466 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTUllE. 



June 



EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT. 



Notices will be iiisertcc! uniler this head at one-half our 

 usual rates. All ad's iiitindeil tor this departmrnt must not 

 exced 5 lines, and you must say you want your ad. in this de- 

 partment, or we will not be responsible for any error. You 

 can have the notice as many lines as you please; but all over 

 Ave lines will cost .you according to our regular rates. 



WANTED.— To e.\chang-e Italian bees, brood, and 

 queens, for t'dn., beeswa.x. type-writer, or any 

 thing- having- a standard market value. 6tl'db 



Th()m.\s Horn, Box 691, Sherburne, Chen. Co.,N. Y. 



WANTED.— To sell or exchange, farm, 180 acres, 

 good buildings, good sandy soil; also latest im- 

 proved Steam Thrashing-machine. Either or both 

 at a bargain. Address J. A. Osbun & Son, 

 Ttfdb Spring- Bluff, Adams Co., Wis. 



WANTED.— To sell cheap for cash, or will ex- 

 change for bees. Root's chaff hives, the D. A. 

 Jones chaff hives, made up or in the fiat, wide 

 frames, brood-frames, dovetailed sections, cases, 

 etc. J. M. KiNZiE, 



lOtfdb Rochester, Oakland Co., Mich. 



■|1[ ANTED. —An active and experienced young 

 VV man to work in apiary. State age, experience, 

 and wages wanted, with references. 



W. D. Wright, Knovversville, Albany Co., N. Y. 



WANTED.— To exchange pure Italian queens for 

 beeswax at 28c per lb. Queens, select, $3.00; 

 warranted, $1.50. Ship wax by freight to Barry- 

 town, N. Y. Cornelius Bros., 

 7 12 db LaFayetteville, Dutchess Co., N. Y. 



EGGS.— From choice stock, for hatching. Safe ar- 

 rival guaranteed. Wyandottes, $3.50 for 13; 

 $4.00 for 2(5. Houdans, $1.50 for 13; $2.00 for 26. 

 Breeding birds and chicks for sale; or 1 will ex- 

 change for bee-supplies I can use. J. EVANS, 

 Otfdb Box HO, Sehaghticoke, N. Y. 



WANTED immediately, 20 untested queens in ex- 

 change for beautiful white basswood one-piece 

 sections, at $4.35 per 1000. A. D. D. Wood, 



lOtfdb Rives Junction, Jackson Co., Mich. 



WANTED.— To cxehange20,C0;)strawberr.v-planfc5, 

 Crescent Seedling, Cumberland Triumph, 

 Sharpless, and Glendalc, V5 cts. per 1(!0; 14.00 per 

 lOOO, for bees, foundation, or improved (loultry. 

 lOtfdb W. J. Hesser, Platlsmouth, Neb. 



WANTED.— Ginseng root.— Will pay 75 cents i)er 

 lb. for the dried root. One ounce to one lb. 

 may be sent by mail to my address. Larger packages 

 may be sent by express to Ransom, Pa , via Pitts- 

 ton, Pa. Address A. P. Shaiu-s, 

 lO-lld Exeter, Luzerne Co., Pa. 



WANTED.— To exchange now Novice honey-ex- 

 tractors for A. and L. frames; will exchange 

 for a bone-grinder, or good books, or any thing use- 

 ful. Geo. W. Baker, Milton, Ind. 3-5-7-9-1 l-13d 



WANTED.— To exchange Gale plow, siiuare har- 

 row, subsoil plow, double lead harness, riding- 

 saddle, horse-clippers; also a Stevens 44 ritle and 12- 

 gauge shot-gun combined, for Barnes saw, hives in 

 tiat, or otters. Goods shiiiped from Philadelpliia, Pa. 

 lid H. M. HiESPELL, Paola, Ela. 



WANTED.— To exchange Heddon cases for lO-f. L. 

 hives, or good second-hand 10-f. L. hives for 

 Italian queens, or offers. D. G. Webster, 



lid Blaine, Boone Co., 111., May 24, 1886. 



WANTED.— To exchange for bees a one-horse 

 harrow, feed-cutter, .50-gall. farm boiler. Sim- 

 plicity hives, used one season, frames of comb. 

 lid Arthur Todd, 



1910 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 



WANTED.— To exchange Italian bees for a bi- 

 cycle, from tiftv to fiftv-six inch. lOd 

 W. e: Darrow, Box 1C6, O'Fallon, St. Clair Co., 111. 



WANTED.— To exchange a trio of white-faced 

 Black Spanish fowls for Italian bees; or will 

 sell game for $12.00 cash. MYEON SCHEEMEEHOEN, 

 lid Elizaville, Columbia Vo., N. Y. 



WANTED.— To exchange, small-size Centennial 

 incubator, new or second hand, or brooder, 

 for Italian bees, nuclei, or full colonies. ll-13d 



James D.,Halsted, Rye, Westc. Co., N. Y. 



/"ANTED.- To exchange silverhull buckwheat, 

 at one dollar per bushel, for offers. 



C. D. Manville, La Grange, O. 



W 



WANTED— To exchange 1 qt. berry-baskets for 

 fdn. or silverhull buckwheat Seed-baskets, 

 $7.0 I per 1009. Joh.\ HARRot-o, 



Coluinliiana, Col (>,).. (Jhio. 



STiL2SrLE"Z''S 



Automatic Honej-Extractor 



AND DOLLAR SMOKER. 



Send for circiibir and Pric ■ lirt to 



G. W. STANLEY, Wyoming, N. Y. 



OKE-PIECE BOXES AT $4.007 



I can furnish one-piece boxes, 414x41:1x1 '« wide at 

 $4.00 per lOOO; 300, $2.00. Send for sample, 

 lid J. P. MCGREGOR, Fueelanu, Mich. 



ES CHEAPS 



I have the finest lot of Queens and Bees I have 

 ever raised in my 13 years' experience, and shouhl 

 like to have everybody see them. I will sell at fol- 

 lowing low prices: 

 SELEiT TES^EIt ( VICHY FIXE) $'J.OO 

 TESTED ------ 1.00 



My Queens arc nearly all mated with drones from 

 an imported Italian Queen. Half-blood Holy-Lands, 

 Cyjirians, and Albinos, at same price. 



H. B. H arkin(;toin, 



JTlay 26, 18!S6. Medina, O. 



CELERr PUNTS! 



Hcndeison's White-Plume Celery, and new ai)ple- 

 shaped Celeriac, at 25 cts. per 100, or $3.00 per 1009. 

 lM2d F. HOLTKE, Carlstadt, Bergen Co., N. J. 



rtllPC/rMQ S. S. Hamburgs, B. Leghorns, P. 

 UniUt^tRO. Rocks; eggs, $1.00 per setting for 

 the rest of the season. Fowls for sale. 



A. H. DUFF, Creiohton, Ohio. 



8 Square ft. to Ib-.ti-IS cents. 

 W. T. LYONS. 



Decherd, Tenn. 



FOUNDATION 



BERRY-BASKETS. 



One-quart baskets, $7.00 per 1000; best iron-bound, 

 33-quart crate, filled with baskets, complete, 99 cts. 

 Discount to dealers. Send for sample baskets. 

 MELLINGER, HARKOLD & (iROVE. 



Columbiana, Col. Co., Ohio. 



KIND WORDS FROM OUR CUSTOMERsT 



I received your ABC book and am \ei-y much 

 pleased with it. The book is worth $10.00 to any be- 

 ginner. C.S.Johnston. 



Emlenton, Pa. ^ 



C. C. MILLER'S opinion OF OUR NEW INCUBATOR 

 THERMOMETERS.— SEE P. £97, APR. 15 ISSUE. 



Many thanks for the thermometer, which has 

 come in perfect order. You don't know the com- 

 fort I feel in owning a thermometer which tells 

 temperature so plainly, and in whose word I can 

 have such confidence. 1 feel very grateful to you 

 for teaching me the use of wire nails, which are 

 now introduced for the first in the Marcnge stores. 



Marengo, 111., May 22, 1886. C. C- Miller. . 



