918 



(jLiiANiNGS IK BEE CULTURE. 



Dec; 



peNEY GdUiW' 



CITY MARKETS. 



New York.— flonejy.— Fancy white, lib., 16(§ri; 

 311JS., 13(5il4. Fair white Mb., 14(§a5: 3-lb8., ll®13. 

 Buckwheat, 1-lbs., 11(«12; S lbs., 10. Extracted 

 white, 8@9. Flvtracted buckwheat, 6(5(7. One lb. 

 white and 1 and 2 lbs. buckwheat are in very good 

 demand, and the stocks art- light. Little demand 

 for 31bs. white, with good stock in the market. 



Beesivax dull at •.i'.Ji4@-4. 



Nov. 24. HiLDRETH Bros. & Seoelken, 



28 & 30 West Broadway, New York. 



Kans.\s City.— Honey.— Market a little slow. We 

 quote, white 1-lb. comb, 17; fair, 14; California 

 white, 17; do., 2-lb„ 15. Extracted, white, do., 7''2; 

 amber, do., 7; Beeswax, none in market. 



Nov. 22. Clemons, Cloon & Co., 



Kansas City, Mo. 



Albany.— Honei/.— Market slow, as dealers are 

 more generally supplied than they were. Prices 

 unchanged, as the stocks are not large. 



Nov. 32. H.R.Wright, 



Albany, N. Y. 



St. Loui.s.— Honev.— We have nothing special to 

 report on hone.v. The demand is good, and stocks 

 are still light. W. B. Westcott & Co., 



Nov. 24. St. Louis, Mo. 



Detroit.— Ho/iey.— Best white comb, 17(a)18, with 

 better supply. Sales rather slow. Extracted, 8@i,9 

 for light-colored. Beeswax, 'Z'i(a)2ii. M.H.Hunt. 



Bell Branch, Nov. 23, 1888. 



Columbus.— Ho/iejy. —No change from last quota- 

 tions: not much white honey on the market, and 

 we think good white stock would readily sell well. 



Nov. 23. Earle Clickenger, 



Columbus, O. 



Cincinnati.— iJo?iej/.— No change since our last. 

 Extracted honey brings .5(rt.8 on arrival, and best 

 qualities of comb honey bring 14@16 in the jobbing 

 way. Beeswax Is in good demand, and brings 30@22 

 on arrival, for good to choice vellow. 



Nov. 21. Chas. F. Muth & Son, 



Cincinnati, Ohio. 



St. liOV is. —Honey. — Market almost bare of stock, 

 especially strained and extracted. We quote, comb, 

 12@14c; strained, 5@,6; cans, 7@,8i. Beeswax.— Vrime. 

 20c. D. G. Tutt Grocer Co., 



Nov. 22. St. Louis, Mo. 



HONEY 



Address 



JAMES HEDDON, 



DOWACIAC, MICH. 



Mention Gleanings. 20tfdb 



A nni I AR PRPP VO EVERYBODY. 

 n UUI-UHn rnCE: a dollar saved is a dol- 

 lar made. The best of all horticultural iournals, 

 THE AMERICAN OAEDEN, is to be still further greatly 

 improved, and the price advanced on Jan. Ist to 

 !f2.00 a year. Subscribe now at $1.00 and get all the 

 issues from date to end of 1889. With Gleaning.'* 



lor $1.8.'). Two MONTHS FOR 10 CTS., FOR INTRO- 



iJUCTioN. E. H. LIBBY, 7.-)l Broadway, N. Y. 



It#"lii rcspoiiiliiit,' to this .ulv. liJMiiiriil inc-nli.iu Gi.KANlNGs. 



MOISTURE. 



If you would know the e&ects of moisture in bee- 

 cellars, how injury to the bees from its presence 

 may be avoided, or how to have dry cellars, '."ead the 

 Nov. No. of the Bee-Keepers' Beview. It gives, 

 upon these points, the views and experience of 

 .las. Heddon, H. R. Boardman, Dr. C. C. Miller, .1. H. 

 Martin, Eugene Secor, O. O. Poppleton, Prof. A. J. 

 Cook, R. L. Taylor, and S. Cornell. Besides this, 

 there are the usual lively, wiaeawake, pointed ed- 

 itorials upon current topics, also appropriate ex- 

 tracts pertaining to the special topics under discus- 

 sion. The Dec. No. will discuss "■ Sections and their 

 Adjustment on the Hives." 



Price of the REVIEW, 50 cents a year. Samples 

 free. Back numbers can be furnished. 



The REVIEW and "The Production of Comb 

 Honey," for t)5 cts. Address 



W. Z. HUTCHINSON, 



613 Wood St. Flint, Mich. 



t^In responding U> tliis :iilvii(ist-iiuMit iiuntidn (Ji.kanings. 



ITETV C-A.TAI-OGTJE 



MAILED IN DECEMBER. 



Enlarged, and prices reduced. It quotes LOW 

 SPECIAL FRIOIGHT RATES to many Southern 

 points, especinlly to points in TEXAS. 



Southern bee-keepers, send for it now. 

 23 24 J. M. JENKINS, Wetunipka, Ala. 



C^In respomlinK to this a<l\ 



■nl mention GLEANINGS. 



■■ppp I Bee-Keepers' Club List of Newspapers 

 L"^^" and Magazines (Club rates). SAVE 



r 



MONEY by sending postal card for it. 

 33-24d E. H. COOK, Andover, Conn. 



DADAMT'B POUNDATIOH TAOTOEY, WHOLESALE AND 

 RETAIL. See ad vertiseraent in another column 



B. J. mZLLEB. & CO., 



NAPPANEE, - ELKHAKT CO., - IND., 



m.\nufactuhers of 



BEE-HIVES AND SUPPLIES. 



We give 10 per cent discount on bee-hives and 

 sections in November and December. 22tfdb 



JSJiNTt I'OR I'HICIJ LIST. 



tg"ln lespoiiilinii to this advci listnient mention (ii.KAMNcs. 



GREAT REDUCTION IN LEAD-PENCILS. 



The bottom has fallen out of the combination on 

 lead-pencils, so that we can sell the same pencils at 

 just V2 the price we have sold them. 



6-iiicIi Plain <'edar Pencil!*. 5 cents per 

 dozen. Postage, ;} cents extra; 5.5 cents per box of 

 12 dozen. By mail, 21 cents extra. These are the 

 same that we have been selling for years at 10 cents 

 per dozen. Eagle Pencil Co.'s make. 



Plain Cedar Penfil»«. 7?4 inches long, Dixon's 

 make. Price T cents per dozen; 7.5 cents for 12 doz- 

 en. By mail. 3 cents per dozen extra, or 32 cents 

 per gross for postage. 



Polislied Cedar Pencils, with inserted Bub- 

 ber Tip. Price 10 cents per dozen. Postage 4 

 cents extra; fl.lo for 12 dozen; postage :i5 cents ex- 

 tra. These are Eagle Pencil Co.'s make. We have 

 been selling them for 3 cents each; 20 cents per 

 dozen, but are now able to offer them as above. 



.», -ID w Pilot Pencils. These are 



-Sri'iEiiol^i finely polished, and as good 



pencils as are made. We have 



2 sizes— ,"0 inch and 3".. inch in diameter. Price 



3 cts. each ; postage, extra, 2 cts. Thirty cents per 

 dozen; by mail, 5 cts. extra 



A. I. BOOT, niedlna, Ohio. 



