696 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



Well^ Pleased. 



The October number of the Home 

 JouEXAL, came duly, also the premium 

 of $2.00 in cash, for which please ac- 

 cept my thanks. I shall be pleased to 

 answer any inquiries concerning your 

 honorable dealings with me. 



Belleville, Pa. Kate M. Boyee. 



[Enclose an addressed postal card for 

 reply. — Ed.] 



"We Maire only a few Binders left 

 of the large size, for the Bee Journals 

 previous to this year. If you want one, 

 please send at once, before all are gone, 

 as we shall not have any more made. 

 Price, 60 cents. 



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 Convention Hand = Book: 



is very convenient at Bee-Conventions. It 

 contains a simple Manual of Parliamentary 

 Law and Rules of Order for Local Bee- 

 Conventions; Constitution aad By-Laws 

 for a Local Society ; Programme for a Con- 

 vention, with Subjects for Discussion. In 

 addition to this, there are about 50 blank 

 pages, to make notes upon, or to write out 

 questions, as they may come to mind. 

 They are nicely bound in cloth, and are of 

 the right size for the pocket. We will 

 present a copy for one new subscription to 

 the Bee Journal (with $1.00 to pay for the 

 same), or 2 subscribers to the Home Jourxal 

 may be sent instead of one for the Bee 

 Journal,. 



Pleasant Surprise. 



Your draft for $2.00 as a premium 

 for answer to the rebus came to hand 

 to-day, and was a pleasant surprise. On 

 account of the distance from Chicago I 

 feared that I coald not get the answer 

 to you in time to be on the first list of 

 names, so that I might obtain the prize. 

 I hope to be as well or better pleased 

 with the perusal of the Illusteated 

 Home Jouenal in my leisure hours. 



P. S. Geindle. 



Brooklyn, Ala., Oct. 29, 1891, 



Henry l^ard Beeclier from 



the Phrenological point of view, is the 

 opening paper of the Phrenological 

 Journal and Science of Health, and in it 

 we learn how much the great preacher 

 craved for power to understand human 

 nature. The editor discusses somewhat 

 ironically That Criminal Type that some 

 scientists are trying to create, and also 

 Convict Labor and Mutual Life Benefit 

 Associations. Price $1.50 a year. The 

 three numbers, October, November and 

 December, 1891, offered on trial, for 

 25 cents. Address, Fowler & Wells Co., 

 775 Broadway, New York. 



If You Have any honey to sell, 

 get some Honey Almanacs and scatter 

 in your locality. They will sell it all in 

 a very short time. We have a few 

 Almanacs for 1891, which we are selling 

 at half price. 



Saved Money. 



I received the Union Scales you sent 

 me some time since, and they are 

 "dandies." I asked the price of such 

 in our hardware store, single beam, to 

 weigh 240 pounds, and they said $4.00. 

 I am well pleased with them. 



Ionia, Mich. Jacob Moore. 



R. Nice F»ockct Dictionary will be 

 given as a premium for only one new 

 subscriber to this Journal, with $1.00. It 

 is a splendid little Dictionary — just right for 

 the pocket. Price, 35 cents. 



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 

 Geow Cabbage and Celeey," a book 

 worth its weight in gold to any grower 

 who has never read it. Address 



ISAAC F. TILLINGHAST, 

 18A16t La Plume, Pa 



