. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. / 15o. 1 copy each Diidauts' "Handling Bees" ( " Bee- Pasturage a Necessity " (lOc.) 18c. Dr. Howard's book on "Foul Brood " 25c. Kohnke'8"Foul Broud" book 25c. Cheshire's " Foul Brood "book ilO,;.) and Dadants' " Hand- ling Bees ' [8c ] 18c. Ur. Foote'8 Hand-book of Health 25c. Rural Life Book 25c. Our Poultry Doctor, by Fanny Felld 25c. Poultry for Market and Profit, by Fanny Field 25c. Capons and Caponizing 25c. Turkeys for Market and Proflt 25c. Green's Four Books on Frult-Growing 25c.


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. / 15o. 1 copy each Diidauts' "Handling Bees" ( " Bee- Pasturage a Necessity " (lOc.) 18c. Dr. Howard's book on "Foul Brood " 25c. Kohnke'8"Foul Broud" book 25c. Cheshire's " Foul Brood "book ilO,;.) and Dadants' " Hand- ling Bees ' [8c ] 18c. Ur. Foote'8 Hand-book of Health 25c. Rural Life Book 25c. Our Poultry Doctor, by Fanny Felld 25c. Poultry for Market and Profit, by Fanny Field 25c. Capons and Caponizing 25c. Turkeys for Market and Proflt 25c. Green's Four Books on Frult-Growing 25c. Kopp Commercial Calculator No. 1 25c. SUo and Silage, by Prof. Cook 25c. Bienen-Kultur [German] 40c. Kendall's Horse-Book [English or German] S5c. 1 Pound White Clover Seed 25c. 1 " Sweet " '• 25c. IH " Alsike •' " 25c. IM '• Alfalfa " '• 25c. m " Crimson " " 25c. The Horse—How to Break and Handle 20e. We make the above o£fers only to those who are now sub- scribers ; in other words, no one sending in his own 40 cents as a new subscriber can also claim a choice of the above Report of the North American Convention Held at St. Joseph, Mo., Oct. 10-12, 1894. REPORTED BY LOUIS R. LIQHTON. [Continued from page WHAT SHALL, WE PLANT FOE HONEY? Plants for Ornament and Honey. Most bee-keepers will want ornamental plants, shrubs, or trees about their homes, but if they should not happen to feel interested in this direction their good wives surely will. It is well to select plants which yield honey, for. tho it may fre- quently happen that the amount collected from them will be but " a drop in the bucket," so to say, yet the satisfaction of seeing the bees busily at work on them will be worth consider- able, and in many instances the pollen obtained by the bees will be of great value in furthering the rearing of brood—par- ticularly, early in the season. The list from which we may choose is very ioug. I can merely


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectbees, bookyear1861