GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE 



March, 1918 



WANTED. — Honey and beeswax. Send sample 

 and price. 



C. S.-Fayer, 386 Halsey St., Portland, Ore. 



BEESWAX WANTED, — For manufacture into 

 V/eed Process Foundation on shares. 



Superior Honey Co., Oglen, Utah. 



WANTED. — 25 to 50 colonies of bees, within 150 

 miles, and second-hand, six-frame, extractor. 



O. A. Dugstad, Spring' Valley, Minn. 



BEES WANTED. — From 1 to 200 colonies, within 

 200 miles. Also second-hand apiary equipment. 

 John E. Geiger, Syracuse, Kansas. 



WANTED. — ^Powei' extractor, brood-foundHxtion 

 machine, 10-fr. queen-excluders and 5-gal. cans. 

 What have you? E, B. Mullins, Baconton, Ga. 



WANTED. — To trade for bees, a 1912 Regal 

 auto. Good tires, would make fine truck. 



C. B. Landwer, Delphos, O. 



WANTED.- — Expert beekeeper desires to run bees 

 on shares. Address 

 592 J., care of Gleanings, Medina, O. 



WANTED. — 50 colonies of bees in 10-frame hives, 

 delivery about May 1st. Must be free from disease. 

 Geo. Herrick, 12110 Parnell Ave., West Pullman, His. 



WANTED. — Colonies of bees in Eastern New 

 York. Give style of hives and price asked. 



G. O'Connell, 467 42nd St., Brooklyn, ,N. Y. 



WANTED. — Second-hand Cowan or Root ex- 

 tractor. Must be cheap and in good condition. 

 T. J. McDonald, Blue Ridge, Georgia. 



WANTED. — Colonies of bees in Eastern Virginia, 

 Maryland or Delaware. Give description and price. 

 I. J. Stringham, 105 Park Place, N. Y. 



WANTED. — 300 colonies or less of bees — for 

 cash and spring delivery — correspondence with full 

 particulars solicited. 



A. W. Smith, Birmingham, Mich. 



WANTED. — To rent, 60 acre grain and hay farm 

 to man with some experience with bees. Good bee- 

 location and opportunity to right man. 



W. A. Latshaw, Carlisle, Indiana. 



WANTED. — Ten or twenty acres to work on 

 shares, in beans. Would help with or take charge 

 of apiary. Experienced. Address 



S. J. Wilcox, 121 John R. St., Detroit, Mich. 



WANTED. — ^Shipments of old comb and cappings 

 for rendering. We pay the highest cash and trade 

 prices, charging but 5 cts. a pound for wax rendered. 



The Fred W. Muth Co., 204 Walnut St., Cincin- 

 nati, O. 



WANTED. — To trade Edison motion-picture ma- 

 ehino, equipped complete, for bees by lb. colony or 

 nuclei. Or can use typewriter, graphophone or piano. 

 What have you to trade ? Write 



Eddie Holt, Westby, Wis., Rt. 3, Box 95. 



OLD COMBS WANTED.— Our steam wax-presses 

 will get every ounce of beeswax out of old combs, 

 cappings, or slumgum. Send for our terms and 

 our new 1918 catalog. We will buy your share of 

 the wax for cash or will work it into foundation for 

 you. Dadant & Sons, Hamilton, Illinois. 



Would you like to receive four or five dollars per 

 hundred more for your 1918 crop of honey than the 

 big buyers will offer you? Tlie Domestic Beekeeper, 

 which will cost you but $1 per year, will show you 

 how. This is no guesswork, we have done this very 

 thing with hundi'eds of our subscribers on their 

 1917 crop, and are willing to do the same by others. 

 You will make your greatest 1918 mistake if you 

 do not, every one of you, investigate the work the 

 Domestic Beekeeper is doing for its subscribers, 

 along the line of buying and selling for them. 



AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS 



AUTOMOBILE owners should subscribe for the 

 AuTO^toBII,E Dealer and Repairer; 150-page illus- 

 trated monthly devoted exclusively to the care and re- 

 pair of the car. The only magazine in the world de- 

 voted to the practical side of motoring. The 

 " Trouble Department " contains five pages of num- 

 bered questions each month from car owners and 

 repairmen which are answered by experts on gaso- 

 line-engine repairs. $1 per year. 15 cents per 

 copy. Canadian subscriptions $1.50. Postals not 

 answered. Charles D. Sherman, 107 Highland 

 Court, Hartford, Conn. 



POULTRY 



White and Bufif Wyandottes, White Rocks and 

 dark Cornish. Selected pens mated with cocks and 

 cockerels of exquisite shape and color. Mating list 

 ready. Write. Joseph Cox. Valencia, Pa. 



FOR SALE. — Single comb Rhode Island Red 

 hatching eggs, $1 and $2 per 15. My birds are 

 bred from Chicago winners. C. R. Zimmerman, 

 115 W. Garfield Ave., Swanton, Ohio. 



REAL ESTATE 



In healthy Oregon; 20 acre alfalfa ranch; 100 

 colonies bees: good house; $2,500.00. 

 871 Box 422, Hermiston, Ore. 



FOR SALE.^ — Village home with plenty of fruit, 

 fully equipjjed apiary. Write if interested. 



Clover Valley Apiary. N. H. Wilson, Derby, Vt. 



FOR SALE. — Fourteen acres — Bee, fruit, poultry 

 farm on interurban near Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor. 

 Particulars for return postage. 



Edwin Ewell, Ypsilanti, Mich. 



VIRGINIA, N. C, W. VA., and Ohio farms at 

 $15.00 per acre and up offer big values for the 

 price. Best climate, markets, schools and transpor- 

 tation. Good land and neighbors. Write P. H. 

 LaBaume, Agrl. Agt., N. & W. Ry., 246 Arcade, 

 Roanoke, Va. 



FINE CHANCE IN COLORADO ! My home and 

 apiary on Lincoln Highway, in Platte River Valley, 

 35 miles north of Denver, edge of village of 500, 

 fi-ve-room cottage, 3 lots, soft water, 50 colonies bees, 

 lots of supers and supplies. Good market right at 

 home. $1,500 takes all, part time. Will stand 

 closest investigation. 



N. L. Henthorne, Platteville, Colo. 



A small California farm earns more money with 

 less work. Raise the crops you know about — alfalfa, 

 wheat, barley, etc. — also oranges, grapes, olives, and 

 figs. Ideal for dairying, pigs, and chickens. No 

 cold weather ; rich soil ; low prices ; easy terms ; 

 good roads, schools and churches. Enjoy life here. 

 New comers welcome. Write for our San Joaquin 

 Valley, also Dairying and Poultry Raising illustrated 

 folders free. C. L. Seagraves, Ind. Com. A. T. & 

 S. F. Ry., 1927 Railway Exchange, Chicago. 



Do yon want a farm where largest profits are 

 made ? Tlie South's great variety of crops and 

 wonderfully productive climate makes it the most 

 profitable farm section of America. It is the place 

 for the lowest-cost meat production and dairy farm- 

 ing. It grows the largest variety of forage crops. 

 Good lands, in good locations, as low as $15 to $25 

 an acre. Let us show you locations that will give 

 the highest profits. M. V. Richards, Commissioner, 

 Room 27, Southern Railway System, Washington, 

 D. C. 



BEES AND QUEENS 



Finest Italian queens. Send for booklet and price 

 list. Jay Smith, 1159 DeWolf St., Vincennes, Ind. 



