The following committees have been appointed to act in regard 
to needs that appeal most urgently to the Club: 
Committee to encourage the use of a color chart: Mrs. Francis 
King, Garden Club of Michigan; Mr. Thomas Shields Clarke, Lenox 
Garden Club. 
Committee to inquire into the opportunities of the Garden Club of 
America for beautifying settlements and highways: Mrs. J. West Roose- 
velt, North Country Club of Long Island; Mrs. C. Shirley Carter, 
Warrenton Garden Club; Miss Fanny R. McLane, Green Spring Val- 
ley Garden Club; Dr. Warthin, Chairman, Garden Club of Michigan. 
Committee to inquire of seedsmen in regard to discount and pur- 
chasing in quantity: Mrs. Albert B. Boardman, Garden Club of South- 
ampton; Mrs. George B. Sanford, Garden Club of Laurence, L. I. 
Committee on Lecturers: Mrs. Thomas L. Barber, Garden Club 
of Southampton; Mrs. George A. Armour, Garden Club of Princeton. 
Committee on Garden Literature: Mrs. Fred. P. Anderson, Gar- 
den Club of Michigan; Mrs. William W. Frazier, Jr., Garden Club 
of Philadelphia; Mrs. Arthur H. Scribner, Garden Club of Bedford. 
Papers on garden matters are being filed by the Librarian, Mrs. 
Charles Tiffany, 128 East 36th Street, N. Y., who will forward the 
list of subjects to any Club who wishes to borrow a paper. 
A descriptive catalog of garden books will be made by the Com- 
mittee on Garden Literature and will be sent to all the Clubs. 
Copies of the programs of all the Clubs have been received and 
will be sent out shortly. 
The President is compiling an exhaustive list of gardens that 
can be visited by members of the Club, and she will be glad to receive 
additional names. 
Two copies of the Princeton paper "A Quest for a Garden" 
have been sent to all the Clubs, and copies of the corresponding paper 
on "Stenton," read at the first annual meeting, will soon follow. 
The BULLETIN is anxious to prove a clearing house for useful 
information by means of its Questions and Answers, and earnestly 
hopes the members of the Club will ask useful questions and answer 
those they have themselves solved — a very important exchange of ex- 
perience not always personally accessible. 
Two accurate and complete card catalogs have been made of the 
Club, the labor of which has been greatly increased by the difficulty 
of reading lists in manuscript. All contributions should be typewritten. 
The Garden Club is bringing into touch with each other many 
of the individual members of our widely scattered clubs who share in 
this way the pleasure and advantage of association. 
