ALBERT R. MANN LIBRARY NEW YorK STATE COLLEGES OF AGRICULTURE AND HoME ECONOMICS AT CORNELL UNIVERSITY EVERETT FRANKLIN PHILLIPS BEEKEEPING LIBRARY =Price_10¢ Rocky Mountain Bee Plant (Cleome integrifolia) A Souvenir of the Denver Meeting ee of the . 2 2 ee ew ew eo Rational Bee-Reepers’ Assoctation vet alas ee 8 September 3=5, 1902 ..... 6 The L. A. Watkins Mdse. Co. Bee Supplies We handle the A. I. Root & Co.’s goods exclusively. They are the best there is made. SHIPPING CASES HIVES FOUNDATION and a complete line of tools and appliances of all kinds, We are headquarters for honey cans of all kinds and Sizes. Call and examine our stock and get prices before placing your orders. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR BEESWAX 1525-153) Wazee St. : : Denver, Colo. Something About the Bee Mndustry in Colorado :::: Gatbered . . and Worked Over by D. Wi. Working eae eee ee Warranted Pure W. Z. HUTCHINSON, Flint, Michigan. President National Bee-Keepers’ Association. Preface. VERY well-regulated Book needs a Preface. This par- ticular Preface is written to tell you that the Advertiser supplies the money to pay the Printer. If you feel like thanking anybody for it, please thank the Advertiser: he is a Gentleman and the Friend of the Busy Bee and the Busy Bee- master. If you don’t feel like thanking any one, take the advice of good old Izaak Walton and “be quiet and go a-angling”’---or talk it over with the undersigned. D. W. WORKING. ES Two Doctors. A. B. MASON, Toledo, Ohio. C. C. MILLER, Marengo, Illinois. Secretary National Bee-Keepers’ A Director of the National Association. Association. Two Men Who Worked for the Success of the Denver Meeting. PP —s-—DEMVER GEORGE W. YORK. Chicago, Illinois. Editor American Bee Journal. ERNEST R. ROOT, Medina, Ohio. Editor Gleanings in Bee Culture. Che Bee Industry in Colorado, Scraps of History. HE LONGMONT TIMES of October 4, 1892,-- Aa) Honey Day Edition,--contains more information con- cerning the growth and importance of the bee-keeping industry in Colorado than any other publication known to the Compiler of this Booklet. Connected with the occasion com- memorated by the Times there is a good deal which bee-keepers are now inclined to dignify by calling it history. Two short para- graphs from the Times of the date mentioned will serve very appro- priately to introduce the various subjects included in this Souvenir: “Neither a fair nor a festival, yet partak- ing of their characteristics and being something more than a combination of them, the meeting at Longmont on September 28th and 29th of the Colorado State Bee-Keepers’ Association was an event in the history of the bee industry in Colorado. “For months the officers and members of the Northern Colorado Bee-Keepers’ Association had been preparing to make the meeting pleas- ant and profitable for all who should attend, helpful to every owner of a hive of bees in Colorado and instructive to every one who should read the proceedings. Now, that the D. W. WORKING, Denver. meeting is past, and the task of telling what Secretary; Colorade Shite Beé- was done is undertaken, it is with much satis- Keepers’ Association. faction that the Times can say that it wasa success in a very large and liberal sense of the word. The hundreds that came to listen and to see could not but learn something; and the thousands who will read the proceedings and papers as given in the Times will be sure to learn much of Colorado’s honey industry, and will in turn tell others what they have learned.” Besides the proceedings of the Longmont meeting, the Times contained a number of special articles, several of which seem to be of more importance after ten years than they were thought to be at the time. Among these, the one of the greatest permanent value was written by Mr. Harry Knight, Secretary of the State Associ- First Bees in Colorado ation at the time and one of the most useful workers in building it up and making it a power in developing and protecting the industry which it represents. Mr. Knight’s article is here reproduced just as it was written a decade ago. SES Colorado Apiculture. By H. Knight. HE honey-bee is not a native of America. The first were brought here and landed in Boston in 1670. Since that time the little honey gatherer has traveled either by natural swarming or some enterprising bee-keeper has taken them, hive and all, into every state and territory in the Union. The first brought to Colorado was in 1862 by Isaac McBroom of Fort Logan, who hauled one colony across the plains by ox team. They did not increase any, but after one season died. In 1866 ex- Gov. A. C. Hunt brought a colony to Denver by wagon. These also died without increase, the second winter. Shortly after the railroad reached Denver in 1870 a car load of bees were brought here and sold to several that wanted to buy, at $25 per colony. From these the industry grew. The object of bringing them to Amer- Useful ica, and later to Colorado, was two- Bees fold. First, because of their healthful and delicious product, and second, the great benefits derived from their work in the fertilization of blossoms. The great naturalist, Darwin, truly says: “ The more bees the more flowers; the more flowers the more seeds; the more seeds the more flowers; the more flowers the more seeds.” If all the bees were taken out H, KNIGHT. : Aioemer Secretary of thé less fruit grown, because the honey-bees are State Association. the principal agents by which the pollen is carried from one flower to another and thus the bloom is fertilized and becomes seed-bearing. of the country, less seed would be raised and Before the introduction of alfalfa into Colorado, wild flowers Boney- furnished a scanty supply of nectar, and the bees were often short of Producing stores for winter, and spring would bloom forth to find but few bees Plants to kiss her flowers, they having died of starvation. With alfalfa came the red, white, alsike, and sweet clovers, until now, thousands upon thousands of acres of alfalfa, thousands of acres of red clover, and miles of ditches and streams are lined with sweet c over and many pastures and fields of white and alsike clovers are to be found. Of the indigenous plants, Cleome (Rocky Mountain bee plant, skunk weed) is the best, and it has increased rapidly since the advent of civilization, so that to-day the honey flow is considerably pro- longed in regions where it abounds. With these changes in the flora, the progress of the bee-keepers Bee- changed also. When wild flowers were the only dependence for Keeper's’ honey the apiarian asked for a wet season, as it was the best for Progress honey. Now he prays, if he has time, “Please give us a dry season with an abundance of irrigating water, and keep foul brood out of my apiary.”” Another season he will add, “and please kill all the grasshoppers.” Twelve years ago (1880) J. L. Peabody, E. Milleson and Mrs. State Olive Wright, met in Denver and formed the Colorado State Bee- Association Keepers’ Association. There were then but few bee-keepers and about 250 hives of bees in the State. Nine years ago the coming winter the writer had the pleasure of attending a meeting of the Association held in the county commissioners’ room, upstairs, corner Fifteenth and Lawrence streets, Denver. About ten persons were in attendance. In December, 1888, the Association was incorporated under the laws of the State. In 1890, the apiculturists of the western slope met in Mon- Other trose and organized the Associations Uncompahgre Valley Bee- Keepers’ Asosciation with J. T. Hartop as President. In 1891 two associations were born. First the Northern Colorado Bee-Keepers’ Associ- ation at Longmont, with R. F. Coffin, Presi- dent, D. L.Tracy, Secretary. This association ELISHA MILLESON, Denver. A former President of the State Association. Colonies in Colorado now has 73 members. In September of same year the Weld County Bee-Keepers’ Association was organized at Greeley, with D. S. Beal, President, H. E. English, Secretary. This association numbers 60 members, All of these associations are in a thriving condition, and ere another year rolls around as many more will be formed. This is a difficult problem, but after getting statistics from assessors, and county inspectors and from correspondence with bee- keepers, the number can safely be put at 64,000 colonies. Boulder County leads them all with 18,000 hives. Of these bees it can be said that fully four-fifths are in moveable frame hives. One-fourth are owned by specialists and another fourth by semi-specialists, and one-half are in the hands of farmers that only about half take care of them. The last named get only comb honey and average from nothing to thirty pounds per colony, and save about one-tenth of the increase. Those making a specialty of the business get from 50 to 150 pounds section honey or 75 to 200 pounds extracted in the average season. The past season (1892) is the poorest in the history of bee-keeping in the State, and the average yield will be very low. Placing the honey production at MRS. RACHEL A. RHODES, Boney sixty pounds per colony with the Fort Lupton. Produced specialist, thirty pounds with the Treasurer State Association. semi-specialist, and ten pounds by Beeswax the farmer bee-keeper, which I think a fair estimate, would make a honey crop of 1,760,000 pounds. The aver- age price of which has been about eleven cents per pound, making the honey crop worth $193,600 per year, 1892 not taken into con- sideration, as there is not one-fourth of a crop. The amount of wax saved by bee-keepers is very small as so many of them throw all scraps away; but nevertheless about fifteen hundred pounds is put onto the market each year in this State, the price of which is twenty-five cents, or $375 on the yearly crop. This amount could be greatly increased by the saving of all scrap- ings and scraps of wax. The amount of cash represented in the business each year is— 64,000 colonies bees at $5...-.-__-___-. $320,000 1,760,000 pounds honey at JJ cents- ---- 193,600 1,500 pounds beeswax at 25 cents-----.- 375 Necessary supplies each year-.....----. 48,000 Making a grand total of .-.....--- $561,975 This, you see, does not include wages paid to hired help, which is considerable, as many bee-keepers have so many bees that it becomes necessary to have assistants. The prospects are not flattering. Each year in the last five the honey crop has grown less than the crop of the previous year, and the price has dropped from eighteen cents per pound in 1877 to ten cents in 1891. Foul brood is here, which will kill off some bees, although I believe that it can and will be eradicated in a couple of years. Grasshoppers may be worse next year than they have been this, and we may have a law making it a misdemeanor to allow sweet clover to grow on our farms; but notwithstanding all these drawbacks I believe the business will increase and get more into the hands of the specialists, and that honey can, and will be produced for less money than it now is. Ee Later History. R. KNIGHT’S article brings the history of the bee- M keepers’ industry down to the fall of 1892. There has been growth during the years that followed---and some rather remarkable changes. For example, Boulder County, according to Mr. Knight’s estimate, had 18,000 colonies; in the fall of 1900 Mr. Frank Rauchfuss and the Compiler of this publication united in estimating the nnmber of bees in the State, and gave Boulder County credit for having 6,000 colonies, while Arapahoe was put at the head of the list with 7,000 colonies. In December, 1900, the writer of this prepared an article for the New Year’s edition of one of the Denver papers, setting forth ina popular way the status of the bee industry at the end of what was one of the most prosperous years for the bee-keepers of Colorado. It seems worth while to reprint that article here, with no change except the omission of a single unimportant paragraph. Gash Repre- sented Prospects Colorado's Honey-Producing Tndustry. By D. W. Working. HE honey-bee is not the smallest animal that works for fa) man, though it is the smallest which can be said to be truly domesticated and to work under direct personal management. It is the only domesticated insect. And what a wonderful worker the honey-bee is! The “‘honey-bee” is proverbial, and is useful in more ways than one---is more than a maker of the choicest of sweets. It is an old story that red clover seed could not be raised in Australia till bumble-bees were imported to aid in the fertilization of the blossoms. It is not so well tnderstood that in Colorado we could not raise alfalfa seed without the help of the honey-bee. And comparatively few of our fruit-growers realize =] the importance of the work of the bees in fer- tilizing their fruit blossoms. “Be sure,” writes M. B. Waite in the concluding paragraph of an article in the Year Book of the United States Department of Agriculture for 1898, “that there are sufficient bees in the neighbor- hood, or at least within two or three miles, to properly fertilize the blossoms. When possible, endeavor to favor the bees by selecting shel- tered situations for the orchard or by planting wind-breaks.”” And Mr. Waite was not writ- ing as a bee-keeper, but from the standpoint of the fruit-grower. So the reader is reminded-—-bluntly enough, it may seem---that the money value of the honey-bee to Colorado is not measured by the MISS SUSIE R. COOK, Littleton. market price of the honey and beeswax pro- duced. Every orchard is debtor to the honey- A Member of the Reception bee; every berry patch and flower garden Committee. owes him something. The alfalfa fields, with their purple blooms that yield the nectar for the best and sweetest and whitest honey, get as much as they give. Wherever he goes, the bee pays his way if given an honest bee’s fair chance. No loafer or shirk is he, but a worker of the workers. Though he gives due respect to his queen, he is no sycophant at the feet of royalty, A democrat of the democrats, he chooses his own queen, and he lives and works as if he believed the doctrines of industry, thrift, and equality which he preaches. The queen-mother of his social democracy must not contract the habits of indolence. She rules by her power of service, and when her power to serve is spent, she must give place to the young queen, chosen by the workers. The history of honey production in fragmentary. The loose ends have not been gathered up and tucked in as they might have been. The early bee-keepers were too intent on getting honey to write history. A year ago Frank Rauchfuss, Secretary of the Association, in a summary of the history of the industry in Colorado, stated that the first statistics of the business were gathered in 1885 by Secretary Shiff of the State Association. Shiff estimated that there were about 500 bee-keepers and 6,000 swarms of bees. “Two bee-keepers had 150 colonies each and reported a crop of five tons of honey for that season.” V+ | @ @ Apiary of F. H. Hunt, Edgewater, Jefferson County, In 1899 the Association had thirty-eight members, who owned 3,578 swarms of bees, yielding 130,000 pounds of comb honey. How many bees were owned by persons not members was not known. ‘The business was growing and prospering. "Secretary Rauchfuss estimated the number of bees in the State in 1897, putting the total at about 70,000 colonies. The yield of honey that year was twenty-six pounds per hive, and the total value of the honey was about $80,000. The Association then had forty-three members, From this time on the organization grew faster than the business it represents. In 1899 Mr. Rauchfuss was able to report 165 members in good standing, and now the membership roll includes about 290 names. The industry represented has grown in import- ance. The bee-keepers are learning the need of organization and proving the value of co-opera- tion. They save by buying together; they gain by selling together. They have established a FRANK RAUCHFUSS, Denver. system of grading that has given Colorado a aa Colorado Honey Producers’ honey an honorable name in the markets of ssociation; a Former Secretary of the State Association; Mem- Eastern cities, where the choicest of our pro- ber Executive Committee. ducts are consumed, Among American associations of bee- keepers the Colorado organization is one of the foremost. Among its members are some of the best known bee-keepers in the United States, as well as a number of the most competent writers for the bee journals. Colorado is famous for her alfalfa honey and her wide-awake honey producers, some of the most successful of whom are women. Most people like to read of big things. The business that is represented by millions appeals to them. They are interested in things in the mass---in carloads of needles and pins, in train loads of apples and strawberries. In speaking of the bee industry in Colorado we are not forbidden by the truth to use large figures. The bee is small, but his name is legion. An average swarm of bees weighs five pounds; but there are 25,000 of the little workers in the swarm. There are, approximately, 75,000 swarms or colonies in the State---nearly 2,000,000,000 of bees! To keep these myriads of tiny workers busy, two Denver firms distributed fifteen carloads of bee supplies---hives, sections, wax foundations, shipping cases, smokers, veils, gloves and a hundred other things known only to the men and women who are acquainted with bees. Twenty-five thousand dollars is the sum paid by the bee-keepers for these supplies. But the bees must be kept busy. And there seemed to be a rivalry during the year just ended, the bees keeping their owners on the run; their masters trying to give the bees a chance to do their utmost during the honey flow. The result was satisfactory. The 75,000 stands of bees in Colorado are scattered throughout the State substantially as follows: Arapahoe County ------ 7,000 Boulder County -__. ---- 6,000 Delta County -.._ .._-.. 5,000 Fremont County - ---.-- 3,000 Huerfano County. ------ 3,500 Jefferson County -----.-- 5,500 Larimer County.-_----- 5,000 Logan County ----. -.-- 1,000 Montrose County - -----. 5,000 Mesa County --.-_.---- 6,500 Morgan County-.--. ---. 1,500 Otero County... ------ 6,000 Prowers County -.------- 3,000 Weld County -------.-- 6,000 Other counties... -_. ----33,000 These estimates will seem low to many well-informed bee-keepers of the counties named, But the figures may stand. They eo eeu seen furnish a basis for other estimates. Editor Rocky Mountain At the recent annual meeting of the State Bee Journal. Bee-Keepers’ Association a member who suc- cessfully handles a large apiary estimated the value of every good swarm of bees, including hive and one super, at $5.50. But there are swarms that are not good. Call the average swarm worth $4.00 and we have $300,000 as the value of the bees in Colorado. Add the cost of buildings, tools and appliances, and the total investment represented by the bee industry will amount to fully $500,000. This does not include the value of ‘‘bee pasture.” The value of the honey produced in the State is not easily esti- mated. Most of the 2,000 bee-keepers in the State are not members of the State organization. A large share of them have only a few stands and use the entire product at home. Many of them follow primitive methods, and sell only broken honey. Manifestly it is impossible to “get at” the average product per hive. Numerous examples could be given of single hives that produced 200 pounds of comb honey during the season; large apiaries could be named from which honey was sold by the ton at the rate of 100 or more pounds per colony. Many small apiaries have done as well. Unfortunately conditions were not favorable in all parts of the State, and all bee-keepers are not equally skillful in handling bees. It is a low estimate to put the average production of surplus honey at 20 pounds per colony, or a total of 1,500,000 pounds for the State. For home use and for sale this honey was worth about 10 cents a pound, or $150,000. The value of the natural increase by swarming is not far from $50,000. SES Some Later Figures. F THE EDITOR thought it necessary to apologize for anything in the foregoing article,* it might be for the item “other counties” in the table and for the lack of accuracy in the use of a few words that have particular meanings to bee-keepers. But it is not worth while to apologize; though it may be worth while to remark in passing that the Working who wrote the foregoing article was an amateur ; bee-keeper, while the Working who writes this é is also an amateur, but not quite so amateurish. The estimates given above were for the end of the year 1900. They may be called fairly intelligent guesses. In comparing them with the eitimates of the Census, which follow, it will be well to keep in mind the fact that the Census estimate of the number of colonies was for the first of June, 1900, and to remember *The article referred to was in the printer’s hands before the paragraphs under the heading, Some Later Figures were written and before the Census bulletin was examined, LEVI BOOTH, Denver. Whose Wife is the Bee-~Keeper. that the increase in the number of colonies by swarming was excep- tionally great during that year; also that several car loads of bees were shipped into the State. A Census bulletin on Colorado agricul- ture, dated June 2, 1902, gives the following paragraph under the heading Honey and Wax: “In 1900, 4,518 farmers reported, in the aggregate, 59,756 swarms of bees. They obtained, in 1899, 1,732,630 pounds of honey and 24,930 pounds of wax, the gains in the last decade being 87.4 per cent in the former item, and more than twofold in the latter. The leading counties in 1900, as in 1890, were Jefferson, Arapahoe, Montrose,- Delta, Lari- mer and Weld.” It might be well to add that the bulletin referred to does not give details, either by counties or otherwise, and that it estimates the value of the 59,756 swarms of bees at $195,096, an average of $3.26 per colony. During the spring of 1902 many colonies changed hands at $6.00 per colony, and some at even higher prices. At the present time prices are much lower, and doubtless will remain low until next spring. Since the figures of the Census were collected there has been a large increase in the number of bees in Colorado, and there are reasons for believing that at the present time (August J, 902) there are nearly eighty-five thousand colonies‘in the State. This, of course, is a guess, but not an entirely unintelligent guess. It will have been noticed that the number of bee-keepers given by the Census bulletin is largely in excess of any local estimate; and it would seem that the Census figures in regard to the number of persons owning bees ought to be substantially accurate, The following approximate estimate of the number of colonies in the State is given on the authority of Mr. Frank Rauchfuss, his figures being prepared independently of those above given and after the foregoing paragraphs were written: MRS. BOOTH, Denver. Arapahoe (Gounty 5 <<..e-) ccasieceeceee 8,000 Bent Cognty--2.4schiecccuceedseeenses 2,000 Boulder County --..-. -----------. ------ 8,000 Chaffee: County a.--2+ s2sces ceeds scedte 200 Delta Gounty: 2222..eec ssc eee eeece 4,000 Douglas ‘County- 2.2. : 222 ecc2e0annse-se 300 Elbert: County 222: sees se ss aren vex eee 200 E! Paso County.--.. ------------------ 800 Fremont County -.----. ------ ---------- 2,000 Garfield County ..----.----------- ----- 5,200 Huerfano County- .__.-. ------ ---------- 2,000 Jefferson County .----. -.-------- -------- 8,000 La Plata County - ..---.----...--.------ 4,000 Larimer County -----.-.---- sg Shamees 6,000 Las Animas County .--.-----. ----- .--- 1,500 Logan County --_-_..-----.-----. ------ 2,500 Mesa County -----.---------- _...---- 5,000 Montezuma County ...----.-----.------ 2,500 Montrose County-.----- ---------------- 5,000 Morgan County --.--.-----. ----..------ 3,000 Otero County-----_---.-----. ---.------ 7,000 Pitkin: County: 2-2-ces sees a censte 300 Pueblo: Countyssce. = esis cece se cseeonece 1,500 Rio Grande County. -------------------- 300 Weld County ---_.. .--.------.----.---. 6,000 Apiary of Gill and Francis, Boulder County. A Talk with a Pioneer. N MR. KNIGHT’S SKETCH it is stated that Mr. J. L. Peabody was one of the three organizers of the State Bee-Keepets’ Association. Mrs. Wright, one of the three, has passed away. The other two, Mr. Peabody and Mr. Elisha Milleson, live in Denver, the latter still a bee-keeper, the former out of the business, but interested, nevertheless, in the bees and those who care for them. Mr. Peabody, like other early bee-keepers, has a fund of interesting reminiscences of the early days; and as he has the name of being the first President of the State Association, it is worth while to know something of his experi- ence. He came to Colorado in 1873, he says, “to get away from bees, for a time, at least, on account of his health.” But the bees followed him and he could not be contented without a few at least, if only for pleasure and to have an opportunity to make experiments. Not before 1881 did he give much attention to increase and honey-production, having the year before sold all his bees but two colonies. In 1881, with his two colonies to start with, Mr. Peabody secured 400 pounds of J. L. PEABODY, Denver, honey, mostly extracted, and increased his The First President. apiary to fourteen colonies. The extracted honey sold at twenty cents a pound and the comb at twenty-five, the total income from this source being about $90. Six swarms of bees were sold for $60. Valuing the other six new swarms at the same rate, Mr. Peabody figures that his income from the two colonies was a little better than $200. The increase was all artificial, and the queens were bought at seventy-five cents each. The honey was nearly all from the Rocky Mountain bee plant, Cleome. Of course a yield of 200 pounds of honey per colony is extra- ordinary, especially when the bees are increasing so rapidly. But Mr. Peabody says that the season of 1881 was “fa great year for the bloom all over the city,” though he admits that it may not have been better in that respect than some other particularly favorable years. His explanation of the large yield is as follows: “It was a moist season, with little rains every few days, which made the honey thin, so the bees could fill themselves very quickly. They could work most of the day which they can not do in this climate when it is so extremely dry, as the honey in the flowers seems to get thick during the middle of the day.” From 188) to 1884 Mr. Peabody was in the supply business, as well as keeping bees and dealing in honey and queens. He handled Root’s goods for the most part, but manufactured all the hives he sold. sets i ese wes SSS JAMES U. HARRIS, M. A. GILL, Grand Junction. Longmont. President State Bee-Keepers’ Vice-President State Bee-Keepers’ Association. Association. SES Bees in Boulder Qounty. R. J. B. ADAMS, of Longmont, is the authority for the following facts about the bee industry in Boulder County: “The pioneer bee-keeper of Boulder County was David J. Lykins. Mr. Lykins, who came to Colorado in 1859, began his work with bees some time in the sixties, after receiving from an uncle in Missouri two colonies in rough box hives. Like other pioneers he had many interesting and exciting experiences with Indians and became familiar with the men and events that made the early days so full of what has come to be of so much interest at the present day. “Like many others, Mr. Lykins, whose home was and is in Little Thompson Canon, neglected his bees, and the increase for many years went to the trees in the mountains where are to be found the only full blood black bees in this county. After Mr. Lykins was married his wife took charge of the bees, and bought twenty-five colonies of Italians from Mrs. Baker of Upper St. Vrain, paying eight dollars a colony for them. She sold honey to the amount of $175 the first year, 1885. She had a swarm come off on September 9th and afterwards make honey enough to winter on. “Dr. King of Boulder and Mr. Barten and W. S. Flory of Hygiene were among the first to handle bees according to scientific principles, Mr. Flory shipped four colonies direct from Italy. Others bought Italian queens from breeders in the East. From these nearly all the bees in this country have become Italianized.” A Corner of one of W. B. Hopper’s Apiaries, Otero County. F, H. C. KRUEGER, Brighton. B. Ww. HOPPER. La Junta Bee Inspector, Arapohoe County. Bee Inspector, Otero County Apiary of the Sterling Bee Company. Harry McCombs, Apiarist. Jefferson County. SIIHIE Rev. R. H. Rhodes, now of Fort Lupton, gives the i] following interesting account of the beginning of the bee industry in Jefferson County: “The first colony of bees of which we have any authentic knowledge was brought to the county in 1864. “F, J. McQuiston of Ralston Crossing (post office address, Golden, Jefferson County) bought a colony of bees in a log gum, on Coon Creek, Iowa, and paid the sum of four dollars for it, and then placed it with his household goods upon an ox wagon, in the fall of 1863, and migrated with others across the plains, arriving in Denver the first day of January, 1864, safe and sound. From Denver he moved with his effects to his present home, where he unloaded his household goods including his bees. “During the time he kept the bees he was twice or thrice offered the sum of $100 for his one colony. And for the first honey that was taken from the hive to Central City he received one dollar a pound for all that he had, and Mr. McQuiston says that if he had known how to keep bees in modern style he could have made a fortune with them.” APP -S—DENVER HARRY McCOMBS, Sterling. J. S. BRUCE, Montrose. RA ae tt he beta NO 2 HONEY. Grading Rules OF THE Colorado State Bee-Keepers’ Association. COMB HONEY RULES. ECTIONS to be well filled and capped, honey white or slightly amber, comb white and not projecting beyond the wood, wood to be well cleaned; cases of separatored honey to average 21 pounds net per case of 24 sections, with a minimum weight of not less than 20 pounds for any single case; cases of half-separatored honey to average not less than 2334 pounds net per case of 24 sections, with a minimum weight of 2034 pounds for any single case; cases of unseparatored honey to average not less than 2212 pounds net per case of 24 sections, with a minimum weight of 2114 pounds for any single case. Includes all amber honey of a pronounced tinge, and all white and amber honey not included in No. J; to be fairly well sealed, uncapped cells not to exceed fifty in number exclusive of the out- side row, wood to be well cleaned; cases of separatored honey to average not less than J8 pounds net per case of 24 sections; cases of half-separatored honey to average not less than 19 pounds net per case of 24 sections; cases of unseparatored honey to average not ies than 20 pounds net per case of 24 sections. & Extracted honey shall be classified as white and amber, shall weigh twelve pounds per gallon, shall be perfectly free from particles of wax, and shall always be marketed in new cans, All rendered honey, whether obtained by solar heat or otherwise, shall be classed as strained honey and not as extracted. It is recommended to sell all cull honey around home as much as possible; to grade only in daylight, near a window; to use the standard 41{x414x1% inch section and the 24-pound double-tier shipping-case, in order to have uniformity in loading cars; to stamp all cases of No. J honey with the owner’s name above the hand- holes; to mark all cases of No. 2 honey with two dashes in the handholes at each end of the case, and with no other marks what- soever; to use no second-hand cases for No. } and No. 2 honey; to pack all sections with paper below and above, and in double-tier cases to put a sheet of paper between the tiers; to store comb honey ina warm, dry place, protected from flies and dust; and to haul carefully, well protected from dust and rain. No. 1 No. 2 Extracted Roney Rules Recom- mendations PART OF THE COLORADO STATE BEE-KEEPERS’ ASSOCIATION, AS PHOT( IED BY W. Z. HUTCHINSON, ON THE CAPITOL STEPS, NOVEMBER, 1901. PROP. C.. 'P.. GILLETTE, State Agriculture College, Fort Collins, Colorado An authority on long-tongued bees. Bee-Keeping in Delta Qounty. By Frank H. Drexel. F THE COUNTIES on Colorado’s western slope none offer to bee-keepers greater inducements in the way of honey resources, climatic conditions, and congenial environments than does Delta County. ’Twould be putting it rather too strong, however, to say that this is the bee man’s paradise, or to endorse what appeared only recently in Gleanings in Bee Culture regarding this county; but we have, undoubtedly, a fine country here with prospects most promising. Bee-keeping in Delta County had its birth shortly after Uncle Sam’s regulars cleared out the Indians. Some of the first settlers Apiary of Frank H. Drexel, Crawford, Delta County. found bees in trees and in caves; and it may be worthy of mention that these bees were not the common black ones, but;were in fact nicely marked. Indeed, a colony of black bees is a rare thingjhere even now, although very little has been done by anyone to import fresh blood. It was in 1883 that Mr. W. D. Brown of Delta shipped in about twenty colonies of bees in frame hives. He retained part of these for his own use and sold the balance to his neighbors at twenty-five dollars per colony, thereby setting Delta County’s agricultural ball a-rolling. A start in bees was expensive in those days, and it was likewise expensive to run them in an up-to-date way; for hives, sections, shipping cases, and in fact everything was high in price and diffi- cult to obtain. So it transpired that notwithstanding bees increased very rapidly and honey sold for twenty-five cents per pound in the local market, bee-keeping as a business made but little headway. By this time (1893) bees were in the possession of nearly every ranch- man, but declining prices in honey and the panicky times brought to an untimely end many high hopes. Only a few of our pioneers—-Miss Rose Kennicott, Mr. Geo. T. Conklin, and Mr. Geo. Fogg---kept on producing honey for market in a large way, honey then being worth only seven to eight cents per pound. This marked the ebb tide in the bee industry of our county. It was at this stage that the writer, having come to this country from Baltimore in 1892 at the age of twenty-three years, for his health, entered the field of apiculture. To find an out-door occu- pation, not requiring very heavy work and yielding fairly good teturns for money invested and labor performed, was the object sought. Two bee papers, a text book, fifty colonies of bees in box Apiary of Coggshall & Weeks, Delta. Delta County. hives, some lumber, and a beginner’s outfit formed the stock on hand. Interest in the work ahead, determination to stay with the business and the most powerful incentive in the world to back up the enterprise was to compensate for the total lack of learning or experience in bee matters. Eight years of service in a large hard- ware house under a tireless and exacting employer had not, I soon found, been for naught. Business is business---be it hardware or bees or profession or anything else. Eight years of bee-keeping has not brought all the success dreamed of in the start, but it has brought health, has made possible the estabiishment of a home and a nice, clean business; the fifty colonies in one yard have grown to some Apiary of R. T. Stinnett, Delta, Delta County. four hundred, in four yards; and there is no doubt that in more competent hands the results would have been much better in many ways. All things considered, I have never felt the least regret in making Delta County my home or bee-keeping my business, The foregoing was written, not so much with any idea of mak- ing known my small accomplishments, as to more forcibly impress the reader with the fact that this ts a honey-producing country; for it must be admitted that not in every country can a man start in the bee business as a specialty without any knowledge of the work before him and make it pay. Some time around the year 1898 a bee-keeper and his wife from near Denver came into this county and purchased several hundred colonies of bees. Being practical bee-keepers with plenty of hustle, they made the business pay from the start. Each year the number of their colonies and the size of their honey crops increased and suc- cess to them came quick and sure. But, mind you, it took work. Partly through their instrumentality a better grade of supplies at closer figures than before were handled by Delta supply houses. With an increased output of fine honey, fine fruit, fine cattle, and what not, Eastern buyers were attracted to our market, the price of honey ruled higher and higher, so that in 1903 the bee industry of Delta County was thoroughly alive and awake to its possibilities. The beginning of the present year witnessed several large deals in bees as well as the building of a new line of railroad through the county---a line which will put Delta County many hours nearer to Denver. Mr. W. L. Coggshall and Mr. C. H. Weeks, both of New York, became the owners of one thousand colonies of bees located in nine yards in a very fine portion of the county. These yards are under the management of Mr. Weeks, an enterprising young man who has been in the West long enough to know Western requirements. Given a county such as Delta County, and a man with grit such as Mr. Weeks no doubt possesses, and there can be little question as to the result of the enterprise. Simultaneously with Messrs. Coggeshall and Weeks came Mr. R. T’. Stinnett, who purchased avery fine hay and fruit ranch together with 160 colonies of bees. Mr. Stinnett, while thoroughly practical, having served under such men as W. L. Coggshall of West Groton, N. Y., and N. C, Alford of Fort Collins, Colorado, and having kept bees on shares and for himself in New Mexico, where he had 1,150 in his care, R. T. STINNETT, Delta. is also qualified to “tackle” the scientific side of apiculture. At the College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts of New Mexico, from which he graduated in 1897, he pursued a scientific course and made a thorough microscopical study of the anatomy of the bee. He now considers himself per- manently located in what he thinks is the finest State, for a home, in the Union. Having lived in Virginia, where he was born in 1874, in New York, in New Mexico, and in Colorado, his opinion in the matter should deserve recognition. : Several other ventures in bees have been made, but space will not admit of making further mention of them than that they are indications of a healthy growth, auguring well for the future. These men are all intelligent, wide-awake pushers. It has been my privi- lege as bee inspector for the county to meet them, to see their yards and get their views; and I am sure that any one coming to our part of the State will find them as ready to extend the right hand of fellowship, if rightly and intelligently approached, as he will find them resolute in standing up for their proper rights, Our county is not a large one, but the greater portion of it I think is under cultivation. Each year sees improvements in irriga- tion which admit of an increase in tillable land. Fruit and alfalfa hay are our main products. We have no infallible crops. We have no boom. We do not produce twenty-five cars of honey per season ---only about three. We haven’t abundance of room for squatters--- locations must be bought---or at least old apiaries must be. We have no room for idlers---we want pushers. Neither have we any foul brood---not one case has been found. But we have a glorious climate, and we have beautiful scenery. We have good schools and churches. We havea rich county any way you wish to look at it. TWO LARIMER COUNTY BEE-MASTERS. A. E. MILLER, Timnath. Ww. C. EVANS, Fort Collins. Bee-Keeping in Larimer County. By R. C. Aikin. ARIMER COUNTY does not stand at the head asa honey-producer, though it is by no means at the foot of the list. The annual output of Boulder County exceeds that of this, having a little better natural conditions of soil and flora, and a better development of the industry. However, Larimer puts out at present about from three to six car loads as an annual product in fair seasons. The main source of nectar is alfalfa; second, sweet clover, and third, cleome or Rocky Mountain bee plant. The latter thrives best in a somewhat sandy soil, and as we have much clay, cleome does not abound as in some other parts of the State. Alfalfa begins yield- ing nectar about June 15th, and continues until mown for hay, generally closing about July Ist to 10th. Cleome and sweet clover begin the last of July and usually close about August 15th to 20th. The writer is not able to say when the first bees were brought into the county or who brought them in, but possibly among the first to keep bees and produce extensively were Mr. Will Amos and Mr. N. C. Alford of Fort Collins. In 1889 the first car load was shipped ina tieenanice a EERE PER: out of the county from Fort Collins, Mr. President State: Association Alford producing eight tons of the amount. from 1893 to 1901. This honey was bought by the G. G. Liebhardt Commission Co. of Denver. That year was one of the best, probably the best, of any in the history of the county. Not only was the yield large, but the price was well up, making the business so flattering that many others were led to go into the busi- ness more or less, and a boom was the result, only to go flat again within the next three years. However, it was with the bee and honey industry as with other lines: some went into the business in a more conservative way and to make of it a permanent business, and, as above stated, our annual product is now several car loads. This write up is in no sense a R. C. AIKIN, Loveland. boom, but simply more in the nature of an advertisement of the business as it exists in this territory. To boom the industry here would be a sin against those now engaged in the pursuit, and a wrong to any prospective locators. The field is being systematically occupied by apiarists distributing their stock to the best advantage and to best utilize the pasture. The year of 1889 has not been equaled since in either yield or prices, and possibly will not be again in many years. There is no doubt a fair income to be made from the business, but it will require a careful and judicious management and strict business principles. A. ELLIOTT, Timnath. Looking for a Queen. APP =6-BEN Vir HARRY CRAWFORD, Broomfield. A. ELLIOTT, Timnath. Apiary of W. C. Evans, Fort Collins. Our county at present contains several practical apiarists, among whom we might mention at Fort Collins, Walter Hawley, Wil! Lind- enmier, W. C. Evans, and others; at Timnath, E. A. Miller and A. Elliott; at Loveland, E. S. Allen and Sons and R. C. Aikin. In the Berthoud district we have Mr. A. C. Van Galder, S. C. Rising, L. P. Milburn, Mrs. Lovejoy, W. Hickox, and others. OF fate years there is getting to be a more close and careful farming, and a custom of cutting the alfalfa before it blooms, which largely decreases the average yield per colony. We do not dare to overlook two facts---this early cutting of the principal nectar plant and the large increase of bees to pasture upon the bloom. The spread of sweet clover, blooming in July and August, in a measure supplements the early cutting of alfalfa, and at the same time some- what complicates the management necessary to success. The writer does not anticipate any decrease in the annual output from this county, but thinks it will be very materially increased; but it will be done by carefully utilizing all pasturage, and an intelligent-and scientific management. In the early days when alfalfa was allowed Agricultural College Apiary, Fort Collins. In Walnut Grove. to bloom freely and there were only hundreds of colonies where now there are thousands to feed on the bloom, some astonishing yields were obtained. But conditions have changed. I go back in memory to the early days in lowa when 75 and 100 bushels of corn were harvested from the rich virgin soil without much effort; but now it requires the most careful cultivation, rotating, and manuring to pro- duce half the former yields. I take it that this fairly represents the bee industry in this and very many localities throughout our State. Industry and intelligence will maintain our pursuit and cause it to prosper, and Larimer County will continue to put out a honey pro- duct not to be discounted by any. Apiary of E. A. Miller, Timnath. iS A LAST WORD, I must acknowledge my obligations to all who have helped to make it possible to print this little book. It is not possible to mention all of my helpers. Two names, however, deserve to stand out conspicuously. Mr, Frank H. Drexel of Crawford, Delta County, and Mr. Walter Hawley of Fort Collins, Larimer County, did especially valuable work, Besides these, Mr. Frank Rauchfuss and Mr. R. C. Aikin have’ earned particular thanks. Then there are the advertisers: I am proud of every one of them. Of course the Souvenir is not as handsome or as valuable as I originally hoped to make it; but I think it is worth keeping. D. W. WORKING. F. H. C. Krueger Examining one of his Colonies. Established 1876 Sk oH & CO. 189 So. Water St. References Correspond First National Bank with ae price eae Chicago Cc Ho I CA samples of and Mercantile extracted honey Agencies Commission Merchants and Wholesale Dealers in COMB and BXTRACTED HONBY and BEESWAX THE RAUCHFUSS SECTION PRESS and FOUNDATION FASTENER If you produce Comb Honey you need one of these machines. Folds any width of the 4 1-4 x 4 1-4 see- tion and fastens the foundation at one operation. Capacity 1,000 to 3,000 sections per day. Used and endorsed by all the large comb honey producers of Colorado. A wonderful TIME AND LABOR SAVER. * Send for circulars and testimonials. FOR SALE BY G. B. Lewis Co., Watertown, Wis. W.T. Falconer Mfg. Co., Jamestown, N. Y. Chas. Dadant & Son, Hamilton, Ill. Rob’t Halley, Montrose, Colo. Delta Fruit & Pred. Co., Delta, Colo. Barteldes & Co., 1521 15th St., Denver, Colo. L, A. Watkins M’d’se Vo , Denver, Colo. The Colorado Honey Producers Ass’n, 1440 Market St., Denver, Colo. Rauchfuss Bros., Sole Manufacturers and Patentees, 1440 Market St., DENVER, COLORADO. $°.25 Acre . . . Land Near Denver Ten pet cent. down and 10 per cent. each year and pay in full before maturity if you want to. A discount of 10 per cent. for cash from the price list. Do you happen to know of an easier way to acquire valuable land holdings? Every acre of it under warranty deed. If you do---tell us ---we want some---if you don’t---tell us---we want you to have some of ours. For further particulars call on or address Or Cc. E. WANTLAND, B. A. McALLASTER, Special Agent, 1025 17th Street, Omaha, Neb. DENVER, COLO. SHE SRE SHE SRE SH SRS SHS HE SRE SR SAS RE ARE Af See aR ake ale He ak ae ate ae ae Ske ake ape aft a ake ate ate ae ae ake lle st He COLLEGE OF MUSIC «+es.- UNIVERSITY OF DENVER ...... A Great School of Music in Denver. All Branches Taught by Specialists. Every Facility Offered for the Stu- dent’s Benefit... ........... 571 Students Attended Last Year. Call or Send for Free Catalogue... . = Address....S. H. BLAKESLEE, Dean * J4thand Arapahoe Streets, Denver, Colorado HR ace e eee cae ate ok oat ae aes ae eae ae te i ot ooo ae ae ae te ko ota ae ae eae ate a at oe ae ae nee Jeanie ie ste she ote ba IF YOU WANT A PIANO that isa joy forever ...... buya .. Bush & Gerts.. on $2 per week payments 6 RRR ete Ste he ARO Ms Ys sel Gehan Columbine Music Co. 920 and 924 Fifteenth Street Charles Building ..... Denver, Colorado ate aw Me ae Ww be ete 4 zt We Give Free Music Lessons with xe ates ae aealeake skates ease a aesteakseaie sfeaieakee ak se eae eat se aieak Every Piano Purchased.....-+- 4 # wwe ag al) | aE Ma Me Nie Me MA sale q me y 3 Ss Colorado : | Algricultural) | | College : Ante wt wie ste ate wt = & a METHOD-—Industrial, Technical, Practical ? : PRODUCT—A Useful Citizen : : : x Two Sus-FRESHMAN YEARS LEADS TO ALL COURSES a . : 7) ~ ts c 1. AGRICULTURE a 7 (4 Years) & 2 2. CIVIL ENGINEERING %& a (4 Years) 2 ed 3. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING os { (4 Years) a 3 4, DOMESTIC SCIENCE % a (4 Years) ‘ cy 5, VETERINARY SCIENCE = x (4 Years) & = 6. ARCHITECTURE & < (4 Years) is 4 7, MILITARY SCIENCE = + (4 Years) & 3 8 COMMERCIAL COURSE Ke ei (4 Years) ie a7 ne For Catalogue, Address wi ~ 3 BARTON O. AYLESWORTH, President % 3 Fort Collins, Colorado % # K + For Bulletins, Address & 3 L. G. CARPENTER, Director Experiment Station cs a! y = < FAS RASS ARS RS AS SE ES SS RIE Announcement NEW AND UP-TO-DATE eee MANAGEMENT OLD RELIABLE - American watt ea PRE CITED | | House F a 3 a SHEA & eee FORSTER waa = Proprietors Headquarters for the DENVER Bee-Keepers’ Association RATES, $2.00 PER DAY, equal to any $3.00 per day house PCececejececejec@c@ 0c ee 8 0. e eee ece -ecececececececececececececec' ececececececececececec@jejejejejecececjec e0ec ecececejecejececece” 0: 0:0: 0: ecececececececec'g? 980000000000000000 2000000808080808 20 300000500810 50 200 @20 018080030 0050085000 10505020 20% 8 e & 8 ° 8 td 8 s * s ; 8 8 & 2 ' id : : : : : : : : ; % WE HANDLE EVERYTHING USED IN OR ABOUT THE : Creamery, Cheese © Factory or Farm Dairy State Agents for De Laval Cream Separators Separators sold on easy payments 2935S Seec = =. Write us for catalogue of up-to-date dairy appliances {=—= LITTLETON CREAMERY COMPANY (801-1809 Market St. : : DENVER, COLORADO 10000 OC OCA 0000OC 010 @08CO08DEC OC BCOC O0eCe eCececececece: ec ec ecececececec ecececejejececjed), Seececece ecececececececece: @cecec ecece: ede cece ecececececececece-e-e 2 es Si BA FZINDEINPLINSPEBRIDZIS ZS PLUS VZINTWZIN VIIA ZISAVZIN OSSD LES VEINIV ENON OIRO IN VINES WEI Bee-Keepers, Please Potice ESAT We Have Five Large Agencies in Colorado Colorado Honey Producers’ Ass’n, 1440 Market St., Denver, Colo. Colorado Honey Producers’ Ass’n, Loveland, Colo., R. C. Aikin, Mgr. Grand Junction Fruit Growers Ass’n, Grand Junction, Colo. Pierce Seed and Produce Co., Pueblo, Colo. Robert Halley, Montrose, Colo. Lewis’ White Polished Wisconsin Basswood Sections are perfect, our Hives and other Supplies the finest Ah in the market. Write above agencies for prices. i (7 A SUGGESTION. Do not put your money into NEW- FANGLED bee-hives, but buy a simple, serviceable, and well-made hive such as the regular Dovetailed Hive, arranged for beeway sections. Honey-producers in Colorado, one of the largest honey-producing sections in the world, use this style. CARAS CARCAB ARSE I OS IRSA SOAS SIE DOSS PSPS SIS Fifteen Large Carloads of Our Goods Sold in Colorado the past season G. B. Lewis Company WATERTOWN, WISCONSIN, U.S.A. ARISE ARS. ISTE ARS IS SAS Whale tral NaI IY aI aI, IG oN, LIE IY IY SY IY YL Ne net Ne Dittmer’s FY Foundation Retail Wholesale Fobbing ) r)) a This foundation is made by an original process, that absolutely removes every particle of dirt and foreign substance from the wax and produces a founda- tion that has the rich, clean, light yellow color and sweet odor natural to the finest pure wax. It has a thin, clear, and transparent base, and is the finest look- ing foundation produced. Having a very thin base, it has more sheets to the pound than any other make. It is used exclusively by the largest honey pro- ducers in the United States. It is tough and will not sag, and has established, on its own merits, the reputation of being the best and most desirable in all respects. ibs khtth sth Sth b Nh di bslel Gl AGh ibe ine eM eNgL SEL NL SEL SE EL te My process and Automatic Machines are my own inventions; which enable me to sell foundation and worK wax INTO FOUNDATION FOR CASH at prices that are the lowest. Beeswax wanted. MeN NL NL SUL NN NYL NL NL NYT NL NT NYE ST ML DT 1 NT MY fT Catalogue, giving Futt Line or Suppuigs, with prices and samples, free on application. Co SED SE NLL SELL YL YL NL NL YL NL, Skbs Gus. Dittmer, Hugusta, Wis. ERR th, SR Sth Sth th et Ee AE RY Sado SL NL Sele Selb io Che American Bee Journal EVERY BEE-KEEPER SHOULD READ IT It will contain the great Denver convention pro- ceedings in full: 2:22: ihe dtd In order to become a progressive apiarist, and at the same time realize the most money from your bees, you can not afford to be without a good bee-paper. THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL, established in 1861, is a 16-page WEEKLY, well illustrated, and fully up-to-date in every thing pertaining to bee-culture, ITS DEPARTMENTS. Contributed Articles.—Discussions of Important Topics and Bee-keep- ing Experiences—by experts. Convention Proceedings.—Just what this implies. Questions and Answers.—In charge of Dr. C. C. Miller, a bee-keeper of 40 years’ experience, who answers all questions. Invaluable to beginners in bee-keeping. Editorial Comments.—Just what this indicates. The Weekly Budget.—Being mainly personal items and miscellaneous notes. Beedom Boiled Down.—Cream of bee-literature. The Afterthought.—This is in charge of Mr. E. E. Hasty, who reviews what has appeared in recent numbers of THE AMERICAN BEE JOURNAL, pointing out any errors and commending the good things. General Items.—Being filled with short experiences and reports of the honey-crop, condition of bees, etc. Price of the Bre JOURNAL, one year, $1.00. A sample copy free on appli- cation. For $1.75 we will send the Bez JouRNAL a year and a copy of Professor (ook’s ‘‘Bee-keeper’s Guide, or Manual of the Apiary.” (Pro- fessor Cook’s book alone is mailed for $1.20.) ADAG LN, MSP NLD AY NL AYLI YL TL SST NL RL re Be yy Headquarters for Root’s Bee-Keepers’ Supplies—Catalogue Free ADDRESS—— GEORGE W. YORK & CO. “144-146 Erie St. : : : CHICAGO, ILL. SA DYLAN POL IL RL NL tbc NIMs Nie nit nto whe st whe wt te nt te wt wt wt te nt wt She te ste te what NM OMAN ste Nie whe te whe ste whe Nt te wt nt Nt Nn nt NE nt nt nt nt ate nt nt wt nt wt ste wt te Nie whe wt te tt GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE A 44-page illustrated Magazine on Bees. Semi-monthly, $1.00 per year. This year’s volume contains a special series of articles by the Editor, telling of his recent 6,000-mile trip through the West, par- ticularly in the Rockies, These articles are profusely illustrated. Besides these there are special write-ups by John H. Martin (Rambler), who has moved to Cuba. Bee-keeping in Colorado will be given special prominence during the next two months. Price, three months’ trial subscription, J5 cents; six months, 25 cents. ee el: Root’s A B C of Bee Culture 85Tra THOUSAND The new edition of this work, containing over 500 pages, will be ready about January J. Price, in cloth, $1.20; or clubbed with Gleanings for $1.75. Root’s Hives, Root’s Extractors, Root’s Sections, Root’s Shipping- Cases, have won a name for themselves. Have you seen them? Samples can be obtained from the L. A.Watkins Mdse. Co., Denver, Colorado. The A. I. Root Co. MEDINA ¢ 24 ¢? ¢ OHIO FRSA RA AS OAS AR RAR RAR RAS RAS RAS AR FIRS ISIS ISR FIRS AR IR GRR IR TS IR IR IR IR RRR RIN AR RRR OR OR IR IR RR ROE OR OK ~ SH SHAPE SHER SUE Ie ESR Se ah ae FE SESE Sie HE TR HE What the Review of Reviews is to general literature, the | BEE-KEEPERS’ REVIEW is to bee journalism. While each issue contains a few of the best original articles that it is possible to procure, its special feature is that of reviewing current apicultural literature. Errors and fallacious ideas are faithfully, but courteously and kindly pointed out, while nothing of value is allowed to pass unnoticed. Few articles are copied entire. instead, the ideas are extracted, given in the fewest words possible, and com- mented upon when thought advisable. Particular attention is paid to the unsolved problems of advanced apiculture. It is pre-eminently the journal for the specialist. 3h ae te The Rrevimw is very neat typographically, being printed on ah heavy, extra machine finished, white book paper, while the xe ae cover is heavy, enameled, court gray, printed in three colors. He ae The Review is published monthly, has 36 pages, and the price a ae is $1.00 a year. Jf you prefer to see copies before subscribing, * te send ten cents for three late but ditferent issues, and the ten ae ae cents may apply on any subscription sent in within a year. 2 —— —— ————_—_— a W. Z. Hutchinson, Flint, sina : Pi eat ate ate sl ate ote ste ote ae Cc. T. Dadant——L. C. Dadant s° DADANT’S FOUNDATION 3" WE 3 GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. What more can Nese tea do? Beatty, Purrry, FIRMNEsSsS, No SAGauinc, No Loss, Patent WrEED- PROCESS SHEETING WHY DOES IT SELL SO WELL? Because it has always given better satisfaction than any other. Because IN 24 YEARS there has not been any complaints, but thousands of compliments. Bee-Keepers’ Suuplies of All Kinds Send name for our Catolog, samples of Foundation and Veil Material. 38 We sell the best Veils, cotton or silk. % 3 Langstroth on the Honey-Bee-—Revised a The classic in Bee-Culture-—Price, $1.25 by mail. 3 ie . 3% Beeswax wanted at all times Hamilton, Hancock Co., 3K * Western Bee-Keepers % : Do you want a live up-to-date = = bee journal devoted exclusively Ms Sr to your section? Fa HH Then subscribe for the : ie 4 te » Rocky Mountain Bee Journal + : TERMS, 50 CENTS PER ANNUM : ak He We club with every other bee M4 journal, Address the publisher - Po H. C. Morehouse, Boulder, Colo. : % oe BOX G11 ie ae He Beas He Ue aft ale Sit He aie SS Sie Sie she ae SHS a alls : Order Your : m Supplies # I From the nearest factory to you and save freight % We furnish everything needed in the apiary, of best quality and at LOWEST price. We ie carry a large stock, and by running day and 4 night can make you PROMPT SHIPMENTS. We want every bee-keeper to have our FREE ILLUSTRATED CATALOG and read description of Alternating Hives and Ferguson Supers, etc. WRITE AT ONCE FOR CATALOG.......... Kretchmer Mfg. Go. RED OAK : : : ILOWA WLW WWW WFTW Wr ev We wv re eee ea vv ev WWW ete DO YOU KNOW THAT The Colorado Honey Producers’ Ass’n is Toe ONLY FIRM IN THE West dealing exclusively in HONEY, BEESWAX AND BEE-KEEPERS’ SUPPLIES? & : It is a strictly Co-operative Stock Company (shares of stock $10.00 each) and every member is a Bee-Keeper. Any Colorado Bee-Keeper who is willing to put up an honest grade of honey may become a member. It will pay you to investigate the working of our Association and we = will gladly give you any information desired. We carry a large and complete stock of bee supplies of the very = highest quality (made by the G. B. Lewis Co., of Watertown, Wis.) and our prices are as low as first-class goods can be sold. Our Dove- tailed Hives with Improved Colorado Covers are pronounced by bee- keepers that have tried them as the best and most suitable hive for this climate. = = Rg We are agents for Dadant’s (Weed precess) Comb Foundation. We buy and sell comb and extracted honey, or will handle the same on consignment. We can use any quantity of pure Beeswax and will pay spot cash upon arrival. If you have honey or wax to sell be sure and write us. Bee-Keepers attending the National Convention at Denver are invited to make our store their headquarters. BOARD OF DIRECTORS W.L. Porter, President, Denver L. F. Jouno, Vice-President, Denver | FRANK RaUCHFUSS, Secretary, Denver | J, M. CoRNELIUS, Treasurer, Denver H. Ratcuruss, Denver D. Moon, Golden Mrs M A Bootu, Denver : The Colorado Honey Producers’ Ass'n 1440 Market Street : : : : : DENVER, COLORADO AAAAAAAARAARAAAAAAARAAAAAMARAARAARAPARAARASABARAAAS? AMAARAARAAAARAARASAAAAAR BABAR RAR ILAN EES a Ee FRECHE USN PELE CEM DSN ROMO DRED VPP ORO UWF CUML VW MIEN O HV FON FOP Ug yi BEE-AKEEPERS SUPPLIES EVERYTHING FOR THE APIARY ake You can save freight from the East by buying of us : : : We buy and sell Beeswax at the market price : : : : : Our descriptive catalogue with “HINTS TO BEGINNERS” free Nd See BARTELDES & COMPANY COLORADO SEED HOUSE 1521 (5th Street DENVER, COLORADO We are the Ploneer Bee-Keepers’ Supply House of Colorado I was rich in flowers and trees, Humming-birds and honey-bees. --WHIT TIER. © Busily coming From moss-covered bowers, Brown bees are humming, Questing for flowers. —GOETHE. seemed tniversity Library . , asouvenir of the Denve aor UCI 3 1924 003 245 259 ann