AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



827 



Extracting partly-filled sections 597 



Extra-light colored bees 499, 631 



Fall operations with bees 



Farmers as bee-keepers 



Farmer's honey crop 



Father Langstrot h 1 03, 



Feeding back honey 115, 



Feeding bees for extra comb in the fall 



Feeding bees for winter 407, 42S, 493, 



Feeding sour honey 



Ferguson bee-hive and super 



Filling combs with water 



Fires— Canadian Bee Journal and Levering Bros. 

 103, 104 



First importation of Italian bees 



Fixed spacing 



Flavor of honey 



Floriculture in Texas 



Foley county, Tex 



Forefathers in apiculture 



Formic acid in the blood of bees 



Foul brood. . . . 1.5, 48, 53, 80, 108, 14.i, 150, 176, 184, 

 209, 214, 244, 279, 306, 334, 364, 370,374,434,501, 

 5.j8, 600. 718, 775. 785, 759 



Foundation for comb honey 212, 



Foundation in the brood-chamber 



Foundation starters with separators 



Four and five banded Italian bees 499, 



Freight rate on honey 



Fumigating combs 683, 778, 



Getting bees ready for winter 



Getting bees into the sections 73, 



Getting best working colonies 



Getting water or nectar 



Gipsies of the air— a bee song 



Glucose honey 



Glucose with a little honey in it 



Glucosing honey 



Golden bees 300, 402. 



Golden-rod and aster 



Golden-rod as a medicine 



Grading honey 400, 691, 



406 

 405 



50 

 .551 

 728 



47 

 649 

 300 

 425 

 108 



711 

 598 

 657 

 393 

 77 

 761 

 269 

 717 



Half-pound sections 



Has the bee to die after stinging? 



Heddon hive advantages considered 



Hinting at the Blarney stone 



Hive-covers 42, 



Hiving swarms with colomes 



Honey analysis 



Honey-dew aphid ian honey— is it? 



Honey-dew— a Russian drink 



Honey exhibits at fairs— home and foreign. .456, 



Honey in candy 



Honey market and crop in Minnesota 



Honey-plants of northern Texas 



Honey used in producing bees 



Honey-vinegar 299, 



Honey yield from buckwheat 



How fast bees go for honey 



How I became a bee-keeper 



How not to introduce queens 



How to advertise 



How to get bees to work in the sections 



How to keep honey 



Hybrid and black bees 



Hybrids or Italians 



Illinois honey exhibit at the World's Fair 



106, 135 



Implements used in bee-culture 



Improvement of bees .')60, 



Improving utensils in bee-keeping 



Increase bydividing 



Increase, not honey, wanted 



Increasing the number of colonies 



Indian apiarian names 



Indications of the honey market 470, 



Inexperienced bee-writers 



Infidelity and " reason " speak 



Intemperance the curse of the age 



Introducing new blood to our apiaries 



Introducing queens 204, 



Inversion, contraction, etc 



Iowa State Fair 



Italian bees 



Italians ahead of the blacks 



Japanese honey industry. 



818 



623 

 213 

 175 

 682 

 328 

 792 



333 

 169 

 633 

 109 

 394 

 775 

 698 

 72 

 753 

 521 

 426 

 692 



366 

 717 

 694 

 168 

 268 

 397 

 105 

 205 

 296 

 518 

 713 

 404 

 13 

 585 

 753 

 521 

 215 

 783 

 440 

 809 

 686 

 662 



457 

 399 

 562 

 466 

 691 

 10 

 238 

 473 

 496 

 402 

 633 

 181 

 337 

 210 

 82 

 54 

 437 



39 



Keeping bees on shares 662 



Keeping bees on top of a city house or store. . . 143 



Keeping in line in apiculture 327 



Keeping the apiary grass down 135 



Killing their drones 170 



Kind of frames 624 



Langdon non-swarming attachment 108, 113, 



209, 245 327 



Laying-worker nuisance 522 



Laying-worker or queen drone-layer "748 



Laying-workers or an old queen 431 



Lazy men for bee-keeping 173 



Leaving on super when not storing 169 



Leisure time in winter 621 



Location and over-stocking 664 



Longevity in different races of bees .533, 629, 755 



Loose bottom-boards 135 



Loose or tight hive-bottoms 429 



Loss of weight in wintering 569 



Mailed queens 793 



Mammoth colony of bees 665 



Managing bees profitably 758 



Many eggs in one cell 139 



Marketing of honey 583, 617, 712, 761, 762, 817 



Marking a location by bees 305 



Mating bees in confinement 624 



Mating of queens 77 



May be a new disease 268 



Members of the North American 73 



Michigan apiarian exhibit at the World's Fair.. 7 



Michigan experiment apiary 212, 618, 680 



Michigan honey exhibit 745 



Mild kick from "The Kicker" 699 



Minneapolis honey show 520 



Mother-bee— should be called 396 



Moths 716, 719 



Moving bees 170 



Moving bees in carload lots 5'26 



Moving the hives lower 364 



Moving wide frames with sections 205 



Nameless bee-disease 42, 728, 761 



National Bee-Keepers' Union 659 



Nebraska honey exhibit at the World's Fair 297 



Nebraska State Fair notes 489 



Nebraska State Fair premium list 202 



New bee-papers 296 



New bee-paper idea dropped 589 



New theory about the queen's will 248 



New thing in hives 394 



New York honey exhibit at the World's Fair 137 



No exhibit at the St. Joseph Fair 503 



Non-swarming bees 820 



Non-swarming methods 20 



Number of bees in a pound 360 



Number of Langstroth frames for a colony at 



any time 655 



Number of seasons a queen should lay Ill 



Number of sections made in 1892 201 



Officers of the New South Wales Bee-Keepers' 



Union 363 



Old bees do not locate their hive when swarm- 

 ing ; 456 



Old brood-combs 753 



Old colonies of bees 45 



Old foundation 492 



Old friends ( poem ) 38 



Opening and then sealing cappings 300, 409, 492 



Orange Co., Calif .—climate and production 468 



Out-apiaries 86 



Out-door winter protection 407 



Packing bees for winter 696, 



Painted or unpainted hives 



Parthenogenesis 



Partially-tilled sections 



Partly capped sections of honey 139. 



Phenomenal honey year 



Piping and quahking of queens 281, 376, 



Planting for honey 



Plants as barometers 



Pratt self-hiver 213, 



Preparing bees for safe wintering 371, 



Presidio Co., Tex 66.3, 



Prevention of honey-granulation 



Prevention of second or after swarms 534, 



Prevention of swarming 40,41, 



Production of comb honey 



Proper c^re of honey 



Pulled queens 17, 120, 147,276,534,629, 



Punic bees 



Pure queens 



Purifying dark beeswax 



Putting bees into the cellar and taking them out 



782 

 620 

 205 

 492 

 336 

 137 

 793 

 52 

 71 

 632 

 599 

 789 

 618 

 629 

 688 

 625 

 662 

 755 

 18 

 208 

 8 

 727 



Queen and worker in the same cell 140. 409, .503 



yueen-bee experiences 408, 473 



Queen-breeders and queen-buyers 51 



Queen-excluders for hives .590 



Queen-excluding zinc 650 



Queen questions 335 



Queen-rearing 494 



Queen that stopped laying 332 



Queen-traps 269 



