EQUIPPED FOR AN ARCTIC CRUISE 39 



fit in the cabin. Rather than recite the whole assort- 

 ment, which contained many useless items, a list is given 

 of what I would take on another summer cruise in the 

 Arctic. 



Personal Outfit. 



Two United States Army flannel shirts, two suits 

 woolen underwear, three pairs heavy woolen hose, three 

 pairs light woolen hose, one Duxbak or Burberry hunting 

 jacket, one suit of oilskins (hat, short coat, trousers), two 

 pairs mukluks (Eskimo skin boots), one fur parka (Eskimo 

 hooded fur shirt), one pair calked boots, one pair shoe- 

 pacs (rubber soles and vamps, leather uppers), one pair 

 slippers, one suit pajamas, one cap with ear flaps, one 

 soft hat, three pairs woolen gloves, three pairs cotton 

 gloves (as ^vdndbreaks over woolens), two pairs trousers 

 (preferably of jungle cloth), one necktie, one belt, six 

 handkerchiefs, one sleeping bag, books, toilet soap, tooth 

 brush and dentifrice, talcum powder, razor, brush, sha^'ing 

 soap, hand mirror, brush and comb, three towels, two 

 pipes, five pounds tobacco, pouch, cigarette papers, 

 needles, thread, buttons, knife, pocket whetstone (coarse 

 on one side and fiine on the other), tape measure, green 

 spectacles of fieuzal glass, head net, binoculars, kodak, 

 twenty films, exposure meter, note book, pencils, fountain 

 pen, ink, fly dope, brass tags for trophies, scales, clothes 

 bag, a dozen small oiled bags for duffle, one fine tooth 

 comb, insect powder, pocket compass, ten yards cheese 

 cloth, simple medicines. 



Arms. 



One high-power rifle, 50 hard-point cartridges, 50 

 soft-point cartridges. 



