Some Gardens I have Known — Illustrated with Lantern 
Slides. 
Subjects of Beatrix Farrand's Lectures: 
Flower Gardens, Old and New. 
Composition and Design in the Garden. 
Committee on Photography 
Chairman — Mrs. E. L. Bouton, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md., 
Amateur Gardeners. 
Report Deferred. 
The following Committees have sent no reports: 
Committee on Beautifying Country Roadsides and Railroads. 
Chairman — Dr. A. S. Warthin, Ann Arbor, Mich., Garden Club of 
Ann Arbor. 
Committee on Growing Medicinal Herbs. Chairman — Mr. 
Benjamin T. Fairchild, 247 Fifth Ave., New York City, and Quaker 
Ridge, N. Y., Associate Member. 
Committee on Preservation of Native Wild Flowers. Chairman 
— Miss Delia Marble, Bedford, N. Y., Bedford Garden Club. 
Committee on Testing New Plants. Chairman — Mrs. Arnold 
Hague, Newport, R. I , and 1724 I St., Washington, D. C, Garden 
Association in Newport. 
The completed report of the Committee on Special American 
Plant Societies. Chairman — Mrs. John A. Stewart, Jr., Short Hills, 
N. J., Short Hills Garden Club, was published in The Bulletin for 
May, 1916. 
Reports of Members Clubs 
The Albemarle Garden Club 
The Albemarle Garden Club was formed in 1913 and admitted to 
the Garden Club of America in 19 15. It has forty members, some of 
whom live in Charlottesville or at the University of Virginia and the 
others within a radius of twenty miles. We have a yearly program 
for the monthly meetings at the Blue Ridge Club of Charlottesville, 
and this year the Club had the privilege of enjoying three delightful 
lectures given by Miss Elizabeth Leighton Lee on Landscape Garden- 
ing and allied subjects. 
In addition to the Annual Autumn Flower Show, which was very 
successful, we held, in April, a plant sale on one of the street corners 
in Charlottesville where we sold plants, mostly perennials, from our 
own gardens and several hundred roses, purchased from wholesale 
growers. 
The most interesting plan that the Club has in prospect for the 
