1911 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE 



27 



118 

 119 



i-:i 



1-22 

 126 

 1:27 

 128 

 131 



133 

 134 

 135 

 137 

 138 

 139 

 140 

 142 

 144 

 145 

 149 

 150 

 152 

 154 

 155 

 156 

 157 

 158 

 162 

 K.4 

 166 

 ]67 

 169 

 170 

 173 

 173 

 174 

 175 



178 



i;9 



ISl 

 182 

 183 



ISO 



186 

 137 

 I S3 

 190 

 192 

 193 

 194 

 195 

 196 

 197 



198 

 200 

 201 

 -,'02 

 ■•1)3 

 ■,'04 

 205 

 206 

 209 



210 

 ■,'13 

 21S 

 219 

 220 

 221 

 222 

 223 

 224 

 225 

 227 

 228 

 229 

 231 

 232 

 233 

 234 

 235 

 236 

 237 

 238 



Continued from page 23. 

 Grape Growing in the South 

 Experiment Station Work — XV 

 Beans, Pea?, and Other Legumes as Food 

 Experiment Station Work — XVI 

 Practical Suggestions for Farm Buildings 

 Important Insecticides 

 Eggs and Their Uses as Food . 

 Household Tests for Detection of Oleomar- 

 garine and Renovated Butter 

 Experiment Station Work — X\'III 

 Tree-Planting on Rural School Grounds 

 Sorghum-Syrup Manufacture 

 The Angora Goat 

 Irrigation in Field and Garden 

 Emmer: A Grain for the Semi-Arid Regions 

 Pineapple Growing 



Nutrition and Nutritive \'alue of Food 

 Experiment Station Work — XIX 

 Carbon Bisulphid as an Insecticide 

 Experiment Station Work — XX 

 Clearing New Land 

 Scabies of Cattle 



Home Fruit Garden ; Preparation and Care 

 How Insects Affect Health in Rural Districts 

 The Home X'ineyard 

 The Propagation of Plants 

 How to Build Small Irrigation Ditches 

 Experiment Station Work — XXI 

 Rape as a Forage Crop 

 Cheese-Making on the Farm 

 Cassava 



Experiment Station Work — XXII 

 Principles of Horse-Feeding 

 Scale Insects and Elites on Citrus Trees 

 Primer of Forestry: Part I: The Forest 

 Broom Corn 

 Home Manufacture and Use of Unfermented 



Grape Juice 

 Cranberry Culture 

 Squab-Raising 



Insects Injurious in Cranberry Culture 

 Horseshoeing • 

 Pruning 



Poultry as Food 



Meat on the Farm: Butchering. Curing, etc. 

 Beautifying the Home Gro'ands 

 Experiment Station Work — XXIII 

 D'-ainage of Farm Lands 

 Weeds L^sed in Medicine 

 Experiment Station Work — XXIV 

 Barnyard Manure 

 Experiment Station Work — XXV 

 Alfalfa Seed 



Annual Flowering Plants 

 l^scfulness of the American Toad 

 Importation of Game Birds and Eggs for 

 Propagation 

 Strawberries 

 Turkeys 



Cream-Separator on Western Farms 

 Experiment Station Work — XXVI 

 Canned Fruits, Preserves and Jellies 

 The Cultivation of Mushrooms 

 Pig ^Management 

 Milk Fever and Its Treatment 

 Controlling the Boll Weevil in Cotton Seed 



and at Ginneries 

 Experiment Station Work — XXVII 

 Raspberries 

 The School Garden 



Lessons from Grain-Rust Epidemic of 1904 

 Tomatoes 



Fungous Diseases of the Cranberry 

 Experiment Station Work — XXVIII 

 Miscellaneous Cotton Insects in Texas 

 Canadian Field Peas 

 Experiment Station Work — XXIX 

 Experiment Station Work — XXX 

 Forest Planting and Farm Management 

 The Production of Good Seed Corn 

 Spraying for Cucumber and Melon Diseases 

 Okra: Its Culture and Uses 

 Experiment Station Work — XXXI 

 The Guinea Fowl 

 Preparation of Cement Concrete 

 Incubation and Incubators 

 Experiment Station Work — XXXII 

 Citrus-Fruit Growing in the Gulf States 

 To be continued. 



Lesen Sie 

 Deutsch? 



THIS is an offer addressed to the Ger- j 

 man readers of GLEANINGS IN 

 BEE CULTURE. 



The publishers of ! 

 this journal find at 

 the close of the year 

 a surplus stock of 

 copies of — 



The 



ABCder 

 Bienen- 

 zucht. 



This is a complete 

 translation of the "A 

 B C of Bee Culture," 

 annotated corrected, 

 and brought down 

 to date hs Mr. V. 

 < ireiner. who Is a 

 thorough (ierinan 

 scholar, besides be- 

 ing a practical bee- 

 keeper, familiar with 

 American methods. 



THIS BOOK was published to sell at S2.00 

 per copy in paper binding, and 82.50 in 

 cloth. It is handsomely printed and 

 illustrated, but the translation is a little too 

 free. Understand ! There are no incorrect 

 statements— nothing that will be misunder- 

 stood—simply a little bit more of American 

 German than we would use in a new edition. 



SEVERAL hundred of the German edition 

 of the A B C of Bee Culttire have been 

 sold, and not a single complaint or any 

 evidence whatever of dissatisfaction has come 

 to our notice. The book is a success in every 

 way, only we have not properly advertised it: 

 and the sale (in comparison to that of the 

 English edition) is slow. 



Here is How You 

 May Profit 



To close out the German A B C we are going 

 to offer a paper-bound copy, with GLEAN- 

 INGS for one year, for only Sl.To. GLEAN- 

 INGS alone costs Sl.OO, so you practically get 

 the book by paying 50 cts. and postage— which 

 will be at least 25 cts. The cloth-bound edi- 

 tion—a beautiful volume— may be had with 

 GLEANINGS, -vs-hile stock lasts, for only S2.00. 



If your subscription is already paid, take this 

 offer any way. You will get full-year exten- 

 sion, and the book will be sent at once. 



English-speaking bee-keepers should call the 

 attention of German friends to this special 

 offer. 



Send order and remittance to — 



The A. I. Root Company 



Medina, Ohio 



