408 



THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 



Keeping Members of an Association 84 



Knives, how to treat honey 203 



Late reared queens, advantages of 241 



I,adies' Home Journal and the comb honey 



canard 203 



I<ewis Co. G. B , makes Improvements 162 



I,essons of the past winter 83 



Locality, influence of 339 



Mating 300 queens by using the bees of one 



colony 70 



Manufactured comb honey canard 336 



Management of out-apiaries for extracted 



honey 37 



Mempries of the Wisconsin 82 



Mistakes Z^7 



Moisture in the wintering of bees, influence 



of 297 



Moisture and ventilation in bee hives and 



cellars 7 



Morehouse, death of Mr. H C 275 



Nails, supporting frames on 14 



National Association should vise its money 



in a different way 368 



Neatness in the apiary 307 



New bee-keeping, the 52 



Nomination of officers 205, 336 



Observation hives 274 



One thousand colonies iji one apiary 47 



Order and system, advantages of 18 



Orange bloom yields sparingly a delicious 



honey 189 



Orange bloom honey sometimes secured in 



large quantities 274 



Overstocking 125,204,343 



Overstocking varies with the flow and the 



season 237 



Overstocking, location and strength of col- 

 onies versus 157 



Overstocking a good localitj' is exceedinglj' 



difficult 78 



Out-apiaries, starting 5 



Out-apiaries, without help, managing eleven 9 

 Out-apiaries for extracted honey, manage- 

 ment of 37 



Paper Protection for hives 333 



Pa alysis. bee 87 



Planing mill man, some pertinant advice 



from the 45 



Plans and their execution 305 



Polariscopic examinations of honey 306 



Populous colonies secured by shook-swarm- 



ing 127 



Portable honey houses 74 



Preparations and plans 341 



Prices for honey at wholesale, how to get 



better 326 



Propolis differs in different localities 372 



Profitable to produce, comb or extracted ... . 



honey, which is the more 48 



Protest from a supply dealer, a 51 



Prepardness the secret of most successes. ... i5 

 Quality of queens, keeping track of the age 



and 264 



Queen trade, to abandon the 13 



Queens, testing 240 



Queens in the fall, finding 304 



Queens mating more than once 161, 202 



Queens, advantages of late reared 241 



Queens, keeping track of the age and quality 264 

 Queens by using the bees of one colony, 



mating 300, 70 



Queens and their influence upon success in 



bee culture 369 



Review, date of the 81 



Review, boquets for the 12 



Report, shall the National publish a steno- 

 graphic 1 24 



Repository above ground, wintering 312 



Rendering wax 160 



Rocky Mountain Bee Journal 81 



Rocky Mountain Bee Journal has been sold., ibi 

 Roar because they are uncomfortable, bees.. 77 



Rural bee-keeper 159 



School children, talking bees to .... 241 



Selling 14,000 puonds of honey to 3000 people 229 



Selling 20,000 pounds of hone3' at 12 cents per 



pound 293 



.Selling honey to grocers, some novel metoods 



of 299 



Sell the honey of its members, how Associa- 

 tions can 308 



Self reliance 46 



Shook-swarms, preventing the loss of brood 



when making 162 



Shook-swarms, the successful making of . 400, 113 



Shook-swarming 8,s 



Shook-swarming and comb honey produotion 196 

 Shook-swarni'ng, how it should be managed 191 

 Shook-swarming and Michigan's uncertain 



weather 149 



Shook-swarming, one way that always suc- 

 ceeds with 365 



Shook-swarming, populous colonies secured 



by 127 



Shook-swarming — how to avoid some of its 



annoyances 209 



.Smoke in handling bees, the right use of.. .. 305 



Sold honey, how a drummer 266 



Spend mone.v on bees, when to 163 



Spring management 5 



Specialist and atnateur 205 



Specialty versu-f mixed bee-keeping 337 



Stand up and be a man 122 



Stenographic report, shall the National pub- 

 lish a 124 



Stick to one thing 15 



Statistics, shall the National Association 



gather honey 53 



Staples being thrown away 239 



Supporting frames on nails 14 



Sugar feeding 27 



Success dependent upon many things 204 



.'Subjects for bee journals, suitable 342 



Swarm, how to tell, without opening a hive 



when a colony will 49 



Tarred paper not a success as protection for 



bees 304 



Testing queens 240 



Tile for a hive stand, using a . . . ' 122 



Trade mark, a National 246 



Trade. laying the foundation for an extracted 



hone}' 329 



Uncapping combs 274 



Uncapping and extracting honey expedi- 

 tiously 231 



Ventilation and moisture in bee hives and 



cellars 7 



Vinegar, from honey from cappings, making 209 



Western Bee Journal., 239 



Wiring brood frames 55 



Winter, lessons of the 83 



Wintering bees influence of moisture in the. 297 

 Wintering of bees, requisites for the success- 

 ful." 1 332 



Wintering bees, Mr. Cheshire's views on 374 



Wintering of bees, some basic principles in 



the • 364 



Wintering bees in Northern Michigan 357 



Wintering repository above ground 312 



Writing articles for farm journals 383 



INDEX TO CORRESPONDENTS. 



Achard, C B 165 



Ahlers, C 293 



Alexander, E W 78, iii, 152, 193, 264 



Atwater. E. F . g 



Callbreath. John S 278 



Cady. M P 39 



Cheshire Frank 374 



Crims W. W : 45 



France, N' E. . : , 229 



Getaz, Adrian • 41 



Gill. M. A 85,113,23- 



Green. J. A 115, 199, 343, .■^72 



Hart, W. S 189 



Hahman, Wm 234 



Heddon, Jas 334 



Holterman, R. F 46 



Hutchinson, W . Z 325 



