. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. October, 1909. American See Journal 339 trust is hard pushed to get its vile stuff foisted on the public, and it does not hesitate to stoop to nefarious ways in doing so. The "he" bee is a terrible fellow to the paid writers of the sulphuric-corn- glucose-muss of the nefarious trust, for, forsooth, the " he" bee makes honey that is vile, nasty, filthy and unfit for human consumption. I never saw any " he " bee honey, but I wager as much genuine hair as John D. Rocke- feller has on his "skating rink," that the he
. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. October, 1909. American See Journal 339 trust is hard pushed to get its vile stuff foisted on the public, and it does not hesitate to stoop to nefarious ways in doing so. The "he" bee is a terrible fellow to the paid writers of the sulphuric-corn- glucose-muss of the nefarious trust, for, forsooth, the " he" bee makes honey that is vile, nasty, filthy and unfit for human consumption. I never saw any " he " bee honey, but I wager as much genuine hair as John D. Rocke- feller has on his "skating rink," that the he makers of the corn-syrup trust turn out a more damnable stuff than all the bees in the world could manu- facture, if it were possible for the in- dustrious insects to make bad honey. Let John D. and his ad-men know that "he " bees don't monkey with honey as he does with so-called food stuffs; let the conglomeration bunch know that " she " bees produce honey, and they do it to the people's taste. I don't understand for the life of me how a paper that claims such respecta- bility as Leslie's does, can prostitute itself as to allow its editorial columns become the medium of such advertis- ing stuff as the letter I referred to above. It is so patent that it was pre- pared by the corn-syrup concern that one would think it would be run in the advertising columns rather than edi- torially. But, I suppose, it is one of those cases where the editorial pages are subservient to the business office, as is nearly always the iron-clad rule of the dailies. Such work is injuring the standing of our American publica- tions ; they will stoop to damn an hon- est business because some millionaire advertiser will pay a good price to get his stuff into their columns. 'Tis a damnable business that will stoop to such nefarious methods, and bee-keep- ers should shun the said papers as they must surely do corn-syrup. One of those strange coincidents that sometimes manifest themselve
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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectbees, bookyear1861