NOVEMBER 15, 1913 



Honey reports continued from page 2. 



Albany. — The honey market is quiet, with light 

 receipts and good demand. We quote fancy white 

 clover at 16 to 17; good 15 to 16; fancy buck- 

 wheat, 14 to 14 Mi ; good 13 to 14; extracted is slow; 

 buckwheat, IVz to 8 ; amber, IVo to 8 ; white clover, 

 81^ to 9. Beeswax, 32. 



Albany, Nov. 6. H. R. WRIGHT. 



Denver. — Our local market is well supplied with 

 honey, and jobbing quotations are as follows: Strict- 

 ly No. 1 white, per case of 24 sections, $2.70 ; choice 

 ditto, $2.57; No. 2 ditto, $2.43; extracted white, 8 

 to 9 cts. per lb. ; light amber, 7 to 7 % cts. We are 

 in the market for beeswax, and pay 30 cts. per lb. 

 in cash, 32 cts. in trade, delivered here. 



Denver, Colo., Nov. 6. P. Rauchfuss. 



The Colorado Honey-Producer's Association, 



Schenectady. — Many retail dealers in honey have 

 now secured sufficient stock to last several weeks, 

 and the demand at present is not so large on that 

 account, and there is quite a stock on our market, 

 with no change of prices. We quote fancy white at 

 16 to 18; No. 1, 15 to 16; mixed and buckwheat, 

 12 to 14, according to style and quality ; extracted 

 white, 9 to 91/2 ; dark, 7 V2 to 8, in 60-lb. cans and 

 kegs. 



Schenectady, Nov. 6. Charles MacCulloch. 



New York. — The demand for comb honey is good, 

 especially for fancy white stock. While the crop in 

 the Eastern States has been short, some large ship- 

 ments of western alfalfa comb honey have arrived, 

 and prices are now somewhat declining. We quote 

 fancy white at 15 to 16; No. 1, 14; lower grades, 

 12 to 13; dark, 10 to 11. Extracted is in fair de- 

 mand, with sufficient supply, and prices ruling about 

 the same as our last quotation, with the exception 

 of West Indian, which is rapidly declining in price, 

 and selling at 65 to 70 cts. per gallon. Beeswax is 

 steady at 31 to 32. 



New York, Nov. 5. Hildreth & Segelken. 



Cincinnati. — The demand for both comb and 

 extracted honey is not as brisk as it should be for 

 (his time of the year. We are receiving qxiantities 

 of both comb and extracted honey. Fancy white- 

 clover comb honey is selling at 16. No. 1 white is 

 selling at $3.50 per case of 24 sections. Off grades 

 do not sell. White-clover extracted honey in 60-lb. 

 cans is selling from 9 to QVo. Amber "grades are 

 selling from 7 Vi to 8 V^ , according to grade and 

 quantity purchased. Beeswax is selling from $33.00 

 to $35.00 per hundred. The above are our selling 

 prices, not what we are paying. 



Cincinnati, JSTov. 3. C. H. W. Weber & Co. 



The A. I. Root Co.: — Of the three tested queens 

 I received of you last fall, two of them brought in 

 the goods. *** From each of the two tested queens 

 I have six cases — 168 sections to the present. The 

 seventh case, put on underneath, is also well filled 

 but not completed, while there will be another case 

 to go underneath that one to-morrow. This crop is 

 all white clover and alsike. This is an excellent 

 record, but it is not yet done. We have a heavy 

 flow of white clover running now, and it has not 

 ceased since it began about June 10. 



Highgate, Out., Can., Aug. 12. P. W. Beaton. 



LOGICAL. 



" Ma, do cows and bees go to heaven? " 

 "Mercy, child, what a question I Why?" 

 " 'Cause if they don't, the milk and honey the 

 preacher said was up there must be all canned stuff." 



hustlers, indeed. 

 Canvassers — Bright, hustling young men to take 

 orders for pure honey direct from the bees. — Daily 

 News. 



IDLE MONEY 



Money lying idle or earning 

 a small rate of interest is 

 promoting waste. The Sav- 

 ings Deposit Bank Company 

 maintains a de])artment de- 

 voted to . ... 



BANKING BY MAIL 



and invites savings accounts 

 in any amounts from $1.00 

 upward, paying interest at 

 the rate of 4%, compound- 

 ed semi-annually. You can 

 with safety and pri^ acy open 

 an account by mail. 



The SAVINGS DEPOSIT 

 BANK COMPANY 



Medina, Ohio 



ASSETS OVER ONE MILLION DOLLARS. 



A. T. SPITZER, Pres. 



E. R. ROOT, Vice-pres. 



E. B. SPITZER, Cashier 



Address the Publishers 



THE A. I. ROOT COMPANY, MEDINA, OHIO 



INCREASE Your SALES 



... By a Liberal Distribution of Our Booklet ... 



THE USE OF HONEY IN COOKING 



The 1913 edititin is ready for distribution, and may be 

 had in quantities at reasonable rates. The back cover 

 pag'e affords space for a display advertisement. As this 

 booklet contains no advertising- whatever, it can l)P 

 employed with telling- effect. Better order your supply 

 early. Sample and prices in quantities on application. 

 Fifty-eig'ht pag-es; one hundred and twenty-two valu- 

 able recipes in which honey is used. Just the book for 

 every household. A two-cent stamp will bring- a copy. 



>% — ^ A ^ -^ is the Shipping Canter of 



Boston New England 



Beekeepers should bear this in mind when order- 

 ing their supplies. A full line of supplies always 

 in stock Send for catalog 



H. H. JEPSON 



182 Friend Street 



BOSTON, iVIASS. 



GET 



TOP NOTCH PRICES 

 FOR YOUR HONEY 



BY 



USING LEWIS SECTIONS 

 AND SHIPPING CASES 



Send for Annnal Catalog which will tell 

 yoa who it yoar nearest Distributer. 

 G. B. Lewis Company, Watertown, Wis. 



