Louisa County Fair 2025 Poultry Results

Poultry:

Champion Broiler- Jackson Mincks

Reserve Champion Broiler- Baylie Laymon

 

Best of Class Meat Production- Baylie Laymon

 

Best Class Egg Production Pen of Three- Olivia Buffington

 

Best of Class Egg Production- Olivia Buffington

 

Champion Home Laid Eggs- Olivia Buffington

 

Best of Class Ornamental Bantam Feathered Leg- Garrett Cooley

 

Best of Class Ornamental Bantam Clean Leg- Garrett Cooley

 

Best of Class Ornamental Standard Feathered Leg- Zoey Ehlers

 

Best of Class Ornamental Standard Clean Leg- Garrick Ball

 

Best Class of Ducks- Baylie Laymon

 

Best Class of Geese- Barrett Starkweather

 

Best Class of Turkey- Jonathan Warnstaff

 

Best of Class Pigeon- Averee Allison

 

Best of Class Other Poultry- Khayden Rees

 

Best of Show Poultry- Olivia Buffington

Reserve Best of Show Poultry- Garrett Cooley

 

Best of Class Pair- Olivia Buffington

 

Best of Class Costume- Owen Hayburn

 

Champion Open Showman- Garrett Cooley

 

Champion Senior Showman- Garrick Ball

 

Champion Intermediate Showman- Olivia Buffington

 

Champion Junior Showman- Zoey Ehlers

Louisa County Fair 2025 Sheep Show Results

Sheep:

Grand Champion Commercial Ewe- Cade Storm

Reserve Grand Champion Commercial Ewe- Remson Lents

 

3rd Overall Commerical Ewe- Madeleine Howell

 

4th Overall Commerical Ewe- Remsen Lents

 

5th Overall Commerical Ewe- Jake Milder

 

Champion Lightweight Madeleine Howell

Reserve Champion Lightweight- Mattilyn Jay

 

Champion Middleweight- Madeleine Howell

Reserve Champion Middleweight- Madeleine Howell

 

Champion Heavyweight- Hannah Anderson

Reserve Champion Heavyweight- Coralene Edwards

 

Champion White Breed Influence- Alanna Edwards

Reserve Champion Whtie Breed Influence- Cade Storm

 

Champion County Raised Lamb- Kamdyn Hahn

Reserve Champion County Raised Lamb- Jake Milder

 

Champion Carcass- Jake Milder

 

Champion Rate of Gain- Jake Milder

 

Grand Champion Market Lamb- Madeleine Howell

Reserve Champion Market Lamb- Hannah Anderson

 

3rd Overall Market Lamb- Madeleine Howell

 

4th Overall Market Lamb- Coralene Edwards

 

5th Overall Market Lamb- Madeleine Howell

Louisa County Fair 2025 Goat show results

Goat:

Champion Diary Goat- Kara Giese

Reserve Champion Diary Goat- Danielle Giese

 

Grand Champion Buck Kid- Lea Stweart

Reserve Grand Champion Buck Kid- Kalley Deese

 

Champion under 1 Year Breeding Doe- Cael Howell

Reserve Champion under 1 Breeding Doe- Hailey Wellington

 

Champion over 1 Year Breeding Doe- Tate Travis

Reserve Champion over 1 Year Breeding Doe- Eloise Keltner

 

Champion Breeding Doe Pair- Barrett Starkweather

Reserve Champion Breeding Doe Pair- Jase Howell

 

Grand Champion Breeding Doe- Cael Howell

Reserve Champion Breeding Doe- Hailey Wellington

3rd Overall Breeding Doe- Kamdyn Hahn

4th Overall Breeding Doe- Tate Travis

3rd Overall Breeding Doe- Eloise Keltner

 

Grand Champion Market Goat- Cael Howell

Overall Reserve Champion Market Goat- Kamdyn Hahn

3rd Overall Market Goat- Lucy Wellington

4th Overall Market Goat- Hailey Wellington

5th Overall Market Goat- Garrett Cooley

 

Champion Rate of Gain- Kamdyn Hahn

 

Champion Ultrasound Production Goat- Garrett Cooley

 

Champion Home Raised Goat- Hailey Wellington

 

Champion County Raised Goat- Tate Travis

 

Open Showman- Eloise Keltner

 

Senior Showman- Hailey Wellington

 

Junior Showman- Isabel Warnstaff

Brenda M. McDowell

Brenda M. McDowell

Brenda M. McDowell, 60, of Mt. Pleasant, died Tuesday, July 22, 2025 in the Emergency Room of Henry County Health Center.

Brenda Marie Keck was born December 1, 1964 in Mt. Pleasant, IA. She was the daughter of Larry Lester and Sharon Kay (Steward) Keck. She attended school in Morning Sun, IA. On August 21, 1982 in Mt. Pleasant, Brenda was united in marriage to Emmett Milton McDowell.

Brenda was a longtime homemaker. She had previously worked for Wal-Mart and in the Housekeeping Dept. of the Iris Motel and AmericInn in Mt. Pleasant. Her grandchildren were her greatest joy and loved to spend time with them.

Those thankful for sharing in Brenda’s Life include her husband of over 40 years, Emmett of Salem; 3 children – Tina McDowell of Mt. Pleasant, Justin McDowell and his fiancée Tori Moore of Kahoka, MO and Colton Keck and his wife Amanda of Mt. Pleasant; a sister – Shelby Kinney and her husband Paul of Mt. Pleasant, and 14 grandchildren.

Her parents – Larry Keck and Sharon Keck Vaughn, two sisters – Debra Volner and Kim Morris and a brother, Monte Keck, precede Brenda in death.

No services will be held per Brenda’s request. Cremation rites have been entrusted to the Kimzey Funeral Home, 213 North Main Street, Mount Pleasant.

Those considering an expression of sympathy may direct memorials to the family. Online condolences may be left at www.kimzeyfh.com

Darrell Eugene Schenk

Darrell Eugene Schenk, 89, of Winfield, died Tuesday, July 22, 2025 at Henry County Health Center, Mt. Pleasant.  He was born June 17, 1936 in Mt. Union to Carl and Francys Helphrey Schenk.  He was a 1954 graduate of Winfield High School and graduated Cum Laude from Iowa Wesleyan College.

Darrell married Carolyn Watkins in Pleasant Grove and they later divorced.  He taught junior high and high school science in area schools and retired from Mediapolis where he taught jr. high science and in his earlier years, he enjoyed coaching basketball.  He farmed his entire life and enjoyed ballroom dancing; watching high school and college sports; the stock market; talking politics; and traveling.  He loved reading about his genealogy and family history, and was a lifelong learner and educator.

Survivors include his children Michelle Bentler of Ft. Madison and Kelvin (Cay) Schenk of Albuquerque, New Mexico; grandchildren Kaitlyn (Matthew) Schmelzer, Isa and Alex Schenk; great-granddaughter Maeve Schmelzer; sister Mary Jane Robertson of Mediapolis; one niece, nephews and many cousins.  He was preceded in death by his parents and brother-in-law Ray Robertson.

Visitation for Mr. Schenk will begin at noon on Saturday, July 26, 2025 at Elliott Chapel, New London, with the family receiving friends from 3:00 -4:00 pm.  A graveside inurnment service will immediately follow in procession to Trinity Cemetery, rural Mt. Union with Pastor Nancy Sutherland officiating.  A light summer supper will be held at the New London Community Hall immediately following the burial.  Memorials have been established for the teachers at the Winfield Mt-Union School District and the Sunrise Terrace Activity Fund.  Online condolences may be left at www.elliottfuneralchapel.com.

Cade Storm Wins Grand Champion Breeding Commercial Ewe at Louisa County Fair

It was a hot day in the show ring at the Louisa County Fair, but that didn’t stop Cade Storm from earning top honors. Representing the Columbus City Wildcats 4-H Club, Cade was crowned Grand Champion in the Breeding Commercial Ewe division.

 

Cade is the son of Matt and Stacey Storm and says this moment is one to remember despite the blur of excitement surrounding the victory.

In addition to the champion ewe, Cade is also showing two market lambs later in the fair—a speckled face white face lamb and a regular crossbred middleweight lamb. While sheep are Cade’s focus, he’s not showing any other species this year.

The Louisa County Fair continues this week with more livestock competitions, activities, and community celebrations. Congratulations to Cade Storm on a well-earned champion title

Melvin Lee Carr

Melvin Lee Carr, 75, of Keosauqua, IA passed away on Monday, July 21, 2025, at the University of Iowa Hospital in Iowa City, IA surrounded by his loving family.  A service celebrating his life will begin at 11:00 a.m. on Saturday, July 26, 2025, at the Cranston Family Funeral Home in Keosauqua, IA with Rev. ellis andrews and Pastor Mary Kathryn Hart officiating.  Cremation will take place following the service.  Visitation will begin at 2:00 p.m. on Friday, July 25, 2025, at the Cranston Family Funeral Home in Keosauqua with the family present to greet friends from 5:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m.  Memorial contributions may be directed to the family to be used for a 4-H scholarship in Melvin’s honor.  Friends may leave online condolences at www.cranstonfamilyfuneralhome.com.

Melvin Lee Carr was born May 10, 1950, at home to Orville and Marna (Thornburg) Carr. He was a loving husband, father, grandpa and brother.  Melvin was an active dairy farmer milking jersey cows until July 1998. He continued to farm mainly haying and raising sheep and border collies. Melvin retired from raising sheep, selling his herd in January of 2024. He continued raising and training border collies and using them in the herd and on the farm. Even though he retired he continued to help his grandson Scott and wife Abby with the farm. Melvin was living life to the fullest either on the farm, at the sale barn or watching grandchildren or great grandchildren with their activities.

His legacy will be continued by his wife, Sharon Carr; three daughters, Missy Rotenburger of Trenton, IA, Mary Jane (Alton) Mast of Cantril, IA, Jolene (Jim) Nusbaum of Keosauqua, IA, and a son, Mark (Lisa) Roberts of Penrose, CO; his grandchildren, Brett Boyd, Scott (Abilene) Mast, Wayne Mast, Julia (Garrett) Davis, Shayla Rotenburger, Kelli Rotenburger, Jace (Desiray) Roberts, Sarah (AJ) Nolting, Lane Davis, Kadence Nusbaum, Kamden Nusbaum and Lex Farner; great grandchildren, Eli Boyd, Elena Mast, Case Mast, Blakley Roberts, Watson Roberts and Miles Detrick, and brother, Rex (Nancy) Carr, along with many nieces, nephews and cousins.

He was preceded in death by his first wife, Marcia (Schmitt) Carr, father and mother, Orville and Marna Carr and brother, Tom Carr.

Prep Baseball: #5 Mediapolis’ State Tournament Trip Cut Short by #4 Unity Christian in 5-1 Final

Carroll, IA- The second Class 2A quarterfinal matchup of the day had everything a baseball fan could ask for: drama, excellent pitching, outstanding defense, and controversy. Unfortunately, #5 Mediapolis was on the wrong side of that controversy in their 5-1 loss to #4 Unity Christian.

One play can change everything from momentum to legacy—just look at former Boston Red Sox first baseman Bill Buckner. In this case, you can even ask Mediapolis head coach Rick Whitaker,

“Yeah, I always say that’s baseball, but… it turned the whole ball game. Yeah, that was a momentum switcher for sure… I don’t want to blame that play on the game because they still scored five runs against us. You know? So yeah, it is what it is.”

That pause after “that’s baseball, but” was not of pensive thought, rather an invitation to relive the moment that the ballgame was flipped on its head for the Bulldogs. A moment of awkward dejection in the top of the 4th inning.

But how did we get here? For that we go back to before the game.

Mediapolis earned the #5-seed after going 27-2, including three straight postseason shutouts at the hands of senior Lance Ludens. His 19.2 innings pitched, allowing only six hits, and striking out 20 almost single-handily brought the Bulldogs to their second state tournament appearance in program history.

Unity Christian was making their second straight state tournament appearance—fourth overall—after shaking off a 4-6 start to the season to win 22 of their last 25 games, including a 4-0 shutout of Estherville Lincoln Central in the substate championship.

The Knights had their own aces up their sleeve on the mound in Adler Van Essen and Braeden Bosma. The overall makeup of the team was almost identical to their 2021 squad, which was also a #4-seed, with eight upperclassmen in the starting lineup on most days.

The Game

Scott Parcher Field was ready to house a premier pitching matchup as Ludens entered the matchup with a 1.23 ERA having not given up a run since June 25th, while Van Essen was given the ball for the Knights as the sophomore rocked a 2.60 ERA.

Unsurprisingly, the Bulldogs went down in order with two sharp groundouts to Dylan Bosma at shortstop to start the game. Bosma carried that momentum into the bottom of the 1st inning with a leadoff single, but three Knights later and it was on to the second inning.

A botch by Graden Van Essen at first base allowed Kyler Crow to scamper to second base on the first play to start the top half of the second frame. Yet, two popouts and strikeout later and the Bulldogs were heading back to the field.

The bottom of the second inning did not offer much as Ludens located his first strikeout of the game after allowing a walk and the Knights were kept off the board without advancing past first base.

Mediapolis finally broke through when Braeden Oliver slapped a ball into right-centerfield and managed to sprint around to third base on his second triple of the season. A Will Luttenegger line drive into left field gave Mediapolis a 1 to 0 lead.

“This was the end goal really” said Ludens. “You know, to make it to the state tournament. You know, once we got here, our goal was to play our butts off and try to see how far we can get. And unfortunately, this was it. But just to be here, it’s a great feeling, so I’m happy for it.”

The senior was doing more than playing his butt off, he was nearly infallible on the mound. In his last six game on the hump, he produced an arcane 0.35 ERA, surrendering just two runs in five starts, while fanning 45.

He brought his total to three in the game after striking out two and picking off Dylan Bosma for an unconventional 1-2-3 third inning. Mediapolis led 1 to 0 after three complete innings.

The team was not done either as the Max Griffin and Henry Luttenegger produced back-to-back two out walks in the top of the fourth inning with Oliver due up.

This is where our story takes a tragic turn. Oliver blooped the ball into right-centerfield again, falling underneath Eli Ruschman’s outstretched glove and rolling towards the wall, allowing Griffin and Luttenegger to score and Oliver to stand triumphantly at second with his team up 3 to 0.

Until, the Knights threw the ball over to first base, challenging whether Oliver had missed the bag when he rounded it to head to second base. The first base umpire ruled that he had missed it. The runs did not count since it was technically a force play at first base.

Two runs taken off the board and the top of the frame was now over, the Bulldogs still led 1 to 0 but the momentum had taken an unforeseen turn. Ludens addressed the situation after the game,

“You know it is what it is, you know? Umpire is gonna miss a few calls here and there. You just gotta take it with a grain of salt and move on. I mean, you gotta claw back and try to do what you can to get back. I’m still happy with our effort, you know. I think we did our best. So, despite that, you know, momentum shifts hard. If that doesn’t get overturned, we’re up 3-0, you know, feeling good. But it’s alright, I’m still extremely proud of what we did.”

The senior was back to business in the bottom of the fourth inning, popping out Braeden Bosma, a third-team All-State member last year, and striking out Graden Van Essen to make it two outs.

Then Austin Wieringa singled into centerfield and advanced to second a passed ball. A Brady Boogerd dribbler on the opposite side of the infield bounced away from Hayden Gugeler and allowed Wieringa to tie the game at 1.

Then the avalanche started, a popup in the infield was lost in the sun allowing the inning to continue with runners on first and third base. A Skyler Atlemeier groundball went between the legs of Will Luttenegger who had already made three impressive plays at the hot corner allowing the Knights to take a 2 to 1 lead.

Mediapolis entered the game having committed only 36 errors for the season, yet a couple of miscues allowed the Knights to rally back. Coach Whitaker knows his team should have shaken off the errors, but those types of plays have a way of compounding,

“Yeah, and this turf is a lot faster than you know we’ve played on, you know, Solon’s was pretty fast too, but this this was a lot faster and the ground a little harder, you know, not to make excuses for my guys because like you said, you know, we’ve been a really good defensive team all year and yeah, that they were the kind of team, you know, that we got to make those plays or bad things will happen. You know, we’re not going to score against, you know, two really good pitchers. We’re probably not going to score 8-9 runs. We’re going to score four or five, maybe six, and then we’re gonna let our pitching, our defense, you know, hold them.”

The tough part was that Mediapolis’ offense has been slumping for the last five games. The Bulldogs went from a 0.418 batting average and scoring 54 runs in a five-game stretch starting at the end of June, to a 0.211 batting average, scoring only 13 runs in their last five showdowns.

Unfortunately, the slumping would continue as Braeden Bosma entered the game in relief and managed to get his own unconventional 1-2-3 fifth inning after Will Luttenegger was caught trying to steal second base after reaching on an error.

A Dylan Bosma leadoff triple in the bottom of the fifth inning spelled disaster as Hall’s weak grounder to Gugeler allowed Bosma enough time to score on the play to extend the lead to 3 to 1.

Again, the Knights went to work with two outs, slapping three consecutive singles against Ludens to extend the lead to four runs: 5 to 1. Six of the Knight’s eight hits occurred with two outs in the inning. The senior’s day was over.

Max Griffin and Bosma did not allow another baserunner for the rest of the game as Unity Christian walked away with the 5-1 victory.

Ludens, Oliver, and Payton Doty’s careers at Mediapolis were done in one afternoon at Merchants Park. Coach Whitaker was not shy in expressing his emotions about this senior class,

“I broke down a little bit in the huddle…Those guys have been with me for five years as 8th graders all the way up here and just their personality, you know, all the kids are different. But you know, Lance is a bulldog. He’s a fighter. We got Brayden Oliver, who just had a fantastic year. You know, didn’t have the greatest couple of years and then he just had a huge year. He had two hits there, you know. And then Payton, he’s almost caught every inning behind the plate, you know, 95° weather and he’s as tough as nails. He’s one of the better catchers in Class 2A, I for sure love those guys.”

Ludens, who committed to play baseball at Central College, could not have asked for a better group to go on this adventure with,

A great, great group of guys, you know. It’s like a family, you know, every time we’re together, we’re tearing stuff up. But yeah, it’s a blast. I wouldn’t rather be here with anyone else.

This 2025 Mediapolis squad will go down as one of the greatest in their program’s history with 27 wins, a district and substate championship, and their second trip to the state tournament. Coach Whitaker believes this moment will motivate future Bulldog teams,

“You know, we’ve had a lot of, you know, a lot of good teams in my 8 years here, but we’ve never got over the hump. Shoot, we haven’t even won a district championship before this year, so this is huge. I mean, we got over one little hump. We got over the big hump to get here, you know. And this experience, if we ever get a chance, you know, to come back and I and I think these guys have a really good chance to come back, they’ll already know kind of what to expect. You know, this is the first time for me, first time for my assistant coaches, it’s the first time for these guys. So, you don’t have any experience, and I think that’ll help us as a program, you know, and then tasting this a little bit, when you taste the state tournament, hopefully the younger guys like hey, this is where we want to be, ‘let’s work, let’s go.”

One play can make or break a game, but it will not define the legacy of this year’s team. It may be used as fuel to stoke the fire of next year’s squad though.