60 THE LAST VOYAGE OF THE KARLUK 
frozen, to be thawed out as we wanted to use them), 
carrots, parsnips, spinach, pickles, asparagus, 
beans, corn, tomatoes. We always had fresh 
meat at least once a day, seal meat or, when we got 
any, later on, bear meat. For dessert we had ice- 
cream, in all flavors, or sherbet, pies, puddings, 
fancy cakes, and earlier had had watermelon and 
cantaloupe. At all times we had a great variety 
of canned fruits. In fact we were well supplied 
with about everything obtainable. 
About this time we began putting the clock back 
to get the benefit of all the daylight. The men did 
not have to get up until breakfast-time but at ten 
o’clock they had to be ready for the day’s work. 
This consisted of sewing canvas, making clothing, 
sewing pemmican up in canvas, shifting boxes and 
putting things over on the big floe, shovelling snow, 
filling up the locker with coal, bringing in fresh¬ 
water ice for melting in the tank, doing various odd 
jobs around the ship and fixing up the dredge- 
hole. 
We had plenty of soap and razors and plenty of 
underclothing, so we kept clean. We made it a 
rule to shave at least three times a week and to 
bathe at least once. Even the Eskimo bathed like 
the rest of us. When Kataktovick joined us he 
said, “X like my bath.” In Nome and St. Mi¬ 
chael’s the Eskimo have a bath-house where they 
