1902 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



833 



mfaatMon 



flWiCiiWMWaWI 



STRONGEST 

 MADE. Bull 



Ktrontr, Chicken- 

 Tipht. SoUi to tho Faiinerat Wholesale 

 Prices. Fully Warranted. Cataloi? Free. 



COILED SPRING FENCE CO. 

 Uox 101, Wiuchester, Indiana, V. 8. A. 



CKas. Israel (Si Brothers 



486-490 Canal St., cor. Watt St., N. Y. 



Honey and Bees^vax 



Liberal Advances Made on Consignments Wholesale 

 Dealers and Commission Merchants. Establish* d 1875. 



Queens! Queens! 



We have five different yards, 5 to 20 miles apart, 

 where Italians, Cyprians, Holylands. Carniolaus, and 

 Albinos are bred for business. You can .send in your 

 orders at following prices the rest of this year: Test- 

 ed, $1 50 each; $8.00 for six; $15.00 per doz. Untested, 

 75c each; $4.25 for six, or $8.00 per doz. Fine breeders, 

 $5.00 each. Safe arrival guaranteed. Write for free 

 catalog. Tells how to raise queens and keep bees for 

 profit. The Jennie Atchley Co., Beeville. Bee Co., Tex. 



Queens for Aug. and Sept., 60 cts. 



Abbott I,. Swinson, queen-specialist, will mail war- 

 ranted American Albino Italians (best bees known) to 

 introduce the stock, at 60 cts. each; $6.00 per dozen. 

 Everybody try them, and get the bee you need. 



Swinson & Boardman, Box 35$, Macon, Ga. 



HONEY QUEENS FROM TEXAS. 



I can furnish queens of 6 different races, all bred in 

 their purity in separate yards from 6 to 25 miles apart. 

 Untested queens, 75 cts. to $1.00 each. Tested queens 

 of either race, SI. 50 to $iM each. Breeders, $3.50 to $5 

 each. Bees by the pound, and 1, 2, and 3 frame nuclei 

 a specialty. Prices cheap Quoted on application. 

 Price list free. Will Atchley, Box 79, Beeville, Bee Co., Tex. 



Wants and Exchange. 



WANTED. — Beeswax; bright yellow preferred. 

 I. J. Stringham, 105 Park PI., New York City. 



w 

 w 



ANTED.— To exchange apples for sweet potatoes. 

 John Anderson, Oriskany Falls, N. Y. 



ANTED.— To buy bees in Ohio or adjoining States. 

 W. J. Wolfe, Ludlow, Ky. 



w 



ANTED. 



mill. 



-A location for a custom saw and feed 

 Wm. S. Ammon, Reading, Pa. 



w 



w 



ANTED. — To sell or exchange, a lady's Crescent bi- 

 cj'cle; fine condition. H. Shane^ Medina, O. 



Y^ANTED. — To exchange bees, supplies, books, and 

 ' ' a long list of articles (write for list), for typewrit- 

 er, combined hoe and drill, and beeswax. 



F. H. McFarland, Hyde Park, Vt. 



ANTED. — To exchange sweet - clover seed for 



queens or cash. 

 The Snyder Bee & Honey Co., Kingston, N. Y. 



WANTED.— To trade 160 acres of rich, level, black 

 "' land for bees. Write for particulars in first let- 

 ter. D. E. I<'Hommedieu, Colo, Story Co., Iowa. 



IVANTED — We want to hear from those having 

 ' choice comb honey to sell, stating quantity, qual- 

 ity, size, and style of .sections, and how packed. If 

 not yet packed for shipinent state how soon j-ou can 

 have it ready, and the price asked delivered here or 

 free on board at your place. 



The a. I. Root Co., Medina, Ohio. 



\VANTED.— To sell cockerels. Last June I bought 

 ' ' 65 eggs of the famous Wickoff strain of single- 

 comb White Leghorns, and have 5S chicks. The cock- 

 erels are too good to be killed. Will express one for 

 50c; three for $1.30. They are beauties; none better. 

 See what Reliable Incubator catalog says. Get them 

 while small ; express will be light. No pullets for 

 sale. C. A. Olmstead, East Bloomfield, N. Y. 



Y^ANTED. — To exchange pups (bird), 7 weeks old, 

 ' ' for incubator or offers. Pups are worth $2.50 

 each. R J. Cary, Route 42, Norwalk, Conn. 



ANTED. — To exchange bets for a young cow or 

 heifers; must be good ones. 



W. D. SOPER, Route 3, Jackson, Mich. 



w 



w 



w 



w 



ANTED.— To exchange fine violin for windmill, 

 gasoline-engine, shotgun, grain, or honey. 



G. E. Wells, Roseland, N. C. 



ANTED.— To sell a bee, fruit, and poultry ranch. 

 Write for particulars. 



Geo. C. Hatch, Port Angeles, Wash. 



ANTED — To send you catnip seed— real nice seed 

 — at 10c per large ounce packet, prepaid. 



J. E. Johnson, Williamsfield, Knox Co., Ills. 



yVANTED. — To exchange modern fire-arms for foun- 

 ^' dation-mills and foot-power saw, also wax and 

 honey. Wm. S. Ammon, Reading, Pa. 



\^ ANTED. — To sell forty strong, healthy colonies of 

 '^ Italian bees in almost new 8 and 10 frame Dove- 

 tailed hives, at $1.00 per colony. 



Chas. D. Day, Northampton, Pa. 



WANTED. — A buyer for my stock of merchandise, or 

 will exchange for a small farm in valley of Vir- 

 ginia. Wish to start a fruit and bee farm. 



W. E. Tribbett, Spottswood, Va. 



VVANTED. — To correspond with a young man who 

 '' thoroughly understands the care of bees, and 

 who would be open for engagement in the spring of 

 1903. H. C. Mills, 424 Arabella St., Pittsburgh, Pa. 



WANTED.— To sell an apiary of 30 colonies, a lot of 

 bee-supplies, 5 lots— with house, barn, and two 

 shops — in a small village. Must be sold; a great bar- 

 gain for some one. Address for particulars, 



H. D. Edwards, Delhi, 111. 



WANTED.— To sell a four-horse-power gasoline-en- 

 gine; good as new; will sell very low for cash. 

 C. L. Gould, East Dover, Vermont. 



WANTED —To sell 200 swarms of Italian bees. Also 

 7000 lbs. white extracted honej' in 60-lb. cans; 

 5 acres choice improved land, and house and two lots; 

 or will trade for merchantile business. Don't write 

 unless you mean business. 



Elias Fox, Hillsboro, Wis. 



V^ANTED.— Beeswax ; highest market price paid. 

 ' ' Write for price list. 



Bach, Becker & Co., Chicago, 111. 



W^ 



w^ 



WANTED. — To sell for cash, 5 gal. square tin cans, 

 used for honey, at about half price of new cans. 

 Also elegant exhibition 12-lb. nodrip honey-cases f-^r 

 plain Danz. and 4i^X4i<( sections; made for Pan-Amer- 

 ican. For prices, etc., address OrelL- Hershiser, 

 301 Huntington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 



WANTED. — To sell bees and queens. ALso putt}'-- 

 knife with iron handle and strong steel blade — 

 just the thing for prying and scraping about hives, 

 etc., 1.5c postpaid. "O. H. Hyatt, Shenandoah, la. 



WANTED. — To exchange an American fruit-evapo- 

 rator (nearly new, capacity 8 to 12 bus., cost $35). 

 for honey or supplies. Will sell evaporator for $15. 

 Dean Ferris, 1510 Maple Ave., Peekskill, N. Y. 



WANTED.— To sell 600 stands of Italian bees in Sim- 

 plicity hives in lots to suit buyer. Will deliver 

 the same to any point in the West if desired. Corres- 

 pondence solicited. Tyler Bros., Nicolaus, Cal. 



'ANTED. — To exchange my new price list of 2000 

 ferrets, now ready to ship, for your address on a 

 postal card. N. A. Knapt, Rochester, Ohio. 



WANTED— To sell in December. 160 acres of im- 

 proved land for $.500 and 200 hives of yellow 

 bees, and extracting tools; hive factory very cheap for 

 cash. I w.ns the founder of the apiary with which J. 

 C. McCubliiii, of Central California, earned his fame. 

 ,So come for health where there i« but little rain and 

 no snow. Land is rich, and crops grow. This State 

 has all kinds of climate and soil. 



S. W. Conrad, Poplar, Tulare Co., Cal. 



W^ 



w^ 



