June 20, 1907 



AmericaiTBec Jonrnaljgi^^^^^^n 



While the Present Stock of these BEE- HIVE CLOCKS lasts, we will sell 

 at only $1,50 each, ''y express ; or $2.00 for the Clock and the Weekly 



them 



American Bee Journal one year 



Better order at once, I)efore all are gone. 



With the 



Tfi£> U£>£> Uivp rinrl/ a $4.oo clock for $2.50 



IIIC DCC"niVC LIULIV American Bee Journal L';h"f.rr Only $3.00 



Wo have originated and had made specially 

 for our readers, a bronzod-rretal Clock, called 

 "The Uec-Hive Clock." It is lo'^ inches 

 wide at the base, 9% inches high, and deep 

 enough at the base to stand firmly on a man- 

 tel or elsewhere. It is a beautiful piece of 

 work, and would be both ornamental and 

 very useful in any house, and particularly in 

 a bee-keeper's home. 



The Clock part itself is warranted for 3 

 years to keep good time. So it is no play- 

 thing, but a beautiful and needful article for 

 everyday use. 



Clocks like "The Bee-Hive Clock " usually 

 sell in the stores at from if4.00 to $5.00 each, 

 but having them made for us in quantities 

 enables us to offer them at $2.50 each by ex- 

 press, or with the American Bee Journal a 

 year— both for only $3.00. Either Clock or 

 Journal would make an ideal gift. 



How to get "The Bee-Hive Clock" 

 FREE 



Send us 5 New Subscribers to the 



Weekly American Bee Journal for one year, 

 at $1.00 each, and we will send you this beau- 

 tiful " BeeHive Clock " FREE (excepting 

 express charges). Or, send us 4 Ne^v Sub- 

 scribers {at $1.00 each) and 60 cents— $4.50 

 in all. Or, 3 New Subscribers (at $1.00 

 each) and $1.00— $4.00 in all. Or, 3 New 

 Subscribers (at $1.00 each) and $1.50— 

 $3.50 in all. 



Only $2.50. f.o.b. Chicago, by Express. 



Weight, with packing, about 4 pounds. 



What Dr. Miller Thinks of the 

 Bee Hive Clock 



Busily ticking away, in the room where I 

 am sitting, stands a genuine bee-keeper's 

 clock (please understand that the word "gen- 

 uine" belongs to the clock and not to the 

 bee-keeper) .or, as the legend upon the clock 

 has it, "The Bee-Hive Clock." I don't know 



whether the idea of getting up such a clock 

 was ccinciived in the brain of the Editor of 

 the American Bee Journal, or whether he got 

 it elsewhere, but the wonder is that such a 

 thing was uot thought of long before. 



Setting aside all idea of its association with 

 the business of a bee-keeper, there is a pecu- 

 liar appropriateness in having the minutes 

 aud the hours " told off " in a case represent- 

 ing the home of the busy little workers. The 

 glance at the clock, with its ceaseless tick, 

 tick, tick, tick, can not fail to remind one 

 that the Hying moments must be improved 

 now or be forever lost, and that suggestion is 

 reinforced l)y the thought of the never ceas- 

 ing activity of the little denizens of the hive, 

 always busy, busy, busy, working from morn 

 till night and from night till morn, working 

 unselfishly for the generations to come, and 

 literally dying in the harness. 



Let us be thankful that the form of the old- 

 fashioned straw hive or skep was adopted, and 

 not that of any modern affair, patented or 

 unpatented. The latter smacks of commer- 

 cialism, but the former of solid comfort, for 

 no other form of hive has ever been devised 

 that contributes so fully to the comfort and 

 welfare of a colony of bees as does the old- 

 fashioned straw-hive. It appeals, too, to one's 

 artistic sense as can no angular affair of more 

 modern times. As an emblem of industry, 

 artists have always used — probably always 

 will use — the old straw skep. 



Thanks, Mr. Editor, for furnishing us a 

 time-keeper so appropriate for all, and espe- 

 cially for bee-keepers. C. C. Milleb. 



Address all orders to GEORGE W. YORK &. CO., 



CHICAGO, ILL. 



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