Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 11, 1997, Image 51

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    Contestants Demonstrate Poise
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Rebecca Mitchell shows her self-made ful
llned black evening dress with hand-
Itted lace yoke, while she leads her Scot
h Blackface ewe.
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SEE YOUR DEALER TODAY!
MANOR MOTORS
On Rte 553
Penn Run. Pa. 15765
412-254-4753
HERNLEY'S FARM
EQUIP., INC.
Elizabethtown. Pa
717-367-8867
Great New Ideas.
New Style
Low profile styling
lot increased
visibility
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faOl
hqi
r)if
aIIi
ies
;ooled
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SANDY LAKE
IMPLEMENT
Sandy Lake, Pa
412-376-2489 .
NICHOLS FARM EQUIP
Bloomsburg, Pa.
717-784-7731
B. EQUIP, INC.
Waynesboro, Pa
717-762-3193
Jamie Fought shows her handmade jack
et, skirt and beret, while leading a yearling
Hampshire ewe wearing a matching scarf.
New Transmission
4 speed pnwershift
transmission with
optional creeper
B H M FARM EQUIP.
INC
Annville, Pa
717-867-2211
GRUMELLI
FARM SERVICE
Quarryville, Pa.
717-786-7318
New Controls
Totally new design with
Ultra i omfort idle eat)
AGCO
lAQCO I I ALLIS I
C.J. WONSIDLER
BROS
Quakertown, Pa
215-536-7523
New Tripoli, Pa
215-767-7611
Oley, Pa.
215-987-6257
Kelsey Bowman wears a red plaid skirt and vest with
matching tarn and red socks, while her Lincoln yearling ewe
sports a scarf and tarn that also match her outfit.
(Continued from Page B 8)
Macarenas said that she has
been participating in lead line con
tests at the Ohio State Fair for 13
years, as well as in her county fair,
and the North American Livestock
Exposition in Louisville, Ky. She
has been involved in a number of
4-H activities and has had projects
in cooking, sewing, sheep breed
ing, saddle horse and junior
fairboard.
In second place in the intermedi
ate division was Jamie Fought, 13,
of Carlisle, who led a Hampshire
ewe and modeled her self-made
hVIr iulic System
Do mom *ork
in k time
HOLTRY’S EQUIPMENT
Roxbury, Pa.
717-532-7261
Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 11, -1997-Bii
outfit of a jacket, skirt and beret
made from 100-percent wool.
The jacket was hip-length,
black, semi-fitted and lined, with
princess seams and coordinated
collar and buttons. The flared skirt
was also lined and made from
black and dark magenta checked
wool with a matching beret. The
lamb wore a matching scarf.
Fought is a four-year member of
the Cumberland County 4-H
Livestock Club, and she owns and
shows Hampshires, Dorsets, and
market lambs. Recently, the Bth
grade student started a flock of
Southdown sheep.
Third place in the intermediate division was
Cassandra Schaeffer, 15, of Myerstown, who led a
Jacob yearling ewe.
Cassandra wore a two-piece black, grey and
white plaid 85-precent wool outfit.
Her straight skirt was fully lined with slits on
the sides, a waistband with beltloops. A fully lined
form-fitted vest with silver buttons and side tabs.
She also wore a white blouse and tights. She wore
black patent leather loafers and a black belt. She
also had a 100-percent grey wool hat with a black
band.
She is a member of the Lebanon County 4-H
Sheep Club and the county livestock judging
team.
Junior Division
In the junior division, the winner was Laura
Hunter, 9, of Cassadaga, N.Y., who modeled a
100-percent wool, self-made outfit that included
an imperial blue vest with gold buttons, a fully
lined wrap-around skirt of matching plaid, match
ing woolen head band, book bag, white blouse and
knee highs.
She led a Dorset ewe outfitted with a matching
woolen halter cover, that she has been showing for
two years. She has been showing Dorset sheep at
KILE for four years, as well as at Northeast reg
ional and All-American shows.
In second place, Kelsey Bowman, 10, of Dru
more, wore a 100-percent wool red plaid skirt and
vest with a matching tarn and red socks. She lead a
Lincoln ewe outfitted with a matching scarf and
tarn.
A home-schooled fifth grade student, she is a
second-year member of the Lancaster County
Woolies Sheep Club, and she also belongs to the
county’s Rough Riders Horse and Pony Club, and
Lancaster Production Club. She has shown a
market lamb and breeding ewe at area fairs this
year, and qualified for the stale 4-H horse show.
The third place wiftner in the junior division
was Emmalynn Little, 11, of Churchville, Md„
who led a Jacob yearling ewe.
Little’s self-made outfit was a 100-percent
plaid wool tailored jacket with buttons, and a
pleated skirt It had a velvet CQllar and cuffs. She
also wore a hat and a pin as accessories.
Treasurer of the Harford County 4-H Livestock
Club and a member of the county livestock judg
ing team, she raises 35 Jacob, Cots wold and
Dorset sheep and shows them throughout the