FREELAND TRIBUNE.': Esta'clishoi 1533. ' PUBLISHED EVERY | MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY inn ; TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited.; OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SU INSCRIPTION RATES. I FREELAND.—'The TRIBUNE is delivered by j carriers to subscribers in Preulaud ut the rate ! j of 12A4 cents a month, payable every two months, or $1.50 a year, payable In advance, j The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the 1 carriers or from the olHoe. Complaints of | 3 irregular or tardy delivery service wiil receive j prompt attention. { BY MAIL.—The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for SI."U a year, payable in * advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. f The date when the subscription expires is on 1 the address label of each paper. Prompt re- 1 newals must be made at the expiration, other- ] wise the subscription will be discontinued. j Entered at the Postoilioo at Freeland, Pa., , ' as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, check*, etc., payable to , the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND. l'A.. JUNE 4, lUO2. Peril of the Miners' Union. From Yesterday's Phlla. North American. The building of stockade fortifications j around mine properties, the enlistment j of fighting men and the hiring of mer- < cenaries arc not necessarily evidences 1 that the anthracite mine operators have reason to fear attacks upon the collier- j ' ies by strikers. That they desire to j , create such an impression there is no i doubt, and when they are fully prepared for trouble it will not be their fault if | , trouble does not come. It is easy to ' i hire men to instigate disorder, and , j there is always the possibility of foolish | , outbreaks by the more ignorant and ex citable strikers, especially if the leaders 1 ' cannot keep them away from saloons. The operators have declared their 1 purpose to destroy the miners' union. They have unlimited funds with which to buy brains and brute force, and they are not hampered by scruples about using their resources. , At Wilkesbarre two carloads of re peating shotguns and buckshot cart ridges have been distributed to the mer cenaries of the coal barons. It is ox plained that buckshot cartridges have been provided instead of rille bullets be cause the intention Is to "maim rathor than kill." Most humane and consider ate indeed aro these gentle opponents of organized labor. A riot gun loaded with buckshot is one of the deadliest weapons known. It is preferred to a Mauser by peace officers and express messengers in the Southwest who have to deal with desperate outlaws. Rut the fortifications and the shotguns will bo of no avail to break up the union if the miners keep their wits about them and refuse to be inveigled into violence. Public opinion is more potent than buckshot in such a contest as they are engaged in. Public sympathy is their sword and buckler; if they throw It away they will stand naked and unarm ed before the riot guns of the Coal Trust. Let the miners take warning from the military preparations made by the de clared enemies of organized labor, and under no provocation permit themselves to bo lured Into physical combat. Any outbreak of violence, no matter how it i begins or who starts it, will bo cunning ly made to count against them. If any among them counsels violence or seoks to iuflame thoir passions, let them regard and treat him as a hired emis sary of the enemy. If he be merely a fool or a man crazed with alcohol, they must restrain him and see that ho docs no harm. John Mitchell and his colleagues aro keenly aware of the danger here pointed out, and they will give to the men tin same advice that the North American gives. Let the miners be loyal in thought and deed to their leaders and constitute themselves the vigilant guardians of the public peace, and the railroads cannot whip them. Both factions of the Republican party I are claiming control of the coming! state convention, which will name can didates for several high offices. As the so-called insurgents have been swal- I lowed by one or tlio other faction, and j the fight is. nothing more than a scram- I ble for spoils between two Republican | machines, it should make no difference to the honest citizen which side wins. Botn are corrupt and unscrupulous and a oi.sgraco to the state and to the Re publican party. I IN ST. PAUL'S! | LOFT & I % By Epes W. Sargent 2 4 Copyright, 11103, by the X T H. 8. McCluro Company ♦ ♦ :■♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ On Easter Sunday morning for the first time St. Paul's congregation was to occupy its new church. It was not an elaborate edifice, but with its quaint English effects, its huge overhanging rafters, its deep set windows and its dim, quietly furnished chancel it was a far cry from the town hall, where for several years the band of worshipers had met. So the happy occasion was to he duly celebrated, and the young wo men of the altar guild had taxed their individual aud collective ingenuity—to say nothing of pluses—in order to beau tify the chancel witti flowers. Philip Harrison, pausing in the door way, nodded his head approvingly. "The girls have done well, and this will give just the correct finishing touch to the decorations," he mur mured as he stalked down the center aisle, carrying a pure white dove, with outstretched wings. Ills sister, who was the president of the altar guild, had pressed him into service, and he was to suspend the bird just above the tectum. lie was glad that the matter had slipped her mind until after all the girls had gone, for since a certain night when Mildred Allen and he had parted In bitterness he had rather avoided the circle of young people who rallied round his sister in her work for St. Paul's. Philip climbed up a tall ladder and had wired the dove to the rafter above the lecturn when suddenly from be neath his feet slipped the ladder, fall ing with a crash among the choir stalls. Fortunately the young man had a stout grip on the polished oak beam, and before the noise died away he had swung himself up and from his poreh full twenty feet above the chancel sur veyed the broken ladder with a rueful expression. Suddenly he removed his gaze from the ladder and glanced around with an uneasy sense that some one was watch ing him. This was impossible, for the church had been absolutely empty when he entered it. Ho turned cau tiously on his perch and caught a smothered exclamation. Then lie saw not ten feet away a tousled golden head and a pretty face, in which amusement and fright mingled. The girl was peering from a loft above the recess near the chancel left by the builders for the eventual accommoda tion of a pipe organ. "Well, Milly, it looks as if you were in a hole too." She ignored both tlio speech aud the chuckle which followed it. "I do not see," she replied In icy tones, "how my predicament can be of the least interest to Mr. Harrison." Philip, now quite secure on the broad beam, hugged his knees and looked at her entreatingly. "Come, now, Milly, isn't that a bit strong to the man you were practically engaged to less than a week ago?" "It Is hard t® bo reminded of the fol lies of one's youth," she confided to the paschal lamb which stood out in hold relief back of the altar to her right. "One is not to blame, however, for mistaking a flirt for a gentleman." "I'm not a flirt," answered Philip hotly, and in his excitement he almost slipped off the beam. Mildred tried hard not to smile and continued to gaze at the lamb. "Isn't it odd," she continued, "how some persons will fib even in church?" The lamb wisely kept out of the dis cussion, but young Harrison answered for him. "Milly, won't you please listen? I never tared a rap for Jennie Adams, honestly." "Then," she retorted, suddenly for getting tlio lamb, "why did you send her those perfectly lovely violets?" A great light came to Philip. "Why, those were a philopena pres ent. Didn't she tell you?" "That is a very ancient excuse for bestowing violets on a gir! to whom you are not engaged. You might at least have Informed me of your inten tions beforehand. Then, you see, 1 shouldn't have cared, and perhaps I might have warned you"—this just a trifle viciously—"that a girl with Jen nie's sallow complexion docs not look well wearing violets. Crimson carna tions would have been better." "Well, I will ask you next time." Then, catching sight of more thunder clouds gathering, he added hastily, "1 mean there will be no chance of its ever happening again if you will for give me." Ilis contrition seemed genuine. More over, she was uncomfortable, and the shadows were falling unpleasantly fast. "Perhaps I will if—you will get me out of this." "llow did you get in?" he questioned. "I was working on the ladder, and my curiosity led me to see what this cubby hole was for, and then I caught my heel in a knothole and couldn't get the thing loose until after the girls left. They did not ntiss me, and—and —then 1 saw you and thought I'd wait until you got out of the way"— "Thank you." It was on his brow that the stormclouds now gathered. "I hail a vague idea that you were I rather glad to see me and that this j miserable misunderstanding was to he I forgotten." "Oh, then you think a girl is to he bullied; that because I could not help myself I'd have to he pleasant. Well, let me inform you that I'd rather stay hero all night than accept a favor of you, Mr. Harrison." She did not mean a word she said, hut when a girl has been nursing a wrong, real or Imagine ry, for one good long week lier lieart becomes not only rebellious, but utterly unreasonable. Without a word Philip rose steadily to his feet and balanced his way along the beam to the wall. She held her breath. He might fall. lie might— "Where are you going?" she cried tremulously. "Home," he answered shortly. "Oh, Phil, don't—leave—me—alone in the dark!" she implored. "Why not? You have distinctly said you waited to get rid of me. You evi dently hate the sight of me." "Oh, but that was before the ladder fell. I mean—oh, please, please come back," she entreated. "Will you make up this wretched quarrel and start all over again?" "Never!" "Then goodby!" And he resumed his progress. "You will be killed!" she warned him. "It doesn't matter now," he answer ed easily. She know he did not mean it and that purposely he let his foot slip while he clutched at the rafter, but she was too proud and angry to speak. Silently she watched him make his way along the beam that topped the side wall, and so to the rear of the church. Here a storm door, built inside, made a platform ten feet from the beams. He carefully swung himself down, then dropped from the platform to the floor. Next slie saw him come up the aisle to the chancel. Her heart beat fast. What would he do? She would never pay the price he demanded for her deliverance. She did hate to be bullied. She had never thought Philip could be such a bully Yes, that was the very word. In the dusk she could see him work tag over the ladder. Finally he raised h to the wall and placed it securely with in her reach. "l'ou can come down now," he said curtly as ho turned his back, "but it you will wait a minute or two I will be outside the building, nnd you will be safe from annoyance." He walked toward the rear of the church. A quick gasp followed him through the gathering shadows; then as lie neared the door he heard the rus tle of feminine skirts, and a voice called entreatingly: "Phil, dear Phil, wait just a mo ment." He turned. A whirlwind of golden hair, warm, tremulous lips and couxing arms threw itself into his embrace. "Phil, dear, I thought you were going to force me to be good and make up. If you had, I'd hated you, but"— "And now?" What followed only the paschal lamb, smiling benevolently from his post above the altar, could tell. And he smiled in just the same set way two months later when Philip and Mildred walked down the aisle, With Mildred's white gloved finger marking the page: "The Form of Solemnization of Mat rimony." Gln m from Scrantou, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. 0 35 P ni from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Carmel, Shenan doah, Mahanoy City, Dcluuo and Hazlo ton. 7 29 from Seranton, Wilkes-Barre and For further information inquire of Ticket A Rents. KOLLIN n.WI LBUK. General Superintendent, 20 Cortlandt Street, New York City. CHAB. 8. LEE. General Passcuircr Apent., 20 Cortlandt Street, New York City. G. J. GILDKOY, Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa. THE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table in effect May 10, 1001. Trains leave Drlfton for Jeddo, Eckley, Hazle brook, Stockton, Beaver Meadow Itoad, Roan and Hazleton Junction at 000 a m, daily except Sunday; and 7 07 a in, 2 38 p m, Sunday Trains leave Drlfton for Oneida Junction' Garwood Head, Humboldt Head, Oneida and' Sheppton at 600 a m, daily except Sun dav: and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Ha-rwood Road, Humboldtaßoad Oneida and Sheppton at 8 32,11 10 am,441 pm' daily except Sunday; and 737 a m, 311 Dm' Sunday. ' Trains leave Drrimrer for Tomhicken, Cran berry, Hai wood, Hazleton Junction un( j K ottn at BW n daily except Sunday; ana 337 i m, 5 07 p m, Sunday. Train" leave aneppton for Beaver Meadow Hoid, Stockton. Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Lrifton at 5 20 p m, daily, except Sunday: a'id 8 11 a m, 3 44 p m. Sunday.' Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Beaver Meadow itoad, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Ecklev Jeddo and Drlfton at 6 4V) p m, dailv except Sunday; and 1010 am,f>4o pm, Sunday All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with electric ears for Hazleton, Jeanosville, Auden ried and other points on the Traction Com pany's line w 111 i rTTHBB O SMITH IPIRXL4T X XTGr Promptly Done at the Tribuue Office,