1554 GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. Dec. 15 



'I 



ieeman, what do you 

 get for your money? 



That's the question to consider when buying your bee-supplies. 



Simply because you have bought from some other firm for 

 years and years, and because you perhaps think that you are sat- 

 isfied is no reason why you should not look around to see if you 

 can't buy from a better firm. 



You don't know what satisfaction is until you get it. 



By a better firm we mean a firm selling better goods in better 

 packages, giving better service; a firm who can and will do not 

 only better by you than the concern you have been doing business 

 with, but who will do the best of them all. 



"I bought Hfty Lewis hives froui a fellow in our town last year, and I 

 never saw nicer, whiter, better-fitting bee-hives in all my life. I have always 



l)ought my supplies from so I had no idea you made such fine 



goods until I stumljled onto them by mistake. Now I want Lewis Beeware and 

 nothing else." 



The above is only a sample of what bee-keepers think and 

 have to say about Lewis goods. Thousands of our customers 

 come to us in just this way. 



They comie to stay. 



Now, we are goirg to ask you to buy just five Lewis hives 

 and five hundred Lewis sections— even less, if you do not care \o 

 run that risk— just to see what they are. We leave the decision 

 entirely with you. If after getting a sample you are not con- 

 vinced that Lewis goods are the goods for you— we don't ask 

 your business. That's fair, isn't it? 



AGENTS EVERYWHERE. 



G. B. Lewis Company, Watertown, Wisconsin. 



