42 THE AMERICAN MUSEUM JOURNAL 
An imagination that is vivid enough to eliminate the comforts of the 
exhibition hall would enable a person, sitting upon one of these sledges 
to think himself among the interesting inhabitants of the land of cold 
INTERIOR OF ESKIMO IGLOO 
From group in Hall No. 108 
and snow,— the land of the midnight sun in summer and of darkness 
in winter, save for the brilliant moonlight and the aurora borealis. 
A general glance at the exhibit leads to an appreciation of the bleak 
characteristics of the land of the Eskimo. Almost no wood is to be seen, 
