90 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



HONET AND BEESWAX MARKET. 



NEW YORK, July 10.— Demand good for 

 extracted-honey, with sufficient supplj'. No 

 comb-honey in market. We quote: Extracted 

 —common, 70c per gal.; good to choice, 75@ 

 78c. ; orange bloom, 7@7Vic per lb. Beeswax: 

 Demand good; supply limited, at 28@30e. 

 HILDRETH BROS. & SEGELKEN, 

 28-30 West Broadway. 



KANSAS CITY, July 11.— Demand fair for 

 new 1-lb. comb, at 15@16c. Extracted, 6@6»4c. 

 Beeswax, in good demand and light supply at 

 35c. - CLEMONS, MASON & CO., 



Cor. 4th and Walnut Sts. 



CINCINNATI, July 11.— Trade good in ex- 

 tracted-honey, with plenty of the new crop in 

 market. New comb-honey is plentiful. We 

 quote: Choice comb, 14@15c. Extracted, 

 5@8c. Beeswax is in good supply and de- 

 mand at 2o@28c for good to choice yellow. 

 C. F. MUTH & SON, Freeman & Central Aves. 



CHICAGO, July 11. — Demand for comb 

 and extracted honey not very active. We 

 quote: Comb, 12@17c; extracted, 7@8c, 

 Beeswax in good demand at 27c. 



S. T. FISH & CO.. 189 S. Water St. 



KANSAS CITY, July 10.— Demand for honey 

 light, with new crop coming in. We quote: 

 Comb— 1-lb. white, 16@18c; dark, 14c; 2 lb. 

 white, 15c; dark, 12c. Extracted— white, 7@ 

 8c; dark, o@5^c. Beeswax, 25@27c. 



HAMBLIN & BEARSS. 514 Walnut St. 



CHICAGO, July 11.— Demand light, and the 

 new honey offered not very white ; a fancy ar- 

 ticle of new comb-honey will seU at 17c. We 

 quote: Comb, 15@17c. Extracted, 6@8c, as 

 to color and quality. Beeswax : Demand 

 equal to supply, at 28. 



R. A. BURNETT, 161 S. Water St. 



BOSTON, July 10.— Demand poor, supply 

 light. We quote: Comb, 12@18c; extracted, 

 7^@9c. Beeswax: None in market. 



BLAKE & RIPLEY, 57 Chatham St. 



ALBANY, N.Y., July 10.— Demand for honey 

 very light. Attractive new comb-honey would 

 sell at 15@18c. Beeswax, in light supply and 

 wanted at 30c. 



H. R. WRIGHT, 326-328 Broadway. 



NEW YORK, July 10.— Demand for honey, 

 quiet, and shipments increasing. We quote: 

 New crop, comb, 14@15c. Extracted— Florida, 

 7@7Vic. Southern, 75@80c per gallon. Bees- 

 wax : Demand, light; supply, increasing; 

 good stock, 29@30c. 



F. G. STROHMEYER & CO., 122 Water St. 



MILWAUKEE, July 11.— Demand for honey 

 fair ; supply moderate. Old-crop honey out of 

 the way, and market in good order for ship- 

 ments of new. We quote: Comb, 1-lb., 16@ 

 18c. Extracted, white, 7}4@8c. Beeswax, in 

 fair supply and dull, at 25@28c. 



A. V. BISHOP, 142 W. Water St. 



SAN FRANCISCO. July 6.— Demand for 

 honey good, and supply light. Crop late and 

 lighter than last season. We quote: Comb, 

 1-lb., 12@14c; no 2-lb. in market. Extracted, 

 5@6c. Beeswax in light demand, and market 

 almost bare, at 25(§i27c. 

 SCHACHT, LEMCKE & STEINER, 16 Drum St. 



CHICAGO, July 11.— Honey market quiet, 

 and shipments increasing. A fancy white 

 comb, in clean package, will find ready sale at 

 a high figure. We quote: Comb, 15@17c. 

 Extracted, 6@8c. Beeswax scarce and in good 

 demand at 27@31c. 



J. A. LAMON, 44-46 S. Water St. 



DETROIT, July 11.— Demand for comb- 

 honey is slow and supply light. We quote: 

 Comb, 14@15c; extracted, 8@9g. Beeswax in 

 fair demand, at 27@28c. 



M. H. HUNT. Bell Branch, Mich. 



Lots of Replies. 



During the year 1888, we had an adver- 

 tisement running in the American Bee 

 Journal, and we had the same in several 

 Daily and Weekly papers, but to our surprise 

 we received more than double the number 

 of responses from the advertisement in the 

 American Bee Journal, than from all our 

 others combined. 



The fact that we are still receiving letters 

 referring to our advertisement in the Bee 

 Journal, shows that it is preserved and read 

 long after it is received. Newspapers are 

 read and thrown aside and that ends it, but 

 the Bee Journal is preserved, and the 

 advertisements are often noticed and bring 

 responses long after they appeared in it. 



We regard the American Bee Journal as 

 a first-class advertising medium. 



Cedar Rapids High-Speed Engine Co., 

 Henry Rickel, President. 



You Need an Apiary Register, 

 and should keep it posted up, so as to be 

 able to know all about any colony of 

 bees in your yard at a moment's notice. 

 It devotes two pages to every colony. 

 You can get one large enough for 50 

 colonies for a dollar, bound in full 

 leather and postage paid. Send for one 

 before you forget it, and put it to a good 

 use. Let it contain all that you will 

 want to know about your bees — includ- 

 ing a cash account. We will send you 

 one large enough for 100 colonies for 

 $1.25; or for 200 colonies for $1.50. 

 Order rme now. 



Open the hives only when it is 

 necessary, and when it is warm enough 

 for the bees to fly. 



Waiits or Exctiaiiges. 



Under this heading, Notices of 5 lines, or 

 less, will be inserted at 10 cents per line, 



for each insertion, when specially oi'dered 

 into this Department. If over 5 lines, the 

 additional lines will cost 20 cents each. 



FOR SALE.— Thirty colonies Hybrid Bees, 

 in 10-frame Langstroth Hives; all straight 

 combs, built on foundation. Price, $4.00 per 

 colony. Can be shipped at once. JESSE 

 FAIRCHILD, 1241 Homan Ave., Chicago, Ills. 

 3Atf 



