Life : ' - ' - I I i I I T -rr nrrri' ii - - i TRY WORKS OX A WHALING 10 MANY American whalers are going to seek tho big "fish" in the Baffin bay waters this season tnat -e Canadian government has ' decided to charter a sealing steamer to cruise there to prevent tho Yankee from "violating Canadian customs laws." It looks as if tho "prostrated Amer ican Industry" were about to awaken to something akin to vigor. Years of more or less desultory whaling have given the sea-giants a chanco to re cuperate; and that they were not guilty of race suicide during their time of reBt Is proved by tho fact that whales are 'plenti ful in all the seas again. For a rich American, eager to try real sport, there Is a great chance now. Whal ing, one of the oldest forms of big game hunting known, Is the one field which has not been fittingly exploited by the ama teur eporteman. In a time when lion and tiger shooting are mere routine sporting affairs to hundreds of wealthy men, the whale should appeal with great force. To the man who has exhausted even tho delight of the sixty-mlle-an-hour auto mobile, there Is an unlimited field. The chances are that If ho once gets an oppor tunity to taste the unbridled and terrific pleasure of a "Nantucket sleigh ride," ho will view his auto machine as a tame thing ever afterward. The Nantucket sleigh ride is so common an experience with whalers that they are prone to speak of it in disappointingly matter-of-fact language. But, for all that, there isn't an old whaler of them all whoso nostrils will not dilate with zest when he thinks upon it. And the landsman who ever has had tho rare fortune to experi ence one Is not likely to find anything else In all the rest of his life that will not seem tame compared with It. Few landsmen ever have the opportunity. When a whaleboat lowers to fight a sixty foot whale, tho business is too important to encumber the craft with unskilled pas sengers. And not many landsmen would really care to go into the whaleboat even If they could, when they behold, wallow I American and English women, for I a. lnnsr flmA rciFMrflof! a boatwIuI 4at ! a? on the continent, in tlmo came to be envied, and is now being emu lated everywhere. All trades and profes sions are being opened to woman in such conservative countries as Russia, Holland and Germany, reports the New York Even ing Post. In Russia there aro several business lirms conducted wholly by women, and they recently rather startled the min ister of finance, M. Witte, by sending him a petition requesting him to allow them to do business on their own account in the Stock exchange Instead of employing brokers. The minister asked for time to consider the petition. In Holland a certain Miss Cromer, who has just taken her degree of doctor of philosophy, applied to the general synod of the Reformed Dutch church, asking to be admitted to serv? as a duly qualified pastor. Her petition was refused by a majority of one vote, but the dlMeusuion which was aroused by her radical request showed a liberal disposition on the purt of many members of the synod, and a willingness to extend the field of work for Dutch women. Perseverance being on essential virtue of the pastoral offlc, Miss Cremer may yet win her permission to preach. In Germany the women have been apply, ing for admission to the universities In such numbers that the authorities Ire alarmed, and it is rumored that conditions for admission will bo made more and more tringeut in the future, in hopes of dis on Board -i n iim , Tr'-trm SHIP READY FOR BUSINESS. ing In the ea the huge thing that Is to be attacked. The ride begins after the whale has been harpooned and when the boat header con siders it.tlmo to draw up alongside and begin lancing. The first thing thit is done is to haul in upon the harpoon line until the boat is brought as close to the running whale as is consistent with the extremely delicate margin that the whakr allows for safety. "Safety" to the whaler really ineins to remain just about an inch or two beyond tho reach of the vast flukrs With which the big beast is beating the sea. Having hauled as far up on the whale as possible, tho boat header reaches oer the bows and lifts the line out cf the chocks. Swiftly he brings it. around out side of the boat and passes 'it to the bow oarsman, who has faced around on his thwart so that he looks forward. He at once lays back on the line and holds fast with all his might. And Im mediately the boat, dragged like a railroad car by that mighty living locomotive, be gins to run parallel with the side of the whale and just a few feet away from him, being prevented from running right on top of him by the oblique strain on the line. Now, if the harpoon is well forward , in the whale, the boat hangs in a' precarious but sufficient arc of safety, for the swing ing tall hammers the ocean behind it and the wildly sweeping Jaw unavallingly searches the sea in front. The boat header braces himuelf in the bows until he is based firmly as the stern post and begins to poise his long, keen, razor-edged killing lance, waiting for his opportunity to thrust it into the whale's life. Sometimes tho 'opportunity come3 within a minute after haul'ng up on the big "fish." Sometimes it does not come until the boat has been towed for many miles. It does not require very much time to tow a mllo when a sixty-foot whale is doing the towing. As long as the whale runs in a fairly straight course, the boat will hang to him like a terrier. Ho may champ and bito Professions Open' to couraging the attendance of women. In i-russia, which has never made any im portant concessions to the demands of wo men, the reaction is apparently stronger than elsewhere. So severe have tho condi tions for admittance besn made at the Uni versity of Berlin that the enrolment de creased nearly one-half in a single sem ester. In this university women are not matriculated at all now, and can attend lectures only as "hearors," and that by special permission. The example of the leading Institution in Berlin will, no doubt, be followed by others throughout the coun try. Far from indicating the failure of the women students to show themselves worthy of the higher education, the attitude of tho German authorities is plainly ono of defenso against an advance thoy little believed in at the outset. They frankly admit as much. Many Germans object' to the presence of women In lecture rooms, while apprecia ting erudition in those who have acquired their knowledge elsewhere. A celebruted professor of Sanskrit of Berlin accepted the assistance of un American woman In certain of his works, but when she ex pressed a desire to listen to ono of his lectures ha replied that she might do so. and welcome over the telephone. Sho declined. English women have less liberty in the professions than their great political and soclul liberty would seem to warrant. They have been excluded from tho bar up to the present time, but a London woman recently applied for admission and her application a Whaling j" It's ll4rAK.w:. ' SCENE ON DECK OF WHALING SHIP-OIL TASKS IN PLACE. and hammer the ocean into acrea of froth with head, flukes and tall and never shake it off. His only chance for retaliation is to run deep or to "mill." "Milling" is the act of turning suddenly and so bringing the boat within reach of flukes or Jaws. The position of the bow oarsman Is no Joy in a Nantucket f leishrldo. The chauf four in a racing automobile is In a pnrudlBe of case and luxation compared with him. He must keep the boat in position by his unaided strength. From tho tirao he gets the line until the ride Is ended he drives into a smothering sheet of flying spray. When the sea is high, every billow Is hit by the boat with a eninph that wrenches his arms. The strain on the wet line cuts and burns his hands. Aud if be lets a foot of it slip he Is disgraced. Once ho Is in it he is in it for good, with no chance of help or relief till tho wild advanture Is done. Often the boat !s hauled so close on a harpooned whale that the barpooner leans over and steadies himself by resting one hand on tho butt of the harpoon that Is sticking in tho great sea mammal, w'.lla with the other he drives the kllling-lanco. Again and again the long weapon is burird deep in the black sides, until suddenly thick, black-red clots of blocd well from the wound, showing that the "life" has been reached. Then It is "back," sometimes for dear life. A whale may take his death so quietly, co passively, that it is pitiable to see so mighty a swimmer killed thus easily by man. Or he may fight till the boat Beems only a black atom In the sudden uproar that smites the ocean and sends tons of water rising till they seem high enough to wash tho sky. Tho danger from a fighting whale is not only in the whale himself. The boat Is a perfect man-trap of keen, deadly tools. Lances and harpoons, rutting spades, hatch ets, knives and boathooks, all sharpened' to the finest edge the ship's grindstone can give them, fill the boat. If the whale gets at It and hurls it into the air, the men find themselves in murderous company when the weapons como raining down on them. Women in Europe is now under consideration. The decision was promised in April. The applicant, whose name Is not divulged, seeks admission to Gray's Inn, one of the four inns of court, the others being Lincoln's Inn, the Middle Temple and the Inner Temple. These Inns are governed by the benchers, who super intend tho admission and education of students for the bar, the calling of barristers, and tho regulation of tho pro fession. The benchers of Incol i Inn have shown a liberal tendency in their attitude toward women lawyers. They have given the uso of their books and library to Miss Cornelia Sorubjl, a Hindu lawyer, who la now in London preparing herself for a notable work among her own people. Miss Sorabjl took her degree from tho Bombay univer sity, and lias practiced us an advocate in the Indian courts. Lately she propounded a plan for legal aid for property-owning women, widows and orphans in India, which has been much discussed both In India and England, and receives the in dorsement of a number of eminent men. The helplessness of the nativo women who live under the restrictions of tho Purdah is hardly conceivable In our civilization. All of their business must be done through a man ngent whom Ihey are not allowed to see, or even to converse with, except be filnd a screen. If the agent is dishonest the Purdahnlshln can invoke the aid of the law only through the swindling agent, cer tainly no very satisfactory medium. Miss Sorabji's plan la for a corps of women law years to be attached to tit court of word Ship The harpoon line goes hissing out a ser pent of rope far more dangerous than any cobra, for let it but kink in the loast and catch a man and he will fly overboard with it and out of sight as if he were a mora splinter of wood. So there are enough sporting chances In the whalo to excite and content tho most exacting of sportsmen. And tho slzo of the trophy if he "bags" a whale certainly leaves nothing to be desired. Captain Davis, one of tho most famous of the oldtime American whalers, gives theso as the dimensions of a right whale yielding 250 barrels of oil. "Tho blubber of such a whale," he says, "is half a yard thick, and if put together in a strip would be Blxty-slx feet long and twenty-seven feet wldo. The upper Jaw would make a room nine feet high and twenty feet long. The lips and throat of the brute, with the' supporting jawboneo, will weigh as niui'h as twenty-flvo oxen of 1,000 pounds each. The tonguo alone will often weigh as much as ten oxen. "The spread of the lips is thirty feet. He can take In fifty barrels of water at each mouthful. When feeding, a whale as big as that sifts a track of sea a quarter of a mile long and fifteen feet wide in ono run. Then he raises his head, forces hla mighty tonguo Into the cavity of his whale bono sieve and drives the water out with immense force. "The tall of a right whale is twenty five feet broad and six feet deep, and thu point of junction with the body is about four feet in diameter. In it lie tendons as big around as a man's leg. "Tho greatest blood vessels are more than a foot in diameter. The blood that Is forced through them by a heart as big as a hogshead runs in torrents, heated to 104 degrees. "The respiratory canal 1b more than a foot in diameter. The rush of air through it Is as noisy as the exhaust pipe of a thou, sand horse-power steam engine ; and when the fatal wound is given, a cataract of clotted blood is Bpattered over the hunters, so hot and nauseating that the crew of a whaleboat often becomes helplessly sick." department, to whom the widowed Pur dahnlshln could have free access, and thereby secure protection for her property rights. It ii considered highly probable that women lawyers will bo appointed to theso positions within a short time. Nat urally, they will be native women, as far as they are available. It notable that ths educated Hindu woman has, in a number of instances, shown a decided leaning to ward the legal profession. Miss Sorabjl s attainments, it is Bald, would be notable in any country. Turkey is tho Inst country where wo man's intellectual emancipation might be expected, but there are a few encrgetlo women and more than a few liberal men In the Ottoman empire who are bent on Im proving the lot of Turkish women. Amon-i them are a trio who are now lecturing lr European cities: Princess Halrle Ben-Aid. her husband, who although of Swedish birth, spent Borne years in the service of the sultan, and an ex-edltor of a Turkish Journal. Taking it Out on Family Mrs. Ferguson-George, what particular falling of yours did the preacher touch on In his sermon this mornlngT" Mr. Ferguson What do you ask me that question for? Mrs. Ferguson Because you have been as cross as a bear ever since you cam homa from church. Chicago Tribune.