn ile.ir old tunes n coil dl not starvn for loni;, WIiIIh my mini li.nl his violin Anil I my sweet love soup, Tlii" worlil has nye gone well with u, Oi l man, sine w"re one , Our ho nel.-ss w.indrim; ilowii Hip litnoa - It long ago WHS rolli". Iliit tlms-i wlio w ilt br gold or gear. For linn iiml for kin, Till youth's sweet spring grow brown ntnl senr Ami lo I and beauty twin", Will ni-vcr know Hie joy of hearts ThKt ni"t wt limit ti tciir, When you hn I I n' your violin Ail I 1 a Mini.', n y tli'iir. M-iry Kyle n.illas, ANOE.THY TO ORDER. nv cm:. crtAitt,F.. Jin; wood burn's earliest recollection was of Ml litipninted 'SiAv.-fc'JL. M"rv 1,1,1 . -tlT(i..f,..'...lt, f mm, try town itiCen- Iral Ni'W York fStKtv. 'J lit ru ho llVOll Willi his mother mid father nnd t lie babv brother t lint died mil il ho w as twelve years did. HiH father kept a grocery, also was superinten dent of the Mission Sunday-school held every Sunday afternoon in the mission chapel on tlm outskirts of the town, where nil t lit" rolling-mill em ployes lived. Peter's father was n delicate-looking iiihii, with hint; hide whiskers, and, generally speaking, n pious tone of voice. II in mother was more robust. She wore a Muck Uce bonnet with purple flowers, h water-fall- it was then at the begin ning of the seventies and taught a class of boys in the Home Hnnday school IVtev, of course, being in the class. They were a good family ; thoroughly well respected in the town and fairly prosperous. Groceries are necessities; Mr. Woodburn provided for a good cIiihs of patrons. He owned his home and had a modest bank ao conut. He believed in education and l'eter was kept closo at hit books. Peter did not dislike hi books j he was loud of rending. He studied well and passed high examinations. From the public schools he went into the Academy and got n taste of mathe matics and higher classics. He had a great notion, too, for modern Ian guapes and his parents fostered it. An old professor took him in baud and found him an apt pupil. When Peter was seventeen he whs t hought so much of by the Young Men' Christian As sociation that they made him librarian at their library, to his infinite joy. It was a well-selected library aud Peter read and rend onmivorously. When he was nineteen hu father died. Peter and his mother were alone in the world, She was an amiable, middle-aged Boul very proud of her boy and very content with him. Ho was quiet, studious, industrious. He spent his evenings at homo with her, and read aloud a great deal. Of course, he frequently read fiction -generally English novels of higher class English life. Ofton he would discuss what he read with his mother. Once he laid down hia book with a nigh, and aaid almost sadly : "Ob, mother, how de lightful it must be to live in an old, old house, where you grandfather and great-great-grandfather have lived be fore yon. It must be delightful to trace away back in your ancestry and know who they all were. We can't do that iu America. For instance, mother, you don't know much about your great grandfather, do you, now?" The good woman shook her head. "No that is, well, I don't know about all of them. Von see I had two grand fathers and yes, I guess I must have had four great-grandfathers. But about as far as I can go is my grand father on my mother's side that's your great-grandfather ; be lived down to Middle Forks and was a cobbler. But he was a real good man ; read his Bible all the time he worked." ' Peter draw another deep sigh. "I'll go on readiug the next chapter, now, I think," he said, for his mother's recollections were n?t to his taste. Another time he tried to Cud out something about his father's ancestors. But of these his mother eould tell him little, except that his father, like her self, had been orphaned at a rather early age. There was an uncle of his father's out iu California might be very rich by this time, but she didn't know. With another sigh Peter gave up trying to investigate. He simply went on conducting his father's business and laying aside a little money, and patronising the library where he was still librarian during certain hours of toe day such as he could best spare from the grocerr. When he was lacking just a few days of coming of age, be had the great misfortune to lose his mother. , He knew it was a great, au irreparable misforUine. He was now alone iu the world ; bis best friend was gone for ever. He felt a great deal of grief in a quiet war. ' He shut up tho little house and went to live at the hotel. He hardly kuew what he meant to do ; it seemed to him that nothing now bound him to hisoative town. At the hotel he breame acquainted with a gentleman who waa going out nest and talked glowingly of chances out there for a young man. Peter became interested and soon made up bis mind to go alonsf. Within a fortnight's time he had sold his grocery and his home, drawn bis bank balance and put the money iu such safe shape that ht could get at it at any moment. Then he went West. Holier, steady, industrious and wnll inforined, l'eter Woodburu prospered beyond his expectations. At thirty be was very well oft very well oh" for a young man. He had mining proper lies and other property; a home in IU-nvcr, a llrsl-rnte lmme. He had everything man could desire --except, of course, a wife. He had always been too busy to fall ill love, it seemed. And" bis ideas of women worn very excellent, chivalrous ones, derived from the excrllcut English fiction he had read. As he rame into his thirty-first year it began to dawn upon him that a man should have a good wife and settle dowu to family life some time or other. With this idea in his bead hn oatno Kat--itwas .itine and went to slay at a delightful and fashionable water ing place oil the Jersey const. Eligible men were not plenty thnt year, and Mr. Wondbtirn he always registered as Mr. !'. 1. Woodburu, for it seemed to him that l'eter was not exactly an American name and that Pierce was very much more musical and quite as ensily written nnd hn bud heard Ins mother sav that his father's mother's maiden inline m Dclainnter Mr. Woodbnrn was very mttcli in demand. He was a tall, One-looking fellow and .-ported very rich. The girl tint most ellricted him, and there were very many lino girls there, wai a Miss Until I'.r. tt, of Phila delphia. She whs t:ill, slender, grace ful in dancing and swimming, charm ingly well bred, arcordini; to Peter's notions acquired from his novel read ing moiles; and dutiful, vet not sim pering. l'eU'i' soon hud fallen head t.ver ears in love with Until BreU. There w as no opposition. Mrs. Orett gave cordial verbal consent and bless ing; Mr. Bret1; wrote his approval and Peter was i'l a sort of paradise. And yet, underneath it all was a sort of gnuwing appreheusioti of tho possi bility ot the Hretts at some time de manding tho history of bis ancestry. Werethey not Philadelphia folks? And was that not the terrible the crucial test? Who was your grandfather? Whs it not strange they had not al ready insisted on knowing? Tho more K, thought of it the more ho lay awake nights. At length hn could no longer etidura the strain. He miiht be prepared for any emergency. Tho idea came to him one night that if one must make oneself, one might as well make one's ancestry. There wuld be no great particular harm in it, seeing Hint it was only to be used as a matter of reference. The next morning hn took pencil and paper aud prepared a book of lineage. The only names he knew, Clinton aud Morris on his mother's side, Woodburn aud Delamnter on hia father's, were excellent. What he did know be told no lies about; what he did not know might have been true as easy as not for all be knew. To be sure be purposely forgot to mention the great-grandfather shoemaker who read his Bible constantly while cob bling. His father, George Washburn, he made descend gracefully from Puritan gentlefolk through a gentle manly line of New England farmers to emerge a "merchaut" he t'.id not say "grocer." His mother, also from English stock, with just a slight drop of Huguenot blood, to account for preferring the name Pierre. When, after several mornings' work, Mr. Woodbnrn had completed this an cestry in peuoil murk, he very natur ally knew it pretty well by heart. There were blank pages in his family Bible apart from those where the entry of his parents' marriage was made and that of bis birth and his brother's. Upon these pages he copied carefully in pale, old-fashioned ink the precious lineage he had labored so hard to construct. Days passed. At the proper time the subject was brought up of family, and Mr. Woodburn casually mentioned his ancestral record in the old Bible, and after some persuasion gave it to his betrothed for perusal. The effect was excellent. The Bretts regarded him with new veueration at least the parents did. As for Ruth, it seemed not to make so much differ ence. But some few days later something else transpired. A letter, forwarded from Denver, came to Peter Woodburn with news that bis father's uncle, the one his mother bad once told him of, bad discovered that his grandnephew was a tine, prosperous fellow. The old man, Delamater, was coming East and wanted to meet Peter. Of course Peter was glad to bear from the old man, who, it seemed, was au old bachelor and well off. In due time old Mr. William Dela mater came East and put up at the same seaside hotel and. of course, was presented to the Bretts. Peter had taken pains to meet him in New York and see wht he was like in advance. The old roan had passed muster very creditably. He had lived in Han Fran cisco and bad very good ways, dressed well and was not uugratnmatioal by any means. He took a great fancy to Ruth Bret' and they became great friends. The old man was capital story teller and used to entertain Ruth's mamma for hours dowu at the beach while Ruth bathed or promenaded. One might almost have suppoaed that Peter would take certain precautions in the matter of a hint to bis grand-uncle as to the matter of "family" and Philadelphia prejudices. But Peter omitted this. And so the mischief was wrought, They had roiib down to the beacti onn morning and found there was no bathing. It was very rough. Mrs. IJiett bad ensconced herself In bpr beach chair, old Mr. Delamater bad made himself comfortablo at her side, Itnlh was loitering about, and Peter Woodburn was somu distance away smoking and looking out at tho ocean. Siiddouly Peter saw flying toward him his fiancee. "Pierre, Pierre, quick, sho whis pered. "(Jltiick, take your uncle awayt" Hhe was white and scared looking. "What's the matter?" be asked. "Ob, I I'll tell you later. Only lake him away quick I" Peter strode over to tho old man. "Uncle, quick, come along ; there's the queerest looking thing down there down whore those men are. I'd hardly aik the ladies to go just yet there's such a crowd. (Jtiick, uncle." And ho dragged him away. "Uncle, for Heaven's sake, what wero you talking about to Mrs. Brett ?'; "Talking about? Why nothing in the world let's see. O, yes, sho lib gnu to talk about her ancestors and asked me if I wasn't proud of mine tho old Puritan nnd the tho what'it sho call 'em? And blamed if I know what she'd got in her head." Andtheu sho says "Oh, well, you are one ol there independent Americans that would prel'ev to be considered aelf umilc. But your nephew, Mr. Wood burn, seemed to feel a getitiiuo pride in being well born. I think it no ad tniriible his keeping that old f.imilj Bible and being able to go back gen erntious. I certainly tlo approve it;' and I up and says, "Oreat Hcottl Von don't inuau to say you put auy credit iu that balderdash why, lie jusl probably made thnt up to suit him self. Why, on his mother's side, now, thev were iiist ordinnrv shopinnkeri 'nnd grocers and farmers and .lust then Miss I'uth began to tell nie yon wanted mo and (lood Gracious, l'eter, you're as palu as a sheet I What's the matter?" "Nothing, uncle; only I guest you've just ruined all tho happiness ol my iiTe. Why couldn't you keep youi m utlh shut; that's all. Now, for pity'l sake, keep away from tho Bretts." He turned and strodo away, hnrdly knowing where he went until hu saw Until coming to intercept him. One look into her eyes reassured him ; they were shiuiug almost mer rily. "Oh, Pierre!" kIio cried, with a lit Ho laugh, "what au escape!" "What do you mean, Ruth?" "Why, your uncle was just giving roil away for nil he was worth. I have to laugh. He says you made up all your ancestry. "And Rntli you you couldn't forgive me if I did such a thing?'' Wooilbnrn's voice shook. "Bless your old heart, Pierre I Listen ; anyouo around to hear? Why, yon know mamma's father was just a plain dry-goods-storo man iu in Camden. " But don't tell, Only just make your uncle hold his tongue." "Then everything is all right?" The color leaped buck into Peter's cheeks. "Why, of course. Wasn't mamma cute? That's tho real Yankee word. She pretended not to have heard any thing he said, All she remarked was; 'Dear me !' The old gentlemuu is al ways most garrulous when tho wind blows away from me, and I can't catch mi v thing he Buys, Jt's quite too bad.' " l'eter Woodburn burst out laugh ing. Ruth laughed with him. "Left go back and sit by mamma," she said. New York Mercury. Pump Shotguns For Bobbers. Messengers and guards for the United States Express Company ar being furnished with rapid-tire repeat ing shotguus with which to guard the property iu their charge. Beside the outlet nnd bomb proof doors to tin express cars and the burglar-proof safes, which cannot be opened even by the messengers, train robbers will find guards and messengers supplied with these guns in addition to the revolvers they have always carried and ready and willing to engage in a shooting scrap at short range. To ex-Senator Thomas C. Piatt, President of the United States Expresn Company, is due the adoption of the repeating shotgun. He has been ex perimenting for some time with guns of various makes, and perhaps he would yet have been undecided as to what make was best for the purpose, but a practical demonstration of the value of oue gun was made when one Devery, a would-be-robber, drew a pistol on Guard Bell in the Washing ton depot. Bell had a Winchester "pump" shotgun with six cartridge! iu it, and ho fired twelve large-sized buckshot into the person of Devery, and he was carried to a hospital to have his wounds dressed. The attend ing physician expressed surprise at the wounds, and said that at forty yards a mau would be riddled with the discharge from it. Detroit Free Press. Internal Temperature ot Trees. "" The internal temperatme of trees has been observed for some time past by M. Prinz, of Uccle, in Belgium, who finds their meun annual tempera ture at the heart of the trunk the same as that of the air, but the mean monthly temperature of the trees some times differs from the latter by two or three degrees ceutigrade. Ou oertain days the difference iu question maybe as much as ten degrees centigrade. In very cold weather the interual tem perature falls to a tew tenths of a de gree below the freezing point, and theu remains stationary. In very hot weather the temperature of the tree stays at tttteou degrees ceutigrade or thereabout A large tree is, therefore, oooler in hot weather and warmer iu cold weather thau the air. London, Qlobe. COAL MINKUS. SCr.NF.S OK DUTItKHS I Till? AM'lli:.( U K ItKCilOXS. Crentl Forms the Chief Pond Thus Who Helve for "llliielt lln!tu!il V Novell Ages of Miner's l.lfo, of T TAI'.D times bnvo often born felt in the mining regions, L ''Mt "pv,'r before, says a C Wikesbnrre (I'entl.) letter to the New York World, bus stnrvntioli been so near as now. Employers run give the men no hope of improvement for nt least ilvo months to come. How to support a lnrge family on 910 or 913 a month is a problom iu econ omy no dillictilt that tin miner, ex perienced ns be is iu such nj necessity, hns ii 1 most given up trying. The condition of nffiiirs in tho Wyo ming Valley may be taken ns nu exam ple of the destitution Unit also pre vails in the other two tiuthi'iieitu min ing regions of lYmisylviiiiiii tho Hchuylkill and the Lehigh. Wyoming i-i greater Hum both, its mines nre more prosperous, its output much larger nnd its miners double in num ber, but from Cnrbondnle to Hehlcks hinny not one of the hundreds of mines is being worked more than two days a week, nnd soma have closed en tirely. In this valley are 1511,11110 men employed in nnd about the mines. N'ific-te utha of t h dim Iihto tiimilica to support. The highest wages made by tli'st-cbifs miners tluring .luuuiiry was A very Inrgo majority received lcs tliiiu 915. For February the fig ures nfe oven' lower. Such nn amount of money is suffi cient to keep a single mini in comfort, but it must be remembered miners' fiuuilies mo invariably large, mid the household ithont small children isiiu exception. The question of children is a serious one in mining regions, and has oftiu been the subject of discus sion iimolig operator nnd company miiuiigers. Poverty nn 1 children seem to increase iu the kiidio ratio. "It is not ii mutter to bo c iusidered lightly or humorously," said the uinnuger of n litro company to the World corres pondent. "Miners' families are grow iug constantly, and nt a time when the pniviits can ill uffor I to fend more mouths. Every accident leaves a host of helpless children, who become sub jects of charity. Raising a family of is or more keeps the father constant ly iu iVibt and creates a home iu which there is the direst povertv. Thy miuer nr,'Ues his sous will keeji bun iu old ui , luil the young men soon marry and havo all they can do to support themselves. J lie subject is a most ser ious one for mining communities." i'tt'iid is now the chief food iu the majority of miners' homes. Iii some it is already the only article, nnd the intuitu r is increasing daily. "There is many a ftuuily iu thu v.illey wherj llrj bill of fare is dry bread for break last, dry bread for dinner an I dry bread for supper." This was tho sintumeut of a mine worker who knew by sad experience thnt it was true. "The miner is poorer to-day - tli'iu I ever know him to ba before. Out of his pittance ot wages must tirnt come $ii to 912 for house rent, anil theu see what is left for the family to live ou fl'i a month, ot thirty-three cents a day, to feed ami clothe six or more persons. This is what huudreds have . been existing ou for two months." During 1893 there was an average of 180 working days in the mines, or a little more than half time. The first month of 1M.U the mines averaged about eight days; the second not so much. The question of wages is little heard of auy more. Now it is a ques tion of work. Yet it took years of Conflict and agitation before wages fere adjusted to their present basis. The followiug list, taken from tho AN IDl.3 I'OAL BBEAKEB. books of the Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal Company, shows what the meu could make if they had the oppor tunity : PAT Or THE MEN. OuUblu workers Ter month. FurMiir'u , H5 l'lrk 43 Mnt'ilH tonen 40 W.iu-huivu 40 Per iluy. Ten waters 1 f1 I'ut.) i Us-iiixcr SI 00 PirdtiiHii 1 (ill l!r.-Her eUK.lU'ers 3 US Ho '.lu euglneers S SO Fan engineers U 00 bo hIhm , 1 53 MlirilKKi-M 1 'ii I. ),or rs K.nlt) pickers, ... Top nit ii II. nckimitha I.'arp-ii.er Co il iuieetunt. .. ..1 10 to 1 30 30e. to 1 M ICOloltiS a oo II 10 I 74 I'r mouth. tii.nlt. workers FiirHinnu , '. to 11 Kirn I owui. 73 to SO blalilo 1 oases , ii 1'enUy. )ilv. r Losses - f'i US l'u:;iU'UKiuir i 00 Minor, first elnss ,., 9 311 lUiii-r", seooml class 9 17 Miners' laborers.. ...T3 ISto a -ili Tlmbermi'ii Track eleiuier ,. Iliinners a let ilr.vxrs..., I'nti'lietS. poor bovs , I'lnne loot men , Innlilo earpenl CiirpentHrs' hi'lr. . . . Mason ....9 17 to 1 in .,..1 411 to I 71) . ... 1 fill to 1 s . . . . t nn to I 2 in I no ....1 JOIO 1 SH IK ...A til) to I HS 2110 From the list it might be imagined tho mine-worker was in prosperous circumstances pompnred to many other trades, but I tin difference ap pears when it is found that eight days a month is the average time worked. Not one man iu the wholo list made over 920 tluring January, ami many of them are of considerable education mid experts in their work. Despite their almost desperate con dition, hnrdly a word of denunciation of employers and the rich is beard. There nre no strikes, no meetiugs of unemployed, no agitators and no btbor organization. This change in a re Kioii, once the very centre of such -reason ElL!' 11 ' W&m A MIMF. CAUIM OI'ITI'IFII ItY EltlHT PKOI1.E. discontent, is most remarkable ami is accounted for iu two ways. The operators say the men are more intel ligent and retul the uewpapers. Tho men sav : "Wo bnve bad enough ex perience with such things." There fore, iu this present stringency, there is no complaint, because the men recognize as well as the operator tho causes, which are very difK'reut from those which eHeot other business. The total product of the anthricite mines for 1H1U nas 4',00l),000 tons, of which Wyoming Valley put out 25, 000,01)1) tons. At the eiid of the year, when the entire product should have been sold nn 1 the mines worked full time to supply the demand, there re mained ou band o,QI0,l)li) tons of coal. Tho mines closed at once. Add ing to the prevailing tluliiess of trade came the warmest winter known iu years. There was no sale whatever for coal. Niuety-Hve per cent, of tho nutbracite coal is consumed in house hold staves and furnaces, mid the weather has an immediate effect on trade. Ho while warm weather has proved a blessing to the city poor, it has taken away the work of mauy thousands of men iu Pennsylvania. Weather is tho cause ot three-fourths of the destitution. The price of coal at the mine is seventy-five cents lower per ton thau for several years past, although retailers hold to the same old lofty figures and make greater profit. This causes a most decided disinclination ou the part of the opera- tors to mine much coal. Not until lake shipments to the Northwest com mence, about July 1, will there be an improvement in the anthracite re gions. As the weather .continue to get warmer there will be less work than at present, and the miuer will havo to exist iu some way ou nothing. The mining companies are doing as much as possible to alleviate tho dis tress. Effort is made to give all the men a little work each week. Minos are worked when it would be moie profitable to shut down. All kinds A necessary improvements are put uuder way. New shafts are sunk, tunnels driven and gangways opened. This furnishes employment for part ol the men all of the time, and the most de serving are chosen. The Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Company, which usually employs 15,000 men, is able to keep 1300 ou these improvements. . The widows and orphans are cared for aud special cases of destitution are relieved. Coal is supplied free and bouse reut is IIO:if! OF FOl'RTKKN' MEM AND ONE WOMAN. allowed to fapsn. Rome of the larger companies build many bouses for their employes to live in, and the collection of rent for tho! is deferred until tnuri prosperous times. Companies that hove getieru! tores extend long-titnaj credit tp t ii j men, and in this way foot) is obtained. As a rule, tho miner is honest ami pays when hn can. Piiblio charily, however, is not organized, antt destitution has been so common fof years that little notice is taken of it Tho seven ages of man n the mining region are sitccossiva periods of priva tioi, danger nnd hard work. Tim miner begins and ends bis days in the breaker picking slate. First, as the boy, bo enters the breakpr. Then ha aspires to tend door iu the mine, parry a whip and phew tobaoco. Next he becomes a innlo driver and learns to swear. As miner's laborer next be londs the conl his employer digs. Then bo reaches the summit of his ambition and is a full-fledged miner. As .old age romes ou anil ho gets tut feeble to handle tho pick, ho goes back to tho Ac-, breaker, where fifty years before hn commenced life full of ambition and strength. In every breaker iu tho valley, boys and old meu work side by sitle, aud yet, despite tho inevitable end which can I so plainly seen, there is never a lack of youngsters to fill every va cancy in tho ranks. The mine worker bus characteristics that can tie found in no other man. As the father grows old, tho son tskei his place, and tho clans remain to gether, until they gaiu a kind of pro prietorship over the company iu whoso employ the families have long been. Tho past five years have, how ever, been marked by tho beginning of great changes iu the old ways. Tho son no longer thinks his father's place high enough. The mine has nu attraction for the young man, aud be becomes n clerk or a student. Very few of the rising generation at present will become miners. F.dticntion and newspapers are large ly res) onsible for tho change. At Hcrnnton tho miners have a philosoph ical debating society. All of the mem bers read one or more newspapers nnd keep posted on public affair. Frank ness and honesty are the two most noticeable traits In the miners. Credit is given by merchants for the asking. The Welsh, who predominate, possess these characteristics to A marked de gree, nnd their influence has pervaded the wholo region. With such a class of meu the suffering of poverty seems more acute. They starve with the submission to philosophers. This new order of things has three most remarkable resnlts the decline of lawlessness, the extinction of labor organizations aud the exodus of Huns, Finns, Polandcrs and Bohemians. The Mnllie Mctluires, once the terror of the mining regions, are no longer known. Tho reign of murder and as sassination has completely ended. Crimes are few and life is safe any where along the lonely monntain roads. Duly a few years ago it was an almost uncommon occurrence to find a super intendent or disliked boss lying dead in the road, and mysterious disappear ances were frequently reported. The radical change to the present quiet and orderly state is a most astonishing one to those who knew the mining re gions in their former day of lawless ness. A strange exodus from the anthraciU mining regions, especially the Wyom ing Valley, is the emigration of Huns, Polanders, Bohemians, Hlavs and Finns. They formerly swarmed into the mines and were employed in large number by the operators for very low wages. They were put in place of experienced men, but were soon found to be a most costly experiment. By ignorance and carelessness they caused many acci dents that proved expensive to the operators. The old workmen allied against them, the companies found it more profitable without them and sud denly the tide of immigration ceased and au exodus commenced. The foreigners moved in large number to Western Pennsylvania to work in mills Mid soft coal mines. Those who re mained in the anthracite regions are employed for the cheaper class of labor, aud form now but a small por tion of the mineworkers. Manv improvements have been made in mining methods. Htrict laws gov erning Tentilation and safety appli ances are iu force, but there still re mains oue great permissible crime robbing pillar. It is a qnestiou of engineering judgment in which science is ofteu overpowered by corporation greed. Weak mines are numerous in the valley, and the most dangeroud of all are the abandoned workiugs that have been robbed of every pound tbey would stand. When they cave, death and destruction ore spread to the work ing vein. This was the case in the Gay lord mine, at Plymouth. Years of natural chippiug aud weariug away of pillars left barely strong euongh to hold up the roof finally caused this to collapse and nearly ruiued the whole mine, costing thirteen lives. 3fc. Mammou doe only a cash business.