(26) 
April 27. “Home Gardens,” by Mr. Henry G. Parsons. 
May 4. “Drug Plants and Their Cultivation,” by 
Dr. H. H. Rusby. 
May 11. “How to Grow Fruits in Limited Areas,” 
by Professor M. A. Blake. 
(Exhibition of Flowers, May 11 and 12) 
May 18. “Fiber Plants and Their Cultivation,” by 
Mr. Lyster H. Dewey. 
May 25. ‘Women as Gardeners,” by Miss Delia W. 
Marble. 
June. ‘Diseases of Garden Crops and Their Control,” 
by Dr. Mel. T. Cook. 
June 8. “Insect Pests and Their Control,” by Dr. F. J. 
Seaver. 
June 15. “Rose Gardens,” with visit to new Rose 
Garden, by Mr. G. V. Nash. 
(Exhibition of Roses and Peonies, June 15 and 16) 
June 22. “Economic Uses and Possibilities of the 
Seaweeds,” by Dr. M. A. Howe. 
June 29. “Wild Flowers of Summer,” by Dr. N. L. 
Britton. 
July 6. ‘Scenic and Botanic Features of the Dells of 
the Wisconsin River,” by Dr. A. B. Stout. 
July 13. “How the Introduction of Foreign Plant 
Diseases is Prevented,” by Mr. H. B. Shaw. 
July 20. “The Economic Uses of the Fungi,” by Dr. 
F. J. Seaver. 
July 27. “Edible Wild Plants of the Vicinity of New 
York,” by Dr. H. H. Rusby. 
August 3. ‘Rock and Alpine Gardens,” by Dr. E. B. 
Southwick. 
August 10. ‘“‘The Sphagnum Moss and its Use in 
Surgical Dressings,” by Dr. G. E. Nichols. 
August17. “Through the Eastern Andes of Colombia,” 
by Dr. F. W. Pennell. 
August 24. ‘“‘Ancient and Modern Ideas in Regard to 
Fossil Plants,” by Dr. Arthur Hollick. 
(Exhibition of Gladioli, August 24 and 25) 
