We enjoyed welcoming six neighboring garden clubs to a 
garden party and lecture last June. The day was perfect and 
we all felt the charm of that golden chain, The Garden Club of 
America, which so delightfully binds us together. 
Helen S. Thorne 
President. 
THE GARDENERS OF MONTGOMERY AND 
DELAWARE COUNTIES, PENNSYLVANIA 
Report, 1920-1921 
During the past year Wild Flowers and their preservation 
have been our main object. 
Wister Woods in Germantown will be developed into a Wild 
Flower preservation, the Park is giving the ground. Mr. John 
Wister has drawn the plans for the planting, the expenses being 
defrayed by the Garden Club of Philadelphia, the Weeders and 
our Club. 
We had our usual Booth at the Rittenhouse Flower Market, 
in May. Owing to the efficiency of our Chairman Mrs. Louis 
Rodman Page and her aides, the returns from our table proved 
to be more than had been made by any booth since the starting 
of the Market. 
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd has written two most interesting 
papers on "Putting the Garden to Sleep," and "Waking the Gar- 
den Up." We netted something over a hundred dollars in sell- 
ing copies of them at the Flower Market. 
Our members co-operated with the Garden Club of Philadel- 
phia, the Weeders and the Horticultural Society in opening our 
gardens to the public, Saturdays in May and June, charging fifty 
cents a person, for the benefit of the School of Horticulture, at 
Ambler. 
We have enlarged our membership and all seem interested 
and enthusiastic. 
Mrs. Horace Bullock 
President. 
MORRISTOWN NEW JERSEY GARDEN CLUB 
The Morristown (N. J.) Garden Club has increased its 
membership to eighty during the current year. It has held eight 
meetings, which have included a talk on Rock Gardens, an il- 
lustrated lecture on possibilities of planting in small gardens, 
a paper on wild flowers, an address by Dr. David H. McAlpin, Jr. 
on "Grains and Their Economic Values," and an address by 
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