454 THE BEE-KEEPERS* REVIEW 



Cash for Your Honey 

 at Your Door 



The committee in charge of the Honey-Producers' 

 League Fund has $604, to be used in advertising uses 

 of honey, and to create more demand for honey. Thsy 

 have purchased several thousand books entitled "The 

 Use of Honey in Cooking," with chapters on "What 

 is Honey," "Food Value of Honey," "How Comb and 

 Extracted Honey is Produced," "Why Honey Granu- 

 lates, and How to Liquefy the Same," "Why Different 

 Flavors of Honey from Different Flowers," "Why Use 

 Honey in Cooking in Place of Sugar," 'Where to Keep 

 Honey," and over one hundred recipes for the use of 

 honey in cooking, candies, cough syrups, creams, and 

 soaps — 58 pages of valuable information. 



If you want a home market for more honey than you 

 produce, get some of these recipe books and use judg- 

 ment in giving them to those you believe will use 

 honey for table and cooking, asking each to give it a 

 trial. 



I have talked with bee-keepers of several States who 

 have been thus using these books for their customers, 

 and who now have to buy honey to finish filling orders. 

 To get these books before consumers I will GIVE them 

 to bee-keepers and members of the National Bee-keepers' 

 Association who may ask for them, provided they will 

 pay postage on the books ordered, and who will, in 

 application, state the number of colonies of bees they 

 had in the spring of 1913, and pounds of comb and ex- 

 tracted honey produosd this season, and prices they are 

 selling at. 



Postage on the books is 68 cts. for 100 copies. Other 

 lots in proportion. If bee-keepers want a growing home 

 market for all their honey, here is a chance to get it 

 for nothing. When this one lot of books is gone, others 

 getting them later will have to pay publishers for them 

 $4.50 per 100 copies. 



N. E. FRANCE, Platteville, Wis. 



Chairman of League Fund Committee 



