. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. can Bee Journal—Chas. Dadant & Son. Each subject is clearly and thoroly ex- plained, so that by following the in- structions of this book one cannot fail to be wonderfully helpt on the way to success with bees. The book we mail for $, or club it with the American Bee Journal for one year—both for $ ; or, we will mail it as a premium for sending us THREE NEW subscribers to the Bee Journal for one year, with $ This is a splendid chance to get a grand bee-book for a very little money or work. Rocku Mountain Bee-Plant Seed! {(.leutm iiite


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. can Bee Journal—Chas. Dadant & Son. Each subject is clearly and thoroly ex- plained, so that by following the in- structions of this book one cannot fail to be wonderfully helpt on the way to success with bees. The book we mail for $, or club it with the American Bee Journal for one year—both for $ ; or, we will mail it as a premium for sending us THREE NEW subscribers to the Bee Journal for one year, with $ This is a splendid chance to get a grand bee-book for a very little money or work. Rocku Mountain Bee-Plant Seed! {(.leutm iiitegi ifolta.) ...FREEJAS A Tlie AKC of Bee-Culture says of it: "This is a beautiful plant for the flower-g^arden, to say nothing' of the honey it produces. It g^rows from two to three feet in hig-ht, aud bears large clusters of bright pink flowers. It g^rows natur- ally on the Rocky Mountains, and in Colorado, where it is said to furnish large quantities of ; We have a few pounds of this Cleome seed, and offer to mail a J^-pound package as a pre- mium for sending us ONE NEW subscriber to the American liee Journal, with $; or % pound by mail for 40 cents. GEORGE W. YORK & CO. lis Michig-au St., CHICAGO, ILL. m,'a^g^mi^?!^v^^i^:iiiiai^^ ©^eHTil^MI Bees Doing Splendidly. The bees came thru in fine shape last winter, and as we are now in the midst of fruit-bloom they are doing splendidly. After selling some I still have 35 colonies—about as many as a man past 80 years of age can take care of. J. KknoyKR. Whitman Co., Wash., May 7. Blocking the Brood-Chambep with Honey. I was compelled to transfer a colony in an old 12-frame no-spacing hive this spring to an up-to-date hive, and this was done five weeks after they swarmed (on account of rainy weather I could do it no sooner), and to my sur- prise every cell was jam full of honey and sealed, and the bees were con- structing one-sided combs on each side of the hive, which were partly filled with


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