■ --- _ HP" »juT § /.i b M| Ulnll Vol. 38 No. 46 Jennifer Grimes Reigns Jennifer Grimes from Berks County competed with 35 other county dairy princesses to win the Pennsylvsnis crown st the snnusl Harrisburg pageant. See page B 2 for the pageant story by Lou Ann Good, staff writer. Jay Hess with tha champion FFA market steer. Hess Wins Two Lampeter Livestock Shows EVERETT NEWSWANGER Managing Editor LAMPETER (Lancaster Co.) — FFA and 4-H beef and hog judging were part of the Lampeter Com munity Fair on Wednesday. In both the FFA hog and FFA 016192 1299 PERIODICALS DIVISION ' PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY , W 209 PATTEE LIBRARY UNIVERSITY PARK PA i6f.o._--l*o_ 60t Per Copy steer show. Jay Hess. Penn Manor FFA member, was the winner. In the afternoon 66-head hog show, Hess had the grand champion with a heavyweight crossbred gilt. In the evening steer show, Hess had (TUrn to Pago A3l) Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, September 25, 1993 Barbara Relslnger holds tha halter of th# grand champion of the Pennsylvania Hols tein Fall Championship Show, Miss Magic Flair, which also Is the 1993 Keystone 3-Year-Old Futurity class winner. Marcl Hamlsh, state alternate dairy princess, pre sents the rosette, while, on the left, Amy Mearkle, alternate princess, and Jennifer Grimes, state dairy princess, hold the banner declaring the cow grand champion. VERNON ACHENBACH, JR. Lancaster Farming Staff HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) A 3-year-old Holstein owned by Barbara Reisinger and Heidi Miller, of Carlisle not only won the Ketystone 3-year-old Futurity and $1,189.22, but was also named grand champion of the state Holstein Fall Championship show. - Miss Magic Flair, a daughter of Romandale Magic, was first in the futurity class, besting an entry from Penn Gate Farm, of Littles town, in Adams County, Penn Gate Mark Abbey, and then went on to outperform the best of the regular senior class winners to take Bruc* Snyder, right, swept the supreme champion honors, picking up champion ram and ewe on Monday at the Reading Fair. At left Is show Judge David Lytle. For story and results, see page A 26. Miss Magic Flair Wins Pa. Holstein Show, Futurity the senior and grand championships. The 3-year-old was also named best bred and owned of the show. And though their entries didn’t take the championship title, the cattle exhibited by Penn-Gate Farms were strong enough to win the family farm both the show’s premier breeder and premier exhi bitor banners. The state show is the culmina tion of the year’s officially sanc tioned state Holstein shows. It is held annually at Harrisburg during' All-American Dairy Show Week, which features national, regional and state dairy shows for all six" recognized dairy breeds. FOur Sections Judge for Tuesday’s show was James Burdette, of Mercersburg, who is a well-known Holstein breeder and who has shown and won with his Windy-Knoll View prefix catde, including a national champion, Windy-Knoll View Ultimate Pala. Though it is Burdette’s first judging of the Pennsyvania Fall Championship, he has been a judge for other states’ Hosltein shows. According to statistics pro vided, Miss Magic Flair also has been milking well for the Reisinger-Miller partnership, recording 25,408 pounds of milk at (Turn to Page A2O) Sarah Boyd holds tha trophy to hor grand champion hog on Tuaaday night ,at the Ephrata Fair. Her brother Gerald holds the ribbon. For story and results, see page A 23. $19.75 Per Year