. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. ntmm MTsammivRM ?mmm jowmmmE*. 99. THOMAS G. r«E«'9IA]\, EDITOR, YoLIIlV. Feb, 15,18 No.]. How" dear to my heart is the fierce howling blizzard, Which comes from the North like a wolf on the fold. Predicted by Foster, or some other wizard, The charger of snow, and the demon of cold ; How sweet to be caught in its grasp like a feather. And find yourself wrapped round a telegraph pole: O, how we adore it, this wild winter weather : The blizzard that comes when we're all out of coal; This wild,whirling razor-edged blizzard, The loud, ho


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. ntmm MTsammivRM ?mmm jowmmmE*. 99. THOMAS G. r«E«'9IA]\, EDITOR, YoLIIlV. Feb, 15,18 No.]. How" dear to my heart is the fierce howling blizzard, Which comes from the North like a wolf on the fold. Predicted by Foster, or some other wizard, The charger of snow, and the demon of cold ; How sweet to be caught in its grasp like a feather. And find yourself wrapped round a telegraph pole: O, how we adore it, this wild winter weather : The blizzard that comes when we're all out of coal; This wild,whirling razor-edged blizzard, The loud, howling blizzard, freah from the North pole. —Lincoln Journal. That poetic—but tlie blizzards very soon drive away all poetry, when they take full possession of a locality. Sir. Riflisird Grinsell, of Baden, Mo., well-knowij to many who attend Fairs iu Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri as an exliibitor of bees and honey, is dead. He was an intelligent and progressive apiarist. "Pcrliaps llie Clearest and best ;—That is how the first line of the last paragraph but one on page 87 should have read. It was an oversight of the printer. XIic Peiiii. rarniors' Iiiistitutc is now in session at Oxford, Penn. To- morrow morning S. W. Morrison, M. D., Rives an address before it on " ; The Doctor will, no doubt, give them an enthusiastic talk—for it may be truthfully said that "every bee-keeper is an en- ; Home Markets for honey can be made by judiciously distributing the pamphlets, " Honey as Food and ; Such will create a demand in any locality at remunerative prices. See list on the second page of this paper. ;e^v in February.— Mr. George E. Hilton, of Fremont, Mich., on Feb. 8,1888, thus describes the honey-dew he has seen on the ivy: I have just discovered that our English ivy is infested with aphides, and the leaves are sticky with the spray they have thrown off. In one place I found a


Size: 1548px × 1613px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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