1906 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



327 



For Sale. — Bee-keepers' supplies. Root's goods. 

 Hoot's prices. Free catalog. F. R. Daniels, 



117 Florence St., Springfield, Mass. 



For Salk.- Italian queens at any time. Untested, 

 •66 cts.; 50 and over, 10 per cent discount. 



Thompson Bros., Half-way-tree P. O.. Jamaica. 



For Sale. — Best land for bee-keepers, farmers, 

 ■dairymen. Cheap. Write us. 



Wright-Robinson. Cumberland. Wis. 



ForSale.— White Wyandotte eggs for setting. $1.00 

 per 15; $4.00 per 100 Order early. 



Chas. W. Barnes, 138 N. Pleasant St., Norwalk, O. 



For Sale. — Forty-six stands of Italian bees in Root 

 eight-frame hives; well painted and in good condition. 

 Write for prices. Fred Donner. Oakville, Iowa- 



For Sale. — Or exchange for qupens or bees, straw- 

 berry, raspberry, and blackberry plants of all leading 

 varieties. John D. Antrim, Burlington, N. J. 



For Sale.— Eggs for hatching from a superior egg- 

 producing strain of S. C. White Leghorns, $2.00 for 15, 

 $3.75 for 30, $10.00 for 100. 



J. F. Rasch, Marilla, N. Y. 



For Sale.— P supers for eight-frame Dovetailed 

 hives; well painted, and used one season. Will ex- 

 ■change for two-frame extractor or will buy extractor. 

 A. J. Morse, Plum, Pa. 



For Sale.— Cheap, 32 colonies of Italian bees in eight 

 and ten frame two and three stoi-y hives. Reason for 

 selling, have no time to take proper care of them. 



N. O. Penny. Vero, Indian River, Florida. 



For Sale. — Rosecomb Buff Leghorn eggs, J2.50 for 

 15, $10.00 per 100; largest breeder and finest flock in the 

 world; largest and best layers of all Leghorns. Gold 

 Dust (original). F. Boomhower, Gallupville. N. Y. 



For Sale.— Root's bee-supplies at factory prices: 

 full colonies Italian bees; queens in season (catalog free); 

 Plymouth Rock chickens and eggs; incubators, brood- 

 ers, poultry food, etc. H. S. Duby, St. Anne, 111. 



For Sale. — If you want an illustrated and descrip- 

 tive catalog of bee-keepers' supplies for 1906 send your 

 name and address to Frank S Stephens, 



(Root's Goods.) Paden City, W. Va. 



For Sale.— 100 colonies of pure Italian bees in eight 

 or ten frame new Dovetailed hives with Hoffman 

 frames; tested queen in each colony. Price $6.00 each. 

 In lots of ten, $5.00 each. 



F. A. Gray, Redwood Falls, Minn. 



For Sale.— Trees by mail; one-year-old peach and 

 apple trees, 10c each; $1.00 per dozen. Guaranteed 

 true to name and free from disease. 



G. A. Haper, Batchtown, 111. 



For Sale.— Cheap, a place of four acres in one of 

 the best locations for bees in New York State. Have 

 taken 300 lbs. of comb honey from one colony in a sea- 

 son. G. H. Adams, Box 976, Schenectady, N- Y. 



For Sale. — Bees; the right kind, right prices. Safe 

 arrival and satisfaction guaranteed. Ask for illustrat- 

 ed Outfits for Beginners, price list, and our hints on 

 buying bees. Mason Supply Co., Mechanic Fs., Me. 



For Sale.— 500 colonies of bees located in the best 

 sweet-clover belt in the U. S. Will take $1500 for the 

 outfit. Reason for wanting to sell, too much other bus- 

 iness. If I do not sell shall want a good man to run them 

 next season. W. N. Cannon, Greenville, Ala. 



For Sale. — Weed-process foundation business; a rare 

 chance to buy a foundation business with good grow- 

 ing established trade; price $800. 



H. F. Hagen, Denver, Colo., 



Or The A. I. Root Company, Medina, Ohio. 



For Sale.— 150 colonies of bees, 30 in Danz. and bal- 

 ance in Root eight-frame Dovetailed hives, at $3.50 per 

 colony complete, in excellent condition for winter; 

 heavy stores; a great bargain for the price. K inter- 

 ested, write for further particulars. 



W. M. Bailey & Co., Spartanburg, S. C. 



For Sale. — Forty- eight stands of bees in two-story 

 ten-frame L. and Danz. hives, 25 empty hives, and 35 

 Danz. supers complete. The bees are J. P. Moore's red- 

 clover workers, and are in Hamilton Co., Ind. Write 

 me. J. E. Hughes, Route 1, Foreston, Minn. 



For Sale.— Three untested Italian queens for $1.00 

 after July 1, if ordered now; warranted pure mated, 10 

 cts. extra. Satisfaction, or money back. Only 300 at 

 this rate. All you want as long as they last. Orders 

 filled in rotation. Particulars free. 



S. F. Trego, Swedona, 111. 



For Sale.— 200 ten-frame supers; all nailed, and 

 painted one coat, filled with 4x5 sections and full sheets 

 of foundation ready to go in hives. These have never 

 been used and will sell them cheap. Write for price 

 and say how many you want. Daniel Wurth. 



1111 North Smith St., San Antonio, Texas. 



For Sale. — Fine home in Glenwood, Wis.; one large 

 house and two lots in the city, and two acres with large 

 building 25x100 feet (very suitable for bee-supply fac- 

 tory), 150 colonies of bees all in good condition; one of 

 the best white-clover and basswood localities for bee- 

 keeping. Write for particulars. 



J. Gobeli, Glenwood. Wis. 



COLLINGDALE APIARY 



J. R. Rambo, CoUingdale, Delaware Co., Penn. 



Breeder of Caucasian and Golden Italian queens; Ital- 

 ians bred from stock received from Swarthmore; Cau- 

 casians bred from an imported queen. Queens reared 

 and mated in S£ parate yards, six miles apart. Satisfac- 

 tion and safe arrival guaranteed. Prices furnished on 

 application. I am booking orders now for the com- 

 ing season, and will fill same in rotation as received. 



■ui liotkA-s 



buckwheat for seed. 

 We have on hand a good supply of both silverhull and 

 Japanese buckwheat for seed. The silverhull is espe- 

 cially nice beed. We offer either kind at the following 

 prices, including bag to ship in without extra charge, 

 but not prepaid: Peck, 35 cts.; V2 bushel, 65 cts.; bushel, 

 $125 2 bushels. $2 25; 10 bushels or more, $1.00 per 

 bushel. By mail postpaid, 4 oz., 5 cts.; 1 lb., 15 cts. 



BEESWAX market. 

 Market price of beeswax seems to grow stronger as 

 the season advances. We have secured some very large 

 lots during the past month, but are in the market for 

 more. We are paying 28 cents cash, 30 in trade, for 

 average wax delivered here or at our branch offices. 

 We find it necessary to remind shippers again to be 

 careful to mark shipment with their name so it can be 

 identified on arrival; also to state number of pounds 

 shipped, so we can tell whether any has been lost out 

 on the way. 



SWEET-CLOVER SEED. 



We have had an unusual demand for sweet-clover 

 seed, and our large stock of seed is exhausted. If any 

 of our readers have any seed to offer, will you send us a 

 sample, stating how much you have to sell, and the 

 price you ask for it? Until we have a supply to offer 

 we are obliged to withdraw all prices. If we secure a 

 supply so that we can continue to sell at prices given in 

 last issue we shall be pleased to do so; otherwise we 

 will make as low prices as we can. 



