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Show 7,Npi ehives H . . aw tr'l - ' lb ,, "". DARWIN ;::4A,1:7--"- - LAMBERT , ,,,,,,,,,,, t ,,,,.... -- 6-- -b- eehives- now-vanish- ed white-washe- the diameter.. thirty-fofor high space living guar-- a ters was never determined, however. as the couple quarreled and the marriage failed to materialize. Charcoal was made in the ovens at intervals for some five years, during which many men were employed in hauling wood by ox team. Nut 'pine was used almost entirely, trees which had been dead for a time being preferred. relate that great mountains of wood were stock-pile- d behind the ovens. As needed, it was moved by handcart to the top of a long platform, level with the six dows. From the platform it was pushed through the windows, while other workers stacked it in layers side. The capacity of each oven up to window level was around fifty cords. The wood was set on fire and thefire controlled by regulating the draft Iron doors, gone long since, made the windows and lower openings on the opposite sides airtight. Air intake was carefully regulated by opening - ot 'k rs , wve. rr-W - - ''' , ' 1 Jow-- .4111efv 44, ,t 4par.40.4iir .'....tdA",J , 4&11411,4 t'!A - '4 4 - '444' 11tN.-- , ' and closing small vents all around the base. When the wood was charred to the right degree, the fire was smothered off by shutting off all air Only one oven was usually fired at a time, and the charcoal was kept stored in it until needed at the smel' ter. One day in the 1860's, toward the end of Ward's short day in the sun, fire either escaped control or was intentionally set without proper precaution. The platform beneath the windows and 150 cords of wood were-u- t terly destroyed, and very little charcoal has been made their since. Remains of campfires are in most of the ovens nowlf built, the smoke finds its way out a small kw' - 014F-77.. - onus HAVE BEM USED Mt mama4o lEDISVE mom -- - three-quarte- rs - , 10 4. L. re ' CCoss (lova 11,5 1- 011!l1MIM 1- at LOWEV COST 11 13 , 1 To Get 02 CECIL Q.! e S r v'Tsrb ' ' Ark Voices ondillimo le ilmemes wielmot make 0 , Irtt 90 -- ...woo" Zyco ET ON "..1141 13:0 DESIGN 14 4745 SO. STATE IV oTompolip,d sealsatal called torilleas el tisty shimmies oases that GZEP die reed mad resit obi'. ding. These csamesing treads can he applied- -le Tsui ims have Tour lie wieh treads alstonott skid-esailla- y 01111 "keeehr preduese 0 0-0--11 it71117 wen's' AllirlinFREEZE Got Yours HOWL -- HOME AtID AUTO SUPPLY STORE 2 YOU2S TODAY 0 R AD ! Exclusive I-- Made of Mastic . . . Won't Soutch - I á SCRAPER - -- -- tireses V110 , WINDSHIELD Tir - Ask About Our Convenient Budget Terms La,111-- st1 re 0 r .,. , 1 v,Z1- 1 r 0 IL 1 1 lisa4 - GUMMED rolat cms A S I OW AS 11-12,11 Tivestone - MOTOR KING 14ASATTERY --4- 5 I , ' WITH A 14 MO 0 : -1- , , u q; r"..1.'"ilV --- - I OP ,iA 8 1 ri7.-- - . , to STABLI3 HOMES opening in the top, just as,in an Indian tepee. There's an old bed in one oven, while another shows signs of having been used as a stable. Several of the sandy floors have been rather deeply dug as a result of a legend invented by a group of jokers to the effect that a Chinese had been buried beneath the ovens with some valuable curios. But the floors are filled level now. of a century. After the weather is beginning to make instone roads on the thirty-inc- h but the odd structures may yet be expected to carry their nostaligic message from the heyday of Nevada mining at least another century into the future. J1 ...,,Ik" )44,tv ' fig 1 , .; nil , gko : uw t - - , - . - , - Old-time- , Se . ' v,,11 - 1' , -- u 01 41k, r ydP ot twenty-five-fo- , 4 1, t of , ,tNe L:141; --. 7.1''..s.-,0 motorists along southeast of Ely. Neph. U. S. vada, can see six gray shapes in line above the sagebrush and cedars across Steptoe Valley. gray shapes ready to tell old secrets of work and , Laughter. hopes and hardship. A dirt and gravel road turns south from the highway six miles out of Ely and goes over the alluvial fans on the west side'of the valley. teen miles from Ely the six nestle below picturesque, rock pointed foothills. Built, by a master mason in.1876 to make charcoal for The Martin White Smelter atthe silver-lea- d town of Ward, also have served as emergency they shelters for ranchers, miners and re-stockand one narrowly escaped being a honeymoon cottage, long ago. There was a housing shortage in Ward: An ingenious dealer in a local club cleaned up and d the ' interior of the best charcoal oven for his prospective bride. The suitability - -- , - EEN-SIGHTE- D , I - - ,17---,----- ' .4. -- ',ft...pm Phones S-41- 01 anti Unr. 310 KUSH WWI Isle Prigiseno Pop lessoldt A- -. Me Om WINO Cast ...eel GAME. SAO IAZI Cifir. 31,9 1110 |