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THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 



THE REVIEW CLUBBING LIST. 



To be up to date, besides the periodi- 

 cals pertaining to our business, one 

 should have a few good books treating 

 upon our pursuit. Below we club a few 

 ot the best, including the Review one 

 year. If you do not find what you want 

 in this list, we will be pleased to quote 

 you our clubbing rate on any book per- 

 taining to bee culture you may need. 

 The price quoted includes domestic 

 postage on both the book and Review : 



Review one year $1.00 



A. B. C. of Bee Culture 2.25 



Regular price of both 3.25 



Our price for both 2.40 



Review one j^ear $1.00 



Advanced Bee Culture 1.10 



Regular price of both 2.10 



Our price for both 1.75 



Review one year $1.00 



Cook's Manual of the Apiary 1.30 



Regular price of both 2 30 



Our price for both 1.75 



Review one year $1.00 



Doolittle's Queen Rearing 8 J 



Regular price of both 1.80 



Our price for both 1.55 



Review one year $1.00 



Fiftv Years Among the Bees, 



M'iller 1.10 



Regular price of both 2.10 



Our price for both 1.75 



Review one year $1.00 



Langstroth Revised, by Dadant... 1.40 



Regular price of both 2.40 



Our price for both 1.75 



To secure these low rates, kindly ad- 

 dress with remittance 



The Bee-Keepers' Review, 



Northstar, Michigan. 



Chadbourn, N. C, Nov. 8th, 1913. 

 Editor Review : Please take my name 

 from the list of those having honey for 

 sale, as I have only enough left for 

 my home trade. Thanking you for 

 your kindness in listing my honey and 

 with best wishes, I am, yours respect- 

 fully, 



F. R. Jordan. 



Hobart, Ind., Nov. 7, 1913. 

 Editor Review : That fall flow did 

 turn out to be pretty good. Produced 

 20,000 sections of comb honey, 5,500 

 pounds of extracted honey and increased 

 from 175 to 237. That is not bad for 

 one yard. 



Yours very truly , 



Joseph M. Mundell. 



INDIANA WILL OBSERVE 

 HONEY DAY, DEC. 15. 



Every Person is Expected to Eat 

 Honey on This Date. 



George W. Williams, of this city, 

 secretary of the Indiana Bee-Keepers' 

 Association of Indiana, has issued the 

 announcement that Monday, Dec. 15, 

 has been designated in Indiana as 

 "Honey Day." Each person is asked to 

 observe this day by eating a little In- 

 diana honey. 



The busy little bee and the modest, 

 unassuming clover have given to In- 

 diana and her sister states of the clover 

 belt, a beautiful crop of the most lus- 

 cious and wholesome sweet. The pres- 

 ent crop is said to be more delicate and 

 appetizing than usual. Nowhere in the 

 wide world can be found anything that 

 will compare with the present crop of 

 Indiana clover honey. 



Nor is the delicious honey the only 

 gift these modest little workers bring 

 to us. Every berry, apple, peach, plum, 

 cherry, tomato, cucumber — in fact al- 

 most all our fruits and vegetables — 

 owe their polenization to the visit of 

 some bee or other honey gathering in- 

 sect. Every pound of butter, milk, beef 

 or mutton is debtor to the bee for the 

 delicate white clover flavor, and there 

 could be no white clover without bees 

 to fertilize the blossoms. 



In view of the many material bene- 

 fits that the little toiler brings to us, it 

 is eminently fitting that we pause for a 

 moment and offer a modest tribute to 

 this faithful ally and benefactor, and 

 thus pay a debt of gratitude we owe. 

 In so doing let us regale ourselves with 

 a feast of honey, such as the ancient 

 Greeks offered as fitting for the lips 

 of the gods of Mount Olympus. 



— Redkey Times. 



LEWIS HIVES 



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