. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. 538 AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. is the result of pure air, sunshine and exercise obtained with each successive day's labor in the apiary, and some of the most successfull apiarists in our country are women. Many of these were led to adopt this vocation as a means of restoring their health, and have been rewarded in finding not only pleasure and profit, but renewed vigor of body and mind in the labors and rec- reation of the apiary.—Coming's Oar- den. Dixon, Tils. CONVENTION DIRECTORY. Time and place of meeting. Nov. 3—Connecticut, at Hartford, Conn. Mrs. W.


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. 538 AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. is the result of pure air, sunshine and exercise obtained with each successive day's labor in the apiary, and some of the most successfull apiarists in our country are women. Many of these were led to adopt this vocation as a means of restoring their health, and have been rewarded in finding not only pleasure and profit, but renewed vigor of body and mind in the labors and rec- reation of the apiary.—Coming's Oar- den. Dixon, Tils. CONVENTION DIRECTORY. Time and place of meeting. Nov. 3—Connecticut, at Hartford, Conn. Mrs. W. E. Riley, Sec, Waterbury, Conn. Nov. 28 —Allegany Co., at Angelica, N. Y. H. L. Dwight, Sec, Friendship, N. Y. 1893. Jan. 13,14.—, at Edwin Pike, Pres., Boscobel, Wis. VW In order to have this table complete, Secretaries are requested to forward full particulars of the time and the place of each future meeting.—The Editors. North American Bee-Keepers' Association President-Eugene Secor.,Forest City, Iowa. Secretary-W. Z. , Mich National Bee-Keepers' Union. President—James Heddon . .Dowagiac, Mich. Seg y and Manager—T. G. Newman, Chicago. Doolittle's Queen-Rearing book should be in the library of every bee-keeper; and in the way we offer it on page 520,there s no reason now why every one may not possess a copy of it. Send us one new subscriber for a year, and we will mail the book to you as a present There's Not a Young: Person but what can secure at least one new subscriber to the Bee Joubnal, and get the splendid Premium offered on 519. Try it. The Amateur Bee-Keeper, by J. W. Rouse, is a book of 52 pages, intended, as its name indicates, for beginners. Price, 25 cents. For sale at this *^~ Do not write anything for publication ^a^e,sam? sn?let of PaPer wMii business matters unless it can be torn apart without interfering with either part of the letter. Nesting Fowls Near the Bees. I have a large, valuable w


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