162 



THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



gitlncvtiscmaxts. 



iSANTmDNDATION 



is attested l>v humlreds of tlie nmst prac- 

 tical anil (li'sintcrcsted liee-kccpcrs tn be 

 the cleanest. l>ri!;litcst,(iiiioki'st a.rc-iiteil by 

 bees, least apt to sag, must regular in culor, 

 evenness ami neatness of any that is made. 

 It is kept lor sale by Messrs. 

 A. a. NEWMAN, Chicaso, 111., 

 C. F. MUTII, Cincinnati, O., 

 JAMES IlEDDON, Uowagiac, Mich., 

 Dougherty & McKee, Indianapolis, Iiid., 

 CHAS. a. GREEN, Berlin, Wis., 

 CHAS. aEKTEL, .Ir., Freeburg, HI., 

 GEO. W. HOUSE. FayetteviUe, N. Y., 

 WM. BALL A NTINE, Sago, O. 

 E. L. ARMSTRONG, .lerseyville, 111. 

 and numbers of otlier dealers. 



Write for SAMPLES FREE and price 

 list of supplies, accoiapanied witli 



ISO COMPI.IMENTAKY. 



and UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIALS 

 from as many bee-keepers in 18S3. 

 P We guarantee every inch of our 

 Foundation equal to sample in every 

 respect. CHAS. DAUANT & SON, 



SABly HAMILTON. Hancock Co.. ILL. 



iNCH $ 15.00. 

 - W.CRELJH AM ...^ 



37Aly 



VA.L'O'ABI.E 



ORIGINAL PATENTS. 



The Oi-KKinjil 



BINGHAM 



Bee Smoker 



Patented, 1878 t 



Prof Cook, in ilia valuable Manual Of the Apiarv, 

 Btates that " llr. Bint-hanj was the flrst-to improve 

 ihe old Ouinby smoker by establishing a direct 

 draft " Five years of per^.i^tent effort has demon- 

 strated that no one but Binaham has been able to 

 imuroveaBiPBham smoker. Hundreds ol Binn- 

 ha.ii smokers have been in use Ave years, and are 

 Set in working order. They burn lots ot blocks 

 andch.ps and stun, and make lots of smoke and 

 comfort, and have no dampers or match-box at- 

 tachments, as they never so out or tail to blow 

 smoke up or down or sideways, much or litt e, 

 swift or slow, ju.-i asyOH please, any or all the 

 time: top up or down, they always eo! 



Bee-keepers will save money and vexation by 

 buying genuine Binaham smokers and Binuham & 

 Hetherineton Uncappine-Knives tlrst, ^\ e ne. her 

 make nor handle any other supplies; but "f these 

 we are the oriilinal invent jrs. and only let-'al 

 makers, and have had over 4.5.11110111 use trom one 

 tTi five years, and receivinB but one letter of com- 

 "'wan European and American orders already 

 received for over :i.oiKi. there is evidence that I^M4 

 With us is not likely to be an idle one. A so that 

 Ilich goods as we make have met the advanced 

 wants of the m .st advanced bee-keepers In Eu- 

 rope and America. , „„J „„,rt Tr, 



For mail rates and testimonials, send card. To 

 Bell again, send for dozen rates to 



BISGHAM & HETHERINGTON, 



jjA^Btf ABKOMIA, MICH. 



BOOKS! 



Sent by mail, on receipt of price, by 



925 West Madison Street, CHICAGO, ILL. 



On dozen or half-dozen lots of one kind.weallow 



25 per cent, discount, and prepay postage. Special 



rates, on larger quantities, given upon application. 



Dzlerzon'a Rational Bee - KeepInB.— A 



Translation of the Masterpiece of that most 

 celebrated German authority, by U. Dieck and S. 

 Btutterd, and edited, with notes, by Charles N. 

 Abbott, B.r-fiJi(f>r of the "British Hee JournaL 

 Dr Dzierzon is one of the greatest living authori- 

 ties on Bee <.ulture. To him and the Baron of 

 Berlepsch we are indebted for much that is 

 known of scientidc bee culture. Concernink' this 

 book. Prof. Cook says: "As the work of one ot 

 the great masters, the Langstroth of Germany, it 

 can buttlnd a warm welcome on this side of the 

 Atlantic." Mr. A. 1. Boot says of it; "Old father 

 Dzierzon.... has probably made greater strides in 

 scientidc apiculture than any one man.. .For real 

 scientific value, it would well repay any bee- 

 koeper whose attention is at all inclined to scien- 

 tiflc research, to purchase a copy. Cloth. JUS. 



Oueeu-Kearlng, l>y Henry Alley.— A full 

 and detailed account of TWBNTy-THKBB years 

 experience in rearing queen bees. The cheapest, 

 easiest and best way to raise queens. Never 

 before published. Price, Sl.OO 



Bee-R.eeper's ««lde I or. Cook** Manual 

 of the Apiary. — This Manual is elegantly 

 illustrated and fully " up with the times" on every 

 subject of bee-culture. It is not only instructive, 

 but Intensely interesting and thoroughly practical. 

 The book is a masterly production, and one that no 

 bee-keeper, however limited his means can afford 

 todowithout. Cloth. «l.S5l paper cover. 1»1. 



Been and Honey, or Management of an 

 Apiary for Pleasure and Profit, by Thomas Q. 

 Newman.- Fourth Kdition. "Fully up with the 

 times." including all the various improvements 

 and inventions. Chief among the new chapters 

 are ; " Bee Pasturage a Necessity." " Management 

 of Bees and Honey at Fairs," "Marketmc Honey, 

 etc It contains m;o pages, and is profusely illus- 

 trated. Price, bound in cloth. 7Sc.; in paper 

 covers. *>Oc., postpaid. 



Honey, a« Pood and Medicine, by Thomas 

 G Newman.— This pamphlet discourses upon the 

 Ancient History of Bees and Honey , the nature, 

 quality, sources, and preparation i.'f ll-mey tor the 

 Market ; Honey as food, giving recipes f.jr making 

 Hcney ('akes. Cookies. Puddings, Foam.Wines.etc; 

 and Honey as .Medicine, with many useful Recipes. 

 It Is intended for consumers, and should be scat- 

 tered by thousands, creating a demand for honey 

 everywhere. Published in English and German. 

 Price for either edition. Oc. ; per dozen, 50c. 



Preparation of Honey for the Market, 

 Including the production and careol both comb 

 and extracted honey, and instructions on the ex- 

 hibition of bees and honey at V airs, etc.. by '1. O. 

 Newman. This is a chapter from " Bees and 

 Honey. ' Price lOc. 



SwarmlnicBlvldlngand Peedlnit Bee>.- 

 Hints to Beginners, by Thomas G. Newman. 1 his 

 is a chapter from " Bees and Honey." Price, 5c. 



Bee Panturage a JJeccMlty, by Thomas G. 

 Newman— Giving advance-1 Tlews on this impor- 

 tant subject, with suggestions what to plant, and 

 and when and how : Ji; engravings. This is a chap- 

 ter from " Bees and Honey." Price, lOc. 



Bees In Winter, with instructions about 

 Chaff-Packing. Cellars and Bee Houses, byThomas 

 G. Newman. This is a chapter from "Bees and 

 Honey." Price, 5c. 



Food Adulteration ; What we eat and should 

 not eat This book should be in every family, and 

 ought to create a sentiment against adulteration of 

 food products, and demand a law to protect the 

 consumer against the Eumeroushealth-destroying 

 adulterations offered as food. 200 pages 50c. 



8orll>ner'» Lumber and I.OK Book.— Most 

 complete book of its kind published. Gives meas- 

 urement of all kinds of lumber, logs, and planks 

 by Doyle's Kule, cubical contents of square and 

 round timber, staves and heading bolt tables, 

 wages, rent, board capacity of cisterns, cordwoort 

 tables, interests, etc. Standard book throughout 

 United States S Canada. Price 35 c. postpaid. 



FUher'a Grain Tables for Farmers, etc. 

 —14" pages pocket form; full ot useful tables lor 

 castTng up grain, produce, bay; cost of pork, inter- 

 est- wages tables, wood measurer, ready reckoner. 

 Plowing tables and more miscellaneous matter and 

 Gseful tables for farmers and others than any 

 similar book ever published. 40 cents. 



Moore's Universal Assistant, and Com- 

 plete Mechanic, contains over l,ii(Xl,(»«i Indus- 

 dustrial Facts. Calculations, Processes, Irade Se- 

 crets, Legal Items, Business Forms, etc., of vast 

 utility to every Mechanic, Farmer and Business 

 Man Gives 2ihi,ik«i items for Gas, Steam, Civil 

 and Mining Engineers, Machinists, Millers, Black- 

 smiths, Founders, Miners, Metallurgists, Assayers, 

 Plumbers, Gas and Steam Fitters, Bronzers. (Slid- 

 ers, Metal and Wood Workers of every kind. 



The work contains l,ol6 pages. Is a veritable 

 Treasury of Useful Knowledge, and worth Its 

 weight in gold to any Mechanic, Business Man, or 

 Farmer. Price, postage paid, »». so. 



Kendall's Horse Book, — No book could be 

 more useful to horse owners. It has 35 engravings 

 illustrating positions of sick horses, and treats all 

 diseases in a plain and comprehensive manner. It 

 has recipes, a table of doses, and much valuable 

 horse information Pr4ce 185c. for either the 

 English or German editions. 



<(ulnby's New Bee-Keeping, by L. C. Root— 

 T'' e author treats the subject of bee-keeping so 

 that it cannot fall to interest all. Us style is plain 

 and forcible, making all its readers realize that its 

 author is master of the subject.—*! . SO. 



The Hive I "Use— Being a description of the 

 hive used by G. M. Doolittle. Price, Sc. 



Novice's ABC of Bee-Culture, by A. I. Root 

 —This em braces "everything pertaining to the care 

 of the honey-bee," and is valuable to beginners and 

 tliose more advanced. Cloth. S81.S5. 



King's Bee-Keepers' Text-Book, by A. J. 

 King.— This edition is revised and brought down to 

 the present time. Cloth. 3S1.00. 



L.angstroth on the Hive and Honey Bee. 

 —This is a standard scientific work. Price, »». 



Blessed Bees, by John Allen.— A romance of 

 bee-keeping, full of practical information and 

 contagious enthusiasm. Cloth, YSc. 



Foul Brood; its origin, development and cure. 

 By Albert II. Kohnke. Price. «5c. 



Extracted Honey ; Harvesting, Handl- 

 ing and Marketing.— A 24-p:ige pamphlet, by 

 Ch. & C. P. Dadant, giving in detail the methods 

 and management adopted in their apiary. 15c. 



Practical Hints to Bee-Keepers, byChaa. 

 F Muth ; 32 pages. It gives Mr. Muth's views on 

 the management of bees. Price, lOc. 



Dzierzon Theory ;— presents the fundamen- 

 tal principles of bee-culture, and furnishes the 

 facts and arguments to demonstrate them. 15 c. 



Aplarv Register, for SYSTEMATIC WORK 

 in tlie APIAIIV. The larger ones can be used 

 for a few colonies, give room for an increase of 

 numbers, and still keep the record all together m 

 one book. Prices: For .Xl colonies, *I.uu; forlOO 

 colonies, 1 1.25; for 200 colonies, I1.5U. 



Deutsche ^xtcdtet% 



^ Uebtt ©icncnjildjt. 



^icncn ^uUur, obcv erfotgreic^e 

 33c{)anblung ber Sienen, ooii ll^og. @. 

 ateraman. ®ie[c§ $amp()let entljalt 

 SBelcIji-ungciiiiber folgenbe 'Scgcnftfinbe 

 — Oevtlic^f eit be§ 33icncnftanbe§ — 

 .^onig pflnujcn— ei-5tel;ung beviloni'gin 

 — -giittevn — ©djiuavnlen — 9l6lcgcr— 

 i^erfetu'u— 3 t a I i e n i p r e n— Sufe^er 

 Don i?6iiiginncn— 9(u§5ie(jcu— Stenen 

 bc^nnbcln unb I)erurjit3ni ; inciter entl)att 

 e§ etn j?npit(;I,iuorin bie ncuofte 3Kett)obt 

 fiir bie Jpcvviditiing be§ ,£ioiug§ fur ben 

 S^anM bcld;veiben ift. ^vci§ 40 Qa\i%. 



9RcDi}in — uon'i[}oma6@.9leroman. 

 S)icfeg cntbiilt eine flare barfteUiing i'lbei 

 SBienen iin'bJnonig be§ 9lUertl]uni§ ; bie 

 S3efci)afte"(}ci't, Ounlitat, nuelten unb 

 3ubercitungbc§,0o"i3§ fiirben .^nnbel ; 

 ,^onig al§ 9taf)rung§mitte(, angebenb 

 luie man ^Jjonigfudien, g-ovinfiic^eldjen, 

 Rubbing?, ®d}aumfoiifcct,iCi'ine,u.f.n) 

 juberciten faiin ; ferncr J^onig al§ 

 9JJcbijinmitDie(en3{csepten. (5§ ift fiir 

 ben gonjuinenten bcftimmt, unb fotlte 

 meltaufenbfaltig iibcr bn§ ganje Sanb 

 DcrbreitcfiDcrben. X^xd?, (j (JciitS. 



2» rt ^ qj f c r » im» \t\nt 

 ^ranflKltcn— «on S8.3-.^eni">It, 

 a}?.®., enttjaltenb ein alp^abetifd^ 

 georbnetcS SSerjcidjuifj, ber ucrfcfjicbencn 

 ^ferbcfranf^eiten,|ammt ben ?Irfac^ert, 

 ©t)niptomen unb ber rid;tigcn 23ef|anb= 

 lung berfelben ; ferner, eine ©ainmlung 

 roert^Doller SU-jepte. ^rci? 25 6ent§. 

 THOMAS G.NEWMAN. 



925 West Madison St. CHICAGO, ILL. 



