ENEMIES OF BEES.
| Are they all guilty? | 286 |
| Rats and Mice, | 287 |
| Are all the Birds guilty? | 288 |
| King-bird—one word in his favor, | 288 |
| Cat-bird acquitted, | 289 |
| Toad got clear, | 290 |
| Wasps and Hornets not favored, | 290 |
| Ants—a word in their favor, | 291 |
| Spider condemned, | 292 |
| Wax-Moth unrivalled for mischief, | 293 |
| Indications of their presence, | 296 |
| Management, | 296 |
| Care in turning over Hives, | 297 |
| Other symptoms of Worms, | 298 |
| When they grow larger than usual, | 299 |
| Time of Growth, | 299 |
| Time of Transformation, | 300 |
| Freezing destroys Worms, Cocoon, and Moth, | 300 |
| How they pass the Winter, | 301 |
| Stocks more liable to be destroyed last of Summer, | 301 |
| When Bees are safe, | 302 |
| Means to destroy them, | 302 |
| Making them drunk and their execution by Chickens, | 303 |
MELTING DOWN OF COMBS.
| The Cause, | 304 |
| Effects, | 304 |
| First Indications, | 305 |
| Prevention, | 305 |
FALL MANAGEMENT.
| First care, | 307 |
| Strong Stocks disposed to plunder, | 307 |
| Bees Changeable, | 308 |
| Requisites for good Stocks, | 308 |
| Great disadvantage of killing the Bees, | 309 |
| Section of country may make a difference in what poor stocks need, | 309 |
| When Bees are needed, | 310 |
| Caution, | 311 |
| Principal Difficulty, | 311 |
| How Avoided, | 311 |
| Advantages of making one good stock from two poor ones, | 312 |
| Two families together will not consume as much as if separate, | 312 |
| An Experiment, | 312 |
| Season for operating, | 313 |
| The Fumigator, | 314 |
| Directions for uniting two families, | 315 |
| Uniting with Tobacco Smoke, | 317 |
| Condition of Stocks in 1851, | 318 |
| How they were managed, | 318 |
| Cause of their superior Thrift, | 319 |
| Swarms partly filled pay better than to cut out the honey, | 320 |
| Advantages in transferring, | 320 |
| Another method of uniting two families, | 321 |
| Uniting Comb and Honey as well as Bees, | 322 |
| When feeding should be done for Stock Hives, | 323 |
WINTERING BEES.