82-Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, December 23, 1995 LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff COATSVILLE (Chester Co.) When Paul Sands purchased a 280-acre farm in a secluded part of Chester County in 1953, he said that his mother-in-law almost dis owned him. She was dismayed that her daughter would live in the delapi dated farmhouse where chickens had once roosted. Several years later. Sands con sidered relocating. “And my wuihcr-in-law almost disowned me again. She couldn’t understand why I would sell such a nice place after all the work we put into it.” Sands recalls, “Those first years in farming, we really had to struggle. Things in (he house just had to wait because we needed things to make the farm run.” Little by little, the house was restored. Underneath the crumbling plas ter and layers of blackened soot, the Sands discovered beautiful sandstone and three fireplaces. Partitions were tom out, walls erected, new windows installed, and even the beams replaced. “We did everything first class when we did it even if it was slow in getting done,” Paul reported. The lovely stone house sits on top a hillside surrounded by fields and woodland. The secret to success in terming Is paying attention to detail. Business is very cruel and unforgiving If you don’t do it right,” said Sands who calls himself a calculator man. “The calculator doesn’t lie,” he said of his wariness to not take another person’s word for the profit that can be made on contract and bids. i iS