. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. 554 THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. September 1, and see what a smile he will have on his face when he goes home to that wife of ; Yes, Mr. Galloway, that would be a great smile-producer. If we had four or five times the present number of regular subscribers, we would—well, we would do a number of the things we have been aching to do iu connection with the American Bee Journal. But if each one can't send four yearly subscribers, then send two besides your own renewal. That would make three times our present list—enough to put in at least two of the


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. 554 THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. September 1, and see what a smile he will have on his face when he goes home to that wife of ; Yes, Mr. Galloway, that would be a great smile-producer. If we had four or five times the present number of regular subscribers, we would—well, we would do a number of the things we have been aching to do iu connection with the American Bee Journal. But if each one can't send four yearly subscribers, then send two besides your own renewal. That would make three times our present list—enough to put in at least two of the biggest improvements in the old American Bee Journal that we have had in mind for several Two-Pound Plain Sections are made by Geo. O. Morris by taking two one-pound sections, putting a sheet of founda- tion between them, and then pressing together.—Gleanings. Snow-White" or Cream-Colored. Sections.—G. K. Hub- bard is endorst by Review and Gleanings in saying that It is not consumers but bee-keepers that demand such white sec- tions, honey looking nicer and whiter in the darker wood. Arranging the Brood-Nest for Winter.—When the four central combs contain little honey, the outer combs on each side having the bulk of it, Mr. Doolittle often puts the four central ones at one side and the combs with honey at the other. That prevents the bees being stranded in winter atone side while there is plenty of honey at the other.—Progressive Bee-Keeper. Pacific Bee-Papers.—They never live long. The Fresno County Bee-Keepers' Association voted money out of its treas- ury to pay for "our California newspaper " on the generous terms offered by the publisher. Months have past, and no publisher, paper, nor money has been located yet. J guess California soil or climate is not good for such literature.— W. A. H. Gllstrap, in Gleanings. Must Read the Bee-Papers.—The editor of American Bee-Keeper has a distinct conviction that a bee-keeper must take one or


Size: 3256px × 768px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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