GLOSSARY. 521 



Gallup Frame — Frame 11}^ inches square, p. 229. 



Ganglia — Knots of nerve matter like the brain, p. 81. 



Gastric Juice — Digestive ferment secreted by stomach. 



Gena — Cheek of insects. 



German Bee — Common black bee, p. 52. 



Glands — Tubular or sack-like organs which form from elements taken 

 from the blood a liquid called a secretion. Bees have several pairs 

 of glands, p. 134. 



Glassing — Covering or protecting sections of comb honey with glass. 



Glucose — Reducing sugar, p. 173. 



Good Candy — Candy made by mixing sugar and honey, p. 318. 



Grafted Cells — Queen-Cells with the larva replaced by another, p. 278. 



Grafting Cells — Taking small larviB from cells and placing them in queen- 

 cells, p. 278. 



Granulated Honey — Honey that has crystallized or candied, p. 175. 



Green Honey — Unripe honey, p. 327. 



Grub — Larva of beetle, p. 98. 



Guide Comb — Narrow piece of comb or starters fastened to top-bar of 

 frame or section, p. 295. 



Gullet— CEsophagus, pp. 89. 142. 



Hatch — To issue from egg ; egg hatches, the brood develops and emerges 

 from cell. 



Hatching Brood — Incorrectly used to refer to bees coming from cells. 



Heart — Circulating organ ; in insects a tube along the back, p. 84. 



Heath Bees — Variety of German bees from Luneberg Heath, Europe, p. 57. 



Heddon Hive — Hive with divided brood-chamber, the division being hori- 

 zontal, p. 223. 



Heddon-Langstroth Hive — Langstroth hive as used by Heddon, p. 215. 



Hexapoda — Class insects, p. 32. 



Hill's Device — Curved sticks used to raise cloth a little from the frames 

 in winter, p. 456. 



Hive — Box or receptacle for bees, p. 207. 



Hiving — Removing a swarm of bees from cluster to hive, p. 297. 



Hiving Basket or Box — Basket or box used in hiving swarms, p. 297. 



Holy-Land Bees — Yellow bees from Southern Palestine, p. 48. 



Honey — Nectar digested by the bees, p. 171. 



Honey-Bee — Apis Mellifera, the domestic bee, p. 52. 



Honey-Bag— Honey stomach, pp. 89, 143. 



Honey-Board — Board between brood-chamber and section-case, p. 219. 



Honey-Box — Box lor surplus comb honey. 



Honey-Comb— Fabric that holds the honey and brood, p. 179. 



Honey-Dew — Nectar from insects like Aphides and bark-lice, or from ex- 

 tra floral glands, pp. 392, 393. 



Honey-Extractor— Machine for extracting honey, p. 321. 



Honey-Gate — Faucet to draw extracted honey from an extractor or barrel. 

 It is closed instantly by a slide or gate. 



Honey-Knife — A knife for uncapping honey, p. 325. 



Honey-Sac— Honey stomach, pp. 89, 143. 



Honey-Slinger— Honey extractor, p. 321. 



Honey-Stomach — Honey-sac where bee carries honey, pp. 89, 143. 



House- Apiary — Building frost-proof where bees are kept continually, p. 468. 



Hungarian Bee — Variety of the black bee from Hungary, p. 58. 



