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Ch. 9: Methods of Fishing

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THE PEARL
gather the shells he should fall, he is likely to shoot feet foremost to the surface.
Though dress-diving has heretofore been con­fined almost entirely to white men, the Japan­ese, Chinese, Malays, South Sea Islanders, and others in different places, are now being edu­cated to it chiefly through an Australian fishery.
At the northwestern corner of Australia, a thousand miles from the nearest railroad and ten days from the nearest port, there are pearl-fisheries where the climate is so hot that white men cannot be obtained for the work. Colored men are shipped there from Singapore to man the boats, the pearl-fishers giving a bond to the government of 100 pounds sterling for each man employed, as a guarantee that he will not go to other parts of the state. A fleet of about three hundred boats and fifteen hundred men are employed there, the supply station being at Broome township.
In all things, when once the improvements of science gain a foothold anywhere in the world, the whole earth succumbs eventually to their advantages, and so with diving; the habits and
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Ch. 9: Methods of Fishing Page of 358 Ch. 9: Methods of Fishing
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