THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 



287 



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I have produced a crop of extracted hone3' from the 

 wild red raspberry of Northern Michigan. It would 

 be an easy matter to send this entire crop, in a lump, 

 to some dealer, but I prefer to give each of my friends 

 an opportunity of supplying his table with this truly 

 delicious hone^^ — a hone}^ with a flavor all its own - a 

 flavor that smacks of the wild raspberry of the forests. 



The honey is put up in bright, uezt\ shinj-, 60-lb 

 cans, two in a case, and is offered at ten cents a pound, 

 or $12.00 for a case of two cans. Perhaps some will 

 think this a high price, but we must take into consider- 

 ation the great loss of bees last winter and spring, the 

 almost total failure of the white clover honey crop, as 

 well as that of California, together with the upward 

 tendency in the price of nearl^^ all commodities. Re- 

 member, too, that this is not the ordinary honej^ — it is 

 raspberry honey; and, besides this, it has been left 

 on the hives until it was all sealed over and thoroughly 

 ripened, and is as far superior to ordinary honey, as 

 ripe fruit is more delicious than green. 



If you prefer to taste the honey before ordering, 

 drop me a postal, and I'll mail you a generous sample — 

 enough so that the neighbors, too, can have a taste, and 

 perhaps will wish to join you in ordering a case, if you 

 do not care for that much yourself. 



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eUTCeHHSOMp ¥\lm.%, Mic&i. 



