have somewhere in your own pack a 

 modest supply of condensed soups and 

 vegetables, a box or two of meat 

 crackers, and three or four bottles of 

 bouillon, to be brought out on occa- 

 sions of famine. Anyway it is a com- 

 fort to know that you have provided 

 against the wolf. 



So much for your part of the eating; 

 now for the sleeping. If you do not 

 sleep warm and comfortable at night, 

 the joys of camping are as dust in the 

 mouth. The most glorious morning 

 that Nature ever produced is a weari- 

 ness to the flesh of the owl-eyed. So 

 whatever else you leave behind, be sure 

 your sleeping arrangements are com- 

 fortable. The following is the result of 

 three years' experience : 



A fiece of waterproof brown canvas^ by 

 10 feet, bound with tape and supplied 



