My grandfather used poplar firwood for all his heat. He spent many hours splitting it by hand and stacking it. Then he'd use a small wheelbarrow to carry some to the woodbox in the entry porch. My dad would get a permit to take firewood off state forest land. He burned poplar in the kitchen stove, but pine in the parlor stoves. Chimney fires were pretty common until we almost lost the house Replaced the loose brick chimney with an insulated metal one. He was much too busy to split and pile the wood, and us kids were still too young, but we did haul some up to the house using our pony and a sled. The bottom photo here appears to have ash firewood. It looks like they sawed off the trees along a fence line. I wonder how they got up to the top and cut off that tall one. Why not just drop it complete??
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Today's Featured Article - Ford Part Number Trivia - by Forum Participants. "Replaced by" means the part was superseded. All of my part books date back to 1964 and New Holland have changed some part numbers. They usually put the old Ford part number on the package. I was suppressed when I looked up the part number of the auxiliary drive shaft because for some reason the part number went through a radical change and it lost its "Basic Part Number". Ford part numbers follow the following rules. Most part numbers are in three parts. The middle part is called the
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