July 10, 1902. 



AMERICAN BEE JOUi?NAL 



447 



stronp, and were doinff fine before we 

 had so much rain. The whole country 

 has been covered with white and red 

 clover. 



My bees have not shown any disposi- 

 tion to swarm; I wanted them to 

 swarm this year, as last year I did all I 

 could to keep them from swarmiii^r. 



This is a fine crop year; everything 

 looks well. Kruit will not be as plen- 

 tiful as last year. 



Miss B. L. Hackwokth. 



St. Clare Co., Mo., June 20. 



[We regret to say that the picture of 

 your apiary. Miss H., is not clear 

 enough to make a good engraving. We 

 should be pleased to have you try 

 again, and if you get a good picture 

 send it on and we will use it. 



Of course, ladies are eligible to mem- 

 bership in the National Bee-Keepers' 

 Association, on the same basis as the 

 men — SI. 00 a year dues. 



As to the rates to Denver from the 

 places you mention, you should be able 

 to find out by enquiring at your near- 

 est railroad station. We do not know 

 what the rates are from everywhere, 

 even if all roads do lead to Denver 1— 

 Editor.] 



Low Round Trip Rates, via 

 Union Pacific, from Mis- 

 souri River, 



To Denver, Colorado Springs, 

 QIC nn and Pueblo, Colo., Julv 1 to 

 iplJ.UU 13, inclusive, Aug. 1 to"l4, 23 



to 24, and 30 to 31, inclusive. 



To Denver, Colorado Springs, 

 QiQ nn and Pueblo, Colo., June 25 to 

 ipiy.UU 30, inclusive, July 14 to 31, in- 

 clusive. 



<t\nc nn To Salt Lake Citv and Ogden, 

 ipiU.UU Utah, Aug. 1 to 14, inclusive. 



To Glenwood Springs, Colo., 

 July 1 to 13, inclusive, Aug. 1 

 to 14, 23 to 24, and 30 to 31, in- 

 clusive. 



To Salt Lake City and Ogden, 

 Utah, July 1 to 13, inclusive, 

 Aug. 23 to 24, and 30 to 31, in- 

 clusive. 



To Glenwood Springs. Colo., 

 June 25 to 30, inclusive, July 

 14 to 31, inclusive. 



To Salt Lake City and Ogden, 

 Utah, June 25 to 30, inclusive, 

 July 14 to 31, inclusive. 



To San Francisco or Los An- 

 geles. Calif., Aug. 2 to 10, in- 

 clusive. 



To Poitland, Oreg., Tacoma 

 and Seattle, Wash., July 11 to 

 21, inclusive. 



Bee= Books 



M'..NT I'lJUTl'Alii liv 



GEORGE W. YORK & CO., 



144 & 146 Kric St., - CHICAGO, ILL. 



$25.00 



&30.00 



$31,00 

 $32,00 

 $45,00 

 $45,00 



Corresponding/^'' /,otv Kates 

 I^runi IntermediatG' f (tints, 



Full Jnformation Clieerfally F'nr- 

 nif^lte'cl on application to 



E. L. LOM AX, G. p. a: t. a., 



27Atf OMAHA, NEB. 



Please mention Bee Journal 

 when writing advertisers. 



BeP"Keei>c(r'H (Juide, or Manual of the 

 Apiary, by Prut. A. .). Cook, of Pomona Col- 

 lei,'e, ('aliforuiii. This book is not only In- 

 structivB and ht'lptiil as a (juide in bue-keep- 

 int;, but is intciustin);; and lliorouglily iJiacti- 

 cal and scientilic. It contains u fiiil dclini'a- 

 tion of the aiuitorny and physioloi^y ^>( heus. 

 r>l4 padres. 2itr> illustrations. Bound in cloth. 

 lUO'.! edition— lilth thousand. Price, gl.'.'O. 



Langstroth on the Honey-Bee, revised 



by Dadant. — Thi.s classic in bee-culture has 

 been eotirely re written, and is fully illus- 

 trated. It treats of everythint^ relatint; to 

 bees and bee-kcepin^r. No apiarian library is 

 complete without this standard work by Rev. 

 L. I.. Lanjjstroth — the Father of American 

 Bee-Cullure. It has 520 pages, Ixjund in 

 cloth. Price, ?l.i5. 



A B C of Bee-Culture, by A. I. Root.— 



A cyclopedia of 4U0 pages, describing every- 

 thing pertaining to the care of the honey- 

 bees. Contains ;sOO engravings. It was written 

 especially for beginners. Bound in cloth. 

 Price, $1:20. 



Scientific Queen-Rearing, as Practi- 

 cally Applied, by G. M. Doolittle. — A method 

 by which the very best of queen-bees are 

 reared in perfect accord with Nature's way. 

 Bound in cloth and illustrated. Price, SI.UO; 

 in leatherette binding, 60 cents. 



Bees and Honey, or Managemeni of an 

 Apiary for Pleasure and Profit, by Thomas G. 

 Newman. — It is nicely illustrated, contains 

 U>0 pages, bound in cloth. Price, in cloth, 50 

 cents; in paper, 30 cents. 



Advanced Bee-Oulture, Its Methods 

 and Management, by W. Z. Hutchinson. — The 

 author of this work is a practical and enter- 

 taining writer. You should read his t>ook ; 

 '.)0 pages, bound in paper, and illustrated. 

 Price, 50 cents. 



Itee-Keeping for Beginners, by Dr. 



•J. P. H. Brown, of Georgia. — A practical and 

 condensed treatise on the honey-bee, giving 

 the best modes of management in order to se- 

 cure the most profit. 110 pages, bound in 

 paper. Price, 50 cents. 



Kee-Keeplng for Profit, by Dr. G. L. 



Tinker. — Revised and enlarged. It details the 

 author's " new system, or how to get the 

 largest yields of comb or extracted honey." 

 SO pages, illustrated. Price, 25 cents. 



Bienen-Kultur, by Thomas G. Newman. 

 — This is a German translation of the princi- 

 pal portion of the book called "Bees and 

 Honey." 100-page pamphlet. Price, 25 cents. 



Apiary Register, by Thomas G. New- 

 man. — Devotes two pages to a colony. Leather 

 binding. Price, for 50 colonies, 5^1.00. 



Dr. Howard's Book on Foul-Brood. 



— Gives the McEvoy Treatment and reviews 

 the experiments of others. Price, 25 cents. 



Winter Problem in Bee-Keeping, by 

 ij. R. Pierce. — Result of 25 years' experience. 

 Price, 30 cen ts. 



Foul Brood Treatment, by Prof. F. R. 



Cheshire. — Its Cause and Prevention. 10 cts. 



Foul Brood, by A. R. Kohnke. — Origin, 

 Development and Cure. Price, 10 cents. 



It:lli:in r^llP£>nc —bred for business, bv the 

 Ibdlldll UUOtJMo best methods, and from the 

 best honeygathering stock. My bees are free 

 from disease, and are hustlers. No small or in- 

 ferior queens sent out. Untested, T5c: tested, $1. 

 2SA4t D. E. ANDREWS, Bloomington, Ind. 



Please mention Bee Journal 

 when writing advertisers. 



JJ Jte. Jte >t< >lt Mt Jlt >lt j*t .•!« >lt .1(14. ."(l? I» 



I HONE,y AND BEESWAX J 



-^CA^ >;v >^- >;» >^- vjif vjw y^i >;• y;^-^ j^^ 



MARKET QUOTATIONS. 



Chicago, June 1«.— The market Ih practically 

 nvcr it) comb buuey uniil tbe new crop conies 

 forward, km far noue has appeared in this cily. 

 A little ul the extracted in on Hale, but it is 

 chiefly of a low (frade of amber HeUiag at abont 

 5 centH per pound. There is a lar^-e amount of 

 the white extracted honey of tbe crop of IWl 

 still on sale brioifinij S'tjfOc, accordintf to body 

 and flavor. iJeeswax sella upon arri%-al at ?>2z, 



R. A. HURIf RTT & Co. 



Ka.nsas Citv, June 23.— There is very little 

 (loinjf in honey at this time. The Bupply of 

 comb on tbe market is not lar^fe, althouff b there 

 is a very good supply of extracted. We quote: 

 Comb honey, 13%14c; extracted, 5%<"(>c. Bees- 

 wax, 25^30c. No new honey in market. 



C. C. Cle.mons & Co. 



CiNciNN-ATi, March 6.— The market in ex- 

 tracted honey is (food with prices lower. Am- 

 ber, for manufacturing- purposes, bring^s from 

 5!4@6Hc; better g-rades from7f't«c. Fancy comb 

 honey sells at 16c; lower grades hard to sell at 

 any price. Beeswax strong^ at 27(ai30c. 



The Fked W. Mcth Co. 



Albany, N.Y., May 1.— Honey market isduU. 

 Very little call now for any grade. Well cleaned 

 out of stock and season practically over. Some 

 comb honey is selling- at 14^al5c. Extracted, 

 6^6Hc. Beeswax, good demand, 30f5>3lc. 



H. R. Wright, 



Detroit, Apr. 8.— Fancy white comb honey, 

 15c; No. 1, l3(Q>l4c; dark and amber, ll@12c. 

 Extracted, white, 6Ji@7c; dark and amber. 

 5@6c. Beeswax, 2*?@30c. M. H. Hunt & Sow. 



NbwYork, May I'J.— There is a limited de- 

 mand for comb honey and prices range as fol- 

 lows: Fancy white, 14c; No. 1, white, 13c; am- 

 ber, ll@12c; no buckwheat or dark on the 

 market and no more demand for any. Market 

 on extracted remains very inactive. Plenty of 

 supply with only fair demand. We quote: 

 white, 5^Ca5\c: light amber, 5®5%c; southern, 

 in barrels, 50^55c gallon. Beeswax firm at from 

 30^32c pound, according to quality. 



HiLDRBTH & SKOBLKBIf. 



Cincinnati, June 7.— There is hardly any 

 change in the honey market. Comb is not mov- 

 ing much, and whatever is left can be bought 

 at cut rates. Water -white is selling from 

 14^^? 15c. Extracted is in fair demand and finds 

 steady sales, in barrels, 5[S>5Hc; water-white 

 alfalfa from 6@t>J^cj white clover from fj^to 7c. 

 Beeswax is coming in more freely and sells for 

 2Sc. C. H. W. Wbbbr. 



San Francisco, June 25.— White comb, 10^ 



12 cents; amber, 7@l0c; dark, 6^*7 cents. Ex- 

 tracted, white, 5@— ; light amber, 4H@— ; 

 amber. 4@ — . Beeswax, good to choice, light. 

 27fS29c; dark, 25(a2oc. 



While the market presents a firm undertone, 

 owing to the season's yield proving much 

 lighter than was generally anticipated, the in- 

 quiry is not active at full current rates. Buyers 

 are slow realizing that they are not going to be 

 favored this summer with heavy offerings. 



WANTED! 



Honey and Beeswax, Mail sample and state 

 price delivered Cincinnati. C. H, W. WEBER, 

 2146-2148 Central Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio. 

 21Atf Mention the American Bee Journal. 



Prlz6=wlnnlnQ 



Daughters of Mnore's famous long-tongued 

 red clover Italian Queen, which won the t25.00 

 prize offered by The A. I, Root Co. for thelong- 

 est-tongued bees; and also daughters of other 

 choice long-tongued red-clover breeders whose 

 bees '* iust roll in the honey," as Mr. Henry 

 Schmidi, of Hulto, Tex,, puts it, now ready to 

 go by return mail. Untested Oueens, 75c each; 

 six. §4.110; dozen, $7.50. Selec"! untested, $1.03 

 each: six, fS.u"; dozen. $9.(X). Safe arrival and 

 satisfaction guaranteed. Circular free. 



J. p. MOORE, 



28Elf Lock Box 1. nORQAN. KY. 



Please mention Bee Joartal wlien "Wi-itias 



