296 



THE BEE-KEEPERS" REVIEW 



Bee-Keepers'* Association will Furnish You 



Quality Cans 



At Wholesale Prices. Standard Sizes. 



Here we are with a standard can. Of course, you have bought sixty-pound 

 cans, but did you ever know what size those cans would be, what weight of 

 tin they were made of, or what kind of a box they would be placed in for 

 shipment? Of course, you didn't. You simply had to order sixty-pound cans 

 and take what you got. Sometimes you did not get a very good can. Some- 

 times the box was not strong enough to stand shipment without breakage. 

 Sometimes you paid a big price for those cheap cans in the loss of honey 

 you sustained through leakage. 



Here Are the Specifications 



Our contract with the Company which is furnishing us our cans reads in 

 part as follows : 



"We herewith agree to furnish, the requirements of your Association with 

 the following packages during one year from date, subject to prices and terms 

 as stated below, and with the understanding that shipments will be consigned 

 direct from our factory to the various members of vour Association : 



NOTE THE 

 N NER SEAL 



60-lb. 



Five-gallon Square, 



cans 



Round-Corner 



Cans, 



'jVh" square by 13%" high, with wire handle, 



paneled sides and 1}4" Cork-Lined Inner Seal 



Screw. 



Above packages in lots of 50 cans. 



crated 30c per can 



Above packages cased s'ngly with 



case having %" ends and }i" 



sides, tops and bottoms 33c each 



Above packages cased in pairs with 



case having %" ends and ji" 



sides, tops and bottoms 63c each 



F. O. B. Detroit 



All Cans to be carefully soldered and tested 

 with compressed air under water to prevent 

 the possible shipment of leakers. Weight of 

 Tin used on above Cans to be not less than 

 100 lbs. per base box of 113 sheets 14x20". 



Freight Rates 



To Canadian points you must figure a duty of 35 per cent, which can be 

 paid by you when you receive the cans. 



The minimum weights for car lots are as follows : To the Mississippi and 

 Ohio Rivers, 14, COO lbs.; to points Iieyond it is 15,000 lbs., and direct to the 

 coast terminals it is 20,000 lbs. 



Shipping weight cf a case of two sixty-pound cans, boxed, is about 17 lbs. 

 Crates of 50 ship at 215 ibs. and crates of loO ten-pound friction top pails ship 

 at 100 lbs. per crate. 



All cans and pails shipped from Detroit, Mich. 



