236 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL 



July 



success. We hope the present publi- 

 cation may succeed. 



The following is an incomplete list 

 of the different bee periodicals which 

 have been born in the United States in 

 the past 50 years, and have been com- 

 pelled to suspend their publication 

 after one issue or more. Some have 

 lasted over ten years. We possess at 

 least one number of nearly every one 

 of the following: 



1866. The American Bee Gazette 

 merged into the American Bee Journal, 

 New York, N. Y. 



1868. The Illustrated Bee Journal, 

 Indianapolis, Ind. 



1869. Annals of Bee Culture, Hawes- 

 ville, Ky. 



1869. The Beekeepers' Journal, New 

 York, N. Y. 



1871. The National Bee Journal, Des 

 Moines, Iowa. 



1872. The North American Bee Jour- 



H. T. Hagler. of Virden, III. 



nal, Indianapolis, Ind. Successor to 

 the Illustrated Bee Journal. 



1873. Moon's Bee World, Rome, Ga. 



1873. The Beekeepers' Magazine, 

 New York, N. Y. Successor to the Bee- 

 keepers' Journal. 



1877. The Indiana Beekeepers' Mag- 

 azine, Logansport, Ind. 



1877. The Beekeepers' Guide, Ken- 

 dallville, Ind. 



1879 The Beekeepers' Instructor, 

 Somerset, Ky. Later at Adelphi, Ohio, 



1879. The Beekeepers' Exchange. 

 Canajoharie, N. Y. 



1879. Our Apiary, Shelbyville, 111. 



1879. The Western Honey Bee, Leb- 

 anon, Mo. 



1881. The Kansas Beekeeper, Colum- 

 bus, Kan. 



1882. The American Apiculturist, 

 Wenham, Mass. 



1882. The California Apiculturist, 

 Oakland, Calif. 



1883. The New England Apiarian, 

 Mechanic Falls, Maine. 



1885. The Gleaner, Dalton, Pa. 



1885. 

 Tex. 



1886. 

 Mich. 



1886. 



1886. 

 Chester 



1886, 



The Texas Bee Journal, Waco, 

 The Beekeepers' Index, Ovid, 



The Bee Hive, Andover, Conn. 



Rays of Light, North Man- 



Ind. 



Modern Farmer and Busy Bee, 

 St. Joseph, Mo. 



1883. The Western Beekeeper, Des 

 Moines, Iowa. 



1888. The Queen Breeders' Journal, 

 Marlboro, Mass. 



1889. The Beekeepers' Advance, Me- 

 chanic Falls, Maine. 



1891. The American Beekeeper, 

 Jamestown, N. Y. 



1891. The White Mountain Apiarist, 

 Berlin Falls, N. H. 



1891. The California Beekeeper, San 

 Francisco, Calif. 



1891. The Bee World, Waynesburg. 

 Pa. 



1891. The Missouri Beekeeper. Sold 

 to the American Beekeeper. 



1892. The Progressive Beekeeper, 

 HiBginsville, Mo. 



1892. The National Bee Gazette, St. 

 Louis, Mo. 



1892. The Poultry and Bee Journal 

 Auburn, Neb. 



1893. The Beekeepers' Enterprise, 

 New Haven, Conn. 



1893. Success in Bee Culture. 



1893. The Nebraska Bee Journal, 

 Fairbury, Neb. 



1894. The Beekeepers' Quarterly, 

 Dowagiac, Mich. 



1895. The Pacific Slope Bee Journal, 

 Los Angeles, Calif. 



1896. The Southland Queen, Beeville, 

 Tex. 



1901. The Rocky Mountain Bee Jour- 

 nal, Boulder. Colo. 



1902. The Lone Star Apiarist, Flor- 

 esville, Tex. 



1904. The Rural Beekeeper, River 

 Falls. Wis. 



The short life of most of the above 

 43 publications has nevertheless helped 

 progress, by calling attention to the 

 cultivation of the bee. 



Colleges have at different times taken 

 interest in beekeeping. The first we 

 know of to give a course of beekeep- 

 ing was the Michigan State Agricul- 

 tural College of Lansing. This was 



THE VETERAN O. O. POPPLl.TON. FOR YEARS A BEEKEEPER WITH LONG 



IDEA HIVES 



