146 
THE HIVE AND IIONET-BEK. 
keeping, if they dicl not regard it as a source of pleasant 
recreation, rather than of pecuniary profit; while others 
do not hesitate to say that much more money has, of late 
years, been spent upon patent hives, than those who have 
used them have realized from their bees. 
It is an easy matt.er to make calculations on paper* al¬ 
most as flattering as an imaginary tour to the gold mines 
of Australia or California. Only purchase a patent bee¬ 
hive, and if it fulfills the promises of its sanguine inventor, 
a fortune must be realized in a few years; but such arc 
the disappointments resulting from bees refusing to swarm, 
that if the hive could remedy all other difficulties, it would 
still fail to answer the reasonable wishes of the experienced 
Apiarian. If every swarm of bees could be made to yield 
a profit of twenty dollars a year, the bee-keeper could not 
multiply his stocks, by natural swarming, so as to meet 
* The following calculation of possible profits from bee-culture, taken from 
“Sydserff's Treaties on Bocs,” published in England, in 1792, is a perfect gem of 
its kind: 
“Suppose a swarm of bees at the first to cost 10s. Cd., and neither them nor the 
swarms to be taken, but to do well, and swarm once every year”—bees must be 
naughty, Indeed, if they dare to do otherwise! — “ what will bo the product for four¬ 
teen years, and what the profit, if each hive is sold at 10s. Cd. ? 
Years. 
ffives. 
_ 1 . 
Profits. 
£ s. d. 
. 0 0 0 
. 2 . 
. 1 1 0 
. 4.. . 
. 2 2 0 
. 8. 
. 4 4 0 
* * 
* * » 
14 . 
. 8192 . 
. 4300 16 0 
“N. B.—Deduct 10s. Cd., what the first hive cost, and the remainder will bo clear 
profit; supposing the second swarms to pay for hives, labor, &c.” The modesty 
with which this writer, who seems to have had as much faith in his bees as in the 
doctrine that “figures cannot lie,” closes his calculation at the end of fourteen 
years, is truly refreshing. No bee-keeper, on such a royal road to wealth, could 
ever find it in his heart to stop under twenty-one years, by which time his stocks 
would have increased to more than a million, when, probably , he would be willing 
to close his bee-business, by selling them for over two and three-quarter millions 
of dollars! The attention of all venders of humbug bee-hives, is respectfully in¬ 
vited to this antique specimen of the art of pulling. 
