HOW TO KEEP BEES FOR PROFIT 



of beekeepers to rear their own queens, as 

 they are able to breed from only their best 

 specimens, whose offspring have shown re- 

 markable qualities of gentleness, and are great 

 honey -gatherers. With the advent of a number 

 of new systems of queen-rearing, which will be 

 explained, one can easily see that this part of 

 the profession is not so mysterious as some will 

 suppose, and with a little experience the novice 

 will soon be able to raise as good queens as the 

 professional breeder, and not be compelled to 

 pay from $1 to $3 apiece for them. 



If left to follow their own natural impulses, 

 the bees would build only a limited number of 

 cells at the swarming time, but by the use of 

 a few simple and inexpensive appliances, the 

 beekeeper is able to rear them in almost un- 

 limited numbers and thus always have them 

 at hand when needed. 



It is a known fact that in the breeding of all 

 kinds of stock, the quality can be greatly 

 improved by selection and restriction in the 

 specimens that are to reproduce their kind, 



98 



