The drugstore on the left. The three storey building was known as the "Big Hall" where all the high class entertainment took place before the public hall was built. This building was moved from Howlan , a thriving community in the early days. Haywood's had a lumber business and a grist mill. In fact according to Mrs. John Platts , who was a member of the Haywood family, there were five mills on the stream that meandered through Howlan . Of course, this was in the days before the hillsides were stripped of trees; thus, allowing a great deal of soil erosion to fill up the many springs bubbling along the dale. Later the building was moved near the potato warehouse. It was owned by Turners, used as a warehouse and ultimately destroyed by fire in the thirties. When the chimney fell, Lome Silliker was hit on the head by a falling brick and was in critical condition for some time; however, he fully recov¬ ered and lives in O'Leary today. 344