XM® MMUKICfEK MMM J@URI«JEI^. 



61 





AL,FREI> H. WEWMAN, 



BUSINESS MANAGER. 

 IXXIXX.XXXXXXXXXXXXTXX.X XXXXXT-XXTXX1 



itisiuess ^attcts* 



■ Subscribers who do not receive their 



papers promptly, should notify us at once. 



H^" Money in Potatoes, by Mr. Joseph 

 Greiner. Price, 25 cents, postpaid. For sale 

 at this office. 



^g' Send us one i^EW subscriber, with 

 ^1.00, and we will present you with a nice 

 Pocket Dictionary. 



It^" Red Labels are nice for Pails which 

 hold from 1 to 10 lbs. of honey. Price $1.00 

 per hundred, with name and address printed. 

 Sample free. 



1^" We have some full sets of the Bee 

 JouKNAL for 1889, and new subscribers can 

 have the full sets for 1889 and 1890 for 

 $1.80 until all are gone. 



' Calvert's No. 1 Phenol, mentioned in 



Cheshire's Pamphlet on pages 16 and 17, as 

 a cure for foul brood, can be procured at 

 this office at 35 cents per ounce, by express. 



■ The date on the wrapper-label of this 



paper indicates the end of the month to 

 which you have paid. If that is past, please 

 send us a dollar to advance that date another 

 year. 



t^~ Please send us the names of your 

 neighbors who keep bees, and we will send 

 them sample copies of the Bee Jodrnal. 

 Then please call upon them and get them to 

 subscribe with you. 



_ _ ' As there is another firm of "Newman 

 & Son" in this city, our letters sometimes 

 get mixed. Please write AmerUian Bee 

 Journal on the comer of your envelopes to 

 save confusion and delay. 



' Systematic work in the Apiary will 

 pay. Use the Apiary Register. Its cost is 

 trifling. Prices : 



For 50 colonies (120 pages) $100 



'• 100 colonies (220 pages) 1 25 



■' 200 colonies (420 pages) 1 50 



'When talking about Bees to your 

 friend or neighbor, you will oblige us by 

 commending the Bee Journal to him, and 

 taking his subscription to send with your 

 renewal. For this work we will present you 

 with a copy of the Convention Hand Book, 

 by maU, postpaid. It sells at 50 cents. 



' We offer the Monthly Philadelphia 



Farm Jmimal, and either the American 

 Bee Joitrnal or Illustrated Home Jour- 

 nal for one year, for the small sum of $1.20. 

 Or, we will give it free for one year to any 

 one who will send us one new subscriber for 

 either of our Journals with $1.00 (the sub- 

 scription price). 



We Club the American Bee Jowmal 



for a year, with any of the following papers 



or books, at the prices quoted iu the I.1ASX 



column. The regular price of both is given 



in the first colunin. One year's subscription 



for the American Bee Journal must be sent 



with each order for another paper or book: 



Price of both. (Mub 

 The American Bee J ournal 1 00 . . . 



and Gleanings in Bee-Culture 2 00.. 



Bee-Keepers' Guide 1 50.. 



Bee- Keepers' Review 1 50.. 



The Apiculturist 1 75. . 



Bee-Keepers' Ad vance 1 50 . . 



Canadian Bee Journal 2 00. . 



Canadian Honey Producer... 1 40.. 

 The 8 above-named papers . . 5 65 . . 



and Langstroth Revised (Dadant).3 00. 

 Cook's Manual (ISST edition) 2 25. 

 Doolittle on Queen-Rearing.. 2 00. 

 Bees and Honey (Newman)... 2 00, 

 Binder for Am. Bee Journal . . 1 60 . 

 Dzierzon's Bee-Book (cloth).. .3 00. 

 Root's A B C of Bee-Culture. .2 25, 



Farmer's Account Book 4 00, 



Western World Guide 1 50, 



Heddon's book, "Success,".. 1 50, 



A Tear Among the Bees 1 75, 



Convention Hand-Book 1 50 , 



Weekly Inter-Ooean 2 00, 



Toronto Globe (weekly) 2 00, 



History of National Society..! 50. 

 American Poultry Journal. . .2 25, 



..175 

 ..140 

 .. 140 

 ..165 

 ..140 

 ..180 

 ..130 

 .. 5 00 



... 2 75 



. .. 2 00 



... 175 



. . . 1 75 



. . . 1 50 



... 2 00 



. .. 210 



. . . 2 20 



. .. 130 



. 1 40 



... 150 



. . . 1 30 



... 175 



. . . 1 70 



. . . 1 25 



... 150 



l>© not send to us for sample copies 

 of any other papers. Send for such to the 

 publishers of the papers you want. 



CATARRH. 



CATARRHAL DEAFNESS-HAY FEVER. 

 A New Home Treatment. 



Sufferers are not generally aware that 

 these diseases are contagious, or that they 

 are due to the presence of living parasites 

 in the lining membrane of the nose and 

 eustachian tubes. Microscopic research, 

 however, has proved this to be a fact, and 

 the result of this discovery is that a simple 

 remedy has been formulated whereby 

 catarrh, catarrhal deafness and hay fever 

 are permanently cured in from one to three 

 simple applications made at home by the 

 patient once in two weeks. 



N. B. — This treatment is not a snuff or an 

 ointment; both have been discarded by 

 reputable physicians as injurious. A 

 pamphlet explaining this new treatment is 

 sent free on receipt of stamp to pay pos- 

 tage, by A. H. Dixon & Son, 337 and 339 

 West King Street, Toronto, Canada. — 

 Christian Aclmocate. 



Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles should 

 carefuUy read the above. 

 50E26t Imly. 



Our Clubin? Iiist.— We have now made 

 arrangements with publishers of metropolitan 

 Weekly Newspapers, by which we can club 

 them at the very low prices quoted in the 

 IiAST column, without premiums. The regu- 

 lar price of both is given in the first column. 

 One year's subscription for this Journal 

 must be sent with each order for another 



paper ; 



Price of both. Club. 



Chicago Inter-Ocean S2.00 $1.75 



Chicago Times 3.00 1.75 



Chicago Globe 2.00 1.75 



Chicago News 2,00 1.75 



Chicago Herald 2.00 1.75 



Philadelphia Practical Farmer 2,00 1.75 



New York World 2.00 1.75 



ToledoBlade 2.00 1.75 



iStS.OO EiK-yt-lopedia. — The work is 



almost us large as Webster's Dictionary, 4 

 inches thick, weighs over 5 pounds, and 

 occupies over 300 cul»ic inches of 5i>ace. It 

 is handsomely bound in English cloth, 

 double spring back, gilt side and back 

 stamp, marble edges, beveled boards, and 

 contains over 100 illustrations. It is pub- 



lished at $5.00 per volume, which is very 

 low in comparison with standard current 

 prices on other works. 



It treats of every characteristic, both the 

 good and the bad, of the various types of 

 man and woman, and proposes to tell most 

 people more about their fellow-men than 

 they ever dreamed it possible to find out. 



We will club it with this Journal for 

 $2.10, postpaid. 



Or we will present it as a Premium for 5 

 new subscribers to either Journal, with 

 $5,00 to pay for the subscriptions. 



This is an opportunity of a lifetime— a 

 rare chance to get a very valuable book 

 free. The postage alone costs 30 cents. 



Postal l^otes are no safer to use in 

 letters than bank bUls. Any one can get 

 the money on them. A Money Order can 

 be obtained at the post-office or at the ex- 

 press office for 5 cents (only 2 cents more 

 than a Postal Note), and is perfectly safe; 

 if lost it can be re-issued. 



E^" We always extend the term of re- 

 newal subscriptions from the date of 

 expiration on our books. Present sub- 

 scribers whose time may expire one, two 

 three or six months hence, can safely 

 renew now, without fear of loss thereby. 



Any of the Political Dollar Weekly 

 Newspapers will be clubbed with our Jour- 

 nal at $1.85 for the two ; or with both our 

 Home Journal and Beb Journal for $2.50 

 for all three papers. 



