. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. that anything is wrong with me ex- cept the feeling of weakness. "So send on your questions and I'll scratch around to find the answers. "C. C. ; No, Doctor, we are not going to send you any Questions to answer for a while yet. We ask the readers who have questions to ask, to con- tinue sending them to the American Bee Journal office. We are going to do our share to keep you from over- exertion. L'Apicoltore Changes Its Home Count Visconti Di Saliceto and Dr. Emilio Triaca, President and Vice President of the Italian Society or B


. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. that anything is wrong with me ex- cept the feeling of weakness. "So send on your questions and I'll scratch around to find the answers. "C. C. ; No, Doctor, we are not going to send you any Questions to answer for a while yet. We ask the readers who have questions to ask, to con- tinue sending them to the American Bee Journal office. We are going to do our share to keep you from over- exertion. L'Apicoltore Changes Its Home Count Visconti Di Saliceto and Dr. Emilio Triaca, President and Vice President of the Italian Society or B'eekeepers, make announcement, in the October number of L'Apicoltore, that after January 1, this periodical, which will enter its 53rd year of life, will be published at Reggio, Calabria, by its present editor, Dr. Vincenzo Asprea. Dr. Asprea is an experi- enced and a capable linguist. He is therefore amply fitted to continue the progressive course of this pro- gressive periodical. We wish him and the old reliable magazine great suc- cess. L'Apicoltore has been pub- lished in Milan since its establish- ment in 1868. It gives more quota- tions from American bee magazines than any other publication in the world. Montfiie Street, in Grandpre, in the Argonne. The building on the right, with a roof on, was restored by the Americans and is now used as a work room for girls. The fourth or filth house on the left, was the home of a beekeeper, Mr. Urique, in 1913, when we visited there. Mention was made of him in A. B. J. for September, 1913. He was also a candle-maker. Tariff "The writer firmly believes that this country should have a tariff ot from 3 to 5 cents a pound on honey. American honey is at present con- fronted with foreign competition and in most cases this competing honey is of an inferior grade, produced in foreign countries where labor is cheap, and such competition is quite unfair to the beekeeping interests of America, where the best honey of the world is produced.


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