THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW. 



25 



In the uoitheast corner of the shop is the | 

 nffin« in wliich I write hU of my contnbu- 

 ?£'to"ti:'airterent b- l.apers and tor a 

 few a-ricuitural journals, while *»« " °^\i*^; 1 

 mv private correspondence l^ done in in« 

 S;\,.'e!a, »™ ...he le'^V.^^de^wm no,' £ 



i',!i^-„rr3-,.'~rr;;'or.he .I.OP 



fSfhonesisaoa i. r.<i,...cl a dark color Jo 



°o S dt^reei. tor weeks at a time lu cloudj 

 weXr I resor. .0 all oil stove to keel, .he 

 heat up. 



ADVERTISEMENTS 



NOW LOOK HERE. 



i&rOR T. TIMPE, of (inmd Led^e. Mich., 

 hai^h?e?nIw lidlin^' Potatoes tl-t Ik, «rew 

 from the seed, and beat everything at the <^ > i< ^e, 

 and to those who .gro^y the mc.s from <me an 

 two pounds, he wiii give, one full '.^^'"i, ^'V* 

 f,>nr •'. frame nuclei, ot his Five Joanaeu, 

 rioiritt Bees with breediut; queens ; tour 

 ?^?Hme nuclfi with selected, tested queens; 

 indtree3-frame nuclei wi.h tested queens. 

 Look fo? his ad. in n.xt Review, or send tor cat- 

 alogue Should you desire any queen bees, let 

 him book your ordea now and he will make you 



liSf !/icoi'f. n/W^, Grand Ledss, Mich. 



Pleife mention the Review. 



S03IETHIG NEW, 



AGAIN, IN 



SEND FOR HEDDON'S CIRCULAR 

 FOR 1S91. 



Address JAS. HEDDON, 



Doivagiac, Michigan. 



Please nrention ll.e Review. 



AN INIEKIOK VIEW INTO THE HONEY KOOM IN 



THE SHOP. 



We are now ready for Fig. 2, which shows , 

 the mt'erior of the honey -om as seen 

 through the open door, trom the mside oi 

 the shop. This room is 7 feet wide by 10 

 ion- it being 8 feet high. In this room I 

 had'n 1877 Nearly 11,0U0 pounds of honey, 

 which is about all it will hold and give room 

 7or the operator. To the left, through the j 

 door canC seen one of the Platforms on 

 wh°ch the honey is stored, and the pile as it 

 irink^-wheii first started. , 



Both the outside door to the ^hop and the 

 one into the honey room are made lai^f a^*{ 

 wMe so a wheelbarrow can be run m full^f 

 honev and out when empty. Now, it we 

 keep\he temperature of this room at from 

 80 to 100 degrees our honey ^tU grow better 

 better and riper every day till it gets so 

 thick and good that the <.uce thm honey m 

 the open cells, around th. edge of the box, 

 wiU not run out, and the whole will be like 

 ^iackwax-' as we boys used to term thick 

 maple molasses put on snow. Itthu, tem- 

 perature is kept up, the honey, will not de- 

 terforate one ilarticle for all time to come 

 a^ I said in the Query I>epartmeiit not long 

 a<To as I know from a test of four year^, 

 duration : but let the temperature go down 

 to '^ and sweating and .^deterioration soon 

 becrin. If all is not plam, u.ll what it i^, 

 and I will most gladly explain. 



Names of Bee-Keepers. 



te£ in a hook, ihe^e aie several thousand all 

 arranged alphabetically and according to states ; 

 ^ml although this list has been secured at an ex- 

 TOUse of hundreds of dollars, I would furnish it 

 to my advertisers at $2.50 per thousand names 

 A manufacturer who. wishes for a list of the 

 names of bee-keepers in his own state onlj, or, 

 posBibS iu the adioining states c^an be accom^ 

 modated. Anv inquiry in regard to the. numner 

 T,v?mes in a certain state, or states, will be an- 



^vri.ing of ^ddWmua n=uue^.^^gQ^_ ^^^^^^ j^.^j^_ 



DOCTOR 

 TINKER'S 



The Nonpareil Bee Hive and Winter Case, 

 White Poplar Sections, Wood-Zinc Queen Ex- 

 cluders, and the finest and best Perforated Zinc 



ever m;.de. , i or «to 



Send for Catalogue of prices, and enclose 25 cts 

 u.r the New Book, Bee Keeping for 

 Profit. ^^ ^ ^ TiriKEE}, 



jy^jj New Philadelphia, Ohio. 



_ ^_ _ ,,_. -r -,^7 TT-v Six months free, to 

 MAGAZir^E iitroduce. Adddress 

 "special crops." bkaneateles, N. Y, 8-90-tf 



