OUR HOME AT SHIPWRECK CAMP 97 
4056 pounds of Underwood pemmican 
5222 pounds of Hudson’s Bay pemmican 
8 drums of coal oil 
15 cases of coal oil 
2 boxes of tea 
200 tins of milk 
250 pounds of sugar 
2 boxes of chocolate 
2 boxes of butter 
1 box of cocoa 
Candles and matches 
Besides these supplies in the tent and on the floe 
we had, of course, the coal, clothing, and equip¬ 
ment which we had been placing on the ice through 
the previous months, consisting, besides ammuni¬ 
tion, pemmican, milk, clothing, tea, coffee, sugar, 
and butter, of these things: 
250 sacks of coal 
88 cases of gasoline 
1 case of codfish 
8 large cases of cod steak 
5 drums of alcohol 
4 cases of desiccated eggs 
114 cases of pilot bread, each case containing 
48 pounds in small tins 
5 barrels of beef 
9 sledges, each capable of carrying 600 or 
700 pounds 
2000 feet of lumber 
8 coal stoves 
2 wood stoves 
90 feet of stove-pipe 
1 extra suit of sails 
2 Peterborough canoes 
