10 The Mountaineer 



Fahnstock, C M. Farrer, Annie Farrer, Lulie Smith, 

 Olaf Hansen, Charles Albertson, Lieutenant. 



Company D. — Dr. F. J. Van Horn, Captain ; May I. 

 Dwyer, Anna Howard, S. L. Moyer, Elizabeth David, H. 

 Hutchinson, R. Merrill, Alida J. Bigelow, Lieutenant. 



Company E. — Blake D. Mills, Captain ; Cora Gar- 

 vin, Robert Van Horn, Dr. L. W. Clark, Stella Scholes, 

 J. M. Jensen, Bertha Reed, H. V. Abel, Gladys M. Tut- 

 tie. Lieutenant, 



Company F. — Murray McLean, Captain ; Freda San- 

 ford, Grace Howard, Rena Raymond, Anna Stauber, H. 

 May Baptie, A. W. Archer, Mollie Leckenby, Robert 

 Carr, Lawrance Carr, J. Fred Blake, Lieutenant; H. 

 Otto Knispel. 



Company G. — Major E. S. Ingraham, Captain ; Ken- 

 neth Ingraham, Richard Buck, W. J. Colkett, Harvey 

 Moore. 



After an hour on the summit the descent was made 

 safely to temporary camp, where a second night was 

 spent. Twilight gave way to full splendor of moon- 

 light while clouds formed in the valleys and rolled 

 fragments of mist upward against the bulk of the 

 mountain. The toil of the day and the discomforts of 

 our beds were forgotten in the splendor of the scene. 

 A mile above us the great White Glacier formed and 

 wound its ten miles of ice downward into the dark 

 chasm. From our eery crag we could not see where 

 it passed the base of the cliff, but we could look 

 straight down on the seamed surface of ice. More than 

 a mile away across the ice, clear in the moonlight, rose 

 the dark crag of Little Tahoma and from the depths 

 occasionally came the boom of moving ice. 



The following morning the clouds lay around the 

 mountain in a vast sea that stretched on all sides to 

 the horizon. A few peaks broke through, but they were 

 insignificant in comparison to the dominating bulk of 

 ice that we were on. The impression was of being 



