250 



July, 1913 



American Vee Journal 



Chicag'o. June lo.— Our market is entirely 

 bare of comb honey of the best urade. and 

 very little of the poorer grade is to be found. 

 No I to fancy white comb will bring i7@iKc 

 per pound upon arrival, and until the traders 

 each get a small supply, consignments will 

 sell promptly. There is no change in the 

 oriceof extracted from recent quotations. 

 Beeswax also steady. 



R. A. Burnett & Co. 



Cincinnati. June lo.— This market is in 

 good shape to receive the new crop of honey 

 which will be a big one in this part of the 

 country. Our advice is that the early bird 

 will get the price, and those who wait will 

 be sorry for it. 



We can use quick shipments of comb 

 honey, and are selling what we have at from 

 I5@i6;4c a pound by the case; some cheaper 

 at wholesale. Extracted honey for table 

 use is selling at 7'2@ioc a pound, and amber 

 honey in barrels at oCqTjsc a pound, accord- 

 ing to the quality and quantity purchased. 

 For choice bright yellow beeswax we are 

 paying 30c a pound delivered here. 



The Fred W. Muth Co. 



Kansas Citv. Mo., .lune 10 —The first ship- 

 ment of new comb honey has made its ap- 

 pearance, and sold on arrival at $3 7^ per 

 case of 24 sections for No. i. The demand is 

 good. The demand for extracted is light 

 Supply not large. We quote white at 8@8^ic 

 per pound. Beeswax, per pound. 25@28c- 

 C. C. Clemons Produce Company. 



Indiahapolis. JuneiQ. — The market is 

 practically bare of fancy white comb honey. 



No. I white is selling at I6fe>i7c per pound; 

 amber comb in slow demand and at varied 

 prices. Best extracted sells at 11&12C per 

 pound in s-gallon cans, according to quan- 

 tity at one shipment. Beeswax is in good 

 demand, and producers are being paid 30c 

 per pound cash. Walter S. PouDER. 



Denver, June 20 — No more comb honey to 

 offer. We quote extracted honey in a job- 

 bing way at the following tigures; White, 

 oc; light amber, 8c; strained, hh@7c. We 

 pay 28c in cash per pound, and 35c per pound 

 in trade for clean yellow beeswax delivered 

 here. 



The Colo, Honev-Producers' Ass'n . 

 Frank Rauchfuss, A/^r. 



Cincinnati, June 20,— There is very little 

 doing in honey, both comb and extracted 

 No new honey has yet arrived. General 

 conditions are good for a big crop. 



C. H. W. Weber & Co. 



Boston, June 20. — tancy and No. i white 

 comb. i6@i7c per pound. Fancy white ex- 

 tracted in s-gallon cans. Ii®i2c. Beeswax. 

 30c. Blake.-Lee Company. 



New York, June 20.— There are no new 

 features in the condition of the market. 

 New crop of comb honey from the South is 

 beginning to arrive in small quantities, and 

 finds ready sale at from 14"' itic for No. i and 

 fancy white, and lower grades at from i2(SiiC. 

 Extracted honey decidedly dull, and while 

 there is a fair demand for strictly firstclass 

 quality, amber and light amber are neg- 

 lected. West India is arriving in large 



quantities, and on account of the slow de- 

 mand, prices have been gradually declining. 

 and choice stock is now selling at around 

 ^"Ci;oc per gallon. We are advised by our 

 California shippers that there will be no 

 sage honey to speak of this season, and 

 prices on others, such as alfalfaand orange, 

 have not been established as yet for the 

 new crop. Beeswax steady at from 3i@32C. 

 Hildreth & Segelken. 



San Francisco, June 20.— There is very 

 little of the old comb honey on the market. 

 and we are promised some of the new very 

 soon, and have had some new extracted 

 honey in very small quantities. The de- 

 mand for extracted honey has been better 

 than for sometime, and the crop so far in 

 this section will be limited. Fancy comb 

 honey at I4@I5C. Water-white extracted at 

 Q^SO/^c; light amber. 7j4@8c; amber. 654@7C 

 dark. 5@6c. Beeswax, 24®3oc per pound. 



John C. Frohliger. 



Los Angeles, June 20.— Stocks of white 

 extracted honey on the coast are entirely 

 exhausted, and are not quotable at any 

 price. Light amber extracted honey is in 

 light supply, and is quotable in carload lots 

 at 6^ic f, o. b. Coast. Comb honey is in verT 

 light supply, and there is scarcely enough 

 left for local consumption. Beeswax is sell- 

 ing to eastern buversat iibout3oc per pound, 

 Hamilton &Menderson. 



ITALIAN QUEENS 



$1.00 EACH, $9.00 PER DOZEN. 



Queens are reared i»v as good a in^-thod as 

 anybody can rear »^ueens. My stock is 

 hearty and fine hone\ -gatherers. All qoeens 

 • hipped by return mail within 24 hours after 

 I receive the order. 

 M. BATES, R. D. No. 4, Greenville, Ala. 



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CELLAR WINTERING 







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WTO are glad to call the attention of our readers to a long article on this sub- ^ 

 ject to appear in the American Bee Journal, beginning with the August i^ 

 number, and written by ^ 



DR. C. C. MILLER 



f 



Dr. Miller himself a firm advocate of cellar wintering, gives the results o 

 his experience and experiments along this line. Every bee-keeper should read 

 what he has to say. Urge your neighbor bee-keepers to subscribe to the Journal 

 also. It will be interesting, instructive, and written in the distinctive 

 style of all of Dr. Miller's contributions. 



The Article will be followed with comments and discussions bv Dr. E. 

 F. Phillips, of the Government Bureau of Entomology, and by Dr. MiJIer. 



Don't miss it. Don't let your neighbors miss it. 

 Many otiier interesting articles and comments, also. 





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