DECEMBER 15, 1915 



1059 



Honey Bread 1007 



Honey as a Food 1010 



Honey production of two api- 

 aries 346 



Honey cook book from the 



Bovernment 305 



Honey, boiled, not suitable for 



queen-cage candy . 4 



Honey produced in U. S. in 



1915 696 



Honey, keeping in a refrige- 

 rator 698 



Honey crop reports in On- 

 tario 698 



Honey, filtering to lighten the 



color 829 



Honey cakes, increasing de- 

 mand for 831 



Honey crop conditions and 



prices ATS, 051, 695 



Honey crop conditions — a 



queer season 519 



Honey cro'p conditions im- 

 prove 608 



Honey crop conditions and 



reported 783 



Honey, some new uses in the 



home 785 



Honey, its peculiarity for 



cooking 785 



Honey for browning pan- 

 cakes 786 



Honey as a cure-all 786 



Honey condition prospects. 349, 350 

 Honey for baking purposes.. 133 

 Honey market, development of 213 

 Honey extractors, genesis of.. 700 



Honey Day, national 740 



Honey bee, embryology of . . . 996 



Honey crop conditions 3S8 



Honey in the ice box 475 



Honey candies, chocolate.... 563 

 Honey crop report of Ontario 607 

 Honey crop for United States 609 



Honey for shaving 786 



Honey, hot or cold 786 



Honey, cold better than warm 698 

 Honey, increasing demand for 217 

 Honey, amount in square cans 431 

 Honey, increasing demand for 831 

 Idaho foul-brood law 3 15. .391, 392 

 Idaho proposed foul-brood law 1 

 Idaho foul-brood bill vetoed.. 258 

 Illinois Field Meet at Hamil- 

 ton 744 



Immigrating to the West.... 260 

 Immunity from stings, how to 



become 434 



Imperial Valley, California... 



348, 349 



Importing bees from one 

 county to another in Cali- 

 fornia 349 



Inheritance in bees and its re- 

 lation to color 214 



Introducing a new method of 741 

 Introducing by smoke not al- 

 ways test of purity 214 



Invert sugar for queen-cage 



candy 133 



Invert sugar, queen-cage candy 388 



ways a success 829 



Iowa Apicultural Station.... 258 



Iowa State Convention 134 



Iowa report exhausted 213 



Italians, resistant strains of. 480 

 Italians and European foul 



brood 480 



Journal, new bee 431 



Kentucky State Bee Conven- 

 tion 47 



Kirkpatrick, Geo. H., com- 

 plaints against 521 



I.nngdtroth'i invention 5G8 



Latin names for honey plants 742 

 Laying workers from two- 

 year-old quoon 433 



Lanvstroth in Spanish 475 



Leather vs. golden colored 



bees 744 



Live-be^ demonstration, going 



too far 610 



Live bee demonstration, im- 

 portant point 651, 652 



Location of hives or apiaries. 739 



Long Idea hive 479 



Manum, A. E., death of 566 



Massachusetts instructions on 



spraying 347 



M;\ssachusetts beekeeping .... 348 

 Massachusetts anti-spraying 



bill 89 



Massachusetts on the time 



to spray 173 



Massachusetts Convention.... 174 

 Massachusetts inspection work 476 

 Massachusetts summer school 567 

 Migratory beekeeping to the 



south not profitable 564 



Miller, Dr. C. C, methods of 



management 787, 788 



Miller, Dr. C. C. discoveries. 78S 

 Mitchell on the net weight law 91 

 Montreal Beekeepers Conven- 

 tion 47 



Moth traps 568 



Motor-cycle accident, Phillips, 



Geo. W 919 



National Assn. problems 218 



National Assn. purely educa- 

 tional organization 217 



National Convention at Den- 

 ver 174, 217 



Nelson's new book 996 



Net weight law as it relates 



to hams and comb honey 90 

 Net weight law interpreted by 



Bureau of Chemistry . .91, 92 

 Net weight law. blessing, not 



curse 740 



Net weight law, warning con- 

 cerning 830 



Net weight, how to sell comb 



honey under 783 



Net-weight law as it relate* to 



comb honey 607 



Net weight law after one year 652 



New Jersey bee book 831 



Newell, Wilmon, off to Florida 696 

 Nevada quarantine on bees.. 607 

 Newell's experiment on Car- 



niolans and Italians 214 



Norwegian beekeeper, visit 



from 743 



Nosema apis or bee paralysis 784 

 Nosema apis or bee paralysis 



784, 830 



Nosema apis 922 



Nulomoline, queen-cage candy 388 



Ohio State Convention 89 



Oliio Field Dav Meet. . . .653, 739 



Ohio Field Meet again 739 



Ohio State Convention at 



Akron 830 



Oklahoma dinner 563 



Oklahoma foul brood bill 



passes 213 



Olfactory sense of bees 346 



Olive Oil and Honev 1008 



Omdahl, visit of 743 



Ontario crop report 607 



Ontario honey crop reports. . 698 

 Ontario honey crop reports 



again '. . . . 831 



Orange culture and bees 216 



Oregon ian beekeeping 389 



Packing, methods of 877 



Packing, not too much, but too 



much snow 964 



Parable of barren apple tree. 214 

 Paralysis or nosema apis.... 784 

 Paralysis not, but poison.... 46 

 Paralysis, or nosema apis . . . 922 



Pejario Valley orchard 305 



Pennsylvania, $.'jO,000 appro- 

 priation bill 257 



Polletfs liei-book 1008 



Pettit on European Foul brood 480 

 Phillips' new book, "Beekeep- 



int,'" 739, 834 



Phillips and the editor at Dr. 



Miller's 787 



Phillips. Geo. W., accident . . 919 

 Poison, not paralysis 46 



Politics in Pennsylvania 563 



Pollination, an interesting 



discussion of 611, 612 



Pollination of orange groves. 216 

 Pollination of fruit trees, 45, 214 

 Pollination of fruit trees in 



Pejario Valley, Cal 305 



Pollination of fruit trees by 

 insects as well as bees. . 



390, 391 



Pollen theory 568 



Pounds bees successfully 



shipped 744 



Prejudice against bees, un- 

 reasoning 520 



Publications from the govern- 

 ment, list of 875, 876 



Quadruple winter cases vs. 



bees 607 



Quadruple winter case, who 



invented 875 



Quadruple winter cases, hav« 



they made good 697 



Quadruple winter cases.. 175, 176 

 Quarantine on shipments of 



double-walled hives 345 



Queens, plurality of 740 



Queens, value of young 699 



Queens, can they be raised for 



50c? 699, 786 



Queen-cage candy of invert 



sugar 131 



Queen-yard Alabama 1007 



Quinby's old home 260 



Rabbet Spacing 1008 



Rainfalls and their distribu- 

 tion 349, 350 



Review divorced from the 



National 217 



Rheumatism and stings 964 



Rock, bee, in California .... 875 



Root, E. R., back home SOI 



Root, old original honey ex- 

 tractor 700 



Sandpaper or knife for clean- 

 ing sections 655, 656 



Scarifying seed to make it 



grow 303, 304 



Scythes for mowing in bee 



yard 432 



Scientific names for honey 

 Sealed covers vs. absorbents 48, 90 

 Sections, how to mark mini- 

 mum net weight 652 



Sections, sandpai>er or knife 



655, 656 



Sections, bait, the abuse of.. 831 

 Self-spacing Hive Rabbets . . 1008 

 Shake, or shook swarming. . . . 568 

 Smelters, and the complaints 



of beekeepers 965 



Smelling of bees 349 



Smoke introducing not always 



successful 829 



Snow, and its relation to win- 

 tering 173 



Solitary sand bees of fruit 



trees 390 



Southern Conference for edu- 

 cation 257 



Special numbers of Gleanings, 



1915 2 



Splaying when in bloom. . . . 



■ 173, 215, 347 



Spraying, how it kills bees in 



Colorado 5, C 



Spraying bill, anti for Massa- 

 chusetts 89 



Spraying, killing bees by, ac- 

 cording to Gillette 303 



Spraying while in bloom not 



killing bees 306 



Spraying, killing bees, con- 

 clusively shown 740 



.Spraying just before white 



petals fall 391 



Sjiraying not injurious in Pe- 

 jario Valley, and why... 432 

 Sjjrcading brood should be dis- 

 couraged 432 



Square cans, how much honey 



holds 431 



