Conestoga Celebrates (Continued from Pag* B 4) area remained a remote, isolated lar resort area was replaced by nouby Safe Harbor viUage. The town. thriving resorts in other areas, rolling mill and foundiy moved Although a rail was built to run Technology brought a revival of out After the ferry was wiped out, between Columbia and Atglen, it the town’s growth in 1930 when no river crossing existed and the failed to revive the area. The popu- the power plant was erected at Safe Always fascinated with the history of the Conestoga area, Tom Grassel recalled many stories he had heard and contacted sources who were able to help compile a factual history. UnCUWYIED FREIGHT COl" iUQUIMTIOII S4LES!MSi | 4 DRAWER CHE: Pine Finish and Brass Hardware • Reg Ret. $149 95 ' CASH PRICE* WITH COUPON , $6995 *39.04 r (CANTED) FRONT CURIO i Oak or Cherry Finish - Your Choice . - 5 Glass Shelves I - Two Doors I • Lighted Interior 1 - Mirrored Back I Reg. Retail $599.95 | With Coupon $159.88 | Volume Buy | [” BUNK BEDS « ~\ I Choose From Sculptured or WmiKU — f] > I w/Boskcase Headboard. BrT_ ) HQ I Includes Ladder and safety . *-t J’ ! rails, Bedding Sold ( rM . I Separately, Breaks Down To ——i.J i I Twin Size fife-, t L'Q) 1 I Reg. Retail $599.95 j ■ Cash Price ' I 1 $209,95 _ _ _#2j « “7““1 I GLIDER ROCKER 1 , ] I I | Available In Blue, Beige, " i lijj | Qreen \jJj Reg. Retail $149.95 0/ With Coupon I | $98.04 WT V | L =========== lZ^ ==== #2j |IIOME COMPUTER "! CENTER CLOSEOUT Reg. Retail $1,329.90 I White Washesd Oak Finish I j With Coupon 1 $299.95 Wholesale/Must Goll I | r METAL FUTON~! Whlte/Green/Black I I\f with 8" Futon Mattress I detail $639.95 u%lFjs\Cash Price I | $259.95 | | 4jJ With Coupon $159.95 I J?J r ” SECTIONAL H I SLEEPER I py -' T 7 v j Featuring a Loveseat j ! | w/Slde-By-Side | * ' tftfj ßecllners and Center | I 'v -'I Console Plus Sofa i I w/Hide-a-Bed I I Reg. Retail $2389.95 ‘ I I Our Cash Price $1049.95 I With_Coue?!LiBB9 .04_ _ _^ 2 _J I 5 DRAWER CHEST , I Maple Finish I- I . I Reg. Price: $399.95 I i , Cash Price: I—'l 1 i $59.95 ; 1 I Closeout ' | [sTlcedt^ I CIOS) 130”X60" Solid Oak J Reg. Price $889.95 \Z *249 i ““--n | RECLINER CLOSEOUT U f7j\ I Available In Four Colors / / ' I Reg. Retail $689.95 ST\f / 17 / I | Our Cash Price $299.95 | IZ» •259.95V5ff1/'J i _±r__l 2 j i FUTON SOFA & CHAIR CLOSEOUT i I White, Green, Black Comes w/8" Futon Mattress & I Chair Mattress . Reg. Retail $989.95 Our Low Price $479.95 I Wa are a lour atora chain not affiliated with any other atorea. r Sloraa in LANCASTER • YORK • CARLISLE. PA • ELKTON. MD LANCASTER STORE HOURS Mon -Frl *-8 •Sat M• Sun Noon-S • No Rotunds ■■■* No Exchangee For purchssos with a cheek, bring FINANCING re No Exchangee drlvors liesnso and phono numbers AVAILABLE ■■ Cash A Cany . Not r—oonalMs lor twnoareohica arrorm W» re—rva the dtfil lo subepaite Jft items S BIG SELECTION OP WOOD ft METAL BUNK BEDS 3019 Hempland Road, Lancaster 397-6241 / s. ;/ * Lancaster Farming, Saturday. November 7, 1998-Bf Harbor. The village of Conestoga served as a place where transits seeking to earn a few. extra pennies by working cm the railroad could find boarding. Scotch and Irish immigrants were employed in the area and they helped establish St. Mary’s Catholic Church in the mainly Pennsylvania German settlement. Although the chinch is long gone, many of the artifacts were put into storage and uncovered when Gras sel, recalling stories told to him, remembered that artifacts were stored in a barn in the area and con vinced the present-day owners to donate them to the Historical Society. “The family who lived on the farm didn’t even know the things were stored there. We found some pew doors, benches, and windows under six feet of dirt,” Grassel said. A small indoor section of the church was erected in the museum. -jrylog „ sparsely furnished as a log cabin would have been in that era,, but the furnishings are reproductions of that century. ©■■ ■■ IHi Several businesses such as Safe Harbor Dam and Turkey Hill Dair ies contributed display items. Art work and a model of the locks and canals are an example of how some of the history of the era is portray ed. A section of the museum includes an agriculture display with farm tools, butchering items, and a typical farmhouse parlor. “We aren’t purists,” Hoak said. “We show not only the past but also the present that will become part of the past.” The displays cover several gen erations and a farmhouse parlor is typical of several generations liv ing in the same home and each having some of their own items in use. The Historical Society isn’t fin ished yet. Plans are being finalized to move a blacksmith shop, located about two miles away, to the erounds.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers