Jack: And he and his dad built this house, and they built this one next to it as a storeroom, and this of course, was taken many years later. This was taken probably in the 19late nineteen twenties, or possibly as late as 1932. Because I remember wellthis was our refrigerator. We kept stuff cooling in therethat was screenedkept the flies off. And down in the crick we had a box that we kept butter and stuff in, that water ran through. But he ah. . . he and his bride lived in this, and this is the cabin where my mother was born. Well, then after the folks died, obviously, they moved over there. . . because that was. . . this building was where my grandmother had the post office. And then. . . after it burned. . . now I don't know if it burned when they were going through the throes of divorce. . . Ummm, I do know that my grandmother ended up over in the Wet Mountain Valley, teaching school there, and my mother went to school under her, in the nineteenten, eleven, twelve, along in there, wasn't it? Yeah. But my grandfather stayed there, and then he. . . he. . . all this. . . and they had this to move back into. That's all he had to live in, at the time. After that burned down. My grandmother was a taxidermist, and she did lots of mounting of animals, and you can see. . .