254 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL, 



April 20, 1899. 



THE BEGINNING 



and all that lies between that 

 and the end of the poulti-v 

 business, from the hati )i 



'■k uiitii it rcai.-lu-s the iiuirket; the be^t method^ 

 iti'hiiitr, br»i>dliii;. I'eeilliie uiid mBrkctintr <'t ei;^-- 

 ultrv 



THE MIDDLE 



•v; 



'4' 



RELIABLE INCB, 



That is 



what is I I I ^ ■¥■ I ^^ ^^ ka bp lilio K 

 0.\ Pon/rii^ . It i-i.iitaliis 228 pairi/s cliih'k lull 1 tin 

 thintjs poultry ptnpk' should know. CiitM ot' all tin Uu«l-"fa-i^^ - ^^ 

 lui; bn-cdH, liicul>atorH, Brouder»t and a full Mm at i>onItr\ Huiipllt 

 ^ help you out of many of the little tniubles that ari 

 in breeding potlltrv. Sent for XOe. in stamps. 



Sl brooder CO. Box B 2, Qulncy, III. 



Please mention Bee Journal when writing. 



It « ill 



THE END 



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PHILADELPniA 



The Farm Journal and the Bee Journal. 



We will club the Bee Journal for one year and the Monthly Farm Journal for five 

 years (as above) all for $1.4U; the Farrn Journal alone is SO ceuts a year. 

 Send us ONE new subscriber for the Bee Journal for a year (at $1.00,) and we will 

 order the Farm Journal for you for 5 years as a premium. 



Or, send TWO new subscribers for the Bee Journal for the balance of this year at 

 60 cents each, and we will order the Farm Journal for you for Syears as a premium. 

 Better apply soon, as we have only a limited number of 5-year FARM JOURNAl, subscrip- 

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Offer No, 1. 

 Offer No. 2. 

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Carloads ' 

 of Bee- 



Sections, 

 Shipping-Cases. 

 Comb Foundation 



and EVERYTHING Used in the bee-industry. We want the name and address of every bee-keejjer 

 in America. We supply dealers as well as consumers. We have Dry Kiln, Improved Machin- 

 erv 40 000 feet of floor space, and all modern appliances. We make piompt shipment. Write 

 for Catalog's, Quotations, etc. INTER-STATE MFQ. CO.. Hudson, bt. Croix Co., Wis. 



Please mention Bee Journal when writing. 



are pieces of carpet. They have wintered 

 in line condition, and were out in large 

 ■numbers one day last weeii. 



We have not had much honey for sale for 

 a year, but our customers have come again 

 after having purchast once, for they say 

 the honey is surely pure. 



Mks. M. B. Martin'. 



Menard Co., III., April 3. 



Wintered All Right. 



I have 35 colonies, which wintered out- 

 doors with only a good covering of paper 

 on the cover, and they get along all right. 

 I have lost but one colony so far, and I am 

 afraid they starved to death. I make my 

 own hives and use the 10-frame Langstroth- 

 Simplicity. I like it better than any other 

 I have tried. C. H. Anderson. 



Christian Co., Ky., March 31. 



Two-Thirds of the Bees Lost. 



We have had a hard winter here. Bees 

 have been dying with the diarrhea on ac- 

 count of the poor honey they gathered last 

 fall. Every one in this locality lost 8 colo- 

 nies out of 12. A good many bees that are 

 left will spring-dwindle, for when there are 

 no more than a double handful in a hive 

 they surely will dwindle, we all know. 



G. Rennert. 



Summit Co., Ohio, March 29. 



Bees in Fair to Good Condition. 



All's well. It now begins to look like 

 spring, and everybody is hopeful of good 

 times and a good honey-flow. The bees, as 

 a rule, appear to be in from fair to good 

 condition, but my ! we have had a terror of 

 a winter for snow. It has buried all records 

 out of sight. There was said to be four 

 times as much as last year. It is now hoped 

 that we may have cool weather with little 

 or no rain, so as to prevent floods. 



E. S. LOVEST. 



Salt Lake Co., Utah, March 31. 



Quite a Loss in Some Apiaries. 



My bees seem to have wintered all right. 

 I overhauled a few colonies early in 

 March, and found lots of brood and some 

 young bees, which shows that the queens 

 must have commenced laying in the very 

 coldest weather in February. There is 

 quite a loss of bees in some apiaries. "They 

 froze," they say, but of course they were 

 not packt so as to keep dry. 



Geo. Spitler. 



Crawford Co., Pa., April 6. 



Wintered Poorly. 



Bees wintered poorly in this locality, 

 some losing one-half. Frank Sntdeu. 



Jones Co., Iowa, April 6. 



Mr. Kipling's Lite Saved 



By the inhalatiou of Oxygen, the 

 specific cure for all lung' troubles. 

 For special infortnation regard- 

 iner The Oxy(;en Treatment, 

 Address, DR. PEIRO. 



Central Music Hall. Chicago. 



THE A. I. ROOT GO'S GOODS ^^"^3^- 



Including their discounts for goods wanted for 

 use another season. It will pay you to send me 

 list of eoods wanted. Cash for Beeswax. 



M. H. HUNT, Bell Bk.\nch, Mich. 



r'..IS'ff<->*-nio I If vou care to know of its 

 C'alllUnila > Fruits, Flowers, Climate 

 or Resources, send for a sample copy of Cali- 

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The Pacific Rural Press, 



The leading- Horticultural and Agricultural 

 paper of the Pacific Coast. Publisht weekly, 

 handsomely illustrated, $2.00 per annum. Sam- 

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PACIFIC RURAL PRESS, 

 330 Market Street, - San- Fkancjsco, Cal. 



