862 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAU 



HONEY AND BEESWAX MABEET. 



DETROIT, March 7.— Comb-honey is quoted 

 at 14@15c; demand light. Extracted, 7@8c. 

 Beeswax in fair demand, 27@28c. 



M H. HUNT. BeU Branch, Mich. 



NEW YORK, March 7.— Market is bare of 

 comb-honey. We quote: Extracted, bucls- 

 wheat, 7@7*4c; California, in good demand, at 

 6?£@7 J4c, and market well supplied ; Southern, 

 none in market. Beeswax, 25@27c. 



HILDRETH BROS. & SEGELKEN, 

 28-30 West Broadway. 



KANSAS CITY, March 7.— The receipts of 

 comb-honey are very light: our market will be 

 well cleaned up by March 15. We quote: White 

 1-lb. comb, at 16@18c; California white, 2-lb., 

 14@15c; extracted, 6@7c. Beeswax, 22@25c. 

 CLEMONS, MASON & CO., 

 Cor. 4th and Walnut Sts. 



CINCINNATI, March 7.— Demand is good for 

 all kinds of honey, with a good supply on the 

 market of all but Southern honey, which is 

 scarce. Choice comb honey brings 16@17c per 

 pound. Extracted honey, 6@8c. 



Beeswax is in good demand at 24@26c., for 

 good to choice yellow. C. F. MUTH & SON, 

 Corner Freeman & Central Aves. 



CHICAGO, March 7.— Demand at present not 

 very active on comb honey. Fancy white, 17c; 

 white, 16c; white, 2-lb. sections, 14c; buck- 

 wheat, 1-lb. sections, 12c; extracted, 7@8c. 

 Beeswax, 28c. 



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



KANSAS CITY, March 7.— Fancy white 1-lb. 

 comb, 18c; fair to good, 17c; dark 1-lb., 14® 

 15c; 2-lb. white comb, 15@16c; 2-lb. dark, 13@ 

 14c; extracted, white, 7c; dark, 5@6c. 



HAMBLIN & BEARSS, 514 Walnut St. 



CHICAGO, March 7.— The volume of trade in 

 honey is very small. A few of the best lots are 

 taken at 17@18c; but where the condition and 

 appearance of honey is a little off, 16c is about 

 the top. The supply is not large, but there 

 seems to be about enough for the trade. Ex- 

 tracted, is selling at 7@8c, with fair trade. 



Beeswax, 27@28c. 



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



BOSTON, March 7. —Honey is in fair demand ; 

 supply short. Fancy, 1-lb. comb, 19®20c; fair 

 to good, 18@19c; 2-lb. sections, 16@17c. Ex- 

 tracted, 8@9c. There is no beeswax on hand. 

 BLAKE & RIPLEY, 57 Chatham Street. 



ALBANY, N. Y., March 7. — Honey market 

 is slow and unsatisfactory, stocks of comb- 

 honey being light and prices unchanged ; stock 

 of extracted increasing. We are selling white 

 at 16@18c; mixed, 14@15c; dark, 12@14c. 

 Extracted, white, 8@9c; dark, 6@7c. Beeswax, 

 26@30c. 



H. R. WRIGHT, 326-328 Broadway. 



We send both, the Home 

 Journal and Bee Journal 

 for 1891, for $1.35. 



Back Numbers. — We want Vol. 2 of 

 the American Bee Journal. Also No. 

 52 for Dec. 28, 1881; and No. 21 for 

 May 21, 1884. 



Any one having these for sale will 

 oblige by sending a postal card to this 

 office, stating price; and if not already 

 supplied, we will negotiate for them. 



Xtic 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 a ad 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 Journal 

 may be sent instead of one for the Bee 

 Journal. 



Xlie ''Farm-Poultry" is a 20 page 

 monthly, published in Boston, at 50 cents 

 per year. It is issued with a colored cover 

 and is finely illustrated throughout. 



We have arranged to club the American 

 Bee Journal with the Farm-Poultry at 

 $1.35 per year for the two. Or with the 

 Illustrated Home Journal at $1.75. 



Supply Dealers desiring to sell our 

 book, "Bees and Honey," should write 

 for terms before issuing their Catalogues. 



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 

 1 70 pages, which is nicely bound in cloth, 

 and is as interesting as a story. Price, bound 

 in cloth, $1.00. For sale at this oflace. 



Cliil>»» of 5 New Subscriptions for $4.00, 

 to any addresses. Ten for $7.50. 



