156 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



Mar. 



Wants or Exchange Department. 



Notices will be Inserted under this head at one-naif our 

 usual rates. All ad's intended for this department must not 

 exceed 6 lines, and you must sat you want your ad. in this de- 

 partment, or we will not be responsible for any error. You 

 can have the notice as many lines as you please; but all over 

 five lines will cost you according to our regular rates. This 

 department is intended only for bona-flde exchanges. Ex- 

 changes for cash or for price lists, or notices offering articles 

 for sale can not be inserted under this head. For such our reg- 

 ular rates of 20 cts. a line will be charged, and they will be put 

 with the regular advertisements. 



WANTED.— To exchange for land or stock mer- 

 chandise, a flrst-class apiary, 17.5 colonies. No 

 better location. Crop, past season, 18,00U lbs. Bees 

 need not be moved. Every thing complete, ready 

 for business. Found.-machines, 4-hor8e-power, etc. 

 Good trade direct with consumers. Give particu- 

 lars for particulars. H. L. Graham, 

 3-45« Letts, Louisa Co., la. 



"TTTANTED.— To exchange 1000 new bee-hives, all 

 VV complete, for bees, or will furnish hives, sec- 

 tions, and foundation, lor share of the honey, to 

 parties living in Maryland, Virginia, or West Vir- 

 ginia. Write for particulars to 



F. Danzenbaker, 

 1301 K. St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 



WANTED.— To exchange Gregg, Souhegan, Early 

 Ohio, and Tyler raspberry-plants, Wartield, 

 Bubach. Jessie, May King, and Hoffman strawberry- 

 plants, A No. 1 plants, and true to name, for sec- 

 tions, honey, beeswax, or pear-trees. Satisfactioi* 

 guaranteed. E. T. Flanagan, Belleville, Ills. 

 3-5-7-d 



WANTED. — To exchange bees and queens, for 

 Barnes saw, Novice extractor, honey-knife, 

 and Excelsior printing-press with ."i!4x9)^-in. chase. 

 3-lId S. A. Shuck, Liverpool, Ills. 



WANTED. — Bee-help for 1890. One man with 

 experience, and two desiring to learn the 

 practical part of apiculture. Must be strictly tem- 

 perate. State wages expected, and other particu- 

 lars. 3 6db S. I. Freeborn, Ithaca, Wis. 



WANTED.— To exchange all kinds of wall paper, 

 for honey. J. S. Scoven, Kokomo, Ind. 



WANTED.— To exchange ^00 colonies of bees, in 

 S. hives, for any thing useful on plantation. 

 Itfdb Anthony Opp, Helena, Ark. 



W 



ANTED.— To exchange foundation, for beeswax. 

 Sample on application. 



Avery's Island Apiary, Avery, La. 



WANTED ! ! ! I want a man to take charge of an 

 apiary. F. D. Lacy, 



3-5db Nirvana, Lake Co., Mich. 



WANTED.— To exchange from one to 1000 books, 

 of new publication, for bees and apiarian fix- 

 tures. F. D. Lacy, Nirvana, Lake Co., Mich. 4ifdb 



WANTED. — I want a small-size baling-press, for 

 which I will exchange folding paper boxes, 

 Italian bees, hives, extractors, or job printing. 

 4 .5d A. O. Crawford, S. Weymouth. Mas'*. 



WANTED.— To exchange nursery siock lor sDot- 

 gun or lawn-mower. Geo. Gould, 



4-56d Villa Ridge, Pulaski Co., 111. 



WANTED.— To exchange Ply. Rock, Langshan, 

 and Wyandotte cockerels /o?- Wyandotte hens, 

 thorou{)hbred. Correspondence solicited. 

 45d W. H. SwiGART, Dixon, 111. 



WANTED.— To exchange bees and queens for 

 nursery stock, or will pay cash. C. E. Price, 

 5d Smithtown Branch, Suffolk Co., N. Y. 



WANTED.— To exchange a 6-inch Pelham fdn.mill, 

 in good order, one dipping-tank, one 10-inch 

 planer saw, one lO-lnch rip-saw, one 10-inch cut-off 

 saw; 8-inch bevel saw; one 6-inch rip-saw; one saw- 

 mandrel, for tin sap-buckets, new or second hand. 

 Post's Eureka spouts, or offers. F. W. Dean, 

 5d. New Milford, Pa. 



WANTED. — To exchange one Acme harrow, new, 

 for Poland-China swine, either sex. or Shrop- 

 shire ewes, or any thing I can use on the farm or 

 in the apiary. Luther Purdy, Killbuck, O. .5tfdb. 



WANTED.— To exchange for supplies, or part 

 payment for Barnes saw, one Twombly knit- 

 ting-machine, with coarse plate; nearly new. 

 5d J. M. Moore, Holden, Mo. 



WANTED.— To exchange 3 breediuer-pens, one 

 cockerel and 6 hens each. White P. Rocks, or 

 White Wyandottes, A No. 1 stock; 3 pairs of premi- 

 um birds, for full colonies of bees, to be shipped in 

 April or the first of May. J. B. Mason, 



5d Mechanic Falls, Me. 



WANTED.— To exchange one 5x8 photograph 

 outfit for a foot-power saw, bicycle, apiarian 

 supplies, or any thing useful on a farm. 

 5d P. M. Lockwood, Sand Lake, Kent Co., Mich. 



WANTED.— To exchange a quarter-plate camera, 

 with stand, headrest, cartons, and chemicals, 

 for small self-inking printing-press and tvpe. or of- 

 fers. F. T. Hall, Lochiel, Dunn Co., Wis. 



WANTED.— To exchange thin fdn. or queen-re- 

 strictors for honey. C. W. Dayton, 



5d Bradford, Chick. Co., Iowa. 



WANTED.— To exchange Cuthbert raspberry- 

 roots for beeswax, L. fdn., and Shaffer's Co- 

 lossal raspberry-roots. M. Isbell, 

 .5-7d Norwich, Chenango Co., N. Y. 



W 



ANTED —To exchange empty Simp. L. combs 

 at 10 cts. each, for wax or offers. 5tfdb 



Oliver Foster, Mt. Vernon, Linn Co., Iowa. 



WANTED.— To exchange Turner and Cuthbert 

 raspberry-plants for pure Italian queens, eggs 

 for hatching, etc. E. R. Miller, 



.5-6-7d Garden City, Cas.s Co., Mo. 



WANTED.— To exchange 11 bound volumes of 

 Gleanings, from 1878 to 1889, inclusive, for a 

 Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, or a copying- 

 press or offers. w. S. Wright, 

 5d Battle Creek, Mich. 



WANTED.— To exchange comb honey and Jap- 

 anese buckwheat for extracted honey and 

 comb foundation. F.Wilcox, 



.5 6d Mauston, Juneau Co., Wis. 



FOR SALE— 6 colonies hj'brid bees in Root Dove- 

 tailed hives at $400 per colony. Address 

 6-6d T. L. Thompson, Blairsville, Indiana Co., Pa. 



2SIMPl.IClT\r BEE-HIVES, 3 covers, 1 T 

 super and .56 sections, in flat, $1.35. All kinds of 

 hives and exiractord made to order. 

 ,5-7d T. A. GuNN, TuUahoma, Tenn. 



SUPPI-IES! 



Send for circular— free. WALTER S. POUDER, 

 175 E. Walnut St., Indianapolis, Ind. 



Stfdb (Successor to F. L. Dougherty.) 



READY to Mail, tested Italian queens cheap, from 

 imported mothers. Untested in season. Send for 

 circular. Simon P. Roddy, Mechanicstown, Md. 



5-7-9d 



J.E.Neyland,McLane,ErieCo.,Pa. 



BREEDER OK CHOICE 



RED CAPS AND ANDIGOLOES EGGS; $3 PER 15. 



Also Golden Wyandottes, White Plymouth Rock, 

 Golden Spangled Hamburg. Black Hamburg eggs, 

 $3 00 per 15. Ihave taken first prize wherever shown. 



t^"ln responding to this advertisement mention Glkanings. 



«* f\ mm «1 EmPIiOVniENT.- AGENTS 



U II IVI L wanted everywhere, for the HOME 

 nil III fl JOURNAL— a grand family paper 

 MK W XiA JJ at $1 a year. Big cash premiums. 

 Sample Free. THOS. Q. NEWMAN & SON, 

 246 East Madison Street, - - CHICAGO, ILLS. 



(^"In responding to this a<lvertisen>ent mention Glkanings. 



