354 THE BEE-KEEPERS' REVIEW 







uJn Everybody knows about the Bing-ham smoker. The Conqueror vjf^ 



M)^ size gives sufficient smoke, and is as good as a larger size, except that ^A^ 



/fAK it needs filling a little oftener. The price, postpaid, is $1.00, but I WAK 



will send the Review one year and a Conqueror for only $1.75. >ak. 



Twentieth Century Smokers have a diameter of Z^ inches, are ^ak 



7 inches deep, have a double draft, double walls lined with asbestos, ^V: 



a hinged, one-piece cover, and the bellows is fastened on with ribbed, ^U^ 



([u^ steel brackets. The price, postage oaid, is $1.25, but I will send one (/jjy 



^(h with the Review one year, for an even $2.00. {Jj^ 



/fAK Advanced Bee Culture is a beautiful book, delightfully written, M\ 



^AK neatly printed, lavishly illustrated and handsomely bound, but, of ^ak 



greater importance, the reading and heeding of its contents will put ■jV^: 



any practical bee-keeper on the high road to success. Price $1.20, ^•v^ 



kO^ or the Review one year and the book for only $2.00. kU^ 



il\h A good fountain pen is a great convenience, and the Parker cer- kOn 



i/J^ tainly fills the bill. I have carried one for years, and I know. It does {1(k\ 



not leak and daub the fingers, while the "lucky curve"' feature makes ^AK 



/«K the point always inked, ready for business. The $2.00 pen is exactly i/AK 



" ■ as good as any pen that is made; the higher priced pens simply having IjL 



more fancy handles. For $2.50 Til send the Review one year and a ^v^ 



$2.00, Parker, gold, fountain pen. K\J^ 



The Advanced Bee Veil is the most satisfactory veil that 1 have ^UN 



m)\i ever worn. It is not tucked inside the collar, but is fastened and held t/Qvi 



^A^ down firmly, by a cord, out on the shoulders, several inches from the ^A^ 



/WK neck; thus making it simply impossible for the bees to sting the neck /fAK 



through the veil, as is the case with the ordinary veil. Price of the ^A^. 



veil is 60 cents, but I'll send the Review one year, and the veil, for ^v> 



only $1.50. # 



The Superior Stock strain of Italians bred by J. P. Moore are the ^U>^ 



(/Jf^ equal of any bees in this country. I have tried them, and sold them- ^Qm 



^A^ year after year, and they always come out ahead. Many a man has ^A^ 



/AK blessed the day he bought a queen of this stock. Here is about the M\ 



way such men write: "The colony of Superior stock that 1 bought of >ak 



you last spring filled 140 pound sections that I sold for $18.60, while v/^ 



my two next best colonies stored only $1 1.00 worth, each, of surplus ^.W 



Ujh I am sure that these bees are really superior stock. They kept on (/(jM 



^A^ storing surplus quite a while after all the other colonies had quit.— A _ ^A^ 



M\ A. Augenstein, Dakota, Ills." The price of a queen is $1.00, but I'll M\ 



^AK send you the Review one year, and have Mr. Moore book your order >a\ 



'^V; for a queen to be sent next spring, for only $1.60. i^: 



WUmt, Miclh. |^ 





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