THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



285 



^:|xecinl Notices. 



Esnniiiie the Uate following your 

 name on the wrapper label of this 

 paper ; it indicates the end of the 

 month to which you have paid your 

 subscription on the Bee Journal. 



For safety, when sending money to 

 this office get either a post office or ex- 

 press money order, a bank draft on 

 New York or Chicago, or register the 

 letter. Postage stamps of any kind 

 may be sent for amounts less than one 

 dollar. Local checks are subject to a 

 discount of 2-5 cents at Chicago banks. 

 American Express money orders for 

 $5, or less, can be obtained for 5 cents. 



AVe wish to impress upon every one 

 the necessity of being very specific, 

 and carefully to state what they desire 

 for the money sent. Also, if they live 

 near one post office, and get their mail 

 at another, be sure to give us the ad- 

 dress we already have on our books. 



^^ When writing to this office on 

 business, our correspondents should 

 not write anything for publication on 

 the same sheet of paper, unless it can 

 be torn apart without interfering with 

 either portion of the letter. The edi- 

 torial and business departments are 

 separate and distinct, and when the 

 business is mixed up with items for 

 publication it often causes confusion. 

 They may botli be sent in one envelope 

 but on separate pieces of paper. 



^° It must be understood that, 

 should an advertiser desire to cancel 

 an unexpired contract, he can do so 

 only by paying regular rates for the 

 number of insertions his advertise- 

 ment has had. 



^" All money orders from foreign 

 coimtries, should be made payable at 

 Chicago, as the " Madison Street Sta- 

 tion " is not an International office. 



^" In reply to many correspondents 

 let us say that we take any kind of 

 postage stamps at their face value — 

 including the 3 cent ones. Silver 

 should never be sent by mail, as it en- 

 dangers the loss of the letter either 

 by tliieves, or else breaks through the 

 envelope and is lost in that way. 



^" We carefully mail the Bee 

 Journal to every subscriber, but 

 should any be lost in the mails we will 

 cheerfully send another, if notified 

 before all the edition is exhausted. 



Subscription Credits.— We do not 



acknowledge receipt of each subscrip- 

 tion by letter. The label on your 

 paper, or on the wrapper shows the 

 date to which your subscription is 

 paid. When you send us money, if 

 the proper credit is not given you, 

 within tv.o weeks thereafter on your 

 label notify us by postal card. Do 

 not wait for months or years, and 

 then claim a mistake. The subscrip- 

 tion is paid to the end of the month 

 indicated on the wrapper-label. This 

 gives a continual statement of account. 



AdTcrtisements intended for the Bee 

 Journal must reach this office by 

 Saturday of the previous week. 



GETTING UP CLUBS. 



To increase the number of readers 

 of the Bee Journal, we believe, will 

 aid progressive bee-culture and help 

 to elevate the pursuit. "We, therefore, 

 offer the following premiums for 

 getting up clubs : 



"While no subscription to the Bee 

 Journal will be taken for less than 

 the regular advertised prices (viz. : 

 AVeekly, S2.00; Monthly, $1.00),— any 

 one getting up a club of two copies, 

 or more, may select from " Our Book 

 List " anything therein named, to 

 the amount of 15 cents for every dollar 

 they send direct to this office, to pay them 

 for the trouble of getting up the club ; 

 and these books will be sent, postpaid, 

 to any address desired. 



For a club of 3 Weekly or 6 Monthly 

 and $6.00, we will make an additional 

 present of a Pocket Dictionary, bound 

 in cloth, containing 320 pages. 



For a club of 5 Weekly or 10 

 Monthly, (or a mixed club of both,) 

 with $10, we will, in addition to the 

 15 per cent, present a copy of the 

 AsfERiCAN "Popular" Dictionary, 

 comprising every word in the English 

 language that enters into speech or 

 writing ; it contains 32,000 words and 

 phrases,670 illustrations and 512 pages; 

 it is nicely bound in cloth, and will be 

 sent by mail, postpaid, to any address 

 desired. 



Subscriptions for two or more years 

 for one person, vpill count the same 

 as each year for a different person. 



Apiary Register— New Edition. 



All who intend to be systematic in 

 their work in the apiary, should get a 

 copy and commence to use it. The 

 prices will hereafter be as follows : 



For 50 colonies (120 pages) $1 00 



" 100 colonies (220 pages) 1 25 



" 200 colonies (420 pages) 1 50 



The larger ones can be used for a 

 few colonies, give room for an increase 

 of numbers, and still keep the record 

 all together in one book, and are there- 

 fore the most desirable ones. 



1^" Dzierzou's new work entitled 

 " Rational Bee-Keeping," we now 

 club with the Bee Journal as fol- 

 lows : The Weekly for one year and 

 the book, bound in" cloth, for $3, or in 



Saper covers for $2.75. The Monthly 

 iEE Journal and the book, $1 less 

 than the above prices. It is an im- 

 ported book, printed in the English 

 language, and the price of the book is 

 $1.50 bound in paper covers, or $2.00 

 when bound in cloth. 



Emerson Binders — made especially 

 for the Bee Journal, are lettered in 

 gold on the back, and make a very 

 convenient way of preserving the Bee 

 Journal as fast as received. They 

 will be sent, post-paid, for 75 cents, for 

 the Weekly ; or for the Monthly, 50 

 cents. They cannot be sent by mail 

 to Canada. 



Honey as Food and Medicine. 



A pamphlet of 16 pages giving 

 Recipes for Honey Medicines, all kinds 

 of cooking in which honey is used, and 

 healthful and pleasant beverages. 



We have put the price still loicer, 

 to encourage bee-keepers to scatter 

 them far and wide. Single copy 5 

 cents, postpaid ; per dozen, 40 cents; 

 per hundred, $2.50. 500 will be sent 

 postpaid for $10.00 ; or 1000 for 

 $15.00. On orders of 100 or more, 

 we will print, if desired, on the 

 cover-page, "Presented by," etc., 

 (giving the name and address of the 

 bee-keeper who scatters them). This 

 alone will pay him for all his trouble 

 and expense— enabling him to dispose 

 of his honey at home, at a good profit. 



®" To give away a copy of " Honey- 

 as Food and Medicine " to every one loho 

 buys a package of honey, will sell almost 

 any quantity of it. 



I®" We are now preparing a new 

 book for the pocket, to be called "The 

 Bee-Keepers' Convention Assistant." 

 It will contain a copy of a model 

 " Constitution and By-Laws " for the 

 formation of Societies for Bee-Keep- 

 ers— a simplified manual of Parlia- 

 mentary Law and Rules of Order for 

 the guidance of officers as well as 

 members, a blank form for making 

 reports for statistical information — 

 and much other useful matter for 

 those who attend Conventions. One 

 of the latter will be a suitable Pro- 

 gramme of questions for discussion at 

 such meetings, model Premium Lists 

 for Fairs whlcli may be contracted or 

 enlarged, and then recommended to 

 the managers of adjacent County or 

 District Fairs ; a few blank leaves for 

 jotting down interesting facts, etc. 

 We shall aim to make it suitable for 

 any locality, and a book that will com- 

 mend itself to every bee-keeper in the 

 English-speaking world. It will be 

 of a size suitable for the pocket, nicely 

 bound in cloth, and the price will 

 be 50 cents. 



1^ The first edition of the " Apiary 

 Register " having been exhausted, we 

 have just issued a new edition, ele- 

 gantly bound in Russia leather, with 

 a large worker bee and "Apiary Reg- 

 ister "in gold on the side. It forms 

 not only a Register of both Queens 

 and Colonies, but has also an Ac- 

 count Book at the back, in which to 

 keep a record of all the receipts and 

 expenditures of the apiary, which will 

 be found exceedingly valuable. We 

 have also reduced the prices, as will 

 be seen on another page. 



Preparation of Honey for the Mar- 

 ket, including the production and care 

 of both comb and extracted honey, 

 iBStructions on the exhibition of bees 

 and honey at Fairs, etc. This is a 

 new 10 cent pamphlet, of 32 pages. 



