Gleanings in bee culture . largelydisappear.—Ed.] THE HIVE-CAlvRIER VALUABLE ALSO AS ACOMB-CARRIEK. The method of carrying bees out of thecellar at the Home of the Honey-bees, as il-lustrated on page 557, April 15th issue, wasused by my brother and myself in 1880. Wemade the frame for carrying frames of hon-ey into the extracting-house, and, whenempty, back to the hives. For this purposeit is the ideal way until robbers take to a wire screen all over and under, withthe top made in a frame with hinges, is allthat is required to baffle the robbers. Wealso carried hives and wood on it, a


Gleanings in bee culture . largelydisappear.—Ed.] THE HIVE-CAlvRIER VALUABLE ALSO AS ACOMB-CARRIEK. The method of carrying bees out of thecellar at the Home of the Honey-bees, as il-lustrated on page 557, April 15th issue, wasused by my brother and myself in 1880. Wemade the frame for carrying frames of hon-ey into the extracting-house, and, whenempty, back to the hives. For this purposeit is the ideal way until robbers take to a wire screen all over and under, withthe top made in a frame with hinges, is allthat is required to baffle the robbers. Wealso carried hives and wood on it, and otherthings that are to be removed. Levita, Texas. J. W. Guyton, M. D. UNCAPPING-KNIVES WITH SCALLOPED EDGES. I would suggest making those uncapping-kuives, page 937, with hcalloped edge, likethose scalloped bread-knives. I have beenusing one of the latter for several years, andthink they work well, using the same eitherwith a drawing or sawing motion. St. Louis, Mo. Herman Betke. 1907 GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 913. OVJ^^ No chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous,but grievous; nevertheless, afterward it yieldeth thepeaceable fruit of righteousness.—Heb. 12 : 11. At one of our recent week-day prayer-nieetingd the topic was, What has particu-larly impressed you in the life of Josephwhich we have been studying in our Sunday-school lessons? I repliedthatit was Josephsremarkable faith that enabled him to takeevery persecution and trial as a part of Godsplans to teach him new and important les-sons, that impressed itself on my mind. Jo-seph, even in early childhood, was broughtinto pccnliar trial. As soon as he was oldenough to observe, he saw that his big broth-ers were not doing the square thing. Thequestion to his childish mind was, whetherhe should repeat to his father what he knew,and thus become, in one sense a talebearer,or whether he should let it pass. We arenot told very much about this, but we canread between the lines that his boyish senseof hone


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectbees, bookyear1874