Kitchen Kaper Tour Features Home, Food, Flowers EPHRATA (Lancaster Co.) The GFWC of Ephrata will spon sor its 16th Kitchen Kaper Tulip Tour on Monday, April 28, from 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Nine stops along the way of this year’s tour will feature kitch ens primarily and other areas of homes. Most of the locations will feature floral arrangements do nated by local florists and food samples prepared by local restau rants. • The tour begins at The Eich er Arts Center, Museum, and Shoppe, located along the Cocali co Creek in the Ephrata Park where tour tickets with brochure and map can be picked up. In ad dition, a rest area with rest rooms and refreshments are offered. Ephrata T.R.A.C.K. (Teens Re sponding To Adult Caring and Kindness) will have a table of crafts for sale. The Eicher Arts Center offers educational, artis tic, and cultural events free to the public. • The Boxwood Inn Bed and Breakfast. This building is locat ed at 1320 Diamond Street, Akron, a 1768 farm house boast ing a dining room with original built in china cabinets and two comer cabinets with handmade lattice woodwork. The living room shows a handmade wooden comer wall cabinet and mantle. Original hardwood floors and doors with original hardware have been preserved. Situated on three acres plus of peaceful countryside, the Box wood Inn offers solitude, hospi tality, and comfort. A 30-foot garden room overlooks a slate patio that leads to the gardens, a natural stream and an expansive landscape of holly, chestnut, wal nut, and willow trees. The owners, Greg and Betsy have renovated the MAINTENANCE FREE RAILINGS FOR PORCHES, DECKS OR BALCONIES We have the expertise to design & create a system just to fit your need. 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However, the ambiance of the 235-year-old property has been maintained. • Lynn Bames and Richard Smith are the proud owners of 114 Brickyard Circle, Ephrata, built on the site of the old Ephra ta Brickyard, once playground for children, hunters, and ducks. Lynn and Richard decided to re tire here exciting years of teach ing for the U.S. Department of Defense. They brought with them collections of antiques and arti facts from France, Austria, Ger many, England, and other loca tions. • The home of Roger and Lynne Kline, 650 Ridge View Drive, offers some of the very best views of Clay Township and Northern Lancaster County. The federal style construction has been remodeled in the past two years to compliment and open up a view both from within and out side. While each room has its own style, the spaciousness al lows for family unity room to room. The Klines are amateur gar deners, always trying new things flowers, plants, and garden vegetables as the yard matures. A water garden was added during the remodeling that affords relax ation from the sound of water flowing year round. • The Old Carriage House Shoppe, at 2425 West Main Street, Ephrata is a quaint coun try shop located on Rt. 322 in the village of Clay. The proprietor is Sherrie L. Miller. This 200-year-old lime and sandstone building features original wood beams, a walk-in stone fireplace and brick flooring. It offers cus tomers a unique shopping experi ence for floral creations, antiques, J 4 to New Image I was 50 pounds over weight and suffered from fibromyalgia i pain the maionty of the time I was taking steroids and four other medications, one of iy' I could hardly get out of bed and another gave me ulcers I began taking New Image t my family would make fun of me After a mon'h, I discovered I had lost eight pounds then it dawned on mej was feeling better, the depression and pain were gone In two icahons “I feel SUPERIFIC I ” Now, two years later I have lost 43 pounds and 30 inches r giving me a new life again Judy Swift -Mt Washington, KY Nil does not make any health claims. This is strictly personal testimonies of product users. N|l New Image Interniiiona l aC7 and unusual gifts. • The residence of Owen and Beulah White, 1131 Marilyn Ave nue in Ephrata, will be a delight to anyone who has but one bear in their own home. Beulah has 300 bears in her collection. • The Ephrata Church of the Nazarene along Rt. 322 west of Ephrata at 110 Durlach Road moved into its new location on Easter Sunday of 2001. The sanc tuary seats 750 in a building that houses both church and school (K thru 12). • Robert and Jan Johnson 11, Snavely Mill Road live in a house originally built in 1802, super seded only by the bam, a year earlier, where the Snavely’s lived until the house was constructed. The house is of stone with deep window sills and soft wooden floors. The entrance/dining area was once the kitchen and the present kitchen was once the gathering room. Two bedrooms are part of the original building. The present living room, added 30 years ago, was once a summer kitchen. The family room, laun dry, baths, and an upstairs bed room were added 14 years ago. Kitchen cupboards were crafted from planks of wood recovered from the original attic. This func tional house is cool in summer and kept warm in winter by a large stone fireplace. Situated on five acres of land, an original bank bam stands across from the old Snavely Mill. • James and Amy Artz, Mar tin Avenue, have a pleasant two story brick dwellingm where a number of antique items are found in the kitchen. A fully fin ished basement features a wide collection of fire fighting memo rabilia which was begun by James’ parents at his early age of two years. Included are more than one hundred miniature fire trucks and various patches. For reservations, call Mar ion Shook at (717) 733-7677 or Edith Graff at (717) 336-4719. Tickets are limited. Lebanon Dairy Princess Pre-Tea LEBANON (Lebanon Co.) Do you want to know what being a Dairy Princess, Dairy Maid, or LiT Miss is really about? Why not get the “Real” Toil Free -888- 788-5572 To Order Call or Write The Boxwood Inn is one of nine stops featured during the annual Kitchen Kaper Tour. Tickets are limited and should be ordered in advance for the opportunity to tour residences, sample food served by area restaurants, and view indoor and outdoor floral displays. Rooms-To-View Tour Benefits Historical Landmark BETHLEHEM (Lehigh Co.) Some of the Lehigh Valley’s most distinctive historic and contem porary homes will be open for a rare view of their furniture, an tiques, interior design, and land scaping as part of Historic Beth lehem Partnership’s (HBP) 11th annual Rooms to View house tour, Saturday April 26 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The nine houses on story from the 2002 Lebanon County Dairy Royalty? Come to the Lebanon County Dairy Prin cess Pre-Tea, Midway Church of the Brethren, Saturday, April 26, from 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Directions to the Midway Church of the Brethren: From Rt. 322, turn east on Evergreen Road (the road in front of the fairgrounds). At the first road on left, turn left, and immediately bear left. The red brick church is on the right. Any questions, con tact Alisha Risser, (717) 274-8707, or Sherry Bashore, (717) 865-3161. U..KH L Ei. L..N SC.., ING E_ hrat~,. .. 717*335- ~.. 717*27 -2. I*l i w fS EJ ft E (*' 5 ! Lancaster 1 Farming, Saturday, April t 2, 2003-B7' ra w ra w c? 0 fi 5 the tour are located in Bethle hem, Fountain Hill and the Sau con Valley. Tickets for the house tour, if ordered in advance, are $2O for the general public and $l5 for members of HBP. All tickets are $25 if purchased the day of the tour. A boxed lunch is available for $l2 if ordered by April 18. Preceding the tour, on Friday, April 2S from 6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m. will be a preview evening, cock tails and hors d’ouevres at an ex traordinary farmhouse estate. Tickets for the preview evening are $75 apiece and include the tour the next day. Proceeds of the tour benefit the preservation and educational work of Historic Bethlehem Part nership. To order tickets in advance or for more information, call (610) 882-0450, ext. 10. Tickets may also be purchased at the Moravi an Museum, 66 W. Church Street, the Kemerer Museum of Decorative Arts, 427 N. New Street and the 1810 Goundie House, 501 Main Street between noon and 4 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday. Tickets may be purchased the day of the tour at the Moravian Museum, 66 W. Church Street, Bethlehem.