DECEMBER 15, 1913 



studying bees in Oklahoma, 809 ; Comb built in six 

 days, 379; Comb honey irregular in sections, 54; 

 Comb honev shipped in candy -pail, 450; Combless 

 bee packages, 257, 258, 259, 260; Concrete hive, 

 Bosserman's, 718, 719; Concrete hive-stands, 89; 

 Convention, field, Massachusetts, 607 ; Convention, 

 field. New Zealand, 375, 376; Convention, field, 

 Ontario, 536: Convention, field. South Dakota, 804; 

 Convention, Iowa, 87 ; Convention, National, Cin- 

 cinnati, 185; Convergent poultry-runs, 741; Cover, 

 Holtermann's metal, 849; Covers, Powers' telescopic, 

 88. ' 



Daisies in Colorado, 118; Dasheens at Medina, 

 578: Dasheens in Florida, 459, 613; Davis, W. G., 

 South Africa, 613 ; Democrat for hauling honey, 

 Isle-of-Wight, 646, 647 : Divisible-brood-chamber hive, 

 848 ; Demonstrating bees, Mrs. Swope, 149 ; Disease, 

 SchoU's, 415 ; Dress for woman in apiary, 895 ; 

 Drumwright, W. J.,- home of, 571; Drunken man 

 and boy, 554, 555. 



Engine located outside building, 846; English 

 schools, beekeeping taught in, 20; Entrance partly 

 closed with propolis, 816; Entrance protector for 

 packing, 683; Entrances, screening, 891; Escape- 

 board, Yeoman's, 302, 303; Escape-boards ventilated, 

 577, 877: Escape, Bunch's substitute for, 230; Ex- 

 hibit of G. F. Pease, 766; Exhibit, Madison Centen- 

 nial, Wisconsin, 810; Exhibit, Massachusetts, Agri- 

 cultural Cololege, 608 ; Exhibit, New Zealand, 17, 

 4 53, 496; Exhibits, Hartford fair, 755, 759 ; Extract- 

 ing outfit, Holtermann's, 215, 845 ; Extracting outfit, 

 small, 218, 219; Extracting room diagram, 226, 228, 

 229, 231; Extracting wagon, Dexter's, 220; Ex- 

 tractor, double-walled, 224 ; Extractor, twelve-frame, 

 on wagon, 215. 



Fair, Hartford, honey exhibit at, 755 — 759 ; Feed- 

 ers, Smith's "Perfect," 120, 121; Field day, Massa- 

 chusetts, 607; Field meeting. New Zealand, 375, 

 376; Field day, Ontario, 536; Flood, Florida, 892; 

 Foster, Oliver, 373; Foster, Robert E., and grease- 

 wood, 50; Foul brood, Barstow's method of shaking, 

 887; Foul brood. Case's method, 406; Foundation 

 fastened by "bulb" wax-tube, 123; Foundation, im- 

 bedding wire in, 800, 803 ; Foundation poorly attach- 

 ed, effect of, 54; Frame tongs. Gram's, 574; Frame 

 tongs, Gray's, 573 ; Funnel, Bruennich's, for run- 

 ning bees in mating-box, 494. 



Garage, colony transferred from wall of, 16; Gid- 

 ley, K. N., New Zealand, 374; Glass mating-hive, 

 Bruennich's, 493, 494 ; Glass super covers, 52 ; Grad- 

 ing honey in New Zealand, 457 ; Grass kept down by 

 sheep, 85; Greasewood in Colorado, 50; Group of 

 twelve-frame hives, 848 ; Grouping of hives, SchoU's 

 plan, 684. 



Hall, P. W., home of, 716; Hand-car, Holter- 

 mann's, 847 ; Harker, Amos, playing with bees, 293 ; 

 Heating honey, Niver's arrangement for, 576; Hills, 

 majesty of, 14; Hive indicators, 762; Hive numbers, 

 SchoU's, 43 ; Hive records, bricks for, 223 ; Hive- 

 stand, B. Keep's, 503; Hive-tool, Gray's, 573; Hive, 

 Whitten's back-opening, 772, 773 ; Hives piled on 

 platform by car, 891; Hives, Scholl's plan of group- 

 ing, 684; Hives too close together, 188; Hives, 

 twelve-frame, group of, 848 ; Holtermann's helpers, 

 850; Holtermann, R. P., 844; Holtermann's stu- 

 dents, 123; Home of A. I. Root, 865, 866; Homes 

 of Colorado bee-men, 411 ; Honey-dew on pine, 614 ; 

 Honey exhibits at Hartford Fair, 755 ; Honey graded 

 and sealed. New Zealand, 455 ; Honey-house on 

 creek, 571; Honey-house, Silsbee's, 217; Honey- 

 liquefying vat, 797: Honev-wagon, Kirkpatrick's, 

 451; House apiary, Fetzer's, 537. 



Ice-covered orange-tree, 83 ; Imbedding wire in 

 foundation, 800, 803 ; Isle-of-Wight bee disease, 646, 

 647. 



Jacobson, C. A., New Zealand, 454. 



Langstroth hive, birthplace of, 853, 854; Leaves 

 for packing whole row of hives, 119; Liquefying vat, 

 Scholl's, 797 ; Loading car of bees for Florida, 892 ; 

 Loading car of honey, Arizona, 448 ; Locust trees, 

 picturesque drive, 645. 



925 



Mammy and the bees, 181 ; Map of Scholl's api- 

 aries, 615; Maples and willows in Colorado, 13; 

 Massachusetts Agricultural College, 607, 608, 609 ; 

 Mating-hive, Bruennich's, glass, 493, 494; Mcln- 

 tvre family, 893, 894; Mclntyre, Flora, 895; Mer- 

 conchini. P., 339; Mickwitz, Paul, 307; Moving 

 load of supers, 533. 



Nailing-device, Byer's, 680; New Zealand N. F. 

 B. A. olifice, 456; Nickel, Grandpa, 19; Numbers, 

 Scholl's, 43; Nursery-cage, Bankston's, 187. 



Observation hive, Whitten's, 186; Orange-tree cov- 

 ered with ice, 83 ; Oregon, map showing bee distri- 

 bution, 896; Outdoor colony, 305, 492, 768. 



Paper on framework around hive, 725 ; Parcel 

 post lioney packages, 94 ; Peas, sweet and garden, 

 544; Pine covered with honey-dew, 614; Playing 

 with bees, 293; Pound package, putting bees in, 

 261; Pound packages, 257, 258, 259, 260. 



Queen-cells started by crushing surrounding cells, 

 611; Queen, sifting to find, 501. 



Raw material and finished product, 554, 555 ; 

 Robber-cloth, Cheney's, 270 ; Root, A. I.'s home, 865, 

 866; Row of hives protected, 119; Russian hives, 

 262, 263, 264. 



Saloon a factory, 555 ; Sawing " bee," Ontario, 

 378; Scales, hive on, 723; Screening entrances, 891; 

 School-house and teacher, 539; Schools, English, 

 beekeeping taught in, 20; Section with tin slides to 

 protect honey, 716; Sectional hive, Scholl's, 415; 

 Sections folded wrong side out, 15; Shallow frames 

 of honey, shipping, 799 ; Sheep clearing brush lands 

 for clover, 380; Sheep mow grass in apiary, 85; 

 Shipment of honey from N. P. B. A., New Zealand, 

 454; Shipping comb honey in candy-pail, 450; Ship- 

 ping shallow frames of honey, 799 ; Sifting to find 

 queen, 501; Snow, hives buried in, 56, 888, 890; 

 Snowdrop, or buckbush, 649 ; Soap-box, hiving 

 swarm in, 294; Spencer boys, 122; Starters poorly 

 attached, effect of, 54 ; Steam-knife, tea-kettle for, 

 377; Steers eat sweet clover. 497; Stites, Robert, 

 preparing winter cases, 49 ; Supers covers of glass, 

 52; Super-rest, 350; Swar.n bending down small 

 tree, 352; Swarm clustered on top of hive, 304, 

 Swarm, hiving, by Frank Pease, 297, 298; Swarm 

 hived in soap-box, 294; Swarm, "molecules" of, 

 530, 531; Swarm on lasket, 152; Swarm on face 

 of Jay Smith, 447; Swarm on rail fence, 300; 

 Swarm returning to hive, 299 ; Swarm, W. C. Wall- 

 er's, 410; Swarms carried in sacks, 577; Swarming 

 device Junge-Peirce, 308, 309; Sweet clover eaten 

 by steers, 497; Sweet clover in Ontario, 885, 886; 

 Sweet-clover root, 650. 



Taylor, Murton Ross, 811; Tea-kettle for steam- 

 knife," 377; Tenement-hive apiary, 288; Thimbleber- 

 ries in bloom, 117; 'Tin slide on sections to proiecl 

 honey, 726; Toad that ate bees, 498; Transferring 

 bees, Mrs. Howard, 154, 155; Tree, section of, con- 

 tains bees, 721. 



Uncapping-knife, tea-kettle for steam, 377; Un- 

 capping machine, Ferguson's, 340. 



Ventilated bottom-board, 314, 763; Ventilated 

 escape-boards, 577, 877; Ventilating by putting 

 brood-chamber on four blocks, 610 ; Ventilation in 

 winter, 763 ; Ventilator and non-swarming device, 

 308, 309; Vinegar factory, W. W. Gary's, 854. 



Wagon, Scholl's apiarv, 344; Ward, E. G., New 

 Zealand, 453; Wax from 35,000 lbs. of honey, 377; 

 Wax-press, Atwater's home-made, 124; Wax-presses, 

 Massachusetts Agricultural College, 609 ; Wax ren- 

 dered out of doors, 495 ; Wax separator, 499 ; Wheel- 

 barrow, spring, 760; Whiskers made of bees, 447; 

 White Leghorns and their keeper, 612 ; Wilder, J. ,T., 

 342; Willows and maples in Colorado, 13; Willows 

 in Canada, 412, 413; Winter case for twelve colo- 

 nies, 683 ; Winter cases, Holtermann's, 849 ; Winter 

 cases. List's, 682; Winter cases, Robert Stites' 49; 

 Wire to imbed in foundation, 800, 803 ; Woman's 

 dress in apiarv, 895 ; Women studying bees, 540, 

 541, 542. 



