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SUMMER. 
and prevent it resting on the end. I have done it as 
follows: Get an old thick piece of dry comb some 
three inches square; cut out an inch of the middle. 
At right angles with this, in one edge in the centre, 
make another to intersect it, just the size of the cell, 
and have the lower end reach into the opening. This 
comb will keep it in the right position, and may rest 
on the floor-board. It can now be put in the hive, 
cutting out a piece of comb to "intake room for it if 
necessary. 
Soon after such cell is introduced, the bees are quiet. 
In a few days it hatches, and they have a queen as 
perfect as if it had been one of their own rearing. 
This queen of course will be necessitated to leave the 
hive, and will be just as liable to be lost, but no more 
so than others, and must be watched the same. It is 
unnecessary to look for a cell in a stock that has cast 
its first swarm more than a week before, as they are 
generally destroyed by that time, (sometimes short of 
it,) unless they intend to send- out an after swarm. 
MARK THE DATE OF SWARMS ON THE HIVE. 
Should you have so many stocks that you cannot 
remember the date of each swarm without difficulty, 
it is a good plan to mark the date on one side or cor- 
ner of the hive, as it issues. You can then tell at 
once where to look for a cell when wanted. 
It will sometimes happen that a queen may be lost 
at the extreme end of the swarming season, when no 
other stock contains such cells. I then look around for 
the poorest stock or swarm that I have on hand, one 
