1905 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



847 



hat we furnish free to intending- purchasers will tell 

 you how we have succeeded. If you are looking for 

 " cheap John " goods don't write to Remus. 



E. D. TowNSEND, Remus, Mich. 



For Sale. — 10,000 lbs. comb honey. Can deliver July 

 and August crop in September at 11 cts., f. o. b. in New 

 York or 8 cts. in Havana: all fancy and A No. 1 white, 

 in carriers of 170 lbs. net; nine cases to carrier, 24 sec- 

 tions to case. Frank Reiman, Nueva Paz, Cuba- 



For Sale.— Choice e.xtracted white-clover honey, 

 new crop, in new 60-lb. cans. Sample, 5c. 



G. A. Bleech, Jerome, Mich. 



For Sale.— New clover honey in 60-lb. cans. 



C. J. Baldridge, Kendaia, Seneca Co., N. Y. 



For Sale. 

 square cans. 



-Fine new extracted clover honey in 60-lb. 

 C. G. LuFT, Forest, Ohio. 



For Sale.— 7000 lbs. new clover honey in 60-lb. cans; 

 sample free. Jas. McNeill, Hudson, N. Y. 



For Sale.— Comb and extracted white-clover honey; 

 also full colony Italian bees. Please write. 



F. M. Mayberry, Obelisk, Pa. 



For Sale.— Superior grades of extracted honey for 

 table use. Prices quoted on application. Sample, 10 

 cts. to pay for package and postage. 



O. L. Hershiser, 301 Huntington Av., Buffalo, N. Y. 



For Sale.— 12,000 lbs. new clover honey, comb and 

 extracted; latter in five-gallon cans, one and five pound 

 pails, and glass jars. State jour wants, and we will 

 quote a price that is right. 



Quirin-the-queen-breeder, Bellevue, Ohio. 



Wanted.- We will be in the market for comb honey 

 in both local and car lots, and parties having same to 

 sell or consign will do well to corre.'^pond with us. 



Evans & Turner, Columbus, Ohio. 



Wanted. — Honey in any quantity. State price, quan- 

 tity, and quality. Address JuDSON Heard, 



110 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. 



Wanted.— Beeswax. Will pay spot cash and full 

 market value for beeswax at any time of the year. 

 Write us if you have any to dispose of. 



Hildketh & Segelken, 

 265-267 Greenwich St. New York. 



Wanted.— Strictly first-class white bulk comb honey. 

 Any quantity. Write quantity you have, what size 

 packages and price expected f. o. b. your nearest R. R. 

 station. Udo Toepperwein, San Antonio, Texas. 



Wanted.— Comb, extracted honey, and beeswax. 

 State price, kind, and quantity. R. A. Burnett, 

 199 South Water St., Chicago, Ills. 



Wanted.— New comb honey — crop of 1905. We be- 

 lieve it woukl pay those having it in car lots or other- 

 wise to write us. Give us your lowest spot-cash prices, 

 and fully describe the goods and style of package, 

 when you can ship, etc. We handle more of these goods 

 than any other firm in the U. S. Yours fo- business, 

 Thos. C. Stanley & Son, 

 Manzanola, Colo., and Fairfield, 111. 



Wanted.— We are in the market for buckwheat 

 honey, both comb and extracted. When writing be 

 sure to tell how it is put up, mentioning the grade; if 

 comb, No. 1 or fancy; and send sample if it is extracted. 

 We do not want it mixed with other flavors. 



The a. I. Root Co., Medina, Ohio. 



Kie Danzenbaker Twentieth Century Smokeif 

 Awarded Highest Prize 



A COLD MEDAL 



at the World's Fai r 

 St. Louis, 1904. 



CLEANEST, 

 COOLEST, 

 STRONGEST, 

 UP=TO=DATE. 



It has a side grate that strengthens the fire-cup, and 

 holds a removable metal and asbestos lining that keeps 

 it cool, adding to its durability. It has no valves to get 

 out of order. 



It has no snout to clog with soot. 



It gives a light or dense volume of cool smoke, at 

 operator's option, 3 to 5 hours at one filling. 



Guarantee: Simplicity, quality, eflSciency, durability. 



The General Manager of the National Bee-keepers' 

 Association wrote me: 



Platteville, Wis., Oct. 28, 1904. 



I have given your Twentieth Century Smoker a thor- 

 ough trial. For convenience in lighting, durability, 

 and long time one filling will last and give ample smoke, 

 I find it all you claim. In the spring I shall want sev- 

 eral. I always want the best. 



Yours truly, N. E. France. 



Prices: By mail, one, $1.25; three, $3.25. 



By express or freight, one, $1.00; three, $2.50. 



F. DANZENBAKER, - MEDINA, OHIO. 



A NUMBER OF TIPS!! 



Each of which has saved or gained me one dollar, is 

 the talk of one of a series of articles by Dudley B. Tru- 

 man, of Breezy Hill, Nassan, Bahamas, B. W. I., now 

 running in the Rural Bee-keeper, published at River 

 Falls. Wis. Mr. Truman writes under the caption 



HIVE MANIPULATIONS 



In the July issue Mr. Truman gives six tips, each of 

 which has saved or gained for him one dollar. The 

 price of the Rural Bee-keeper is but $1.00 for the 

 twelve numbers, and one article tells how you can save 

 or gain $6.00. There are 24 to 28 pages each issue— all 

 valuable to bee-keepers; clubbed with Gleanings, $1.50. 



W. H. Putnam, River Falls, Wis. 



■" ■^— "^^^" Btrouff chick- 

 f n-tiirht. Sold to the Fanner at Whole- 

 sale Prices. Fully warranted. Catalog freo 



COILEn SPRING FENCE CO., 

 Box ]r>i Winchester, Indiana, 



pOR 



SALE. — Bees, honey, land, and timber. 



Tho. Worthington, Leota, Miss. 



To Make a Success 



of keeping bees in large numbers has been the leading 

 theme of the Bee-keepers' Review for this year. Each 

 issue contains one or more articles on this subject from 

 men who have made great successes in this line; and 

 these men are from widely scattered localities, from 

 Vermont to California, and from Cuba and Texas to 

 Minnesota. If you are at all interested in making your 



business grow until it brings you in thousands of dollars 

 a year, send ten cents for three late but different issues 

 of the Review, and the ten cents may apply on any sub- 

 scription sent in during the year. 



W. Z. Hutchinson, Flint, Mich. 



