. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 647 Plans for Bee-Houses by Josef. Kach. This is an illustrated pamphlet of 28 pages and cover, published by C. A. Schwetscbke & Son, Braunschweig, Germany. There are plans and specifi- cations for 21 different kinds of bee- houses, winter repositories, etc., and these are illustrated by 35 engravings. It is beautifully printed in German on softly to and fro in the crisp breeze, apparently crooning itself to sleep with a soft, creaking sound -that kept time with the motion. It was old, worn, and meek looking, and one must get
. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 647 Plans for Bee-Houses by Josef. Kach. This is an illustrated pamphlet of 28 pages and cover, published by C. A. Schwetscbke & Son, Braunschweig, Germany. There are plans and specifi- cations for 21 different kinds of bee- houses, winter repositories, etc., and these are illustrated by 35 engravings. It is beautifully printed in German on softly to and fro in the crisp breeze, apparently crooning itself to sleep with a soft, creaking sound -that kept time with the motion. It was old, worn, and meek looking, and one must get to the leeward side to read, where the weather as yet had failed to obliterate the single word, " ; Standing in the middle of the sun- fiecked floor, musing over the picture of a rosy-cheeked boy on a hard bench in. HOCJSE-APIARY IN GERMAN ?. good paper, and our German apiarists should each procure a copy. Price, one mark. Send to Germany for it. An Indiana Apiary was thus written up by a reporter for the In- dianapolis Journal of last week : The golden Autumn sunlight and ^rustle of falling leaves were all about a little wooden building that stands meekly among its more pretentious neighbors on East Walnut Street. There was no sign of life about the place when the writer peered through its tiny win- dows ; even the street was deserted without. Over the door a sign swung a stuffy school-room, and a booming bumble-bee gorging upon a big blossom in the center of a clover field, the re- porter had not noticed the entrance of a tall young man who knew all about bees, honey, and beeswax. This was Mr. Walter S. Pouder, and in the short time the reporter spent in his cozy little place, showed himself to be a thorough master of the apiary. "My bees are all at rest now, but I shall be very glad to exhibit the inside of a hive, though it is a trifie dangerous at this season of the year, the bees, be- coming cold, also become very ; That offer was declined w
Size: 1689px × 1479px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectbees, bookyear1861