670 



THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



Oct. 15, 1903. 



knowing just when to sell or when to buy means 

 .., dollars to the farmer. It is a lever that can be made to 

 count \n profit in many ways and the telephone is the 

 greatest means to this end. With a 



STROMBERG - CARLSON 

 TELEPHONE 



you are In a position to know the market prices from 

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 is triflinj;— they're a necessity to successful farming. 

 Send five 2c stamps for 128-pa^e telephone book. Our 

 book F- 4, "Telephone Facts for Farmers." is free. 



STROMBERG-CARLSON TEL. CO. SSSVI'ii.lioJ's 



Lanosiroilion... 



TI16H0161IB66 



Revised by Dadant— 1900 Edition. 



This is one of the standard books on 

 bee-culture, and ought to be in the 

 library of every bee-keeper. It is bound 

 substantially in cloth, and contains 

 over 500 pages, being revised by those 

 large, practical bee-keepers, so well- 

 known to all the readers of the Ameri- 

 can Bee Journal — Chas. Dadant & Son. 

 Each subject is clearly and thoroly ex- 

 plained, so that by following the in- 

 structions of this book one cannot fail 

 to be wonderfully helped on the way to 

 success with bees. 



The book we mail for $1.20, or club 

 it with the American Bee Journal for 

 one year — both for f 2.00 ; or, we will 

 mail it as a premium for sending us 

 THREE NEW subscribers to the Bee 

 Journal for one year, with $3.00. 



This is a splendid chance to get a 

 grand bee-book for a very little money 

 or work. 



GEORGE W. YORK & CO. 



144 & 146 Erie Street, 



CHICAGO, ILL. 



s 



END YOUR NAME f 



DANDY GREEN BONE CUTTER 



ill di.uHe ymr ,s^ yl.ld. V,ia J5 „f. 



Strattau Mtg. Co., Bx 81, Erie, Pa.l 



Please mention Bee Journal 

 when writing advertisers. 



in the head for about an hour, no 

 serious effects were felt. To be sure, 

 there was a little puffering about the 

 face, but not nearly as much as I have 

 often seen from the effects of a single 

 sting. 



I merely relate this as a warning to 

 others to use judgment when it is nec- 

 essary to bring horses near a large 

 apiary, as no one who has never wit- 

 nessed the blind, impotent fury of bees 

 when angered in this way, can form 

 any idea of their vindictiveness in such 

 cases. — York County Bee-Kkeper, in 

 Canadian Bee Journal. 



Formaldehyde. 



The most suitable time for fumigat- 

 ing combs with formaldehyde is when 

 foul brood is in growth, i. e., in the 

 spore stage. My practice is to fume 

 all combs removed from colonies before 

 returning. 



In using formaldehyde for fuming 

 care should be taken to have no brood 

 in the combs, as it kills the brood, even 

 when capped ; and this brood has to be 

 removed by the bees, which wastes a 

 lot of time. I first remove all cap- 

 pings, and if the comb contains two or 

 three pounds of honey, I extract this. 

 It is quite evident that I read Mr. 

 Saunders' first letter (5212, page 336) 

 on the same wrongly, owing to his 

 not mentioning that he aired the 

 combs, consequently I thought he had 

 not done so. In reply to his letter 

 (5225, page 354), if he will mix a little 

 formaldehyde with twice its volume of 

 water, and evaporate in a test tube — 

 smelling the gas as it is evolved — it 

 will be found that when heating the 

 tube after the liquid has evaporated a 



Order Yoyr See-Sypplies Now 



While we can serve you 

 prompt, and get them at 

 bottom prices. 



R. H. SCHMIDT CO., Sheboygan, Wis. 



I WANTED ! Fancy Comb Honey 1 



p 



In No-drip shipping-cases. Also extracted, 

 in barrels or cans. Mail samples and quote 

 your best price delivered Cincinnati. 



11 



g The Fred W,Muth Co,, "'°"*^c"Srf.,oM,o. I 



Bee= Books 



SENT POSTPAID BT 



GEORGE W. YORK & CO., 



J44&146E. ErieSt., - CHICAGO, ILL 



Forty Years Among the Bees, by Dr. 



C. C. Miller. — This bool< coutains 328 pages, 

 is pound in handsome cloth, with gold letters 

 and design ; it is printed on best book-paper, 

 and illustrated with 112 beautiful original 

 half-tone pictures, taken by Dr. Miller him- 

 self. It is unique in this regard. The first 

 few pages are devoted to an interesting bio- 

 graphical sketch of Dr. Miller, telling how he 

 happened to get into bee-keeping. Seventeen 

 years ago he wrote a small book, called "A 

 Year Among the Bees," but that little work 

 has been out of print for a number of years. 

 While some of the matter used in the former 

 book is found in the new one, it all reads like 

 a good new story of successful bee-keeping 

 by one of the masters, and shows in minutest 

 detail just how Dr. Miller does things with 

 bees. Price, §1.00. 



Bee-Keeper's Guide, or Manual of the 

 Apiary, by Prof. A. J. Cook, of Pomona Col- 

 lege, California. This booli is not only in- 

 structive and helpful as a guide in liee-keep- 

 ing, but is interesting and thoroughly practi- 

 cal and scientific. It contains a full delinea- 

 tion of the anatomy and physiology of bees, 

 544 pages. 295 illustrations. Bound In cloth. 

 I'Jth thousand. Price, $1.20. 



Liangstroth on the Houey-Bee, revised 

 by Dadant. — This classic in bee-culture has 

 been entirely re-written, and is fully illus- 

 trated. It treats of everything relating to 

 bees and bee-keeping. No apiarian library is 

 complete without this standard work by Rev. 

 L. L. Langstroth — the Father of American 

 Bee-Culture. It has 520 pages, bound in 

 cloth. Price, $1.30. 



AB C of Bee-Culture, by A. I. & E. R. 



Root. — A cyclopedia of over 500 pages, de- 

 scribing everything pertaining to the care of 

 the honey-bees. Contains about 400 en- 

 gravings. It was written especially for begin- 

 ners. Bound in cloth. Price, §1.20 



Scientific Queen-Keariug, as Practi- 

 cally Applied, by ti. M. Doolittle. — A method 

 by which the very best of queen-bees are 

 reared in perfect accord with Nature's way. 

 Bound in cloth and illustrated. Price, $1.00; 

 in leatherette binding, tiO cents. 



Bees and Honey, or Management of an 

 Apiary for Pleasure and Profit, by Thomas G. 

 Newman. — It is nicely illustrated, contains 

 100 pages. Price, in cloth, 75 cents ; in paper, 

 50 cents. 



Advanced Bee-Culture, Its Methods 

 and Management, by W. Z. Hutchinson. — The 

 author of this work is a practical and enter- 

 taining writer. You should read his book; 

 90 pages; bound in paper, and illustrated. 

 Price, 50 cents. 



Blenen-Kultur, by Thomas G. Newman, 

 — This is a German translation of the princi- 

 pal portion of the book called '"Bees and 

 Honey." 100-page pamphlet. Price, 25 cents. 



Apiary Register, by Thomas G. New- 

 man. — Devotes two pages to a colony. Leather 

 binding. Price, for 50 colonies, $1.00. 



Dr. Howard's Book on Foul Brood. 



— Gives the McEvoy Treatment and reviews 

 the experiments of others. Price, 25 cents. 



Winter Problem in Bee-Keeping, by 

 G. R. Pierce. — Result of 25 years' experience, 

 Price, 30 cents. 



Foul Brood Treatment, by Prof. F. B. 



Cheshire. — Its Cause and Prevention. 10 cts. 



Foul Brood, by A. R. Kohnke. — Origin, 

 Development and Cure. Price, 10 cents. 



