t M i hK i nr Ulf l nil .iw . r .' W.7 &,;. .. r . . . ' . ::i nrw', . i.. r.u m MMM' Ii: lJ), 1i i'.'tT3Jrtr7(r mmftf. m 'I !"( ICopyrtght, 1891, by llr.chellcr, Johnson, & Uachollur. lit. "Anything," said tho mumper, shut ting lils loft eyo again "anything is possible th:it comes out of a bout thrlco the size of Mugger-Ghaut. My villago is not a small one." There was a whistle overhead on the bridge, and the Delhi mall slid across, all the carriages gleaming with light, and the shadows faithfully fol lowing across the river. It clanked away into tho dark again; but tho mugger and the jackal were so well used to it that they never turned their heads. "Is that anything less wonderful than a boat thrice the size of Mugger Ghaut?" asked the bird, looking up. "I saw that built, child. Stone by fitono I saw tho bridge piers rise, and when tho men fell off (they were won drous sure-footed for the most part but when they fell) 1 was read'. After tho ilrst pier was made they never thought to look down the stream for tho body to burn. There, again, I eared much trouble. There was noth ing strange in the building of tho Tjridgo," said the mugger. "IHitthat which goes across, pulling the roofed cartsl That is strange," tho adjutant repeated. "It is, past any doubt, a new breed of bullock. Some day it will not bo able to keep its foothold up yonder, and will fall as the men did. Tho old mugger will then bo ready." Tho jackal looked at tho adjutant, and the adjutant looked at tho juckal. If there was one thing they were more certain of than another, it was that tho engine was everything in the wide -world except a bullock. Tho jackal had watched it time and again from tho aloc-hedgos by tho side of tho line, and tho adjutant had seen engines since the ilrst engine ran in India. Put the mugger had only looked up at tho ongino from below, where the brass lomo seemed rather liko a bullock's bump. 'M yes, a new kind of bullock," the Snugger repeated ponderously, to make "sin: mini) at sib himself quito sure in his own mind; and "Certainly it is a bullock," said the jackal. "And again it might bo" began the mugger, pettishly. "Certainly most certainly," said the jackal, without waiting for tho other to finish. "What?" said tho mugger, angrily, for he could feel that tho others leno'v more than ho did. "What might it be'. I never finished my words. You said it "was a bullock." "It is anything tho Protector of the Poor pleases. I am his servant nt tho servant of tho thing that crosses tho rivor." "Whatever It is, it is white faced work," said tho adjutant. "And, for my own part, I would not choose a pl-H'o so near to it to lie out upon asthit bar is." "You do not know tho English as I do," bftid the mugger. "There was a white-face here when tho bridge was built, and ho would tako a boat in tho evenings and shuttle with his foot on tho bottom-boards, and whisper: 'Is lie here'.' lb ho Ihero? Got me my gun.' I !i im: -. '-jsk i a li& xm k g ' r'," ' & iftttS ? 3k . ik - . ns.k.H? .aas n . ". could hear him beforo I could see him each sound that he made croaking and pulling and rattling his gun, up and down the river. As surely as I had picked up one of his workmen, and thus saved great expense in wood for the burning, so surely would ho come down to the ghaut and shout in a loud voice that ho would hunt me, aud rid the river of mo tho mugger of Mugger-Ghaut! Mel Children, I have swam under tho bottom of his boat for hour after hour, and hoard him fire his gun at logs; and when 1 was well sure he was wearied I have risen by his side and snapped my jaws in his face. When tho bridge was finished ho went away. All tho English hunt in that fashion except when they are hunted." "Who hunts tho white-faces?" said tho jackal, excitedly. "No one now, but I have hunted them in my time." "I remember a little of that hunting. I was young then," said tho adjutant, clattering his beak significantly. "1 was well established here. My village was being buildcd for tho third time, as 1 remember, when my cousin tho gavial brought mo word of rich waters above Pennros. At first I would not go, tor my cousin, who is a fish eator, dogs not always know tho good from the bad; but I heard my people talking in tho evenings, and what they said niado mo certain." "And what did they say?" tho jackal asked. "They said enough to make me, tho mugger of Mugger-Ghaut, leave water and take to my feet. I wont by night, using the littlest streams as they served me; but it was tho beginning of tho hot weather and all streams were low. 1 crossed dusty roads; I went through tall grass; I climbed hills in the moon light. Even rocks did I climb, chil dren consider this well. I crossed tho tail of Sirhind tho waterless, bo fore I could find the set of tho littlo rivers that ilow Gungaward. I was a month's journey from my own people and the river that I know. That was very marvelous!" "What food by tho way?" said tho jackal, who kept his soul in his littlo btomach, and was not a bit impressed by tho mugger's land travels. "That which I could find cousin," said the mugger slowly, dragging each word. with a shout qvs. Now you do not call a man a cousin in India unless you think vou can es tablish some kind of blood relation ship, and as it is only in old fairy tales that tho mugger ever marries a jackal, tho jackal know for what reason In Had been suddenly lifted into tho mug ger's family eirclo. If they had boon alone ho would not have cared, but tho adjutant's eyes twinkled with mirth at the ugly jest. "Assuredly, father, I might have known," said the jackal. A mugger does not care to bo called a father of jackals, and tho mugger of Mugger Ghaut said as much and a good deal more which there is no so in repeat ing hero. "Tho Protector of tho Poor has elaimed kinship. How can I remember the pre cise degree? Moreover, wo eat tho fa mo food. Ho has said it," was tho jackal's reply. That made matters rather worse, for what tho jackal hinted at was that tho mugger must have oaten his food on that land march fresh, and fresh every day, instead of keeping it by him till It was in a fit aud proper condition, as every sell-respecting mugger ana most wild boasts do when thoj can. Indeed, ono of tho worst terms of contempt along tho river bod is "eater of fresh meat." It is about as bad us calling a friend a cannibal would bo among human beings. "That food was eaten thirty seasons ago," said tho adjutant quietly. "If wo talk for thirty seasons more it will never come back. Tell un now what happened when the good waters wore reached after thy most wonderful land journey. If wo listened to tho howl ing of every jackal tho business of tho town would stop, as tho saying Is." Tho mugger must have boon grate ful for tho interruption, because ho wont on with a rush: "By the Itight and Left of Gunga, when I came there never did I see such waters." "Wore they bettor, then, big flood of last season?" jackal. than the said tho "Hotter! That Hood was no mom than comes every five years a handful of drowned strangers, some chickens, and a dead bullock in muddy water with cross-currents. Put, tho season I think of, tho river was low, smooth and oven, and, as the gavial had warned mo, tho dead English came down touch ing each other. I got my girth in that season, my girth and my depth. From Agra, by Etawah kihI tho broad waters by Allahabad " "Oh, tho oddy that set under the walls of the fort at Allahabad!" said the adjutant. "They came in there liko widgeon to tho roods, and round and round they swung thus!" Lie went off into his horrible dance again, while tho jackal looked on en viously. Ho naturally could not re member tho year of tho mutiny they were talking about. Tho mugger con tinued: "Yes by Allahabad, ono lay still in tho slack water and lot twenty go by to pick one; nnd, above all, tho Eng lish wore not cumbered with jewelry and noso rings and anklets as my women are nowadays. To delight in ornaments is to end witli a ropo for necklace, as tho saying is. All tho mug gers of all tho rivers grew fat then but it was my fato to bo fatter than them all. Tho news was that tho Eng lish were being hunted into tho rivers, and by the Right and Left of Gunga wo believed it was true. So far as 1 went south I believed it to bo true, and I went down stream beyond Monghyr and tho tombs that look over the rivor." "I know thnt place," said tho ad jutant. "Since those days Monghyr is a lost city. Very few live there now." "Thereafter 1 worked upstream very slowly and lazily, and a littlo abovo Monghyr there came down a boatful of white faces alive! Thoy were, as I re member, women, lying under a eloth spread over sticks, and crying aloud. There wa. never a gun fired at us watchers of tho fords in those days. All the guns were busy elsewhere. Wo could hear them day and night inland, coming and going as the wind shifted. I rose up full beforo tho boat, because 1 had never seen whito faces alive, though I knew them well otherwise. A naked whito child kneeled by tho side of tho boat, and, stooping over, ho must needs try to trail his hands in the river. It is a pretty thing to sec how a child loves running water. I had fed that day, but there was a lit tle unfilled space within mo. Still, it was for sport and not for food that I rose at tho child's hands. They woro so clear a mark that I did not oven look when I elosed; and they woro so small that though my jaws rang true I am sure of that tho child drew them up swiftly unhurt. They must huvo passed between tooth and tooth those small whito hands. I should have caught him crosswise at tho elbows, but, as I said, it was only for sport and desire to see now things that I rose at nil. They cried out ono after another in tho boat, and presently I rose again to watch them. The boat was too heavy to push over. Thoy woro only women, but ho who trusts a woman will walk on duckweed in a pool, as tho saying is; and by tho llight and Left of Gunga that is truth!" "Once a woman gave mo some dried skin from a fish," said tho jackal. "I had hoped to get her baby, but horse food is better than the kick of a horso, as tho saying is. What did thy woman do?" "She fired at mo with a short gun of a kind I have never seen befo'o or binoe. Five times, ono aftcr another" (the mugger must have met with an old fashioned revolver); "and I staj'ed open-mouthed and gaping, my head in the smoke. Never did I seo such a thing. Five times, as swiftly as I wavo my tail thus!" The jackal, who had been growing more and more interested in tho story, had just time to leap back as tho tail hwung by liko a scytho. to UK CO.VCMJDKI). fMiturnl Onro ."Morn. Cumso Jaysiiilth is himself again. Fanglo What do you mean? Cumso You know a relative loft him 10,000 a few months ago? Fanglo Yes. Cumso It's all gone. IIo struck me for a fiver this morning, just as he used to in tho good old times. Town Topics.- S'lnn of Dufciit. Cora So you nro sure her husband had tho best of tho argument? Did she tell you so? Madgo No; but I heard her say ho was a moan, hateful thing, as alio wout out of tho room and slammed tho door. Puck. EXPOSITION ECHOES. Notos of tho Gront Fair Doing Hold in Athintn, Tho Hlimr M u (Ircsit I'luiuicliil nnd .nin ths Sui'otmn Viirlrty In tlio Scciich nnd Attractions IVnturon Not to ltd Ovi'iionltcd. Spoclnt Atlnntn T.ottor. UIIE ATLANTA ox- position is now In the full tide of suc cess. In spito of the fact that for ho mo time after its gates w t r o opened the exhibi tion was i n com plete in many of Its at tract ions, It has up to the pres ent lime paid cx pen son. The at tendance during September, notwithstanding the hc U'rely hot weather, was larger than had been expected, and has si nee been stead ily on the increase. Large excursion parties- from the surrounding states have become quite the fashion. One day, not long since, several thousand Tennesf,ecanH passed through the ex position turnstiles. Large parties of journalists hao made thciisclcs fa miliar with the principal attractions. The last week of October, including the first diiyn of November, Atlanta wel comed within her gates 500 newspaper men. Three of tho largest state press organizations in the country arrived at " ""P'-" wise i TIIK woman's the same hour. The editors came from Missouri, Illinois and Arkansas. Said one of the editors: "When we entered tho grounds what we saw astonished us. Wo looked in amazement for several minutes from the terrace near the audi torium upon the beautiful buildings and the grand panorama that was be fore us. If we were going to have an exposition in our state wo would have the exposition here as our model." Quite a number of Chicago business men, together with the First regiment and a brass band, are on tho eve of in admg the great fair. The success of the exposition in the matter of attendance conies from tlio tremendous attractiveness of that en terprise. Nothing could be imagined more complete and harmonious than this show of the great cotton states of the south. The ; educed rates of travel on the railways have also coiitrihtitcd largely in the direction, though not go ing nearly so far us the cordial hospital ity of i he Atlanta hosts. The action oT the managers in declining to open the exhibition grounds on Sunday has given widespread satisfaction through out the south, where rewrence for the Sabbath has not yet given place to the loose ideas which prevail in some other parts of the country. Jtut a word of caution iH not out of order. The exhibit of rascals and im- 1'IXi: AKTS postors in connection with the Atlanta exposition is as rich and varied as it has been at oilier great fairs, and tho vis itor might tlo worse than look to his purse strings. It is not the fakirs of tho Midway who are to be feared, not those who sell pure gold badges for a quarter of a dollar, who lure you into cheap shows or bad dining halls, not even those who pick your pockets in dense crowds or sandbag you in dark alleys. These are open-hearted, honest rogues whose designs may be anticipated ami whose deeds may be averted by a keen eye and a stout cane. The dangerous rascals am those who shake your hand. The peerage of fraud thrives on crowds and vanity. Theio is no oppor tunity at such times as these toanalye Koclety. Everybody is on the rush, seeking invitations, parting their hair in the middle, wearing their best gowns and brightest jewels, spending money with careless grace, holding t heir heads as high as they can, in fine, being of tho world worldly and striving for distinc tion in cosmopolitan society. In this turmoil and passion, when heads aro turned with tho thunder ol St mm JL Mi Mtmmm Pil SM asf 5n 4m 'm 8 PPB & r TSBS!:',dWiV fti J) ! J W?i l'l.Cl '? I 3J ' w - . ituti4 ii uLwr.t r jin 'din ra si i bah 1 'jtih rv.. tt ii p t t hi .v.- 'jftwiwyyimuirjui'"" high names, when eyca aro blinded with glares and glitters, when own the poor bruin becomes soft because the log are tired and tho arms arc weary and the stomach Is jaded with beautiful foods and bad hours, the fl, smooth, oily rogue of society glides around in high carnival. One Invitation to u swell function, and the rogue's career is cany; one introduction, and hissnuro is set. If there Is any one thing that tho promoters of tho fair pride them selves uimn, it is the variety in iU scenes and attractions. This is found in plenty among smaller bullding.H erected by states and corporations, such as the handsome Knickerbocker mansion, of New York state; the Long fellow home, of Massachusetts; tho superb villa, of Illinois; the. quaint old Catholic mission, of California; tho queer looking barracks of Alabama; tho Cozy bungalow, of Costa llica; tho iiant log cabin, of the creole kitchen; the pretty Itcuuissnncc, of the woineii'ii annex; tlicwoiulcrful plant pyramid, of Florida; the railway sheds or stables, in which the iron horses stand upon exhibition; the campanile, the grace ful music stand, where Gllmore's band pours forth its Hood of melody every day; the Mexican village, with Its in teresting reproduction of Atoo, Span ish aud Saracen types of construction: the Japanese and Chinese villages, which transport Tokio and Canton to tlio Gate City of the South, and (ho In dian village and Dahomey village, where savage Africa confronts savagu America in equal ingenuity and dirt. Hero and there, in rhythmic undula tion'), winds tho main road, one-half - jii i; ua LrarziizzS . A lllTII.DIXIl. lnacnilami.ed, as if to show tho mod ern age, and one-half corduroy, that i.s to say, composed of a solid roadway of heavy pine planks, as if to repre sent t he beginningof the century. Tho clever artist of tho exposition so ar ranged road and meadow, hill and building, .that from every point along the thoroughfare aro two or three long vistas, each different from tho rest, and yet eaoli of the greatest attractive ness. Devotees at the Napoleonic slirino will find some interesting mementos' of their idol in the Virginia Colonial case. These relies are genuine, having been inherited by the exhibitor from Mons. Pascal Schisano, to whom they wero given by Charles de Montholon, consul at liichmoiid, Va., who had received them from his father, Marquis do Montholou, and from Gen. Jlertrand, both devoted friends of the emperor. Minnesota, however, lias the most valu able Napoleonic relic at the fair; it is on exhibition in a small case in tlio Decorative art room, and is a small iron chest, with a curious lock, in which Napoleon carried his private papers when on his campaigns. Other inter esting things connected with tho French revolution are also to be seen in thisexhibit. In the Lucy Cobb room, Wonian'H building, are three old prints, date, hJ4Hll!! liun.Dixa. 7001, one of the Vatican library, ono of the Ducal palace, Venice, and tho third of the guidon of the Tuilerics, printed for Carrington Howies, St. Paul's church yard, Loudon, tho art ist's name, Mareschi. Tho lucky own er of these rare prints bought them only a few years ago for $1. 50. The cradle in which Jefferson was rocker 's exhibited in the Forestry building. It is not liko that of Jeffer son Davis, in tlio Confederate hall. In the Louisiana case, Colonial room, no one should fail to note the largo re pousse silv or pitcher, bearing t lie Cn nip bull coat of arms, and which once bo longed to tlio duke of Argyll and de scended in tho female line to tlio pres ent possessor, Mrs, Story, of Now Or leans. There Is no doubt that the exposition is destined to exert a most potential in fluence iiioblitcratingsomoof the preju dices which have operated to tho disad vantage of the south, and that it will promote that spirit of national unity which must constitute so largely the, buttress of our life and accurity. 11.C..U