810-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 5,2001 Rembolds Prepare For MCC GAY BROWNLEE Somerset Co. Correspondent SALISBURY (Somerset Co.) Edgar Rembold says the red elm spiral lamp he will donate on July 20 and 21 to the Mennonite Central Committees TriState Re lief Sale at the Garrett County Fairgrounds at McHenry, Md., was made with 90 percent hand work. This was accomplished using wood rasps. Mennonite Central Committee is the relief and development arm of the North American Men nonite and Brethren in Christ churches. It is headquartered in Akron. About 45 relief sales con ducted annually in North Ameri can locations, channel 88 cents from every dollar to MCC. The funds are used for food, health, education, job creation, agricul ture, disabilities and peace-relat ed activities. Rembold’s wife, Alice, enjoys crocheting and keeping a portfo lio of her husband’s wood crafts since he retired 13 years ago from the Harbison-Walker Re fractories near Grantsville, Md. Her contribution to the TriState Relief Sale will be a delicate cro cheted baby afghan that she made. “I had given up crocheting for awhile. 1 lost interest, but then I picked it up again over the win ter,” she said. “I like to work with baby yarn, its soft,” she added. By giving 40 years of service to one employer, Rembold holds a job record few people in today’s mobile generation will ever achieve. ‘I don’t miss the work,” he said, “but 1 miss the fellows 1 .worked with.” So instead of making fire brick these days, at his leisure in the Savage Road shop, he accepts custom orders like the challenging armoire he is working on at present. “Anything you want, just give me a bit of a picture of it,” he said with confidence. Holding up a hand that is missing something at the finger tips, Rembold grins. “On the 21st of January I got too close to the saw. I knew it was more than a band aid would cover.” Alice drove him to the local hospital On the wood lathe is an unfinished spiral lamp Edgar Rembold of Salisbury is making with a wooden rasp. Ninety percent of the tedious work is done by hand. Edgar Rembold exhibits two spiral lamps similar to the one he is donating to the MCC TriState Relief Sale at Garrett County Fairgrounds in Maryland on July 20, 21. emergency room for treatment, but in a matter of days he was right back to work. At the outset of taking an order the one thing Rembold makes clear to customers is he won’t be coerced into setting deadlines. Deadlines and retire ment to his way of thinking are incompatible soul mates. He works for enjoyment and keeps out the stress. Ironically, the plant where he once worked for still relies on Rembold to build the charger boards that are necessary to move the clay in and out of the press. Occasionally, these must be replaced. The spiral lamp pattern origi nated in Germany, he said. Be yond a natural bent for wood- crafts, the necessary skills to perfect a spiral piece were re fined under an accomplished in structor. That was Alices late fa ther, a carpenter by trade and the builder of the heavy spiral floor lamp they having standing in their livingroom. Rembold also' builds spiral floor candle holders that have a 3-inch cup. The couple reported they ab sorbed a lot about the MCC relief sales when they decided to at tend two that were held else where. These were in Kidron, Ohio and in Harrisburg. “I helped to get the TriState Sale off the ground,” the wood crafter said with a twinkle in his eye, “but, I said I wouldn’t carry an office.” He will act as a runner, how ever, when things are hopping on sale Saturday, just to help the auctioneers. Rembold devotes much of his time to the very active Springs Historical Society which operates the Springs Farmers Market. This entity gets underway on Memorial Day weekend Satur day at 8 a.m., and is open every Saturday through September. Additionally, the first Friday and Saturday of every October, the Springs Historical Society holds the Springs Folk Festival to preserve the early arts and crafts of the Casselman Valley settlers. The 2001 TriState Relief Sale amid the panoramic mountains and lakes of western Pennsylva nia, western Maryland, and West Virginia is being held in the area for the third time. Tristate Relief Sale Alice Rembold of Salisbury will donate this baby af ghan to the MCC TriState Relief Sale. For effect in dis playing it she brought out a few dolls from her own child hood. The two-day extravaganza will MCC’s Brenda Wagner recently feature all new items in a Friday expressed an opinion that the evening silent auction, Saturday TriState Relief Sale’s advantage main auction, children’s auction, is that of being held in a location and the market place. thriving with tourism. A puppet show is planned for Her message told how Wag- The spiral lamp pattern originated in Ger many. Beyond a natural bent for woodcrafts, the necessary skills to perfect a spiral piece were refined under an accomplished instruc tor, Alice’s late father. Friday evening and dinner will be available. There will be numerous quilts, wall hangings, art work, hand crafted furniture and chests, rugs, first quality glass by Simon Pearce; P. Buckley Moss prints and pottery, vacation and week end packages for The Wisp, the Inn at Georgian Place, and Lau relville Mennonite Church Cen ter. Food attractions are Saturday pancake and sausage breakfast, followed by chicken barbecue at lunch, homemade ice cream, half-moon pies, apple dumplings and various specialties. The youngsters will tally coins for MCC from combined Penny Power projects that were held in churches, pack school kits and* health kits, and participate in ac tivities similar to those done by children in countries MCC serves. At the Springs Mennonite Church, (Somerset County) <. c ner’s MCC experience with a woman in a country of another culture, brought new meaning to the biblical account of the woman who touched the hem of Jesus’ garment and what his re sponse to her was. Garrett County Fairgrounds are very near the rippling waters of Deep Creek Lake, a popular four-season resort area that at tracts city dwellers from Pitts burgh, Washington, D.C. and Baltimore. The site is on Route 219 South in McHenry, Mary land, 13 miles south of Interstate 68 Exit 14A, 28 miles west of Cumberland, Maryland. Admis sion and parking to the sale are free. Campsites on the grounds are also available. For information including a listing of accommo dations call (814) 445-6945. Or write to TriState Relief Sale, P.O. Box 824, Grantsville, Md. 21536, or E-mail: soridge@wpia.net. •' ! '‘f’4s *!