22 



Gleanings in Bee Culture 



Poultry 



Indian Runner duck eggs, 11.00 per 13. Booklet 

 free. Aaron Fisher, Box 37, La Park, Pa. 



Indian liunner duck-culture book. Information 

 that a lieeinner is looking for; 75 cts.. money order. 

 Catalog for two stamps. 



Levi D. Yoder, Box 50, Dublin, Pa. 



Indian Runner ducklings from best pens at 20 cts. 

 each, for July 1st delivery — the right time to raise 

 them for winters layers. Place your order early. 

 Kent Jennings, Mt. (Ulead, O. 



Indian Runner ducks from Imported stock, fawn 

 and white; very easy to raise and easy to keep. 

 They are beauties too — lay eggs all the year ; lay 

 heaviest In winter. Eggs, 81.50 per 13; 17.00 per 100, 

 Let me start you to success. 



C. O. Yost. Rt. 4, Winchester, Ind. 



For Sale.— Duston White Wyandottes, 82.00; 15 

 eggs, 81; 85 per 100. Elmer Gimlin, TaylorvUle, 111. 



Buttercups for utility and beauty; selected pens; 

 unlike others. H. V. Meeker, Earl St., Toledo, O. 



White-faced Black Spanish eggs for hatchingf 15, 

 $1.00; 50, S'3.00; 100, 85.00. Also dealer in bee-keepers' 

 supplies of all kinds. A. W. Swan, Centralia, Kan. 



Partridge Wyandottes and Partridge Rocks— also 

 all leading varieties. Prize-winning stock and eggs 

 —reasonable. Catalog free. 



John T. Crouthamel. Franconia, Pa. 



Golden Barbed Rocks.— The beauty and utility 

 breed. They are barred buflF on white, making a 

 most beautiful fowl. Write for descriptive catalog. 

 L. E. Altwein, originator, St, Joseph, Mo. 



S. C. R. I. Reds, large and beautiful, rich in color, 

 and rich egg-layers; the winning strain. Eggs from 

 exhibition pens, 82.00 per 15; 110.00 per 100. Eggs 

 from standard pens, 81.00 per 15; 85.00 per 100. I can 

 please you, sure. 



C. O. Yost, Rt. 4. Winchester, Ind. 



Order your copy of " American Standard oi Per- 

 fection " through Gleanings. The new edition of 

 this greatest of all poultry-books Is now ready. 

 Beautiful plates show feather-markings, etc., of ev- 

 ery standard breed. Price 81.50, postpaid, in cloth; 

 82.25 in morocco binding. 

 Buyers' Bureau, Gleanings in Bee Culture. 



Miscellaneous 



For Sale. — Cadillac automobile with runabout 

 and touring bodies; good running condition; three 

 tires mactically new; a bargain at S^lOO, f. o. b. here. 

 I>. F. HowDEN, Fillmore, N. Y. 



For Sale. — Extra good Collie pups, white and sa- 

 ble; eligible for registry; $5.00 to $25.00. Can use a 

 few queens. W. D. K. Deuel. 



129 Bouck St., Tonawanda, N. Y. 



Fob Sale. —One set (40 volumes) of the Imperial 

 Encyclopedia and Dictionary. These books are in 

 fine condition, very slightly worn; half publishers' 

 price. Cash or white extracted honey taken. 



Snavely Brothers, Lltitz, Pa. 



Bee-keepers* Directory- 



Nutmeg Italian queens, after June 1, 81.00. Circu- 

 lar. A. W. Yates, 3 Chapman St., Hartford, Ct. 



Bees, queens, supplies, and export; free school. 

 W. C. MORRIS, 74 Cortlandt St., New York. 



Well-bred bees and queens. Hives and supplies. 

 J. H. M. Cook, 70 Cortlandt St., New York. 



For bee-smoker and honey-knife circular send a 

 card to T. F. Bingham, Alma, Mich. 



Improved golden-yellow Italian queens for 1911; 

 beautiful, hustling, gentle workers. Send for price 

 list to E. E. Lawrence, Doniphan, Mo. 



Queens. — Improved red-clover Italians, bred for 

 business; June 1 to Nov. 15, untested queens, 75 cts.; 

 select, $1.00; tested, $1.25 each. Safe arrival and sat- 

 isfaction guaranteed. H. C. Clemons, Boyd, Ky. 



Quirin's famous improved Italian queens ready 

 in April; nuclei and colonies about May 1. My stock 

 is northern-bred and hardy. Five yards wintered 

 on summer stands in 1908 and 1909 without a single 

 los.s. For prices see large advertisement. 



Quirin-the-Queen-breeder, Bellevue, O. 



RAY PRINTING CO., Fostoria,0. 



Make ENGRAVINGS for GLEANINGS 



Books and Magazines. 



Taking " speed pictures " with an ordinary cam- 

 era usually puts the amateur " up a stump." But 

 there are certain expedients by which the ordinary 

 camera can be used very elTectively, even in pictur- 

 ing a limited express train or a ball in its flight 

 from the pitclier's hand to the batsman. These are 

 explained in an article on the Boys' Page of The 

 Youth's C'onwanion for June 1. 



Convention Notices. 



The summer meeting of the New Jersey Bee-keep- 

 ers' Association will be lield at Mr. W. D. Robin- 

 son's apiary. Spring Lake, Monmouth Co., New Jer- 

 sey, on Wednesday, J une 28. The program is not 

 completed yet, but it is intended to make the meet- 

 ing especially interesting along the line of bee dis- 

 eases and their treatment. 



State Inspector of Apiaries Dr. John B. Smith will 

 be present, and explain the recently enacted foul- 

 brood law; plans of inspection; enforcement of pen- 

 alties, etc. It is also hoped that the assistant in- 

 spector will have been secured by that time, who 

 will also be present and get acquainted with the 

 bee-keepers of the State. All bee-keepers in this 

 State and near-by territory are invited. This ought 

 to be a very profitable meeting for bee-keepers who 

 have bee diseases or who are threatened with them, 

 for the success of our foul-brood legislation in erad- 

 icating diseases from the State will depend in a 

 large measure on the support of the best bee-keep- 

 ers of the State. 



Spring Lake is easily accessible from most parts 

 of the State. It can be reached conveniently from 

 points on the Central Railroad of New Jersey, the 

 Pennsylvania Railroad, and New York & Long 

 Branch Railroad. It is also near the large summer 

 resorts of Ocean Grove, Long Branch, Sea Girt, etc. 



Program will be mailed later to any who will 

 write for it. 



Bee-keepers and manufacturers are invited to ex- 

 hibit any appliance or improvement along apiarian 

 lines — bees in observation hives, and the like. 



Pittstown, N. J. Albert G. IIann, 



