650 



APPENDIX 



Provisions for Eleven Men durinCx a Six Months' Stay 

 ON THE Ice 



Pounds 

 1008 

 144 

 2^2 

 2 152 

 102 

 1850 



60 

 120 

 320 

 320 



20 

 560 



20 



200 



Roast and boiled beef, 14 tins of 72 pounds 



Minced collops, 3 tins of 48 pounds. 



Corned beef, 3 tins of 84 pounds . 



Compressed ham, 3 tins of 84 pounds 



Corned mutton, 17 tins of 6 pounds 



Bread, 37 tins of 50 pounds . 



Knorr's soups, various, 2 tins of 56^ pounds 



Vegetables: white cabbage, julienne, pot-herbs 



Flour, sugar, 3 cases of 40 pounds 



Oatmeal, 4 cases of 80 pounds 



Groats, 4 cases of 80 pounds 



Cranberry, 2 cases of 10 pounds 



Margarine, 20 jars of 28 pounds 



Lunch tongue, i case 



Danish butter, 2 cases 



Stearine candles, 5 cases 



Preserved fish, i tin 



Macaroni, i case 



Viking potatoes, 4 cases 



Vage's fish flour, 2 cases 



Frame-food jelly, i jar 



Marmalade jelly, i jar 



Lime-juice jelly, 1 jar 



Cadbury's chocolate, 3 cases 



Lactoserin cocoa, i case 



Milk, 10 cases of 48 tins 



Tea. I case 



English pemmican, 13 cases 



Danish pemmican, i case 



Dried liver patties, 3 cases 



Vril-food, 5 cases . 



Besides these, 3 tins of salt, i t 



When all the stores were 1 



50 

 208 

 200 

 190 



54 



54 

 144 



18 

 480 



20 

 756 



68 

 204 

 208 



n of mustard, and i tin of pepper. 



ready and packed, they were pro- 

 visionally stowed at certain fixed points on deck, under the awn- 

 ing forward. I did not want them taken out on the ice until 

 later in the year, or until circumstances rendered it necessary. 

 We had still abundance of coal — about 100 tons. I considered 

 that 20 tons would be about enough for six months' consump- 



