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Advertisement. ranged for Dentists or Chiropodists at modPhone ofA La DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART 'Bayer package .Accept onl contains which proven directions. boxes of 12 tablets 24 and 100 Druggists, w of Salicyllcacld the trade mark of Bayer Uaanfartere of Monoacctlcvddwter Handy Bayer Also bottles of By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN I AST of the whalers of the old-tim- e d square-rigge- ships that sailed the Seven Seas for whale oil. whalebone, spermaceti and ambergris Is the Charles W. Morgan of New Bedford. Eighty-fou- r years old, shes In her home port to stay. But she's no dismantled hulk, tlm rtlnmoTlta ill have their way. Shes spick and span with fresh paint and a new suit of canvas nnd she lies In a concrete cradle on the waterfront of the estate of Col. E. II. R. Green at Round Hills. Henceforth her mission Is that of object lesson of one of the countrys greatest Industries, of which she sawr the rise, decline and fall. New Bedford sent out her first whaler In 1755. For many years she was the great whaling port of the world. Now the Morgan Is as much a curiosity to most of her people as to .the landsman visitor from the Middle West who thinks of a whale as the big fish that swallowed Jonah. w Heres how Col. Edward nowland Robinson Green conies to be Interested in the old whaler. She was named for Charles W. Morgan, her first owmer. Her second owner was Edward Mott Robinson, father of Colonel Greens mother, the famous Hetty Green. Capt. George Fred Tilton is the crowning touch. Hes a veteran New Bedford whaling skipper who looks the part. And when he spins whaling yarns why, the old days seem to live again. Visitors? Well, rather. The old whaler has been alive with visitors all summer from all parts of the country. Most of them frankly admit complete ignorance on the subjects of whales and whaling and listen roundeyed. But lots of them have read Moby Dick or the Cruise of the Cachalot" or Stray Leaves from a Whalers Log or all three. So they take on airs. The Morgan's the real thing, all right. Old as she is, she was built to last. Jethro and Zachariah Hillman of New Bedford built her of live oak, with copper fastenings and sheathing. She has cruised over every whaling ground from the Arctic to the Antarctic. For twenty years or so she sailed out of San Francisco, until the steam whalers put her out of business. These steam whalers use modern methods and theres no adventure or romance in the business any more Its just slaughter. Here's about the way a whale was captured and handled on the Morgan In the old days; When the lookout at the masthead hails the deck with There she blows! the whaleboats are lowered. There are five or six boats, each requiring at least six men. The boats race for the whale. The first boat runs almost up against the huge bulk. The harpooner in the bow lnirls the barbed weapon. The rowers back the boat frantically. The whale plunges down, sometimes to a ddpth of 200 fathoms. The line smokes out of the tubsi. Finally the whale comes up to breathe, usually In twenty minutes or so. Other boats fix harpoons. Again the whale goes down and so on. Finally the whale is killed by lances. The boats then tow the carcass to the ship, where it is made fast to the chains so that it will not sink. Unless there are other whales in sight, the men then cut up the outer layer with blubber-spadeGreat cubical chunks are hoisted to the deck to be "tried out in huge kettles, strained and stored in casks. But sometimes It doesnt happen Just exactly this way. Suppose the line gets around a man thats the end of him. Suppose the whale takes out all the line. The axman cuts and thats the last of a thousand feet of line. Suppose In the dying flurries the great tail 25 feet by 7 hits a boat thats the end of that boat and maybe several of her crew. Suppose a toothed whale bites the boat Into splinters thats one boat less. Suppose a big sperm whale gets mad and rams the whaler itself that s. walked away. It got on John Smiths nerves and he asked St. Peter, "Whos that uppity chap vio tries to queer smashed a boat and the crew floated my best fish stories? all night on the carcass thats a Oh, thats Jonah, said St. Peter. Which raises the question, Has whaling classic. In J. T. Browns book, Stray Leaves from a Whalers Jonah any right to take on airs? In Log is told In detail how Vera, the other words, did the whale swallow Portuguese boat steerer, uttered a cry Jonah ? and the Immense glistening lower Not wishing to be caught between jaw, armed with two rows of polished the upper and nether millstones of teeth, flashed from the water when the fundamentalists and modernists, the gigantic whale leaped into the this deponent further sayeth not. But air, carrying with It the head of the as to whether the whale could havs boat, which had snapped asunder, and swallowed Jonah, why, bless you, that the unfortunate Vera, whose head and all depends upon the kind of whale long arms were suspended from the it was. If Jonahs whale was like the corners of the monsters mouth . . ., one shown In the old print reproduced it. Two other men, the bow and midship why, one gulp could have done oarsmen, were never seen again. (cachawhale toothed Fpr this Is a The Essex of Nantucket In 1819 met whale). lot, sperm whale, spermaceti Its this fate: The captain and first mate Its feet. length often runs to sixty Its built, being fast to a big sperm whale, Owen head forms about of its Chase, second mate, headed the ship and extends more than toward them. The whale came to the Its mouth is very large and to surface and fiercely rammed the ship length. wide and its throat is large enough bow on, stopping her as if she had pass a man with ease. struck a rock. It passed under the book out Incidentally, theres a new ship, scraping her keel, and coming Our Naval Heritage, by B'eU up astern. After snapping Its jaws Green, and thrashing the water with Its tall, tenant CommanderG. Fltzhugh The S., M. Sc. U. S. N., F. A. the monster rammed the second time, approved; with Its head half out of water. It jacket says Its officially histories the struck the ship directly under the read and checked by An department. section of the Navy cathead and completely stove in her this. find we bows. It then went under the ship ,in the very first chapter hw and disappeared to leeward. The Moreover, It Is really surprising ny of the early sea Esses sank. After ninety days of hormded on facts that defied e?ae,nai n. rifying experiences In two boats, the Take the whale rn . . . Our own Literary D jef crew were picked up, the mates boat of a, printed a true story ot a uu whale boats attempt by the brig India of London and the to inching two men an in of .lipment e. captains by the whaler Dauphin. sperm whal w a ?ture gigantio he i battle with the monster 'Theres no chance for anything like 01 r pslzed one of the boats. All this in modern steam whaling. The n were saved except two who boat can run rings around pposed to have been drowned kniea. . r iale was subsequently ama the fastest whale. A big gun In the , on9 ys later It was cut up, bow shoots a barbed harpoon carrying 9t astonishment, the men foun their shipmates whom they a bomb timed for three seconds. The lying hn?nscloVname rnght dead whale. Ininside I he whale the kills llynats-.- s Lly of the .explosion John Bartley, and he stantly. The carcass Is then pumped irered. full of air. Ultimately the steamer met up 3n the other hand, if Jonah tows its captures to its shore' station there why, whale th a toothless where the oil Is extracted and the meat canned by modern machinery. is nothing doing, except by ue And theres ice. In 1S71 a fleet of racle. The toothless whale may an st as big as a toothed whale forty-twwhalers was caught in the ve Just as large a mouth, but Arctic and only one escaped. More rath Is chock full of whalebone, than 1,200 men were shipwrecked, but the loom ough which is. strained escaped in boats. And New Bedfords Is absurdly smm sides, the gullet loss was more than a million dollars. so huge a creature, St. Peter, so goes the old story, as J out the rhose who think of a whale through peeked Pearly Gates and asked, Who knocks so loudly? g fish should think again. "John Smith, the famous fisherman," g enough the only bigger Caltfornl was the answer. Ing is the Big Tree of an an much it the whale Is as Well, I cant keep you out for that, It on hasjuqg a fish a horse or sheep. but go easy stories. your But John Smith told em, morning, eathes air ; gives birth to its J motne noon and night, to admiring throngs. d suckles It. Moreover, the iale displays great affection fo But always there was a man on the edge of the circle who sneered and may be the end of the whaler. Now, all of these things used to happen In the old days. Once a whale one-ha- lf one-thir- 9 high-spee- d o ? d |