THE BEE-KEEPERS" REVIEW 345 



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Officers. Directors. 



George W. York, President Sandpoint, Ida. E. D. Townsend, Chairman Remus, Mich. 



MoRLEY Pettit, Vice-Pres. . .Guelph, Ont., Can. J. M. Buchanan Franklin, Tenn. 



E. B. Tyrrell, Secretary Detroit, Mich. Wesley Foster Boulder, Colo. 



230 Woodland Ave. J. E. Crane Middlebury, Vt. 



N. E. France, Treas. Gen. Mgr., Plattville, Wis. F. Wilcox Mauston, Wis. 



CTational Branches and Their Secretaries. 



Arizona Honev Exchange N. Michigan — Ira D. Bartlett 



G. M. Frizzell, Tempe, Ariz. East Jordan, Mich. 



Adirondack — H. E. Gray.. Fort Edwards, N.Y. Ohio — Prof. N. E. Shaw, Dept. of Agr 



Colorado — Wesley Foster Boulder, Colo. Columbus, Ohio 



Chicago-Northwestern — L. C. Dadant.... O.ntario — P. W. Hodgetts, Parliament Bldg., 



Hamilton, 111. Toronto, Ont., Can. 



Idaho — R. D. Bradshaw Notus, Ida. Oregon — H. Wilson Corvallis, Ore. 



Illinois — Jas. A. Stone. . .Rt. 4, Springfield, 111. Pecos Valley — Henry C. Barron 



Iow.\ — C. L. Pinney Le Mars, Iowa Hagerman, New Mexico 



Indiana— Walter Pouder, 859 Mass. Ave... Twin Falls — C. H. Stimson. .Twin Falls, Ida. 



Indianapolis, Ind. Tennessee — T. M. Buchanan, Franklin, Tenn. 



Missouri — J. F. Diemer Liberty, Mo. Texas — Willis C. Collins, Box 1.54 



Michigan— E. B. Tyrrell, 230 Woodland Goliad, Texas 



Ave., Detroit, Mich. Vermont — P. E. Crane Middlebury, \'t. 



Minnesota — C. E. Palmer, 1024 Miss. St.. Washington — J. B. Ramage 



St. Paul, Minn. Rt. 2, N. Yakima, Wash. 



New Jersey— E. G. Carr New Egypt, N. J. Wisconsin — Gus Dittmer Augusta, Wis. 



Meeting of Kansas Bee-Keepers. 



On Thursday, September 1!', the Kansas bee-keepers will hold a 

 meeting at Hutchison. This will be during- the State Fair and we 

 urge every one interested in bees to attend. Air. C. P. Dadant, of 

 the American Bee Journal, will deliver an address o'a bees. He is 

 one of the best authorities on bees in this or any other country. 

 The regular annual meeting of the Kansas Bee-Keepers' Association 

 will occur in Topeka about January 15, 1913. O. A. Keene, Sec. 



The Summer Field Meeting. 



It is not difficult to get from a dozen to seventy-five bee- 

 keepers out to a field day meeting and picnic, such as was held 

 July 16 at AA^ashoe, Idaho. Select some interested bee-keeper's 

 apiary where plenty of shade is near. Buy t\venty-five or fifty 

 postal cards and write to all the bee-keepers you kni)w. Phone to 

 others and give notices of the meeting to the newspapers. A set 

 program is not necessary. Supering, controlling, swarming, trans- 

 ferring, treating foul brood, nailing hives and grading honey, will 

 be more subjects than can be handled in one day. 



Give the basket lunch feature special prominence and be sure 

 to get out the women and children. Have an exhibit of comb and 

 extracted honey so that non-bee-keeping visitors can see what your 

 vicinity can produce. Urge the newspaper men to attend and invite 



