704 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



the inside as long as the temperature 

 within was above freezing, and the sur- 

 face free from propolis. Bees in their 

 natural homes have the benefit of this 

 capillary force. — Gleanings. 



< I I if Rl>4- LIST. 



"We Club the American Bee Journal 

 for a year, with any of the following papers 

 or books, at the prices quoted in the LAST 

 column. The regular price of both is given 

 n the first column. One year's subscription 

 for the American Bee Journal must be sent 

 with each order for another paper or book : 



Price of both. Club. 

 The American Bee Journal 81 00 



anc" Gleanings in Bee-Culture 2 00 1 75 



Bee-Keepers' Review 2 00 175 



The Aplculturist 175.... 165 



Bee-Keepers' Guide 150... 140 



American Bee-Keeper 150 140 



Canadian Bee Journal 2 00 ... 175 



Nebraska Bee-Keeper 150 135 



The 8 above-named papers 6 25 5 25 



and Lang-stroth Revised (Dadant) 2 40 ... . 225 



Cook's Manual 2 00.... 1 75 



Doolittle on Queen-Rearing. 2 00. . . . 1 65 



Bees and Honey (Newman).. 2 00 175 



Advanced Bee-Culture 150.... 140 



Dzierzon's Bee-Book (cloth). 2 25 2 00 



Root's A B C of Bee-Culture 2 25 ... . 210 



A Year Among the Bees 1 50 1 35 



Convention Hand-Book 125 115 



History of National Society. 1 50 ... . 125 



Weekly Inter-Ocean 2 00 1 75 



The Lever (Temperance) .... 2 00 ... . 1 75 



Orange Judd Farmer 2 00 . . . 1 70 



Farm, Field and Fireside 2 0u 1 75 



Prairie Farmer 2 00 1 75 



Illustrated Home Journal . . 150 135 



American Garden 2 50 2 00 



Rural New Yorker 3 00.... 225 



Do not send to us for sample copies 

 of any other papers. Send for such to the 

 publishers of the papers you want. 



"The Winter Problem in 



Bee-Keeping" is the title of a splendid 

 pamphlet by Mr. G. R. Pierce, of Iowa, 

 a bee-keeper of 26 years' experience. It 

 is 6x9 inches in size, has 76 pages, and 

 is a clear exposition of the conditions 

 essential to success in the winter and 

 spring management of the apiary. Price, 

 postpaid, 50 cents ; or given as a pre- 

 mium for getting one new subscriber to 

 the Bee Journal for a year. Clubbed 

 with the Bee Journal one year for 

 $1.30. Send to us for a copy. 



Be Sure to read offer on page 685. 



-75-^ 





PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY 



At One Dollar a Year, 



199 Randolph St.. CHICAGO, ILLS. 



TO CORRESPONDENTS. 



The Bee Journal is sent to subscribers 

 until an order is received by the publishers for 

 its discontinuance, and all arrearages are paid. 



A Sample Cony of the Bee Journal will 

 be sent FREE upon application. 



How to Send Money.— Remit by Express, 

 Post-Offlce Money Order, or Bank Draft on New 

 York or Chicago. If none of these can be had, 

 Register yourXetter, affixing Stamps both for 

 postage and registry, and take a receipt for it. 

 Money sent thus, IS AT OUR RISK; otherwise 

 it is not. Do not send Checks on Local Banks — 

 we have to pay25 cents each, to get them cashed. 



Never Send Silver in letters. It will 

 wear holes in the envelope, or may be stolen. 



Malee all Money Orders Payable at 

 Chicago, 111.— not at any sub-station of Chicago. 



Postage Stamps of any denomination may 

 be sent for any fraction of a dollar; or where 

 Money Orders cannot be obtained, stamps for 

 any amount may be sent. 



Subscription Credits.— -The receipt for 

 money sent us will be given on the address-label 

 of every paper. The subscription is paid to the 

 END OF THE MONTH indicated. 



-Jo not Write anything 1 for publication on 

 the same sheet of paper with business matters, 

 unless it can be torn apart without interfering 

 with either part of the letter. 



Emerson Binders, made especially for 

 the American Bee Journal, are convenient 

 for preserving each weekly Number, as fast as 

 received. They will be sent, post-paid, for 50 cts. 

 each. They cannot be sent by mail to Canada. 



f*ost Wumbers. — We carefully mail the 

 Bee Journal to every subscriber, but should 

 any be lost in the mails, we will replace them if 

 notified before all the edition is exhausted. 



Always State the Post-Office to which 

 your paper is addressed, when writing to us. 



Special Notices. 



The Date on the wrapper-label of this 

 paper indicates the end of the month to 

 which you have paid for the Journal. 

 If that is past, please send us one dollar 

 to pay for another year. This shows 

 that Mr. Porter has paid his subscrip- 

 tion up to the end of December, 1893 : 



Wallace Porter Dec93 

 Suffield, Portage co, Ohio 



