UNCLAIMED FREIGHT CO. 1 SALES, INC. & LIQUIDATION STORE HOURS: Mon thru Fn 9am to 9 o m Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. OPEN MEMORIAL DAY 9 to 5 BUY THIS RECLINER AT $429.95, WE’LL GIVE YOU A MATCHING SOFA & LOVESEAT £EEE!! (Sofa & Loveseat Retails At $1529.95 to $1689.95) -ASSORTED COLORS AND FABRICS— The reason the price is so low is because we are what our name represents deals from factories, unclaimed refusals and liquidation for manufacturers. Full warranties on most items. THIS IS FACT NOT BULL ....14 Years of success to prove it, you’ll see once you shop us, if you don’t shop us you are the losers!! SAVE MONEYS BUY QUALITY FURNITURE AT LOW PRICES!! THIS LINE IS TOTALLY DISCONTINUED NESTING TABLE Reg. Retail Price $169.95 WAS |8935 CLOVER TOP TABLE Reg. Retail Price $129.95 WASSSS4Q now $32.00 BUNK BEDSw/Safety Rails. Ladders and Bunkies, Dark Pine Also Breaks Down To IT jHfcr.' fl Twin Beds Reg. Retail Price $609.95 OUR CASH PRICE r $165.00 Seeing Is Believing, A Real Steal! -I_ .1 ,*£\' 6 pc. PINE GROUPS With Party Ottoman in Antron Nylon Wvxs}P pj e g detail p r i ce 11099.95 (Almost Identical) Same Suit in Herculon s2B9.9scash Price Victorian Brass Hall Trees... Reg. Reg. $89.95 Loads of End Tables, 3 Pc...Reg. Ret. $169.95 to $1189.95 45 Bedroom Suites...Maple...Walnut...Reg. Ret. $649.95 50-Early American...Sofa...Chair..Loveseat...Reg. Ret. $1489.95 70 - 4 Drawer Chests.. .Reg. Ret. $129.95 75-5 Drawer Chests... Reg. Ret. $159.95 Pine Tables with (4) Chairs & Upholstered Seats... Reg. Ret. $309.95 50-Bookcases...Walnut...Maple ...Reg. Ret. $139.59 MATTRESS & FOUNDATION SETS.. .252 Coil.. .Quilted.. .Full Warranty 75 - Singles... Beg. Ret. $279.95 Cash Price $79,95 60-Doubles... Reg. Ret. $359.00 Cash Price $99.95 10-Queens...Reg. Ret. $459.95 Cash Price $129.95 Large Selection of Waterbed Sheets.. .Mattresses... Comforters.. .Pillows... Chemicals... Lane Recliners...Sidex Dining Room Suites... Lehigh Bedrooms On The Floor Now... Large Selection of Living Room Suites... Early American... Contemporary Modern...Traditional...Pitt Groups... Sofa Beds... Dining Room Suites...Curios...Gun Cabinets Lights... Plant Stands...Desks...Etc. No Refunds... No Exchanges Cash & Carry Mastercard . Visa... Choice Financing Can Be Arranged.. Not Responsible For Typographical Errors LANCASTER YORK 3019 Hempland Rd 4585 West Market St Lancaster, PA York, PA 717397-6241 717-792-3502 CLOSED SUNDAYS STARTING MAY sth Will Re-Open Sundays Starting Oct 6th . You’ve Read The Ads - Buy (1) Recliner At $499.00 And Up And They Give You One Free. This Ad Will Mate Their's look sidk! now $45.00 HURRICANE LAMPS With N ite Lite 28 In. High, Decorative Clear & Color Reg. Ret. Price $249.95 m CZpr.ce $49.95 r | |rrl 500 SINGLE BEDS Headboard, Footboard, Rails, Foam Mattress Solid Pine, Maple, Complete Beds Range From $349.95 to $449.95 (20 OUR CASH PRICE $69.95 Per Customer) Also, Double Beds, Solid Cherry & Hardrock Maple, Matt k Platform Reg. Ret. $569.95 OtIR CASH PRICE $149.95 OUR CASH *9OO price u.uD $35.00 Cash Price Matching Pair of Lamps and Shade .. Cash Price $22.00 to $25.00 . Cash Price $49.95 to $529.95 Cash Price $299.95 & $289.95 Cash Price $269.00 Cash Price $45.00 Cash Price $59.00 Cash Price $119.95 Cash Price $39.95 CQIUMIIA AVI lIAWCUCHII ♦-UNCASm »| >Q rAucirr fONtiisiowN ciniiivuii •=§" j) ™ CARLISLE 1880 Harrisburg Pike Carlisle. PA 717-249-5718 (Carlisle Pike) UNCUM MIIOHt McO**«Wi HIMfIAND 13 >1 >0 a farm wife -And other"" Joyce Bnpp Ground beef sizzled in a skillet and the macaroni I had just dumped into boiling water was starting to bubble. Shortly the troops would file in for lunch on this busy spring Saturday. Then the stove light died and the kitchen turned shadowy in the cover of the maples around the house. A quick check of other electrical appliances and circuits confirmed my dread; the elec tricity had gone off. This was the second time in a week, a really unusual happening for our cooperative’s electrical service. After waiting a few minutes, hoping the lights would magically brighten, I called the cooperative’s number, got a promise they’d be on the problem at once, and settled on sandwiches for lunch. Surely this wasn’t planned, but it all seemed fitting. For May has marked the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Rural Elec trification, truly a turning point in the revolution of modern agriculture. Two hours into the post-darkness hours of the thunderstorm-wrought first outtage, we were thirsty for drinks, wanted to wash up before going to bed, and were hankering to fill-up our hunger for the late night television news and weather reports. Reading by candlelight waa tolerable, but not something my eyes felt they wanted to do for any extended period of time. A collective sigh of relief went up when the house lit up and the refrigerator started to hum again. By mid-afternoon of the second outtage, I worried with a faint uneasiness because of the string of cows lounging in the pasture, but expecting to be milked in a just a few hours. But, a glance from the garden to the porch-where I'd turned on the light to see when the current was activated-showed that we were once again elec trified. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 25,1985-B5 Fifty years after the fact of rural electrification we have grown utterly dependent on the luxury-or necessity-of watts and volts. What a day of rejoicing it must have been the first time our grandparents hung an electric milker-primitive no doubt by today’s standards-on the family cow. And what a boon for con sumers as refrigerated tanks bacame the standard on dairy farms. Think of the release from housewife slavery to not have to polish soot-blackened lamps, or trim oily, greasy wicks, feed a smoking woodstove, or pound work-soiled heavy pants on a washboard. How marvelous it must liave seemed to have water gush from a faucet in the house at the turn of a spigot, rather than pump it with a crank mechanism outside on the back porch. Or to flush, in warmth, rather than shiver on a trip out to the little house at the end of the yard-especially before milking ona frozen January morning. Softies-that’s what we are, some might say. Suckled on the life giving milk of electricity, courtesy of far-sighted farmers who then saw the potential of an electrified agriculture. Pioneers they were, cajoling their occasionally reluctant neighbors to share equally in the coat of stringing lines to distant, lonely, outlying farmsteads which private firms refused to serve. Our progress today surely has its roots in the thin lines first strung by teams of horses and crews of sweaty, determined, rural men. True, I’ll admit to a tinge of guilt when I complain about a brief interruption that means I can’t finish cooking lunch or watch the evening news. But not guUty enough to even seriously consider ever giving up that blessed thin, elecrifying lifeline.