Wi®M®Si®. 



•J) 



•®, 



® 



'3 

 ■ 



■®) 



COMB HONEY 



a 



:®) 



]©) Is profitably produced only when several important factors 



S are combined. First, we must have the rig-ht kind of bees. 



^ We all know that there is not only a vast difference be- 



Wi . . . . issi 



Y^ tween the different varieties, but also a variation in strains ^ 



jg of the same variety. Just which are the best bees for pro- |j| 

 '©) ducing- comb honey, w/iy they are best, and how to secure 

 [Ml them, is told in one of the chapters of Advanced Bee- 

 i© Culture. 



[^ When bees of the right kind have been secured, then 



j^ comes the matter of using the right kind of hives, fixtures, 

 •(g) sections, etc., to secure the best results with the least j@) 

 [Ml labor ; and Advanced Bee - Culture has a chapter on '™' 

 ]©) "Hives and their Characteristics; " and another on "Sec- 

 tions and their Adjustment on the Hives." 



Bees may gather large quantities of white honey, and 

 yet be so manag-ed as to put very little of it in the sections; 

 or they may be so managed that nearly all of it will go 

 '©) into the sections; all of which is explained in one of the 

 [Ml chapters of Advanced Bee - Culture. 



^ Comb foundation costs money. Notwithstanding this, 



!p| its use is very profitable at some times and in some places. 

 [^ Under other conditions it is worse than wasted. Read 

 *©) Advanced Bee - Culture and learn zc/iy. 

 [M| Advanced Bee - Culture is a book of 32 chapters, 



® describing the most advanced methods of bee - keeping- 

 from the beginning of the year through the entire season. 

 Fifty cents is the price of the book; or it and the 

 ^ Review for one year will be sent for $1.25. 

 [^ 



® W. Z. Hutchinson, Flint, Mich. 



[i®a©)iiDii'j)ii©!i 



