948 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



Oct. 1 



Wants and Exchange. 



Notices will be inserted nnder this head at 15 cts. per line. 

 Advertisements intended for this department should not ex- 

 ceed five lines, and you must SAY you want your advertise- 

 ment in this department or we will not be responsible for 

 errors. You can have the notice as many lines as you like; 

 but all over five lines will cost you according to our regular 

 rates. This department is iiiti-nded only for bona-fide ex- 

 ohanges. Exchanges for cash or for price lists, or notices 

 offering articles for sale, will be charged our regular rates 

 of 20 cts. per line, and they will be put in other depart- 

 ments. We can not be responsible for dissatisfaction aris- 

 ing from these " swaps." 



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ANTED.— A good coon and skunk hunting- dog. 



P. W. Stahlman, West Berne, N. Y. 



WANTED.— To exchange 8-frame hives, extractor, 

 and uncapping-can. for honey. Root's goods. 

 O. H. Hyatt, Shenandoah, Iowa. 



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ANTED. -Comb honey; 

 how put up. 



state kind, quantity, and 

 Chas. Koeppen, 

 Fredericksburg, Va. 



V^ ANTED.— To exchange a few pounds of cultivated 

 ' ginseng seed for Danzenbaker bee-supplies. 



W. C. Sorter, Wickliffe, Ohio. 



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ANTED.— Refuse from the %vax extractor, or slum- 

 gum. State quantity and pi ice. 



Orel I,. Hekshiser, 

 301 Huntington Ave., Buffalo. N. Y. 



\V ANTED. — Quantity lots of gilt-edge, new, white- 

 " clover comb honey, plain or tall sections preferred. 

 Also extracted honey in cans in exchange for second- 

 hand cans. B. Walker, Clyde, III. 



V^ ANTED.— Old comb. We expect to give our new 

 wax-rendering machines a thorough testing this 

 fall, and we shall need a considerable amount of old 

 comb, for which credit will be given. Ship within 30 

 days, as that which is sent after that date can not be 

 used. The A. I. Root Co., Medina, Ohio. 



VV ANTED.— Partner for party wishing to engage in 

 "'^ bee and poultry business. Good farm, nearly 40 

 acres, with' dwelling, barn, and poultry-houses, can be 

 bought for $1500— $.500 cash, balance mortgage. Bees 

 averaged 80 pounds surplus per season last 5 years. 

 Have 100 colonies, with unlimited range for out-apiaries. 

 A living in poultry alone. S. V. Reeves, 



114 E. Park Ave., Haddonfield, N. J. 



V^ ANTED.— An experienced dairyman who likes to 

 care for cows and make them do their best. Warm 

 stable, cement floor. Bid well stalls, water in every stall, 

 three silos, 39 cows; milking hours, 4:30 A. m., 2:30 p. m. 

 Wages, $300 per year, with house, garden, apples, pears, 

 cherries, etc. If wife or any other member of family 

 can milk, will pay more according to amount of milking 

 they do. When answering this ad., give reference, also 

 state number of members of family and their ages. I 

 will give $5.00 to anybody who refers me to the man 

 that I will employ. J. P. Watts, Kerrmoor, Pa. 



Situations Wanted. 



WANTED.— Situation with a bee-keeper in Cuba or 

 Jamaica, for six months or terra of years. 



F. G. Denzinger, Clean, N. Y. 



Addresses Wanted. 



WANTED.— Parties interested in Cuba to learn the 

 truth about it by subscribing for the Havana 

 Post, the only English paper on the island. Published 

 at Havana. 81.00 per month; 810.00 per year. Daily, 

 except Monday. 



For Sale. 



-6000 pounds white comb honey, best of- 

 Quirin-the-Queen-Breeder, 

 Bellevue, O. 



For Sale. 

 fer gets it. 



For Sale. —30 colonies bees. 8 Langstroth frame hives. 

 RoBT. J. COLBURN, 6827 Union Ave., Chicago, 111. 



For Sale.— Several hundred colonies of bees, with 

 locations— in southern California— for particulars ad- 

 dress I. A. King, Derby, Tex. 



For Sale. — For $1200, or will trade for part cash and 

 a small farm in good location for bees and poultiy. 

 good city property in Harvey, Cook Co., 111. 



Frank Brunskog, Harvey, 111. 



For Sale. 

 5 cts. per lb. 



-Sweet-clover 

 Address 



I, 50 pounds or over, at 

 Joseph Shaw, 

 Strong City, Kan. 



For Sale.— 120 colonies of bees, and fixtures for ex- 

 tracted honey, and home; will invoice about $2000.00. 

 Write me. D. S. Jenkins, Las Animas, Col. 



For Sale —Second hand GO I^i. honey cans GooJ 

 as new. Satisfaction guaranteed 

 I,Ewis C. & A. G. Woodman, Grand Rapids, Mich 



For Sale. — Five-gallon square tin cans used for h(a;- 

 ey, at about half price or new cans. For prices etc 

 address Orel I,. Hershispr, 



301 Huntington Ave., Buffalo, N. Y 



For Sale. — Italian bees and queens. We make one. 

 two, and three frame nuclei a specialty. Write fur 

 circular and price list. Also. 100 T supers for .'•air 

 cheap. O. H. Hyatt, Shenandoah, Page Co., Iowa. 



For Sale.— 500 colonies of bees in Roofs lOfraiue 

 hives in fine condition. Will sell in lots of .50 O'- up- 

 ward. Also fine 100-acre farm at a bargain. Write 

 or call quick for full particulars. 



Udo Toepperwein, San Antonio, Tex. 



For Sale — Ap'aries consisting of 500 colonies of 

 bees; also, 1904 honey crop of 60,000 pounds of comb 

 and extracted alfalfa horev. Address 



D <. Gr'o D .VIncHEt.L S: Co . 

 340 1th St., Ogden Utah 



For Sale.— On account of not having room in my 

 cellar to winter all the bees I have, I will, for the next 

 30 days, sell full colonies of pure Italians in nine-frame 

 hives at $4.00 each. Hives are in good condition. In 

 lots of five, will give one super with each colony. Safe 

 arrival guaranteed. F. A. Gray, 



Redwood Falls, Minn. 



For Sale. — Having sold my farm, I desire to close 

 up my entire business, and offer for sale two fine bee 

 locations with 500 colonies, near Santa Monica and Los 

 Angeles. Most complete of any. 



Herman Lehmann, Santa Monica, Cal. 



SIMPLEX HONEY-TAR. 



We have found a new glass jar 

 for one pound of honey, which we 

 think surpasses any other style we 

 ever offered. It has a glass top 

 which screws on to the glass jar 

 with a rubber gasket between. 

 The joint is on a taper so that, the 

 further you screw the cover on, 

 the tighter it makes the joint. It 

 can be sealed absolutely air-tight; 

 has no metal to rust or corrode. 

 1 1 is about K inch higher than the 

 No. 2.5, which improves its appear- 

 ance. We sell them at the same 

 price as the No. 25, and have a 

 carload in stock ready to fill 

 orders. We first learnt d of this 

 jar nearly a year ago, but have 

 said nothing about it until we had 

 the stock in hand ready to supply. We still have 

 some No. 25 in stock for those who may prefer to con- 

 tinue with it We believe, however, the Simplex jar 

 will take the place of the No. 25. 



XHE: a. I. R.OOT Co., Medina, O. 



