July 21, 1915.— Water Gardens. 
Aug. 4, 1915. — Paper, "Vines." 
Aug. 18, 1915.— Paper, "Trees." 
Sept. 1, 1915. — Vegetable Show. 
Sept. 8, 1915. — Original paper, "September Transplanting." 
Sept. 15, 1915. — Spanish and Italian Gardens. 
Sept. 22, 1915.— Plans for Dahlia Show. 
Sept. 29, 1915.— Dahlia Show. 
Oct. 6, 1915.— Paper, "Tent Caterpillar." 
Oct. 13, 1915. — Lecture, "Trees." J. J. Levison. 
Oct 20, 1915.— Relations with the Gardener. 
Oct. 27, 1915.— Roses. 
Nov. 10, 1915. — Lecture, "Conservation of Birds." T. G. Pearson. 
Dec. 8, 1915. — Plans for Conservation of Birds. Original paper, "Some 
Essentials for Artistic Flower Arrangement." 
ftrenton (Barfcen Club 
The call for an experience meeting in the pages of The BULLE- 
TIN reminds us of our club meeting held after every one has returned 
in the fall and each member has five minutes to relate her summer suc- 
cesses and failures. It is always both instructive and amusing. At the 
recent meeting one member told of her experiment with a vegetable 
from foreign shores which she was planning to be the surprise at a 
dinner for the club members, but as the crop consisted in three small 
shriveled objects and the club numbered twenty- four, the dinner was 
postponed. Another amateur had planted a new border near a large 
stream, with the result that the front row thrived so wonderfully in the 
moist atmosphere that she was obliged shortly to trespass on her neigh- 
bor's premises with some steps in order to peer over the wall and see 
what the other rows were doing. 
An honorary member and a vice-president invited all the New 
Jersey clubs to discuss orchids and luncheon, and the former were so 
enticing the latter was almost forgotten. Mrs. Archibald Russell, Vice- 
President of the Garden Club of America was presented to a beautiful 
new hybrid which had been christened in her honor that morning. 
Stereopticon lectures on flowers and talks on birds by specialists 
have varied the regular program of papers written by the members. 
A committee from the club took up the matter of vacant lot gar- 
dening and was very successful, though starting a new philanthropy this 
year in Trenton was difficult work. They felt fully repaid, however, 
by the results and the work will be continued, it is expected, next year 
by a large committee of citizens. 
Annie MacIlvaine. 
