UNCLAIMED FREIGHT CO. & LIQUIDATION SALES, INC. STORE HOURS: LANCASTER YORK CARLISLE Mon. thru Fri. 3019 Hempland Rd 4585 West Market St 1880 Harrisburg Pike 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Lancaster, PA York, PA Carlisle, PA Saturday 9 am. to 5 p.m. 717-397-6241 717-792-3502 717-249-5718 CLOSED JULY 4th (Carlisle Pike) 3 PC. LIVING ROOM SUITE I LIBRARY AND DESK CHAIRS SOFA, LOVESEAT & RECLINER L_.. Oak And Maple Trailer Load! Wood: Reg. Ret. $109.95 cash * I 1 Reg. Ret. $129.95 5 PIECE PINING RO °M sujTES~n 30 OUR'CASH 0-1 .q oc Hardwood. OCRCASH A- fiQ PRICE *149.95 Reg. Ret. $639.95 PRICE $409.95 _ 3 PC. END TABLE SETS |gjE|»a 100 SWIVEL ROCKERS Big Sri! 10 Different Colors Solid Pine Reg. Ret. $369.95 W/Fomuca ipPijjßilpffij OUR 411 ft n . Reg. Ret. $299.95 CASH PRICE $119.95 OUR CASH PRICE $98.95 Cocktail & (2) End Tables l|L 1,250 LANE RECLINERS BUNK BEDSw/Safety Rails, Ladders Liquidating for manufacturer Refused andßunkies. from dealers and cancellations ®SLr— Also Breaks Down To ilk tm •KSS™' Re g . IWj _ RETAIL OUR CASH PRICE Bl| Reg. Ret. $600.00 to $175.00 $1,500.00 U T jrA 6 PC. PINE GROUPS With Party Ottoman In Antron Nylon sps|pr Reg. Ret. $1099.95 OUR aqaa a»> ■ CASH PRICE...S/C9».»0 Full Size Matching pair of lamps and shades (Almost Identical) $35 CASH PRICE 3Pc END TARLE SETS Cocktail with (2) End Tables CENTERS OUR CASH PRICE $69.95 Kt •~mi —“gr g=hrT=> 5 DRAWER CHESTS 4 DRAWER CHESTS . - 'la : - ~ v T , .. W IQI Reg. Ret. $159.95 " Reg. Ret. $209.95 OUR CASH PRICE OUR CASH PRICE gj||g $65.95 IS $59.95 60 - 4 pc. Garden sets by Shear Magic... Reg. Ret. $11.95 69 - EKCO 5 pc. Cutlery Sets... Reg. Ret. $29.95 70 - TOTES UMBRELLAS...Reg. Ret. $lB.OO to $20.00 147 - TIMEX ANALOG ALARM CLOCKS...Reg. Ret. $7.95 24 - TIMEX DIGITAL ALARM CLOCKS...Reg. Ret. $24.00 22 - MAGNAVOX Clock Radios... Reg. Ret. $39.95 71 - MAGNAVOX Clock Radios... Reg. Ret. $39.95 43-ALADDINS (1) Quart thermos with strap... Reg. Ret. $6.95 174 - ALL WEATHER Floating LANTERNS...with batteries... Reg. Ret. $10.95 3 Pc. End Table Set - Pine Trestle Bases... Reg. Ret. $299.95 GARDEN HOSES: 5/B”xsoFt l/2”xsoFt 5/8”x75 Ft l/2”x2sFt Spalding Kro-Flite Golf 8a115...1 Dozen 50 -19” Color TV’s...Reg. Ret. $509.95 10-13” Color TV’s...Reg. Ret. $469.95 19” COLOR REMOTE TV. ..Reg. Ret. $629.95 No Refunds...No Exchanges... Cash 8c Carry...DUE TO A RASH OF BAD CHECKS WE NOW ONLY ACCEPT, VISA, CHOICE, MASTERCARD 8c DISCOVERY, OR CASH, CERTIFIED CHECKS, MONEY ORDERS, CASHIERS CHECKS!! Due to the FACT THAT WE SAVE THE BUYER SO MUCH MONEY WE CAN NOT AFFORD THESE LOSSES!! ■HHMHiHNot Responsible For Typographical Errors $98.95 COIUMIIA AVI $6.50 $5.50 $9.95 ..$3.50 .. $7.50 $209.95 $169.00 $259.95 +-UNCASTII PAIK CITY lOMIUITOWN IXIf l| Unrf'i'ilH I 1 JJ c II OUR CASH PRICE 53.00 53.00 55.00 53.00 53.00 slo.oo slo.oo 53.00 54.00 unoaußß] MiIGNICOI lIAffK IKjHtl McD«*«Ui himfianTo wist IT 10 If JO CIN'UVUit 1 IXII \VJ LWJ On being a farm wife -And other hazards Joyce Bnpp Greenery. Thick. Tangled. Here and there, patches of feathery fem bask in dappled sunlight. At other spots, briars cluster in nearly impenetrable, fortressed thickets, ringed by moats of poison ivy and guarded by fierce front lines of jagged thorns. Vines weave unseen traps, camouflaging logs fallen at ran dom across the heavily-shaded woodland floor. Crackling sounds echo in the distance. Squinting to see through the gnats and tangled undergrowth, we check one another’s locations. A navy tee shirt moves slightly, way off to my left, but to the right the obscure patch of white has vanished. A guerilla jungle army of sorts, we are. Fifteen or so of us, stalking this hundred-acre battleground of blackberry brambles and land mines of matted grape vines. Hasitly assembled, our neigh borhood brigade mustered this first afternoon of summer to meet a common enemy in alien territory; 27 Charolais feeder steers barely off the rolling beef country of Virginia. Semi-wild, skittish as deer, they flattened the owner’s gate to roam at large over a wide expanse of hay and com fields, and the undergrown woodlands of June. After escaping the evening before, they have hours of freedom ahead of us. A couple tame heifers have been tied in their home bam as “bait,” and the blue-jean-clad batallion, wooded-branch weapons in hand, are on the move. Flanking the outer edge is our eldest on horseback. We remainding foot soldiers are hoofing it across the wooded rural ridge. The spirit of country neigh borliness invades these proceedings. Most sweaty faces are familiar ones. I remember how the owners of the escapees were fast on the scene last fall, after a truckload of our com overturned on a rural road. Their front end loaders scooped up the golden mess, and dumped in onto the waiting replacement Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 2t. 19SS-B5 ' * Au%i JHhyv jm truck. That truck, too, belonged to another face in our woodland army. Our neighbors are one of the nicest benefits of our rural area. An hour of steady searching the heavy woods finally brings shouts of a find: four steers. (Good grief, where are the rest??) About eight of us jog uphill through a kneehigh cornfield, hoping to turn the four in their escape path from brushy undergrowth, out through a just harvested hayfield, and toward home. Scared, confused, and headed back for woodland cover, these fleet-footed-fellows make fools of us pursuers. They easily out distance us, fly directly past the startled horseperson, green vines dangling from their shaggy heads, and disappear into the woods from which we have just emerged. “Geez, they weren’t even in second gear,” wryly observes one panting posse member. We have succeeded only in further splitting one more steer away from the pack of four. Their owner calls of the chase, and we all scatter for home in frustration, having been precious little help save maybe for moral support. Twenty-four hours later, eleven of the escapees have been corralled. Ten cozied up to a beef herd a whole valley and ridge away. One straggler (our split off? ) jumped a fence to take refuge with a herd close to the wooded ridge we’d searched. And 48 hours later, we were astonished when six trotted up to the barn during milking with our heifer herd. A quick check of the far meadow turned up five more, which were baited back to the barn again with heifers. As I write this, five of these sturdy fellows remain at large. We can only hope that, within one more day, our neighborhood ad venture will have ended. But the farmer figures it marks a new trend for this farmstead. Indeed, the concept of animals breaking INTO our pastures is almost more than the mind can handle.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers