Mrs. Verplanck is anxious that Garden Club members should 
grow this interesting and beautiful plant. She has saved the seed and 
is prepared to sell it for the benefit of THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM. 
The packets are twenty-five cents each and may be had from Mrs. 
W. E. Verplanck, Mount Gulian, Fishkill-on-Hudson, N. Y. After 
November 15th, 112 Mercer St., Princeton, N. J. The supply is not 
large so send at once. 
Committee on Garden Literature 
The Committee has no Reviews to offer this month but is busy with 
a new plan of action. With the January number of The Bulletin 
will begin a series of reviews and articles which, it is hoped, will be 
of real and constant use to Garden Club members. 
Report of Lecture Committee 
The following list of lectures is submitted by the Lecture Commit- 
tee. All are, recommended by two or more Clubs. Details as to 
terms, etc., will be sent on application to the Chairman, Mrs. Horatio 
W. Turner, The Avon, Baltimore, Maryland. Members will realize 
that this Committee are collectors of the data given and assume no 
responsibility. 
Averill, Miss M "Japanese Flower Arrangement" 
83 Waverly Place, N. Y. 
Alderson, Miss "Herbaceous Plants and Flowering 
c/oMrs. Cope, Shrubs" 
Overbrook, Pa. "Sweet Peas." 
Barron, Mr. Leonard . . . "Roses and Greenhouses" 
Editor of the Garden Magazine, 
Garden City, Long Island. 
Baynes, Mr. Harold . . . "Wild Birds in the Garden" 
Meriden, N. H. 
Bisset, Mr. Peter, . . . " Some New Friends of the Plant World " 
Department of Agriculture, ■ 
Washington, D. C. 
Bright, Miss Anna L . . . "English Gardens and Others" (Illus- 
Bryn Mawr, Pa. trated by her own photographs in 
projector.) 
Bosley, Mr " Culture and Preservation of Trees" 
Johns Hopkins University, 
Baltimore, Md. 
