. The honey-makers. Bees. I I 2 The Honey-Makers From the Homoeopathic Pharmacopoeia we get the following : — " Draw out the sting together with the poison-bag from bees freshly killed. Taking hold of the bag, insert the point of the sting into a small glass tube and squeeze the poison into it. Or take a live bee with a pair of pincers and allow it to take hold of a small lump of sugar. It will immediately sting into the sugar which will absorb the poison. Repeat this process until enough is accumulated to start a ; Sometimes whole bees are used ; in which case, the &quot


. The honey-makers. Bees. I I 2 The Honey-Makers From the Homoeopathic Pharmacopoeia we get the following : — " Draw out the sting together with the poison-bag from bees freshly killed. Taking hold of the bag, insert the point of the sting into a small glass tube and squeeze the poison into it. Or take a live bee with a pair of pincers and allow it to take hold of a small lump of sugar. It will immediately sting into the sugar which will absorb the poison. Repeat this process until enough is accumulated to start a ; Sometimes whole bees are used ; in which case, the " live bees, put into a bottle, are irritated by shaking, and then drenched with five times their weight of dilute alcohol, and allowed to remain eight days, being shaken twice a day. The tincture is then poured off, strained, and ; Sometimes the bee-keeper is requested to supply bee- stings, instead of bees or honey, not for the pleasure but for the cure of ailing Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Morley, Margaret Warner, 1858-1923. Chicago, A. C. McClurg and company


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherch, booksubjectbees