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CL,U]SBIIVC} L,IST. 



ALFRKM H. NEIVIWAIV, 



BUSINESS MANAGER. 

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Uisiuess notices. 



I^" Subscribers who do not receive their 

 papers promptly, should notify us at once. 



ES" Send us one new subscription, with 

 §1.00, and we will present you with a nice 

 Pocket Dictionary. 



1^" 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^" 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 25 cents per ounce, by express. 



Jt^~ Send us two new subscriptions, with 

 $2.00, and we will present you with a 

 " Globe " Bee-Veil for your trouble. (See 

 the fuller notice in the advertising col- 

 umns.) 



B^" 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. 



I^" Please send us the names of your 

 neighbors who keep bees, and we will send 

 them sample copies of the Bee Journal. 

 Then please call upon them and get them to 

 subscribe with you. 



m^ Any of the Political Dollar Weekly 

 Newspapers will be clubbed with our Jodb- 

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

 Home Journal and Bee Journal for $2.25 

 for all three papers. 



J^" As there is another finn of "Newman 

 & Son" in this city, our letters sometimes 

 get mixed. Please write American Bee 

 Journal on the corner of your envelopes to 

 save confusion and delay. 



1^" Systematic work in the Apiary wUl 

 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 



1^^ 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 mail, postpaid. It sells at 50 cents. 



1^" A "Binder" made especially for 

 the American Bee Journal, and lettered 

 in gold, makes a very convenient way of 

 preserving the copies of the Bee Journal 

 as fast as they are received. We offer it, 

 postpaid, for 60 cents ; or as a premium for 

 two ?iew subscriptions, with $2.00. It can- 

 not be mailed to Canada. 



We Club the Amej^an Bee Journal 

 for a year, with any of the following papers 

 or books, at the prices quoted in the LAST 

 column. The regular price of both is given 

 in the first column. One year's subscription 

 for the American Bee Journal must be sent 

 with each order for another paper or book : 



Price OS both. Clnh. 

 The American Bee Journal SI 00 



and Gleanings in Bee-Culture 2 00 1 75 



Bee-Keepers' Guide 150. .. 140 



Bee-Keepers' Review 150 140 



TheApieulturist 175 165 



Bee-Keepers' Advance 150 140 



Canadian Bee Journal 2 00 ... 180 



The 7 above-named papers 5 25 5 00 



and Langstroth Revised (Dadant) 3 00 2 75 



Cook's Manual (1887 edition) 2 25.... 2 00 



Quinby's New Bee-Keeping. 2 50 2 25 



DooUttle on Queen-Rearing. 2 00 175 



Bees and Honey (Newman).. 2 00 175 



BinderforAm. Bee Journal. 160 150 



Dzierzon's Bee-Book (cloth). 3 00. . . . 2 00 

 Roofs A B C of Bee-Culture 2 25.... 210 



Farmer's Account Book 4 00 2 20 



Western World Guide 150.... 130 



Heddon's book, "Success,".. 150 140 



A Tear Among the Bees 1 50 1 35 



Convention Hand-Book 150. .. 130 



Weekly Inter-Ocean 2 00 175 



Toronto Globe (weekly) 2 00.... 170 



History of National Society. 1 50 1 25 



American Poultry Journal.. 2 25 150 



The Lever (Temperance) 2 00 1 75 



l>o 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 Advocate. 



Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles should 

 carefully read the above. 

 50E26t Iraly. 



Conventioii IVotices. 



diapnian Honey-Plant Seed. — 



This plant has been commended by some of 

 the most experienced beekeepers in 

 America, as being "a most valuable acqui- 

 sition to the list of bee-forage plants." The 

 seed may be scattered in waste places, or 

 it may be sown in drills or hills like onion 

 seed. We can furnish the seed, post-paid, 

 at the following prices : Single ounce, 40 

 cents; 4 ounces, $1.00; 10 ounces, $2.00 ; 

 or one pound for $3.00. 



B^" The Southwestern Wisconsin Bee-Keepers' 

 Society, will meet on Oct. 8, 1890, at the residence of 

 E. France, Platteville, Wis. B. RlCE, Sec. 



^W The fall meeting of the Central Michigan 

 Bee-Keepers' Association, will meet in the Pioneer 

 Rooms, Capitol Building, LansinK, Mich., on Wed- 

 nesday, Oct. 15, 1890, to commence at 10 a.m. 



W. A. Barnes, Sec. 



t^" The Capital Bee-Keepers' Association will 

 meet in the Supervisors' Room of the Court House, 

 in Springfield. Ills., at U) o'clock, a.m., on Sept. 26, 

 1890, Come, and let us have a good time. 



C. E. VocoM, Sec. 



tt^" The Susquehan.t County Bee-Keepers' Asso- 

 ciation, will meet at Springville, Pa., on Saturday, 

 Sept. 13 1890, at 111 a.m. All are invited to attend. 

 1 would request every one in the county, who has 

 one or more colonies, to send me their report for 

 the season— number of colonies in the spring, num- 

 ber of increase, pounds of comb honey, of extracted 

 —and of beeswa.x. 



H. M. Seelet, Sec, Harford, Pa. 



tW The Nebraska State Bee-Keepers' Association 

 will meet in convention in the Bee and Honey Hall, 

 State Fair Grounds, at Lincoln, Nebr., on Wednes- 

 day evening. September 10, I8911. Mr. E. Whitcomb. 

 Superintendent of the Bee and Honey Department 

 of the State Fair, will beon hand the entire week of 

 the Fair. He especially desires that every bee- 

 keeper shall make this department his head-quart- 

 ers. Any honey, or appliances in its production, 

 sent in his care, charges paid, will be properly 

 placed on exhibition. J. N. Heater, Sec. 



A Nice PofWet Wictionary will be 

 given as a premium for only one neMV 

 subscriber to this Journal, with $1.00. It 

 is a splendid little Dictionary — Just the 

 right size for the pocket. Every school boy 

 and school girl, as well as everybody else, 

 should own and use it. Price, S5 cents. 



We club the Illustrated Home Journal 

 (price 50 cts. ) with the American Bee Jour- 

 nal for one year for only $1.35. You can- 

 not afford to do without either- the one as 

 an aid to practical bee-keeping, and the 

 other as an invaluable literary and home 

 periodical for the whole family. 



^ducvtiscmcrits. 



Bee-KeepiusT *<>•* Profit, by Dr. 



G. L. Tinker, is a new 50-page pamphlet, 

 which details fully the author's new system 

 of bee-management in producing comb and 

 extracted honey, and the construction of 

 the hive best adapted to it — his "Nonpareil." 

 The book can be had at this office for 25 

 cents. 



Send us the Names and addresses of any 

 of your friends upon whom you desire to call, 

 to get their subscriptions, and we will imme- 

 diately send them each a sample copy. In 

 this way you can readily get them for a club. 



WE have had splendid success this season. 

 We believe we have filled all oi-ders up to 

 date, and can now send CarnioIaiiA Italian 

 Qneenni by return mail, providing you do not 

 all order at once. We shall have about 100 

 of those Beautiful Vellow rarniolan 

 ttneens ready to ship during September— a 

 new strain of bees possessing all the desirable 

 points of Carniolans, with color added. Price 

 of all Queens. $1.00 each, by mail, 



E. L. PRATT, PRATT BEE-FARM, 



3Atf Marlboro, ITIast*. 



Prices Reduced. 



L1ELECT TESTED QUEENS, SI.; 



Warran- 



SE 

 ted Queens, 75 cents— 6 for $4.00. Make 

 Money Orders payable at Nicholasville, Ky. 

 14Etf J. T. WILSON, Little Hickman. Ky. 



