112 ANTHROPOLOGICAL SURVEY IN ALASKA [bth.ann.46 



boon to me, and the transportation of the many specimens by the 

 Bear clown to Seattle or San Francisco will be a fine service to the 

 Institution. 



The older of us, that is those who have been longer on the ship, 

 feel like veterans and are drawn closer together. The new lot, 

 heterogeneous, do not attract, particularly one of the women. An 

 older one, evidently a well-liked nurse, goes off at Wainwright. 

 which we reach once more at 8 p. m. Here goes off also Jim Allen, 

 the trader, who is a good fellow in a rough shell and whom I 

 learned to like. He helped us all a good deal while in the ice. 



The movie man from Point Hope is a somewhat spoiled, gossipy, 

 and roughshod, but otherwise a good-hearted big kid — not very 

 wise, but not mischievous, and more than efficient in his own calling. 

 Is 40, but already aging, like a weather-beaten poplar — not pine 

 or oak. Is violently against all " kikes," or eastern money-lending 

 Jews, from whom he used to borrow at usurious interest and who 

 sold him out once or twice when he could not pay. 



Lost Jim Allen and dropped the nurse, but are still too many. 

 At 10 p. m.. just as the minister and I have retired, there comes a 

 call for the former to go up. A couple of Eskimos have arrived, 

 with their friends, to be married. So he dresses and performs the 

 function. I am too weary to rise and dress to go and look at it. 

 He says it was quite tame. Then the anchor, and once more we 

 are off. No ice any more, ami the sea has again a swell, which was 

 absent in the ice-covered waters. 



Wednesday. August 11. Swell, but not bad, though one of the 

 women, another nurse, is ill, and the other, a " writer." etc., will not 

 get up for breakfast. Quite a problem now to get washed and 

 shaved. Both the minister (archdeacon) and the movie man like 

 to use perfumed things, and the former takes much time with his 

 toilet, so I endeavor as before to be first up. 



August 12. A great day. Was called a little after 12.30 a. m.. after 

 but little sleep (through anticipation), to examine a site ashore — 

 a coal mine, a water source, and possibly something human. Two 

 miles to shore, in semidarkness; no night yet in these regions. A 

 long tramp over the mossy and grassy tundra; mosquitoes. One 

 native igloo, and on a little elevation some distance off a grave of 

 a child; otherwise nothing. After examination of the coal strata, 

 a curious secondary inclusion in sand and gravel, and the stream 

 of water (good to drink, even if not clear), we depart and reach 

 ship again after 4 a. m. 



Beginning to be — in fact am already — a " night doctor," for sure. 

 Never thought I could stand such doings, but am standing it, and 

 that even with some cold and bothersome night cough. But am 



