A disused gas station and some ruins are still there to say that Two Guns existed. This place had developed with the passage of Route 66. It was owned by Harry E. Miller, an Apache Indian, who acquired it in 1925. Today, the complex is a private property that has been abandoned. The entrance is forbidden. A little way off, you can see the remains of the zoo buildings that Miller built for tourists, as well as the old bridge over Diablo Canyon where the 66 highway used to pass. This is the site of the Apache Death Cave where, during the tribal wars of the 1870s, 42 Comanches and their horses were allegedly burned alive by the Navajos.

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