. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. AMERICAN BEE 143. Bee-Keepers and Paners on Ailteration. Query 934.—1. In your opinion, what can bee-keepers do toward the prevention of boney-adulteration ? 2. What should, or can, the bee-papers do in the same line ?—Mo. 1. Do not engage in it themselves. 2. Expose those who do.—Mrs. L. Harri- son. 1. Petition Congress and Legislatures. 2. Work with bee-keepers.—Jas. A. Stone. 1 and 2. Try to get laws passed to prevent adulteration, and then enforce the laws.—E. France. 1. JJac/i. ONE put up a perfectly pure article. 2. Just as they have b


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. AMERICAN BEE 143. Bee-Keepers and Paners on Ailteration. Query 934.—1. In your opinion, what can bee-keepers do toward the prevention of boney-adulteration ? 2. What should, or can, the bee-papers do in the same line ?—Mo. 1. Do not engage in it themselves. 2. Expose those who do.—Mrs. L. Harri- son. 1. Petition Congress and Legislatures. 2. Work with bee-keepers.—Jas. A. Stone. 1 and 2. Try to get laws passed to prevent adulteration, and then enforce the laws.—E. France. 1. JJac/i. ONE put up a perfectly pure article. 2. Just as they have been doing.—Mrs. J. N. Heater. 1 and 2. Sit down on it wherever they find it, until we get more stringent laws on the matter.—Dadant & Son. 1. Secure legal protection, and have courage enough to enforce the law. 2. Give 'em—well, fits !—J. P. H. Brown. 1. Unite together and prosecute. 2. Give fearlessly all the light that comes upon it, without fear or favor.—C. C. Miller. 1. Produce pure honey and fight adul- teration when it can be detected. 2. Keep still when talk will do no good. Usually it does harm.—J. A. Green. 1 and 2. Never have anything to do with anything that looks like adultera- tion. Put your brand or mark on every package sold to consumers.—H. D. Cut- ting. 1 and 2. Get the world converted to the religion of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, and when all live as He taught, there will be no adulteration.—G. M. DOOLITTLE. 1. Solicit our representatives to enact appropriate laws, and when secured, en- force thera. 2. Throw the force of their influence in the same direction.—J. M. Hambaugh. 1. Secure radical laws opposed to it, and through the Bee-Keepers' Union, which all should join, prosecute all who practice it. 2. Aid in doing the above. —A. J. Cook. 1. They can abstain from themselves adulterating, and supply the market with a good and pure article. 2. The bee-papers can condemn adulteration, and expose the guilty when found out


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectbees, bookyear1861