July. IHlo. 



A Muth Bee-Veil for 65c 



I have several dozens of the Muth 

 wire-and-clotli Bee-Veils — a dandy veil 

 —which I will mail for 65 cents each. 

 Order quick if you want one before all 

 are gone. 



Wilder's "Southern Bee-Culture" 



This is a .")i»-cent book which I will 

 mail for .'50 cents so long as they last. 



Danzenbaker Bee-Smoker 



The $1.00 postpaid size I will mail 

 for only 80 cents. It's a fine bee- 

 smoker. Order at once if you want one. 



Honey as a Health Food 



Till further notice, I will fill orders 

 for "Honey as a Health Food" — the 

 great honey-selling booklet — at the 

 following prices : 



Sample copy free ; 10 copies 20 cents ; 

 50 copies 75 cents; 100 copies, $1.00; 

 250 copies for $2.00; 500 copies lor 

 $3.75 ; or 1000 copies for $7.00. 



These are all postpaid or express pre- 

 paid prices. The time to sell the honey 

 crop will soon be here again. It is a 

 fine thing to have a good supply of the 

 above booklets on hand, ready for dis- 

 tribution among those you would like 

 to secure as customers. 



American ^cc JournaJj 



Untested ITALIAN QUEEN-BEES 



Your Name and Address 

 on a Rubber Stamp 



It is a nice thing to have a rubber 

 stamp with your name and address. 

 You can then stamp the letters you 

 write, or the envelops you use, or any- 

 thing at the bottom of the booklets, 

 " Honey as a Health Food," for stamp- 

 ing your name and address. 



I can furnish you a Rubber Stamp, 

 with your name and address, at the 

 following prices, postpaid, the stamp 

 being 2>i inches long: 



One Line Stamp 30 cents 



Two " " 45 " 



Ink Pad (2>^x3M inches). .15 " 



All orders will have prompt and care- 

 ful attention. Address, 



GEORGE W. YORK 



Sandpoint, Idaho 



OUR STANDARD-BRED 



6 Queens for $4.50 ; 



3 for $2.75; 1 for $1.00 



For a number of years we have been sending out to 

 bee-keepers exceptionally fine Untested Italian Queens, 

 purely' mated, and all right in every respected. Here is 

 what a few of those who received our Queens have to 

 say about them. 



American Bee Journal — 



O'lV/Z/fOTtv/-— Last October I purchased three queens of you 

 for my experiments with different queens, and wish to ask you 

 if queens of this season will be of this stock ? Oneofthe Queens 

 is the most remarkable queen I ever owned for prolilicness. 

 which she transmits to all her daughters. 



Riddle. Oreg.. July 4. 1012. L. W. Wells. 



A-MERicAN Bee Journal— 



(Sfu/Zeme/i.—The aueen you sent me came in t;ood condition. 

 She was one of the best I have ever bought. I have her intro- 

 duced and she is doing business as if to the manor born I want 

 another of those beautiful queens as soon as I can possibly get 

 it for making up my fair exhibit. Please send a tine one. Such 

 queens certainly advertise your business. 



Darlington. Wis,. July 31. i<jI2. C. R. Bridgman. 



American Bee Journal— 



C;otWc7/;«/.— I bought a queen of you about 35 years ago. and 

 from her I Italianized i;o colonies of the finest beauties of 

 unusual good qualities. I lived near Milton Center, Ohio, at the 

 time. Yours truly. 



Portales. New Mexico, July 10. 1512. J. W, Hourz, 



We usually begin mailing Queens in May, and con- 

 tinue thereafter on the plan of " first come first served." 

 The price of Oiie_of our_UnJestedQueen^s alone is $1.00, 

 or with the old American Bee Journal for one year, both 

 for $1.60. Three Queens (without Bee Journal) would 

 be $2.75, or six for $4.50. Full instructions for introduc- 

 ing are sent with each Queen, being printed on the un- 

 derside of the address card on the mailing-cage. You 

 cannot do better than to get one or more of our fine 

 Standard-bred Queens. 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL, HAMILTON, ILLINOIS 



The ideal Hive-Tool Free as a Premium 



nickel plated. 

 Exactly half actual size. 



Price, postpaid. 35 cents; or with the American Bee Journal 

 one vear-both for $1.15: or mailed Free as a premium for 

 sending us one new subscription at $1,00, 



This is a special tool invented by a Minnesota bee-keeper, adapted for pry- 

 ing up supers, and for general hive and other work around the apiary. Made of 

 malleable iron, 8% inches long. The middle part is 1 1-16 inches wide, and 7-32 

 thick. The smaller end is 1/s inches long, 'A inch wide, and 7-32 thick, ending 

 like a screwdriver. The larger end is wedge-shaped, having a fairly sharp, semi- 

 circular edge, making it almost perfect for prying up hive-covers, supers, etc., as 

 it does not mar the wood. Dr. C. C. Miller, who has used this tool since 1903, 

 says: "I think as much of the tool as ever." 



American Bee Journal, Hamilton, Illinois, 



