430 



THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 



BOOKS ON PRACTICAL BEE CUL- 

 TURE 



Parcel Post — Include Postage as weight 



indicates 

 Post Paid — Where no weight is men- 

 tioned 

 ABC and X Y Z of Bee 



Culture, cloth $2.00 



ABC and X Y Z of Bee 



Culture, half leather 2.40 



ABC and X Y Z of Bee 



Culture, German 2.50 3 lbs. 



A B C de L' Apiculture French 



ed 2.00 



El A B C Y X Y Z de la 

 Apicultura, Spanish 2.00 



Langstroth on the Hive and 

 Honey Bee Reprint 1.00 



Advanced Bee Culture, W. Z. 



Hutchinson 1.00 2 lbs. 



Biggie Bee Book 50 



British Bee-keepers' Guide- 

 book, Cowan 1.00 1 lb 



Cook's Manual of the Apiary 1.15 2 lbs. 



Doolittle's Queen-rearing 75 1 lb. 



Fifty Years Among the Bees, 



C. C. Miller 1.00 2 lbs. 



First Lessons in Bee-keeping .50 



Honey-bee, The— Cowan. . . 1.00 1 lb. 



How to Keep Bees — Mrs. 



Comstock 1.00 2 lbs. 



Humble Bee, The — P. W. L. 

 Sladen 3.25 



Irish Bee Guide, Puev. J.' " G 



Digges 1.00 1 lb. 



Langstroth, rev. by Dadant, 



,^cloth.. 1.25 2 lbs. 



Modern Bee-farm, S. Simmins 2.00 2 lbs. 



Practical Bee Guide 100 



Quimby's New Bee-keeping. . 1.00 2 lbs. 



Max Craft 1.00 



Increase Forcing the Queen to 



Lay; each 25 2c. 



French edition, separate... .50 2c. 



POPULAR BOOKS ON BEE CULTURE 



Bee People, The, Maz-garet M. 



Morley $1.50 2 lbs. 



Children's Story of the Bee 2.00 



Honey Makers, The Margaret 



M. Morley 1.50 2 lbs. 



Life of the Bee, Maeterlinck 1.40 2 lbs. 



Bee Master of Wai-rilow, The 



— Edwards 57 1 lb. 



Lore of the Honey Bee.... 2.00 



Queenie 75 



Bee Models each'sOc; '2 for 75. 



Ten-cent Library Booklets. . .10 



Gleanings Library 



50c each, 3 for $1, 5 for $150 



RURAL BOOKS 



A B C of Carp Culture $0.30 1 lb. 



ABC of Potato Culture, 



paper 57 1 lb. 



ABC of Potato Culture, 



cloth S5 1 lb. 



A B C of Strawberry Culture, 



paper 50 1 lb. 



A B C of Strawberry Culture, 



cloth 75 1 lb. 



Tomato Culture 40 1 lb 



Tile Drainage, W. I. Cham- 

 berlain 40 1 lb. 



Maple Sugar and the sugar- 

 bush, paper .. .30 11b. 



Winter Care of Horses and 



Cattle, paper 30 1 lb. 



How to Keep Well 1.00 



Our Farming 75 



The Dollar Hen 1.00 



What to Do, paper 50 



What to Do, cloth 75 



Address All Orders 



THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 

 Northstar, Michigan 



BEEKEEPERS OF WESTERN NEW 

 YORK TAKE NOTICE. 



There will be a meeting held at 

 Akron, Erie Co., N. Y., Tuesday, Dec. 

 15, 1914, at the American Hotel, com- 

 mencing at 10.30 a. m. and closing at 

 3.30 p. m. There will be some of the 

 best beekeepers in Western New York 

 there to speak and there will be other 

 discussions on bee culture. This meet- 

 ing coming soon after the Syracuse 

 meeting wall give those that reside in 

 Western New York a chance to gain 

 the latest knowledge pertaining to bee 

 culture and a chance to form a branch 

 of the N. B. K. A. 



Akron is but 20 miles east of Buffalo 

 on tw-o railroads and two state im- 

 proved highways, those that cannot 

 make connections on these lines liv- 

 ing on the Erie, Lehigh or Lacka- 

 wanna R. R. and wish to come can do 

 so by corresponding with John N. De- 

 Muth, Pembroke, N. Y., he will find 

 a way or meet you. 



The American Hotel is an ideal 

 place for such a meeting, offering the 

 best accommodations at a reasonable 

 rate, the hall is free to all. 



Come and get acquainted, learn 

 something, see what the other fellow 

 is doing, get together, talk it over, have 

 a good time, take a day off, it will pay 

 in the end. 



Obligingly yours, 



John N. DeMuth. 



Management of Three Thousand 

 Colonies Bees in 50 Yards 



(Continued on page 402) 



that day I took my helper around 

 to the first three yards in which 

 we had made increase and fotmd 

 that the young queens had emerg- 

 ed from the cells which we had 

 three days previous removed from 

 the coml3s of the colonies made 

 queenless and placed in the cell 

 protectors and inserted in the comb 

 of the queenless parts. All during 

 this day's work I was instructing 

 and demonstrating to my apiarist 

 how to build up this increase and 

 the weaklings into full colonies by 

 giving them frames of sealed brood 

 and spreading the brood nest where 

 queens were very active. 



That night in the "shack," after 

 the lamp was blown out, we lay un- 

 til a very I'ate hour, talking over 

 our undertaking and the task that 



