AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 



779 



HONEY AND BEESWAX MARKET. 



NEW YORK, June 6.— New crop of South- 

 ern honey is now arriving- freely. We quote: 

 Extracted, 75@80c; orange blossom, 7@7»4c; 

 California, 7@7V^c. Beeswax scarce at 2 8@30c. 

 HILDRETH BROS. & SEGELKEN, 

 28-30 West Broadway. 



KANSAS CITY, June 6.— The demand for 

 honey is very light, especially 2-lb. comb. We 

 quote: Comb, 1-lb., 14@15; 2-lb. 10c. Ex- 

 tracted, 6@6i4c. No beeswax in the market. 

 CLEMONS, MASON & CO., 

 Cor. 4th and Walnut Sts. 



CINCINNATI, June 6.— Trade g-ood in ex- 

 tracted honey, with plenty of the new crop in 

 market. Choice comb-honey in fair demand. 

 We quote: Choice comb, 14@16c. Extracted, 

 6@8c. Beeswax is in good supply and fair de- 

 mand at 25@30c for good to choice yellow. 

 C. F. MUTH & SON, 

 Corner Freeman & Central Aves. 



CHICAGO, June 8.— Demand for both comb 

 and extracted honey increasing, and our stock 

 is light. Can use shipments to advantage. 1-lb. 

 sections, 16@18c; 2-lbs., 14@15c; extracted, 

 7@8c. Beeswax, 30c. 



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



KANSAS CITY, June 6.— The demand for 

 honey is very light; supply fair, at 12@14c; 

 extracted, 5@7c. All good comb-honey sold 

 out; new crop will be in within 30 days; 

 prospects good. The demand for beeswax is 

 good, at 25@27c; supply light. 



HAMBLIN & BEARSS, 514 Walnut St. 



CHICAGO, June 8.— Very little comb-honey 

 being sold; prices are about the same, with 

 really very little fancy goods offered.' Best 

 white comb, 17@18c; extracted, steady, is in 

 good condition, at 7@8c. Beeswax, 28c. 



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



BOSTON, June 6.— No change in prices of 

 honey ; sales a little slow, on account of ex- 

 tremely low price of maple sugar. White, 1-lb. 

 comb, 18@19c; fair to good, 14@18c; 2-lb. sec- 

 tions, 16@17c. Extracted, selling at 7H@8i4c. 

 No beeswax on hand. 



BLAKE & RIPLEY. 57 Chatham St. 



ALBANY, N. Y., June 6.— The honey market 

 is slow, with small stocks of comb. We quote : 

 clover, 1-lb. comb, at 15@16c; buckwheat, 

 12@13c. Extracted, light, slow at 7@8c; dark, 

 firm at 6@7c. Beeswax, 25@27c. 



, H. R. WRIGHT, 326-328 Broadway. 



NEW YORK, June 6.— No comb-honey in the 

 market. Extracted— demand light, except for 

 Southern, which would sell easily at 75@80c 

 per gallon for common, and 7>4@8c for 

 Florida. Beeswax scarce and firm at 29c. 



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



MILWAUKEE, June 8.— Supply of choice 

 comb-honey is very small, and shipments will 

 find a good maiket. AVe quote: Choice, 1-lb. 

 sections, 18@19c; second best, 16@17c; com- 

 mon, 13@15c; dark, 10@12c. Extracted, white, 

 in barrels and kegs, 8@8i4c; dark or amber, 

 6@7Hc. Beeswax, 28@30c. 



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



SAN FRANCISCO, June 3.— Honey, scarce. 

 W^e quote: Comb, 1-lb., 13@14c; 2-lb.,10@12c. 

 Extracted, 5U@6J4c. Beeswax scarce, 25@26c. 

 SCHACHT. LEMCKE & STEINER, 

 16-18 Drum3 



CHICAGO, June 8.— Fancy white 1-lb. comb, 

 17@18c; fair to good, 15@17c; ordinary, l@2c 

 l@2c less. Extracted— white clover or bass- 

 wood, in kegs or small barrels, 8@9c; Califor- 

 nia, 60-lb. cans, 7@8c. Beeswax scarce and in 

 demand at 30@31c for prime yellow. 



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



DETROIT, June 0.— No comb-honey in the 

 market. Extracted, 8@9c. Beeswax firm, at 

 29@30c. 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 saine 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. 



We send both, the Home 

 Journal and Bee Journal 

 for one year, for $1.35. 



Bee^'Keeping for F»rofit, by Dr. 



G. L. Tinker, is a new 50-page pamphlet, 

 which details fully the author's new system 

 of bee-management in producing comb and 

 extracted -honey, and the construction of 

 the hive best adapted to it— his "Nonpareil." 

 The book can be had at this oflBce for 25c. 



Wants or Excjianges. 



Under this heading, Notices of 5 lines, or 

 less, will be inserted at 10 cents per line, 



for each insertion, when specially ordered 

 into this Department. If over 5 lines, the 

 additional lines will cost 20 cents each. 



WANTED— Your attention ! Foundation at 

 Dadant's prices, exchanged for Wax, 

 Hives, Sections, etc., cheap; 2-inch Sections 

 very cheap. St. Joe Apiary Co., St, Joe., Mo. 

 24Alt 



