Feb. 15. 1906 



THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL 



147 



EVERGREENS 



That 

 are 



Sure 

 to 



AND FOREST TREES 



I have been pro winy everpreens 

 and forest, trees for :n years, al- 

 ways with one idea— trees that 

 satisfy. When you buy Hill's 

 trees yoa pet honest value — 

 highest emality. My catalogue 

 is mv salesman; it's free. Con- 

 tains ix papes illustrate] with 



Qatiefv beautiful pictures; describes 

 9dli9iy a n kinds of nursery .stock for 



all purpose*— faadpta. windbreaks ml orownwt. Abo mul 

 («M.«hruh«»ndTin«. &0 Beit B»rga[nB ever offered— »1 00 

 110.00 p«T 1<m1 Prepaid. Ererjlhini: 6rst-clMB,p)fcr»nte*d 

 wily a* represented. Write for CBtaloR today. 



D. HILL, Evergreen Specialist 

 Dnndee. 111. 



La n^s troth ^ the 

 *** Honey-Bee 



Revised by Dadant— Latest Edition. 



This is one of the standard books on 

 bee-culture, and ought to be in the 

 library of every bee-keeper. It is bound 

 substantially in cloth, and contains 

 over 500 pages, being revised by those 

 large, practical bee-keepers, so well- 

 known to all the readers of the Ameri- 

 can Bee Journal — Chas. Dadant & Son. 

 Each subject is clearly and thoroly ex- 

 plained, so that by following the in- 

 structions of this book one cannot fail 

 to be wonderfully helped on the way to 

 success with bees. 



The book we mail for $1 .20, or club 

 it with the American Bee Journal for 

 one year — both for 12.00 ; or, we will 

 mail it as a premium for sending us 

 THREE NEW subscribers to the Bee 

 Journal for one year, with $3.00. 



This is a splendid chance to get a 

 grand bee-book for a very little money 

 or work. 



GEORGE W. YORK & CO. 



334 Dearborn Street, CHICAGO. ILL 



FENCE SSSSC' 



Made of High Carbon colled wire. We 

 have no agents. Selldlrectto user at 

 factory prices on 30 days free trial. 

 «, ■ |.av all freight. Catalog shows 31 



stvli-sand ln-l^fitsof farm and poultry 



fence. It's free. Buy direct. Write today 



COILED SPRINC FENCE GO. 



Bo* 89 WINCHESTER, INDIANA. 

 Bee Journal vrhen wrltlnic. 



Mention 



Do You Want a South Dakota Paper? 



Tells of great land values, of business op- 

 pottnnttles, of a State where niore railroad 

 building is going on than in any other State 



union South Dakota Farmer £•£ 



everv week. Price, fl per year. 



SPECIAL OFFER— Send this ad with 35 

 cents for a year's subscription. Address. 

 SOUTH DAKOTA FARMER, SiouxFalls.S.D. 



5lA10t 



Please mention the Bee Journal. 



The Rietsche Press 



Made of artificial stone. Practically inde- 

 structible, and giving- entirely satisfactory re- 

 sults. Comb foundation made easily and 

 ?uickly at less than half the cost of buying 

 rom the dealers. Price of Press, fl. 50— cash 

 with order. Address, 



ADRIAN GETAZ, 



«Atf KNOXVILLE, TENN. 



WJ.G. Goodner, of this State, writes me that 

 he "Prefers to pay $25 for a Rietsche Press than 

 do without it."— A. G. 

 Mention Bee Journal Trhen writing. 



BEE - BOOKS 



SENT POSTPAID BT 



OEORQE W. YORK & CO. 



334 Deakbokn Street, - CHICAGO, ILL. 



Advanced Bee-Culture. Its Methods 



and Management, by W. Z. Hutchinson. 

 — The author of this work is a prac- 

 tical and helpful writer. You should 

 read hi: boi 330 pages; bound in 



cloth, and beautifully illustrated. Price, 

 $1.20. 



A II O of Bee-Culture, by A. I. & E. R. 

 Root. — A cyclopedia of over 500 pages, 

 describing everything pertaining to the 

 care of the honey-bees. Contains about 

 400 engravings. It was written espe- 

 cially for beginners. Bound in cloth. 

 Price, $1.20. 



s.irntifle Queen-Rearing, as Practi- 

 cally Applied, by G. M. Doolittle. — A 

 method by which the very best of 

 queen-bees are reared in perfect accord 

 with Nature's way. Bound in cloth and 

 illustrated. Price, $1.00; in leatherette 

 binding, 75 cents. 



nee-Keeper'* Guide, or Manual of the 

 Apiary, by Prof. A. J. Cook, of Pomona 

 College, California. This book is not 

 only instructive and helpful as a guide 

 in bee-keeping, but is interesting and 

 thoroughly practical and scientific. It 

 contains a full delineation of the 

 anatomy and physiology of bees. 544 

 pages. 295 illustrations. Bound in cloth. 

 19th thousand. Price, $1.20. 



I.nngstroth on the Honey-Bee, revised 

 by Dadant. — This classic in bee-culture 

 has been entirely re-written, and is 

 fully illustrated. It treats of every- 

 thing relating to bees and bee-keeping. 

 Xo apiarian library is complete without 

 this standard work by Rev. L. L. Lang- 

 stroth — the Father of American Bee- 

 Culture. It has 520 pages, bound in 

 cloth. Price, $1.20. 



Honey as a Health Food. — This is a 

 16-page honey-pamphlet intended to 

 help increase the demand for honey. 

 The first part of it contains a short 

 article on "Honey as Food," written by 

 Dr. C. C. Miller. It tells where to keep 

 honey, how to liquefy it, etc. The last 

 part is devoted to "Honey-Cooking Re- 

 cipes" and "Remedies Using Honey." 

 It should be widely circulated by those 

 selling honey. The more the people 

 are educated on the value and uses of 

 honey the more honey they will buy. 

 Prices; Sample copy for 2-cent stamp; 

 50 copies for 70 cents; 100 for $1.25; 

 250 for $2.25; 500 for $4.00; or 1000 for 

 $7.50. Tour business card printed free 

 at the bottom of the front page on all 

 orders for 100 or more copies. 



Forty Years Among the Bees, by Dr. 



C. C. Miller. — This book contains 328 

 pages, is bound in handsome cloth, with 

 gold letters and design; it is printed on 

 best book-paper, and illustrated with 

 112 beautiful original half-tone pic- 

 tures, taken by Dr. Miller himself. It 

 is unique in this regard. The first few 

 pages are devoted to an interesting 

 biographical sketch of Dr. Miller, tell- 

 ing how he happened to get into bee- 

 keeping. About 20 years ago he wrote 

 a small book, called "A Tear Among 

 the Bees," but that little work has been 

 out of print for a number of years. 

 While some of the matter used in the 

 former book is found in the new one, it 

 all reads like a good new story of suc- 

 cessful bee-keeping by one of the mas- 

 ters, and shows in minutest detail just 

 how Dr. Miller does things with bees. 

 Price, $1.00. 



"The Honey-Money Stories." — A 64- 

 page-and-cover booklet, 5%xS% inches 

 in size, printed on best quality paper. 

 Many short, bright stories interspersed 

 with facts and interesting items about 

 honey and its use. The manufactured 

 comb honey misrepresentation is con- 

 tradicted in two items, each ocupving 

 a full page, but in different part's of 

 the booklet. It has in all 33 fine illus- 

 trations, nearly all of them being of 

 apiaries or apiarian scenes. It also 

 contains 3 bee-songs, namely, "The 

 Hum of the Bees in the Apple-Tree 

 Bloom," "Buckwheat Cakes and Honev." 

 and "The Bee-Keepers' Lullaby." This 

 booklet should be placed in the hands 

 of everybody not familiar with the 

 food-value of honey, for its main ob- 

 ject is to interest people in honey as a 

 daily table article. Price, 25 cents, or 

 3 copies for 50 cents. 



A ■ 



FRESH 

 HATCH 

 EVERY 

 DAY 



By a simple but effective me- 

 chanical arrangement and a 

 new application of nature's 

 laws the *' CONTINUOUS » 

 HATCHER makes it possible 

 to keep up a continuous hatch- 

 ing of chicks from one ma- 

 chine— a FRESH HATCH EVERY 

 day. Removing chicks from 

 machine and replacing them 

 with fresh eggs does not inter- 

 fere with or retard process of 

 incubation. This is possible 

 with no other incubator. One 



"CONTINUOUS" HATCHER 



will hatch as many chicks 

 as several ordinary incu- 

 bators. Simple, effective, 

 sure. Free catalog tells 

 how. Write for it today. 

 Hacker Incubator & Mfg. Co. 

 3127 N. Jefferson Ave. 

 St. Louis, Mo. 



Mention Bee Journal when writing. 



COOT 3p CO, *g8« *SE8IP.r*a 



w 

 s 



1 -i 

 D 

 I Never Go Out q 

 £§ And last from 6 to 21 years oa. 

 Otisvtlle, Pa., Jan. 18, 1904. 

 Dear Sir:— I have tried almost everything" In 

 the smoker line; 3 in the last 3 years. In short 

 if I want any more smokers your new style la 

 good enough for me. I thank the editor of Re- 

 view for what he said of it. Those remarks In- 

 duced me to get mine. Fred Fodner. 



BE A RAILROAD MAN 



and euro from $60 to $135 per month 



We teach you by mail for position of 



BRAKEMAN OR FIREMAN 

 Our Instruction is practical; endorsed by 

 railroad managers, and qualifies you for 

 immediate employment. Instructors 

 are all prominent railroad officials. 

 Write for catalog. Begin study at once. 

 Wenthe Ry. Corr. School, Oept.108 Freeport, III. 



For Queens -«£.- 



Mention Bee Journal vehen writing. 



Send to 



PHARR 

 Tex. 



He will furnish at the same prices as last 

 year: Tested, -$1 ; Untested, ?ne; 5 for S3. 25; 

 10for.S6; 15 for S8.25; 25 for $12.50; 100 for 

 $45. He breeds Golden6, Carniolans, and 3- 

 Band Italians. Also 1, 2, and 3 frame Nuclei 

 and full colonies. Prices given on applica- 

 tion. Pharr pays the freight, and guarantees 

 satisfaction on all Queens. To do justice and 

 judgment is more acceptable with the Lord 

 than sacrifice.— (Prov. 3:21.) 5Atf 



BANTA 



Incubators&Brooders 



Backed by 14 Years 

 ■^■B of Successful Use by 



Soultrymen all over the world. 

 fo guesswork. They are auto- 

 matic in regulation and ventil- 

 ation. Fully guaranteed to give 

 YOU satisfaction. Send for 

 free book. B*^TA -BENDER 

 MFG. CO..Dept. 24 , Ligonier, Ind 



Mention Bee Journal when writing. 



