* * * * PHANTOM SHIP * * * * * * * -OR The Flying Dutchman. . -BY CAPTAIN MARRYAT. CHAPTER XXII. ( Continued. ) The Utrecht sailed with a flowing sheet , and was soon clear ofthe Eng lish Channel ; the voyage promised to bo auspicious , favoring gales bore them without accident to within a few hun dred miles of the Cape of Good Hope , when , for the first time , they were be calmed. Amine was delighted ; in the evenings she would pace the deck with ( Philip ; then all'was silent , except the splash of the wave as it washed against the'sldes of the vessel all was in re pose and beauty , as the bright south ern constellations sparkled over their heads. When the day dawned , the lookout man at the mast-head reported that he perceived something floating on the still surface of the water , on the beam of the vessel. Krantz went up with the glass to examine , and made it out to be ta small boat , probably cut adrift from ( gome vessel. As there was no appear ance of wind , Philip permitted a boat to be sent to examine it , and after a long pull the seamen returned on board , towing the small boat astern. : "There Is the body cf a man in it , " jsald the second mate to Krantz , as he gained the gangway ; "but whether he is quite dead or not , I cannot tell. " Krantz reported this to Philip , who was at that time sitting at breakfast twith Amine , in the cabin , and then tproceeded to the gangway , to where Jthe body of the man had been already \ ( [ handed up by the seamen. The sur- igeon , who had been summoned , 'de clared that life was not yet extinct , and was ordering him to be taken below , for recovery , when to their as tonishment the man turned as he lay , [ sat up , and ultimately rose upon his I 'feet ' and staggered to a gun , when , [ after a time , he appeared to be fully [ recovered. In reply to questions put { to him , he said that he was in a vessel ( which had been upset in a squall , that Ihe had time to cut away the small 'boat ' astern , and that all the rest of [ the crew had perished. He had hardly made his answer , when Philip , wuu Amine , came out of the cabin , and Iwalked up to where the seamen were [ crowded round the man ; the seamen tretreated so as to make an opening , when Philip and Amine , to their as tonishment and horror , recognized heir old acquaintance , the one-eyed pilot Schriften. "He ! he ! Captain Vanderdecken , I believe glad to see you in command , and you , too , fair lady. " Philip turned away with a chill at his heart ; Amine's eye flashed as she surveyed the wasted form of the wretched creature. After a few seconds ends she turned round and followed Philip into the cabin , where she found him with his face buried in big hands. "Courage , Philip , courage ! " said Amine ; "it was indeed a heavy shock , and I fear me forbodes evil ; but what then ? It is our destiny. " "It is ! it ought perhaps to be mine , " replied Philip , raising his head ; "but you , Amine , why should you be a partner " "I am your partner , Philip , in life and in death. I would not die first , Philip , because it would grieve you ; tut your death will be the signal for mine , and I will join you quickly. " "Surely , Amine , you would not hasten your own ? " "Yes ! and require but one moment for this little steel to do its duty. " "Nay ! Amine , that is not lawful our religion forbids it. " "It may do so , but I cannot tell why. I game into this world without my own consent ; surely I may leave with out asking the leave of priests ! But let that pass for the present ; what will you do with that Schriften ? " "Put him on shore at the Cape ; I cannot bear the odious wretch's pres ence. Did you not feel the chill , as before , when you approached him ? " "I did I knew that he was there before I saw him ; but still I know not why , I feel as if I would not send him away. " "Why not ? " "I believe it is because I am in clined to brave destiny , not to quail at It. The wretch can do no harm. " "Yes , he can much ; he can render the ship's company mutinous and dis- uffected ; besides , he attempted to de prive me of my relic. " "I almost wish he had done so ; then must you have discontinued this wild search. " "Nay , Amine , say not so ; it is my duty , and I have taken my solemn oath " 5 "But this Schriften you cannot well 5I I put him ashore at the Cape , he being a company's officer ; you might send him home if you found a ship there home ward bound ; still , were I you , I would let destiny work. He Is woven in with ours , that is certain. Courage , Philip , and let him remain. " "perhaps you are right , Amine ; I may retard , but cannot escape , what ever may be my Intended fate. " "Let him remain , then and let him do his worst. Treat him with kindness who knows what we may gain from him ? " "True , true , Amine ; he has been my enemy without cause. Who can tell ? perhaps he may become my friend. " "And if not , you have done your tluty. " The Utrecht arrived at the Cape , watered and proceeded on her voyage , and , after two months of difficult nav igation , cast anchor off Gambroon. During this time Amine had been un- ceasing in her attempts to gain the good-will of Schriften. She had often conversed with him on deck , and had done him every kindness , and had overcome that fear which his near approach preach had generally occasioned. Schriften gradually appeared mindful of this kindness , and at last to be pleased with Amine's company. To Philip he was at times civil and courte ous , but not always ; to Amine he was always deferent. His language was mystical she could not prevent his chuckling laugh , his occasional "He ! he ! " from breaking forth. But when they anchored at Gambroon , he was on such terms with her that he would occasionally come Into the cabin ; and , although he would not sit down , would talk to Amine for a few minutes , and then depart. The Utrecht sailed from Gambroon , touched at Ceylon and proceeded on her voyage in the Eastern seas. The ship was not far from the Andaman Isles , when Krantz , who had watched the barometer , came in early one morn ing and called Philip. "We have every pospect of a ty phoon , sir , " said Krantz ; "the glass and the weather are both threaten ing. " "Then we must make all snug. Send down top-gallant yards and small sails directly. We will strike top-gallant masts. I will be cut in a minute. " Philip hastened on deck. The sea was smooth , but already the moaning of the wind gave notice of the approaching preaching storm. The vacuum in the air was about to be filled up , and the convulsion would be terrible ; a white haze gathered fast , thicker and thick er ; the men were turned up , every thing of weight was sent below , and the guns were secured. Now came a blast of wind which careened the ship , passed over , and in a minute she righted as before ; then another and another , fiercer and fiercer still. The sea , although smooth , at last appeared white as a sheet with foam , as the typhoon swept along in its impetuous career ; it burst upon the vessel , which bowed down to her gunwale and there remained ; in a quarter of an hour the hurricane had passed over and the ves sel was relieved ; but the sea had risen , and the wind was strong. In another hour the blast again came , more wild , more furious than at first ; the waves were dashed into their faces , torrents of rain descended , the ship was thrown on her beam ends and thus remained till the wild blast had passed away , to sweep destruction far beyond them , leaving behind it a tumultuous , angry sea. sea."It "It is nearly over , I believe , sir , " said Krantz. "It is clearing up a little to windward. " "We have had the worst of it , I be lieve , " said Philip. "No ; there is worse to come , " said a low voice near to Philip. It was Schriften who spoke. "A vessel to windward scudding be fore the gale ! " cried Krantz. Philip looked to windward , and in the spot where the horizon was clearest he saw a vessel under topsails and foresail standing right down. "She is a large vessel ; bring me my glass. " The telescope was brought from the cabin , but before Philip could use it a haze had again gathered up to wind ward , and the vessel was not to be seen. "Thick again , " observed Philip , as he shut in his telescope. "We must look out for that vessel , that sire does not run too close to us. " "She has seen us , no doubt , sir , " said Krantz. After a few minutes the typhoon again raged , and the atmosphere was a murky gloom. It seemed as if some heavy fog had been hurled along by the furious wind ; nothing was to be distinguished except the white foam of the sea , and that not the distance of half a cable's length , where it was lost in one dark-gray mist. The storm- staysail , yielding to the force of the wind , was rent into strips , and flogged and cracked with a noise even louder than the gale. The furious blast again blew over , and the mist cleared up a little. "Ship on the weather beam close aboard of us ! " cried one of the men. Krantz and Philip sprang upon the gunwale , and' beheld the large ship bearing * right down upon them , not three cables' length distant. "Helm up ! She does not see us , and she will be aboard of us ! ' cried Philip. "Helm up , I say ; hard up , quick ! " The helm was put up , as the men , perceiving their imm'inent danger , climbed upon the guns to look if the vessel altered her course ; but no down she came , and the headsails of the Utrecht having been carried away , to their horror they perceived that she would not answer her helm and pay off as they required. "Ship ahoy ! " cried Krantz , on the gunwale , waving his hat. It was use less down she came , with the waters foaming under her bows , and was now within pistol shot of the Utrecht. "Ship ahoy ! " roared all the sailors , with a shout that must have been heard ; it was not attended to ; down came the vessel upon them , and now her cut-water was within ten yards of the Utrecht. The men of the Utrecht , who expected that their vessel would be severed in half by the concussion , climbed upon the weather gunwale , all ready to catch at the ropes of the other vessel and climb on board of her. Amine , who had been surprised at the noise on deck , had come out and had taken Philip by the arm. "Trust to me the shock " said Philip. He said no more ; the cut water of the stranger touched their sides ; one general cry was raised by the sailors of the Utrecht they sprang to catch at the rigging of the other vessel's bowsprit , which was now point ed between their masts. They caught at nothing nothing there was no shock no concussion of the two ves sels the stranger appeared to cleave through them ; her hull passed along in silence ; no cracking of timbers ; no falling of masts ; the foreyard passed through their mainsail , yet the canvas was unrent ; the whole vessel appeared to cut through the Utrecht , yet left no trace of injury not fast , but slowly , as if she were really sawing through her by the heaving and tossing of the sea with her sharp prow. The strang er's forechains had passed their gun wale before Philip could recover him self. "Amine ! " cried he , at last ; "the Phantom ship ! My father ! " The seamen of the Utrecht , more astounded by the marvelous result than by their former danger , threw them selves down upon deck ; some hastened below , some prayed ; others were dumb with astonishment and fear. Amine appeared more calm than any , not ex cepting Philip ; she surveyed the vessel as it slowly forced its way through ; she beheld the seamen on board her coolly leaning over her gunwale , as if deriding the destruction that they had occasioned ; she looked for Vander- decken himself , and en the poop of the vessel , with his trumpet under his arm , she beheld the image of her Philip the same hardy , strong build , the same features , about the same age apparently ; there could be no doubt it was the doomed Vanderdecken. "See , Philip , " said she ; "see your father ! " "Even so. Merciful heaven ! it is it is ! " and Philip , overpowered by his feelings , sank upon the deck. .The vessel had now passed over the Utrecht ; the form of the elder Vander decken was seen to walk aft and look over the taffrail ; Amine perceived it to start and turn away suddenly ; she looked down and saw Schriften shak ing his fist jn defiance at the super natural being ! Again the Phantom ship flew to leeward before the gale , and was soon lost in the mist ; but before that Amine had turned and perceived the situation of Philip. No one but herself and Schriften appeared able to act or move. She caught the pilot's eye , beckoned to him , and with his assistance Philip was led into the cabin. ( To be continued. ) ' Snppljinjr Stationery by the Ton. The supply department of the postal service is an immense business in itself. Over six tons of stationery , blanks , books , twine , scales , etc. , are mailed every day from the department at Washington. Facing-slips put around letters and pack'ages numbered 550,000,000 last year ; blanks , over 90.000,000 ; lead pencils , 200,000 ; pens , 13,700 gross ; sealing wax , over five tons. The wrapping paper cost as much as the president's salary. De spite rigid economy , $90,000 worth of twine was called for. Paper by the ton , blanks by the thousand , ink by the barrel till figures grow weak and un satisfying. The division of supplies occupies a building .formerly used as a skating rink. One room contains supplies of every blank used in every postoflice in the country , another room is filled with wrapping-paper and twine , another great room has thou sands of the 217 different articles of stationery for first and second-class offices. Cinderella of Ancient Ejjrpt. ' "Cinderella" is not entirely the product of fiction. Princess Rhodopis of Egypt was the first Cinderella. She was bathing in the Nile , and a bird , which Strabo calls an eagle , flying past , picked up one of her slippers , or sandals , flew away with it , and dropped it on the lap of Prince Psam- meticus , who was holding a court of justice in Memphis. He was so struck by the dainty manufacture and small size of the sandal that , being then in search of a bride , he at once vowed that he would only wed the maiden whose foot fitted the sandal. There were two elder daughters of the first marriage who greatly envied her good fortune and here we have all the es sentials of the story. Tarnod Down. "I came to ask you for your daugh ter , " said the young man who has noth ing but what he expects to earn , "but I can't express myself. " "Express yourself ! " sneered the plutocratic parent. "You don't even need to go by freight. Walking is expeditious enough in this case. Don't forget your hat. " Detroit Free Press. An Explanation. "I would be thought more of , " Mr. Dismal Dawson explained , "if people only understood my nature more bet ter. I am that kind of a guy that never gives up when he has once started to do somethin' . That's the reason I've always been afraid to start in at anything. " Indianapolis Journal. Not n Volunteer. "Do you go to school.my little man ? ' ' asked the smiling visitor. "No , " drawled the hopeful , "I'm sent. " The Rival. France is burdened with 400,000 prb- Hc officials , costing the state 615,000- OCO francs a year. WHERE THEY THEIVE TRUSTS FLOURISH IN FREE- TRADE BRITAIN. Any Attempt to Cimpplo tilth Combines by tbe Abolition of Protection In the United States Would 1'rovo Dangerous to Domestic Industries. San Francisco Chronicle : Under the caption , "The Growth of Monopoly In English Industry , " H. W. Macrosty , In the March Contemporary Review , fur nishes some interesting Information re specting trusts In Great Britain , which deserves to be attentively stud- led by those misguided writers who as sume that protection is responsible for the movement In the direction of in dustrial combinations so prevalent in this country at present. Mr. Macrosty furnishes abundant evi dence that the phenomena is not con fined to protective countries , and shows that the movement is as far-reaching in free-trade England as in the United States. Speaking of the growth of combinations In the United Kingdom , he says : "Single amalgamations , while not entirely excluding competition , control the screw , cotton , thread , salt , alkali and India rubber tire industries. In other cases a formal agreement of mas ters fixes prices ; thus , in the hollowware - ware trade ( metal utensils ) prices are arranged by an informal ring of a dozen Birmingham firms. Similarly there is no open market In antimony , nickel , mercury , lead pipes , fish supply and petroleum. Steel and iron rails are con trolled by an English rail ring , which so manages matters that It is under sold by American , Belgian and German competitors. All the largest firms in the newspaper making industry have just consolidated their interests into one large combination. In the engi neering trades twenty-four-firms have a subscribed capital of 14,245,000. In 1897 Armstrong & Co. absorbed Whit- worth & Co. , raising their capital to 4,210,000 in the process. Vickers Co. , the armor plate manufacturers are another example of a very large amalgamation. In the spring of 1897 they bought up the Naval Construction and Armament company , and later they acquired the Maxini-Nordenfeldt Guns and Ammunition company. Now they boast of being the only firm ca- p.able of turning out a battleship com plete in every respect. The most note worthy examples of combination , how ever , are to be found in the Birming ham staple trades and in the textile industries. " This condensation is supplemented by extended details showing that slow ly but surely the British organizer is bringing every possible plan of money making within the field of his opera tions , and that England is rapidly be coming the home of trusts. Here is his summing up : "We thus see in British industry a steady movement toward combination and monopoly , a movement which is the natural outcome of competition.and therefore not capable of being prevent ed or undone by law. " The keen critic will not fail to note that this admission is fatal to the as sumption that protection is responsible for the creation of trusts. If trusts are the natural outcome of eompe i- tion , as Mr. Macrosty avers , then the evil cannot be attributed to a policy which has the effect of restraining the area of competition. We may add that this view , that competition is respon sible for combinations , has found ex pression in the works of such distin guished free traders as J. Thorold Rogers , and that it is only the "feather-weight" economists , fighting under the Cobden banner in this coun try , who have sought to fasten the re sponsibility for the evil on protection. Not only is protection not responsible for the trust evil , but it may be claimed that it offers the only remedy for its suppression. We venture to say that no protectionist will assent to the prop osition that combination is "not capa ble of being prevented or undone by law , " but it is natural enough for a free trader to assume that the evil is irremediable , as Mr. Macrosty does in his closing sentence , in which he says : "Nevertheless , with the weapon "of state control in hand , combination may be welcomed , and if control proves in sufficient , state purchase and public ad ministration remain behind. " Protectionists , accustomed as they are to the idea of regulation , will not hesitate to resort to the most drastic measures if they find it necessary to dose so in order to stamp cut the evil. By carefully limited the area of competi tion to their own country the states men of a protective nation can con trol trusts , but that will be found an impossible achievement in a free-trade country , for the simple reason that the attempt to prohibit combination in a land with wide-open trade doors will prove destructive to domestic indus try. TIio Triumph of Intelligence. A communication recently sent from London to an American commercial pa per contains the following : "Practically all the equipments of new London electric railways , includ ing elevators , are brought from the United States. There are many outward signs of this American invasion. A large proportion of things advertised in papers and magazines the Americans recognize as home products. One big hotel in the commercial quarter has a whole wing given up to sample rooms of American drummers. They show machinery , novelties and manufactured articles of all kinds. Nor do these ad vance agents of Yankee prosperity con fine themselves to one hotel. Some of the pioneers are reaping a harvest. Amerlcan shoes sell at CO per cent over New York prices , and bicycles and other articles are also well up. An outcome cf this movement , already ap parent in some quarters , Is that Great Britain Is urged to impose a tariff to save her home market from her new est rival. " This state of affairs goes to show that the cheapest products , considered as to their selling prices , are today , in a large number of cases , the products of the highly paid and intelligent labor employed in the protected industries of America. We are now having a prac tical realization of the protectionist claim that protection will , In the end , mean cheaper production than would be possible under free trade , because protection means intelligent labor. As President McKinley once said : "A revenue tariff cheapens products by cheapening men ; a protective tar iff cheapens products by elevating men and by getting from them their best la bor , their best skill , their best inven tion. " Satan Kcbuklns Sin. What did the Democrats ever do when they were In power to restrain the developments which they now af fect to deplore , but at which they se cretly rejoice , recognizing , as they do , in them a possible chance of salvation ? They never did a thing. On the con trary , it was while the Democracy was in office that the seeds of the growth we see going on were planted. The great sugar trust , which was one of the first to be formed , was little less than a Democratic organization. Its contributions had assisted Grove/ Cleveland's election , and it is an open secret that by way of reward it was permitted to dictate the sugar sched ule in the disaster-breeding tariff bill to which Professor Wilson gave his name. The Democracy denouncing trusts will be strongly suggestive of Satan rebuking sin. The position of the Republicans is much better. The only anti-trust law upon the federal statute books , the so- called Sherman law , was a Republican measure , and in the anti-trust legisla tion of the states it Is the Republican states which have consistently taken the lead. If the Democrats cannot find any other issue upon which to unite than one upon which all politicians of whatever allegiance are agreed , their straits must indeed be desperate. Ex change. Too Good a Thing to Drop. John Bull Now that we're getting to be such warm friends , isn't it about time to drop that foolish tariff of yours ? Uncle Sam Thanks , Johnnie , for your assurances of friendship , but that foolish tariff has proved too good a thing to drop. Why don't you try it yourself ? There's millions in it ! Yearninsj for Soup House roller. Two hundred day laborers of the Mount Vernon Car Manufacturing company have received a 10 per cent advance in wages. The works were closed down much of the time early in the nineties for want of orders , but now it has contracts for building 1,700 new cars , in addition to those upon which the men are at work. Business men , farmers and others in that vi cinity claim that local conditions are improved by the expenditure of thou sands of dollars of wages , monthly , in the city , but others who earn nothing , build nothing , pay nothing , and do nothing but talk and long for the re turn of the soup-house policy party to power , are not happy at the outlook , and bear upon their forlorn visages the unspoken prayer of "give us calamity or give us death. " Carmi (111. ( ) Times. The Goieminent Cunlil 1'siy. McKinley solil 3 per cent bonds to the people ; Cleveland sold 4M ; per cent bonds to a syndicate of bankers. The total of our public debt is a mere baga telle compared with our wealth and re sources. The continuation of the Re publican party in power , which would mean continued prosperity , would en able the government to pay it off in ; i few years. Western ( Neb. ) Wave. "Will > 'cctl the Doctor. The balance .of trade in favor of the United States is at the present time fifty-four million dollars a month. Un- Jer the Wilson bill and the Cleveland Pi administration it was less than seven Piei millions a month. A little argument of eiP this kind will make a Democrat sick ir enough to call In the family physician. fc Lawrence ( Kan. ) Journal. U A In ays True to Its lu The business and finances of the nation ill illA tion always have been in satisfactory A shape when the management of gov- srnment affairs is intrusted to the Re iff ! publican party , the only national or cr ganization which ever has demonstrat cr ed its capacity to conduct them success tn fully. Springfield (111. ( ) Journal. to : of How easy It is for some people to idvise others hew to conduct their af W fairs when their own show a lameut- tr ; ible want of attention. tb THE BRITISH WAY. tfpon the Workingman Blust Toll the Cost of Increasing Competition. The Duke of Devonshire , in an ad dress delivered a short time since be fore the shareholders of the Furness railway , referred to the fact that , as he put it , "even the most enterprising of English firms , with well-equipped works expressly put down at the coast for export trade , have been under quoted in their own country by Amer ican-made rails , " and said : "Excessive care must be taken not to demand overmuch In the way of increased wages or lessened hours , lest produc tion be made so dear that the for eigner can cut in below our country men. " Americans have no quarrel with this attitude on the part of English states men , especially so as the policy advo cated is not likely to result in the shutting out of American rails. We are more than willing to let the Eng lish manage their own affairs. Yet one cannot but marvel at the eco nomic bigotry which prefers to secuse the home market by having laborers "not demand overmuch in the way of increased wages or lessened hours , " rather than to hold it by putting a pro tective tariff on competing products. We have had considerable experience with that same kind of economic big otry on the part of free traders in this country. Fortunately for the interests of the country , the great majority of American workmen have not been de ceived by the false ideas of "cheap ness" advanced by these bigots , and have insisted on a policy -which gives protection to American labor and makes good wages sure. It is not past belief that English workmen will some day wake up to their own interests and demand protection for their labor and their wages. In Five Southwestern States. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat , in the course of a review of the industrial conditions of five southwestern states , published in a recent issue , said that the four years of depression had been quickly followed by a business revival never equaled in the history of this country ; that this improvement hai continued for two years , and that evi dences of renewed prosperity were in creasing daily. It continued as fol lows : "New industries have been estab lished , having a capital of at least S14- 753,150 , and the plants are valued at $13,230,600. The value of the annual output of these new industries in round figures is $76,592,456. These plants give employment to 16,436 persons , and pay out annually in wages $10,156.s01. Those totals , large as they are , are small compared with the aggregate which a complete showing of th * com mercial expansion in all lines would present. There is no doubt but that the figures would reach into the hun dreds of millions were it possible to ascertain' the exact amount invested 4a commerce , manufactures , agriculture , and mining during the past two years in the states thus partly covered In tie reports received from the fifty-four towns making up this enumeration. " With such a showing as this , there is little chance that these states will be found again in the ranks of free trade. The citizens will not be in a hurry to give up their prosperity through cling ing to an exploded theory. Protection ami the Farmer. The report of the agricultural de partment showing the increasing ex tent to which foreign countries were in 1S9S purchasers of the agricultural products of the United States presents some interesting facts illustrative of the wisdom cf an economic policy which promotes the foreign trade aad domestic trade at one and the same time. Domestic exports of all kinds in 1S9S exceeded imports of all kiatis by the enoromus sura of $594.242.259. which was more than double the excess of the preceding year , the largest re ported up to that time. Agricultural exports for 1S9S amounted to 78.93 per cent of the whole , being a gain of near ly 25 per cent over 1S97. There was. on the other hand , a marked decrease in 1S9S of purchases of foreign agri cultural products as contrasted with the fiscal year 1S97. when under th * free wool provisions of the Wilson law we imported $53.243.191 worth of for eign wool , against less than sevoateea millions' worth under the Dinglev tar iff in 1S9S. The American farmer had much th best of the situation in the first eleven months of restored protection , as fcis sales to foreign countries mor * than doubled the value of our imports f foreign agricultural products , the ex cess amounting to $314.216.14 $ . Alto gether , the agricultural export and im port figures for 1S9S show well for pro tection and its benefits to the Americas farmer. llixrtl to Cot Oor. A tribute to the effectiveness of th * protective policy In adding to the g a- eral welfare of the United States Is paid : in a recent report of the Gorman , imperial commissioner at Bremen , as follows : "The strong tendency toward tUt L'nited States. In spite of immigration liaving been rendered more difficult , rtnds an explanation in the fact that American Industry hns largely ilev l- jped In consequence of the DIngley tar , and that the demand , for o.\iv rl- nced artisans has therefore greatly In- reased. Moreover. Gemma manufae- Lurcrs have. In order to save the cu - ems duties , established branch lionets their works.in the United Stntos , " Facts like these are. like a bnrhttl vire fence , "hard to get over. " Fro- ra'le writers don't nUompt to got ovtr .hem. They dcilge and Ignore them * .