advertisement. 
* • ♦- — 
An individual or farm right, to make and use the Movable- 
Comb Hive, will be sold for five dollars. Such a right entitles the 
owner, in the territory where it is purchased, to make for his own 
use, and not otherwise, any number of hives. 
Ministers of the Gospel, of all denominations, are entitled to 
an individual right for their own use, without any charge. 
fihe Inventor has secured to all purchasers of individual rights 
the privilege of using, without any further charge, any improve- 
ments which he may hereafter patent. For the information of 
the Public (see note on page Cl), the following extract is given 
fi-om the Patent Office Report of 1852-3 : 
Patent No. 0300 —Improvement in Bee- Hives. 
“ ^ hat 1 olslm as invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is- 
First. Tile uso of a shallow chamber, substantially ns described, in combine- 
W oTn “ P C0V ° r ' f ° r cnlar S in 8 or diminishing at will the sice and num- 
Dor of the spare honey receptacles. 
“ SKrnd — The uso of tho movable frames, A, A, Fig. 4, or their equivalents, sub- 
atantially as described ; also, their use in combination with the shallow chamber 
with or without my arrangement for spare honey receptacles. 
■“ nir f— A dividor, substantially ns described, in combination with a movablo 
eovcr^llowmg the divider to be inserted from above, between tho ranges of comb. 
Fbwrih. Tho uso of tho double glass sides in a single frame, substantially ns 
ana Tor tho purposes sot forth. 
“ Fifth. Tho construction of tho trap for excluding moths and catching worms 
so arranged ns to incrcaso or diminish at will tho size of tho entrance for bees sub- 
Btantially in tho mannor and for tho purposes set forth. 
L. L. LANGSTROTH.” 
“For individual and territorial rights, in the States of Massa- 
chusetts and Rhode Island, and the Counties of Cheshire, Hills- 
boro’, Rockingham, Merrimack, Sullivan and Belknap in New 
Hampshire, address W. B. Gleason, No. 70 State Street, Boston. 
For individual and territorial rights in New Jersey, part of 
Pennsylvania, and Newcastle County, Delaware, address P. J. 
Mahan, No. 720 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. 
411 
