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THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 



Bee-Keepers' Review 



Published Monthly 

 E. B. TYRRELL, Editor and Publisher 



Offioe — U30 \Voo«llnnd Ave., Detroit, 

 Mieh. 



Eeiitered as second-class matter, July 

 Y, 1911, at the post office at Detroit, 

 Michigan, under the Act of March 3, 

 1879. 



Terms — $1.00 a year to subscribers 

 in the United States, Canada, Cuba and 

 Mexico. To all other countries post- 

 age is 24 cts. year, extra. 



Discontinuances — The Ileview is sent 

 until orders are received for its discon- 

 tinuance. Notice is sent at the expira- 

 tion of a subscription, further notices 

 being- sent if the first is not heeded. 

 Any subscriber wishing tlie Review 

 discontinued, will please send a postal 

 at once upon receipt of the first notice, 

 otherwise it will be assumed that he 

 wishes the Revie^v continued. and will 

 pay for it soon. Any one who prefers 

 to have the Review stopped at the ex- 

 piration of the time paid for. will 

 please say so when subscribing, and 

 the request will be complied with. 

 Ailvertisins Rates on Application. 



"Napoleon, during the reverses in 

 Spain, and when he was compelled to 

 give his entire time to the diplomatic 

 difficulties with Austria, cried out in 

 one of his dispatches : 'In warfare men 

 are nothing; a man is everything.'" 



volunteer apiary inspectors will be held 

 at the same time. H. C. Klinger, sec- 

 retary. 



"The small man, whether he is in a 

 big or little place, thinks his secret 

 method is so vital in his business that 

 it would be suicide to divulge it." 



The annual meeting of the Pennsyl- 

 vania Bee-Keepers' Association will be 

 held in the courthouse, Lancaster, Pa., 

 Dec. 1 and 2. This promises to be the 

 most important meeting yet held. 

 Every bee-keeper is invited to be pres- 

 ent. Matters of interest will come up 

 for discussion. An examination for 



M. B. K. A. Convention. 



In the last issue I gave the dates of 

 the next convention of the Michigan Bee 

 Keepers' Association. Full program will 

 be given in the December number. Re- 

 member the dates, Dec. 1?. and 14. 



The convention of the Michigan As- 

 sociation is noted for its good attend- 

 ance, and the interest taken. Saginaw, 

 where the convention will be held, is 

 centrally located, and we shall be sur- 

 prised if there is not an exceptionally- 

 large attendance this year. True, this 

 has not been the best year for bee- 

 keepers, but Michigan bee-keepers are a 

 live bunch, have secured some honey, 

 and expect a good big crop next year. 

 Come, anyway, and don't forget the 

 wife, mother, sweetheart and babies. 

 The auditorium is big enough for all. 



Classified Department. 



"I am well pleased with the Review, 

 but there is one thing about it I don't 

 like. It hasn't any classified depart- 

 ment." So writes one of my subscribers. 

 Xow, I had been thinking the same 

 thing myself. Why not have a classi- 

 fied department? Why not give the 

 readers a chance to advertise in a small 

 way whenever they wanted to? So with 

 this issue we have the department. 

 Looks pretty good, too. doesn't it? 



.\s a starter we will divide it into 

 just two parts, "Wanted" and "For 

 Sale," but as the department grows we 

 will make further sub-divisions later. 



So send along your liners. They will 

 sell or buy for you bees, honey, poultry, 

 farms, eggs, incubators, new or second- 



