. Gleanings in bee culture. round, provided the pay were am sorry our engraver didnt succeed inhaving the lady with a book a little more life-like. In your photograph she was quite abeauty. One would imagine you must havewarm weather there, or that good-lookingyoung fellow would feel a trille chilly goingaround bare-legged. It seems to me theirideas of decorum in the presence of ladies isa trifle different from ours. And about kites, it is just wonderful to thinkof their all getting a mania for kite^ know schoolboys sometimes all go on onething for awhile,


. Gleanings in bee culture. round, provided the pay were am sorry our engraver didnt succeed inhaving the lady with a book a little more life-like. In your photograph she was quite abeauty. One would imagine you must havewarm weather there, or that good-lookingyoung fellow would feel a trille chilly goingaround bare-legged. It seems to me theirideas of decorum in the presence of ladies isa trifle different from ours. And about kites, it is just wonderful to thinkof their all getting a mania for kite^ know schoolboys sometimes all go on onething for awhile, and then something is it about the singersV That issomething I never heard of. Is it somethingthat the wind makes sing ? I may explainto our readers, that we credited our friend xVda $ for her letter and what do you suppose she picked out ofour list for the dollar? Why, it was the lifeof our President Garfield ; and I dont knowthat she could :have found anything betterto be sent clear to Ever> girl or boy, under 15 years ofasre, who writes a letter for depart-ment, CONTAINING SOME VALUABLE FJ\CT,)WN, ON BEES O! OTHERMATTERS, will receive one of David Cooksexcellent five-cent Sunday-school of these books contain the samethat you find in Sunday-schoolbooks costing from $ to $ It youhave had one or more books, give us thenames that we niav not senrJ the sametwice. We iii sto.^k, six differenthooks, as follows: Silv,i-k,v>, Sl»-cr Off,The Giant Killer, Tlir , Res-cued from Egypt, and Ten Nights in a Bar-Room. THE BABY OF THE HOUSEHOLD. ELL, little friends, Huber has beensick. Is it not sad to see a babysick? For a few days he tried toplay, but he couldnt; and finally he just layin his crib all day feverish, moaning plain-tively. How anxiously we watched for hislittle smiles, and .tried to make him noticeus ! In the evening i held him a little, whilehis mother fixed the crib for him, and al


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