Octoher, 1908. 



American Hee -Journal 



FASHION BOOK FREE! 



I want to Fend you my Imntisom* 

 hocik fliowing hundreds of latent 

 with illustrated lessons on euttln 

 dreiiuiiniaklng. I will agree to sell y 

 the iMittems you want for live cts. 

 They are the same patterns you 

 ways paid lOo & 15c forattho 

 8toreH. made bv the Siime peo- 

 plc.and <-nrrect In every detail. 



HOW I DO IT. 



T iMit.li^b tlie FARMER'S 

 CALL, a weekly iiuj: 



Ao especially Interesting fea- 

 ture each week are the chil- 

 dren's letters: and theW 

 Uepartnient isu 



JOHN M. STAHL, Dept 



IF YOU WANT THE BEE-BOOK 



That covers the whole Apicultural Field 

 more completely than any other pub- 

 lished, send $1.20 to 



Prof. A. J. Cook, Claremont, Cal., 



— FOK HIS— 



'*B£E-KEEPER'S GUIDE" 



Libe 

 Mention 



ral l>iscov 

 Bee Joe 



atslo the Trade. 



rnal vrben vrrKlne- 



THE JOURNAL OF 

 ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY 



Has the latest report of all the best work in 

 practical entomology. Articles upon apicul- 

 ture by national authorities appear in it. If 

 you wish the best entomological journal for 

 the practical man, subscribe for it. $2 a year. 



ess Mgr.. 



Our New 

 Headquarters 



We have moved our business from 

 Redford to Lansing, and are now 

 equipped to supply you with "Root 

 Quality" Gonds to the very best ad- 

 vantage to you. We have a Complete 

 Stock, and ours is the best shipping 

 point in the State. Address your let- 

 ters, and ship Beeswax to us here. 



M. H. HUNT & SON, 



Lansing, Michigan 



Mention Bee Journal nlien writlnE' 



Honey as a Health-Food.- This is a 16- 

 page honey-pamphlet intended to help in- 

 crease the demand for honey. The first 

 partof It con tarns a short article on" Honey 

 as Food, written by Dr. C. C. Miller It 

 tells where to keep honey, how to liquefy it, 

 etc. The last part is devoted to " Honey- 

 Cooking Recipes" and "Remedies Using 

 Money. It should be widely circulated by 

 those selling honey. The more the people 

 are educated on the value and uses of 

 honey, the more honey they will buy. 



Prices. prepaid-RampIe copy for a2-cent 

 Sl^T'P-.^'ic'^'"'"^^ for 70 cents: IIIO for $1.25; 

 250for$2.2,S: 500 for $4.00; or 1000 for $7 50. 

 Your business card printed fr(f. at the bot- 

 tom of front paae on all orders for 100 or 

 njore copies. Send all orders to the office 

 ot the American Bee Journal. 



"Forty Years 

 Amon^ the Bees 



99 



■By -Dr. C. C. Miller 



One of the Best - Known Honey - Producers in all the 

 World 



THIS book of over 340 pages tells 

 just how Dr. Miller manages his 

 apiaries to produce the most 

 honey, which, in turn, brings the most 

 money. Dr. Miller has been 

 "at it" some 45 years, and so 

 is competent to tell others 

 the best way to be success- 

 ful with bees. In 1903 his 

 crop of comb honey was 

 over 18,000 pounds, and he is 

 not located in the best honey- 

 producing part of the United 

 States, either Northwest- 

 ern Illinois. 



The book is bound in substantial 

 cloth, gold-lettered, and is sent post- 

 paid for only $1.00; or with 

 the American Bee Journal 

 one year for $1.50. (Or send 

 us 4 new subscriptions to the 

 Bee Journal— with $3.00 -and 



we will mail you the book free as a 

 premium.) Every bee-keeper ought 

 to have both the book and the Bee 

 Journal, if not already possessors of 

 them. 



As Dr. Miller gets a royalty 

 on his book— so many cents 

 on each copy sold— every 

 bee-keeper who buys it is 

 thus helping a little to repay 

 him for his effort to lead 

 others to success through his 

 writings on bee-culture. 



As we have a good stock of 

 these books on hand, we can 

 fill all orders by return mail. This 

 is the time of year to read up on bee- 

 keeping. Better send us your 

 order at once for Dr. Miller's 

 book, and study it carefully 

 so as to make the most of the 

 bee-season. Address, 



GEORGE W. YORK <a C0.."«%"I*^«^7^«l^^»- 



Tennessee- Bred Queens 



All from extra-select mothers, Davis' Best, and the best money can buy 



3-band and Golden Italians bred 3X miles apart, Carniolans 5, Caucasians 

 7 miles away 



Caucasian, $1.25 each: 6 for $7.00: 12 for $12.00. 



Nuclei, without queens: l-frame, $2.50; 2-frame $3.50; 3-frame $4.50. 1 Full 

 Colony, 8-frame $9.00. 



Select the queen wanted and add to the above prices. 



=N T E= 



.' snn,l!cn|. a. Davia, my straiRlit .~>->>anil ami Golden ilepart- 

 ' the pn>n)ptest altention, all eorrespon<ience for these should 

 ueDt direct to him. He nraeti<'a]lv Kfew up in mv fiueen yanls, rear.s queens bv my 

 thods, has had charge .if this department tor years, and understands his liuslness. No 



JOHN iW. DAVIS. Spring Hill, TENNESSEE, U. S. A. 



Mention Bee Journal nhen wrltlns. Mention Bee JnurDiit nhen nrltlns. 



