The American Bee Journal. Vol. XVII, No. 12, Mar. 23, 1881

Part 5

Chapter 53,453 wordsPublic domain

☞ At the Chicago meeting of the National Society we were requested to get photographs of the leading apiarists, to sell to those who wanted them. We can now supply the following at 25 cents each: Dzierzon, the Baron of Berlepsch, and Langstroth. The likeness of Mr. Langstroth we have copied, is one furnished by his daughter, who says, “it is the only one ever taken when he was in good health and spirits.” We are glad to be able to secure one of such a satisfactory nature.

* * * * *

☞ We have filled orders for quite a number of Binders for the Weekly BEE JOURNAL. We put the price low, 30 per cent. less than any one else could afford to sell them, for we get them by the quantity at wholesale and sell them at just enough to cover the cost and postage, the latter being 21 to 23 cents, on each. We do this to induce as many as possible to get them, and preserve their Weekly numbers. They are exceedingly convenient; the JOURNAL being always bound and handy for reference. The directions for binding are sent with each one.

* * * * *

=My Annual Catalogue of Vegetable and Flower Seed for 1881=, rich in engravings from photographs of the originals, will be sent FREE to all who apply. My old customers need not write for it. I offer one of the largest collections of vegetable seed ever sent out by any Seed House in America, a large portion of which were grown on my six seed farms. _Full directions for cultivation on each package._ All seed _warranted to be both fresh and true to name_, so far, that should it prove otherwise, _I will refill the order gratis_. The original introducer of the Hubbard Squash, Phinney’s Melon, Marblehead Cabbages, Mexican Corn, and scores of other vegetables. I invite the patronage of _all who are anxious to have their seed directly from the grower, fresh, true, and of the very best strain_.

NEW VEGETABLES A SPECIALTY.

12m5 JAMES J. H. GREGORY, Marblehead, Mass.

* * * * *

Valuable Book

Of Over a Thousand Pages.

_The Crowning Culmination!_ _A $5 Book for_ =$2.50=!!

=MOORE’S UNIVERSAL ASSISTANT=,

_And Complete Mechanic,_

Enlarged Edition, contains over =1,000,000= Industrial Facts, Calculations, Processes, Trade Secrets, Legal Items, Business Forms, etc., of vast utility to every Mechanic, Farmer, and Business Man. Gives 200,000 items for Gas, Steam, Civil and Mining Engineers, Machinists, Millers, Blacksmiths, Founders, Miners, Metallurgists, Assayers, Plumbers, Gas and Steam Fitters, Bronzers, Gilders, Metal and Wood Workers of every kind, Builders, Manuf’r’s and Mechanics. 500 ENGRAVINGS of Mill, Steam, and Mining Machinery, Tools, Sheet Metal Work, Mechanical Movements, Plans of Mills, Roofs, Bridges, etc. Arrangement and Speed of Wheels, Pulleys, Drums, Belts, Saws, Boring, Turning, Planing, & Drilling Tools, Flour, Oatmeal, Saw, Shingle Paper, Cotton, Woolen & Fulling Mill Machinery, Sugar, Oil, Marble, Threshing & Rolling Mill, do., Cotton Gins, Presses, &c. Strength of Teeth, Shafting, Belting Friction, Lathe Gearing, Screw Cutting, Finishing Engine Building, Repairing and Operating, Setting of Valves, Eccentrics, Link & Valve Motion, Steam Packing, Pipe & Boiler Covering, Scale Preventives, Steam Heating, Ventilation, Gas & Water Works, Hydraulics, Mill Dams, Horse Power of Streams, etc. On Blast Furnaces, Iron & Steel Manufacture, Prospecting and Exploring for Minerals, Quartz and Placer Mining, Assaying, Amalgamating, etc. 461 TABLES with 500,000 Calculations in all possible forms for Mechanics, Merchants and Farmers, 800 items for Printers, Publishers and Writers for the Press. 1,000 items for Grocers, Confectioners, Physicians, Druggists, etc. 300 Health items. 500 do. for Painters, Varnishers, Gilders, etc. 500 do. for Watchmakers & Jewelers. 400 do. for Hunters, Trappers, Tanners, Leather & Rubber Work. Navigation, Telegraphy, Photography, Book-keeping, etc., in detail. Strength of Materials, Effects of Heat, Fuel Values, Specific Gravities, Freights by rail and water—a Car Load, Stowage in Ships, Power of Steam, Water, Wind, Shrinkage of Castings, etc. 10,000 items for Housekeepers, Farmers, Gardeners, Stock Owners, Bee-keepers, Lumbermen, etc. Fertilizers, full details, Rural Economy, Food Values, Care of Stock. Remedies for do., to increase Crops, Pest Poisons, Training Horses, Steam Power on Farms. LIGHTNING CALCULATOR for Cubic Measures, Ready Reckoner, Produce, Rent, Board, Wages, Interest, Coal & Tonnage Tables. Land, Grain, Hay, & Cattle Measurement. Seed, Ploughing, Planting & Breeding Tables, Contents of Granaries, Cribs. Tanks, Cisterns, Boilers, Logs, Boards, Scantling, etc., _at sight_. Business Forms, all kinds, Special Laws of 49 States, Territories and Provinces (in the U.S. and Canada), relating to the Coll. of Debts, Exemptions from Forced Sale, Mechanics’ Lien, the Jurisdiction of Courts, Sale of Real Estate, Rights of Married Women, Interest and Usury Laws, Limitation of Actions, etc.

“Forms complete treatises on the different subjects.”—_Sci. Am._

The work contains 1,016 pages, is a veritable Treasury of Useful Knowledge, and worth its weight in gold to any Mechanic, Business Man, or Farmer. Free by mail, in fine cloth, for $2.50; in leather, for $3.50. Address:

For Sale by

=THOMAS C. NEWMAN.= 974 West Madison Street, CHICAGO, ILL.

* * * * *

“American Apiary” for Sale.

About =150 Colonies of Bees=, in fair condition, in Langstroth hives; honey and wax extractors, empty combs, and the usual implements of an apiary.

Will sell for cash or trade for land.

=PAUL DUNKEN=, Freeman, Cass Co., Mo.

0eow3t

* * * * *

=Agents= Furnisht pleasant, profitable employment. Local Printing House, Silver Creek, N. Y.

9y1

* * * * *

=HONEY WANTED.=—I desire to purchase several barrels of dark extracted honey, and a few of light; also Comb Honey. Those having any for sale are invited to correspond, giving particulars.

=ALFRED H. NEWMAN= 972 West Madison street, CHICAGO ILL.

* * * * *

THE BRITISH BEE JOURNAL, AND BEE-KEEPER’S ADVISER.

The _British Bee Journal_ is published monthly at $1.75, and contains the best practical information for the time being, showing what to do, and when and how to do it. =C. N. ABBOTT=, Bee Master,

School of Apiculture, Fairlawn, Southall, London.

* * * * *

SEEDS FOR HONEY PLANTS

A full variety of all kinds, including Melilot, Alsike and White Clover, Mammoth Mignonette, &c. For prices and instructions for planting, see my Illustrated Catalogue,—sent free upon application.

=ALFRED H. NEWMAN=, 972 West Madison St., Chicago, Ill.

Books for Bee-Keepers.

=Cook’s Manual of the Apiary.=—Entirely rewritten, greatly enlarged and elegantly illustrated, and is fully up with the times on every conceivable subject that interests the apiarist. It is not only instructive, but intensely interesting and thoroughly practical. The book is a masterly production, and one that no bee-keeper, however limited his means, can afford to do without. Cloth, =$1.25=; paper covers, =$1.00=, postpaid. Per dozen, by express, cloth, $12.; paper, $9.50.

=Quinby’s New Bee-Keeping=, by L. C. Root.—The author has treated the subject of bee-keeping in a manner that cannot fail to interest all. Its style is plain and forcible, making all its readers sensible of the fact that the author is really the master of the subject. Price, =$1.50=.

=Novice’s A B C of Bee-Culture=, by A. I. Root. This embraces “everything pertaining to the care of the honey bee,” and is valuable to beginners and those more advanced. Cloth, =$1.25=; paper, =$1.00=.

=King’s Bee-Keepers’ Text-Book=, by A. J. King.—This edition is revised and brought down to the present time. Cloth, =$1.00=; paper, =75c.=

=Langstroth on the Hive and Honey Bee.= This is a standard scientific work. Price, =$2.00=.

=Blessed Bees=, by John Allen.—A romance of bee-keeping, full of practical information and contagious enthusiasm. Cloth, =$1.00=.

=Bee-Culture; or Successful Management of the Apiary=, by Thomas G. Newman.—This pamphlet embraces the following subjects: The Location of the Apiary—Honey Plants—Queen Rearing—Feeding—Swarming—Dividing—Transferring—Italianizing —Introducing Queens—Extracting—Quieting and Handling Bees—The Newest Method of Preparing Honey for Market, etc. It is published in =English= and =German=. Price for either edition, =40 cents=, postpaid, or $3.00 per dozen.

=Food Adulteration=; What we eat and should not eat. This book should be in every family, where it ought to create a sentiment against the adulteration of food products, and demand a law to protect consumers against the many health-destroying adulterations offered as food. 200 pages. Paper, =50c.=

=The Dzierzon Theory=;—presents the fundamental principles of bee-culture, and furnishes a condensed statement of the facts and arguments by which they are demonstrated. Price, =15 cents=.

=Honey, as Food and Medicine=, by Thomas G. Newman.—This is a pamphlet of 24 pages, discoursing upon the Ancient History of Bees and Honey; the nature, quality, sources, and preparation of Honey for the Market; Honey as an article of food, giving recipes for making Honey Cakes, Cookies, Puddings, Foam, Wines, &c.; and Honey as Medicine, followed by many useful Recipes. It is intended for consumers, and should be scattered by thousands all over the country, and thus assist in creating a demand for honey. Published in =English= and =German=. Price for either edition, =6c.=; per dozen, =50c.=

=Wintering Bees.=—This pamphlet contains all the Prize Essays on this important subject that were read before the Centennial Bee-Keepers’ Association. The Prize—$25 in gold—was awarded to Prof. Cook’s Essay, which is given in full. Price, =10c.=

=The Hive I Use.=—Being a description of the hive used by G. M. Doolittle. Price, =5c.=

=Extracted Honey; Harvesting, Handling and Marketing.=—A 24–page pamphlet, by Ch. & C. P. Dadant, Hamilton, Ill. This gives in detail the methods and management adopted in their apiary. It contains many good and useful hints, and is well worth the price—=15c.=

=Practical Hints to Bee-Keepers=, by Chas. F. Muth, Cincinnati, Ohio; 32 pages. This pamphlet gives Mr. Muth’s views on the management of bees, and embraces several of his essays given at Conventions, etc. It will be read with interest by beginners as well as those more advanced in the science of bee-culture. Price, =10c.=

=Kendall’s Horse Book.=—No book can be more useful to horse owners. It has 35 engravings, illustrating positions of sick horses, and treats all diseases in a plain and comprehensive manner. It has a large number of good recipes, a table of doses, and much other valuable horse information. Paper, =25c.=

=Chicken Cholera=, by A. J. Hill.—A treatise on its cause, symptoms and cure. Price, =25c.=

=Moore’s Universal Assistant= contains information on every conceivable subject, as well as receipts for almost everything that could be desired. We doubt if any one could be induced to do without it, after having spent a few hours in looking it through. It contains 480 pages, and 500 engravings. Cloth, =$2.50=.

=Ropp’s Easy Calculator.=—These are handy tables for all kinds of merchandise and interest. It is really a lightning calculator, nicely bound, with slate and pocket for papers. In cloth, =$1.00=; Morocco, =$1.50=. Cheap edition, without slate, =50c.=

☞ Sent by mail on receipt of price, by

=THOMAS G. NEWMAN=, 974 West Madison Street, Chicago. Ill.

Binders for the Bee Journal

☞ =Binders for the Weekly Bee Journal, of 1881=, cloth and paper, =postpaid, 85 cents=.

We can furnish Emerson’s Binders, gilt lettered on the back, for AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL for =1890=, at the following prices, postage paid:

Cloth and paper, each 50c. Leather and cloth 75c.

☞ We can also furnish the Binder for any Paper or Magazine desired.

=THOMAS G. NEWMAN=, 974 West Madison Street, =Chicago, Ill.=

RATES FOR ADVERTISING.

A line will contain about =eight words=; fourteen lines will occupy one inch of space.

One to three weeks, each insertion, =20=cts. per line. Four " or more " " =18= " " Eight " " " " =15= " " Thirteen " " " " =12= " " Twenty-six " " " " =10= " " Fifty-two " " " " =8= " " Special Notices, 50 cents per line.

Advertisements withdrawn before the expiration of the contract, will be charged the full rate for the time the advertisement is inserted.

Transient Advertisements payable in advance.—Yearly Contracts payable quarterly, in advance.

THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL is the oldest Bee Paper in America, and has a large circulation in every State, Territory and Province, among farmers, mechanics, professional and business men, and is, therefore the best advertising medium for reliable dealers. Cases of _real_ imposition will be exposed.

THOMAS G. NEWMAN, 974 West Madison Street, =Chicago, Ill.=

Contents of this Number.

Correspondence:

What is the Royal Jelly? 89 Putting Wires into Comb Foundation 90 Importing Bees from Italy 90 Bees and Grapes 90 The Use of Separators for Box Honey 90 Texas for Bees and Honey 90 Alsike Clover as a Honey Plant 91 The Supply and Queen Trade 91 Who is to Blame for the Losses? 91

Editorial:

Editorial Items 92 Frank Benton In the Far East 92 Circulars and Price Lists 92 An Excellent Suggestion 92

Among our Exchanges:

Bees and Grapes 92 Bees Dead in Box Hives 92 Honey for Sore Eyes 92 Feeding In Winter 92 Bees and Grapes 92 Feeding Rye-Meal 92 The Weekly Bee Journal Abroad 92

Selections from Our Letter Box:

But few Bees Lost 93 An Old Queen 93 Gathering Pollen 93 No Winter Flight Yet 93 Bees Confined 4½ Months 93 Closed Out by Fire 93 Bees In Good Condition 93 Lost 8 out of 37 in Wintering 93 Sweet Clover 93 Had a Flight in January 93 Nearly all Dead 93 Bokhara Clover 93 An Enthusiast 93 Bees all Dead 93 Bees Robbing 93 Chloroform Used in Handling Bees 93 Test for Honey 93 Three-fourths of the Bees Dead 93 Mortality of Bees in House and Cellar 93 Bees Doing Well 94 Dwindling in the Cellar 94 Contradictory Experience 94 Wintered Without Loss 94 Bees Uneasy in the Cellar 94 Much Better than Expected 94 Have Young Bees and Brood 94 Bees In the Cellar 135 Days 94 The Best Honey for Winter 94 Carrying in Pollen 94 Chaff-Packing of Bees Triumphant 94 Look Out for the Robbers 94 Two-thirds of the Bees have Died 94 Bees in Good Condition 94 Death Reigns among the Bees 94 No Loss in Wintering 94 Poor Season but Fair Profit 94 Planting Buckwheat for a Honey Yield 94

* * * * *

☞ We can supply but a few more of the back numbers to new subscribers. If any want them, they must be sent for soon.

* * * * *

☞ The Texas Bee-Keepers’ Association will hold their third annual Convention at Judge W. H. Andrews’ apiary, in McKinney, Collin Co., Texas, on the 12th and 13th days of May, 1881.

WM. R. HOWARD, _Sec._, Kingston, Hunt Co., Texas.

* * * * *

DON’T BUY SUPPLIES

Till you have read my new price list for the spring trade. Wax is cheaper now, so I can sell you a fine article of Comb Foundation cheap, and made on the best machine. Italian and Cyprian Queens, Bees, Hives, Sections, etc. Price List free to all.

J. V. CALDWELL, Cambridge, Henry Co., Ill.

12w6m

* * * * *

The Bee-Keepers Guide;

OR,

MANUAL OF THE APIARY,

By A. J. COOK,

_Professor of Entomology in the Michigan State Agricultural College._

286 Pages; 112 Fine Illustrations.

PRICE—Bound in cloth, =$1.25=; in paper cover, =$1.00=, by mail prepaid. For sale by

THOMAS G. NEWMAN, 974 West Madison Street, Chicago, Ill.

* * * * *

NOW READY,

Our =New Circular and Price List for 1881=. We have something new for every bee-keeper. Remember, we are largely engaged in practical bee-keeping, and know what supplies are of practical value in an apiary. You should see a description of our feeder, you will want one. Our new

Double-Draft Smoker is perfection. See what one of the most practical and best informed bee-keepers in the country thinks of it: “Since your great improvement in Smokers, as regards the double-blast, you undoubtedly have the inside track of all the others in the market. This, with the superior workmanship and materials used, should place your Smoker at the head of the list, and secure for it a favorable patronage for 1881.” Price of Smokers, by mail, $1.50 and $1.75. Our book,

QUINBY’S NEW BEE-KEEPING is pronounced the most practical work published. Price, by mail, $1.50.

We furnish everything used in advanced bee-culture. Send for Illustrated Circular to

L C. ROOT & BRO., Mohawk, N. Y.

12smtf

* * * * *

Free to All.

I will send free to any address a sample of the =BEST FOUNDATION= made for brood frames, also sample of =THIN FOUNDATION=, for sections, which can be used the full size of the section, and yet will not leave any “fishbone” in the comb honey. You can get nice straight combs without tin separators. Circular, describing how foundation is made and giving prices of apiarian supplies, free. Address, =J. A. OSBORNE=, Rantoul, Ill.

12w1tp

* * * * *

BEES FOR SALE,

In Simplicity and Everett-Langstroth hives. My bees are perfectly healthy in every respect—most of them good, strong colonies. Address,

J. P. HOLLOWAY, Monclova, Lucas County, Ohio.

12w1t

* * * * *

=ITALIANS AND HYBRIDS=—30 or 40 Colonies for sale now. Queens and Nuclei after May 15th. Address,

R. M. ARGO, Lowell, Garrard County, Ky.

12w3t

* * * * *

=WANTED=—You to send for our Circular and Price list of =American-Italians=. Address,

JOS. M. BROOKS & BRO., Columbus, Ind.

12w6m

* * * * *

FLAT-BOTTOM COMB FOUNDATION,

high side-walls, 4 to 16 square feet to the pound. Circular and samples free.

J. VAN DEUSEN & SONS, Sole Manufacturers, Sprout Brook, Mont. Co., N. Y.

11tf

* * * * *

=BASSWOOD AND TULIP TREES=, from 1 to 8 feet in height, nursery grown. The 2 best HONEY PRODUCING TREES KNOWN, at low prices.

A. BATTLES, Girard, Pa.

10w4t

* * * * *

BARNES’ PATENT

Foot-Power Machinery

CIRCULAR and SCROLL SAWS

Hand, Circular Rip Saws for general heavy and light ripping. Lathes, &c. These machines are especially adapted to =Hive Making=. It will pay every bee-keeper to send for our 48 page Illustrated Catalogue.

W. F. & JOHN BARNES Rockford, Winnebago Co., Ill.

* * * * *

=Wilbor’s Cod-Liver Oil and Lime.=—Persons who have been taking Cod-Liver Oil will be pleased to learn that Dr. Wilbor has succeeded, from directions of several Professional gentlemen, in combining the pure Oil and Lime in such a manner that it is pleasant to the taste, and its effects in Lung complaints are truly wonderful. Very many persons whose cases were pronounced hopeless, and who had taken the clear Oil torn long-time without marked effect, have been entirely cured by using this preparation. Be sure and get the genuine. Manufactured only by A. B. WILBOR, Chemist, Boston. Sold by all druggists.

11w4t

* * * * *

THE CANADIAN FARMER THE ONLY Agricultural Weekly PUBLISHED IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA.

This practical journal is now in its =Third Year=, and meeting with immense success. The low price of its subscription ($1.00 per year) in its new and improved form (16 pages 13½ x 10½, folded and pasted) makes it very popular. Its editors are all practical men. It is the =Best Advertising Medium= in Canada. Sample copies sent free to any address.

=N. B. COLCOCK=, Welland, Ont.

11w26tx

* * * * *

I HAVE NOW OVER

300 COLONIES

of Pure Italian Bees, in good condition, in 10 frame Langstroth hives. Orders for

ITALIAN QUEENS,

Nuclei and Full Colonies,

are now being booked and will be filled in rotation as received, commencing about June 1st., at the following prices:

Tested Queens, each $2 50 " " per half-dozen 13 50 1 frame Nucleus, with Tested Queen 5 00 2 " " " " " 5 50 3 " " " " " 6 00 4 " " " " " 6 50 Full Colonies, each 12 00 " " in lots of 5, each 10 00 " " " 10, each 9 00

I will use all possible care in preparing the above for shipment, but cannot guarantee safe arrival, except on queens any distance less than 1,000 miles.

ALSO 100 COLONIES OF BLACK AND HYBRID BEES,

In Langstroth hives, in quantities of not less than 5 colonies at =$8.00= each, which I will ship direct from the South.

ALFRED H. NEWMAN,

972 West Madison St., CHICAGO, ILL.

* * * * *

THE ORIGINAL

Patented Jan. 9, 1878, and May, 1879; Re-issued July 9, 1878.

If you buy a Bingham Smoker, or a Bingham & Hetherington Honey Knife you are sure of the best and cheapest, and not liable to prosecution for their use and sale. The largest bee-keepers use them exclusively. Twenty thousand in use—not one ever returned, or letter of complaint received. Our original patent Smokers and Honey Knives were the only ones on exhibition at the last National Bee-Keepers’ Convention, 1880. Time sifts the wheat from the chaff. Pretensions are short-lived.

The Large and Extra Standard have extra wide shields to prevent burning the fingers and bellows. A real improvement.

Send postal card for testimonials.

Bingham & Hetherington Honey Knife 2 in., $1 00 Large Bingham Smoker 2½ " 1 50 Extra Standard Bingham Smoker 2 " 1 25 Plain Standard Bingham Smoker 2 " 1 00 Little Wonder Bingham Smoker 1¾ " 75

If to be sent by mail, or singly by express, add 25c. each, to prepay postage or express charges.

To sell again, apply for dozen or half-dozen rates.

Address,

BINGHAM & HETHERINGTON, OTSEGO, MICH.

9wtf

* * * * *

FREE!

We wish to obtain 25,000 New Subscribers to

THE FLORAL MONTHLY

during the next few months, and we propose to give to every reader of this paper

50c. worth of Choice Flower Seed.