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Little Red Mill Product Page | Premium Craftsman Structure Kit - 0 views

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    Features Details Include: Interior etched floor boards, interior wall framing, ore bin, platforms, stairs, a grizzley, stamp frames, removable roofs, plank siding that is engraved on the interior and exterior wall surfaces, boiler room, windows and doors that can be positioned open or closed and include laser-cut glazing, and can be built with the metal siding or without! ■Out trademark EASY to follow FULLY Illustrated Step-By-Step instructions make building easy! ■Precision Laser cut wood construction. ■Includes our corrugated material, "metal" siding, and tar paper roofing. ■Footprint N = N/A ■Footprint HO = 5.0" x 8.3" ■Footprint S = 6.8" x 11.3" ■Footprint O = 9.0" x 15.0" ■Based on measurements by Joe Crea and Mike Pyne. Additional material provided by Keith Pashina. ■With all of kits, we include some way for you to customize our structures right out of the box. This allows you to add you own personal touch to fit your layout. See "The Design" section below for some of the included options. History (continued...) The "Little Red Mill", like many other mine and mill structures in this area, is constructed of rough-sawn wood sheathing over a heavy timber frame. This was then covered at some point with flat metal siding and painted to further repel the harsh weather. No machinery remains inside, only timbers that once supported the mill's operations. (red-iron oxide paint was commonly used to repel the elements because it was both economical and provided the longest protection-the reason we call it the "Little Red Mill!) Today, the hillsides of Gilpin County, once stripped of their wood for the mines, have regrown with pines and aspen trees, and the mill silently weathers away in the sun. But someday, this mill will succumb, like many others, to time, the elements, and/or progress of the area. The Design: Today, the existing structure has been converted to a storage/junk building on the
Kelly Yorks

Little Red Mill Product Page | Premium Craftsman Structure Kit - 0 views

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    Comments: Features Details Include: Interior etched floor boards, interior wall framing, ore bin, platforms, stairs, a grizzley, stamp frames, removable roofs, plank siding that is engraved on the interior and exterior wall surfaces, boiler room, windows and doors that can be positioned open or closed and include laser-cut glazing, and can be built with the metal siding or without! ■Out trademark EASY to follow FULLY Illustrated Step-By-Step instructions make building easy! ■Precision Laser cut wood construction. ■Includes our corrugated material, "metal" siding, and tar paper roofing. ■Footprint N = N/A ■Footprint HO = 5.0" x 8.3" ■Footprint S = 6.8" x 11.3" ■Footprint O = 9.0" x 15.0" ■Based on measurements by Joe Crea and Mike Pyne. Additional material provided by Keith Pashina. ■With all of kits, we include some way for you to customize our structures right out of the box. This allows you to add you own personal touch to fit your layout. See "The Design" section below for some of the included options. History (continued...) The "Little Red Mill", like many other mine and mill structures in this area, is constructed of rough-sawn wood sheathing over a heavy timber frame. This was then covered at some point with flat metal siding and painted to further repel the harsh weather. No machinery remains inside, only timbers that once supported the mill's operations. (red-iron oxide paint was commonly used to repel the elements because it was both economical and provided the longest protection-the reason we call it the "Little Red Mill!) Today, the hillsides of Gilpin County, once stripped of their wood for the mines, have regrown with pines and aspen trees, and the mill silently weathers away in the sun. But someday, this mill will succumb, like many others, to time, the elements, and/or progress of the area. The Design: Today, the existing structure has been converted to a storage/junk building on the -
Genesis Mcklein

Black Hawk Mines: She Can't Pay says the Woman Who Lost Downloading Case - 0 views

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    Pirates are not just hunting oceans' floor but also the music industry. There's still no way she can pay record companies the $222,000 judgment she owes said the Minnesota woman at the center of a long-running court fight over the unauthorized downloading of copyrighted music after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear her appeal Monday. The justices did not give remark on their decision. The amount was excessive argued by the attorneys of Jammie Thomas-Rasset, of Brainerd. In the early to mid-2000s, the music industry filed thousands of lawsuits in opposition to people it charged of downloading music without authorization and without paying for it. Most of these cases were settled for about $3,500 apiece. Only two defendants refused to pay and went to trial one of them is Thomas-Rasset while the other was former Boston University student Joel Tenenbaum. The later also lost and was ordered to pay $675,000. Back in 2006, the initial case was file against Thomas-Rasset. Ever since the case was filed has gone through three trials and several appeals. According to the evidences presented by the industry, Thomas-Rasset made available over 1,700 songs to other computer uses via the file-sharing service Kazaa, though the lawsuit targeted only 24 songs. "I'm assuming that since they declined to hear the case it's probably done at this point," she said. But she also said she needed to consult with her attorneys to determine what happens next. Thomas-Rasset at the age of 35 and who works for the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe tribal government, maintained her claim that as she has all along can't afford to pay. "There's no way that they can collect," she said. "Right now, I get energy assistance because I have four kids. It's just the one income. My husband isn't working. It's not possible for them to collect even if they wanted to. I have no assets." She became a grandmother in June, Thomas-Rasset added. She refused
zhaigel hoon

Black Hawk Mines Music - Taylor Swift's latest isn't quite red-hot - 0 views

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    Taylor Swift walks around with a constant expression of shock at her swell luck and good fortune. As well she should, as the pitch-challenged, confessional sweetheart is doing phenomenally well in the singing business. She doesn't do as well in the relationship business, but her prolific taste in celebrity men has served her and supermarket magazines fine. "Love is a ruthless game, unless you play it good and right," she sings on State of Grace. I would argue that Swift plays the game ruthlessly - "good and right" being adverbs open to interpretation, or even meaningless to a doe-eyed pop careerist whose open-book romantic life is grist for the mill, an attention-getting supply of gotcha-good inspiration. Red, her fourth album, is full of big, errorless music - arena-pop that is just country enough to keep the CMT crowd happy. But even if there are very few missteps, excitement and soul are decidedly lacking. Swift's lyrical style lacks for ambition; someone like Canada's Liam Titcomb, a complete unknown in comparison, has much more of a clue how to write a poppy relationship song with wordy charisma. The pigtailed set will enjoy the 22-year-old woman-child who giggles at the end of the plucky-cute Stay, Stay, Stay. "Before you I only dated self-indulgent takers, who took all of their problems out on me," she sings, resisting the urge to rhyme "Jake Gyllenhaal" with "darn it all" or "John Mayer" with "hey, that's not fair." The album's catchy first single We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together is Avril-bratty, complete with a resolute girlie army on the chorus. But beyond the adolescent stuff, the platinum-selling Kennedy-clan befriender branches out - sometimes moving in less-than-mysterious U2 ways. While State of Grace uses chiming guitars and bold dynamics, All Too Well doesn't at all try to hide its With or Without You tension-building methods. Lyrically it represents Swift's best work, involving broken p
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