814-Umcaster Farming, Saturday, August 1, 1992 Couple Recall Public Wedding At The Fair Sharon B. Schuster Maryland Correspondent UNION BRIDGE, Md. Fifty-three years ago, on August 23, 1939, Frances Bauerline became the bride of Frank Fogle of Union Bridge, Maryland. Now, at age 71, Mrs. Fogle said that, like many brides, she had the wed ding day jitters. Understandably, Frances Fogle had more to be nervous about than most brides. Approximately 3,000 people witnessed the event at their public wedding at the Carroll County Fair. “I saw all the people when I got into the limousine,” she recalled. “It didn’t make any difference to me,” said her husband, Frank Fogle. “The more the better. There were about 6,000 people on the grounds that evening,” he added. How the couple came to be married at the fairgrounds is an interesting story. “We had been going together for about a year and a half,” explained Mr. Fogle. I was at her home one evening when I saw this ad in the paper:” Attention: Young Couples in Carroll County. Would you like to have a pretty wedding Poultry Queens LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) Two queens instead of one will be selected at the annual Lancaster County Poultry Queen banquet on August 7. One will be crowned as the Pennsylvania Poultry Queen and another as the Lancaster Coun ty Poultry Queen. Thrte contestants are competing for the honor of promoting the poultry industry. It is a bit confus ing, but two of the contestants are named Melissa D. Yoder. The other contestant is Mary Sauder. The two 17-year-old Melissas Preparing for the Lancaster County Poultry Queen Banquet are, from left, Melissa Darlene Yoder, contestant; Lancaster County Poultry Queen Michele High, Alternate Lancaster County Poultry Queen Marlene Enck, and Melissa Dawn Yoder, contestant. Another contestant, Mary Sauder, is missing from the picture. on Wednesday, Aug. 23, 1939, at the Carroll County Fair at Taneytown? If so, con tact Mrs. T. B. Cash, West minster or George E. Dodrer, Taneytown for information. “I showed [animals at the fair] all my life. I said we might as well get married there,” he mused. The economy was not good at the time, according to Mr. Fogle, and he said that (hey saw this as a way to “get married, for free.” They applied for the public wedding and all of the free ser vices that went with it free for mal wear for the bridal party, flowers, hair styling, a limousine and cash. “That’s the only free haircut I ever had,” said Mr. Fogle with a chuckle. The young couple competed with about 16 other couples who dreamed of the same grand wed ding at the Carroll County Fair. At the time, the site of the fair was in Taneytown where the Taneytown Shopping Center now stands. It was the 42nd annual fair in the county, and the Public Wedding was an eagerly anticipated annual event. “I think we were chosen did not know each other until they met at a get-together sponsored by the Poultry Association to prepare the contestants for the pageant. Melissa Dawn Yoder is the daughter of Vernon and Barb Yod er of Christiana. She works part time on her parents’ ISO acre farm where they raise 20,000 broilers, SO pigs, 120 steers, a dog, and “1800” cats. She also works part time at Yoder’s Country Market in New Holland. Melissa will be a senior at Lan- because we would draw a good crowd, Frances being from West minster and myself from Union Bridge,” he surmised. The names of the chosen couple were kept a secret from the public until that Wednesday evening at 8 p.m. when Miss Frances Bauerline stepped onto the grandstand and stood by the side of her 22-year old husband-to-be, Frank Fogle. “It was almost like you were in church,” recalled Mr. Fogle. “They stopped all the rides. It was surprising how you could get 3,000 people to quiet down, he observed. “They didn’t want to miss anything,” said Mrs. Fogle. The Fogles’ wedding was the first “top hat, white tie and tails affair” at the fair according to a report that was picked up by the Associated Press. Another article reported that the bride, “a charm ing brunette, wore a gown of while taffeta, with puffed sleeves and a short bodice, and a long, attached train. Her tulle veil was also full length and was caught with a transparent white velvet bow. She carried a colonial arrangement of white roses and (Turn to (Page BIS) To Be Crowned August 7 caster Mennonite High School in the fall. She is a member of the Campus Chorale and is president of her church’s youth group. She has a brother and a sister who are married. Melissa Dailene Yoder is the .daughter of Richard and Sherry Yoder of Mount Joy. She has two married sisters. In the fail, Melissa will be a senior at Lancaster Catholic High School where she plays softball and runs cross country. During the Frank and Francis Fogle were married at the Carroll County Fair in Maryland In 1939. summer, she works as a waitress at the Martin House Restaurant. Melissa’s mother works for Wenger Feeds, which makes Melissa eligible jo compete for the Poultry Queen title. Mary Sander is the daughter of Glen and Joyce Sauder of Neffsvil le and has one brother. Glen is co owner of Sauder’s Eggs of Lititz where Mary had worked part time for two years. Nineteen-year-old Mary is a recent graduate of Lancaster Men nonite High. She is a waitress at Lancaster Airport Restaurant and is majoring in early childhood edu cation at Lancaster Community College. Mary enjoys riding horses (she previoused showed) and water skiing. The banquet program includes a presentation skit by each contes tant and impromptu questioning. The contestants are judged on appearance, speaking ability, poise, personality, industry know ledge, achievements, and availa bility to make appearances. Tickets for the banquet on Fri day, August 7, which starts at 6:30 p.m. at the Lancaster Farm and Home Center, are $l2. For tickets, call Guy Martin (717) 626-2074 or (717) 397-7820. 1