822 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



Index to Vol. XXXI. 



SUBJECTS, 



Absorbents 272, 402 



Adulteration of honey 17,80,85, 114, 176, 184, 



263, 305, 360, 399, 402, 408, 525, 617 657 



Advice to bee-keepers 88 



After swarms— preventing of. . 4X9, 648, 649, 713, 727 



Age of queen wtien beginning to lay 565 



Age when virgin queens mate 758 



Albino bees 107 



Alcoholized wax 268 



Alfalfa 408. 437 



Alley wants war 108 



Alsike clover for honey 120, 183, 396,466, 744 



Analyses of honey 175 



Ants and bees 656 



Ants in the apiary 791 



Apiary for April 456 



Apiary of F. A. Gemmill 391 



Apicultural journalism 616 



" Apicultural literarians " 181 



Apicultural outlook 15 



Apis dorsata 147. 308, 554 



Apis Florea 147 



Apis Indlca 147 



Are drones from unfecundated queens virile ?.. 309 

 Attic or bees of Hymettus 146 



Bad mess 1 67 



Bait sections 754 



Balling the queen 809 



Barrels for extracted honey 778 



Basswood for bees 338 



Bee-diarrhea and its treatment 



395, 439, 489, 503, 531, 664 759 



Bee-escapes 49, 336, 519 



Bee-feeders 399, 429 



"Bee Journal" at the head 392 



Bee-keepers' congress in 1893 81 



" Bee-Keepers' Review " 295 



Bee-Keepers' Union 9, 74, 167, 214, 263, 305 



Bee-keeping and the home 12 



Bee-keeping as a specialty 89 



Bek-Keeping in— 



California 5^, 84. 296, 396, 438, 462 



Florida 427, 525 



Kansas 77 



Minnesota 217, 310 



Mississippi 269 



North Carolina 407 



Oklahoma Territory 531 



Tennessee 119, 376, 717 



Texas 77 



Virginia 437, 598 



Bee-notes and comments 117 



Bee-paralysis 302, 392,399, 626 



Bees affected with diarrhea 339 



Bees and horticulture 624 



Bees and fruit 305, 436, 759 



Bees and peaches 41 



Bees and red clover 76 



Bees as weather prophets 37i 



Bees clustering at swarming time 559 



Bees don't injure grapes 625 



Bees leaving in March 586 



Bee-smokers 695 



Bees starving on pollen 181 



Bees stealing eggs 665 



Bees stealing honey 270 



Bee-stings 689 



Bee-stings and rheumatism .16, 338 



Beginners and the market 367 



Best management for producing honey 621 



Biographical— 



Benton, Master Ralph 587 



Badant, Chas 425 



Demaree,G. W 329 



Dibbern, C. H 779 



Doolittle. G. M 203 



Elwood, P. H 43 



France, Edwin 650 



Green, J. A 171 



Orimm, Adam 138 



Harrison, Mrs. L 458 



Holtermann, H. F 683 



Larrabee, J. 11 715 



Mason, Dr. A. B 747 



McEvoy, Wm 393 



Miller, Dr. C.C 105 



Muth, Chas. F 234 



Pond, Jos. E 523 



Pringle, Allen 619 



Quinby, Moses 266 



Root, Amos Ives .555 



Root, Ernest R 298 



Rouse, J. W 810 



Secor, Hon. Eugene 75 



Taylor, Barnett ii 



Tinker, Dr. G. L 490 



Wilson, Emma 361 



Bottom-boards 429,488, 695 



Brood-chamber for comb honey produci ion 497 



Building up colonies in spring 367, 437, 537, 662 



Burr-combs on brood-frames 435 



Button willow 8 9 



California apiarian exhibit 488, 500 



California bee-legislation 391, 488 



California climate 311 



Can bees hear ? 53 



Can bees puncture fruit 7 759 



Candy for spring feeding 532 



Can the queen establish the sex of her offspring 



at will 753 



Carelessness in wintering 664 



Caring f6r honey 239 



Carniolan bees 145, 333, 405, 588 



Cellar spring feeding of bees 403 



Cellar wintering of bees 342, 690 



Cell protectors 537 



Changing the air in cellars 170 



Chilled queens 489 



Closed-end brood-frames 372 



Cold place, but bees wintered 695 



Comb baskets 246 



Comb honey at 10 cents a pound, or extracted 



at $1.00 per gallon 814 



Comb honey for market 367 



Comb leveler 567 



Comb or extracted honey ? 621 



Compression theory as to queens 408 



Convention reports 180 



Conventions— 



California 



Central 33? 



Cortland Union 336 



Eastern Iowa 367 



Illinois 239 



Indiana 431, 464, 495, 527, 560, 592, 624 



Mich igan 15, 47, 142, 175 



New Hampshire 821 



North American 79,111, 199,206,423, 583 



Nova Scotia 2I6 



Ontario 149 



South Texas , 369. 811 



Southwestern Wisconsin 400 



Texas 559, 589, 620, 651, 685, 716 



Utah 821 



Vermont 272 



Wisconsin 399 



Crane bee-smoker 661 



Crooked combs 332, 438 



Cure for bee-diarrhea 755 



Cure for blues 152 



Cyprian bees 77, 146, 588 



Dalmatian bees 146 



Dampness and bee-diarrhea 439, 371 



Dark Italians or golden Italians 184 



Darkness, dryness, dormancy— three wintering 



essentials 502 



Dead bees 713 



Dealing direct with producers 601 



Death Notices— 



Hambaugh, Mrs. Blmina 42 



Harbaugh, R. E 423 



Mott, Mrs. Dr. Geo 456 



Seelman, Mrs. G. B 808 



Wilson, Mrs. D. C 456 



Department of Agriculture and apiculture.. 207, 208 



Died with plenty of honey 777 



Digesting food and storing it for future use 752 



Divided colonies as good as from natural 



swarming 1 16, 371, 524 



Divided colonies vs. natural swarming 371 



Do bee-keepers need an experiment apiary ? 784 



Doubling colonies 728 



" Driving" bees explained 618 



Drone mating with a worker 268 



Drones and swarming 713 



Drones for breeding purposes 713 



Editorial assistance 520 



Bggs In queen-cells 270 



