824-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 18, 1994 Recipe (Continued from Pag* B 20) CHEESE PIE 1 pint collage cheese, whipped 8-ounces cream cheese 1 heaping cup sugar 3 tablespoons comsiarch 3 eggs, separated 12-ouncc can evaporated milk 2 cups milk Beal egg yolks and both kinds of cheese. Add sugar and comsiarch and beat until smooth. Add the evaporated milk and regular milk. Beal white of eggs, forming soft peaks Fold into above mixture. Pour into uybaked pic shells. Bake 50 minutes at 350 degrees or until done. Makes two deep 9-mch pics. I am I s years old and enjoy cooking and baking We tike this recipe that my great-grandmother gave My dad is a hoof-trimmer for dairy i ow\ We also have a green house where we raise about 50 calves I have three brothers and our job is to help with the calves. Juanita Martin Three Springs You Ask „ ? ? n You Answer In response to readers’ questions, this column is for readers who have questions but don’t know who to ask for the answers. In the past, many readers sent non cooking requests to Cook's Question Corner, a cooking column on page B 8. “You Ask You Answer” Is for non-cooking ques tions. The concept is the same: When a reader sends in a question, it will be printed in the paper. Readers who know the answer are asked to respond by mailing the answer, which will then be printed In the paper. Questions and answers to this column should be addressed to You Ask You Answer, Lou Ann Good, P.O. Box 609, Ephrata, PA 17522. QUESTION A. Nolt of New Holland would like to know the words to the complete poem that was recited in the 1920 s when her father-in-law went to school. The poem contains these lines. The carpenter’s house is falling down. The preacher’s kids are the worse in town.... Since this request appeared, Theresa Litecky, Eastampton, N.J., and several others have written to say they remember parts of this poem and can hardly wait to see the complete poem. Any readers who remember the complete poem, please send it immediately QUESTION Mane Lorah, Box 299 R.D. 3, Tamaqua, Pa. 18252, is looking for water glasses with pictures of owls on them QUESTION Romame B. Answell, Sumerdale, would like to know who manufactured the Webalco electric skillet. QUESTION A York County reader would like to know how to clean aluminum storm doors or enclosures that are becoming pitted QUESTION A reader would like to know where you can send for a catalog featuring vinyl doll heads, arms, and legs, she wants to make her own dolls. QUESTION Charles E Wright, Duncannon, pur chased a 13-inch parlor stove made of iron with the following marks. On the front spark inside is written Gray Iron Casting Co., Mt. Joy, Pa. On the inside top door 75-11; on the poker 7517 The doors, drafts, etc., would like a full-sized stove. Is this company still in business? QUESTION A reader from Thorton writes that families of Canadian geese have taken residence in their pond. How can the geese be encouraged to leave the pond? LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff LITITZ (Lancaster Co.) Some use their talents for them selves or family or friends, but Rosene Bollinger donates her talent for a cause she believes in Christian schooling. The wife of Ken Bollinger and the mother of two sons, Rosene spent weeks capturing the beauty of one of the county’s oldest farms on canvas. The 27x36-mch paint ing shows the farm with freshly fallen snow. “I enjoy painting snow scenes because snow lends itself so nicely to wdlcrcolor,” Rosene said. The watcrcolor will be auc tioned during the benefit auction (or the Litiu Area Mcnnomlc School held June 24 and 25. Rosene said that she donated the painting to the school because her two sons attend it. The Hollingcrs live near to ihc Royer Farm, and Roscnc often admired its beauty. The farm had been in the Royer family for seven generations. Ada Royer was the last of the dcsccndcnts to live in the house that was built in the 1800 s. In January 1992, the farm was sub divided with 107 acres sold to a neighboring farmers Earl and Grace Martin. The house and other (Turn to Paga 825) A{tist Rosene Hollinger displays the oil painting of the Royer Farm, wh Ich will go to the highest bidder during the Lititz Area Mennonlte School Benefit Auction on June 25. larm buildings with 10 acres was purchased by a New Jersey family and is being restored. Rosene has always enjoyed art and dabbled in it, but did not do anything seriously until after high school when she did oil paintings Packed with consistency, bale after bale Here’s a performance you’ll like repeated again and again in your fields: solid, stackable square bales that hold in feed quality. How do John Deere square balers do it? For starters, the low-profile pickup rides close to the ground to gather in more hay. And narrow channel strippers help save leaves and short material. Once the hay’s in the baler, it gets packed solid as a unique design pre-compresses hay inside a tapered chamber. Feeder forks then Artist Paints Roy* of Indian children who she worked with on an Indian Reservation. She look both oil and watcrcolor clas ses and has exhibited her work at a local hospital and an art show. In the past eight years, Rosene has concentrated on raising her You can also'count on a long, trouble-free life from your John Deere baler. Compared to others, John Deere balers are just plain beefier. Heavy duty bale cases and a heavy, side-mounted fly wheel - plus simple John Deere design and fewer moving parts - mean season after season of beautiful bales. To turn your next hay crop into solid, square bales that stack like bricks, pick up a rock-solid John Deere baler. family and has painted only a little until this year when she did several paintings. “It feels good to be doing more, and I hope to continue it," said Rosene, who prefers to paint local scenes and what she calls buildings