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Show City $ M w : -' j' ;' ' - - i i A - ' j - - r - ..." ANCIENT PIONEER HOME Two story sawed log Pioneer home being -rebuilt at Sons of Utah Pioneer Museum. -4;;V y-.-''-. j LIVERY STABLE RE-LIVES Sons of Utah Pioneer Museum yetting now model of historic livery stable, complete to hold hold relic coaches, wagons, oxen, horses At SUP Museum ANCIENT HOUSE, PIONEER LIVERY STABLE Newest addition to the fast and vastly growing Sons of Utah Pioneer Museum this week was reconstruction of a complete, 85-year-old sawed-log, sawed-log, two-story Pioneer home. The structure is being removed re-moved to the museum site, 2998 Connor street, from Wan-ship. Wan-ship. The house will be furnished with pioneer antique furniture, most of it made of pine. The pine, however, was stained to make it resemble dark mahogany, ma-hogany, an imitation of the fine furniture left in the east by the Pioneers when they emigrated to Utah. President Brigham Young ordering or-dering much transported material ma-terial crated in walnut crates, salvaged the crates which provided pro-vided some fine furniture when it was worked over in Utah. This furniture was patterned pat-terned after Victorian pieces The Pioneers were forced to leave behind when they came westward. This particular furniture will be used to outfit still another an-other Pioneer home yet to be reassembled at the museum, Horace A. Sorensen, chairman, reported. However, nearing comple-! comple-! tion and of much interest at the great exhibit of Pioneer relics is a livery stable. It is to be used to house the oxen, horses and eight recently restored Pioneer vehicles, old harness shop and other para,- phefnalia. |