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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69676 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69676)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Italian Alp-bee, by H. C. Hermann
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Italian Alp-bee
-
-Author: H. C. Hermann
-
-Release Date: January 1, 2023 [eBook #69676]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Tom Cosmas compiled from materials made available at The
- Internet Archive and placed in the Public Domain.
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ITALIAN ALP-BEE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber Note
-
-Text emphasis denoted as _Italics_ and =Bold=.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-NEIGHBOUR'S IMPROVED BEE-HIVES
-
-FOR
-
-TAKING HONEY WITHOUT THE DESTRUCTION OF THE BEES.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-DRAWINGS AND DETAILED LISTS FORWARDED ON RECEIPT OF POSTAGE STAMPS
-
-
-=1. NUTT'S COLLATERAL BOX HIVE.=
-
-Consists of three collateral boxes, and octagon top box to cover the
-bell glass,--swarming is prevented. Price, £6. 15s. Stand for ditto,
-16s.
-
-
-=2. NEIGHBOR'S IMPROVED SINGLE BOX HIVE.=
-
-Working one large flat glass above, is fitted with a Thermometer, &c.
-Price, complete, £3. 3s. Stand for ditto, 10s. 6d.
-
-
-=3. TAYLOR'S SHALLOW BOX OR EIGHT BAR HIVE.=
-
-Consists of three boxes t»o of them fitted with moveable bars for the
-more convenient deprivation of the honey protected from the weather by
-a cover of wood. Price, £3. 10s. Stand for ditto, 10s. 6d.
-
-
-=4. TAYLOR'S AMATEUR BAR HIVE.=
-
-With three boxes, furnished with seven moveable bars in each box; this
-Beehive has no additional cover, but is made of stouter wood.--_Vide
-page_ 55, "_Taylor's Bee Keeper's Manual_." Price, £3. 5s. Stand for
-ditto, 10s. 6d.
-
-
-=5. NEIGHBOUR'S IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.=
-
-Working three bell glasses, is neatly and strongly made of straw, it
-has three windows in the lower Hive, with a thermometer affixed to
-the center one. This Hive will be found to possess more practical
-advantages and is more easy of management than any other Beehive that
-has been introduced. Price, complete, £1. 15s. Stand for ditto, 10s, 6d.
-
-(_Continued on page 3 of Wrapper_)
-
-
-
-
- THE
-
- ITALIAN ALP-BEE
-
- OR THE
-
- GOLD MINE OF HUSBANDRY:
-
- SHORT AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS TO BREED GENUINE PROLIFIC ITALIAN
- QUEENS;
-
- TO MULTIPLY THEM BY HUNDREDS IN A FEW MONTHS
-
- AND HOW TO CHANGE GERMAN HIVES INTO ITALIAN
-
-
- BY
-
- H. C. HERMANN,
-
- TAMINS, CANTON GRAUBUNDEN, SWITZERLAND
-
-
- The Right of Translation into other Languages is Reserved.
-
-
- LONDON:
-
- PUBLISHED BY GEO. NEIGHBOUR AND SONS,
-
- 149, REGENT STREET, and 127, HIGH HOLBORN.
-
- 1860.
-
-
-In sending this little Treatise to the Press it has been thought
-desirable to present it to the Public as a _literal_ translation from
-the pen of M. Hermann, rather than a more highly finished production in
-the English, language.
-
-_We take the present opportunity of mentioning, that the first
-introduction of the Ligurian Bee into England was through our agency.
-A letter to us from M. Hermann, dated 5th July, 1859, (an extract from
-which appeared in the "Cottage Gardener" of that month) has given rise
-to the interesting discussion in that periodical._
-
- G. N. & SONS.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-[Transcriber Note: the original owner of the book, Francis Darwin,
-decided to paste a very large bookplate covering the first three
-paragraphs of the Preface. A thorough search of the Internet did not
-reveal any other copy of this volume.]
-
-As that kind of bee inhabits, at present, but a small strip of country,
-they are very rare, and a bee-cultivator who is in possession of such
-a hive can turn it into a real gold mine. The interest in the _Yellow
-Alp-bee_ is on the increase, for it has not the less value for science
-generally, because by breeding such bees one obtains an insight into
-their manners of life, and many things are made clear and brought to
-light of which it has not been possible to obtain a knowledge before.
-Only by breeding bees of this kind one can become a _bee cultivator_ in
-the full sense of the word.
-
-To assist the breeder to change his own black or common bees into
-Italian bees in the shortest and safest way, and to keep the race pure,
-for the purpose of a lucrative income, is the object of this little
-work, and I shall be glad if the contents prove a source of profit to
-very many friends of the bee.
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- NATURAL HISTORY
-
- OF THE
-
- ITALIAN YELLOW ALP-BEE.
-
- (_Apis helvetica._)
-
-
-
-When the Lord created the world he placed the plants in their proper
-situations, and creatures to those plants, which were to serve as their
-food.
-
-But man has in course of time transplanted plants and animals, so, that
-often the original country can no more be recognised. In the valleys
-and plains man could first commence his devastations, but the heights,
-and not easy accessible mountains resisted human cultivation longer;
-and it is there where we find nature in her original majesty. Often
-plants and animals will cease to thrive in a country, because they are
-no more in their place assigned to them by the Creator.
-
-It is different in the steep mountains, where nature is not accessible
-to cultivation; there we find everywhere the same plants in a certain
-region, as, larches, pines, Alpine-roses, gentian; also animals, as,
-chamois, wild goats, white hares, who do not thrive well in the plains.
-Here then, in the mountains, must we look for the origin of animals.
-For, at the time of the great deluge, all animals in the plains were,
-certainly, the first to perish, and those in the mountains were, in all
-probability, left for posterity.
-
-The yellow Italian Alp-bee is a mountain insect; it is found between
-two mountain chains to the right and left of Lombardy and Rhatian
-Alps, and comprises the whole territory of Tessir, Veltlin, and
-South-Graubunden. It thrives up to the height of 4,500 feet above the
-level of the sea, and appeal's to prefer the northern clime to the
-warmer, for in the south of Italy it is not found.
-
-From the mountain those bees later emigrated into the plains, but they
-do not thrive so well there.
-
-Some learned men have called them ligurian bees, but that name has
-neither historical nor geographical claim, and not one bee-cultivator
-of the whole district of the Italian Alp-bee knows what kind of insects
-ligurian bees are. The Alps are their native country, therefore they
-are called _Yellow Alp-bee_[1] or tame house bees, in antithesis to the
-black European bees, whom we might call common forest bees, and who, on
-the slightest touch, fly like lightning into your face.
-
-[Footnote 1: It is not at all an indifferent matter by what name
-anything is called. Many bee-cultivators in German-Switzerland deceived
-by the name of "Ligurian bees," and in expectation to receive a foreign
-race, have purchased such bees at high prices from Germany; that they
-will not do again, as the natural name, "Alp-bee" will immediately show
-where that bee is at home: that is in Switzerland.]
-
-As all good and noble things in the world are more scarce than common
-ones, so there are more common black bees than of the noble yellow
-race, which latter inhabit only a very small piece of country, while
-the black ones are at home everywhere in Europe, and even in America.
-
-The Italian yellow bee differs from the common black bee in its longer,
-slender form, and light chrome yellow colour, with light brimstone
-coloured wings, and two orange-red girths, each one-sixth of an inch
-wide. Working bees as well as drones have this mark. The drones are
-further distinguished by the girths being scolloped, like the spotted
-water-serpent, and obtain an astonishing size; almost half as corpulent
-again as the black drones. The queen has the same marks as the working
-bees, but much more conspicuous and lighter; she is much larger than
-the black queen, and easy to be singled out of the swarm, on account of
-her remarkable bodily size and light colour.
-
-These bees are almost transparent when the sun shines on them.
-
-This race has nothing in common with the black bees; this can be
-instantly seen by their ways and manner of building. The cells of the
-Italian bees are considerably deeper and broader than those of the
-black bees. Fifteen cells of the Italians are as broad as sixteen
-cells of the black kind. It must be very interesting to measure them
-geometrically.
-
-They are extremely tender, amiable little creatures, and a
-bee-protector is not necessary with them, as, unprovoked, they never
-sting, least of all their own master. It is a specific Swiss bee; the
-Alps are their home, and there they thrive beautifully; the higher the
-better. The exhalation of an Italian bee-hive is pungent, and easy to
-be distinguished from a German hive.
-
-The Italian bees have decidedly the preference. If a piece of honey
-is anywhere about, the Italians are sure to be the first to find
-it out. Long before the black bees fly out, the Italians come, and
-are industrious until late in autumn, when the black bees have long
-since ceased to work. Everywhere they scent the honey first, and are
-therefore the first to discover a weak neighbouring hive and to rob
-them of their stores.
-
-It is seldom known that an Italian hive will harbour German bees, for
-the Italians resist an attack much more courageously, and know how to
-keep their house clear. On the other hand, after a few weeks, Italian
-bees will be observed to march in and out of German hives, just as if
-they were quite at home; such is the case if there is only one Italian
-hive on the stand. The cause is easily explained. The Italians belong
-to the long-fingered craft, and creep into other hives, probably to
-look after the stores; then they begin to like the place, and they
-stop, joining the black people.
-
-In Germany the commencement has been made some years since to keep
-those bees, but they were only obtained in a bastard condition; many
-stories go the round about our dear creatures, and virtues and vices
-are attributed to them which they do not possess.
-
-Some insist that they are larger, others, that they are smaller, and
-others again, that they are as large as the common black bees. Some
-say that they do not agree with other bees on the same stand; and some
-are of the obstinate opinion that the Italian bee is not pure, and has
-a small portion of German blood, and that it is only by their (the
-German bee-masters) pains, and careful crossing with their black bee,
-that a pure race can be produced.
-
-It is often comical how some even make a distinction of degrees of
-preference, of more or less purity of race. Once a friend of bees wrote
-to me:--"An Italian queen that we call fine and pure has on the abdomen
-only a very, very little point, &c."
-
-These good people bother themselves about half or whole, and three
-quarters or full blood, and many other subtilities, without arriving at
-the idea that there is no medium pure and impure.
-
-What is not a pure Italian is not Italian at all. If she is Italian she
-can only produce Italians; but a bastard never; just as a bastard can
-never produce an Italian. That which is not genuine, is, and remains,
-spurious.
-
-Once, by the pairing of the Italian bee, brought out of course, there
-is no other guide but that of the yellow colouring.
-
-"All that have not on the after part a black point and a yellow
-abdomen, we kill at once as being spurious," is an expression of
-another bee-cultivator.
-
-Such an incarnate, North-German, Stock-Italian could not be convinced
-that there, where the home of the Italian bee is, by far the greater
-number of queens are dark, almost chesnut-brown, and, for all that,
-there is no difference in the colour of the working bees, whether they
-be produced by a light or a dark-coloured queen. All Italian Alp-bees
-have the same distinctive mark, that is, the two orange-red girths,
-no matter whether dark or light, and a dark queen will just as well
-produce light ones, as a light one produces dark queens, and the colour
-has therefore not the least influence on the race, but solely the marks
-of distinction.
-
-The Marquis of Spinola has called this bee the Apis ligustica, but
-on the same ground the Bavarians may call their bee Apis bavaria, or
-the Berlinians theirs, the Apis borussia, &c. The circumstance that
-these yellow bees are only to be found in the most perfect condition
-on the borders of Graubunden, in the Veltlin and Tessin, and that, the
-farther one goes from the Alps, the less handsome they are found; as
-for example in Nice; until they are entirely lost in lower Italy in
-the black species. This circumstance speaks for itself, that the yellow
-Alp-bees have been, through the glaciers,[2] unsurmountably separated
-from the black bees on this side of the Alps, and could preserve their
-race in original purity, while they might and could mix more, by latter
-gradual spreading, in lower Italy, Venice, Genoa and Nice with other
-kinds. We must therefore look for the original in Switzerland, and can
-call them with as much right Apis helvetica as the Genoese calls them
-Apis ligustica.
-
-[Footnote 2: The assertions of many German bee-cultivators that the
-Italian bee has German blood, as not even the Alps, like a Chinese
-wall, would prevent them from mixing with German bees, may sound very
-well and comprehensible _on paper_, but the matter would be quite
-changed if such a biographer would take the trouble to make, on the
-spot, inquiries which would present a scientific basis-. The last
-German place from the Julier-pass is called Stalla, between which place
-and Poschiavo (a distance of fifty miles) there are _no bees_. In May,
-and sometimes to the end of the month, the road leads from Stalla by
-the Julier-pass (nine miles), often through snow, then Oberengadien
-is passed (where not a single bee exists), and then through the
-Bernina-pass which demands a march, in the snow, of about fifteen
-miles, and passes are the _lowest points for passage_.
-
-Now, I should like to see that swarm of bees that could take its
-wedding-flight from Stalla to Poschiavo over two mountains covered with
-snow (for the snow does not melt in June, and even in July and August
-the temperature is so low that every bee would perish) for the purpose
-of mating with the nearest borderers in Poschiavo. The same may be said
-of the entire chain of passes, on the Bernhardin, Gotthard, Splugen,
-Lukmanier, nowhere for thirty miles round is a bee to be found, for
-they cannot exists where, through the neighbourhood of the glaciers,
-the air is so cooled down. There is an end to the insect-world, and
-we may be sure that it has not entered into the mind of an Italian to
-import a hive from German-Switzerland, by which German blood may have
-been brought into Italy.]
-
-If the latter name were correct, they must have spread from Genoa, the
-former ligurian shore, into Upper Italy, and by gradual removal from
-their Genoese home, they could not gain in beauty of race, but must
-have degenerated in proportion the farther they went from their native
-country, &c. But this is not so. Their seat is the extreme north of
-Italy; that is, the Italian Switzerland, there they have preserved
-their purity.
-
-The proofs of an argument must not be fetched from the moon. A
-nationality is never found on the borders, but in the centre of a
-country.
-
-Only a short time ago it was asserted in the Bee Gazette of Eichstedt,
-that their cell construction is not larger than that of the black bee;
-but that is another erroneous assertion which only proves that the
-author of such a natural history either never handled a pure Italian
-bee; or, like a great many more ink-wasters, hatched something in the
-study which is nowhere to be found in nature.
-
-It does not require the use of spectacles to find a difference.
-
-The cubic contents of an Italian bee-cell is larger by thirty per cent,
-and the width is one-fifteenth more than that of the German cell. If,
-therefore, Italian bees are bred through several generations in German
-cells, the bees must ultimately degenerate and become smaller.
-
-Now as it has pleased some naturalists to name them Apis ligustica,
-I cannot conceive why we should not rebaptise them, as soon as we
-have arrived at the conviction that our researches have been more in
-accordance with nature. Therefore courage, and in future.
-
-Yellow Alp-bee, or, if necessary, that it should be latin, _Apis
-helvetia_, or helvetica (we are not good latin scholars).
-
-
-§ 1.
-
-NATURE OF BEES.
-
- A healthy hive contains in summer three kinds of bees
- 1. The queen or mother-bee.
- 2. The drones or males.
- 3. The working-bees, or imperfect females.
-
-
-§ 2.
-
-THE QUEEN.
-
-In a hive there is in general only one queen who lays during the time
-of her highest prolificness in summer daily from 1000 to 3000 eggs, and
-these in the best order; one egg in a cell. More than one queen the
-bees do not suffer. Should there be more, they fly away as swarms, or
-are killed by the bees.
-
-The queen lays male and female eggs. The male-eggs she lays in
-the drone cells, and the female-eggs in the small cells of the
-working-bees. The queen requires, reckoning from the egg to her
-creeping out ten to seventeen days, according to the weather.
-
-
-§ 3.
-
-THE WORKING-BEES.
-
-The working-bees originate out of the female-eggs. There are in a hive
-from 6000 to 70,000. They require from the egg to maturity eighteen to
-twenty-one days, they then remain in the hive for ten or fourteen days
-before they fly out.
-
-The bees are able to bring up a queen out of every working-bee's eggs,
-and also from the grub if it is not above three days old. In that case
-they elongate and increase the width of the cell in the shape of an
-acorn, and give more feeding-mucilage than they are in the habit of
-giving to the working-bee.
-
-To insure success in the cultivation it requires dexterity, and study
-of the nature of bees. The queen requires from the egg ten to seventeen
-days to her full development, when she will fly out about from one to
-three days, after her creeping out of the egg, to be impregnated, and
-then after the lapse of six or ten days more, she commences to lay
-eggs. Then she will not fly out again unless with a swarm. The bees
-always prepare several queen-cells at one time, which, however, do not
-mature at the same moment. The queen is only once impregnated during
-the whole course of her life which lasts from about three to five years.
-
-
-§ 4.
-
-THE DRONES
-
-These are males. There are about 2,000 in a hive, and then only in
-summer, for, as soon as the swarming and honey-carrying-time is over,
-they are turned out as useless eaters. They serve only to impregnate
-the queen. The drones require from the egg to maturity, twenty-one to
-twenty-four days.
-
-
-§ 5.
-
-THE WORKING-BEES.
-
-The working-bees mate probably with the drones, and are, therefore,
-capable of laying eggs, but which produce only drones; and, generally,
-a hive in which the working-bees commence laying eggs, is going to
-destruction. It can soon be observed, as they lay often two, three, to
-twenty eggs, without order, in one cell. In such a hive there is no
-longer a queen, and it is best to separate it at once or to unite it
-with a healthy hive, for such demoralised people generally kill a newly
-added queen. Those, who dispute the mating of the working-bees with the
-drones are in error. Only place young bees without a queen in a place
-distant from any drones, and no eggs are ever discovered; but, as soon
-as they are brought in the neighbourhood of drones, and they have no
-queens, they lay drone-egg.
-
-
-§ 6.
-
-BREEDING OF THE QUEEN.
-
-For that purpose choose the largest hive, for it is an old saying,
-that "a large cow will produce a large calf."--From so fine a hive you
-certainly have fine young ones.
-
-As it is known that out of every working-bee-egg the bees can breed a
-queen, and that they often prepare as many as from six to thirty at the
-same time, advantage must be taken of that fact.
-
-But do not begin with the breeding of queens until the bees are
-sufficiently strong, and have commenced the breeding of drones. This
-must be particularly attended to if you want to breed afterwards pure
-Italians, for to insure their mating only with Italian drones they must
-first exist, and that in strong numbers.
-
-
-§7.
-
-HOW TO BREED ITALIAN QUEENS WHEN IN POSSESSION OF ONE OR TWO WHOLE
-ITALIAN HIVES.
-
-When you have one or two Italian hives, you must endeavor to put them
-into hives with moveable parts, if they are not already in one. Then
-care must be taken, that by continual feeding with good honey, and
-filling up of the hive with sufficient combs, they increase their
-strength and prepare a good many drones. The trouble is much less if
-the Italian bees are on a stand by themselves, about 500 or 1000 yards
-from the others, the farther the better.
-
-It will be well to be cautious, to leave one hive undivided and
-untouched that they continue to breed many drones, for the divided hive
-will not produce any more drones in the same year, therefore one hive
-must be kept strong and untouched, so that you do not run short in
-drone-breeding.
-
-When there are sufficient drones or drone-brood on hand, take from a
-hive the Italian queen with the third part of her people and building,
-and fill up the missing two-thirds with empty and full combs. This
-queen is now taken to a distant stand where the common or black bee is
-kept, and placed in the stead of a populous hive during the absence of
-the most part of the bees. The black bees will at first be surprised
-and refuse to enter, as these two species hate each other. Should they
-entirely refuse to enter, then remove during the flight, the whole of
-the black hives standing on the same front; the returning bees will
-then be frightened, and not knowing where to go to, will, in the end,
-willingly, and without disturbance, enter to the Italian mother, who
-by those means will soon get strong again; and in about five or seven
-days, will have laid sufficient eggs to part them again; and so you
-can continue as long as you wish to Italianise. In that manner, if
-the queen is forthwith strengthened by German bees, no disturbance
-takes place in the breeding of drones, you have only to put in a few
-drone-cells. But that the Italian mother does not receive black drones
-as well, place before the fly-hole a drone-stopper to keep those
-customers out.
-
-Let us now return to the Italian stand, where we have taken the mother
-from with a third of the people.
-
-Meanwhile they have made preparations to begin queen-cells, and mostly
-more than one, perhaps from ten to twenty. On the eleventh, the latest
-on the seventeenth day, they creep out, and, not to expose them to
-the danger of the surplus ones being killed by the bees, they must be
-looked after on the eighth or ninth day, and all queen-cells but one
-or two must be cut out. The cut out cells are put with a honey-comb
-and a few handfulls of bees into a little box about four or six inches
-square. These boxes must have wires on two, or better, on all four
-sides, so that the bees get used to the smell of each other, and thus
-become reconciled.
-
-In such a box the Italian queen-cell is put in to a hive of black bees,
-which the day previous has been deprived of the queen, and if possible
-in the centre or the heart of the nest. The black bees cannot now enter
-into the box, but become acquainted, through the wire, with the smell
-of the Italian bees, and by the time the queen, who will be well taken
-care of by the two handfulls of bees put with her, is matured, the
-black bees will have taken a liking to her.
-
-About three or five days after the adding of the queen-cell, you must
-look whether the black bees have not formed queen cells of their own
-specie, if so, they must be cut out. Then, the following day, the
-fly-hole in the little box which has been kept shut is slowly opened,
-and the black bees will gradually enter into the box and pay their
-homage to the new queen.
-
-To prevent the mating of the queen with a black drone, a wire must be
-attached before the fly-hole of the hive, large enough for the queen
-and bees to fly out (for the queen only mates in the open air) but too
-small for drones, which are in the black hive; then the stand must be
-placed where the Italian mother-hive is, until the queen is impregnated.
-
-In the same manner all queen-cells are treated (all but one or two,
-which are left in the hive for the purpose of forming a separate
-colony) until all black hives are Italianised. Should, however, a hive
-be impregnated where it is supposed any black drones exist, it must
-be put on the stand of the black bees, so as to have only pure Italian
-drones on the Italian breeding stand.
-
-In three weeks, with only little practice, about fifty hives can be
-Italianised. When done, and all the bees are provided with queens of
-Italian origin, then the work is much easier, as meanwhile, the young
-mothers lay Italian drone-eggs, and the black drones die, or, the
-Italian drones obtain such preponderance, that a genuine impregnation
-is in most cases certain.
-
-For breeding, always choose the finest mother, if possible, of yellow
-colour, having previously convinced yourself that she has been
-impregnated genuinely, that is, by an Italian drone, and that she
-breeds, as a proof, handsome yellow working bees.
-
-
-§ 8.
-
-BREEDING OF DRONES.
-
-To increase the Italian drones as fast as possible, deprive the Italian
-mother of a hive of her drone-cells, and place instead, empty cells for
-further filling them with drone-brood, which she will do forthwith. The
-Italian drone-brood hang into the black hives for hatching, taking and
-destroying, as much as possible, their own black-broods.
-
-Food must not be spared with brood-hives, as that will induce them to
-continue breeding.
-
-So prepared, commences now the proper culture of queens.
-
-For that purpose small queen-breeding-boxes are required for it is
-troublesome to single out a queen in a large and populous hive and
-otherwise not advantageous to disturb a strong hive by ill-treatment.
-
-The ground-rules for the certain pure-keeping of the Italian race,
-consist always of this: to destroy the black drones, and to increase
-the Italian ones.
-
-Therefore, it is better to take care that the Italian bees are placed
-on a stand where no black drones are allowed. And if now German people
-are brought to strengthen the Italian colony then let them pass in
-review first and kill the black drones.
-
-The work can be made much easier by letting the bees run into any weak
-hive, and only through a narrow slit, when only working-bees can pass
-through, but is too narrow for drones, so that the drones can all be
-kept back. The next day the bees can be taken out of the hive again and
-used.
-
-Not only is the object gained to put away the drones, but the bees
-are also discouraged, so that they can be joined with others without
-difficulty. Should they have run into a hive deprived of the queen, or
-only provided with queen-cells, they will be heartily glad that a queen
-is given them and will not leave her. The bees generally become anxious
-and tame if the drones and drone-brood are taken away. Endeavouring
-now, on the one hand, to permit no black drones on the Italian stand,
-which is kept for the improvement of the races, and to destroy them
-with their drone-brood and cells, care must be taken, on the other
-hand, that the Italian bees breed the largest possible quantity of
-drones. Some assert that the Italian queens lay more drone-eggs
-than the Germans, but that is not right; they lay them in the same
-proportion as the black bees but it can be forwarded by the placing of
-drone-breeding-combs in the breeding-nest; for the queen to fill them,
-it is above all things, necessary that the hive be populous and the
-weather favourable.
-
-As soon as a drone-breeding-comb is filled, it should, without delay,
-be placed in a hive deprived of the queen, because those hives in their
-queenless state, seize the opportunity to bring up drones as if they
-were aware that they would be necessary for the impregnation of their
-future queen.
-
-Such a hive seldom destroys drone-brood; while hives with queens, as a
-general rule, on the approach of bad weather, tear out the drone-brood
-and turn the drones away.
-
-But as soon as the queen, intended for the drone-breeding hive, is
-again impregnated, the drones would be in danger of being turned out
-again, for in particular, fresh impregnated queens do away with the
-drones very quickly, therefore the impregnated queen must be taken from
-the drone-hive; in that way drone hives may be kept until late in the
-autumn. The queens intended for drone production, particularly in bad
-weather, must be stimulated with food; so that they do not relax in
-laying eggs.
-
-
-§ 9.
-
-THE QUEEN-BREEDING-HIVE.
-
-This is a small box with moveable parts, more or less large does not
-matter. The principle thing is, that they are made of equal widths that
-every comb of each hive fits into any other hive.
-
-About twelve inches long and six inches broad and high (that is square)
-might be about the right size. Lengthwise, on the top of the inner
-sides, fix two pieces of wood, each about three-eights of an inch
-broad. These are the supporters of the combs, on which the combs or
-chips rest, to be able to take out easily, and to replace each comb
-separately. Better still, if small frames instead of chips are used.
-The top opens upwards, and to make it fit tight, nail or paste soft
-cloth or paper round the edges. In the top make a hole about two inches
-in diameter, which serves as a feeding hole; for such little people
-want frequent feeding, else they will often entirely go away.
-
-
-§ 10.
-
-SUPPLYING OF THE QUEEN-BREEDING-HIVES.
-
-No. 1. That mother which has been picked out as breeding bee must be
-taken with part of her people and some brood-combs, honey-combs, and
-empty ones, until the little box is quite full, and is then placed on
-the stand where the Italian bees and drones are kept. After a few days,
-the queen is taken with a few combs of brood and their bees, and is put
-into a breeding-box.
-
-No. 2. This also should well supplied with honey, empty combs and a few
-ripe breeding-combs. After a few days, when the queen has established
-herself well and has filled the cells with brood she is to be again
-taken out with a few combs and some people, and form a new colony.
-
-No. 3. And so on, until you have enough. But never neglect to feed
-these little people well,[3] particularly the one which contains the
-queen.
-
-[Footnote 3: Else it is to be expected that some fine day they will
-take their departure, when generally every one of them will leave, for
-such little colonies cannot keep themselves unless it be in the high
-honey season.]
-
-Meanwhile the breeding-box, No. 1, deprived of its queen, has prepared
-queen-cells, which on the tenth day are cut out, except one or two,
-and form likewise new colonies,[4] It must be observed that the bees
-which adhere to the combs or the brood, and which guard the cells, are
-taken out with them. The strengthening of such colonies is done best by
-hanging in of ripe brood near their development, or by young bees which
-always set on the combs, and who attend to the real brood business.
-
-[Footnote 4: You must endeavour to insert the queen-cells in the
-middle of a comb, where the most of the bees gather; it is done best
-by cutting a diamond-shaped piece out of the comb, and then, loosely
-inserting the queen-cell cut to a similar shape. If it were inserted
-in the lower edge, the bees could not cover it on the approach of cold
-weather, and the cell would become cold and the bee perish.]
-
-The same is done with the queen-cells of No. 2, and so on. Care must
-be exercised to be well supplied with all the different stages, from
-the egg to the queen, so that there are always ready ripe and half-ripe
-cells, impregnated and unimpregnated queens in all stages.
-
-If now, a queen has crept out, you must wait until she is impregnated,
-and has well supplied the box with brood, then take away the queen,
-and put in from another hive a ripe queen-cell; where the queen-cell
-has been taken from, a few brood-combs must be inserted, so that
-no interruption takes place. If a queen, taken away, can always be
-replaced by a ripe queen-cell, fifteen queens may be produced from
-one breeding-box during one summer. Care must be taken that there is
-always young brood in a queen-breeding-box, so that in case a queen or
-queen-cell should meet with an accident, the bees have a substitute,
-and no interruption can occur.
-
-The brood is necessary to the bees and makes them industrious.
-Therefore, never take a queen from her people until she has well
-supplied them with eggs and brood.
-
-Frequent inspection is very necessary, for sometimes everything may be
-thought to be quite in order, and yet a hive has, instead of a queen,
-_only working_ bees, who, through a longer deprivation of their queen
-have themselves commenced to lay eggs but out of which only drones are
-produced, to the great disappointment of the cultivator. This disorder
-can soon be observed, for the bees lay _many_ eggs and without order in
-_one_ cell, while the queen lays only _one_, never more than two in one
-cell.
-
-Such a hive, where the bees have commenced laying eggs, may also be
-known by blowing into it, when the bees will hum quite hollow, while in
-a hive with a queen, the humming is quite lively and cheerful.
-
-If not too far gone, the hive may be brought round by inserting a comb
-of healthy brood with the adhering young bees; but if it has gone too
-far, it must be united with a healthy hive, else all trouble is lost.
-Introduced queens are killed by such demoralised people.
-
-
-§ 11.
-
-RESERVING OF QUEEN-CELLS.
-
-Often it will happen that there are more queen-cells than can be used
-at the moment, for they must not be let lying about long, else they
-will become cold; and generally the brood must be protected from cold.
-
-Such queen-cells are placed singly into very small boxes, if only of
-the size of two walnuts, and these boxes are put in any hive on a spot
-where a proper degree of warmth is developed, say, just above the
-little rods which is regarded by many bee-cultivators as the honey-room
-in the moveable box. There they can remain until wanted. That a small
-wire-grating is placed before the little box is understood, so that if
-a queen should creep out unexpectedly before required, the bees can
-feed her.
-
-If the queen-cells should have sustained any little injury it must be
-patched again directly with a little wax. The best way is to warm a
-knife a little and to touch the cell slightly with it, the wax-cover
-is then sufficiently softened to repair the damage. Larger injuries
-cannot be remedied, and one cannot be too careful in cutting them out
-not to damage any of them.
-
-
-§ 12.
-
-QUEEN-BREEDING WITH BROOD-COMES.
-
-A brood-comb may be taken from the mother-hive,[5] but always _with the
-bees adhering thereto_, and can be put in a breeding-box provided with
-honey and empty combs. This is placed in the room of a populous hive,
-to people it, and after the lapse of ten days the queen-cells are full
-and covered; they are cut out as stated before.[6]
-
-[Footnote 5: This is particular to be advised when there is only one
-Italian queen which must be preserved to breed drones.]
-
-[Footnote 6: Sometimes the bees put their queen-cells together so
-close, and in groups, or opposite to each other, that often it is not
-possible to cut the cells for use without damaging them. These must
-be left, and watch must be kept for the eleven days, and, as soon a
-as young queen creeps out, she must be taken away, all, but the last
-yellow one which is left in the hive. If a piece of about an inch
-square is cut off, crossways, from below the edge of a young brood-comb
-full of grub-eggs, so that the liquid of the brood runs out, it
-generally causes the bees to fix their queen-cells on that spot in the
-best order.]
-
-
-§ 13.
-
-ADDING OF QUEENS.
-
-The adding of the queen to hives of other races is done like the adding
-of queen-cells. First, the hive is deprived of the queen, then the
-queen is put into the box with a little honey and two handfulls of her
-own bees, and the box is then placed in the desired hive. After four
-days it must be seen whether the black bees have commenced queen-cells.
-If they have not the little fly-hole is opened when the bees will unite
-and accept the queen. But if queen-cells are formed, it is a proof that
-the bees are not yet inclined to accept the new queen. All queen-cells
-must now be cut out, and wait a few days to make them feel quite
-forsaken, then the Italian may be let in and will then be friendly
-received.
-
-If queens or queen-cells were introduced without regard, they would all
-be bitten off, as the Italian and black bees are two different races
-who hate each other.
-
-It should always be looked to that the queen is first impregnated
-before taken from her own people to be given to another, because,
-unimpregnated queens are more exposed to the danger of being killed
-than already impregnated ones, when the bees are assured of her having
-descendants.
-
-
-§ 14.
-
-PARTICULAR RULES.
-
-To cause a sufficient supply of Italian drones care must be taken
-that the hives with Italian mothers are always well provided with
-drone-combs, which will cause the queen, when they are placed in the
-middle of the breeding-layers, to put in more drone-brood; the more so
-by continual feeding with liquid honey. The continuous feeding, with
-proper strength of people is the most effective way for the production
-of drones. By insertion of ripe breeding-combs near upon running out a
-hive can be most effectively and quickly strengthened.
-
-Further, it must be remarked that, as the Italian bees build _larger
-cells_ than the black bees, it is well to give the Italians opportunity
-to begin building anew. It is to be supposed that those who have
-decided to introduce a strange race of bees, Italians, must have some
-knowledge of bee-cultivation, and must also possess bees of their own
-native race; for one who has no idea at all of the higher branches of
-bee-cultivation, for him to introduce a strange race would be money
-thrown away; such an one would do better to try his experiments on
-common bees until he is well practised.
-
-Those who do not particularly care to change all their hives into pure
-Italians can add the Italian queen-cells in a box to the black bees,
-and can abandon the queen creeping out to her destiny, as to which
-drone she will mate with. Although not many Italians are by those means
-gained in the first years, there will be plenty of bastards, and for
-the second year a very good foundation for Italianizing, because the
-stock is already Italian, and the Italian element preponderates. Care
-must be taken to mark the _original mother_ well, and only to obtain
-posterity _through her_.
-
-
-§ 15.
-
-THE AUTUMN CULTURE
-
-For queens it is only so far applicable, as the period must be waited
-for when the black drones are killed, and care has been taken to
-reserve only Italian drones, which is done by depriving some Italian
-hives of their queens, and also of their queen-cells, so that they
-cannot breed any more queens. These bees will not kill their drones.
-By abundant feeding bees can be induced, even in the late autumn, to
-breed drones and to suffer them. When the drones are driven out of a
-hive they must be put, with some honey, into a box supplied with a
-wire-grating, and placed in a hive deprived of its queen. After a few
-days they are let loose and will then soon get used to the queenless
-bees. They may also be put into the top of a hive with a queen, but
-then, they must be kept shut in until wanted for use.
-
-
-§ 16.
-
-IN THE EARLY SPRING
-
-Queens of a pure race may be bred with advantage, because the Italians
-breed drones two or three weeks earlier than the black bees, so that
-the Italian mothers can mate when there are no German drones whatever.
-However, the finest queens are only obtained by waiting the natural
-time when the inclination for breeding exists; from about a fortnight
-before to a fortnight after swarming time.
-
-
-§ 17.
-
-BOXES WITHOUT MOVEABLE PARTS.
-
-Those who are not in possession of boxes with movable parts, but yet
-wish to Italianise their native bees, have much more trouble, and must
-leave it to chance whether the queen, bred from Italian brood, will
-mate with black or Italian drones. It is difficult and not everybody's
-business to take the finished queen-cells from such hives; but a clever
-bee-cultivator will know how to help himself even then.
-
-In such a case all the people in the Italian hive must be driven out,
-and the hive put in the place of one, or better, two strong native
-hives, during the time of their strongest flight, and the empty hive
-will be populated by German people, who immediately begin to make
-queen-cells.[7]
-
-[Footnote 7: Here, too, a wire-grating may be fixed before the
-fly-hole, large enough to permit free entrance to the bees, but too
-narrow for drones; this will keep the hive pure. Of course, as soon the
-queen makes her mating-flight, the hive is carried, in the evening,
-after sunset, to the place where the pure Italians are until the mating
-is over.]
-
-The two native hives are then taken away and placed on another stand,
-or, if there is only one, on the bottom shelf of the bee-house. It is
-always better to take away all hives with black drones, so that here
-are only Italian drones flying. The loss of people will do them the
-less damage, as they would without that have had to give out a swarm.
-
-In order that the forced or artificial swarm from the Italian
-mother-hive may soon be in full strength, it is necessary to put the
-swarm into a hive already filled with combs, which must be well fed to
-excite them to breed.
-
-The separated Italian hive is opened after seven days, when the
-queen-cells are nearly ripe, and divided into as many parts as there
-are undamaged queen-cells; it is always better to give two cells to
-each part, so that if one should get hurt, the bees have another one
-ready.
-
-Each of such parts is taken with the bees adhering to them and put
-with some empty honey-combs into an empty hive. Supposing there were
-ten such parts with queen-cells, then there would be ten colonies.
-But these alone would give neither profit nor amusement, and would be
-altogether too weak to prosper; they must therefore undergo a forced
-operation by being placed in the room of a populous hive, that is, in
-the place of ten native hives during their best flight, keeping a wire
-before the whole to keep out the drones, but admitting the bees.
-
-As at the beginning, the bees of the black race will be rather shy,
-caution must be had to clear the entire front of the bees of the native
-race, by putting them either higher or lower; by these means they will
-lose about as many people as would make a swarm which they would have
-had to give up all the same, and the ten new Italian hives will all
-profit by it, get strong, populous, and will thrive. For as soon as
-the bees, returning from the field, find no hive of their kind in the
-same front, they will at last become tame and enter quietly with the
-Italians. But if the bees coming from the field find only one hive of
-black bees in the same front, they will invariably go in the hive of
-their race left standing.
-
-It is hardly necessary to mention that the drone-wire must be
-sufficiently large to allow the queen to pass.
-
-On the third or fourth day before the young queen creeps out, all new
-hives are brought where the mother-hive, or the drones are kept for
-mating; or all the hives with black drones may be shut up by a wire
-until the mating is over.
-
-To make sure that the queen on her mating-excursions will find drones
-immediately, there are ways to stimulate the bees, that they will lead
-the drones out early in the morning; it is done by feeding the hive
-very early with thinned honey, which will cause the drones to undertake
-an early pleasure-trip on that day.
-
-If there be an opportunity to add to a new hive formed from eggs of
-queen-cells an Italian ripe drone-brood comb it is well to do so, for
-by so doing the purity of race is much insured. As said before, the
-great knack is, to be prepared with the proper number of drones.
-
-Many bee-cultivators make a great blunder in that respect, in cutting
-out the drone-cells, thinking that they are unnecessary eaters, but
-not considering that, _the fewer_ drones there are on a stand _the
-greater_ the danger of losing queens. For, natural enough, the queen
-flies out to mate and to find a drone, if she finds one immediately,
-she can return home directly and the hive is saved. But if the drones
-are scarce, and the queen cannot soon find a lover, she will delay
-her wedding-journey, or even go home again without having gained her
-object; and is, therefore, obliged to repeat her journeys. The oftener
-she flies out, and the longer she must remain out, the more the danger
-that she may be destroyed during her wedding-tour. This is well to be
-considered. Queens which I placed to mate on a distant stand, with but
-few drones were always impregnated from eight to ten days later than on
-the principal stand, where the drones flew in abundance.
-
-
-§ 18.
-
-TRANSPORT OF QUEENS.
-
-If many queens are produced, they are principally bred for presents to
-other lovers of bees, or for sale to extend the race, and by the art to
-raise queens early it is in your power quickly to multiply a favourite
-race of bees. We will now give a few hints how queens can be sent to
-distances.
-
-For that purpose, take a box four inches square, in the lid of which
-make three or four incisions or cuts, to admit air to the bees. A piece
-of covered old honey is loosely wrapt up in blotting-paper and nailed
-firmly to the bottom of the box. That the nail may not pass through
-the honey and the honey gets loose and smother the bees, it is well to
-put a piece of pasteboard or leather, of about two-inch square under
-the head of the nail, as a lining. Then put the queen with a handful
-of her own people (500 or 1000) in the box and nail it down; then wrap
-a loose piece of linen round the box, so that the bees have sufficient
-air, but that the light is somewhat interrupted, to keep them quiet on
-the journey. The blotting-paper must be wrapt round the honey in such a
-manner that the honey shows at one end that the bees can gradually eat
-it up. If, neither blotting-paper be used, nor the honey nailed down,
-there would be risk that the honey rolled about during the journey and
-smothered the bees, or run out of the comb and drown the bees in it.
-The blotting-paper takes up any honey run out, so that the bees can
-only gradually eat it up.
-
-It must be well understood that a queen is not sent before she is
-impregnated, that is, until she has laid eggs. These boxes will stand a
-journey of ten days.
-
-
-§ 19.
-
-REMARKS ON UNITING BEES.
-
-Another caution must be observed on uniting of two bee-colonies.
-
-Bees are naturally avaricious and therefore permit every bee, even a
-stranger, laden with honey to enter. This is a hint, and advantage must
-be taken of this their passion.
-
-Before two colonies are joined together, take care that the bees which
-are to be added are quite satiated with honey. It does not matter if
-both parties have been previously well fed, for then they are not so
-capable of beginning to fight.
-
-Bees, well filled with honey are everywhere welcome, and when the bees
-have discharged their burdens in the cells they fraternise and forget
-all quarrels.
-
-Honey is therefore a very good means of union. But to sprinkle the
-bees only with honey, or honey-water, produces just the contrary
-effect; they become irritated and impassioned and kill each other.
-If, therefore, you desire success, give them honey to their heart's
-content. If a hive is to be driven out, stop up loosely the principal
-hole, blow a little smoke into it, then turn it over and knock
-it gently for about ten minutes; the object will thus be gained,
-because the bees, anticipating the danger, will make haste to provide
-themselves with food for the journey. A bee can suck in double her
-weight in provision.
-
-A very sure way to strengthen Italian queens with German people is,
-that the Italian queen with her company, and a few combs are put into
-a box, and, gradually, brood nearly running out is introduced: not all
-at once, but every one or two combs, so that the brood running out is
-strong enough to cover the brood in store. By so doing the queen will
-have an increase of people who will adhere to her, not having known
-another queen yet. This way of strengthening is the safest, only too
-many combs must not be put in at one time, because then, the queen with
-her weak people could not produce sufficient warmth for the entire
-hatching of the brood.
-
-There is another way to be recommended. The Italian queen with her
-people are put in the box, intended for the purpose, with a sufficient
-number of combs, empty and full of honey. Then bees without a queen, or
-which have been deprived of the queen one, or a few days previous, and
-have been confined _without the least brood_ or combs are let into the
-Italians through a small hole, so that _only one_ at a time can go in
-and must, so to say, _beg_ her admittance.
-
-Hives where the queen has been taken from, but which have young brood
-or queen-cells, are not to be called deprived of their queen, they have
-even the best hopes to bring up, in a short time, several queens; for
-that reason they kill any new introduced queen.
-
-
-§ 20.
-
-THE FEEDING
-
-Is always done best from above with a bottle, the mouth of which is
-tied over with loose linen, so that the bees can always suck in the
-honey without attracting robbers.
-
-
-§ 21.
-
-THE ORIGINAL MOTHER BEE
-
-Must be particularly carefully preserved to have always, in case of any
-cross-breeding, _one queen_ of undoubted purity. To make quite sure the
-queen can be marked by clipping one of the wings; she can then be easy
-recognised.
-
-It is more certain to procure every year or two an _original Italian
-hive_, from their native place, with which to freshen up the race.
-Those who have opportunities to sell Italian bees, which is almost
-everywhere the case, will find it more than enough to their advantage,
-as this little extra expense places them in position to breed pure
-queens with the greatest certainty, and they will be enabled to serve
-their customers always with genuine Italian Alp-bees, and consequently
-increase their sale.
-
-A queen of the Italian species lives generally from three to four
-years, often to five years. Therefore, with some care, what has been
-missed the first year, may, at any rate, be made good the second year,
-if one knows how to save and preserve the mother or breeding--queen.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
--------------
-
-GENUINE ITALIAN ALP-BEES.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-I have appointed my friends, Messrs. Geo. Neighbour and Sons, of 127,
-Holborn, and 149, Regent Street, London, my sole agents for England,
-and they will take orders, I undertaking to execute the same, at the
-following charges--the cost of carriage to paid by the purchaser.
-
-
-A YOUNG, YELLOW, IMPREGNATED QUEEN,
-
-FROM MARCH 15 TO APRIL 30,
-
-With 500 Bees, for 20 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 22 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 35 shillings:
-
-
-FROM MAY 1 TO JUNE 31,
-
-With 500 Bees, for 15 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 17 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 30 shillings:
-
-
-FROM JULY 1 TO AUGUST 31,
-
-With 500 Bees, for 10 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 12 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 25 shillings:
-
-
-FROM SEPTEMBER 1 TO NOVEMBER 30,
-
-With 500 Bees, for 8 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 10 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 20 shillings.
-
-Queens less fine, young as well as old, cost 2 francs each less
-
-PURE GERMAN QUEENS,
-
-TILL THE END OF JUNE,
-
-With 500 Bees, for 6 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 8 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 15 shillings:
-
-
-FROM JULY 1 TO NOVEMBER 30,
-
-With 500 Bees, for 3 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 4 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 6 shillings.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-ITALIAN DRONES,
-
-TILL JULY 30,
-
-2 shillings per 100:
-
-FROM AUGUST 1 TO OCTOBER 30,
-
-3 shillings per 100.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-UNIMPREGNATED YOUNG ITALIAN QUEENS,
-
-6 shillings each.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-ITALIAN QUEEN CELLS,
-
-3 shillings each.
-
-
-A PROPORTIONATE DISCOUNT ON LARGE ORDERS
-
-The Bees are only provided with sufficient honey for the journey.
-Should a queen die on the journey, I send another for half the price.
-As proof, the dead queen must be sent to me in a letter.
-
-Tamins, Canton Graubunden,
-
-H. C. HERMANN,
-
-Bee Cultivator.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-THE RICINUS SILKWORM.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-This worm is particularly recommended, as it will feed readily on
-linden leaves (Dipsacus) and Ricinus thistles, and therefore augurs
-a great future, as the difficulty of growing mulberry trees in our
-northern clime was the chief hindrance. By the introduction of this
-worm all is remedied, and the agriculturist anticipates a brilliant
-future; he will soon be able to dress in silk instead of tick.
-
-The silk of this worm is not as fine, but quite as good, and more
-productive than that of the genuine silkworm.
-
-I sell these insects:
-
- Eggs, 13 shillings per dozen.
- Chrysalis, 3 shillings each.
- Moths, 5 shillings each. And,
- Printed Instructions, 1 shilling.
-
-
-LONDON: W. OSTELL, PRINTER, HART STREET, BLOOMSBURY.
-
-
-GEORGE NEIGHBOUR & SON'S CATALOGUE.
-
-=6. AN IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.=
-
-Precisely the same in construction as the No. 5 described above, but
-without windows or thermometer. Price, complete, £1. 8s.
-
-
-=7. THE LADIES' OBSERVATORY HIVE.=
-
-Is of stout glass and admits of one bellglass for deprivation, with a
-cover of straw for the whole, is admirably adapted for witnessing the
-labour and progress of its industrious inmates, and is an interesting
-addition to the conservatory or greenhouse in which it may easily be
-placed. Price, complete, £3, 5s.
-
-
-=8. THE COTTAGER S HIVE.=
-
-Is intended for the use of cottagers, and consists of three common
-straw Hives with floorboard; it is recommended to those Apiarians who
-are desirous of setting their poorer neighbours in the way of keeping
-bees, on the improved system without destruction. Price, 10s. 6d.
-
-
-=9 & 10. BEE FEEDERS.=
-
-No. 9, is intended to fit a drawer under wood Hives. Price, 5s. No. 10,
-is for Hives either of wood or straw, and is used on the top of the
-stock Hive. Zinc, price, 4s. In earthenware, 43, 6d.
-
-
-=11 & 12. FUMIGATORS.=
-
-Used with the prepared Fungus, for uniting weak stocks, &c. Price, 2s.
-and 2s. 6d.
-
-
-=13. HONEYCUTTERS.=
-
-For easily cutting out the comb. Price, 5s. per pair.
-
-
-=14. TAYLOR'S IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.=
-
-As described page 163, Bee Keeper's Manual. Price, £1. Is. With Stand,
-£1. 10s.
-
-
-=15. FOUNTAIN BEE FEEDERS.=
-
-Price, 6s.
-
-
-=17. SINGLE BAR HIVE.=
-
-The Stock Hive is furnished with seven moveable bars, and admits of
-super Hives or glasses. Vide page 61, ''Bee Keeper's Manual,'' Price
-£2. 12s. Stand, 8s.
-
-
-=18. EIGHT BAR STRAW HIVE.=
-
-Similar in its arrangements to No; 3, with an outer cover of straw.
-Price, complete with Stand, &c., £3. 12s. The Stock Hive maybe obtained
-separate. Price, with floor board, 15s.
-
-
-=19. HUBER'S BOOK OR LEAF HIVE.=
-
-Price, £2. 58.
-
-
-=20. NEIGHBOUR'S PATENT UNICOMB OBSERVATORY HIVE.=
-
-Is a great novelty, being constructed with glass sides, admitting of
-one comb only The queen bee and the hidden mysteries of the hive are
-continually exposed to the full light of day; it is furnished with
-double glass to keep up an uniform degree o: heat. Price, in polished
-oak, £3. 3s.
-
-
-=22. GOLDING'S GRECIAN HIVE.=
-
-Price, complete with three glasses, adapting board, &c., £1. 6s.
-
-
-=23. TAYLOR'S DIVIDING HIVE.=
-
-Is fitted with eight moveable bars, and takes apart in the centre,
-for the purpose of forming artificial swarms. Two Hives form the set
-complete. Price, £2. 10s.
-
-
-_24. COVER OF ZINC FOR BEE HIVES._
-
-Price, 7s. 6d. to 10s.
-
-Ornamental covers corresponding in style with the variety of Beehives
-herein described may also be obtained. Bee Houses, Covers in all sizes,
-&c., made to order.
-
-
-=25. FLAT TOP BELL GLASSES.=
-
-With ventilating tube, 12 in. wide and 6 in. deep, 7s. 6d.; 10 in. wide
-and 6 in. deep, 4s. 6d. Payne's Glass, 3s, 6d.
-
-
-=BELL GLASSES.=
-
-=26.= To contain 10 lbs., 10 in. high, 7 in. wide. Price 5s. 0d.
-
-=27.= " 6 " 7 " 5½ " " 2s. 6d.
-
-=28.= " 3 " 5 " 4 " " 1s. 6d.
-
-=29.= A new shape without knob, may be placed on the table inverted, with
- lid 5 in. by 6 in. Price, 4s. 6d.
-
-
-=30. SHALLOW GLASSES.=
-
-Being so much preferable for the Bees storing honey, G. N. and Son have
-introduced this season a new shape, made of two sizes without knobs, 9½
-in. wide and 4 in. deep, 4s. 6d.; 13 in. wide and 4½ in. deep. Price,
-5s, 6d.
-
-
-=31. BEE DRESS OR PROTECTOR.=
-
-To prevent being stung when operating on the Bees. Price, 5s,, by post 6s.
-
-
-=31. THE CYLINDRICAL SHALLOW WOOD HIVE=
-
-Is varnished, and will be found more durable than straw; glasses or
-small hives worked on top. This Hive is only adapted for a bee house,
-or where the protection is equivalent to one; similar in principle to
-No, 18. Price of hive and floor board, 15s.; if fitted with bars, 16s.
-6d.
-
- Common Straw Hives 2 6
- Small ditto super ditto 2 6
- Small Wooden Super Hives with window 3 6
- Floorboards each 2s, 6d, and 3 0
-
-It is strongly recommended that all beehives be placed under cover, to
-protect them from the sun and rain, and that their entrance be in a
-south-eastern aspect.
-
- "Treatise on the Humane Management of Honey Bees," by T. Nutt 10
- "Bee Keeper's Manual," by H. Taylor 4
- "The Bee Keeper's Guide," by I. H. Payne 4
- Prepared Fungus in Packets (maybe sent by Post for 2d extra) 1
- Thermometers for Nutt's Hives (Collateral Boxes) 10
- Ditto ditto (Middle Box) 5
- Ditto for Cottage Hives 4
- Zinc Slides, Ventilators, &c., in sets, for Nutt's Hives 10
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-Transcribers Note
-
-The original owner of the book, Francis Darwin, decided to paste a very
-large bookplate covering the first three paragraphs of the Preface. A
-thorough search of the Internet did not reveal any other copy of this
-volume. So, this notice is copied there.
-
-
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Italian Alp-bee, by H. C. Hermann</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Italian Alp-bee</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: H. C. Hermann</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 1, 2023 [eBook #69676]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Tom Cosmas compiled from materials made available at The Internet Archive and placed in the Public Domain.</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ITALIAN ALP-BEE ***</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="cover" style="width: 272px;">
- <img src="images/cover.png" width="272" height="417" alt="">
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ii">- ii -</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p class="caption1">NEIGHBOUR'S<br>
-IMPROVED BEE-HIVES</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">FOR</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">TAKING HONEY WITHOUT THE DESTRUCTION OF THE BEES.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="price_list_bee_hive" style="width: 416px;">
- <img src="images/price_list_bee_hive.png" width="416" height="244" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p class="pmb2 tdc smaller">DRAWINGS AND DETAILED LISTS FORWARDED ON RECEIPT OF POSTAGE STAMPS</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>1. NUTT'S COLLATERAL BOX HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p class="tdc">Consists of three collateral boxes, and octagon top box to cover the bell glass,—swarming
-is prevented. Price, £6. 15s. Stand for ditto, 16s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>2. NEIGHBOR'S IMPROVED SINGLE BOX HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p class="tdc">Working one large flat glass above, is fitted with a Thermometer, &amp;c. Price,
-complete, £3. 3s. Stand for ditto, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>3. TAYLOR'S SHALLOW BOX OR EIGHT BAR HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p class="tdc">Consists of three boxes t»o of them fitted with moveable bars for the more
-convenient deprivation of the honey protected from the weather by a cover of wood.
-Price, £3. 10s. Stand for ditto, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>4. TAYLOR'S AMATEUR BAR HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>With three boxes, furnished with seven moveable bars in each box; this Beehive
-has no additional cover, but is made of stouter wood.—<i>Vide page</i> 55, "<i>Taylor's Bee
-Keeper's Manual</i>." Price, £3. 5s. Stand for ditto, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>5. NEIGHBOUR'S IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Working three bell glasses, is neatly and strongly made of straw, it has three
-windows in the lower Hive, with a thermometer affixed to the center one. This
-Hive will be found to possess more practical advantages and is more easy of management
-than any other Beehive that has been introduced. Price, complete, £1. 15s.
-Stand for ditto, 10s, 6d.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">(<i>Continued on <a href="#pg_3">page 3</a> of Wrapper</i>)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">- 1 -</span></p>
-
-<h1 class="nobreak"><span class="smaller">THE</span><br>
-
-ITALIAN ALP-BEE<br>
-
-<span class="vsmall">OR THE</span><br>
-
-<span class="smaller">GOLD MINE OF HUSBANDRY:</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tdc">SHORT AND PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS TO BREED GENUINE<br>
-PROLIFIC ITALIAN QUEENS;<br>
-
-TO MULTIPLY THEM BY HUNDREDS IN A FEW MONTHS<br>
-
-AND HOW TO CHANGE GERMAN HIVES INTO ITALIAN</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc vsmall">BY</p>
-
-<h2>H. C. HERMANN,</h2>
-
-<p class="tdc">TAMINS, CANTON GRAUBUNDEN, SWITZERLAND</p>
-
-
-<hr class="pmt4 bdb">
-
-<p class="tdc">The Right of Translation into other Languages is Reserved.</p>
-
-<hr class="pmb4 tb">
-
-
-<p class="pmb4 tdc">LONDON:<br>
-PUBLISHED BY GEO. NEIGHBOUR AND SONS,<br>
-149, REGENT STREET, and 127, HIGH HOLBORN.<br>
-1860.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">- 2 -</span></p>
-
-
-<p>In sending this little Treatise to the Press it has been thought
-desirable to present it to the Public as a <i>literal</i> translation from the
-pen of <span class="smcap">M. Hermann</span>, rather than a more highly finished production
-in the English, language.</p>
-
-<p><i>We take the present opportunity of mentioning, that the first
-introduction of the Ligurian Bee into England was through our
-agency. A letter to us from M. Hermann, dated 5th July, 1859, (an
-extract from which appeared in the "Cottage Gardener" of that
-month) has given rise to the interesting discussion in that periodical.</i></p>
-
-<p class="tdr">G. N. &amp; SONS.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">- 3 -</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p0 smaller" style="width: 80%; margin: 0 auto;">[Transcriber Note: the original owner of the book, Francis Darwin, decided to paste a
-very large bookplate covering the first three paragraphs of the Preface.
-A thorough search of the Internet did not reveal any other copy of this volume.]</p>
-
-<p>As that kind of bee inhabits, at present, but a small strip of
-country, they are very rare, and a bee-cultivator who is in possession
-of such a hive can turn it into a real gold mine. The interest in
-the <i>Yellow Alp-bee</i> is on the increase, for it has not the less value
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">- 4 -</span>
-for science generally, because by breeding such bees one obtains
-an insight into their manners of life, and many things are made
-clear and brought to light of which it has not been possible to obtain
-a knowledge before. Only by breeding bees of this kind one
-can become a <i>bee cultivator</i> in the full sense of the word.</p>
-
-<p>To assist the breeder to change his own black or common bees
-into Italian bees in the shortest and safest way, and to keep the
-race pure, for the purpose of a lucrative income, is the object
-of this little work, and I shall be glad if the contents prove a source
-of profit to very many friends of the bee.</p>
-
-<p class="tdr">THE AUTHOR.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="scroll1" style="width: 117px;">
- <img src="images/scroll1.png" width="117" height="18" alt="">
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">- 5 -</span></p>
-
-<h1 class="nobreak"><span class="smaller">NATURAL HISTORY</span><br>
-
-<span class="vsmall">OF THE</span><br>
-
-ITALIAN YELLOW ALP-BEE.<br>
-
-<span class="smaller">(<i>Apis helvetica.</i>)</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="pmb4 tb">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> the Lord created the world he placed the plants in their
-proper situations, and creatures to those plants, which were to serve
-as their food.</p>
-
-<p>But man has in course of time transplanted plants and animals,
-so, that often the original country can no more be recognised. In
-the valleys and plains man could first commence his devastations,
-but the heights, and not easy accessible mountains resisted human
-cultivation longer; and it is there where we find nature in her
-original majesty. Often plants and animals will cease to thrive in a
-country, because they are no more in their place assigned to them by
-the Creator.</p>
-
-<p>It is different in the steep mountains, where nature is not accessible
-to cultivation; there we find everywhere the same plants in a
-certain region, as, larches, pines, Alpine-roses, gentian; also animals,
-as, chamois, wild goats, white hares, who do not thrive well in the
-plains. Here then, in the mountains, must we look for the origin
-of animals. For, at the time of the great deluge, all animals in
-the plains were, certainly, the first to perish, and those in the
-mountains were, in all probability, left for posterity.</p>
-
-<p>The yellow Italian Alp-bee is a mountain insect; it is found
-between two mountain chains to the right and left of Lombardy
-and Rhatian Alps, and comprises the whole territory of Tessir,
-Veltlin, and South-Graubunden. It thrives up to the height of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">- 6 -</span>
-4,500 feet above the level of the sea, and appeal's to prefer the
-northern clime to the warmer, for in the south of Italy it is not
-found.</p>
-
-<p>From the mountain those bees later emigrated into the plains,
-but they do not thrive so well there.</p>
-
-<p>Some learned men have called them ligurian bees, but that name
-has neither historical nor geographical claim, and not one bee-cultivator
-of the whole district of the Italian Alp-bee knows what kind of
-insects ligurian bees are. The Alps are their native country, therefore
-they are called <i>Yellow Alp-bee</i><a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> or tame house bees, in antithesis
-to the black European bees, whom we might call common forest bees,
-and who, on the slightest touch, fly like lightning into your face.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> It is not at all an indifferent matter by what name anything is called.
-Many bee-cultivators in German-Switzerland deceived by the name of "Ligurian
-bees," and in expectation to receive a foreign race, have purchased such bees at
-high prices from Germany; that they will not do again, as the natural name,
-"Alp-bee" will immediately show where that bee is at home: that is in Switzerland.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As all good and noble things in the world are more scarce than
-common ones, so there are more common black bees than of the noble
-yellow race, which latter inhabit only a very small piece of country,
-while the black ones are at home everywhere in Europe, and even in
-America.</p>
-
-<p>The Italian yellow bee differs from the common black bee in its
-longer, slender form, and light chrome yellow colour, with light
-brimstone coloured wings, and two orange-red girths, each one-sixth
-of an inch wide. Working bees as well as drones have this mark.
-The drones are further distinguished by the girths being scolloped,
-like the spotted water-serpent, and obtain an astonishing size; almost
-half as corpulent again as the black drones. The queen has the
-same marks as the working bees, but much more conspicuous and
-lighter; she is much larger than the black queen, and easy to be
-singled out of the swarm, on account of her remarkable bodily size
-and light colour.</p>
-
-<p>These bees are almost transparent when the sun shines on them.</p>
-
-<p>This race has nothing in common with the black bees; this can
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">- 7 -</span>
-be instantly seen by their ways and manner of building. The cells
-of the Italian bees are considerably deeper and broader than those of
-the black bees. Fifteen cells of the Italians are as broad as sixteen
-cells of the black kind. It must be very interesting to measure
-them geometrically.</p>
-
-<p>They are extremely tender, amiable little creatures, and a bee-protector
-is not necessary with them, as, unprovoked, they never sting,
-least of all their own master. It is a specific Swiss bee; the Alps
-are their home, and there they thrive beautifully; the higher the better.
-The exhalation of an Italian bee-hive is pungent, and easy to be
-distinguished from a German hive.</p>
-
-<p>The Italian bees have decidedly the preference. If a piece of
-honey is anywhere about, the Italians are sure to be the first to find
-it out. Long before the black bees fly out, the Italians come, and
-are industrious until late in autumn, when the black bees have long
-since ceased to work. Everywhere they scent the honey first, and
-are therefore the first to discover a weak neighbouring hive and to
-rob them of their stores.</p>
-
-<p>It is seldom known that an Italian hive will harbour German
-bees, for the Italians resist an attack much more courageously, and
-know how to keep their house clear. On the other hand, after a
-few weeks, Italian bees will be observed to march in and out of
-German hives, just as if they were quite at home; such is the case
-if there is only one Italian hive on the stand. The cause is easily
-explained. The Italians belong to the long-fingered craft, and creep
-into other hives, probably to look after the stores; then they begin
-to like the place, and they stop, joining the black people.</p>
-
-<p>In Germany the commencement has been made some years since
-to keep those bees, but they were only obtained in a bastard condition;
-many stories go the round about our dear creatures, and
-virtues and vices are attributed to them which they do not possess.</p>
-
-<p>Some insist that they are larger, others, that they are smaller,
-and others again, that they are as large as the common black bees.
-Some say that they do not agree with other bees on the same stand;
-and some are of the obstinate opinion that the Italian bee is not
-pure, and has a small portion of German blood, and that it is only
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">- 8 -</span>
-by their (the German bee-masters) pains, and careful crossing with
-their black bee, that a pure race can be produced.</p>
-
-<p>It is often comical how some even make a distinction of degrees
-of preference, of more or less purity of race. Once a friend of bees
-wrote to me:—"An Italian queen that we call fine and pure has on
-the abdomen only a very, very little point, &amp;c."</p>
-
-<p>These good people bother themselves about half or whole, and
-three quarters or full blood, and many other subtilities, without
-arriving at the idea that there is no medium pure and impure.</p>
-
-<p>What is not a pure Italian is not Italian at all. If she is Italian
-she can only produce Italians; but a bastard never; just as a
-bastard can never produce an Italian. That which is not genuine,
-is, and remains, spurious.</p>
-
-<p>Once, by the pairing of the Italian bee, brought out of course,
-there is no other guide but that of the yellow colouring.</p>
-
-<p>"All that have not on the after part a black point and a yellow
-abdomen, we kill at once as being spurious," is an expression of
-another bee-cultivator.</p>
-
-<p>Such an incarnate, North-German, Stock-Italian could not be
-convinced that there, where the home of the Italian bee is, by far
-the greater number of queens are dark, almost chesnut-brown, and,
-for all that, there is no difference in the colour of the working bees,
-whether they be produced by a light or a dark-coloured queen. All
-Italian Alp-bees have the same distinctive mark, that is, the two
-orange-red girths, no matter whether dark or light, and a dark queen
-will just as well produce light ones, as a light one produces dark
-queens, and the colour has therefore not the least influence on the
-race, but solely the marks of distinction.</p>
-
-<p>The Marquis of Spinola has called this bee the Apis ligustica,
-but on the same ground the Bavarians may call their bee Apis
-bavaria, or the Berlinians theirs, the Apis borussia, &amp;c. The circumstance
-that these yellow bees are only to be found in the most
-perfect condition on the borders of Graubunden, in the Veltlin and
-Tessin, and that, the farther one goes from the Alps, the less handsome
-they are found; as for example in Nice; until they are entirely
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">- 9 -</span>
-lost in lower Italy in the black species. This circumstance speaks
-for itself, that the yellow Alp-bees have been, through the glaciers,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-unsurmountably separated from the black bees on this side of the
-Alps, and could preserve their race in original purity, while they
-might and could mix more, by latter gradual spreading, in lower
-Italy, Venice, Genoa and Nice with other kinds. We must therefore
-look for the original in Switzerland, and can call them with as much
-right Apis helvetica as the Genoese calls them Apis ligustica.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> The assertions of many German bee-cultivators that the Italian bee has
-German blood, as not even the Alps, like a Chinese wall, would prevent them from
-mixing with German bees, may sound very well and comprehensible <i>on paper</i>,
-but the matter would be quite changed if such a biographer would take the
-trouble to make, on the spot, inquiries which would present a scientific basis-.
-The last German place from the Julier-pass is called Stalla, between which place
-and Poschiavo (a distance of fifty miles) there are <i>no bees</i>. In May, and sometimes
-to the end of the month, the road leads from Stalla by the Julier-pass
-(nine miles), often through snow, then Oberengadien is passed (where not a single
-bee exists), and then through the Bernina-pass which demands a march, in the
-snow, of about fifteen miles, and passes are the <i>lowest points for passage</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Now, I should like to see that swarm of bees that could take its wedding-flight
-from Stalla to Poschiavo over two mountains covered with snow (for the
-snow does not melt in June, and even in July and August the temperature is so
-low that every bee would perish) for the purpose of mating with the nearest
-borderers in Poschiavo. The same may be said of the entire chain of passes, on
-the Bernhardin, Gotthard, Splugen, Lukmanier, nowhere for thirty miles round
-is a bee to be found, for they cannot exists where, through the neighbourhood of
-the glaciers, the air is so cooled down. There is an end to the insect-world, and
-we may be sure that it has not entered into the mind of an Italian to import a
-hive from German-Switzerland, by which German blood may have been brought
-into Italy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>If the latter name were correct, they must have spread from
-Genoa, the former ligurian shore, into Upper Italy, and by gradual
-removal from their Genoese home, they could not gain in beauty of
-race, but must have degenerated in proportion the farther they went
-from their native country, &amp;c. But this is not so. Their seat is the
-extreme north of Italy; that is, the Italian Switzerland, there they
-have preserved their purity.</p>
-
-<p>The proofs of an argument must not be fetched from the moon.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">- 10 -</span>
-A nationality is never found on the borders, but in the centre of a
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Only a short time ago it was asserted in the Bee Gazette of
-Eichstedt, that their cell construction is not larger than that of the
-black bee; but that is another erroneous assertion which only proves
-that the author of such a natural history either never handled a pure
-Italian bee; or, like a great many more ink-wasters, hatched something
-in the study which is nowhere to be found in nature.</p>
-
-<p>It does not require the use of spectacles to find a difference.</p>
-
-<p>The cubic contents of an Italian bee-cell is larger by thirty per
-cent, and the width is one-fifteenth more than that of the German
-cell. If, therefore, Italian bees are bred through several generations
-in German cells, the bees must ultimately degenerate and
-become smaller.</p>
-
-<p>Now as it has pleased some naturalists to name them Apis
-ligustica, I cannot conceive why we should not rebaptise them, as
-soon as we have arrived at the conviction that our researches have
-been more in accordance with nature. Therefore courage, and in
-future.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Yellow Alp-bee</span>, or, if necessary, that it should be latin, <i>Apis
-helvetia</i>, or helvetica (we are not good latin scholars).</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 1.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">NATURE OF BEES.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc"> A healthy hive contains in summer three kinds of bees</p>
-
-<table>
-<tr>
- <td>1. The queen or mother-bee.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>2. The drones or males.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>3. The working-bees, or imperfect females.
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 2.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE QUEEN.</p>
-
-<p>In a hive there is in general only one queen who lays during the
-time of her highest prolificness in summer daily from 1000 to 3000
-eggs, and these in the best order; one egg in a cell. More than
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">- 11 -</span>
-one queen the bees do not suffer. Should there be more, they fly
-away as swarms, or are killed by the bees.</p>
-
-<p>The queen lays male and female eggs. The male-eggs she lays
-in the drone cells, and the female-eggs in the small cells of the
-working-bees. The queen requires, reckoning from the egg to her
-creeping out ten to seventeen days, according to the weather.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 3.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE WORKING-BEES.</p>
-
-<p>The working-bees originate out of the female-eggs. There are
-in a hive from 6000 to 70,000. They require from the egg to
-maturity eighteen to twenty-one days, they then remain in the hive
-for ten or fourteen days before they fly out.</p>
-
-<p>The bees are able to bring up a queen out of every working-bee's
-eggs, and also from the grub if it is not above three days old. In
-that case they elongate and increase the width of the cell in the
-shape of an acorn, and give more feeding-mucilage than they are in
-the habit of giving to the working-bee.</p>
-
-<p>To insure success in the cultivation it requires dexterity, and
-study of the nature of bees. The queen requires from the egg ten
-to seventeen days to her full development, when she will fly out
-about from one to three days, after her creeping out of the egg, to
-be impregnated, and then after the lapse of six or ten days more,
-she commences to lay eggs. Then she will not fly out again unless
-with a swarm. The bees always prepare several queen-cells at one
-time, which, however, do not mature at the same moment. The
-queen is only once impregnated during the whole course of her life
-which lasts from about three to five years.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 4.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE DRONES</p>
-
-<p>These are males. There are about 2,000 in a hive, and then
-only in summer, for, as soon as the swarming and honey-carrying-time
-is over, they are turned out as useless eaters. They serve only to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">- 12 -</span>
-impregnate the queen. The drones require from the egg to maturity,
-twenty-one to twenty-four days.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 5.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE WORKING-BEES.</p>
-
-<p>The working-bees mate probably with the drones, and are,
-therefore, capable of laying eggs, but which produce only drones;
-and, generally, a hive in which the working-bees commence laying
-eggs, is going to destruction. It can soon be observed, as they lay
-often two, three, to twenty eggs, without order, in one cell. In such
-a hive there is no longer a queen, and it is best to separate it at
-once or to unite it with a healthy hive, for such demoralised people
-generally kill a newly added queen. Those, who dispute the mating
-of the working-bees with the drones are in error. Only place young
-bees without a queen in a place distant from any drones, and no eggs
-are ever discovered; but, as soon as they are brought in the neighbourhood
-of drones, and they have no queens, they lay drone-egg.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 6.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">BREEDING OF THE QUEEN.</p>
-
-<p>For that purpose choose the largest hive, for it is an old saying,
-that "a large cow will produce a large calf."—From so fine a hive
-you certainly have fine young ones.</p>
-
-<p>As it is known that out of every working-bee-egg the bees can
-breed a queen, and that they often prepare as many as from six to
-thirty at the same time, advantage must be taken of that fact.</p>
-
-<p>But do not begin with the breeding of queens until the bees are
-sufficiently strong, and have commenced the breeding of drones.
-This must be particularly attended to if you want to breed afterwards
-pure Italians, for to insure their mating only with Italian
-drones they must first exist, and that in strong numbers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">- 13 -</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§7.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">HOW TO BREED ITALIAN QUEENS WHEN IN POSSESSION
-OF ONE OR TWO WHOLE ITALIAN HIVES.</p>
-
-<p>When you have one or two Italian hives, you must endeavor
-to put them into hives with moveable parts, if they are not already
-in one. Then care must be taken, that by continual feeding with
-good honey, and filling up of the hive with sufficient combs, they
-increase their strength and prepare a good many drones. The
-trouble is much less if the Italian bees are on a stand by themselves,
-about 500 or 1000 yards from the others, the farther the better.</p>
-
-<p>It will be well to be cautious, to leave one hive undivided and
-untouched that they continue to breed many drones, for the divided
-hive will not produce any more drones in the same year, therefore
-one hive must be kept strong and untouched, so that you do not
-run short in drone-breeding.</p>
-
-<p>When there are sufficient drones or drone-brood on hand, take
-from a hive the Italian queen with the third part of her people and
-building, and fill up the missing two-thirds with empty and full
-combs. This queen is now taken to a distant stand where the
-common or black bee is kept, and placed in the stead of a populous
-hive during the absence of the most part of the bees. The black
-bees will at first be surprised and refuse to enter, as these two
-species hate each other. Should they entirely refuse to enter, then
-remove during the flight, the whole of the black hives standing on
-the same front; the returning bees will then be frightened, and not
-knowing where to go to, will, in the end, willingly, and without
-disturbance, enter to the Italian mother, who by those means will
-soon get strong again; and in about five or seven days, will have
-laid sufficient eggs to part them again; and so you can continue as
-long as you wish to Italianise. In that manner, if the queen is
-forthwith strengthened by German bees, no disturbance takes place
-in the breeding of drones, you have only to put in a few drone-cells.
-But that the Italian mother does not receive black drones as well,
-place before the fly-hole a drone-stopper to keep those customers out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">- 14 -</span></p>
-
-<p>Let us now return to the Italian stand, where we have taken the
-mother from with a third of the people.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile they have made preparations to begin queen-cells,
-and mostly more than one, perhaps from ten to twenty. On the
-eleventh, the latest on the seventeenth day, they creep out, and, not
-to expose them to the danger of the surplus ones being killed by
-the bees, they must be looked after on the eighth or ninth day,
-and all queen-cells but one or two must be cut out. The cut
-out cells are put with a honey-comb and a few handfulls of bees
-into a little box about four or six inches square. These boxes
-must have wires on two, or better, on all four sides, so that the
-bees get used to the smell of each other, and thus become reconciled.</p>
-
-<p>In such a box the Italian queen-cell is put in to a hive of black
-bees, which the day previous has been deprived of the queen, and if
-possible in the centre or the heart of the nest. The black bees
-cannot now enter into the box, but become acquainted, through the
-wire, with the smell of the Italian bees, and by the time the queen,
-who will be well taken care of by the two handfulls of bees put with
-her, is matured, the black bees will have taken a liking to her.</p>
-
-<p>About three or five days after the adding of the queen-cell, you
-must look whether the black bees have not formed queen cells of
-their own specie, if so, they must be cut out. Then, the following
-day, the fly-hole in the little box which has been kept shut is slowly
-opened, and the black bees will gradually enter into the box and
-pay their homage to the new queen.</p>
-
-<p>To prevent the mating of the queen with a black drone, a wire
-must be attached before the fly-hole of the hive, large enough for
-the queen and bees to fly out (for the queen only mates in the open
-air) but too small for drones, which are in the black hive; then the
-stand must be placed where the Italian mother-hive is, until the
-queen is impregnated.</p>
-
-<p>In the same manner all queen-cells are treated (all but one or
-two, which are left in the hive for the purpose of forming a separate
-colony) until all black hives are Italianised. Should, however, a
-hive be impregnated where it is supposed any black drones exist, it
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">- 15 -</span>
-must be put on the stand of the black bees, so as to have only pure
-Italian drones on the Italian breeding stand.</p>
-
-<p>In three weeks, with only little practice, about fifty hives can be
-Italianised. When done, and all the bees are provided with queens of
-Italian origin, then the work is much easier, as meanwhile, the
-young mothers lay Italian drone-eggs, and the black drones die, or,
-the Italian drones obtain such preponderance, that a genuine impregnation
-is in most cases certain.</p>
-
-<p>For breeding, always choose the finest mother, if possible, of
-yellow colour, having previously convinced yourself that she has
-been impregnated genuinely, that is, by an Italian drone, and that
-she breeds, as a proof, handsome yellow working bees.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 8.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">BREEDING OF DRONES.</p>
-
-<p>To increase the Italian drones as fast as possible, deprive the
-Italian mother of a hive of her drone-cells, and place instead, empty
-cells for further filling them with drone-brood, which she will do
-forthwith. The Italian drone-brood hang into the black hives for
-hatching, taking and destroying, as much as possible, their own black-broods.</p>
-
-<p>Food must not be spared with brood-hives, as that will induce
-them to continue breeding.</p>
-
-<p>So prepared, commences now the proper culture of queens.</p>
-
-<p>For that purpose small queen-breeding-boxes are required for
-it is troublesome to single out a queen in a large and populous hive
-and otherwise not advantageous to disturb a strong hive by ill-treatment.</p>
-
-<p>The ground-rules for the certain pure-keeping of the Italian
-race, consist always of this: to destroy the black drones, and to
-increase the Italian ones.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, it is better to take care that the Italian bees are
-placed on a stand where no black drones are allowed. And if now
-German people are brought to strengthen the Italian colony then
-let them pass in review first and kill the black drones.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">- 16 -</span></p>
-
-<p>The work can be made much easier by letting the bees run into
-any weak hive, and only through a narrow slit, when only working-bees
-can pass through, but is too narrow for drones, so that the
-drones can all be kept back. The next day the bees can be taken
-out of the hive again and used.</p>
-
-<p>Not only is the object gained to put away the drones, but the
-bees are also discouraged, so that they can be joined with others
-without difficulty. Should they have run into a hive deprived of
-the queen, or only provided with queen-cells, they will be heartily
-glad that a queen is given them and will not leave her. The bees
-generally become anxious and tame if the drones and drone-brood
-are taken away. Endeavouring now, on the one hand, to permit
-no black drones on the Italian stand, which is kept for the improvement
-of the races, and to destroy them with their drone-brood and
-cells, care must be taken, on the other hand, that the Italian bees
-breed the largest possible quantity of drones. Some assert that the
-Italian queens lay more drone-eggs than the Germans, but that is
-not right; they lay them in the same proportion as the black bees
-but it can be forwarded by the placing of drone-breeding-combs
-in the breeding-nest; for the queen to fill them, it is above all
-things, necessary that the hive be populous and the weather
-favourable.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as a drone-breeding-comb is filled, it should, without
-delay, be placed in a hive deprived of the queen, because those hives
-in their queenless state, seize the opportunity to bring up drones
-as if they were aware that they would be necessary for the impregnation
-of their future queen.</p>
-
-<p>Such a hive seldom destroys drone-brood; while hives with
-queens, as a general rule, on the approach of bad weather, tear out
-the drone-brood and turn the drones away.</p>
-
-<p>But as soon as the queen, intended for the drone-breeding hive,
-is again impregnated, the drones would be in danger of being turned
-out again, for in particular, fresh impregnated queens do away with
-the drones very quickly, therefore the impregnated queen must be
-taken from the drone-hive; in that way drone hives may be kept
-until late in the autumn. The queens intended for drone production,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">- 17 -</span>
-particularly in bad weather, must be stimulated with food; so that
-they do not relax in laying eggs.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 9.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE QUEEN-BREEDING-HIVE.</p>
-
-<p>This is a small box with moveable parts, more or less large does
-not matter. The principle thing is, that they are made of equal
-widths that every comb of each hive fits into any other hive.</p>
-
-<p>About twelve inches long and six inches broad and high (that
-is square) might be about the right size. Lengthwise, on the top
-of the inner sides, fix two pieces of wood, each about three-eights of
-an inch broad. These are the supporters of the combs, on which
-the combs or chips rest, to be able to take out easily, and to replace
-each comb separately. Better still, if small frames instead of chips
-are used. The top opens upwards, and to make it fit tight, nail or
-paste soft cloth or paper round the edges. In the top make a hole
-about two inches in diameter, which serves as a feeding hole; for
-such little people want frequent feeding, else they will often entirely
-go away.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 10.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">SUPPLYING OF THE QUEEN-BREEDING-HIVES.</p>
-
-<p>No. 1. That mother which has been picked out as breeding bee
-must be taken with part of her people and some brood-combs,
-honey-combs, and empty ones, until the little box is quite full, and
-is then placed on the stand where the Italian bees and drones are
-kept. After a few days, the queen is taken with a few combs of
-brood and their bees, and is put into a breeding-box.</p>
-
-<p>No. 2. This also should well supplied with honey, empty combs
-and a few ripe breeding-combs. After a few days, when the queen
-has established herself well and has filled the cells with brood she
-is to be again taken out with a few combs and some people, and form
-a new colony.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">- 18 -</span></p>
-
-<p>No. 3. And so on, until you have enough. But never neglect
-to feed these little people well,<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> particularly the one which contains
-the queen.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Else it is to be expected that some fine day they will take their departure,
-when generally every one of them will leave, for such little colonies cannot
-keep themselves unless it be in the high honey season.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the breeding-box, No. 1, deprived of its queen, has
-prepared queen-cells, which on the tenth day are cut out, except one
-or two, and form likewise new colonies,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> It must be observed that
-the bees which adhere to the combs or the brood, and which guard
-the cells, are taken out with them. The strengthening of such colonies
-is done best by hanging in of ripe brood near their development,
-or by young bees which always set on the combs, and who
-attend to the real brood business.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> You must endeavour to insert the queen-cells in the middle of a comb,
-where the most of the bees gather; it is done best by cutting a diamond-shaped
-piece out of the comb, and then, loosely inserting the queen-cell cut to a similar
-shape. If it were inserted in the lower edge, the bees could not cover it on the
-approach of cold weather, and the cell would become cold and the bee perish.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The same is done with the queen-cells of No. 2, and so on. Care
-must be exercised to be well supplied with all the different stages,
-from the egg to the queen, so that there are always ready ripe and
-half-ripe cells, impregnated and unimpregnated queens in all stages.</p>
-
-<p>If now, a queen has crept out, you must wait until she is impregnated,
-and has well supplied the box with brood, then take
-away the queen, and put in from another hive a ripe queen-cell;
-where the queen-cell has been taken from, a few brood-combs must
-be inserted, so that no interruption takes place. If a queen, taken
-away, can always be replaced by a ripe queen-cell, fifteen queens
-may be produced from one breeding-box during one summer. Care
-must be taken that there is always young brood in a queen-breeding-box,
-so that in case a queen or queen-cell should meet with an
-accident, the bees have a substitute, and no interruption can occur.</p>
-
-<p>The brood is necessary to the bees and makes them industrious.
-Therefore, never take a queen from her people until she has well
-supplied them with eggs and brood.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">- 19 -</span>
-Frequent inspection is very necessary, for sometimes everything may
-be thought to be quite in order, and yet a hive has, instead of a
-queen, <i>only working</i> bees, who, through a longer deprivation of their
-queen have themselves commenced to lay eggs but out of which
-only drones are produced, to the great disappointment of the
-cultivator. This disorder can soon be observed, for the bees lay
-<i>many</i> eggs and without order in <i>one</i> cell, while the queen lays only
-<i>one</i>, never more than two in one cell.</p>
-
-<p>Such a hive, where the bees have commenced laying eggs, may
-also be known by blowing into it, when the bees will hum quite
-hollow, while in a hive with a queen, the humming is quite lively
-and cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>If not too far gone, the hive may be brought round by inserting
-a comb of healthy brood with the adhering young bees; but if it
-has gone too far, it must be united with a healthy hive, else all
-trouble is lost. Introduced queens are killed by such demoralised
-people.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 11.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">RESERVING OF QUEEN-CELLS.</p>
-
-<p>Often it will happen that there are more queen-cells than can be
-used at the moment, for they must not be let lying about long, else
-they will become cold; and generally the brood must be protected
-from cold.</p>
-
-<p>Such queen-cells are placed singly into very small boxes, if only
-of the size of two walnuts, and these boxes are put in any hive on a
-spot where a proper degree of warmth is developed, say, just above
-the little rods which is regarded by many bee-cultivators as the honey-room
-in the moveable box. There they can remain until wanted.
-That a small wire-grating is placed before the little box is understood,
-so that if a queen should creep out unexpectedly before required,
-the bees can feed her.</p>
-
-<p>If the queen-cells should have sustained any little injury it must
-be patched again directly with a little wax. The best way is to
-warm a knife a little and to touch the cell slightly with it, the wax-cover
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">- 20 -</span>
-is then sufficiently softened to repair the damage. Larger
-injuries cannot be remedied, and one cannot be too careful in cutting
-them out not to damage any of them.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 12.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">QUEEN-BREEDING WITH BROOD-COMES.</p>
-
-<p>A brood-comb may be taken from the mother-hive,<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> but always
-<i>with the bees adhering thereto</i>, and can be put in a breeding-box
-provided with honey and empty combs. This is placed in the room
-of a populous hive, to people it, and after the lapse of ten days the
-queen-cells are full and covered; they are cut out as stated before.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> This is particular to be advised when there is only one Italian queen which
-must be preserved to breed drones.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> Sometimes the bees put their queen-cells together so close, and in groups,
-or opposite to each other, that often it is not possible to cut the cells for use
-without damaging them. These must be left, and watch must be kept for the
-eleven days, and, as soon a as young queen creeps out, she must be taken away,
-all, but the last yellow one which is left in the hive. If a piece of about an inch
-square is cut off, crossways, from below the edge of a young brood-comb full of
-grub-eggs, so that the liquid of the brood runs out, it generally causes the bees
-to fix their queen-cells on that spot in the best order.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 13.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">ADDING OF QUEENS.</p>
-
-<p>The adding of the queen to hives of other races is done like the
-adding of queen-cells. First, the hive is deprived of the queen,
-then the queen is put into the box with a little honey and two handfulls
-of her own bees, and the box is then placed in the desired hive.
-After four days it must be seen whether the black bees have commenced
-queen-cells. If they have not the little fly-hole is opened
-when the bees will unite and accept the queen. But if queen-cells
-are formed, it is a proof that the bees are not yet inclined to accept
-the new queen. All queen-cells must now be cut out, and wait
-a few days to make them feel quite forsaken, then the Italian may
-be let in and will then be friendly received.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">- 21 -</span></p>
-
-<p>If queens or queen-cells were introduced without regard, they
-would all be bitten off, as the Italian and black bees are two different
-races who hate each other.</p>
-
-<p>It should always be looked to that the queen is first impregnated
-before taken from her own people to be given to another, because,
-unimpregnated queens are more exposed to the danger of being killed
-than already impregnated ones, when the bees are assured of her
-having descendants.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 14.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">PARTICULAR RULES.</p>
-
-<p>To cause a sufficient supply of Italian drones care must be taken
-that the hives with Italian mothers are always well provided with
-drone-combs, which will cause the queen, when they are placed in the
-middle of the breeding-layers, to put in more drone-brood; the more
-so by continual feeding with liquid honey. The continuous feeding,
-with proper strength of people is the most effective way for the production
-of drones. By insertion of ripe breeding-combs near upon
-running out a hive can be most effectively and quickly strengthened.</p>
-
-<p>Further, it must be remarked that, as the Italian bees build
-<i>larger cells</i> than the black bees, it is well to give the Italians opportunity
-to begin building anew. It is to be supposed that those
-who have decided to introduce a strange race of bees, Italians, must
-have some knowledge of bee-cultivation, and must also possess bees
-of their own native race; for one who has no idea at all of the
-higher branches of bee-cultivation, for him to introduce a strange
-race would be money thrown away; such an one would do better to
-try his experiments on common bees until he is well practised.</p>
-
-<p>Those who do not particularly care to change all their hives into
-pure Italians can add the Italian queen-cells in a box to the black
-bees, and can abandon the queen creeping out to her destiny, as to
-which drone she will mate with. Although not many Italians are
-by those means gained in the first years, there will be plenty of
-bastards, and for the second year a very good foundation for Italianizing,
-because the stock is already Italian, and the Italian element
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">- 22 -</span>
-preponderates. Care must be taken to mark the <i>original mother</i>
-well, and only to obtain posterity <i>through her</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 15.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE AUTUMN CULTURE</p>
-
-<p>For queens it is only so far applicable, as the period must be waited
-for when the black drones are killed, and care has been taken to
-reserve only Italian drones, which is done by depriving some Italian
-hives of their queens, and also of their queen-cells, so that they
-cannot breed any more queens. These bees will not kill their drones.
-By abundant feeding bees can be induced, even in the late autumn,
-to breed drones and to suffer them. When the drones are driven
-out of a hive they must be put, with some honey, into a box supplied
-with a wire-grating, and placed in a hive deprived of its queen.
-After a few days they are let loose and will then soon get used to
-the queenless bees. They may also be put into the top of a hive
-with a queen, but then, they must be kept shut in until wanted
-for use.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 16.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">IN THE EARLY SPRING</p>
-
-<p>Queens of a pure race may be bred with advantage, because the
-Italians breed drones two or three weeks earlier than the black bees,
-so that the Italian mothers can mate when there are no German
-drones whatever. However, the finest queens are only obtained by
-waiting the natural time when the inclination for breeding exists;
-from about a fortnight before to a fortnight after swarming time.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 17.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">BOXES WITHOUT MOVEABLE PARTS.</p>
-
-<p>Those who are not in possession of boxes with movable parts,
-but yet wish to Italianise their native bees, have much more trouble,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">- 23 -</span>
-and must leave it to chance whether the queen, bred from Italian
-brood, will mate with black or Italian drones. It is difficult and
-not everybody's business to take the finished queen-cells from such
-hives; but a clever bee-cultivator will know how to help himself
-even then.</p>
-
-<p>In such a case all the people in the Italian hive must be driven
-out, and the hive put in the place of one, or better, two strong
-native hives, during the time of their strongest flight, and the empty
-hive will be populated by German people, who immediately begin to
-make queen-cells.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> Here, too, a wire-grating may be fixed before the fly-hole, large enough to
-permit free entrance to the bees, but too narrow for drones; this will keep the
-hive pure. Of course, as soon the queen makes her mating-flight, the hive is
-carried, in the evening, after sunset, to the place where the pure Italians are until
-the mating is over.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The two native hives are then taken away and placed on another
-stand, or, if there is only one, on the bottom shelf of the bee-house.
-It is always better to take away all hives with black drones, so that
-here are only Italian drones flying. The loss of people will do
-them the less damage, as they would without that have had to give
-out a swarm.</p>
-
-<p>In order that the forced or artificial swarm from the Italian
-mother-hive may soon be in full strength, it is necessary to put the
-swarm into a hive already filled with combs, which must be well
-fed to excite them to breed.</p>
-
-<p>The separated Italian hive is opened after seven days, when the
-queen-cells are nearly ripe, and divided into as many parts as there
-are undamaged queen-cells; it is always better to give two cells to
-each part, so that if one should get hurt, the bees have another
-one ready.</p>
-
-<p>Each of such parts is taken with the bees adhering to them and
-put with some empty honey-combs into an empty hive. Supposing
-there were ten such parts with queen-cells, then there would
-be ten colonies. But these alone would give neither profit nor
-amusement, and would be altogether too weak to prosper; they must
-therefore undergo a forced operation by being placed in the room of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">- 24 -</span>
-a populous hive, that is, in the place of ten native hives during their
-best flight, keeping a wire before the whole to keep out the drones,
-but admitting the bees.</p>
-
-<p>As at the beginning, the bees of the black race will be rather
-shy, caution must be had to clear the entire front of the bees of the
-native race, by putting them either higher or lower; by these means
-they will lose about as many people as would make a swarm which
-they would have had to give up all the same, and the ten new
-Italian hives will all profit by it, get strong, populous, and will
-thrive. For as soon as the bees, returning from the field, find no
-hive of their kind in the same front, they will at last become tame
-and enter quietly with the Italians. But if the bees coming from
-the field find only one hive of black bees in the same front, they will
-invariably go in the hive of their race left standing.</p>
-
-<p>It is hardly necessary to mention that the drone-wire must be
-sufficiently large to allow the queen to pass.</p>
-
-<p>On the third or fourth day before the young queen creeps out,
-all new hives are brought where the mother-hive, or the drones
-are kept for mating; or all the hives with black drones may be
-shut up by a wire until the mating is over.</p>
-
-<p>To make sure that the queen on her mating-excursions will find
-drones immediately, there are ways to stimulate the bees, that they
-will lead the drones out early in the morning; it is done by feeding
-the hive very early with thinned honey, which will cause the drones
-to undertake an early pleasure-trip on that day.</p>
-
-<p>If there be an opportunity to add to a new hive formed from
-eggs of queen-cells an Italian ripe drone-brood comb it is well to do
-so, for by so doing the purity of race is much insured. As said
-before, the great knack is, to be prepared with the proper number of
-drones.</p>
-
-<p>Many bee-cultivators make a great blunder in that respect, in
-cutting out the drone-cells, thinking that they are unnecessary eaters,
-but not considering that, <i>the fewer</i> drones there are on a stand <i>the
-greater</i> the danger of losing queens. For, natural enough, the queen
-flies out to mate and to find a drone, if she finds one immediately,
-she can return home directly and the hive is saved. But if the drones
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">- 25 -</span>
-are scarce, and the queen cannot soon find a lover, she will delay her
-wedding-journey, or even go home again without having gained
-her object; and is, therefore, obliged to repeat her journeys. The
-oftener she flies out, and the longer she must remain out, the
-more the danger that she may be destroyed during her wedding-tour.
-This is well to be considered. Queens which I placed to mate
-on a distant stand, with but few drones were always impregnated
-from eight to ten days later than on the principal stand, where the
-drones flew in abundance.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 18.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">TRANSPORT OF QUEENS.</p>
-
-<p>If many queens are produced, they are principally bred for presents
-to other lovers of bees, or for sale to extend the race, and by
-the art to raise queens early it is in your power quickly to multiply
-a favourite race of bees. We will now give a few hints how queens
-can be sent to distances.</p>
-
-<p>For that purpose, take a box four inches square, in the lid
-of which make three or four incisions or cuts, to admit air to the
-bees. A piece of covered old honey is loosely wrapt up in blotting-paper
-and nailed firmly to the bottom of the box. That the nail
-may not pass through the honey and the honey gets loose and
-smother the bees, it is well to put a piece of pasteboard or leather,
-of about two-inch square under the head of the nail, as a lining.
-Then put the queen with a handful of her own people (500 or 1000)
-in the box and nail it down; then wrap a loose piece of linen round
-the box, so that the bees have sufficient air, but that the light is
-somewhat interrupted, to keep them quiet on the journey. The
-blotting-paper must be wrapt round the honey in such a manner
-that the honey shows at one end that the bees can gradually eat it
-up. If, neither blotting-paper be used, nor the honey nailed
-down, there would be risk that the honey rolled about during the
-journey and smothered the bees, or run out of the comb and drown
-the bees in it. The blotting-paper takes up any honey run out, so
-that the bees can only gradually eat it up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">- 26 -</span></p>
-
-<p>It must be well understood that a queen is not sent before she
-is impregnated, that is, until she has laid eggs. These boxes will
-stand a journey of ten days.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 19.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">REMARKS ON UNITING BEES.</p>
-
-<p>Another caution must be observed on uniting of two bee-colonies.</p>
-
-<p>Bees are naturally avaricious and therefore permit every bee,
-even a stranger, laden with honey to enter. This is a hint, and
-advantage must be taken of this their passion.</p>
-
-<p>Before two colonies are joined together, take care that the
-bees which are to be added are quite satiated with honey. It does
-not matter if both parties have been previously well fed, for then
-they are not so capable of beginning to fight.</p>
-
-<p>Bees, well filled with honey are everywhere welcome, and when
-the bees have discharged their burdens in the cells they fraternise
-and forget all quarrels.</p>
-
-<p>Honey is therefore a very good means of union. But to sprinkle
-the bees only with honey, or honey-water, produces just the contrary
-effect; they become irritated and impassioned and kill each other.
-If, therefore, you desire success, give them honey to their heart's
-content. If a hive is to be driven out, stop up loosely the principal
-hole, blow a little smoke into it, then turn it over and knock it
-gently for about ten minutes; the object will thus be gained, because
-the bees, anticipating the danger, will make haste to provide themselves
-with food for the journey. A bee can suck in double her
-weight in provision.</p>
-
-<p>A very sure way to strengthen Italian queens with German
-people is, that the Italian queen with her company, and a few combs
-are put into a box, and, gradually, brood nearly running out is
-introduced: not all at once, but every one or two combs, so that the
-brood running out is strong enough to cover the brood in store. By
-so doing the queen will have an increase of people who will adhere
-to her, not having known another queen yet. This way of strengthening
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">- 27 -</span>
-is the safest, only too many combs must not be put in at one
-time, because then, the queen with her weak people could not produce
-sufficient warmth for the entire hatching of the brood.</p>
-
-<p>There is another way to be recommended. The Italian queen
-with her people are put in the box, intended for the purpose, with a
-sufficient number of combs, empty and full of honey. Then bees
-without a queen, or which have been deprived of the queen one, or
-a few days previous, and have been confined <i>without the least brood</i>
-or combs are let into the Italians through a small hole, so that <i>only
-one</i> at a time can go in and must, so to say, <i>beg</i> her admittance.</p>
-
-<p>Hives where the queen has been taken from, but which have
-young brood or queen-cells, are not to be called deprived of their
-queen, they have even the best hopes to bring up, in a short time,
-several queens; for that reason they kill any new introduced queen.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 20.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE FEEDING</p>
-
-<p>Is always done best from above with a bottle, the mouth of which is
-tied over with loose linen, so that the bees can always suck in the
-honey without attracting robbers.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">§ 21.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">THE ORIGINAL MOTHER BEE</p>
-
-<p>Must be particularly carefully preserved to have always, in case of
-any cross-breeding, <i>one queen</i> of undoubted purity. To make quite
-sure the queen can be marked by clipping one of the wings; she can
-then be easy recognised.</p>
-
-<p>It is more certain to procure every year or two an <i>original
-Italian hive</i>, from their native place, with which to freshen up the
-race. Those who have opportunities to sell Italian bees, which is
-almost everywhere the case, will find it more than enough to their
-advantage, as this little extra expense places them in position to
-breed pure queens with the greatest certainty, and they will be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">- 28 -</span>
-enabled to serve their customers always with genuine Italian Alp-bees,
-and consequently increase their sale.</p>
-
-<p>A queen of the Italian species lives generally from three to four
-years, often to five years. Therefore, with some care, what has been
-missed the first year, may, at any rate, be made good the second
-year, if one knows how to save and preserve the mother or breeding—queen.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 126px;">
- <img src="images/scroll2.png" width="126" height="33" alt="">
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">- 29 -</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="caption3">GENUINE ITALIAN ALP-BEES.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 97px;">
- <img src="images/scroll3.png" width="97" height="26" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p>I have appointed my friends, Messrs. Geo. Neighbour and
-Sons, of 127, Holborn, and 149, Regent Street, London, my sole
-agents for England, and they will take orders, I undertaking to
-execute the same, at the following charges—the cost of carriage to
-paid by the purchaser.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc bigger">A YOUNG, YELLOW, IMPREGNATED QUEEN,</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">FROM MARCH 15 TO APRIL 30,</p>
-
-<p class="tdc">With 500 Bees, for 20 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 22 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 35 shillings:<br>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">FROM MAY 1 TO JUNE 31,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">With 500 Bees, for 15 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 17 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 30 shillings:<br>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">FROM JULY 1 TO AUGUST 31,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">With 500 Bees, for 10 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 12 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 25 shillings:<br>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">FROM SEPTEMBER 1 TO NOVEMBER 30,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">With 500 Bees, for 8 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 10 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 20 shillings.
-
-<p class="tdc">Queens less fine, young as well as old, cost 2 francs each less</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">- 30 -</span></p>
-
-<p class="tdc bigger">PURE GERMAN QUEENS,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">TILL THE END OF JUNE,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">With 500 Bees, for 6 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 8 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 15 shillings:<br>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">FROM JULY 1 TO NOVEMBER 30,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">With 500 Bees, for 3 shillings; with 1000 Bees, for 4 shillings;
-with 5000 Bees, for 6 shillings.<br>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 116px;">
- <img src="images/scroll4.png" width="116" height="24" alt="">
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="tdc bigger">ITALIAN DRONES,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">TILL JULY 30,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">2 shillings per 100:<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">FROM AUGUST 1 TO OCTOBER 30,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">3 shillings per 100.<br>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 116px;">
- <img src="images/scroll4.png" width="116" height="24" alt="">
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="tdc bigger">UNIMPREGNATED YOUNG ITALIAN QUEENS,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">6 shillings each.<br>
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 116px;">
- <img src="images/scroll4.png" width="116" height="24" alt="">
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="tdc bigger">ITALIAN QUEEN CELLS,<br>
-
-<p class="tdc">3 shillings each.<br>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="tdc">A PROPORTIONATE DISCOUNT ON LARGE ORDERS</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">- 31 -</span></p>
-
-<p>The Bees are only provided with sufficient honey for the
-journey. Should a queen die on the journey, I send another for
-half the price. As proof, the dead queen must be sent to me in a
-letter.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">
-<span class="smcap">Tamins, Canton Graubunden</span>,<br>
-&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;H. C. HERMANN,<br>
-&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;Bee Cultivator.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="scroll5" style="width: 158px;">
- <img src="images/scroll5.png" width="158" height="34" alt="">
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">- 32 -</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="caption3nb">THE RICINUS SILKWORM.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 97px;">
- <img src="images/scroll3.png" width="97" height="26" alt="">
-</div>
-
-
-<p>This worm is particularly recommended, as it will feed readily
-on linden leaves (Dipsacus) and Ricinus thistles, and therefore
-augurs a great future, as the difficulty of growing mulberry trees in
-our northern clime was the chief hindrance. By the introduction
-of this worm all is remedied, and the agriculturist anticipates a
-brilliant future; he will soon be able to dress in silk instead of
-tick.</p>
-
-<p>The silk of this worm is not as fine, but quite as good, and
-more productive than that of the genuine silkworm.</p>
-
-<p>I sell these insects:</p>
-
-<table>
-<tr>
- <td>Eggs, 13 shillings per dozen.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Chrysalis, 3 shillings each.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Moths, 5 shillings each. And,</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td>Printed Instructions, 1 shilling.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="tdc">LONDON: W. OSTELL, PRINTER, HART STREET, BLOOMSBURY.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">- 33 -</span></p>
-
-
-<p id="pg_3" class="caption3nb">GEORGE NEIGHBOUR &amp; SON'S CATALOGUE.</p>
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>6. AN IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Precisely the same in construction as the No. 5 described above, but without
-windows or thermometer. Price, complete, £1. 8s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>7. THE LADIES' OBSERVATORY HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Is of stout glass and admits of one bellglass for deprivation, with a cover of straw
-for the whole, is admirably adapted for witnessing the labour and progress of its
-industrious inmates, and is an interesting addition to the conservatory or greenhouse
-in which it may easily be placed. Price, complete, £3, 5s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>8. THE COTTAGER S HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Is intended for the use of cottagers, and consists of three common straw Hives with
-floorboard; it is recommended to those Apiarians who are desirous of setting their
-poorer neighbours in the way of keeping bees, on the improved system without
-destruction. Price, 10s. 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>9 &amp; 10. BEE FEEDERS.</b></p>
-
-<p>No. 9, is intended to fit a drawer under wood Hives. Price, 5s. No. 10, is for
-Hives either of wood or straw, and is used on the top of the stock Hive. Zinc,
-price, 4s. In earthenware, 43, 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>11 &amp; 12. FUMIGATORS.</b></p>
-
-<p>Used with the prepared Fungus, for uniting weak stocks, &amp;c.
- Price, 2s. and 2s. 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>13. HONEYCUTTERS.</b></p>
-
-<p>For easily cutting out the comb. Price, 5s. per pair.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>14. TAYLOR'S IMPROVED COTTAGE HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>As described page 163, Bee Keeper's Manual. Price, £1. Is.
- With Stand, £1. 10s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>15. FOUNTAIN BEE FEEDERS.</b></p>
-
-<p>Price, 6s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>17. SINGLE BAR HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>The Stock Hive is furnished with seven moveable bars, and admits of super Hives
-or glasses. Vide page 61, ''Bee Keeper's Manual,'' Price £2. 12s. Stand, 8s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>18. EIGHT BAR STRAW HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Similar in its arrangements to No; 3, with an outer cover of straw. Price,
-complete with Stand, &amp;c., £3. 12s. The Stock Hive maybe obtained
-separate. Price, with floor board, 15s.</p>
-
-
-<p><b>19. HUBER'S BOOK OR LEAF HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Price, £2. 58.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>20. NEIGHBOUR'S PATENT UNICOMB OBSERVATORY HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Is a great novelty, being constructed with glass sides, admitting of one comb only
-The queen bee and the hidden mysteries of the hive are continually exposed to the
-full light of day; it is furnished with double glass to keep up an uniform degree o:
-heat. Price, in polished oak, £3. 3s.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">- 34 -</span></p>
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>22. GOLDING'S GRECIAN HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Price, complete with three glasses, adapting board, &amp;c., £1. 6s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>23. TAYLOR'S DIVIDING HIVE.</b></p>
-
-<p>Is fitted with eight moveable bars, and takes apart in the centre, for the purpose of
-forming artificial swarms. Two Hives form the set complete. Price, £2. 10s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>24. COVER OF ZINC FOR BEE HIVES.</b></p>
-
-<p>Price, 7s. 6d. to 10s.</p>
-
-<p>Ornamental covers corresponding in style with the variety of Beehives herein
-described may also be obtained. Bee Houses, Covers in all sizes,
-&amp;c., made to order.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>25. FLAT TOP BELL GLASSES.</b></p>
-
-<p>With ventilating tube, 12 in. wide and 6 in. deep, 7s. 6d.; 10 in. wide and 6 in. deep,
-4s. 6d. Payne's Glass, 3s, 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>BELL GLASSES.</b></p>
-
-<p><b>26.</b> To contain 10 lbs., 10 in. high, 7 in. wide. Price 5s. 0d.</p>
-
-<p><b>27.</b>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;6 "&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;7&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;5½&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;2s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p><b>28.</b>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;3 "&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;5&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;4&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;"&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;1s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p><b>29.</b> A new shape without knob, may be placed on the table inverted, with lid
- 5 in. by 6 in. Price, 4s. 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>30. SHALLOW GLASSES.</b></p>
-
-<p>Being so much preferable for the Bees storing honey, G. N. and Son have introduced
-this season a new shape, made of two sizes without knobs, 9½ in. wide and 4 in. deep,
-4s. 6d.; 13 in. wide and 4½ in. deep. Price, 5s, 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>31. BEE DRESS OR PROTECTOR.</b></p>
-
-<p>To prevent being stung when operating on the Bees. Price, 5s,, by post 6s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="tdc"><b>31. THE CYLINDRICAL SHALLOW WOOD HIVE</b></p>
-
-<p>Is varnished, and will be found more durable than straw; glasses or small hives worked
-on top. This Hive is only adapted for a bee house, or where the protection is equivalent
-to one; similar in principle to No, 18. Price of hive and floor board, 15s.;
-if fitted with bars, 16s. 6d.</p>
-
-<table>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Common Straw Hives</td>
- <td class="tdr">2</td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Small ditto super ditto</td>
- <td class="tdr">2</td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Small Wooden Super Hives with window</td>
- <td class="tdr">3</td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Floorboards&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;each 2s, 6d, and</td>
- <td class="tdr">3</td>
- <td class="tdr">0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>It is strongly recommended that all beehives be placed under cover, to protect
-them from the sun and rain, and that their entrance be in a south-eastern aspect.</p>
-
-<table>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">"Treatise on the Humane Management of Honey Bees," by T. Nutt 10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">"Bee Keeper's Manual," by H. Taylor 4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">"The Bee Keeper's Guide," by I. H. Payne 4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Prepared Fungus in Packets (maybe sent by Post for 2d extra) 1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Thermometers for Nutt's Hives (Collateral Boxes) 10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Ditto&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;ditto&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;(Middle Box) 5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Ditto&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;for Cottage Hives 4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Zinc Slides, Ventilators, &amp;c., in sets, for Nutt's Hives 10</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<p class="caption3nb">Transcriber Note</p>
-
-<p>The original owner of the book, Francis Darwin, decided to paste a
-very large bookplate covering the first three paragraphs of the Preface.
-A thorough search of the Internet did not reveal any other copy of this
-volume. So, this notice is copied there.</p>
-
-</div>
-
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