~ TERMS OF PUBLICATION. TL e REPOBTEB is published every Thursday Morn , jjE. 0- GOODRICH, at $2 per annum, in ad- exceeding fifteen lines are at TKX CENTS per line for first insertion, ' iivx CENTS per line for subsequent insertions h '"' .j notices inserted before Marriages and will b charged FIFTEEN CENT, per line for L h insertion All resolutions of Associations ; f " .animations of limited or individual interest, [notices of Marriages and Deaths exceeding five t. are charged TEN CENTS per line. 1 Year. 6 mo. 3 mo. fine Column $75 S4O S3O one 40 25 15 Ane Square, --lO 7i 5 F-tray Caution, Lost and Found, and oth er advertisements, not exceeding 15 lines, three weeks, or less, $1 50 lministrator's and Executor's Notices.. .2 00 Editor's Notices 2 50 Business Cards, five lines, (per year) 500 Merchants and others, advertising their business be charged S2O. They will be entitled to i , mn , confined exclusively to their business, with privilege of change. Advertising in all cases exclusive of sub .,-iption to the paper. TUB PRINTING of every kind in Plain and Fan lors. done with neatness and dispatch. Haiid- planks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va • v iCl i s tyle, printed at the shortest notice. The jrr IBTEE OFFICE has just been re-fitted with Power tw SS es, and every thing in the Printing line can scented in the most artistic manner and at the 4 ratt s. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. ffltrUd foftrg. GOING HOME. Where are you going so fast, old man, Where are you going so fast ? Tare's a valley to cross, and a river to ford, re's a clasp of the hand and a parting word Hid a tremulous sigh for the past, old mau ; The beautiful vanished past. The road has been rugged and rough, old man, To your feet it's rugged and rough ; \ a see a dear being with gentle eyes, " a - shared in your labor aud sacrifice ; Ah I that has been sunshine enough, old man, For you and me, sunshine enough. How long since you passed o'er the hill, old man? Of life o'er the top of the hill ? Were there beautiful valleys on t'other side ? Were there fiowers and trees, with their branches wide, To shut out the heat of sun, old man, The heat of the fervid sun ? And how did you cross the waves, old man, Of sorrow, the fearful waves ? Did you lay your dear treasures by, one by one, With an aching heart and -'God's will be done," Under the wayside dust, old man, Iu the graves 'neath the wayside dust ? There is sorrow and labor for all, old man, Alas! there is sorrow for all, j! you, peradventure, have had your share, : r eighty long winters have whitened your hair, And they've whitened your heart as well, old man, Thank God! your heart as well. You're now at the foot of the hill, old man, At last at the foot of the hill! Ihc sun has gone down in a golden glow, Lithe heavenly city lies just below ; * m through the pearly gate, old man, The beautiful pearly gate. IE MINISTER'S SANDY AND JESS, j ■ ! i (CONCLUDED.) j ■si made no reply till the minister was ; 1 ■ and her mother began to press her j i H :.:!}■ for an explanation of her conduct. i 1..-:: she raised a pair of bent black brows, Hi ipened her lips. " Mother, do you 1 1 have no feeling? Do you think, ] j >u?e I first stood up against Sandy, < Hug I have no regard for my own brother ? i • -Id I go and enjoy myself, and not t H: w what has become of Sandy, or what i j.-raay have to bear ? Adam Spottiswoode c Hid to be Sandy's friend ; he might have < H-.ic- 6t-übe than ask me such a gate." 1 I Mrs. Stewart said not another word. 1 1 But the minister was troubled at Jess's t I v ence.cast about in his mind for a cause f 1' cure, aud stumbled on one of his old a Hu of lavish generosity, and extraordi- 1 misconception of his daughter's taste f the laws of harmony. He surprised \ H' y the arrival from her mother's mer- L Bets shop in Woodend of a gown of yel- 1 | crape, with a pink silk scarf to match, t I A'ter Jess had overcome the shock at i H-jigiit of the articles, and her resolution \ v her arms and went straight with them t I the minister's study. \ ' e ", Jess, what is in tho wind now? a ■"•you changed your mind about going i J carriage at Birkholm ?" he demaD- c I king up from Campbell on Miracles, \ H~: P r °tending ignorance and innocence. i ■ •'the minister's consternation, Jess's f '£ " kept for special occasions, began ! t sßnly to fall like raiu. " Father, do \ H ' that Ido not value your presents, j i ■ wear the one or the other at the | , j '• whenever the weather will permit, f B- jS: mg as two threads hang together, i go to Birkholm : it is not fit i ■if-- - should go and show off among the i H' K there, when somebody who has as i ■; a right to your favor as I have, aud i r it far more, has to live without." | "W, is it a fit return for my kindness 1 u should be so bold as question my 1 H--'nt ? I forbid you to speak another 1•, |g;to me on the subject of you brother." 1 j minister dared her with flashing | ] ■ '.and conquered her so far as to drive , i'm his presence to burst out to her j j M ~ ther, my father is cruel to Sandy ; I I keen to him. Aud what ione to lose a son's place? It is j ■ ' - have brought reproach upon him I • is the righteousness and the mercy . "-ig burdens on other men's backs ? fl -it care whether he is ever to best fine ■"i 1 am not sure that 1 have seeu a | ■ ••Muting iu my life ; but he was free i . 1 painter if he liked. I never thought! H ' Sandy than wheu he walked out at j w ith his stick in his hand, last! . v > he was a petted lad before, but : ' H'T 4 fjroUl ' rnan then - If I catch any '■ v > aaD Bave my father looking down i I will never speak to him again, j H . m y father, I say he is hard to Sau i- H Ufced not think that I will take my 18 H "-and Sandy cast off for a lad's a H -7' ' wonder why they profess that 3 lH' ;' Ure . ad things are pure,' if Sandy e [[ 48 innocent as a bairn,) or that I H. 'ikt a butterfly, when, for aught - m Y brother Sandy, who was a u-, llaieß more dutiful than I have m . nj ay be pining in a garret or fl 7 the streets." cj ■e n J u,t . Jess, whist 1" implored Mrs. nd y° u I'id me'whist,' mother; ■ H ij U interfere ?" cried Jess, t e passion, sweeping H~ : SL.au ail [ ! orwardtt through the con- W'lLii , e manse parlor, herself j J tl mlbed of her young. "Why E. O. GOODRICH, Publisher. VOLUME XXVI. do you not stand up for Sandy ? He is your son, and you liked him with reason, twice as well as your daughter. I would not suffer my father's tyranny." " Jess, Jess, you do not know what you are saying. I could not rebel against the minister. And do not you misjudge your father : he groans in his sleep ; and think how good a man he is. And oh, Jess ! you cannot mind, but 1 can, how he took the candle and held it over Sandy iu the cradle. And when your little sister died, and your lather at the Glenork preachings, and I sent the nearest elder to meet him to break to him the distress at home, lie guessed it before Mr. Allan could get out the words. He was always a sharp man, your father, and he just put up his hand and plead with the messenger, 'Not Sand) ; tell me it is not Sandy.' It was not that he was not fond of his lasses, Jess, you know ; but they could not bear bis name and uphold his Master's credit as his lad would do." Though Mrs. Stewart did nothing,— could do nothing,—when Jess came to think of it, sobbing in her own room in the reaction after her recantation, both for San dy and lor Birkholm, from that day's confi dence mother and daughter were" knit to gether as they had not been before. In the beginning Jess had been a litlie too vigorous aud energetic for her mild, tender mother ; but Mrs. Stewart clung to Jess in the end with mingled fond respect, deep gratitude, and yearning affection. On Sabbath days, when the minister left his wife in the kirk porch to go into the session-room, it was on Jess's arm that Mrs. Stewart now leant for the short dis tance up the aisle lo the minister's bucht, on the right band of the pulpit. On the few other occasions when she crossed her ! threshold, while she was able to move j about among her flowers, or strull to the ' Karnes for the spectacle of the setting ot j the sun, which shone on other lands bestdes ! Scotland, she sought to have Jess on the | one side of her and the minister on the j other. Another peculiarity of Mrs. Stewart's this summer was her struggle against her feebleness, her efforts to convince herself and others that she was gaining strength, the eagerness with which she applied every means for the restoration of her health,— new milk, port wine, even to the homely, uncouth superstitions of a stocking from the minister's foot wfapped round her throat at night, and the breath of the cows in the cow-house the first thing of a morn ing. It was as if something had happened which would not let her die when her time came. It was well for Jess that she was much with her mother during the summer, and that their communion was that of perfect love ; for before the summer was ended Mrs. Stewart was attacked by a sudden increase of illness, and after a week's suff ering was gone where she might have clear intelligence of Sandy, to which all the knowledge of this world would have been no more than the discordant words of an unknown tongue. There could have been no time to write for Sandy, even had the minister and Jess known where he was to be found, aud Mrs Stewart had not asked for her son. No immediate danger had been anticipated by the doctor, or apprehended by the patient and her relations, until witin a few hours of her death, and then speech and in part consciousness bad failed her. Unless the look of the eyes, which, heavy with their last long slumber, roused themselves to search round the room, once and again, re ferred to the absence of Sandy, Mrs. Stew art passed away with her love, perhaps like most great love, silent. But when all was over, Jess thought with a breaking heart of the ignorance of him who had most cause to mourn, and of his place filled by others less entitled to be there on the day when the wife and mother was borne to her grave beside her baby who had passed from her mother's bosom to the bosom of the second mother of us all, the earth, who, if she had lived, would have been an older woman than Jess ; and be side the old divines who had filled the min ister's pulpit, aud their faithful wives, of centuries back, in the grassy kirkyard within sight of the widows of her old home, where a stormy wind might carry the leaves from her garden and scatter them on the mound. That mound, whether white with May gowans or December snows, would never be out of the minister's and Jess's minds, and near it distance-divided families and former neighbors would still meet and "be glad to have their crack in the kirkyard," and not forget to say softly in her praise what a fine gentlewoman the minister's wife had been, and how the min ister, po6r man. would miss her. If Adam Spottiswoode had been at Birk holm, Jess might have applied to him in her desperation tj learn if he had heard anything of Sandy, and to beg of him to intercede with her father for his son. But Birkholm was absent at the moors, and J ess had respect for her father's atlliction, and would not torture him to no end.— Therefore Mr. Stewart and Jess bore the brunt of that dark dark day—the darker that it was in the height of summer, the prime and pride of the year —alone, but for sorrowing neighbors and dependents. When Mr. Stewart returned to the manse after the funeral party was dispersed, and retired to his room, Jess could not intrude |on him. It was the room to which he had brought her a bride, and she had died in it. It was her room now while his time of the manse lasted, though she had vacated it humbly during her life. JKBS had too much fellow-feeling with her father not to divine that 110 hand but his own would by suff ered to dispose of its mistress's little shawl and cap, which in the hurry of her last ill ness had been put on the side-table among his books. Ife would see them there, sit ting in the gloaming at his meditations, and half believe that her light foot—at her feeblest it was a light one—would be heard again on the threshold, aud her fair, faded face, which had been to him as none other but Sandy's, would look in upon him, smil iug, while she asked some simple kind question, \\ hy was he sitting without a light? Was he sure he had shifted his feet on coming in fiom christening the bairn at the Cotton Bog ? Was he ready to ask a blessing on the sowens for sup per ? Jess had her own sorrows, but they were a little lightened when, the long af ternoon over, her father re-entered, the sleeves of his coat looking conspicuous in I their white cull's, with which she would grow so familiar that they would seem more than any other details of his dress— white neckcloth and black vest—a part of the man, as he would come to her every second day and stand patiently while she removed and replaced them for him. The minister wanted his tea, and tried to speak on indifferent subjects, on the long drought and burned-up pastures, but stopped abruptly because lie could not put back the thought, and he knew that Jess shared it, that Mrs. Stewart not ten days ago had been lamenting the drought in that room, and had been making her arrange ments to send out the servants every even ing with their hooks to cut grass at the ditch-sides, and bring back their aprons full of a fresh, green supper for her beasts. He walked to the wiudowand looked out beyond the flowery garden, where the evening wind soughed sadly in the grass ol the kirkyard. Then he turned and said, emphatically, " Our wound is deep, though we need not let it be seen. But, Jess, it is not by a gloomy token like that that she would like us to mind her ; not that it is not good in its way, everything is good or changed to good, even parting and death, when they are but a stage to meeting and everlasting life. But, Jess, we must take care of her beasts and birds and flowers, that tbey may never miss her as we shall do, always (though we troubled the last of her days with our discord). We must keep up her habits, that every day may have its trace of her." He went on speaking with unusual openness for a strong, reserved man, on the sweet and winning morning light which had lingered with his wife and Jess's mother amidst the dust and clouds ot the heat of the day ; on her love of ani | mals and plants, quaint books, plaintive ! old songs, primitive sayings ; her walks to the Karnes to see the sun set; her reveries , looking upon the blazing coals on the win ; ter hearth. And Jess knew she was her father's trusted friend, and that he saw in her one who comprehended and shared his i life-long loss and sorrow. 111. —THE PICTURE. j For some time after her mother's death, ' Jess was thrilled with a nervous expecta- I tion that Sandy would "cast up," as she ex pressed it, in the gloaming or the dawning, an)- day, to take his part in their mourning, ilie news ol his mother's death would reach him through friends or the announcement in the newspapers. But as mouths passed, Jess was forced to renounce the expecta tion, and submit to the obscurity which hung over Sandy. The minister and .less lived together in strict seclusion, until the sharp edge was worn off their sorrow ; and then the minis ter had grown a quiet, absorbed, gray stu dent, whom Jess could only wile from his household gods—the books—for the benefit of his health, by ingeniouo stratagems and unremitting pains. And Jess was a fine looking, composed woman, with the eye and the hand of a mother, aud the carriage of a duchess. It was summer again at Clovenford, and the whole place and people were pervaded with a grave, shaded, softened brightness, not wanting iu flashes of mirth, relieving what was pensive in domestic life, —for both Jess and the minister possessed the composite quality of humor, and not only raised the laugh in others, but were subject themselves to sudden ringing peals of laughter ; the wisdom being as old and common as sin and misery, which the wit of Grizel Baillio set in one memorable line, — "Werena my heart licht I would dee." The month of May, with its lilac—lily-oak they called it at Clovenford—and hawthorn, was about its olose, and the General As sembly of the Kirk of Scotland was about to conclude for the season its time-honored, pious, benevolent, virulent squabbles. The minister of Clovenford was not a member this year, but he took it into his head late one evening that he would like to be present at a certain debate next night, and, with constitutional rapidity, fixed that he would go the Edinburg next morning by the early coach which passed through Woodend, take Jess with him for a treat, be present in the gallery of the Assembly, spend what was left of the night at Jess's Aunt Reggy's, and return by the late coach the next night to Clovenford ; " for there will be nobody setting up for us at home," he put in, with an involuntary touch of pa thos, when he found how easy the scheme was. But the minister had not been in such good spirits for a long time, and it was with something of his old animation that he entered into the details, congratula ted Jess that she would have an opportun ity of seeing the Lord High Commissioner, and graphically detailed the marks by which she might distinguish the leaders of the Kirk Jess was glad that her father should feel able for the excursion, and soberly pleased with it on her own account. She had bee-Ja in Edinburgh just once before, and had seta the Castle, Holyrood, Princes Street, Geoxga Street, and St. Andrew's Square already. Two days in Edinburgh were of such rarity and importance that few country-women of her circle attained them more than once in their lives, and then it was on such momen tous occasions as the celebration of their marriage in the capital, or the scarcely less serious step of going with bridegrooms, mothers, and matronly friends, to buy their "marriage things" out of metropolitan shops, gloriously combining love and ad venture, pleasure and profit. Jess, though far behind in other respects, felt a little elated at the double feat. The minister and Jess were on foot by five o'clock next morning ; found even the ond of May rather raw on the top of a coach at that early hour; spent the greater part of the day 011 the road, indefatigably enjoying the scenery, and sheltering them selves under cloak and mantle from pelting showers ; alighting and swallowing slices of salt beef from perennial rounds, glass fuls of sherry and tumblerfuls of porter, leisurely, while the coach was changing horses in the inn-yards of country towns ; and, after inquisitively scrutinizing and formally addressing fellow-travellers, end ing establishing fast friendships with them before the coach and its burden rolled up the High Street of that Auld Keekie which, whether in ancient or modern guise, is one of the most picturesque of cities. The journey, which occupies so large an amount of old traveller's narratives, safely and creditably performed, the rest of the play remained to be played out. Aunt Peggy received her unexpected REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., MAY '24, 1866. visitors with a cordial recollection of sum mer weeks spent by her and her old maiden servant in the country quarters at Cloven ford, and attended them to the Assembly, where the minister procured the party's ad mission. And Jess saw his Grace the Commissioner ; was duly impressed by his throne ; heard, with all the interest a min ister's daughter ought to feel, the question of "teinds" amply discussed ; and just as her high head, with its gipsy bonnet, was beginning to nod in a manner the most un dignified and unlike Jess, and when she was thinking she could not keep her eyes open a moment longer, though the Commis sioner asked it of her as a personal favor, or threatened to turn her out by his usher if he caught her napping, the vote was ta ken, and Jess was released, to repair to Aunt Peggy's and her bed. The next morning tho minister and Jess were abroad betimes, while Aunt Peggy gave herself wholly to solemn preparations for the midday dinner. The walk was for Jess's pleasure, that she might see again the more remote rugged lion couchant, Ar thur's Seat, and the nearer, smooth, pol ished, glittering lions, the shops and the passengers. Among the fellow-passengers of Jess and the minister, while there were some women who ridiculed the country cut of Jess's black silk pelisse, there was more than one man who turned to look after the pair, and remark what a noble-looking lass that was with the gray, stout, old black coat. The minister had fully discharged his ob ligations as a cicerone. He had pointed out the "White Hart," at which Dr. John son alighted on his way to his tout in the Hebrides ; the bookseller's shop where Robbie Burns, in boots and tops, with a riding-whip dangling over his arm, once corrected proof-sheets of his songs; Rich ardson's, frequented by young Mr. Scott, the author of the poem of Marmion ; the houses of Professors Dugald Stewart and Sir Johu Hall, Captain Basil, the great traveller's father ; and the Flesh Market Close, where the best beefsteaks in the kingdom were to be eaten. And Jess had wondered, but found it impossible to ask, whether they were near the street where she remembered Sandy's lodgings had been, and where it was just within nature he might be. " Father," said Jess, suddenly, with a rush of color into her face, "1 would like to go in here." Mr. Stewart and Jess had been proceed ing on the plan of a fair division of labor and recreation. The minister's part per formed, he had been walking along abstrac tedly, only waking up occasionally at the distant glimpse of a book-stall, where Jess stood quietly beside him, as he stood qui etly beside Jess when the attraction was a linen-draper's or a jeweller's window. i be minister bad tnquued or Juaa wheth er she wanted anything, and Jess, after a few modest purchases, had answered in the negative ; hut he supposed now she had met with an irresistable temptation, or re called a forgotten commission. He followed her into the entrance of what looked more like a museum than a shop, and yielded up his stick, not without an inclination to re sist the demand, to a porter, while Jess was hurriedly getting two tickets. The minister stopped short in the door way of another room, aggrieved and ireful; but he bad never turned back in his life, never refused to face an annoyance or a difficulty, and his hesitation terminated in his marching sulkily at the heels of Jess into one of the Royal Society's earliest ex hibitions. The minister and Jess entered into no ex planation and offered no comment as they walked slowly up the room, literally daz zled by the display ou the walls. How ever connoisseurs might have disdained the crude attempts of Wilkie, Allan, and Thomson, they were marvels to tho coun try folk, who were only acquainted with the simpering or scowling representations of ladies, like full-blown roses in their own persons, clasping rose-buds between their fingers and thumbs, aud gentlemen with fierce tops of hair, breaking the seals of letters, with as much cruel satisfaction as if they had been crushing beetles. But all at once both Jess and the minister's eyes were fixed, while their feet were drawn to a picture some yards in advance of them, which they could distinguish through the scanty sprinkling of visitors at that hour in the room. It was not one of the classic pieces, which were the stock pieces there, nor ol" the battle-field, nor of the landscapes, but a little family group which was strangely well known to them. They had seen the round table, the straight-backed chairs, the very ivory netting-box, many a time be fore; and even these dumb pieces of furni ture, so far from home, awoke a thousand associations. „ Then what of the figure, with living eyes looking out at them ? The elderly man putting down his book to ponder its con tents ; the young man with his face half hidden by bis hand, as if weary or sad; the girl entering the room on some household errand; and she was there, setting in the centre of them as she would sit no more, looking not as she had looked when she was passing away, not as Mr. Stewart with a backward bound of his memory had been given to see her lately, the iunoceot, ingen uous, lovely girl who had come to the manse of Clovenford, bringing with her sunshine, poetry, and the first tremulous dewy bloom of life, but Sandy and Jess's mother, whose presence, weak woman as she was, had been like a shelter and a stay, full of _the security and serenity of experience, the sweetness of the household content. The drawing might be faulty, the color ing streaky, but there again was the fam ily, those of them who were still going about the streets, and one who on thia earth was not. It was a God-given faculty aud a loving heart which thus reproduced and preserved the past. The minister and Jess stood as if spell bound among the unheeding spectators, aud gazed at the image of what they had lost as if it had been given back to them, with inexpressible longing ; when, at a start from Jess, the minister turned round and saw his wife's dead face in Sandy's living one, gazing at them in agitation, as they were gazing at the picture. He was in mourning like themselves, but except that he looked older, his brown hair dar ker, aud that his blue eyes were dimmed for the he was not altered, had as much the air of a gentleman as ever, and had emerged from a knot of gentlemen who were making the circuit of the room and an examination of the pictures with the ease of free-masonry of privileged pro fessional frequenters of the place. JCSB scarcely noticed this at first. Her heart leaped to greet her brother, and at the same time she was terrified lest her fa ther should think there had been an ap pointment perhaps through Aunt Peggy, and that she had deliberately betrayed him into a meeting with his son ; whereas Jess had known nothing even of the picture, had been as much struck by the sight of it as the minister, and had only entered the exhibition on the impulse of the moment when she read its name, determined to pay that mark of respect to Sandy, and with what lurking notion of establishing a com munication or provoking an iucounter be tween them she had not dared to tell her self. Jess was in dread of how the minister would behave to Sandy ; she might have known her father better, in his sound sense and old-fashioned code of politeness. " How are you, Sandy ?" the minister asked, holding out his hand to his son, as if nothing had happened. Sandy was a great deal more put out as he took the offered hand and shook it, and said iu a breath, " I am glad to see you looking so well, father ; and, Jess, when did you come to town V Mr. Stewart satisfied his son's curiosity with a word, and then it was in entire keeping with the man, that his next words were in indignant reprobation,— " Sandy, how dared you make your fam ily a gazing-stock on the walls of a public exhibition without even asking their leave?" " I did not think you would dislike it so much, sir," stammered Sandy. "There are ' many portraits here. I have not put the ; names, and I did not fancy the original would be generally recognized. The pic ture is sold to a friend." " Sold !" exclaimed Mr. Stewart, with a great increase of anger and a quiver of | consternation in his voice ; "how could you do such a thing ? Who is the buyer?" "I meant to take a copy, as I could not afford to keep what I believe is the best thiDg I have done, though 1 have sold some other subjects readily enough since my re turn. I dare say I should have altered tin's, had not the buyer been an old friend. He bought it at rny own price the first morning he saw :t," Sandy expatiated, with pardonable pride. "He should be a judge of the liknesses, when he is one of your own parishioners. lie was here to-day, and yonder he is finding yon out—Birk holrn." Misfortunes do not come alone, nor do old friends meet singly. Adam Stottis woode was delighted to come in this man ner upon the Stewarts, and share the pledge of reconciliation which the group implied, to take it boldly as an omen of otlier alliances. For Birkholm still han kered after Jess with an inextinguishable hankering, which was beginning to deepen into the glow of true love. In all his ex perience of life for the last year or two, he had seen nobody yet to come up to Jess Stewart. People from the same parish of Cloven ford, the Stewarts aud the laird, encoun tering each other in the wilderness of a city, were like one family already, and the laird improved the occasion by attaching himself assiduously to the Stewarts, as he would not have had the confidence to do in the Den of Birkholm, acting on the princi ple that it would be disrespectful to his minister not to joiu his ranks when they turned up in a public place among stran gers, and that in these circumstances he had as good a right to investigate narrow ly when the minister and Jess had come, where they were staying, and when they were going home, as if he were as minutely acquaiutod with the daily routine of their lives when he was at Birkholm and they at Olovenford. And without doubt Birkholm's comely, mauly, gentleman-like presence was like a "kind, kenned face" to the min ister and Jess in Edinburgh, however light ly they might regard it in their parish. Jess opened her ej'es a little at his atten tion, but she did not repulse hint, and the minister only staggered him for a moment. " Birkholm, you'll give up that picture ; it is mine by a double right!" The next instant Birkholm was eagerly assuring the minister, "It is yours, Mr. Stewart; do not say another word about it," and accrediting with a throb of tri umph that he had earned the minister's gratitude. The picture was not Mr. Stewart's, how ever, in the sense which Birkholm intended at first. The minister would pay him every pound of his money for it, though it should stint his small purse ; and the laird had the wit to see, soon, that if he would stand well with the high-spirited old man, he must refrain from offering him a gift of his wife and children's portraits (as for the minister's own, the minister might not have minded that). Until Birkholm had a title to he painted on the same canvas, he had better be modest in his favors. Mr. Stewart took another lingering look at the picture after it was his own, and ex amined Sandy strictly on its removal and packing, a little nettled that it was at the service of the Academy for a week or two longer. Afterwards the minister made the rest of the round of the room on Sandy's arm, freely availing himself of his sou's in formation, and making pertineut remarks, which were honorable to the shrewd criti cism of an old prejudiced ignoramus. Before the picture of "Jobn Knox Preach ing to the Regeut," not without correspond ing tire in the handling, Mr. Stewart stood sti 1 again, and commended it warmly. He finished by a more personal admission, worthy of the minister, a half-smile playing over his powerful features : " Sandy, your art is far below the cure of souls, yet 1 own there is something in it, after all. But it was your mother's face that beat me." Birkholm accompanied Jess, and saw no necessity for concealing from her what had been bis intention regarding the picture ; and Jess was not offended, but thanked him softly even when he spoke of a copy, and bis project of hanging it opposite the pictures of his father and mother in the dining-room at Birkholm. And if that was not a broad bint, the laird did not know what was. Jess was so happy—and humble in her happiness—that she could not find it in her heart to contradict Birkholm; and the young laird, not being at all used to his #8 per Annum, in Advance. own way with Jess Stewart, and finding it intoxicating, went on at a fine pace. But first he had the grace to tell her how Sandy was spoken of among artists, of what prom ise he was held, and to point out some of Sandy's friends who were not like the por trait painters Jess had seen at Woodend ; and to say the picture of the family had ex cited a sensation, and that if Jess and the minister were doubly recognized as two of the originals, and as the sister and the fa ther of the artist, they would have to bear some staring for Sandy's sake. Here Jess's credulity broke down. This statement was more than she could swallow, though she had been devouring the rest, —the no tion that though Sandy should be the greatest painter in the land, the minister would be pointed at as Sandy's father. Next, Birkholm's tongue wagged wildly on his own affairs. There was word of his sisb r Effie's marriage, indeed, he might Bay it was as good as settled, with one of the Edinburg writers ; and Betsy's captain was with his ship, and Betsy, who was not sailing with him on his present station,was delicate, and wanted Nancy to keep her company in her lodgings at an English , seaport, and he would be left all by him- j self at Birkholin. It seemed he thought no shame of appealing to the charity of a friend, and arrived speedily at direct insin uations that Jess might visit Edinburgh again with him and the minister in a month or two, after harvest and before the hunt ing season, or even might make the pres ent visit serve two purposes, as, where people were of one mind, the sooner "these things" were done the better. Jess was forced to interpose and put a check on the honest, gallant laird, lest he should come to the point of affronting her by proposing plainly that ber stay in town should extend over the Sabbath, and then there would be time to send word to the session clerk and precenter of Clovenford to have their names cried in the kirk, and the minister would celebrate the ceremony on the Monday, without the trouble of wed ding clothes or wedding guests, or "riding the broose." "Thee things," as the laird called them with agreeable, self-conscious vagueness, were thus performed frequently. The world had awakened to perceive a want of delicacy in the old ostentatious pa rade and riotous rejoicings at marriages, and had run into opposite extreme by en couraging couples to steal off and be mar ried in secret, fine ladies at Richmond,their maids at Chelsea. Half of Jess's acquaint ances quitted their homes, not in the ac complishment of elopements, but with the full consent of friends and relatives, and posted in the all but universal white gowns and yellow buckskins, affording naclew to their design, to Edinburg or some other large town, to be married in the privacy of a crowd. But Jess Stewart was not so minded. If Birkholm had penetrated her secret, she had arrived at her conclusion with the swiftness of lightning, while mechanically reviewing the specimens of early Scotch art in the Exhibition. Women are seldom at fault v/heii they stumble unawares on the leading transactions of their lives, they have rehearsed it too often in imagin ation, —and women like Jess Stewart, never. " I shall not be back in Edinburgh till the spring," said Jess, composedly, glanc ing at her black silk pelisse ; " I think my Aunt Peggy wants me over at that time," she added, with the duplicity which even a woman like Jess could not resist being guilty of, in the strait. Had she been clear as crystal in this as in other matters, she would further have comforted the laird; "and then, Birkholm, after I have accus tomed my father to the thought of not see ing me every day in my mother's place,and have made every provision for his comfort, we will wed, but I think on a bonnie April afternoon, in the (Jlovenford dining-room, where the sound of the healths and the cheering will reach to the kirkyard,-es far as my mother's grave. You and me have spirit enough not to be feared at the ring ing and firing ; we would rather give the folk the play." |As to Birkholm, he took the comfort for granted, and did not need it ex pressed in words. Birkholm dined with the family at Aunt Peggy's on the dainty early lamb and the inythicallysounding forced potatoes and strawberries, the stereotyped luxuries of the Assembly week in Edinburgh. Aunt Peggy, that estimable and convenient kins woman, though she had never been in the same room with the laird and her niece be fore, her eyes probably opened by her hos pitability and its good cheer, followed Jess when she retired to prepare for her home ward journey, and folded her in her arms as soon as they were in the best bedroom ; called her a fine lass, who had done her duty by father and mother and brother,and enthusiastically predicted her reward. For Aunt Peggy's part, she had always prom ised that she would give Jess her tea chi na, and she would take care that Jesß had a set which would not disgrace the brass mounted tea-table of old Lady Birkholm, She would notjsay but, all things consid ered, Jess might not count on her tea trays forbye. Jess and the minister hied home to (Jlo venford,well supported. They had the wil ling convoy of both the young men, —San- dy to remain for a month's holidays. He was to inaugurate his picture, and be a witness to all the parish coming to see and and admire it, and to the minister never tired of showing it off till he succeeded in discovering subtle touches which the pain ter had never laid on. "My hand is closed on my spectacles. Jess is bringing in the eggs. She is copying a leaf from her rose tree in her work. She had the first China rose in Clovenford.and she was very ingen ious. It is from his mother he takes his talent." But beforehand, when Mr. Stewart and the young people returning late in the sum mer night to (Jlovenford, and the latter de layed for a moment at the manse gate to take leave of Birkholm and enter into an appointment with him for the next day, the minister walked up the garden path alone to the door. "It is all dark," he thought, looking up in the purple gloom at the qui et little house and the neighboring kirk and kirkyard, on which the morning would soon dawn in midsummer gladness, "where her light should have shone, and she would have liked well to have seen the two lads aud the lass come home, and to have got her picture by her son's hand, though she had behooved to admit for once that I had been in the wrong. Bat who says she's blind 1 She has gone where faith is sight, and where they know the end from the be ginning,and she has her share of the knowl edge. I warrant she sees farther than any of ns, —to have us all round her again, and her, bonny Jean Clephane, restored to im mortal youth. I cannot rightly understand how the lass and the wife and mother can be one and the same ; but lam sure it shall be, and that will be perfection. And oh ! Jean, woman, when I've sorted and settled the bairns,and done something more for my Master, I will be blythe to go home to my old friend and my young wife." NUMBER 52. THE POWER OF THE HEART. —Let any one while setting down, place the left leg over the knee of the right one, and permit it to hang freely, abandoning all muscular con trol over it. Speedily it may be observed to sway forward and backward through a limited space of regular intervals. Count ing the number of these motions from any given time, they will be found to agree exactly with the beatings of the pulse. Every one knows that, at fires, when the water from the engine is forced through bent hose, the tendency is to straighten the hose, and if the bend be a sharp one, considerable force is necessary to over come the tendency. Just so it is in the case of the human body. The arteries are but a system of hose, through which the blood is forced by the heart. When the leg is bent, all the arteries within it are bent too and eve.ry time the heart contracts the blood rushes through the arteries, tends to straighten them ; and it is the effort which produces the motion of the leg alluded to. Without such ocular demonstration, it is difficult to conceive the power exerted by I the exquisite mechanism, the normal pulsa i tions of which are never perceived by him whose very life they are. * Not so very long ago, in one of the Wes tern States, there was a certain Baptist i church whose members were not exactly a unit on the subject of immersion. At a meeting of church officers, on one occasion, a certain person, not remarkable for purity of life, sent in a request for admission into their fold. One of the committe, a rather rough man, on hearing the name of the in dividual : " That man ! Well, if that roso is to be admitted to the church he ought to soak over night." POETRY OF LABOR. Toil swings the axe, and forests bow, The seeds break out in radiant bloom, Rich harvests smile behind the plow, And cities cluster round the loom ; Where towering domes and tapering spires Adorn the vale and crown the hill, Stout Labor lights its beacon fires, And plumes with smoke the forge and mill. The monarch oak, the woodland's pride, Whose trunk is seamed with lightning scars, Toil launches on the restless tide, And there unrolls the flag of stars ; The engine with its lungs of flames, And ribs of brass and joints of steel, From Labor's plastic fingers came, With sobbing valve and whirling wheel. 'Tis labor works the magic press, And turns the c rank in hives of toil, And beckons angels down to bless Industrious hands on sea and soil. Her sun-browned Toil, with shining spade, Links lake to lake, with silver ties Strung thick with palaces of trade, And temples towering to the skies. FUN, FACTS AND FAOETLE. A justice, better versed in law than gos pel, married a couple in this way : " Hold up your hands. You solemnly swear that you will faithfully perform the duties of your office, jointly and severally, according to your best skill and judgment, so help you God. That's all, fee one dollar." A LITERAL FACT. —" Didn't you tell me you could hold a plow!" said the farmer to the Irish man he had taken on trial. "Re aisy, now," sayS Pat. " How could I hold it an' two horses pullin" it away? Just stop the creatures and I'll hold it for you." GIVING A CHARACTER. —" I)o you know the prisoner, Mr. Wiggms ?" "Yes, to the bone." •'Whatis his character?" "Didn't know he had any." "Does he live near you?" "So near that he has only spent five dollars for fixe wood in eigh£ years." IDLENESS. —Idleness is the dead sea that swallows up all virtues, and the self-made sepul cher of a living man. The idle man is the devil's urchin whose livery is rags, and whose diet and wages are famine and disease. WE have heard of asking for bread and receiving a stone ; but a young gentleman may be considered as still worse treated, when he asks for a young lady's hand and gets her father's foot. A French writer, describing the trading powers of a genuine Yankee, said : "If he was cast away on a desolate island, he'd get up next morning and go around selling.maps to the inhab itants." " AH, doctaw, does the choleraw awfect the highwa awda ?" "No," replied the doctor to the exquisite, "but it's death on fools, and you'd better leave the city at once." Prentice Bays girls will differ. One of them lately broke her neck in trying ts escape be ing kissed, uud a great many of them are ready to break their necks to get kissed. '• William," said a teacher to one of his pupils, "can you tell me what makes the sun rise in the east?" "Don't know, Sir," replied William, "cept it be that the east makes every thing rise." A land speculator, in describing a lake on an estate in Cumberland, says it is so close and so deep that bj looking into it you can see them making tea in China. A WESTERN "local" acknowledges the gift of "two bouquets smiling in their paper frills as do girls' faces within their laced nightcaps." That man is too imaginative to be kept on prosaic "items.' MRS. Partington asks very indignantly, if the bills before Congress are not counterfeit, why there should be so much difficulty in passing them? A WHITE man in St. Louis became enraged at a negro, the other day, and was about to strike him with a brickbat, when the colored man fell back on his reserved right: Look here white man, don't you strike me wid dat ar rock—don't you do it, sar. I'd hab you know dat wben you strikes me you strikes a bureau! A HOI'SEKEEFER'S MAXIMS.— Never say dye until you have had your silk turned twice. Good wine needs no bush, but home-made Cham pagne does need the gooseberry-bush. Don't count your chickens before they're hatch ed ; and avoid as much as possible having them in your breakfast eggs. Half a loaf is better than no bread, and half a stale loaf will go further than new bread. THE BEST RECOMMENDATION. —A youth seek ing employment came to New York city, and on in quiring at a certain counting-room if they wished a clerk, was told they did not. On mentioning tho recommendations that he had, one of which was from a highly respected citizen, the merchant de sired to see them. In turning over his carpet-bag to find his letters, a book rolled out on the floor. "What book is that ?" said the merchant. "It is the Bible, sir," was the reply. "And what are you going to do with that book in New York?" The lad looked seriously into the merchant's lace, and replied, "I promised my mother I would read it every day, and 1 shall do it." The merchant immediately engaged his services, and in due time he became a partner in the firm— one of the most respectable in the city.