. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. FRENCH APPLE CRANBERRY RAISIN PIE This recipe by Kathy Stepler of Vincentown. , won a prize at the Chatsworth Cranberry Festival. Top and bottom 9 inch pie crust 1 cup cranberries whole 6 medium apples, sliced 1/2 cup raisins 1/2 cup sugar grated orange rind 2 tbsp cornstarch 1 tbsp butter Line pie plate with crust. Mix II remaining ingredients except for butter. Put filling into crust lined pie plate. Dot filling with butter. Cover with top crust, trim and make steam vents. Brush with a little milk. Bake in 450 degree oven for


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. FRENCH APPLE CRANBERRY RAISIN PIE This recipe by Kathy Stepler of Vincentown. , won a prize at the Chatsworth Cranberry Festival. Top and bottom 9 inch pie crust 1 cup cranberries whole 6 medium apples, sliced 1/2 cup raisins 1/2 cup sugar grated orange rind 2 tbsp cornstarch 1 tbsp butter Line pie plate with crust. Mix II remaining ingredients except for butter. Put filling into crust lined pie plate. Dot filling with butter. Cover with top crust, trim and make steam vents. Brush with a little milk. Bake in 450 degree oven for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 350 degrees and bake 45 minutes longer. Cool and frost. FROSTING: 1 cup confectioners 10-X powdered sugar and a little milk. FARM-CITY HEAD Clarence J. Bizet of Tallahassee, Fla., a merchandizing specialist with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, has been elected 1985 chairman of the National Farm-City Council Inc. The National Council's headquarters are in Indianapolis, where its activities are administered by Kiwanis International. The Farm-City Week program was organized in 1955 with a mission of educating and informing farm families and their urban neighbors about their interdependency. Farm-City Week activities are conducted year-round, with , most events around Thanksgiving. The 1985 National Farm-City Week is Nov. 22-28. Your advertising dollar is well spent in CRANBERRIES. Talk to a team that knows you better than you do. After you've talked to Ann Roach, Judy Maffini or Ann- Marie Harvey at Gage-Wiley a few times, you begin to think they know more about your investments than you do. That's because they can answer those little, and not- so-little, questions that always pop up. They can explain how and when a dividend is paid, when a certificate will arrive or how to give an investment to a child. They know that financial products can be compli- cated and one quick expla- nation isn't enough. Ann, Judy and Ann- Marie


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