664 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



YOTJ 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 one now. 



The Bee-Keepers' Directory, by Henry 

 Alley, Wenham, Mass. It contains his 

 method for rearing queens in full colo- 

 nies, while a fertile queen has possession 

 of the combs. Price by mail, 50 cents. 



We send "both the Home 

 Journal and Bee Journal 

 for one year, for $1.35. 



If you have a desire to know 



how to have Queens fertilized in upper 

 stories, while the old Queen is still laying 

 below — how you may safely introduce any 

 Queen, at any time of the year when bees 

 can fly — all about the different races of 

 bees — all about shipping Queens, queen- 

 cages, candy for queen-cages, etc. — all 

 about forming nuclei, multiplying or unit- 

 ing bees, or weak colonies, etc. ; or, in fact, 

 everything about the queen-business which 

 you may want to know, send for"Doolit- 

 tle's Scientific Queen-Rearing;" a book of 

 170 pages, which is nicely bound in cloth, 

 and is as interesting as a story. Price, $1,00. 

 For sale at this ofiice. 



R. Nice F»ock:et Dictionary will be 



given as a premium for only one ne-w 

 subscriber to this Journal, with $1.00. It 

 is a splendid little Dictionary — just right for 

 the pocket. Price, S5 cents. 



Xlie Money-Bee; Its Natural 

 History, Anatomy, and Physiology. By 

 T. W. Cowan, editor of the British Bee 

 Journal, illustrated with 72 figures and 

 136 illustrations. $1.00. For sale at 

 this office. 



Well Pleased. ^ 



Your check for $10, my premium for 

 guessing the rebus, came to-day. Some 

 told me 1 would never hear from it, but 

 when I took your check to our bank, 

 they handed me the money without 

 asking a question. I am well pleased 

 with the Illustrated Home Journal. 

 Mrs. John E. Zook. 



Monitor, Kans., Oct. 27, 1891. 



We Club the American Bee Journal 

 and the Illustrated Home Journal, one 

 year for $1.35. Both of these and 

 Gleanings in Bee Culture, for one year, 

 for $2.15. 



The Union Scale you sent me was 

 received some time since, and I am well 

 pleased with it. I asked the price of 

 such a scale in our hardware store, and 

 was told that a single beam to weigh 

 240 pounds would cost $4.00. For 

 such I paid you only $3.00, saving me 

 a dollar. — Jacob Moore, Ionia, Mich. 



Xliose who are in arrears for sub- 

 scription to the Bee Journal for this 

 year are reminded that the year is about 

 closing, and it is time to pay up for this 

 year, and add a dollar for next year. 



Money in Cabbage and Celery. — 



"Blood will tell." Good crops cannot be 

 grown with poor strains of seed. 



For 16 years Tillinghast's Puget 

 Sound Cabbage, Cauliflower and Celery 

 Seeds have been gaining in popularity. 

 The most extensive growers all over the 

 Union now consider them the best in the 

 world. A catalogue, giving full particu- 

 lars regarding them, will be sent free to 

 any one interested. When writing for 

 it, enclose 20 cents in silver or postage 

 stamps, and we will also send " How to 

 Grow Cabbage and Celery," a book 

 worth its weight in gold to any grower 

 who has never read it. Address 



ISAAC F. TILLINGHAST, 

 18A16t La Plume, Pa. 



