32 



THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW. 



ImprGved Chaff Hive 



R^lD T SUPER. 



The pamplilft: "How I 

 Produce Comb Honey." 

 Fi ice 5 cts. Send for free 

 illustrated price list of 

 ■verythinK needed in the 

 ipiary. GEO. E. HILTON, 

 Fremont, Michigan. 



the Review. 



ITALIAN QUEENS AND SUPPLIES 



FQ:E<, 1890. 



Before you purchase, lof)k to your interest, and 

 send for catalogue and price list. 



J. P. H. liKOWN, 

 1-88 tf. Augusta, Georgia. 



Ho. 1 SECTIONS $3.00. 



per bu. Best Bee 



All Supplies cheap. 



l-90-',tt 



•Japanese Buckwheat liOc 

 Veil on Earth, only :iO cts. 

 Send for new list free. 



W. D. SOPER, Boxll7:i, Jackson Mich. 



Please mention the Reuletu. 



hid Flat-Bottom Comb Foundation. 



High Side Walls. 4 to 14 s(juare feet 

 to the pound. Wholesale and Ee- 

 tail. Circulars "and Samples free. 

 J. VAN DEU.SEN & SONS, 

 (sole manufactueees), 

 SPROUT BROOK, Mont. Co., N. Y. 



1-88-tf. 



BEME3IBER, 



Orders for Early Queens Will 

 be Promptly Attended to by W. 

 J. ELLISON, Stateburg, S. C. 



2-90-2t Please mention the Reuietv 



"you should see 



My prices for 1889 of Italian Queens, Bees, Eggs 

 for hatching from Standard Poultry, (seven 

 varieties 1 .Japain'se Buckwheat, and two choice 

 new varieties of I'otatoes. 



YOU CAN SAVE MONEY by getting my price list be- 

 fore you purcliase. 



CHAS. D DUVALL. 

 2-88-tf Spencerville. Mont Co.. AM 



Eaton's Improiied Section Ca*ie. 



Ijatest and best. Bees and 

 5t (Queens. S-nd for free price 

 list. Address. 

 FRANK A. EATON, 



Bluffton, Ohio. 



Please mention the Review. 



A New Book on Bees, and Dadants' Comb 



Foundation. See Advertisement in Another Column. 



THE ''REVIEW,' 



The distinctive features of the Bke-Keepbs' 

 Review are tliat of reviewing current ai)icultural 

 literature (i)oiuting out errors and fallacies and 

 allowing nothing of value to pass unnoticed), and 

 the making of eaeh issue a "special number " — 

 one in which some sjiecial topic is discussed by 

 the best bee-keepeis of the ountry. If you wish 

 for the cream of the otlier journals, already skim- 

 med and dished uii. and to learn the views of the 

 most experienced bee-keepers upon the unsolved, 

 apicultural problems of tlie day, read the Review. 

 Price of the Reveiw, .W cts. a year. Samples free. 



"The Production of Comb Honey." 



Although tliis neat little book contains only 45 

 pages, it furnishes as mucli practical, valuable in- 

 formatit)n as is often found in a book of twice its 

 size. It is "boiled ilown." 



It begins with taking the bees from the cellar 

 and goes over the ground briefly, clearly and con- 

 cisely, until the honey is off tlie hives; toucliing 

 upon tlie most impf)rtant points; and especially 

 does it teacii when, wliei'e and liow foundation 

 can be used to the best advantage; wlien combs 

 are preferable and when it is more profitable to 

 allow the bees to build their own combs. It tells 

 how to hive a swarm in an empty brood nest, and 

 yet secure more lioney than when foundation is 

 used. Price of the'book, 2.5 cents. 



SPECIAL OrPER. 



For B5 cts. we will send the Review one year 

 and "The Production of Comb Honey." For 

 $1.00 we will send the Review two years and the 

 " Production of comb Honey." 



Back Numbers at 2 and 3 Gents. 



Of most of the issues of the Review we have 

 several hundred copies. Instead of keeping 

 them stowed away in the attic several years, and 

 finally selling them as waste paper, we propose 

 to have them out tloing good; have them helping 

 bee keepers, and. at the same time, be making 

 known the Review. So long as the supply lasts, 

 we will sell them at two and theee cents per 

 copy. Three cents if you pick them out; two, if 

 WK pick them out. The reason wliy we make a 

 difference, in price, is this : Some three or four 

 issues have run so low that we would not care to 

 sell them at less than three cents a copy. We 

 would mention which are tlie three-cent issues, 

 were it not that some otlier number will soon 

 "run low" and be added to the tliree cent list, 

 and then another, and so on. If you wish for 

 certain issues, send three cents apiece, and tell 

 wliich numl)ers are desired, and you will get 

 tliein, if you don't wait too long. If you don't 

 cire which numbers you get, then simyily send 

 whatever sum of money you think best, and say : 

 "For the enclosed, please .send back numbt'rs of 

 the Review," and we will send as many numbers 

 as we can at two cents each, and send no two that 

 are alike. If tlie amount sent pays for more 

 numbers Hum we care to sell at two cents each, 

 the i>alance will lie returned, or else the sender 

 notified and asked what sliall be done with it. 



Remember, each number is complete in itself; 

 is, in reality, a little pamphlet containing the 

 best that is known upon some important ajii- 

 cultural subject. 



Stamps taken, either U. S. or Canadian. 



W.Z.HUTCHINSON, Flint. Mich. 



