The Bee=Keepers' Review 



can help you 



MAKE MONEY 



Opportunities for making money out of 

 bee-keeping were never greater. If the bee- 

 keeper with a single apiary, from which he 

 makes a living in a good year, and nothing in 

 a poor year, would only arouse himself to the 



Changed Conditions 



secure a good location, if not already in pos- 

 session of one, adopt such methods as will en- 

 able him to branch out and manage several 

 apiaries, he will find that in a good year he can 



Pile up Honey 



ton upon ton — enough to support himself and 

 family for several years, llie Review is help- 

 ing bee-keepers to accomplish this very thing. 



The First Step 



in making money as a bee-keeper is the secur- 

 ing of a good location; and the Review even 

 goes so far as to discover anu make known 

 desirable, unoccupied locations. 



Get Good Stock 



Having secured the location, the next step is 

 that of stocking it with bees of the most desir- 

 able strain; and, having had years of experi- 

 ence with all the leading varieties of bees, the 

 editor of the Review is able to, and does, tell 

 his readers where to get the best stock. Still 

 further, the Review teas how to make 



Rapid Increase, 



how to build up ten or a dozen colonies, in a 

 single season, into an apiary of 100 or more 

 colonies. 



Having the location and the bees, the bee- 

 keeper must learn how to manage them so as 

 to be able to establish an out-apiary here, and 

 another there, and care for them with weekly 

 visits — yes, by monthly, or even longer, visits, 

 when extracted honey is produced. It is in 

 teaching bee-keepers how to thus 



Control Sivarming, 



that the Review has been, and is still, doing 

 its best work. If a man only knows how, he 

 can care for several apiaries now as easily as 

 he once cared for only one. 



Having secured a crop of honey, the next 

 step is that of selling it. This is the most 

 neglected, yet 



The Most Important Problem 



of succesful, money-making bee-keeping, and 

 one that the Review is working the hardest to 

 solve. So many men work hard all summer, 

 produce a good crop, and then almost give it 

 away. The Review is trying to put a stop to 

 this "giving it away." It is showing, by the 

 actual experience of enterprising bee-keepers, 

 how the leisure months may be employed in 

 selling honey at prices that some of us would 

 call exorbitant. The men who have done this 

 tell how they did it. 



The editor of the Review has a wide, actual, 

 personal acquaintance with all of the 



Leading Bee-keepers 



from Maine to California, and is thus able to 

 secure, as correspondents, men who have scat- 

 tered out-apiaries widely, managed them with 

 little or no help and made money. These men 

 are able to write from actual experience — they 

 know how they have succeeded, and can tell 

 others. 



One thing is certain, if you are a bee-keep- 

 ing specialist, or expect to become one, if bee- 

 keeping is your business, you can't afford 

 not to 



Read The Revieiv. 

 It will lead you and encourage you, and fill 

 you with ideas, and tell you how to do things 

 — show you how to enlarge your business and 

 make money. 



The Review is published monthly at $1.00 a 

 year; but, i£ you wish to become better ac- 

 quainted with it before subscribing, 



Send Ten Cents 



for three late, but different issues, and the ter 

 cents may apply on any suoscription sent it 

 during the year. A coupon will be sent en- 

 titling you to the Review one year for onlj 

 90 cents. 



W. Z. H UTCH INSON 



lO-tf 



FLINT, MICHIGAN 



