THE TIM US NEW HL00MFIEL1), PA., JULY 1 2, 1881. The Conductor's Story. I THINK It Is Emerson who gay: " Wlien you pity for your ticket mid get Into the cur you hnve to guess what goo J compnny you nliall 11 ml there. You buy much tlmt is not rendered lu the hill. " I hnve found this remark eminently true on several occasions, particularly when my We long filend ltuth hears me company. ltutli Is the most unconventional of women. She travels, as he does every thing else, with whole-souled earnest ness, and Muds hread where most could gather only stones. Thus, recently helng in the rear end of a long train, she preferred standing on the platform aud drinking lu at one draught the ninsnill cent valley through which we seemed flying, than by tantalizing sips, ns one has to from behind a narrow car win dow. I followed her. I always do. And, holding on to the narrow railing, we felt somewhnt like two comets whirling through spaoe. Soon the door behind us banged, and a gentleman in the midsummer of life, with a fuce hs "classically beautiful as Edwin Booth's, uud a waist of FalstafTlan dimensions, joined us. He beamed on us almost literally. From the dimple in his fair, 9oftchin, to the ring of brown, silky hair which lay upon his broad, smooth forehead, the expression scintillated with intelligent good nature. Withal there was such a retrospective back ground to the sunny brightness that, after n few commonplaces, Ituth, the daring, honest, impudent creature, said, meauwiiiie looking up into his face With a smile bo honest and kindly that iie would have been a Berserker not to have reflected It: "Sir, permit me to remark that you are a physical incongruity." " Not so bad as that, madam, I hope. I am merely a conductor, as by this time you have discovered, and a pretty well balanced one independent of my avoirdupois." " But your thoughtful face, sir, that is what perplexes me. It should belong to a body but one-third the weight of yours," suggested ltuth, the wise disci ple of Lavater. "My face is all right," he replied, stroking his cheeks and chin with an air of marvelous self complacency. "It stopped growing ten year ago, but it is here," touhching the region of his diaphragm with the tip of ills front fore linger, "that contentment and my rare good luck show themselves. Once I was as thin ns Peter Shemmel's shadow, and" he paused, looking into Ituth's clear, gray eyes as if he would souud her soul's depth "I am strongly tempted to tell you my bit of romance, for there is a long stretch ahead, aud you look like one of the kind to enjoy a touch of nature. Isn't it sol"' The conductor had struck the very key-note of our needs. We were pining for n veritable California story, told in an unconventional way, outside the well-read romances of Bret Harte and the Argonaut; to be told, too, under such peculiar circumstances would be an added spice, and thus we besought him to immediately yield to temptation. "I am an old stager," he said, "at least as far back as the spring of '50. With a blanket strapped upon my back, fifty cents In my pocket and the biggest stock of hope and untried energy that ever made a lad's heart as light as a balloon, I tramped along here in my search for tho 'gold diggings.' My ambition was higher than those buttes yonder by thousands of feet, aud the top was to be capped with solid gold," pointing as he spoke to the three singu lar and isolated peaks we were just then passing, known as the Marysville Buttes, whose volcanic heights looked as inaccessible to us as their peaks seem ed brown and barren." " It appears to me," said Hutu, meas tiling the aliuott precipitous sides of those lofty and mysterious hills, "that when a mau aspires to touch the sky he would want a higher guerdon than mere gold, not, however, that I hold the metal in contempt." "I had madam, and that was the whole matter. I was desperately in love that was a solemn fact expressed 'in as few words as possible and I believe that she loved me, but the top of Mount Sinister was not more unattaina ble to me than Jennie. Her father, an old Philadelphia druggist, bad money, and I had none. He was proud as Lucifer, aud as ambitious for his daugh ter as he was proud. I felt that I could 'move a mountain,' if I could find a mountain to move ; so Jennie and I said good-by one afternoon under an old oak in Falrmount Park, aud In the very depths of heart I believed she would be true to me. It was not a seven days' ride in a palace car from Xew York to Ban Francisco those days, and the tall, slender, hungry, penniless lad who tramped along here twenty-nine years ago, seeking his fortune like another Dick Whittington, was a home-sick and weary one as well." "By 'here,' which you have twice used, do you mean this veritable valley of the Sacreinento V" asked ltuth. " The very same. My objective point was a place now .famous in the annals of that period, called 'indwell's Bar,' on account of a rich bar in the Feat ' ". river, full of golden sand, which s discovered by General Bldwell ..'he place was many miles from . the country was sparsely settled : .Jd not know a soul (for even nps were scarce In those early day' .nd so my courage and my legs ga-'a ut together. Pulling oil' my br is about live o'clock one sultry day, 1 bared my blistered feet to the cool evening breeze, and creeping into a clump of young manz'inltzas, fell asleep, hoping that I would never agalu wake this side of the stars. I did, how ever, conscious that my toes were being licked In a gentle fashion, and discovered that It was being done by a young brown setter dog, about as hungry looking and generally dilapidat ed as I was myself. " Where became from I never knew, but looking into Ills half human eyes, we speedily entered into a sort of dumb compact to trudge on together. I found that the poor fellow (I never could call him a brute) had n sore knee, lutlamed and bleeding. I tore a strip oft' from my last handkerchief to bind it up, and in place of the Good Samaritan's oil and wine, gave him my last scrap of cold bacon. It Is strange, but for'oru as I was lu those days, I recall them with a tender pieasuie almost unaccountable. If 1 had been raised a Brahmin, I would have believed that some immortal spirit of unfailing cheerfulness aud unending resources was imprisoned in that dog's body. " Did you ever read the fairy legend of the 'White Cat,' who, after she had per suaded the young prince, her lover, to cut on" her head and tail and throw them lu the Hre, suddenly stood before him a woman, as fair as Aurora? Fritz, for that was the name by which I called the dog, looked at me with Jennie's brown eyes, half roguish, half thought ful, and together we resumed our journey. Nor would I have followed in the wake of the young prince, even If I hud known the result would have been similar, for Fritz, the dog was invalua ble just as he was. All louesomeness was gone now that he rarely ever left my side, and although our shadows had grown less by the time we ' reached the ' Bar,' our immaterial entities were in prime order for anything in the shape of adventure. Have never seen any gold dug y Then I'll not at this late day spoil your first Impression of a miner's camp by describing mine as I approached Bidwell's Bar. I may say though thnt one might hnve supposed an earthquake or tornado had just been at work there, tearing up the hundreds of thousands of cubic feet that had been moved and removed by mortal hands In their frantic and persistent search for gold. " The ' Bar,' was a world In minia ture. Almost every nationality was represented there, aud almost every feature of human kind but humanity. Armed with a pick, pan aud shovel, I like hundreds of others, began to dig and burrow aud wash dirt. But my labor aud its results would not balance, for somehow my little leather bag of gold dust grew no heavier, toil as I would. Wages being good I stopped digging and hired myself as a camp scullion. I did every kind of jobbing within range of a miner's wants. Washing dirty flannel shirts and cotton overalls, patching leather trousers and cooking flapjacks is not the most digni fied and flower-strewn path to fortune, you must kuow, aud to a hoy whose ideas of .chivalry, independence and deeds of knightly valor were purely and intensely Byronio, such a fate you must acknowledge wasasortof poetic justice. My aim, though, was to earn enough money with which to buy a certain claim of which I knew, and that I had in advance labeled 'bonanza.' " I might have succeeded, but I was prostrated by a malarial fever, aud for days and weeks lay unconscious at the tender mercy of a few Welsh miners with human hearts. My little hoard of money and my energy melted away together like -spring snow. But for Fritz-I'd have died of disappointment alone. He had adopted the 'never say die,' motto, and I as often read in his glorious eyes the sentence : ' You great old coward. At him again I' us a tender and appreciative sympathy which the gift of speech could not have made more assuring. My nurses had pitched me a lent on the south side of a low hill, and left me to get well at my leisure. " My bottom dollar had dwludled into the value of a dime, my legs into the thickness of a pair of tongs (for all appetite was gone), and one evening hope failed me. Believing I was going to die, I resolved to do the fair thiug by Jennie, apprise ber of the event, and advise her to forget me. By the flicker ing light of a bit of tallow candle, I commenced a letter the first I had written for months. I thought aloud an I wrote. Fritz lay beside me, his nose wedged lu between his fore-paws, but I knew by the twitching of his ears that ho understood every word I was writing. " I had reached tho climax of renun ciation and wretchedness or rather my expression of It when he suddenly rose and went out. I soon heard him paw ing and scratching and tearing the earth about six feet from me, us though he was under contract to dig a tunnel to China before daylight. Thinking he had found the burrow of a wolf or fox, I called him oil', but he was as deaf as a rock to my voice. Seizing the candle I hurried to the spot, around which lay a half-bushel of gravel, which he had loosened, when my eye caught the gleam of a dull read Btreak that stained a quartz about the size of an egg, lying among the fresh earth. Would you believe it ? That streak was worth llfty dollars, for it was virgin gold. Nor was it the only one upon tlie billslde. Fritz had fount! a lode (thanks to a gopher), and I, thereby, had found a fortune. As booh as possible 1 had the gold of that first precious stone wrought into a ring of my own designing ; all of It, at least the contents of but one blunt corner, which, In native roughness, I mounted as a simple brooch. Sending these to Jennie I" "An act of great generosity, sir, I think," Interrupted ltuth, with u laugh ing glint in her eye. " One would have thought you'd have preserved such a piece of rare good fortune as a memorial stone." "You anticipated me, madam. It was as a memorial that I sent my first bit of treasure, but I expected to get it back at the end of two years, and the girl with It." "And did you?" "No; nor even received n line of acknowledgment that my offer had been accepted. Nothing finds gold quicker than gold when a mau has once got a fair share of It, and iu two years I had, In various ways, secured twenty tbou i'Hnd dollars. Investing It, as I thought, safely, I returned to Philadelphia in nil the pride of a conquering hero. My story ought to end here ; wind up with the chime of wedding bells and 'a beau tiful Rachel,' as my reward for faithful serving, hut I had scarcely arrived when I heard accidentally that Jennie had gone with her father to Europe, nor left 'one sign that she had ever remembered me." " You certainly did not let that fact dampen the ardor of your pursuit," queried ltuth; "you followed her, of course V" " Of course I did no such thing, niadam. I returned to San Francisco and plunged into the excitement of gold hunting with a recklessness that a woman cannot understand. Six months after I had lost every dollar, but, by that time, I had learned that experience is worth nothing as solid capital until It has been 'dearly bought. I whistled my rhyme : Loss and gain, pleasure and pain Balance the sco-eaw of life. in the sensitive ears of my faithful Fritz, hugged his brown head close to my shoulder don't laugh, that dog was my friend rolled up my sleeves aud again went to work with a vigor thnt I knew meant success if the vein held out. It did, and five years afterwards I had a hank account which ran largely into the thousands. I Invested it in land. Hard knocks aud my big disap pointment had shaken all the romance out of me, and when I again went East it was on business connected with the construction of this railroad." "Aud you had quite lived out your boyish fancy, as your heart begau to lose Us youth V asked Ituth, with the least bit of cynicism in her tone. , " I think Fritz kuew," said the con ductor quietly. "I had become almost a misanthrope for his sake. If I left him to go into society sucli as' we had for a few hours, he either whined like a sick child or kept up such an Incessant barking and baying that, to save him from being shot as a nuisance, I went to no place where It was Impossible for him fo accompany me. The old fellow went with me even to New York, aud on the journey I often found myself cogitating as to how he horn in a wilderness of wild mustard, and as fond of camp-life as an Indian would take to the constraints of an old city. Well, I had not been iu New York a week before there was a strong tugging at my heart to run down to Philadelphia. Not that it was home for me, for my parents had died before I had first left it. I called the desire, 'the charm of associa tion,' aud it led me to decide at ouce to run over to the Quaker City. " There, as I first went down Arch street, my poor dog lost his wits aud the sober dignity of his maturity. He had a remarkably fine scent. I always knew that ; but no sooner had we turn ed into that particular street, than, with nose close to the ground and rigid tail, he ran zig-zag to and fro, as though he was on the trail of an erratic fox. I called to him b'ut he gave no heed. People got out of way. The gamins shouted, and, with a w ild, shrill bark, he bounded Into the doorway of a large dry goods store. I bounded after hltu In time to see him rush up to a lady In black who Was examining some gloves and dance around her with signs of ti)e most extravagant Joy. There are tones that live without the aid of phono graphs, 'lloyl lloy 1 Jjear old Itoy " was all she said, but I'd have sworn the voice was Jennie's, If I had heard it on the summit of Mount Blnne. A w hite hand was laid upon his head, and my ring was on the hand." He p.msed. " Yours V Sir, I hope you did not claim It," said his practical collocutor. " I did, and the hand which wore it, just as I had originally Intended." Aud Alexander In his hour of greatest conquest, never smiled a more serene approval of himself than our conductor at this stage of his story. "But the conduct of Fritz and the lady's silence, aud the queer concomi tants wlilch exist only In fiction how do you reconcile them with an 'ow'r true tale V" said ltuth, the truth-lovlug. "Fritz was Roy, the Itoy who had often been caressed by Jennie before his young master, Jennie's cousin, got the gold fever when I did, and came to California never to return. Jennie had written but her letter never reached me. She thought me dead. Why the dog came to me when his master died, is one among the riddles of my life which I will disentangle iu the hereafter." " And to-day where is she V" He stood waiting for the question. " Ou our ranch near Sacremento, and I believe one of the happiest women in the State. We have a boy ten years old whose name is Fritz, aud all the dearer for the sake of the old friend whq has long since gone where I hope some,, day to meet the human of him. I wish you could stop off a while and see my wife. Queer, isn't it, that I should have in truded this bit of private history upon you, but the truth Is. Yes, coming, I'll be with you again, ladies." A brakeman beckoned him inside, and we had seen the last of our hand some conductor. The evening shadows had begun to lengthen. The setting sun had turned the vast plain of the Sacremento valley Into a "field of the cloth of gold," and the distant peaks of the Sierra, clad In their eternal snows, but now rose-tinted nnd glowing, seemed to cleave the azure nbove them as with a wedge of burnish ed silver. It was starlight when we reached the end of our ride aud were registered for the night. " The conductor's story was a pleas aut little episode, Ruth, wasn't it V Do you believe it happened ?" I asked, as I leaned from my pillow to hers to leave u good-night kiss on her round cheek. " I like Fritz," was her sleepy answer. "There's an instinct about some dogs that the half of mankind can neither appreciate nor attain. I trust a man whom a good dog loves." Very Precise. In noting thedillerence iu the style in which Senators and Representatives now live lu Washington as compared with that usual thirty years ago, an old resident tells nu unecdote of interest. He says that at that time it was not uncommon for very worthy members of either House of Congress to occupy rooms over stores. A very swell gentle man was elected to Congress, whom we will call Baker, and he set up a grand establishment here. He was greatly shocked to find that his intimate friend Cooper, although a very rich man, lived over a grocery store, and one day, in addressing a note to him, wrote: " Hon. Mr. Cooper, over Smith's grocery store." But Cooper was not to be put down thus, so, remembering the situation of Baker's grand house, when he answered addressed his letter: "Hon. George Augustus Baker, opposite Foy's livery stable." " Don't Know Half their Value." "They cured me of Ague, Biliousness and Kidney Complalnt.as recommended. I had a half bottle left which I used for my two little girls, who the doctors aud neighbors said could not be cured. I would have lost both of them oue night iflhadnot given them Hop Bitters. They did them so much good I continu ed their use until they were cured. That Is why I say you do not know half the value of Hop Bitters, and do not recom meud them high enough." B., Roches, ter, N. Y. See other column. Amer ican Mural Home, -7 -t A Good Foundation. Oue of the greatest troubles of our peo ple Is weakness of the stonixcli. As this soon causes Indigestion, Nervous, ness and Rheumatism, they prevail in almost every American household. There Is positively' no need foranybody to sutler from these painful troubles who can buy a 50 ct. bottles of Parker's Gin ger Tonlo; for this superior medicine always toues up the stomach and nerv ous system, and keeps the kidneys act ive In carrying oft' the foul matters, thus laying a good foundation for perfect health. 20 lm I En iiTCIeP E D Foil RHEUSIMISEI, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quins, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation nn earth equal Pt. jArons On. as a titfr.Kiirr. and rhtnp KxterHHl Keniedy. A trlfti entails but ihe f-ompamtivcly triliinp outlay of 5f fenl. unit every one Mificrincr with pain can have cheap nnd jMwitlve proof of it claims. Directions In Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGI8T3 AND DEALERS IK MEDICINE. A.VOGSLER & CO., Jlitltlmnrr, JIM., U. S. A. May S, 1SS1 ly CENTRAL STORE NEWPORT, l'ENN'A. -Now oiler the public A HARK AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT Of DRESS GOODS Consisting of all'shades suitable (or the season BLACK ALPACCAS AND , , Mourning Opods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLINS, AT VAKIOUS PKICES. AN BNDLESS SELECTION OF PRINTS' We sell and do keep a good quality of SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS And everything under the head of GROCERIES ! Machine Needles and oil for all makes ol Machines. To be convinced that ourgoodsare CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, 18 TO CALL AND EX AMIN E STOCK. y No trouble to show goods. Don't forget the CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry County, Pa. PUEE TINTED GLOSS PAINT ! DO'T make experiments on your buildings with untried aud unreliable auclclesat your expense. lOIV'T PAY fur water and benzine J1.0 toSHO per gallon. DO 1JUY the Lucas reliable and guaranteed Tinted Gloss Clreulara and Sample Cards of Taint mailed on application. JOHN LUCAS & CO, 141 North Third Street, 13 6m rhUadelphla, Pn. HELP Yourselvea by maklmr money when a rolden cham-e in ortered, thereby alwaya keepiutr IKtverty from yonrdor. Thoaeu-hn alwav take advantage of the ood chaucea for tuakiutr uioney that are offered, a-euerally ittcome wi-althy, while those, who do not improve uch chances remain in imveriy. We want many men.women, boys and .rirla to work for ua rbrht in their own localities. The. burtiuesa will my more than ten time ordinary wa.res. We. furnish an exneuaive outtit aud all that you need, free. No oue who emnwea faila to make money vei-v rai'hllv. You cau devote your whole time to the work, or only your lare momenta. Full inforuiatiou ami all that is needed Kent free. Addreaa 8TINSON k CO., Portland, Mains ly. ESTATE NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given, that letters of administration on the estate ( Kav. S. 8. Klrhiuoud late of Toroite township. Perry Couutv. Pa., defeased, have Ix-aii granted to the undersigned. P. U. Addiesa taudiaburg. Perry County. Pa. All persons Indebted to said estate are request, ed to make Immediate payment and those having claims will present them duly authenticated lor settlement to AT.BBRT E. HlCHMOND, Cius. H. Pmii.et, Att'y. Administrator. May 10, list.