Zitl JlWW09Eiv - r HUNTING THE WHALE ZJECAY OF A ONCE PROFITABLE NDUSTRY ihe Old Ship Crews and Implements Km ployed in the Industry that Formerly Enriched the New England Coast Towns Perils of Whaling An Almost Forgotten Fish The city of New Bedford Mass re cently celebrated Its fiftieth anniversary as a municipality It is a typical New England city whose people with Yankee adaptiveness have replaced the whaling industry once its principal reliance with many more modern business enterprises The whaler like the Indian the cow boy and the logger is a vanishing type of America A centuiy linds him relegated from among the foremost featuies of the New England seaboard to be an almost forgotten figure The famous fortunes down East were built on a foundation of cetaceous blubber and the wheels of prosperity were lubricated with sperma ceti but when the rock farms of Penn sylvania began geyserlike to spout pe troleum the hollow roar sounded the death knell of the whaling industry The keen Yankee however was equal to the emergency and the millions that had ac cumulated through sperm oil were invest ed in manufacturing The rusting har poons were transformed to shining spin dles the tempest tossed timbers of aban doned ships fed the glowing grates of new enterprise romance of the sea fled away as the electric shadowed the astral lamp but thrifty profit cheerily nestled in the embrasure of the old New England man tle trees smiling at the ghostly memories and heroics of long ago Bare OJd New Bedford What of the fleet of 400 whaling ships once registered from New Bedford Nan tucket Gloucester and ProvincetownV One would find only a few remnants of this glory to day New Bedford indeed is one of the largest manufacturing cen ters of the East but Nantucket is merely an exhibition stand for tourists after a dip or in search of colonial curios while Provincetown is a sleepy point at lands end Down at the moss grown wharves of New Bedford there is an aggregation of queer old ships floating monuments of the ancient fleet There they lie in their quiet reservations hoary in age linked in pairs as though to keep up the old form of gam whalers gossip and look in mild reuuke at the wheezy impudent lit tle tugs that bustle about tie harbor ag gressively attached to large and lazy ships that are coming from or going to foreign shores These old heroes that were once the pride and glory of American seamen -when our flag floated in every port on the globe are freighted with rare romance and curious in contrast with the craft of to day The largest of them did not measure over 125 feet or exceed 500 gross tonnage Take the old Commodore Morris as a type She was built in 1S41 tonnage 33821 length 107 beam 27 depth 17 The quaint old figurehead is battered almost beyond recognition but may take pride in the fact that it cleared 200000 for owners in a brief commis sion The Whaleship Structurally Their bows broad round are heavily timbered ornate with curious carving and their sterns are straight and square giving an ungainly look yet these old ships have boldly battered arctic ice and scorcned under the line They have sail ed in every sea roving in unending com mission until their water casks were filled with oil Notwithstanding the Standard Oil Co venturesome whalers still sail into New Bedford and unload their car goes on the ancient wharves where bar rels and barrels are waiting a favorable market protected from the weather by masses of dried seaweed packed about them Sperm oil is now 38 cents per gal lon it used to command from 1 to 150 Two old whaleships came sailing into New Bedford recently the Rising Sun odoriferous with oil after a three months cruise and the Dolphin packed with whalebone after a cruise of thirty three months around Cape Horn The Rising Sun will serve as a type The distinctive architectural feature of her deck forward was the big brick furnaces inclosine the oil trv nots A firp insrjppfrnr mio li nii - target but whalers soaked as they are with oil and when trying out blubber the roll of the ship seeming to send flames up to the masthead seldom burn a fact due only to the most extraordinary cau tion the wooden water backing about the furnaces being kept constantly filled The cooks galley -was no larger than a dog house and did not admit of that function ary standing up while at his labors to the forecastle upvin the bow where th -sailors -smoked andsept and spurn theirJyarusJ uey werespucKea m ukq sardines Only alimitedsupply of light and air can get through the little hatch which is sealed up in rough weather How over a score of men can live and keep healthy jnd happy in this dark and fear some hole for months or years is a mys tery A whalers crew usually enlists from twenty four to thirty men each man on his lay for they all share in a percent age of the profit the first mate 1 in 24 the second mate 1 in 30 the others shar ing down according to rank the figures varying with the market and the size of the ship There aie four mates a stew ard a cook a cooper ordinary seamen and green hands the last getting the drudg ery and the light lay The latter are out for experience and they generally get it iu large unvarnished quantity It is estimated that it requires 30000 to fit for a long voyage as every emer gency must be anticipated and provided for say a period of three years Into the hold are packed 150 barrels of salt beef seventy five barrels of salt pork thirty barrels of ship biscuit thirty or forty barrels of flour 300 gallons of mo lasses 200 pounds of coffee 200 pounds of tea 500 pounds of sugar equal quan tities of rice meal beans dried apples hams butter raisins cheese canned goods vinegar and food staples The new oil casks are filled with fresh water and there are quantities of oak and pine staves headings and iron hoops with a thousand and one things from paint and tar to pills and gunpowder in the spare supplies The Whaleboat The conspicuous equipment of the whal er is the sharp double prowed boats that hang from awkward looking wooden da vits one on the larboard and two or three on the starboard side The Yankees that devised this craft built for speed stability and buoyancy These twenty-four-foot boats stepped for a mast and arranged for six oarsmen with platforms at each end for lancer and steersman have brought more wealth from the nether world of the deep than can be computed Aside from their complete equipment their distinctive furnishing is a tub where spir ally coiled in concentric layers or sheaves is the whale line This line is a manila rope two thirds of an inch in thickness and measures something over 200 fath oms This line is attached to the harpoon and the other end is unattached first as a matter of safety second for fastening to a second line should the whale sound so deep as to take up the entire length of line Scoresby records an instance where the quantity of line withdrawn from the different boats engaged in the capture of one whale amounted to 10400 yards or nearly six English miles The upper end PERILS OF THE CHASE The master Captain Taylor extended an invitation to go into the cabin The - steps inclined at 90 degrees and were very slippery so we descended on the air line so to speak The little room was about seven 03 eight feet with three open berths on a side and a small folding table in the center Things were neat enough and lockers all about the sides and under the berths showed where things not in use were preserved A trap door in the floor opened into the lazarette where the table delicacies were stored In the Captains Cabin The captains wife a delicate and re fined little woman had made a number of soyages with him and found this cabin quite comfortable The apartment was rooinv and distinctly swell compared of the line is taken aft from the tub and after passing around a loggerhead is car ried forward the length of the boat rest ing upon the handle of every mans oar so that it jogs against hi wrist in row- ing passing between the men as they alternately sit at the opposite gunwales to the grooves in the extreme prow where I a little wooden pin prevents its slipping out The whale line thus enfolds the boat in its complication and all its crew in its contortions when it whirls out fast to a frightened and frenzied whale it fairly smokes and keeping the line free is essential to the safety of all concerned The harpooning is done by the man who handles the steering oar this merely gets I the boat fast to the fish the officer in the I bow does the lancing which is to give the whale the quietus In modern whal ing bomb lances are fired at the harpoon s edhvhaJe from atshortEiin that kicks like a muleJVEven with these powerful aids a whale is not always easy same i A whaling captain recently told the writer that it took no less than seven mod ern lance bombs to finish a big whale on his last voyage The modern German whalers steam ships attack the whales directly without the aid of small boats the harpoon and bomb lances being fired from a big swivel gun in the bow This was the way Emperor William captured a whale two years ago in the North Sea It may appear uncanny that man should feed upon the creature that feeds his lamp but others than the not fermline had a great porpoise grant from the crown serving and seasoning the meat Kke veal balls Zogoranda an old time doctor recommended strips of blubber for infants as very juicy and nutritious In the case of a small -sperm whale the brains are accounted a fine dish by epi cures The scraps of blubber are called fritters and taste like pork cracklings on the whalers however they are used for feeding the flames that try out the oil Whalers wrecked in Greenland have been known to subsist upon moldy scraps of blubber that had been left ashore which is a tribute to their nourishing quality in a pinch In the order of leviathans the sperm whale and the right whale are the most important as the only ones regularly hunted for by man The external differ ence between them is mainly marked in their heads the sperm species having a symmetry that is lacking in the right whose chief treasure is whalebone Cant over the sperm whales head that it may lie bottom up and have a peep down the mouth What a really beautiful mouth From floor to ceiling papered with a glis tening white membrane glossy as bridal satins Pry up the lower jaw and expose its rows of great ivory teeth it seems a terrific portcullis and such alas it proves to many a poor wight in the fishery upon whom its spikes fall with impaling force But far more terrible is it to behold when fathoms down in the sea you see some sulky harpooned whale floating there suspended with his prodigious jaw some fifteen feet long hanging straight down at right angles with his body for all the world like a ships jibboom The Powerful Lower Jaw The lower jaw can be unringed by a practical artist and hoisted on deck for the purpose of extracting the ivory teeth that the sailors decorate with India ink de signs and the hard white whalebone that they fashion into canes and whip handles during their long days of inactivity There are forty two teeth those in old whales much worn down but never decayed One of the darkest tragedies of the ocean resulted from a whale sinking the whaleship Essex Nov 1G 1819 The in furiated monster first struck the ship just forward the fprechains with a tremen dous shock that started her butts The fated ship was settling when the whale returned and struck her under the cat head and completely stove in her bows Some of the survivors of the crew drifted in open boats for three months their lives being sustained by cannibalism As for the head of the right whale look at that hanging lip what a mammoth sulk and pout By measuring it is twenty feet long and five feet deep and will yield you some 500 gallons of oil or more The roof of the mouth is about twelve feet high and runs up to a sharp angle like a ridge pole while these ribbed arched hairy sides present us with those wonder ful vertical scimiter shaped slats of whale- l bone say 300 on a side -which depending from the upper part of the crown bone form flexible Venetian blinds The edges of these are fringed with hairy fibers through which he strains the water and in whose intricacies he retains the small fish when open mouthed he goes through seas of brit a minute yellow substance upon which the right whale largely feeds in feeding time off the famous Brazil banks The colonades of bone so method ically arranged resemble a pipe organ For a carpet to this organ is a tongue that the bold voracious aharks occasionally snatch aj5 - - 77i LANCING A WHALE ous Eskimo have so feasted without the odoriferous vintage of train oil It is re corded that three centuries ago the tongue of the right whale was esteemed a rare delicacy in France and in the time of Henry VIII a certain court chef won royal recognition for concocting a sauce to be served with barbecued porpoise a species of whale The monks of Dun- out sometimes when the tormented whale is alive before the whaler can cen vert it into five barrels of oil whalebone commands from 3 to G per pound The right whale has two external spout holes on top of his head the sperm whale only one The great battering ram of the sperm whales head yields his most pre cious oily vintage the highly prized A pAir op otp jiivjgi - - j NEW BEDFORD RELICS OF A GREAT AND HEROIC INDUSTRY spermaceti in its pure limpid and odorifer ous state nor is this precious substance found unalloyed in any other part of the creature A large whales case yields 500 gallons of sperm In a whale eighty feet long the head is about twenty six feet long One may assume that the blub ber is the epidermis it has something of the consistence of close grained beef but tougher more elastic and compact and ranges from eight to ten or even fifteen inches in thickness In the case of a large sperm whale there will be a blubber yield of 100 barrels of oil When one con siders that this only represents three fourths of the entire coat and that ten barrels to the ton is a fair allotment one may guess that a whale weighs as much as a small locomotive Fpcrm Whales Characteristics The sperm whale like other leviathans but unlike other fish breeds indifferently at all seasons Again it is warm blooded and requires air to fill the lungs The in haling is done through the spiracle or hole in the top of his head not through his mouth which is eight feet below the Sc as tMN K tr3Siy5sS3 vA Ws TCJ lSlSVkiA C WCVV4 TVS FAST TO A FISH face when the big fish comes up to blow and inhale something like an hourly pro ce3 Aside from the wide expanding and massive jaw of the sperm whale his tail is his powerful arm of defense To begin with at that point where it tapers to the girth of a man it comprises on its upper surface an area of fifty square feet the compact body of its root expanding into two broad flukes shoaling away to less than an inch in thickness The entire member is a webbed bed of wedded sin ews with subtle elasticity and amazing strength that sends the owner through the sea like a flash flourishes gloriously graceful in the sunshine as he dives or deals out death in a stroke when vicious ly aiming at a whaleboat hurling boats I with their entire crews into the air as a i juggler tosses up a ball I When a whale has succumbed to lauc j ing and dyed the sea with spouting blood the huge body is towed to the ship and large chains are put about the head and flukes to hold the body fast Enoraiojs tackles are swayed up to the tuafn top and firmly lashed to the lower mast head the strongest point above the ships deck to the end of a hawser like rope Winding through the intricacies is the blubber hook weighing a hundred pounds The blubber envelopes a whale like a rind does an orange and as the ship careens to the strain of the tackle fixed to the heaving windlass the hook takes hold and follow ing the line scarf made by the keen cut ting spades the great body rolls over as strip after strip of the blood dripping blub ber is pulled aloft and lowered through the mainhatch to the blubber room There it is cut up by double handed knives and passed up to the deck to be tried out in the smoking brick furnaces with wooded water backs about their base Edged Tools of the Whaler The whaling spade like all the lancing and cutting equipment is of the best steel is kept as sharp as possible and is honed like a razor This spade is about as large as a mans spread hand and has a socket in which is a pole handle twenty feet long These edge tools are kept in canvas pock ets lined with wool One of the most profitable and curious products derived from the sperm whale is ambergris gray amber a morbid secre tion of the liver or intestines It is a solid opaque inflammable substance lighter than water having the consist ency of wax and having when heated a fragrant odor It is highly soluble in alcohol and is used particularly as the holding base of perfume and was once considered as having great medicinal properties as an aphrodisiac and for spic ing wines It is sometimes obtained from post mortems on diseased whales or found floating on the water in the neighborhood of the Bahamas in masses of from sixty to 225 pounds Ambergris of the best grade is now quoted at 27 per ounce Chas E Nixon in the Chicago Inter Ocean AN ABSENT MINDED MAN Results of a Iearned Professor loosing Himself in Realms of Thought When I was younger than I will ever be again said the professor with a three story head and eyeglasses of telescopic power I was the victim of such intense mental abstraction that I removed myself entirely from the world of practical affairs I was in the boundless realms of thought and paid but fleeting attention to the active field of human action It was necessary to notify me when I should attend my class eat my meals and even when I should retire I was at one time requested to lec ture in a Western village and agreed to do so The theme was one that had received nay best thoughts and the mere prospect of delivering it was a physical pleasure When I arrived at the depot my thoughts were concen trated upon the proposed address I realized that my train was an hour late and that I must hurry but beyond the mere fact of hurrying I did not grasp a detail Drive fast I shouted to the driver of a dingy looking vehicle as I sprang in and handed him a 3 bill Spare neither horse nor whip Away we went with a plunge The carriage rolled like a ship in the trough of the sea Street lights seemed a torchlight procession moving rapidly the other way Constables shouted dogs barked small boys chased us and business ceased that people might stand on the sidewalk and gaze Up one street and down another we dashed madly We took corners on two wheels grazed telegraph poles and knocked over such movables as ash barrels and dry goods boxes After half an hour of this bewilder ing experience I stuck my head from the window and shouted Are we nearly there Where did yez want to go sorr came the edifying answer The Oldest Plow Maker Chicago has the oldest plow maker in the United States His name is David Bradley and he is at the head of a big manufacturing company on the West Side Mr Bradley first worked at the business in Syracuse N Y in 1832 In 1835 he came to Chicago which then numbered about 2500 inhabitants and a camp of several thousand Indians to help erect the first iron foundry estab lished here Mr Bradley was the first man to bring pig iron into Chicago In connection with the foundry which he helped build was a machine shop and the establishment soon began along with its other business the manufac ture of plows Mr Bradley by the growth of his business was finally forced to build a little town of his own which is known as Bradley 111 Mr Bradley has passed his 85th birthday but is still hale and hearty and thor oughly enjoys the prosperity which hard work has brought him The ac tive business has been surrendered to his sons Chicago Tribune Where Duels Are Fought More duels are fought in Germany than in any other country Most of them however are student duels which culminate in nothing more se rious than slashed cheeks or torn scalps Of all German university towns little Jena and Gottingen are most de voted to the code In Gottingen the number of duels average one a day year in and year out On one day se eral years ago twelve duels were fought in Gottingen in twenty four hours In Jena the record for one day in recent times Is twenty one Fully 4000 student duels are fought every year in the German Empire In addi tion to these there are the more serious duels between officers and civilians Among Germans of mature years tho annual number of duels is about 100 Streets in Big Cities London has 1380 miles of streets Paris 600 miles and New York 575 miles THE FIRST PRAYER Initial Invocation Delivered Before the American Congress It does not matter who the mcmbeP of Congress was who was doing the talking but he is one that Is supposed to know as little about religion as he knows much about politics Dont be alarmed about me he said io three or four correspondents the other day during a passing visit to the capital but Ive got something you havent thought of in a thousand years and Im going to read it to yon It may remind you of our very dear and good old friend Chaplain Milbum but thats no harm What I have here is a copy of the first prayer ever delivered in Congress I found It in an issue of Thatchers Military Journal bear ing date of 1777 and it is credited to Rev Jacob Duche rector of Christ Church Philadelphia who subsequent ly proved traitorous to the noble cause of independence The prayer is as fol lows Oh Lord our Heavenly Father high and mighty King of kings and Lord of hosts who dost from thy throno behold all the dwellers on earth and reignest with power supreme and un controlled over all the kingdoms em pires and governments look down In mercy we beseech tliee on these Amer ican States who have fled to thee from the rod of the oppressors and thrown themselves on thy gracious protection desiring to henceforth be dependent only on thee to thee they have appeal ed for the righteousness of their caase to thee do they now look up for that countenance and support which thou alone canst give take them therefore Heavenly Father under thy nurturing care give them wisdom in council and valor in the field defeat the malicious designs of our cruel adversaries con vince them of the unrighteousness oi their cause and if they still persist In their sanguinary purposes oh let the voice of thine own unerring justice sounding in their hearts constrain them to drop the weapons of war from their unnerved hands in the day of battle Be thou present O God of wisdom and direct the counsels of this honora ble assembly enable them to settle things on the best and surest founda tion that the scene of blood may be speedily closed that order harmony and peace may be effectually restored and truth and justice religion and piety prevail and flourish among thy people Preserve the health of their bodies and the vigor of their minds shower down on them and the millions they represent such temporal blessings as thou seest expedient for them ir this world and crown them with ever lasting glory in the world to come All this we sisk in the name and through the merits of Jesus Christ thy son ou Savior Amen Washington Star The Elephant Minded the Baby Some time before an elephant hunt my husband was at a station in Ben gal His work kept him out nearly all day and being ill J used to lie for hours in a long garden chair on theA veranda too weak to read or enjoy any more exciting amusement than my eyes supplied to me We had three elephants for our tents and baggage and one dear creature used to feed from my hands every day and semed as gentle as a pet dog oi cat One of our government ebaprasis was particularly devoted to her anc invariably shared his meal of fruit oi flower cakes with his dumb friend On a particularly hot day the chaprasi t my surprise placed his tiny chikl cl six months at the elephants feet warning her expressively that the in- was in her charge and was to hi cared for till his return I myself wa an eye witness of her wonderful sagac ity Large banana trees and fig tree grew around and to my surprise th elephant broke off one of the former spreading leaves held it like a fan Iv her trunk and from time to time grace fully waved it over the slumberinj child whether to temper the heat oj unable to say The gentle way the atmosphere or to keep off flies I an which she moved her feet over tin child and across to each side astonish ed me I sent for a white loaf anc some oranges and calling her by naini she was never chained tried in vair to tempt her to my side on the lov veranda Nothing would induce her t leave her charge The warm air anC the monotonous wave of the swinging fan overpowered me with drowsiness to which I yielded and after a slei p ol some duration I was awakened b quiet subdued snorts beside me Tc my surprise I found that the cbapni had just returned to his offspring auc the elephant stood near the verands beside me patiently waiting and gen tly asking for the tempting dainties s bravely withstood for over two hours JBtot Water Womans Friend Hot water is womans best friend If she drinks hot water an hour be fore her breakfast she will be able U ward off dyspepsia If she drinks htf water flavored vith lemon and Bwcet ened with sugar when she ha3 beet out in the cold she will ward off chills The same agreeable medicine taker early enough in the progress of a cole will stop it When a nervous headache inakej the forehead throb and back of the neck ache hot water will relieve thi pain Sufferers from sleeplessness find themselves deliciously drowsy after a hot bath Wrinkles flee beforf ir and blackheads vanish before iti constant use Great is hot water Pittsburg Dispatch The Usual Way Mrs Bongtong proud mother of the accomplished girl graduate I hope Alice that you addressed that French count in his native tongue What die he say in reply Alice He apologized and said he was sorry but he understood nothing bu inmu 1 v