. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. 242 American Hee Journal July, 1915. Some concern wishes to introduce into your own town a new baking powder or brand of coffee, or a new kind of easily prepared pudding or breakfast food. What is done? Why, this concern simply rents a small space in your leading grocery store, attrac- tively covers a table, puts a few dishes on it, has an interesting young woman nicely dressed behind it, and then pro- ceeds to deal out samples. Now, you can do the same thing with your honey. It would be a very easy matter for you to obtan space in one of the leading


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. 242 American Hee Journal July, 1915. Some concern wishes to introduce into your own town a new baking powder or brand of coffee, or a new kind of easily prepared pudding or breakfast food. What is done? Why, this concern simply rents a small space in your leading grocery store, attrac- tively covers a table, puts a few dishes on it, has an interesting young woman nicely dressed behind it, and then pro- ceeds to deal out samples. Now, you can do the same thing with your honey. It would be a very easy matter for you to obtan space in one of the leading groceries; in fact, you could do it better than an outside concern. Probably it wouldn't cost you a cent, if you arranged with the grocery store to sell your honey after you had intro- duced it and it. In a nutshell, what I am trying to get at is the factthat thedemandfor honey is at your own door if you will only hear it knocking. You know there is such a thing as getting so close to a thing that you can't see it. If the aver- age honey producer will combine with his honey business a little energy, throw a little of his personality into his work, apply busness principles, not be afraid to risk a dollar if he can get two back, he will be successful and all the honey he can raise will be sold. Watertown, Wis. Cleaning Up Foulbrood BY A. L. KILDOW. Ullinois State Inspector) ? AM sending two pictures, showing a comb of American foulbrood and the burning of an apiary in Will county. On May 13, I answered a call from Plainlield complaining that a beekeeper let his bees die of American foulbrood and allowed them to be robbed out by the neighborhood bees. On arriving at the apiary I found three colonies that had bees, two very weak the other of fair strength, but all badly affected with American foulbrood. The owner had done nothing to stop robbing ; the entrance was left wide open except. A GROUP OF VISITORS IN THE APIARY OF A. E. CRANDALL & SON where the dead beeshad


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