346 



THE BEE-KEBPERS' REVIEW. 



TennesseeQueens 



Daughters of Select Imported 

 Italians. Select long-tongued 

 (Moore's), and select. Straight 

 5-band Queens, bred i]4 miles 

 apart, and mated to select 

 drones. No bees owned with- 

 in 214 miles; none impure 

 within 3, and bvit few within 5 

 miles. No disease. 30 years' 

 experience. Warranted 

 queens 60c each; tested, I1.25 

 each. Discount on large or- 

 ders. 



Contracts with dealers a 

 specialty. Discount after 

 July I St. Send for circular. 



JOHN M. DAVIS, Spring Hill, Tenn. 



Paper Cutter 



For Sale. 



A man living near here, and having a small 

 job printing office, has consolidated his office 

 with mine, and is putting in a cylinder press. 

 We both had a paper cutter, and, as we have no 

 use for both of them, one will be sold at a .sacri- 

 fice. Mine is a 24-inch cutter, and has a new 

 knife for which I paid $10.00 last spring, yet 

 $25.00 will take the machine. A photograph and 

 description of the machine will be sent on ap- 

 plication. This new man will have no connec- 

 tion whatever with the Review — simply with the 

 job work. The presswork for the Review will 

 be done on the new press. 



W. Z. HUTCHINSON, Flint, Mich. 



I am advertising for B. F. Stratton & 

 Son, music dealers of New York, and 

 taking my pay in 



MUSICAL 

 INSTRUMENTS. 



I have already bought and paid for in 

 this way a guitar and violin for my girls, 

 a flute for myself, and one or two guitars 

 for some of my subscribers. If you are 

 thinking of buying an instrument of any 

 kind, I should be glad to send you one on 

 trial. If interested, write me for des- 

 criptive circular and price list, saying 

 what kind of an instrument you are 

 thinking of getting. 



W. Z. Hutchinson, Flint, Mich. 



Phase mention the Review. 



THE 



PARKER 



PEN 



has the 

 ^^LUCKY CURVE^^ 



1 he "lucky curve" is a curve in 

 the feed-pipe that brings its inner 

 opening out against the inside of 

 the barrel of the pen. and this ar- 

 rangement allows capillar^- at- 

 traction to suck the ink out o'f the 

 feed-pi, e when the pen end is 

 held uppermost, thus preventing 

 all leakage. At the same time the 

 feed-pipe is kept moist with ink 

 and ready for business. 



There are other good features 

 about the Parker. One is the al- 

 most impossibility of breaking the 

 haddle. If it breaks from any 

 cause within a year a new one is 

 sent free. 



When on my way to the lyos 

 Angeles convention, I saw Mr. 

 France using a fine fountain pen 

 that worked nicely, and I asked 

 him what kind it was. He said it 

 was a "Parker," made bj' the 

 Parker Pen Co,, of Janesville, 

 Wis. I tried it and was so en- 

 thu.siastic in my praise, that Chas. 

 Schneider pulled out his pen and 

 asked me to try that. It seemed 

 to work as well as the other and I 

 said: "There must be other good 

 pens as well as the Parker. It is 

 strange that I have never been 

 able to bu\' one." "Mine is' a 

 Parker, too," .said Mr. Schneider. 

 As sooh as I reached home I 

 sent for a Parker and have been 

 carrying and using it ever since 

 with the greatest of satisfaction. 



There are styles of pens of dif- 

 ferent prices, from $1.50 up to 

 $10.00, depending mostly upon 

 the finish of the handle. My pen 

 cost $2 00, and, so far as practical 

 use is concerned, is the equal of 

 any. 



So pleased am I with this pen 

 that I have made arrangements 

 whereby I can send the Review 

 one year, and one of the $2.00 

 pens, for only $2.50. Safe arrival 

 and satisfaction guaranteed, or 

 monev will be refunded. 



W. Z. HUTCHINSON, 



Flint, Mich. 



POULTRY NEWS. 



Twenty-five cents yearly. .Agents wanted. Bee 

 department conducted by Fowler, the bee man 

 of Ardsley, N. Y. Twenty pages, illustrated and 

 up-to date. 

 io-03-tf New Brunswick, New Jersey. 



