/ 
i 
List of materials each boat should have at hand (things for Service to buy) 
£5 
Some lumber for work table somewhere aboard, with racks or battens 
to keep bottles from tumbling over in seaway: also *fc>^ kvcultth* 
' Crabs-. 
1 saw (&+■ K&S One) ^ 
/ 
1 hammer J 
I loh ass or'tvc/ sizes 
1 oil can and light machine oil of good quality for oiling calipers# 
^ (Oihck Cutf>uc\iy 
1 ^measuring) dial caliper there is one in Seattle; Pat has one). 
? tin snips 
L&t lv 
Cir S J'V* I 
Soldering iron and solder. May be with engineer each boat, 
Notebooks, tablets, letterhead paper, envelopes. (In short, stationery 
supplies. ) 
Butcher’s scales, such as we used for weighing crab meat on Tondeleyo 
up to 10 or 20 Ib.s (? 20 or 30 on second and third revolutions) 
1 small spring balance of type returned from last trip for ounces 
and fractions thereof. (Pat has one; 1 in Seattle.) 
I ke’f'er- yd. euck C kas e>*e y ewe ik SeoHie") 
1 hypodermic syringe, of type returned. (Pat lias two. A box of 
extra needles for these was left in Seattle; also 1 syringe.) 
4 of those spring top, 5 gal. tins such as are used for livers (for 
packing specimens that have been pickled in tank.) ^ 
C ecxcU. sh*oJI “fkrcejps Ci^d scalpels (/*© v*/ K.a.‘ilec( yew 'flu* cavery. 
Tags for crabs, ivira for same, and 1 pr. wire cutting pliers. 
20 gal. alcohol in 5-gal. tins. 
2-3 ^uls. £oH*Ker'cr*.t 
6 Bureau towels. 
4 25-cent (lightweight) galv. pails lias l%+c*y /i . 
7 ' leif* ik osottie). 
2 large size galv. wash tubs^^c^ kos 2 »k S&uHIz) 
Couple of dip nets£&t u,y oU ones) 
) ^al (eacU \jo edr) ftoutV^ fU</ (■ftMe Q>re $ e r v A-w 
ecy-j* toy'- e/CcctvviKcd'iowA, 
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