1 88 



THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW. 



KANSAS ClTY.-ThP supply of 1897 comb 

 honey is about all cleaned up, and we think 

 shipments of of new comb would soil for about 

 12 cents. C. C. CLEMONS CO.. 



May 19. 521 Walnut St., Kansas Citv, Mo. 



CHICAGO, 111. — Ttiere is a good demand for 

 fancy white comb honey. Thi-^ grade would sell 

 for 11 cts.— possibly higher. Considerable Aui- 

 ber and dark on the market— selhng anywhere 

 from 5 to 8 Extracted White sells at5V4to6; 

 Amber IV2 to .'J ; dark, 4. Beeswax. 27. 

 8. T FISH & CO., 



Mar. 24. 189 So Water St , Chicago, 111. 



CHICIAGO, III.— There is bnt little honey on 

 the market, and we are looking for a good de- 

 mand for the coming crop. We quo e as fol- 

 lows : Fancy white, 11 to 12; No. 1, white, 9 to lO; 

 fancy amber. 9; Nf>. 1, amber, 7 to 8; fancy dark, 

 8; No. 1, dark, 7; white extracted, 5 to 6 : amber, 

 4 to .5 ; dark, 4 ; beeswax, 27 to 30. 



R A BURNETT & CO., 



163 So. Water St, Chicago. Ills. 



May 25, 



BUFFALO. N. Y.-There is no demand for 

 honey at this time of the year ; except for a lim- 

 ited quality of strictly fancy, at 10 to 11 cents; 

 commoner grades are dull at 8 to five cents ac- 

 cording to color, condition, ete Of course, any 

 and every grade can be sold for what it will 

 bring. Extra'>ted ranges from 4 to 6 cents, as 

 to quality. Beeswax from 20 to 26 cents. We 

 would like some beeswax. 



BATTERSON & CO , 



May 25. 167 & 169 Scott St., Buffalo, N. Y. 



NEW YORK. -Trade in honey is fairly acfiye. 

 Fancy white and buckwheat comb find quite 

 ready sale with uk. Trade in Southern and Cal- 

 ifornia extracted has been very good the past 

 few weeks. We quote as follows : Fancy white. 

 11 to 12; No. 1, white, 9 to 10; buckwheat. n]4 to 

 7 ; extracted, California, water white, 6}^; ("'ali- 

 fornia, white, 6; California, light ambpr, 5J^; 

 Sou hern extracted, 52!^ to 55 a gallon. New 

 York exiracted not in demand at present. Be s- 

 wax, 2714 to 2><^4. Write for 8hii)ping instruc- 

 tions. FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & CO., 

 May fi. W.Broadway, Fianklin & Varick Sts. 



NEW YORK, N. Y.-Demand for comb hon- 

 ey is rather slow, especially for off grades, 

 white and dark, and, as we have a lage stock of 

 these would not advisee shipping for the near 

 future. Our stock of fancy whiie is light and 

 such Wf)nld find ready sale at quotations. Our 

 market for extracted buckwheat will open up 

 shortly and we would advise bee-keepers to 

 ship this along now. Beeswax steady. We 

 quote as follows: Fancy white, U to 12; No. 1. 

 White, 10; Fancy Amber, 9; No 1. Amber, 8; 

 Fancy Dark, 7 ; No. 1 Dark, 6; White, extracted, 

 5 to .51^; Amber, I'/j to 4%; Dark, 4 to 414; 

 Beeswax. 26 to 28. 



HILDRETH BROS. & 8EGELKEN, 



Jan. 7, 120 & 122 Weft Broailway New York 



WM. A. SELSER, 



JO VINE ST., PHILA.. PENN. 



Lamp Nursery 



EOR SALE CHFAP. 



A few years ago, my father-in-law, the late 

 Clark Simpson, had made, for his own use, 

 a very fine lamp nursery, or incubator, for 

 hatching queens. It is not made of tin, but 

 of galvanized iron, throughout. First, there 

 is the outer casing, about two feet square 

 and three feet high ; the lower part having a 

 door through which to introduce a lamp. 

 (There is a metal lamp holding a gallon that 

 goes with the nursery.) In the upper partis 

 the nursery proper, the sides of which are thor- 

 oughly tied together with braces so that the 

 walls will not bulge when the five or six pails of 

 water required to fill it are put in. Inside the 

 nursery are four drawers; eaeli drawer being 

 composed of sixteen little apartments about 

 j three inches square, the sides of which are glass, 

 I and can be easily opened. These little apart- 

 ' ments are for isolating cells that are nearly 

 ready to hatch ; the glass sides allowing one to 

 see which queens have hatched, without opening 

 the doors. I used a nursery for years ; and 

 know that it is a great convenience for keeping 

 cells that will soon hatch. I roar so few queens 

 now, however, that it would not pay me to keep 

 a nursery running, hence this nursery is offered 

 for sale at $8.00— not quite one-third what it 

 cost. I would exchange it for a dozen good 

 Italian queens to be sent me this month- June. 



W. Z. HUTCHINSON, Flint, Mich. 



The American 

 Bee JourpZil... 



Sent to New Subscribers 

 from now until the end of 

 the year, and tlie 160-page 

 book, 'Bees and Honey," 

 for only FIFTY CENTS. 

 Sample Bee Journal Ifree. 

 GEO. W.TORK & CO., 118 Mich. St.. Chicago, 111. 



White Clover Honey Specialist. 



Please 



the Reu 



-If you are going to — 



BtfY A BtfXZ-SAW, 



write to the editor of the Review. He has a 

 new Barnes saw to sell and would be glad to 

 make you happy by telling you the price at 

 which he would sell it. 



•Vl^w'Po\iMiK6<vi>* 



See That Wink ? 



Bee Supplies. Root's goods 

 at Root's prices. Pocder's 

 Honey .Jars. Prompt ser- 

 vice. Low freight ratfs. 

 Catalog free. WALTER S. 

 POUDKR, 162 Mass Ave., 

 Indianapolis, Ind., the only 

 exclusive bee supply house 

 in Indiana. 



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