Feedsack Expert, Quilt Historian To Appear At Bird-in-Hand BIRD-IN-HAND (Lancaster Co.) “For many women with a rural background, looking at the feedsack exhibit and historical quilts at the Hometowne Heritage Days will be a trip down memory lane. Feedsacks played an inte gral role in the fabrics of our his tory as well as in the history of fabric. In fact, they clothed Americans in the early 1900 s!” The quote is from Jane Clark Stapel, a feedsack expert known as the Bag Lady. Stapel, joined by fabric identification expert and quilt historian Gloria Hall, will kick off the Bird-in-Hand Hometowne Heritage Days Cele bration during the grand opening ceremony on Sept. 7 at 10 a.m. Joining these “material girls” will be members of the Feedsack Club, the fourth grade class at Hinkletown Mennonite Elemen tary School, and residents from the Landis Home as they “tie off’ the final panels in an “Interna tional Feedsack Quilt.” The International Feedsack Quilt, with a theme of “Reaching Into the Past to Preserve the Fu ture,” is being made exclusively for a special intergenerational and educational project in coop eration with the Hinkletown Mennonite Elementary and the Landis Home. The commemora tive quilt, created from 80 feed sack swatches donated from around the world that are signed with the name and location and date of all participants, will be displayed throughout Home towne Heritage Days then auc tioned off via the Website www.members.aol.com/ bagladylll. The auction will close at the April 2002 Feedsack Club Annual Conference. The winner wi|l receive the quilt as well as a certificate of authentici- Maintenance Free Railings For Porches, Decks or Balconies We have the expertise to design & create a system just to fit your need. Any Size, Different Styles vinyl railing systems offer low maintenance and durability. • No Rust • Smooth Surfaces Available in • No Paint • Impact Resistant • White •No Scraping • tasting Beauty • Ivory •UV Stabilized • Non-Fading Colors • Gray 717-354-0524 “S..on "•* « Do You Suffer From Fibromyalgia? 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To view the progress of the quilt as it is being created, visit the Website at www.members.aol.com/ bagladylll/kidsblockpro jecthtml. According to Heritage Days Planning Committee Chairman John Smucker, Stapel and Hall will share the history of fabrics. Stapel will bring her trunk show a traveling exhibit with color ful dresses, aprons, quilts and bonnets all created from feed sacks and will recount humor ous anecdotes of her association with feedsacks. Hall, who will provide quilt appraisals for a nominal fee, will bring a few of her favorite quilts. Appraisals, available both written or oral, are by appointment only. “The importance of feedsacks and quilts in our American Heri tage complements the theme of this year’s Hometowne Heritage Days, “Renewing Old Memories and Creating New,” said Smuck er.” With that theme in mind, Bird-in-Hand representative Nancy Hess, a feedsack collector herself, has worked with Harriet Douples fourth grade class and the Landis Home to create The Grandpal Project, an intergenerational/educational service project. The students, who will meet their grandpal for the first time at the ceremony, will wear feedsack clothing and tie off the quilt, while the grand pals share memories. The chil dren will later write about the ex perience. Other projects completed by the students for the program will be on display for the weekend. With more than 800 members worldwide, the Feedsack Club is devoted to collecting and re- Nil does not make any health claims this is strictly personal testimonies of product users. Gerald & Margie Jones 75 Goodyear Rd Carlisle, PA 17013 Toll Free-888-788-5572 To Order Call or Write VINYL RAILING SYSTEMS J searching the fabric bags. Stapel publishes a bimonthly newsletter. Switches and Swatches, focusing on the collectible sacks and act ing as forum for members who want to buy, sell, and trade the feedsacks. She is currently work ing with Hess to accumulate sto ries for a future book. Visitors to Hometowne Heritage Days are encouraged to visit the feedsack booth and share tales for use in the book. Bird-in-Hand Hometowne Heritage Days will also feature local craftsmen and artisans, a Pennsylvania Dutch Food Fair with hands-on demonstrations of the traditional dishes, and a quilting bee. Special events scheduled for Maryland Extension Creates Forest/Wildlife Website WESTMINSTER, Md. Have you ever considered devel oping a forest stewardship plan, harvesting forest products, cre ating a riparian buffer, becoming a forest wildlife volunteer, taking a forestry correspondence course or managing your property for wildlife? Well, information about these and many other natural resource activities and topics can be found on a new University of Maryland Cooperative Extension “Forestry Sauer’s Herbal Cures Book Signing At Ephrata Cloister EPHRATA (Lancaster Co.) Colonial Americans seeking relief from aches and pains rarely turned to doctors. Most medical care was found in the home, or in the home garden to be more precise. Small remedy books offered advice on various herbs and their particular characteris tics that could provide ev erything from a soothing nerve tonic to hair dye. One of the most popular and influential of these works among the Pennsyl vania Germans was the seri al publication of German town printer Christopher Sauer. Now for the first the weekend are a free bluegrass concert with the Lykins Valley Bluegrass Band, on Friday at 6 p.m. and Saturday, the Eastern Lancaster County Sertoma Club 28th Annual Country Auction will start at 9 a.m. The Sertoma Club will also have a chicken bar becue on Friday, 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. and on Saturday, starting at 11 a.m. The club will serve breakfast on Saturday morning at 7 a.m. Other activities include a corn field maze, a petting zoo, a per forming pig act, horse-drawn wagon rides, and the second an nual Bird-in-Hand Open, played at the Waters Edge Mini Golf Course. The Bird-in-Hand Hometowne Heritage Days is organized by the and Wildlife Education” Web site: http://www. natural resources.umd.edu. Designed for forest and farm landowners, natural resource professionals, educators, public officials and environmentally concerned citizens, the site con tains a wealth of information on managing forest, wildlife and re lated water resources. Forestry and wildlife training opportuni ties for youth and adults; a for estry newsletter called Branching Out; a calendar of educational time in two centuries, the herbal advice offered to Sauer’s readers is available in a new English edi tion as Sauer’s Herbal Cures, translated and annotated by noted food historian William Woys Weaver. The Museum Store at Ephrata Cloister is spon soring a book signing by Weaver on Saturday, Sept. 8 from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Lancaster f • See pages 823-830 Bird-in-Hand Corporation and underwritten by Hometowne Heritage Bank. Other sponsors are Turkey Hill, Sauder’s Eggs, and WIOV. The event will be conducted in Bird-in-Hand on Rt. 340 (Old Philadelphia Pike), across from the Bird-in-Hand Family Inn. The festival is scheduled for Friday, Sept. 7, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturday, Sept. 8, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Rt. 340 in Bird in-Hand in Lancaster County. Sunday evening of festival week end will conclude with an old fashioned hymn sing at 7 p.m. For more information call (717) 768-8272 or visit the Web site at www.bird-in-hand.com/ events. events; and lists of state foresters, county extension offices and use ful publications...and more...are just a ‘point and click’ away. “The beauty of this Website is that it combines numerous re sources on a variety of forest- and wildlife-related topics in one place,” says Jonathan Kays, ex tension regional natural resources specialist. “Chances are, you’ll find a link to the information you’re looking for without having to conduct a time-consuming search in many different places.” Ephrata Cloister is located in Ephrata Borough, Lancaster County, on Route 322 at the in tersection with Route 272. The historic site is open Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from noon to S p.m. For more information call (717)733-6600.