. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 263. -* PUBLISHED BTT : * GEORGE W. YORK 6b CO ' T "^ m ONE DOLLAR FEB YEAR. Club Kates,—Two copies, $ ; 3 copies, $; 4 copies, $; 5 copies, $ Mailed to any addresses. THOMAS G. NEWMAN, GEORGE W. YORK, Editors. Vol. XIX. AM. 25, 1892. No. 9. The Man who fears to go his way alone. But follows where the greater number tread, Should hasten to his rest beneath a stone ; The great majority of the men are dead. —Life. A General Gathering: of bee- keepers will occur on Sept. 8, 1892, at the Fair Ground


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL. 263. -* PUBLISHED BTT : * GEORGE W. YORK 6b CO ' T "^ m ONE DOLLAR FEB YEAR. Club Kates,—Two copies, $ ; 3 copies, $; 4 copies, $; 5 copies, $ Mailed to any addresses. THOMAS G. NEWMAN, GEORGE W. YORK, Editors. Vol. XIX. AM. 25, 1892. No. 9. The Man who fears to go his way alone. But follows where the greater number tread, Should hasten to his rest beneath a stone ; The great majority of the men are dead. —Life. A General Gathering: of bee- keepers will occur on Sept. 8, 1892, at the Fair Grounds at Hamline, Minn. It will not be a regular convention, but held for the express purpose of giving the bee-keepers a chance to become ac- quainted with each other, as well as with the working of the State associa- tion ; and above all, to make arrange- ments regarding their exhibit at the World's Fair next year. Mr. A. K. Cooper, editor of the Bee-Keepers' Maga- zine and Secretary of the Minnesota Bee-Keepers' Association, and Mr. J. P. West, the President, will be in attend- ance at Hamline. On Pretty Good Terms.— Friend Hutchinson, of the Bee-Keepers' Review, always has some good sugges- tions to offer—a kind of " special topics" we presume. In his August number we find the following observation and hint: The bee-keeping editors are all now on pretty good terms with one another. If there is one of them holding a "grudge" against another member of the fraternity, I'll tell him how to get his revenge, if he must have it. Let him keep perfectly still about it, but go quietly to work and so improve his own journal that it will "run out" the other fellow. But we don't know of anybody that we want to "run out," though of course the item was not meant for us, as we have no " grudge " against anybody. If a brother editor has a " grudge " against us, we would advise him to "drop it," as holding on to it won


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