474 THE BEEKEEPERS' REVIEW 



NOTICE TO QUEEN BREEDERS 



If you want to sell Queens and Bees, advertise in the AMERICAN 

 BEE JOURNAL. Read what some of our advertisers have to say about 

 the pulling power of our advertising pages: 



Got good results from the advertisement I ran in last season's 

 Journals. 



D. G. LITTLE, Hartley, Iowa. 



We have advertised in the American Bee Journal for thirty years. 

 Have always found it a good advertising medium. 



J. W. K. SHAW CO., Loreauville, La. 



My advertisement brought all the Orders I wished for. In fact, 

 more than I was able to supply. Quite a number of orders had to be 

 returned. 



J. A. SIMMONS, Sabinal, Texas. 



The American Bee Journal is a good medium for advertisements. 

 We have had all the Orders booked we could fill. 



GOLDEN RULE BEE CO., Rialto, Calif. 



The Reasons are self evident — a good bee paper is taken by live and 

 wide awake beekeepers and these are the kind that are always in the mar- 

 ket for good bees and good queens. 



Rates on space are not high. Display at 15 cents a line or $2.10 per 

 inch. Classified 15 cents a line. 



Send, in your order with copy today and get rid of your surplus queens. 



AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL 



HAMILTON, ILLINOIS 



TENNESSEE-BRED QUEENS 



43 Years Experience in Queen Rearing-Breed 3-Band Italians Only 



Bees by the pound, 1 lb., $1.25; 2 lb., $2.25; 3 lb., $2.75, July August and September. 

 Nuclei (no queen) 1 fr. $1.50; 2 fr. $2.15; 3 fr. $2.75; 4 fr. $3.50; pure 3-band Italians. 

 Select queen wanted, add price. 



Capacity of yard, 5000 queens a year- -Select queen tested for breeding $5.00 

 The very best queen tested for breeding $10. 



Queens for export will be carefully packed in long distance cages, but safe delivery is 

 not guaranteed. 



My father bought queens from you over thirty years ago. They were good ones. 



S. D. House, Camilus, N. Y., June 12, 1912. 

 I have some fifty of your queens that you sold to F. Farr last season, and for beauty, hard- 

 iness and good honey gathering qualities, they are second to none among our 1,200 colonies. 



M. A. Gill, Longmont, Colo., July 7th, 1903. 

 Six years ago I got six queens from you ; they were the finest I ever saw. The six colonies 

 averaged 185 povnds of comb hone.v 



James I. Davis, Lincoln, Neb., May 24, 1909. 

 I have one of your queens first year making me seven finished cases ; second year, five cases,, 

 and this year, two cases at time of supercedure, July 10. 



H. G. Henthorne, Plattsville Col., July 16, 1907. 



JOHN M. DAVIS, Spring Hill, Tenn. 



