. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. can Bee Journal—Chas. Dadant & Son. Each subject is clearly and thoroly ex- plained, so that by following- the in- structions of this book one cannot fail to be wonderfully helpt on the way to success with bees. The book we mail for $, or club it with the American Bee Journal for one year—both for $; or, we will mail it as a premium for sending- us THREE NEW subscribers to the Bee Journal for one year, with $ This is a splendid chance to get a grand bee-book for a very little money or work. GEORGE W. YORK & CO. 118 Michigan Street


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. can Bee Journal—Chas. Dadant & Son. Each subject is clearly and thoroly ex- plained, so that by following- the in- structions of this book one cannot fail to be wonderfully helpt on the way to success with bees. The book we mail for $, or club it with the American Bee Journal for one year—both for $; or, we will mail it as a premium for sending- us THREE NEW subscribers to the Bee Journal for one year, with $ This is a splendid chance to get a grand bee-book for a very little money or work. GEORGE W. YORK & CO. 118 Michigan Street, - CHICAGO, Leather-Colored (|ueens! Reared from a superior honey-g'athering' strain of Italians. No disease of kind. Untested, SO cents each; dozen, $ Tested, 75 cents each; % dozen, $, Special low price on two- frame Nuclei for July and August Safe arrival. W. J. FOREHAND, 190121 FORT DEPOSIT, ALA. Please mention Bee J oumal when wrltlii& frame (outside dimensions.) A frame is slipt onto this, a sheet of foundation laid inside, and on the smaller board {that jusi comes up even with the lower side of the groove in the top-bar of the frame), and the edge slid into the groove in the underside of the top-bar. A small wedge-shaped splint with a little flour or starch paste (or some other substance that will stick, and not let loose when it gets warm) put on, and prest into the groove, completes the job, except to give it time to dry before putting the supers on the hive. I made my splints from old wood separators cut just wide enough to fill the groove in the top-bars just full. By using a sharp knife, a good ruler, or straight-edge, a good, solid cutting- table, and a reasonably straight- grained wood-separator to cut tiie splints from, they can be made to fit exact, and be made very fast. It helps a good deal in getting the splints to enter the groove readily, and to avoid the sharp edge cutting the foundation, to scrape the sharp edges off from the


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