THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 147 



Published Monthly 



E. B. TYRRELL, Editor and Publisher 

 Office — ^230 Woodland Ave., Detroit, MicUigan. 



Entered as second-class matter, July 7, 1911, at the post office at Detroit, Michigan, under 

 the Act of March 3, 1S79. 



Terms — $1.00 a year to subscribers in the United States, Canada, Cuba, Mexico, Ha- 

 waiian Islands, Porto Rico, Philippine Islands, and Shanghai, China. To all other countries 

 the rate is $1.24. 



Dlseontiniianoes — Unless a request is received to the contrary, the subscription will be 

 discontinued at the expiration of the time paid for. At the time a subscription expires a 

 notice will be sent, and a subscriber wishing the subscription continued, who will renew later, 

 shouM send a rec|uest to that effect. 



Ailvertisins rate!^ on appliention. 



EDITORIAL 



Co-operation nurses ambition and begets independence. 



Fourteen National Branches and more coming. Join the pro- 

 cession, brothers, it is your parade. 



Five thousand circuhtrs will have been sent out to National 

 members and prc^spective members by the time this paper reaches 

 you. Among other things, this circular will tell of the National 

 plans, and give prices and freight rates on tin honey packages. If 

 YOU don't 2:et vours write. 



Connecticut Bee-Keepers Convention. 



Secretary James A. Smith, Hartford, Conn., writes me that the 

 Connecticut l)ee-keepers will hold their annual meeting at Hartford, 

 in the Y. AI. C. A. Building, on Saturday, April 13th. A good pro- 

 gram has been prepared, and tlie question of becoming a branch of 

 the National will be considered. 



A Michigan Comb Honey Specialist. 



While Michigan is conceded to be a state of extracted honey 

 specialists, there is at least one man who is making good at the pro- 

 duction of comb honey, and that too in a location farther north than 

 many would consider good for the production of comb hone3^ This 

 man is L. Denzer, of Highwood, Alichigan. His yield last year, in 

 spite of the poor season, was 11,000 pounds of comb honey from 148 

 colonies, spring count. Mr. Denzer winters his bees out-doors in 

 chafit hives. 



