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Add- Pg. 1: The old "Ophites"
- Pg. 1: J. B. Halm's last collegiate baseball game
- Pg. 2: Wheeler's home near Kettle Falls
- Pg. 2: Fleet entering Tacoma Harbor
- Pg. 3: WSC football game at University of Washington
- Pg. 3: Football practice
- Pg. 4: Old Stevens Hall
- Pg. 4: Whitman football game, Halm kicking field goal
- Pg. 5: Scrimmage in WSC, Whitman game, 1907
- Pg. 5: WSC - Whitman football game, 1907
- Pg. 6: WSC Track Team
- Pg. 6: Halm chose Hooker
- Pg. 7: Whitman football game, 1907
- Pg. 7: Whitman football game, Halm tackles, 1907
- Pg. 8: "Chub" Cherry
- Pg. 8: At Moscow Mountains with E. O. Seeke
- Pg. 9: Practice on Rodgers Field
- Pg. 9: Freshman Sophomore Fight, 1907
- Pg. 10: Championship track team of 1909
- Pg. 10: St. Louis game at Spokane, 1907
- Pg. 11: WSC Rooters doing "The Serpentine"
- Pg. 11: Climbing College Hill
- Pg. 12: WSC Football game at Seattle
- Pg. 12: WSC Football game at Seattle
- Pg. 13: WSC Mascot, "Squirt"
- Pg. 13: WSC Mascot, "Toodles"
- Pg. 14: WSC Football game at Seattle
- Pg. 14: Lake "De Puddle", Silver Lake
- Pg. 15: Lewis and ladies, "He loves 'em all"
- Pg. 15: Moffie and Joe, off on a trip
- Pg. 15: Joe
- Pg. 16: Whitman football game, 1907
- Pg. 16: Whitman football game, 1907
- Pg. 17: At the ball game at Mabton, Washington
- Pg. 17: Moffatts Drug Store, Prosser
- Pg. 17: "Dad" at home
- Pg. 17: Dad among his grape vines
- Pg. 18: At the Potlatch Mill Pond
- Pg. 18: Class in the Arbor, "Tanglewood"
- Pg. 18: The class at work
- Pg. 19: Potlach
- Pg. 19: Potlach Mill Pond
- Pg. 19: At Potlach Depot
- Pg. 19: Waiting for the train, "Hemie" and "Zork"
- Pg. 20: Planting trees
- Pg. 20: Log pond
- Pg. 20: Goetz and his class
- Pg. 21: Good-bye Potlach
- Pg. 21: Potlach Mill
- Pg. 21: Off for Moscow Mountains
- Pg. 21: "Chub" and "Tub"
- Pg. 22: The Forest School class in Tanglewood
- Pg. 22: "Three Brave Men"
- Pg. 22: The Class with Goetz
- Pg. 23: Moscow Mountain
- Pg. 23: Camp
- Pg. 23: Moffatts Drug, Dave, Mrs. M., Moffie
- Pg. 23: Chuck, Tomeo Kogeyamma
- Pg. 24: Ladies at the game
- Pg. 24: "Boskie" and Sarage
- Pg. 24: Early ball practice
- Pg. 25: Miza Noonan
- Pg. 25: Ed and Joe
- Pg. 25: Ed and Slim
- Pg. 25: "Slim"
- Pg. 26: The "Put"
- Pg. 26: Bill, Miller, Blair
- Pg. 27: Kellogg Wardner Ball Season, 1908
- Pg. 27: Wardner
- Pg. 27: Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mine
- Pg. 28: "Patton", "Tenshun", Boskie", just before the Battle Brother
- Pg. 28: The Battle
- Pg. 28: The Victor
- Pg. 29: Huckleberries on the trail
- Pg. 29: Near the summit of Kellogg Peak, 1908
- Pg. 29: The Peak
- Pg. 29: Resting before the last stretch to the summit
- Pg. 30: Pullman
- Pg. 30: Pullman
- Pg. 30: George Hardy
- Pg. 31: Starting for Kellogg Peak
- Pg. 31: Near the peak
- Pg. 31: On the peak
- Pg. 31: Wardner, Main Street
- Pg. 32: Pavilion at Point Defiance Park, Tacoma
- Pg. 32: Board, Learning Seattle
- Pg. 32: "Dad" in Point Defiance Park, 1909
- Pg. 33: Wardner
- Pg. 33: Board at Wardner
- Pg. 33: Nine-Mile
- Pg. 33: Huckleberries
- Pg. 34: On the ferry, Seattle
- Pg. 34: Point Defiance Park
- Pg. 34: Colman Dock
- Pg. 35: Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mill
- Pg. 35: "Mac"
- Pg. 35: Mine car
- Pg. 35: "Brownie" and "Cap"
- Pg. 36: Toppenish, Washington
- Pg. 36: Australian boat in Tacoma Harbor, 1906
- Pg. 37: "Mint" and Talbot
- Pg. 37: Kettle Falls
- Pg. 37: Kettle Falls on the Columbia, 1907
- Pg. 37: The Villian
- Pg. 38: Salmon Fishing on Prosser Falls
- Pg. 38: Cut out the foolish
- Pg. 38: P. D. Park, Tacoma
- Pg. 39: Smith drove us to the Kettle Falls
- Pg. 39: Marion Carbonado
- Pg. 39: Marion Carbonado near Mt. Ranier
- Pg. 39: Kettle Falls
- Pg. 40: Forest Class
- Pg. 40: In Tanglewood
- Pg. 40: Ralph and "Miza"
- Pg. 41: One of the kettles of Kettle Falls
- Pg. 41: Near Mt. Ranier, 1906
- Pg. 41: Kettle Falls, 1907
- Pg. 42: The baseball team at Tekoa
- Pg. 42: Short stop at Tekoa
- Pg. 43: Marion Guard Cabin near Mt. Ranier, 1906
- Pg. 43: Kettle Falls, Wash., 1907
- Pg. 43: Marion K. above the Carbonado coal mines near Mt. Ranier, 1906
- Pg. 44: Ed and Bull
- Pg. 44: "Pat", "Ed", and "Bull"
- Pg. 45: The Kettle Falls
- Pg. 45: "Mint"
- Pg. 45: "Mint"
- Pg. 45: "Mother, Mother pin a rose on me"
- Pg. 45: The old Sigma Nu House
- Pg. 46: "Pat" mowing the lawn
- Pg. 46: Three of a kind
- Pg. 47: Barnstormers at Ellensburg
- Pg. 47: Baseball team at North Yakima
- Pg. 47: At Ellensburg
- Pg. 47: North Yakima
- Pg. 48: Ranger Jacroux at Montegomery Ranger Station
- Pg. 48: Haying at Montgomery Ranger Station, Danielson
- Pg. 49: On the North Pacific bridge, Pasco, Wash., 1908
- Pg. 49: Joe on the bridge
- Pg. 49: Heinie on bridge
- Pg. 50: "Campustry"
- Pg. 50: A Freshman
- Pg. 50: Sunday afternoon, be back by 9:00
- Pg. 51: In the park
- Pg. 51: The Sigma Nu House, 1909
- Pg. 51: The old "Frat" house
- Pg. 52: "Buck", Letter from home
- Pg. 52: Some of the old-timers
- Pg. 52: "Tenshun"
- Pg. 53: Ed and Bull at Sigma Nu house
- Pg. 53: On the "Frat" lawn
- Pg. 53: Boonie, Sunday PM after dinner
- Pg. 53: Patton, Ashlock, Hedger, Sunday afternoon
- Pg. 54: Blackbirds, Guy, Wash., Part of baseball team
- Pg. 54: The Race
- Pg. 55: Bull the dog
- Pg. 55: Pat, Ed., and Bull
- Pg. 55: Halm, Patton, and Smithie
- Pg. 55: "Jerry" Hunting. Before the big game
- Pg. 56: Open house, Sunday afternoon
- Pg. 56: Sunday afternoon, Sigma Nu house
- Pg. 57: Playing with Bull
- Pg. 57: Joe Halm
- Pg. 57: "Goat", Goetz
- Pg. 57: Boskie
- Pg. 58: Second floor, not for men
- Pg. 58: Sigma Nu house, Winter 1907
- Pg. 58: The put
- Pg. 58: Coach Keisel and Capt. Halm
- Pg. 59: At the University of Montana, June 1908
- Pg. 59: At the U of M gym
- Pg. 59: The team in Missoula
- Pg. 59: Duck on the Rock on Moscow Mountain
- Pg. 60: On the road to college
- Pg. 60: Tanglewood
- Pg. 60: "Dink"
- Pg. 60: Ed and Joe as Sophmores
- Pg. 61: Ralph at the old place
- Pg. 61: To the U of Montana, June 1909
- Pg. 61: Sunday at the old place
- Pg. 61: The old place
- Pg. 62: Toot toot for Moscow Mountains
- Pg. 62: A saw log
- Pg. 62: En route
- Pg. 62: Potlatch Mill
- Pg. 63: At the U of Montana gym
- Pg. 63: Off for the races
- Pg. 63: Drawing class, 1907
- Pg. 63: Near Potlatch
- Pg. 64: The class at Moscow Mountains
- Pg. 64: In the Green House
- Pg. 64: The boat and the trip to Honolulu
- Pg. 65: Potlatch
- Pg. 65: Mint and George
- Pg. 65: Patton
- Pg. 65: Asleep in the Deep, Missoula Hotel, 1908
- Pg. 66: "Pat's" Substitute
- Pg. 66: "Dink"
- Pg. 66: Hammer throw
- Pg. 67: Shot put
- Pg. 67: Moscow Mountains
- Pg. 67: Potlatch and Br. Co.
- Pg. 67: Log pond
- Pg. 68: Moscow Mountain picnic
- Pg. 68: Duck on the Rock
- Pg. 69: Snow in Coeur d'ALene
- Pg. 69: Billie Morris goes to Chicago
- Pg. 69: On his way through the Dakotas
- Pg. 70: Coer d'Alene forest map
- Pg. 70: Wallace, Idaho
- Pg. 71: Burk Canyon
- Pg. 71: Big Creek
- Pg. 71: Jordan
- Pg. 72: A quiet pool on Bear Creek
- Pg. 73: "Zook" and "Shorty"
- Pg. 73: A snake in Dave's hat
- Pg. 74: Rader goes to drill
- Pg. 74: A peaceful afternoon
- Pg. 75: A cool pool on Bear Creek
- Pg. 75: The Bear Creek Canyon is steep
- Pg. 76: WSC Baseball Team, 1909
- Pg. 77: Bear Creek
- Pg. 77: Fishing at Lake Atwater
- Pg. 78: WSC Fat Men Relay team
- Pg. 79: Lightening on a yellow pine
- Pg. 79: Bear Creek
- Pg. 80: On the road to Lake Atwater
- Pg. 80: On Bear Creek
- Pg. 81: Goetz near Atwater Lake
- Pg. 81: Atwater Lake
- Pg. 82: Fishing in Atwater Lake
- Pg. 82: Field work, Zook and Lewis
- Pg. 83: Climbing down into Bear Creek
- Pg. 83: On the shore of Atwater, Halm and Lewis
- Pg. 84: Camp on Lake Atwater, Forest School
- Pg. 84: Forest school camp
- Pg. 85: Off for Lake Atwater and Bear Creek, Halm, Holcomb, Walt
- Pg. 85: On the shore of Atwater
- Pg. 86: On Bear Creek
- Pg. 86: Bear Creek Canyon
- Pg. 87: Fishing was fine here on Bear Creek
- Pg. 87: The Quiet Lake
- Pg. 88: Sunday on Moscow Mountain
- Pg. 88: Lunch time
- Pg. 89: A run for cover
- Pg. 89: At the picnic
- Pg. 90: Time to eat
- Pg. 90: In the woods calipering a tree
- Pg. 91: "I lit me trusty pipe"
- Pg. 91: Some pool where fishes play
- Pg. 92: Field practice, Rock, Goetz, Lewie
- Pg. 92: Lightening
- Pg. 93: The class in camp
- Pg. 93: Zook and Ed Holcomb at the Falls on Bear Creek
- Pg. 94: Holcomb and Halm, on foot 13 miles to Lake Atwater
- Pg. 94: Chuck in camp at Atlwater Lake
- Pg. 95: Snow had fallen and covered our tracks
- Pg. 96: Inspection on Rodgers Field
- Pg. 96: The watched the Rookies drill, Pullman, 1908
- Pg. 97: Roscoe had a girl on each arm
- Pg. 97: They called at the Friedner home
- Pg. 98: We landed on the Colman Dock
- Pg. 98: Patsie was always laughing
- Pg. 99: Let's not let him take our picture
- Pg. 99: They were mighty smart looking
- Pg. 100: Avery, July 1910, was a busy place. From R. S.
- Pg. 100: He walked right into the Avery Ranger Station
- Pg. 101:When they reached the hill they all waded up
- Pg. 101: Haines said he thought he'd stay for dinner
- Pg. 102: The Bunker Hill Mill was only a short distance away
- Pg. 102: The men lived in comfortable houses
- Pg. 103: When they decided to go back
- Pg. 103: But Roscoe had failed to call a toyie so they all walked
- Pg. 104: The fire crew passed the little cabin on Big Baron, the St. Joe, July 1910
- Pg. 104: They got snowshoes to keep their feet warm, Wilson, Haines, Berry
- Pg. 105: Roscoe apologized and bought two boxes of cheap candy
- Pg. 105: Snow fight
- Pg. 106: To the old Add. Building from Stevens Hall
- Pg. 106: Dr. Harvey Fearn and J. B. Halm
- Pg. 107: Halm butted in and and Roscoe felt jilted
- Pg. 107: The trains couldn't stop so they tried to pass each other on the same track
- Pg. 108: Ranger Pulaski got out his old sled and hitched
- Pg. 108: The Pulaski Home, Wallace, Idaho
- Pg. 109: One of the girls tried to flag the train
- Pg. 109: Then we crossed the Missouri and soon reached Mandan
- Pg. 110: Wolfe Lodge Summit going into Sands Creek, Coeur d'Alene
- Pg. 110: Near divide going into Deception or Ike Sands
- Pg.111: Tom's old farm in Missouri
- Pg. 111: Crew for the fire on Copper Creek
- Pg. 112: Tom Robinson near Montgomery Creek on CDA
- Pg. 112: Billy said it was a fine pole stand
- Pg. 113: She like her "Tabbie" (cat)
- Pg. 114:The last ford on the Little North Fork
- Pg. 114: Mr. Wigle and the girls came and visited the camp
- Pg. 115: We looked from the divide and saw several small lakes
- Pg. 115: Ed Halcomb and John Winnington at Grand Forks (Now Falcon, Idaho)
- Pg. 116: They hauled logs on Bob's
- Pg.116: Ed stood on the edge and looked over
- Pg. 116: Ed Holcomb followed the State line between Mont. and Idaho
- Pg. 117: Ed said we'd soon be on Sunset Peak
- Pg. 117: The Milwaukee crossed Kelly Creek
- Pg. 118: Trees around Anaconda all died
- Pg. 118: The glacier
- Pg. 119: We slid down the Canyon from Ellensburg
- Pg. 119: The St. Joe River and the Milwaukee railroad
- Pg. 120: Sam and his friend spent the day hunting
- Pg. 120: The trees were larger than the cabin
- Pg. 121: View of the burned area from the old road
- Pg. 121: Bill Rock and Bill Morris at Avery Ranger Station
- Pg. 122: We could see Mount Sunset from Kellogg Peak, July 1909
- Pg. 122: Gustafsons stull camp was near my tent, Dorsey, Idaho, July 1909
- Pg. 123: Taft deserted after the 1910 fires
- Pg. 123: The town of Grand Forks
- Pg. 124: We stopped at a Native American camp
- Pg. 124: Native Americans and dogs at camp
- Pg. 125: Rock and Billie, a fine pole chance
- Pg. 125: A fine pole chance
- Pg. 126: Will Rock, with little saw timber
- Pg. 126: He shined during summer
- Pg. 127: Sam stood under the Clear Creek
- Pg. 127: The tower burned and fell on the wires above the tunnel
- Pg. 128: The Clear Creek Bridge is 248' high
- Pg. 128: June 4, we found the cabin covered in 4 feet of snow
- Pg. 129: The snow was about 8" deep, Bullion Tunnel
- Pg. 129: Twin Lakes from Stevens Peak, Aug. 1909
- Pg. 130: Near Twin Lakes below Stevens Peak, July 1909
- Pg. 130: Near Dorsey, Idaho, July1909
- Pg. 130: Dead trees from the fumes of Anaconda Smelter
- Pg. 131: Joe and Harve hung the wire and finished the line, 1909
- Pg. 131: Joe Halm on the fence near Wallace, Idaho, 1909
- Pg. 132: House damaged in avalanche
- Pg. 133: Nothing to do but smoke and hunt bear
- Pg. 133: Ranger Tom saw the smoke first
- Pg. 134: A large catch of fish
- Pg. 134: A fool hen
- Pg. 135: Ed and gun, July 1909
- Pg. 135: A busy winter for Ed
- Pg. 136: The slide crushed all the houses on that side of Mace; 18 people were killed
- Pg. 136: View of avalanche damage, Winter 1909 and 1910
- Pg. 137: Nelson Siding, he hauled the largest loads of logs
- Pg. 137: Timber claim on the North Fork
- Pg. 138: Still digging for three men lost in the slide, Jan. 1910
- Pg. 138: Box cars swept from the tracks
- Pg. 139: CDA office at Wallace, Winter 1909
- Pg. 139: Roscoe was in charge
- Pg. 140: Demolished house from avalanche; entire family was killed
- Pg. 140: Searching for the last of three victims. He was later found at the X (on photo) alive, but died within the hour
- Pg. 141: Rockwell had his camp on Clear Creek among the cedars, 1909
- Pg. 141: Hungry little rodent that always showed up at meal time, 1909
- Pg. 142: The path of the slide
- Pg. 142: The avalanche came over a mile and carried thousands of tons of snow, W. Morris and Ed Pulaski
- Pg. 143: Puaski put the acorns in the ground for the winter
- Pg. 143: Ed and I left him on top of Kellogg Peak, July 1909
- Pg. 144: The town was a sad wreck
- Pg. 144: The Pasco Home, all that was left of the family that was killed
- Pg. 145: Recovering the bodies from the slide, Winter 1909-1910
- Pg. 145: On Kellogg Peak where we made coffee, Pulaski and Brunk, July 1909
- Pg. 146: French Gulch, timber killed by smoke
- Pg. 146: More smoke fumes
- Pg. 147: The party halted beforethe last climb to the lakes
- Pg. 147: The trail crossed the creek above a waterfall
- Pg. 148: Mr. and Mrs. Brackett prepared the lunch
- Pg. 148: Mr. Weigle always enjoyed a good cup of coffee
- Pg. 149: Then we all started on
- Pg. 149: The stream got smaller but more beautiful, Miss Wilson and Miss Berry
- Pg. 150: As she looked around, I got a good picture
- Pg. 150: I was just about to buy that landscape, J. B. Halm
- Pg. 151: Haines handed it to Miss Berry
- Pg. 151: We were all single and from our own hometown, regular Devils from Wallace
- Pg. 152: A curious chipmunk came into camp
- Pg. 152: The old flume was a good place to go for a walk, 1909-1910
- Pg. 153: It was a dignified bunch that Roscoe took
- Pg. 153: He charged reporters $10 for a pose
- Pg. 154: Some of the finest White Pine in Idaho was found on this claim
- Pg. 154: They became very proficient on snow shoes
- Pg. 155: Emery told the girls it was a lodgepole pine tree and they believed him
- Pg. 155: The girls were a little shy about having their pictures taken
- Pg. 156: Marion looked out over the lake at Tubbs Hill and said "When do we eat!"
- Pg. 157: Coffee was made and a lunch was spread near the lake
- Pg. 157: Weigle said Haines and Halm should be real sober
- Pg. 158: Ranger Henry Kotkey and family
- Pg. 158: The St. Joe Ranger Station, Mr. Kotkeys Headquarters
- Pg. 159: Some of the beautiful ranch homes found in the woods (Wood rat homes)
- Pg. 159: No one had ever lived in the place more than a year or two
- Pg. 160: The crew at the Boulder Nursery, Donald Bruce, Sam Milsad
- Pg. 160: The planting crew at Beaver
- Pg. 161: Planting Black Walnuts near Beaver Siding on the Coeur d'Alene
- Pg. 161: Planting walnuts
- Pg. 162: Logs decked and frozen in the piles
- Pg. 162: Teaming on the Road
- Pg. 162: The sleigh road
- Pg. 163: Cracking the deck with powder
- Pg. 163: A pile of decked logs
- Pg. 164: Ester and Marionin the park in Coer d'Alene
- Pg. 164: J. B. Halm trapped in a bear sign
- Pg. 164: We went out for a walk
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J. B. Halm Photo Album 2: Washington State College and the U.S. Forest Service
Editing is temporarily disabled
Cancel EditPg. 1: The old "Ophites"
Pg. 1: J. B. Halm's last collegiate baseball game
Pg. 2: Wheeler's home near Kettle Falls
Pg. 2: Fleet entering Tacoma Harbor
Pg. 3: WSC football game at University of Washington
Pg. 3: Football practice
Pg. 4: Old Stevens Hall
Pg. 4: Whitman football game, Halm kicking field goal
Pg. 5: Scrimmage in WSC, Whitman game, 1907
Pg. 5: WSC - Whitman football game, 1907
Pg. 6: WSC Track Team
Pg. 6: Halm chose Hooker
Pg. 7: Whitman football game, 1907
Pg. 7: Whitman football game, Halm tackles, 1907
Pg. 8: "Chub" Cherry
Pg. 8: At Moscow Mountains with E. O. Seeke
Pg. 9: Practice on Rodgers Field
Pg. 9: Freshman Sophomore Fight, 1907
Pg. 10: Championship track team of 1909
Pg. 10: St. Louis game at Spokane, 1907
Pg. 11: WSC Rooters doing "The Serpentine"
Pg. 11: Climbing College Hill
Pg. 12: WSC Football game at Seattle
Pg. 12: WSC Football game at Seattle
Pg. 13: WSC Mascot, "Squirt"
Pg. 13: WSC Mascot, "Toodles"
Pg. 14: WSC Football game at Seattle
Pg. 14: Lake "De Puddle", Silver Lake
Pg. 15: Lewis and ladies, "He loves 'em all"
Pg. 15: Moffie and Joe, off on a trip
Pg. 15: Joe
Pg. 16: Whitman football game, 1907
Pg. 16: Whitman football game, 1907
Pg. 17: At the ball game at Mabton, Washington
Pg. 17: Moffatts Drug Store, Prosser
Pg. 17: "Dad" at home
Pg. 17: Dad among his grape vines
Pg. 18: At the Potlatch Mill Pond
Pg. 18: Class in the Arbor, "Tanglewood"
Pg. 18: The class at work
Pg. 19: Potlach
Pg. 19: Potlach Mill Pond
Pg. 19: At Potlach Depot
Pg. 19: Waiting for the train, "Hemie" and "Zork"
Pg. 20: Planting trees
Pg. 20: Log pond
Pg. 20: Goetz and his class
Pg. 21: Good-bye Potlach
Pg. 21: Potlach Mill
Pg. 21: Off for Moscow Mountains
Pg. 21: "Chub" and "Tub"
Pg. 22: The Forest School class in Tanglewood
Pg. 22: "Three Brave Men"
Pg. 22: The Class with Goetz
Pg. 23: Moscow Mountain
Pg. 23: Camp
Pg. 23: Moffatts Drug, Dave, Mrs. M., Moffie
Pg. 23: Chuck, Tomeo Kogeyamma
Pg. 24: Ladies at the game
Pg. 24: "Boskie" and Sarage
Pg. 24: Early ball practice
Pg. 25: Miza Noonan
Pg. 25: Ed and Joe
Pg. 25: Ed and Slim
Pg. 25: "Slim"
Pg. 26: The "Put"
Pg. 26: Bill, Miller, Blair
Pg. 27: Kellogg Wardner Ball Season, 1908
Pg. 27: Wardner
Pg. 27: Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mine
Pg. 28: "Patton", "Tenshun", Boskie", just before the Battle Brother
Pg. 28: The Battle
Pg. 28: The Victor
Pg. 29: Huckleberries on the trail
Pg. 29: Near the summit of Kellogg Peak, 1908
Pg. 29: The Peak
Pg. 29: Resting before the last stretch to the summit
Pg. 30: Pullman
Pg. 30: Pullman
Pg. 30: George Hardy
Pg. 31: Starting for Kellogg Peak
Pg. 31: Near the peak
Pg. 31: On the peak
Pg. 31: Wardner, Main Street
Pg. 32: Pavilion at Point Defiance Park, Tacoma
Pg. 32: Board, Learning Seattle
Pg. 32: "Dad" in Point Defiance Park, 1909
Pg. 33: Wardner
Pg. 33: Board at Wardner
Pg. 33: Nine-Mile
Pg. 33: Huckleberries
Pg. 34: On the ferry, Seattle
Pg. 34: Point Defiance Park
Pg. 34: Colman Dock
Pg. 35: Bunker Hill and Sullivan Mill
Pg. 35: "Mac"
Pg. 35: Mine car
Pg. 35: "Brownie" and "Cap"
Pg. 36: Toppenish, Washington
Pg. 36: Australian boat in Tacoma Harbor, 1906
Pg. 37: "Mint" and Talbot
Pg. 37: Kettle Falls
Pg. 37: Kettle Falls on the Columbia, 1907
Pg. 37: The Villian
Pg. 38: Salmon Fishing on Prosser Falls
Pg. 38: Cut out the foolish
Pg. 38: P. D. Park, Tacoma
Pg. 39: Smith drove us to the Kettle Falls
Pg. 39: Marion Carbonado
Pg. 39: Marion Carbonado near Mt. Ranier
Pg. 39: Kettle Falls
Pg. 40: Forest Class
Pg. 40: In Tanglewood
Pg. 40: Ralph and "Miza"
Pg. 41: One of the kettles of Kettle Falls
Pg. 41: Near Mt. Ranier, 1906
Pg. 41: Kettle Falls, 1907
Pg. 42: The baseball team at Tekoa
Pg. 42: Short stop at Tekoa
Pg. 43: Marion Guard Cabin near Mt. Ranier, 1906
Pg. 43: Kettle Falls, Wash., 1907
Pg. 43: Marion K. above the Carbonado coal mines near Mt. Ranier, 1906
Pg. 44: Ed and Bull
Pg. 44: "Pat", "Ed", and "Bull"
Pg. 45: The Kettle Falls
Pg. 45: "Mint"
Pg. 45: "Mint"
Pg. 45: "Mother, Mother pin a rose on me"
Pg. 45: The old Sigma Nu House
Pg. 46: "Pat" mowing the lawn
Pg. 46: Three of a kind
Pg. 47: Barnstormers at Ellensburg
Pg. 47: Baseball team at North Yakima
Pg. 47: At Ellensburg
Pg. 47: North Yakima
Pg. 48: Ranger Jacroux at Montegomery Ranger Station
Pg. 48: Haying at Montgomery Ranger Station, Danielson
Pg. 49: On the North Pacific bridge, Pasco, Wash., 1908
Pg. 49: Joe on the bridge
Pg. 49: Heinie on bridge
Pg. 50: "Campustry"
Pg. 50: A Freshman
Pg. 50: Sunday afternoon, be back by 9:00
Pg. 51: In the park
Pg. 51: The Sigma Nu House, 1909
Pg. 51: The old "Frat" house
Pg. 52: "Buck", Letter from home
Pg. 52: Some of the old-timers
Pg. 52: "Tenshun"
Pg. 53: Ed and Bull at Sigma Nu house
Pg. 53: On the "Frat" lawn
Pg. 53: Boonie, Sunday PM after dinner
Pg. 53: Patton, Ashlock, Hedger, Sunday afternoon
Pg. 54: Blackbirds, Guy, Wash., Part of baseball team
Pg. 54: The Race
Pg. 55: Bull the dog
Pg. 55: Pat, Ed., and Bull
Pg. 55: Halm, Patton, and Smithie
Pg. 55: "Jerry" Hunting. Before the big game
Pg. 56: Open house, Sunday afternoon
Pg. 56: Sunday afternoon, Sigma Nu house
Pg. 57: Playing with Bull
Pg. 57: Joe Halm
Pg. 57: "Goat", Goetz
Pg. 57: Boskie
Pg. 58: Second floor, not for men
Pg. 58: Sigma Nu house, Winter 1907
Pg. 58: The put
Pg. 58: Coach Keisel and Capt. Halm
Pg. 59: At the University of Montana, June 1908
Pg. 59: At the U of M gym
Pg. 59: The team in Missoula
Pg. 59: Duck on the Rock on Moscow Mountain
Pg. 60: On the road to college
Pg. 60: Tanglewood
Pg. 60: "Dink"
Pg. 60: Ed and Joe as Sophmores
Pg. 61: Ralph at the old place
Pg. 61: To the U of Montana, June 1909
Pg. 61: Sunday at the old place
Pg. 61: The old place
Pg. 62: Toot toot for Moscow Mountains
Pg. 62: A saw log
Pg. 62: En route
Pg. 62: Potlatch Mill
Pg. 63: At the U of Montana gym
Pg. 63: Off for the races
Pg. 63: Drawing class, 1907
Pg. 63: Near Potlatch
Pg. 64: The class at Moscow Mountains
Pg. 64: In the Green House
Pg. 64: The boat and the trip to Honolulu
Pg. 65: Potlatch
Pg. 65: Mint and George
Pg. 65: Patton
Pg. 65: Asleep in the Deep, Missoula Hotel, 1908
Pg. 66: "Pat's" Substitute
Pg. 66: "Dink"
Pg. 66: Hammer throw
Pg. 67: Shot put
Pg. 67: Moscow Mountains
Pg. 67: Potlatch and Br. Co.
Pg. 67: Log pond
Pg. 68: Moscow Mountain picnic
Pg. 68: Duck on the Rock
Pg. 69: Snow in Coeur d'ALene
Pg. 69: Billie Morris goes to Chicago
Pg. 69: On his way through the Dakotas
Pg. 70: Coer d'Alene forest map
Pg. 70: Wallace, Idaho
Pg. 71: Burk Canyon
Pg. 71: Big Creek
Pg. 71: Jordan
Pg. 72: A quiet pool on Bear Creek
Pg. 73: "Zook" and "Shorty"
Pg. 73: A snake in Dave's hat
Pg. 74: Rader goes to drill
Pg. 74: A peaceful afternoon
Pg. 75: A cool pool on Bear Creek
Pg. 75: The Bear Creek Canyon is steep
Pg. 76: WSC Baseball Team, 1909
Pg. 77: Bear Creek
Pg. 77: Fishing at Lake Atwater
Pg. 78: WSC Fat Men Relay team
Pg. 79: Lightening on a yellow pine
Pg. 79: Bear Creek
Pg. 80: On the road to Lake Atwater
Pg. 80: On Bear Creek
Pg. 81: Goetz near Atwater Lake
Pg. 81: Atwater Lake
Pg. 82: Fishing in Atwater Lake
Pg. 82: Field work, Zook and Lewis
Pg. 83: Climbing down into Bear Creek
Pg. 83: On the shore of Atwater, Halm and Lewis
Pg. 84: Camp on Lake Atwater, Forest School
Pg. 84: Forest school camp
Pg. 85: Off for Lake Atwater and Bear Creek, Halm, Holcomb, Walt
Pg. 85: On the shore of Atwater
Pg. 86: On Bear Creek
Pg. 86: Bear Creek Canyon
Pg. 87: Fishing was fine here on Bear Creek
Pg. 87: The Quiet Lake
Pg. 88: Sunday on Moscow Mountain
Pg. 88: Lunch time
Pg. 89: A run for cover
Pg. 89: At the picnic
Pg. 90: Time to eat
Pg. 90: In the woods calipering a tree
Pg. 91: "I lit me trusty pipe"
Pg. 91: Some pool where fishes play
Pg. 92: Field practice, Rock, Goetz, Lewie
Pg. 92: Lightening
Pg. 93: The class in camp
Pg. 93: Zook and Ed Holcomb at the Falls on Bear Creek
Pg. 94: Holcomb and Halm, on foot 13 miles to Lake Atwater
Pg. 94: Chuck in camp at Atlwater Lake
Pg. 95: Snow had fallen and covered our tracks
Pg. 96: Inspection on Rodgers Field
Pg. 96: The watched the Rookies drill, Pullman, 1908
Pg. 97: Roscoe had a girl on each arm
Pg. 97: They called at the Friedner home
Pg. 98: We landed on the Colman Dock
Pg. 98: Patsie was always laughing
Pg. 99: Let's not let him take our picture
Pg. 99: They were mighty smart looking
Pg. 100: Avery, July 1910, was a busy place. From R. S.
Pg. 100: He walked right into the Avery Ranger Station
Pg. 101:When they reached the hill they all waded up
Pg. 101: Haines said he thought he'd stay for dinner
Pg. 102: The Bunker Hill Mill was only a short distance away
Pg. 102: The men lived in comfortable houses
Pg. 103: When they decided to go back
Pg. 103: But Roscoe had failed to call a toyie so they all walked
Pg. 104: The fire crew passed the little cabin on Big Baron, the St. Joe, July 1910
Pg. 104: They got snowshoes to keep their feet warm, Wilson, Haines, Berry
Pg. 105: Roscoe apologized and bought two boxes of cheap candy
Pg. 105: Snow fight
Pg. 106: To the old Add. Building from Stevens Hall
Pg. 106: Dr. Harvey Fearn and J. B. Halm
Pg. 107: Halm butted in and and Roscoe felt jilted
Pg. 107: The trains couldn't stop so they tried to pass each other on the same track
Pg. 108: Ranger Pulaski got out his old sled and hitched
Pg. 108: The Pulaski Home, Wallace, Idaho
Pg. 109: One of the girls tried to flag the train
Pg. 109: Then we crossed the Missouri and soon reached Mandan
Pg. 110: Wolfe Lodge Summit going into Sands Creek, Coeur d'Alene
Pg. 110: Near divide going into Deception or Ike Sands
Pg.111: Tom's old farm in Missouri
Pg. 111: Crew for the fire on Copper Creek
Pg. 112: Tom Robinson near Montgomery Creek on CDA
Pg. 112: Billy said it was a fine pole stand
Pg. 113: She like her "Tabbie" (cat)
Pg. 114:The last ford on the Little North Fork
Pg. 114: Mr. Wigle and the girls came and visited the camp
Pg. 115: We looked from the divide and saw several small lakes
Pg. 115: Ed Halcomb and John Winnington at Grand Forks (Now Falcon, Idaho)
Pg. 116: They hauled logs on Bob's
Pg.116: Ed stood on the edge and looked over
Pg. 116: Ed Holcomb followed the State line between Mont. and Idaho
Pg. 117: Ed said we'd soon be on Sunset Peak
Pg. 117: The Milwaukee crossed Kelly Creek
Pg. 118: Trees around Anaconda all died
Pg. 118: The glacier
Pg. 119: We slid down the Canyon from Ellensburg
Pg. 119: The St. Joe River and the Milwaukee railroad
Pg. 120: Sam and his friend spent the day hunting
Pg. 120: The trees were larger than the cabin
Pg. 121: View of the burned area from the old road
Pg. 121: Bill Rock and Bill Morris at Avery Ranger Station
Pg. 122: We could see Mount Sunset from Kellogg Peak, July 1909
Pg. 122: Gustafsons stull camp was near my tent, Dorsey, Idaho, July 1909
Pg. 123: Taft deserted after the 1910 fires
Pg. 123: The town of Grand Forks
Pg. 124: We stopped at a Native American camp
Pg. 124: Native Americans and dogs at camp
Pg. 125: Rock and Billie, a fine pole chance
Pg. 125: A fine pole chance
Pg. 126: Will Rock, with little saw timber
Pg. 126: He shined during summer
Pg. 127: Sam stood under the Clear Creek
Pg. 127: The tower burned and fell on the wires above the tunnel
Pg. 128: The Clear Creek Bridge is 248' high
Pg. 128: June 4, we found the cabin covered in 4 feet of snow
Pg. 129: The snow was about 8" deep, Bullion Tunnel
Pg. 129: Twin Lakes from Stevens Peak, Aug. 1909
Pg. 130: Near Twin Lakes below Stevens Peak, July 1909
Pg. 130: Near Dorsey, Idaho, July1909
Pg. 130: Dead trees from the fumes of Anaconda Smelter
Pg. 131: Joe and Harve hung the wire and finished the line, 1909
Pg. 131: Joe Halm on the fence near Wallace, Idaho, 1909
Pg. 132: House damaged in avalanche
Pg. 133: Nothing to do but smoke and hunt bear
Pg. 133: Ranger Tom saw the smoke first
Pg. 134: A large catch of fish
Pg. 134: A fool hen
Pg. 135: Ed and gun, July 1909
Pg. 135: A busy winter for Ed
Pg. 136: The slide crushed all the houses on that side of Mace; 18 people were killed
Pg. 136: View of avalanche damage, Winter 1909 and 1910
Pg. 137: Nelson Siding, he hauled the largest loads of logs
Pg. 137: Timber claim on the North Fork
Pg. 138: Still digging for three men lost in the slide, Jan. 1910
Pg. 138: Box cars swept from the tracks
Pg. 139: CDA office at Wallace, Winter 1909
Pg. 139: Roscoe was in charge
Pg. 140: Demolished house from avalanche; entire family was killed
Pg. 140: Searching for the last of three victims. He was later found at the X (on photo) alive, but died within the hour
Pg. 141: Rockwell had his camp on Clear Creek among the cedars, 1909
Pg. 141: Hungry little rodent that always showed up at meal time, 1909
Pg. 142: The path of the slide
Pg. 142: The avalanche came over a mile and carried thousands of tons of snow, W. Morris and Ed Pulaski
Pg. 143: Puaski put the acorns in the ground for the winter
Pg. 143: Ed and I left him on top of Kellogg Peak, July 1909
Pg. 144: The town was a sad wreck
Pg. 144: The Pasco Home, all that was left of the family that was killed
Pg. 145: Recovering the bodies from the slide, Winter 1909-1910
Pg. 145: On Kellogg Peak where we made coffee, Pulaski and Brunk, July 1909
Pg. 146: French Gulch, timber killed by smoke
Pg. 146: More smoke fumes
Pg. 147: The party halted beforethe last climb to the lakes
Pg. 147: The trail crossed the creek above a waterfall
Pg. 148: Mr. and Mrs. Brackett prepared the lunch
Pg. 148: Mr. Weigle always enjoyed a good cup of coffee
Pg. 149: Then we all started on
Pg. 149: The stream got smaller but more beautiful, Miss Wilson and Miss Berry
Pg. 150: As she looked around, I got a good picture
Pg. 150: I was just about to buy that landscape, J. B. Halm
Pg. 151: Haines handed it to Miss Berry
Pg. 151: We were all single and from our own hometown, regular Devils from Wallace
Pg. 152: A curious chipmunk came into camp
Pg. 152: The old flume was a good place to go for a walk, 1909-1910
Pg. 153: It was a dignified bunch that Roscoe took
Pg. 153: He charged reporters $10 for a pose
Pg. 154: Some of the finest White Pine in Idaho was found on this claim
Pg. 154: They became very proficient on snow shoes
Pg. 155: Emery told the girls it was a lodgepole pine tree and they believed him
Pg. 155: The girls were a little shy about having their pictures taken
Pg. 156: Marion looked out over the lake at Tubbs Hill and said "When do we eat!"
Pg. 157: Coffee was made and a lunch was spread near the lake
Pg. 157: Weigle said Haines and Halm should be real sober
Pg. 158: Ranger Henry Kotkey and family
Pg. 158: The St. Joe Ranger Station, Mr. Kotkeys Headquarters
Pg. 159: Some of the beautiful ranch homes found in the woods (Wood rat homes)
Pg. 159: No one had ever lived in the place more than a year or two
Pg. 160: The crew at the Boulder Nursery, Donald Bruce, Sam Milsad
Pg. 160: The planting crew at Beaver
Pg. 161: Planting Black Walnuts near Beaver Siding on the Coeur d'Alene
Pg. 161: Planting walnuts
Pg. 162: Logs decked and frozen in the piles
Pg. 162: Teaming on the Road
Pg. 162: The sleigh road
Pg. 163: Cracking the deck with powder
Pg. 163: A pile of decked logs
Pg. 164: Ester and Marionin the park in Coer d'Alene
Pg. 164: J. B. Halm trapped in a bear sign
Pg. 164: We went out for a walk
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Halm, Joseph B. (Joseph Baldwin), 1884-1965, J. B. Halm Photo Album 2: Washington State College and the U.S. Forest Service (Circa 1906-1912). Montana History Portal, accessed 12/12/2024, https://www.mtmemory.org/nodes/view/116031