Ex LiBRIS
The Pennsylvania
hobticultubal society
i
J
r
1930
YEAR BOOK
The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society
MARCtt
With Reports for
1929
Issued from the office of
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
I
tt(^9^
193 0
YEAR BOOK
of
The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society
''eo Nov.a*
With Reports for
1929
Issued from the office of
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2011 with funding from
LYRASIS IVIembers and Sloan Foundation
http://www.archive.org/details/yearbookofpenns1933penn
Histoiy of
The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society
1827 — 1927
A History covering its first hundred years has just been
pubhahed by the Society and is now ready for distribution.
The text was prepared and edited with painstaking care by
James Boyd, late President, to whom the volume will stand as
a lasting memorial.
The material, compiled from the minutes of the Society
and from contemporaneous prints, is arranged chronologically,
and tells an interesting story of the development of the Society
— starting with its organization in November, 1827, describing
its alternating ups and downs during the next hundred years,
and ending with the celebration of its centennial anniversary
in November, 1927. In addition, there is much valuable in-
formation about horticulture in general and the introduction of
new plants from time to time during the last century.
The book is a cloth-bound volume of over 500 pages,
profusely illustrated, and may be obtained upon application to
the Secretary of the Society, accompanied by check for $5
(postage prepaid).
Officers and Executive Council
President
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
Vice-Presidents
AIRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
Honorary Vice-Presidents
MR. SAMUEL T. BODINE MR. C. HARTMAN KUHN
MR. HENRY F. MICHELL
Treasurer Secretary
MR. S. S. PENXOCK MR. JOHN C. WISTER
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Term ending December 31, 1930
MR. FITZ EUGENE DIXON
MRS. WILLIAM T. ELLIOTT
MR. GEORGE L. FARNUM
MR. FAIRMAN ROGERS FURNESS
MR. S. S. PENNOCK
MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
Term ending December 31, 1931
MR. LOUIS BURK
MRS. EDWARD M. CHESTON
MR. JOHN P. HABERMEHL
MR. JAY V. HARE
MR. HENRY F. MICHELL
MRS. THOMAS NEWHALL
MRS. ARTHUR H. SCOTT
Term ending December 31, 1932
MR. W. ATLEE BURPEE, JR.
MRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD
MR. J. FRANKLIN McFADDEN
MR. W. HINCKLE SMITH
MR. JOHN WILLIAMS
MR. JOHN C. WISTER
COMMITTEES
The President, ex officio, is a member of all Committees.
Executive Committee
MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL, Chairman
AIR. BENJAMIN BULLOCK
MR. LOUIS BURK
MR. HENRY F. MICHELL
MR. JOHN WILLIAMS
Library Committee
AIRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD, Chairman
AIRS. ARTHUR E. BILLINGS
AIRS. FRANCIS VON A. CABEEN, JR.
A'IRS. JOHN S. NEWBOLD
AIRS. WILLIAAI T. WILLCOX
Lecture Committee
AIRS. WILLIAAI T. ELLIOTT, Chairman
AIRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD
MR. JOHN C. WISTER
Finance Committee
AIR. FITZ EUGENE DIXON, Chairman
AIR. S. S. PENNOCK
AIR. W. HINCKLE SAIITH
Exhibition Committee
AIR. W. ATLEE BURPEE, JR., Chairman
AIR. JOHN WILLIAAIS, Vice-Chairman
AIRS. WILLIAAI T. ELLIOTT
AIR. FAIRAIAN R. FURNESS
AIR. JAY V. HARE
AIRS. D. BRADEN KYLE
AIRS. CHARLES S. STARR
Garden Committee
AIR. WILLIAAI J. SERRILL, Chairman
(With Power)
of
atlj^ P^nnsgluama Uorttntllural Bomi^
Adopted March 20, 1929
I
OFFICERS
The officers of the Society shall be a President, two Vice-Presidents, a Secretary
and a Treasurer.
II
PRESIDENT
1. The President, or in his absence one of the Vice-Presidents, shall preside at
the meetings of the Society and the Executive Council. The President, ex officio,
shall be a member of all committees. He shall have general direction of all the
activities of the Society and shall in every v^^ay seek to promote the interests and
extend the usefulness of the Society.
2. He shall submit to the Executive Council at the January meeting a general
report of the affairs of the Society.
Ill
VICE-PRESIDENTS
In the absence of the President, his duties shall be performed by the Vice-
Presidents in the order of their seniority.
IV
TREASURER
The Treasurer shall collect all dues and other income and shall keep the accounts
of the Society, disburse its money, and report thereon at the regular meeting of the
Executive Council in January. He shall deposit the funds of the Society in such
Bank or Trust Company as the Executive Council shall designate. All payments
shall be made by check. He shall pay bills only upon the approval of the Chairman
of the Committee authorizing the purchase or contract. He shall, with the approval
of the President or one of the Vice-Presidents, have authority to borrow money in
order to provide funds for the legitimate expenses of the Society or when in his
judgment it is for the best interests of the Society so to do. He shall furnish a
bond in such amount as the Executive Council may determine, the premium for which
shall be paid by the Society, and the Bond shall at all times be in the custody of the
President.
V
SECRETARY
1. The Secretary shall give notice of all meetings of the Society and of the
Executive Council and shall keep minutes of such meetings. He shall conduct the
correspondence and keep the records of the Society. He shall be the keeper of the
seal of the Society. He shall notify persons elected to membership of their election.
He shall send by mail to each member of the Executive Council at least seven days'
notice of each stated meeting. He shall perform such other duties as may from
time to time be assigned to him by the Executive Council.
2. The Secretar}' may, if the Executive Council so directs, act as Assistant
Treasurer, performing such duties as the Treasurer may delegate to him, with the
approval of the Executive Council. As Assistant Treasurer, he shall furnish a bond
in such amount as the Executive Council may determine, the premium for which
shall be paid by the Society, and the Bond shall at all times be in the custody of the
President.
3. The Secretary may be paid a monthly salary, to be determined by the Execu-
tive Council. This salary may be increased or decreased by the Executive Council
at any regular meeting.
4. In the absence of the Secretary at any meeting the President or presiding
officer shall appoint a Secretary pro tempore.
VI
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
1. The Executive Council shall consist of twenty-one members. It shall have
general charge of the affairs, funds and property of the Society, and shall have
authority to designate the person or persons w^ho maj^ make contracts or purchases
for the Society. It shall have full power, and it shall be the duty of its members,
to carry out the purposes of the Society according to its Charter and By-Laws.
2. The Executive Council shall, as soon as may be, after each Annual Meeting
elect from its own body a President, two Vice-Presidents, a Secretary and a Treas-
urer, who shall hold office for one year from the first day of the succeeding January,
or until their successors are elected.
3. The Executive Council shall meet once a month, except during the months of
June, July and August, and Special Meetings may be called by order of the President.
Seven members shall constitute a quorum of the Executive Council.
4. The Executive Council shall have power to elect annual members, life
members and honorary members.
5. The Executive Council may fill any vacancy in its body by election of a
member of the Society to hold office until the next Annual Election.
6. Any member of the Executive Council or of any Standing Committee who
shall be absent from three consecutive meetings shall cease to be a member of the
Council or the Standing Committee, unless a satisfactory reason be offered to the
Council or the Committee for such absence.
VII
MEETINGS
1. There shall be an Annual Meeting of the Society on the third Wednesday of
November in each year. Special meetings of the Society may be called by the Secre-
tary upon order of the President, or of any fiive members of the Executive Council
or upon request of fifteen members of the Society. At each Annual Meeting there
shall be elected seven members of the Executive Council to serve for three years,
and at such Annual Meeting any vacancy in the Executive Council shall be filled by
the election of a member to serve the unexpired term.
2. Officers and members of the Executive Council shall hold office during the
term for which they are elected and until their successors are chosen.
3. Ten members shall constitute a quorum at any meeting of the Society.
VIII
NOMINATIONS AND ELECTIONS
1. As soon as may be after the September meeting of the Executive Council
in each year a Nomination Committee, consisting, ex officio, of the members of the
Executive Council who have more than one year but less than two years to
serve as such members, shall nominate candidates for all the offices which are to be
filled by election for the coming year. The Committee shall file its nominations with
the Secretary before the first day of October, and the Secretary shall, on receiving
them, cause the nominations to be published in "Horticulture" at least thirty days
previous to the Annual Meeting. Additional nominations may be made in writing by
fifteen or more members of the Society. They shall be addressed to the Secretary
and mailed prior to the first day of November.
2. If no nominations are made in addition to those submitted by the Nominating
Committee an election by ballot will not be necessary, and the E.xecutive Council'
shall, by motion, elect the candidates nominated by the Committee.
If additional nominations are received, the Secretary shall cause ballots to be
printed containing the names of all the candidates, and shall mail them to every
member of the Society as soon after November 1st as possible.
8
0. iViemDers shall vote by placing an "A" opposite the names selected. To
secure secrecy in the election, the ballots shall be provided with inner and outer
envelopes. The member, after marking his ballot, shall enclose and seal it in the
inner envelope. The latter should then be enclosed and sealed in the outer envelope,
on which the member shall sign his name, after which it should be mailed to the
Election Committee. If the member's signature is omitted on the outer envelope, or
if more names are marked than required, the vote shall be disqualified.
4. The President or presiding officer shall appoint an Election Committee of
three to receive, assort and count the ballots cast, and to report the result to the
Secretary. A plurality shall elect, and the President or presiding officer shall declare
who are elected. Voting by proxy shall not be allowed at any meeting.
IX
HONORARY OFFICERS AND MEMBERS
1. Honorary Vice-Presidents may be elected by the Executive Council at any
regular meeting. This honor is reserved for persons who have served the Society as
officers or members of its Executive Council.
2. Honorary Members may be elected by the Executive Council at any regular
meeting. This honor is reserved for persons of pre-eminence in horticulture and
kindred sciences, and signifies the high regard in which they are held. No dues are
required from Honorary Members. They shall not be permitted to vote or hold office.
X
RESIGNATIONS
1. Resignations of membership shall be made to the Secretary in writing.
2. Resignations shall not be accepted until all indebtedness to the Society of the
member resigning shall have been discharged.
XI
DUES
1. The dues of all annual members shall be three dollars, payable on January
1st in each year, in advance. If such dues are not paid on the first day of November
thereafter, such members shall cease to be members of the Society.
2. Candidates elected, on payment of the dues for the current year, shall become
members of the Society, and the election of any candidate shall be void if he fails
to make such payment within thirty days after notice of his election is made, addressed
to him at the place given as his residence in his application for membership.
3. Any person may be elected a Life Member upon the payment of fifty dollars.
4. All moneys received from Life Membership dues shall be treated as a trust
fund in perpetuity. The income only from this fund shall be used by the Society.
XII
SUSPENSIONS OR EXPULSION
Any member may be suspended or expelled for cause by vote of three-fifths of
all of the members of the Executive Council, fifteen days' previous notice in writing
having been given to the member of the charges preferred against him. Any action
under this Article may be revoked or modified by subsequent vote of the Executive
Council.
XIII
STANDING COMMITTEES
1. There shall be six Standing Committees, to be known as the Executive Com-
mittee, the Finance Committee, the Library Committee, the Lecture Committee, the
Garden Committee and the Exhibition Committee.
2. The President, as soon as may be after the first of the year, shall appoint
the members of all Standing Committees, with the approval of the Executive Council.
The Chairman of each Committee must be a member of the Council, but other
members may be drawn from the Society. They shall hold office for one year from
appointment and until their successors are appointed. All vacancies in such Com-
mittees shall be filled by the President and Executive Council, or during its recess
by the Executive Committee. Each Committee shall have power to fix its own
quorum.
3. The Executive Committee shall consist of not more than five members. It
shall be its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to order purchases,
to regulate salaries and wages (except the Secretary's salary), to receive complaints,
to redress grievances, to appoint and dismiss employees, to manage the Society's
Rooms and to perform such other similar duties as may from time to time be assigned
to it by the Executive Council. During the recess of the Executive Council the
Executive Committee shall be vested with all the powers of the Executive Council so
far as the same can be legally delegated, but it shall be its duty to exercise such
powers only whenever immediate action is required.
4. The Finance Committee shall consist of three or more members, of which
the Treasurer shall be one. It shall be its duty, subject to the control of the Execu-
tive Council, to supervise the finances and investments of the Society, to annually
make a budget setting forth the estimated receipts and expenses of the Society for
the ensuing year, commencing on the first day of January, and to present such budget
to the Executive Council for consideration at its January meeting. It shall be its
duty to engage a Certified Public Accountant or Accountants annually to audit the
Society's accounts. It shall report to the Executive Council the accounts audited and
allowed since its previous report, and perform such other similar duties as may from
time to time be assigned to it by the Executive Council.
5. The Library Committee shall consist of five or more members. It shall be
its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to regulate the use of the
Library, the Reading Room, and of all the books, periodicals, newspapers, etc., to
purchase books and periodicals, and to perform such other similar duties as maj' from
time to time be assigned to it by the Executive Council.
6. The Lecture Committee shall consist of not more than three members. It
shall be its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to prepare a list
of lectures to be delivered during the year, to make arrangements with the lecturers,
to supervise the arrangements for the delivery of the lectures, and to perform such
other similar duties as may from time to time be assigned to it by the Executive
Council.
7. The Garden Committee shall consist of not more than five members. It shall
be the duty of this Committee to consider plans for the development and promotion
of the horticultural purposes of the Society and, subject to and with the approval of
the Executive Council, to carry out such plans and to perform such other similar
duties as may from time to time be assigned to it by the Executive Council.
8. The Exhibition Committee shall consist of five or more members. It shall
be its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to organize and super-
vise all of the Society's Exhibitions. It shall determine dates of Exhibitions and
places where they shall be held, which, however, shall be subject to the approval of
the Executive Council. It may contract for printing and advertising in connection
with the Shows, the cost of which shall not exceed an amount appropriated for such
purpose by the Executive Council. It shall appoint all Judges, arrange for their
reception and entertainment, and perform such other similar duties as may from time
to time be assigned to it by the Executive Council.
XIV
RULES AND AMENDMENTS
1. The rules contained in "Robert's Rules of Order Revised" shall govern the
Society in all cases to which they are applicable and in which they are not incon-
sistent with these By-Laws.
2. These By-Laws may be amended by the Executive Council at any regular
or special meeting by the affirmative vote of a majority of the entire membership
of the Executive Council, provided a notice of the proposed amendments has been
sent to the members of the Executive Council with the notice for the meeting; or
they may be amended if proposed at an annual or special meeting of the Society and
recommended by a majority vote of those present, when submitted by letter ballot to
the members, a two-thirds favorable vote of the ballots cast being required.
10
Secretary's Report for 1929
Our late President, James Boyd, considered it one of the duties of his office to
present at the beginning of each jear a review of the activities of the Society and to
make suggestions for the future. This year, as Mr. Boyd's successor has been in
office such a short time, it seems best to include in the Secretary's report the matters
usually covered by the President.
We began the year 1929 w^ith 1,711 members and ended it with 2,009, a net gain
of 298. Four hundred and eleven new members were enrolled, but 113 were lost
by death and other causes. This record is not quite so good as that of 1928, when
there was a net gain of 368, the largest yearly increase the Society has ever had.
However, all records were surpassed when 79 persons became Life Members. As
our total number of Life Members on January 1, 1929, was 99, it can readily be
understood that such an increase in a single year was quite an accomplishment. All
money received from Life Membership is invested in part of the Endowment Fund,
thus giving us increased income for the future. Such additional income is greatly
needed fcr our ever-growing activities.
As in previous years a number of horticultural organizations took advantage
of the Society's invitation to use the Council Room for their meetings. We hope
that in the future it will be used much more frequently than it is at present. Among
the associations that used the Room regularly were : The School of Horticulture
for Women at Ambler, The Council for Preservation of Natural Beauty in Penn-
sylvania, the Philadelphia Flower Show Committees, the Pennsylvania Chapter of
the Wild Flower Preservation Society, and various Committees of local member
clubs of the Garden Club of America, which arranged for the Annual Meeting of
that organization last May. The Council Room was used for 92 meetings during
the year. There were also over 700 visitors to our offices, exclusive of persons
attending meetings and using the Library.
Starting in January, 1929, an entirely new privilege was offered to members in
the services of a gardening consultant. Mr. David Rust was appointed to the position,
and, judging from the many calls for his assistance, this service fills a decided need.
Mr. Rust made 119 visits to the gardens of members, where he gave practical advice
about special problems, in addition to holding many conferences with members by
appointment in our Rooms. He also gave several talks before Garden Clubs and
acted as judge for flower shows of other organizations, thereby increasing our con-
tacts with kindred associations. In case our newer members do not realize the
opportunity that is open to them, I want to emphasize the fact that Mr. Rust's
services are available to all the members of the Society, the only charge being for
actual traveling expenses to and from their gardens. No members should hold back
from asking for this service through mistaken modesty over the size or importance
of their gardens.
For the information of those who may not be familiar with the methods by
which the Society is conducted, I wish to explain our present organization. All of
our officers serve without pay; of course, the office staff is salaried, but the Presi-
dent, Secretary and Treasurer, as well as members of the Executive Council and of
various Committees, give their services to the Society without remuneration of any
Vind. In fact, Mr. Boyd gave his entire time to the interests of the Society for the
last five years, keeping regular office hours.
When Mr. Boyd became President eleven years ago (in 1919), he brought about
the creation of an active Executive Council, now 21 in number, which has power to
transact all the business of the Society. The major activities of the Society are
conducted by six Standing Committees (the Chairman of each being a member of the
Executive Council), as follows: The Executive Committee, the Finance Committee,
the Library Committee, the Lecture Committee, the Garden Committee and the
Exhibition Committee. Under a Budget system, each Committee is given a proper
share of the Society's income. The following abstracts of the main activities during
1929 are summarized from reports made by the Chairmen.
11
LIBRARY COMMITTEE: Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Chairman.
Our Library is gaining accessions constantly. We now possess over 2,500 books,
169 of which were added during 1929. Sixteen of these accessions were presented to
the Society and the remainder purchased from the Committee's appropriation. The
Committee wishes to remind members that they are always delighted to receive
donations of new or old volumes of horticultural interest. Among the new books
in greatest demand during the year were : "China, Mother of Gardens," by E. H.
Wilson; "Gardeners' Bed Book," by Richardson Wright; "Japanese Iris," by Alanabu
Majoshi, 4 v.; "The Lilac, A Monograph," by Mrs. Susan D. McKelvey; "Patio
Gardens," by H. M. Fox; and "Portraits of Philadelphia Gardens," by James and
Louise Bush-Brown. All of the leading horticultural periodicals are also on file.
The Librarian is glad to recommend books to members and to help them look up
special information. There were over 450 visitors to the Library in 1929, the
majority of them availing themselves of the circulating privilege. All persons are
cordially invited to use the Library for reference, but the circulating feature is
reserved for members. A gift of $250 was made to the Library in the summer of
1929. This is the largest donation the Library has received in the last fifty years,
and the Committee hopes that a precedent has been established ! LTpon the recom-
mendation of the Committee, the William L. Schaffer Medal of the Society was
awarded to Susan D. McKelvey for her outstanding monograph on the Lilac. This is
the first time the Schaffer Medal has been presented for a literary achievement.
LECTURE COMMITTEE: Mrs. William T. Elliott, Chairman.
The Lecture Committee presented three lectures in January and February, 1929,
and then added another lecture on November 5th, when they were fortunate enough
to secure Mr. E. H. M. Cox, of London, England, who spoke on Reginald Farrer and
the work he did for Horticulture. After this lecture, which was given on the first
day of the Chrysanthemum Exhibition, tea was served in the Council Room, and an
opportunity given to those who had heard the lecture to meet Mr. Cox. The three
earlier lectures were presented on Tuesday afternoons, as follows : January 22d,
"Some Gardens of England and the Riviera," by Miss Anna Linn Bright ; February
5th, "Notable Trees and Old Arboretums In and Around Philadelphia," by Samuel N.
Baxter, Landscape Architect of Fairmount Park ; and February 19th, "The Japanese
Beetle and Other Important Insects," by G. F. MacLeod, Assistant Extension En-
tomologist of the Pennsylvania State College. The February 19th lecture was
repeated in the evening. The lectures were illustrated and were presented in the
Auditorium of the Insurance Company of North America Building, 1600 Arch Street.
The attendance ranged from 163 to 217 in the afternoon, and dropped to 60 for the
evening lecture. Members were invited to bring guests.
GARDEN COMMITTEE: Mr. William J. Serrill, Chairman.
The Garden Committee added a new phase to its activities in 1929, by awarding
medals to the owners of gardens of outstanding merit in the vicinity of Philadelphia,
as follows : The Society's Exhibition Gold Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Horatio Gates
Lloyd, of Haverf ord. Pa. ; the Society's Exhibition Silver Medals to Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Sill Clark, of Chestnut Hill, Pa.; Mr. and Airs. George L. Harrison, of St.
Davids, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Newhall, of Ithan, Pa., and Mrs. B. Franklin
Pepper, of Chestnut Hill, Pa. The Society co-operated with the School of Horti-
culture for Women at Ambler, Pa., in conducting Garden Visiting Days on eight
Saturdays in May and June. Twenty-seven gardens were opened on these occasions
and 350 members of our Society took advantage of the privilege. As both the School
and our members seemed greatly pleased with the arrangement, it is hoped that it
will be continued in 1930.
EXHIBITION COMMITTEE: Mr. W. Atlee Burpee, Jr., Chairman.
The Philadelphia Flower Show was held in the Commercial Aluseum from March
11 to 16, 1929. The Society co-operated by taking complete charge of the Women's
Classes, to which we awarded $300 in cash prizes. Air. Rust helped stage the exhibits,
and the necessary labor and setting for these displays were provided by the Society.
The Society was represented by a booth at the Show for the enrollment of new
members and also to serve as a meeting place for members. However, its location
was not advantageous, and only 52 new members were secured, as against 100 the
12
preceding year, when the Society's exhibit of an old-fashioned garden drew the
favorable attention of visitors to our organization. In all, the Society expended about
$1,000 in 1929 for its participation in this Show. Our members received two tickets
each for the event ; the admission price to the public was 75 cents. Members of the
Horticultural Society of New York receive a season ticket to the New York Show,
but it should be remembered that the dues of the New York Society are $10.00 a
year, while ours are only $3.00.
The Exhibition Committee was handicapped by lack of a suitable exhibition
hall. No big spring show was attempted, but on June 12th, in the Rooms of the
Society, there was a small Rose Show for the award of the Robert C. Wright Rose
Medal. The medal, which was offered for the "Best single rose grown by an
amateur," was won by Mr. James Boyd with a beautiful specimen of the "Mari Dot"
rose. There were also cash awards for collections of Cherries and Strawberries.
No admission was charged.
The Dahlia Show was held in conjunction with the Bryn M,awr Horse Show
at Bryn Mawr. It was staged in a tent just inside the entrance to the grounds and
was an exceptionally beautiful exhibition. The Exhibition Gold Medal was awarded
to the W. Atlee Burpee Company for the best display of Dahlias, and Exhibition
Silver Medals were awarded to the Lyndora Gardens, Reinhold Greinberg and Echo
Dale Gardens for their exhibits in various classes. The Rutledge Horticultural
Society received the Challenge Cup for the fourth consecutive year, with a vase of
18 Dahlias. Three hundred and eighty-eight dollars was distributed in cash awards.
Members were admitted upon presentation of their Membership Cards. There was
a general admission charge of 50 cents to the public, which included admission to
the Horse Show and to the Dahlia Exhibition, but our Society had no participation
in the gate receipts.
The Chrysanthemum Show was held on November 5th and 6th at 1600 Arch
Street. There were comparatively few entries, but the quality of the blooms was
exceptionally high. The attendance was 268 (disappointingly small), and cash prizes
amounting to $56 were awarded. There was no admission charge for this Show.
The Society's Exhibition Gold Medal and three Silver Medals were given to
the Massachusetts Horticultural Society for award at their Centennial Exhibition,
March 19th-23d. Our Gold Medal was won by Mrs. A. Sherman Hoyt, of Pasadena,
Calif., for her Redwood Tree exhibit, "the most original display in the exhibition."
The Society's Exhibition Gold Medal was also given to the Horticultural Society
of New York for award at their Autumn Exhibition, and was v/on by Mrs. H. McK.
Twombly for the best collection of vegetables. Silver Cups or Garden Club Plaquettes
were given to the following local organizations for awards at their exhibitions : Art
League of Conshohocken, Bala-Cynwyd Garden Club, Camden Dahlia Society, Garden
Club of Westfield, N. J., Kearney & Arlington Garden Club, Lansdowne Flower
Show Association, Rutledge Horticultural Society, Saturday Club of Wayne and
the Woman's Club of Germantown.
Other Activities
In addition to the activities directly under Committee management, as outlined
in the preceding paragraphs, other important interests of the Society were the
following :
"Horticulture": This magazine continued in 1929 to be one of the most appreci-
ated privileges of membership. It is the official organ of this Society and members
should refer to it for news of our activities, notices of meetings, etc.
Relations With Other Horticultural 'Organisations: It has been the constant aim
of the officers and Executive Council to promote harmonious and helpful contacts
v/ith kindred associations. One of the ways in which this has been accomplished
is the bestowing of Medals and Garden Plaquettes to other societies for award at
their exhibitions, as mentioned previously. On the occasion of the Centennial Ban-
quet of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society on March 19, 1929, the Horace Binney
Centennial Medal of this Society was awarded to the Massachusetts Society in way of
congratulation and friendship. The Society was officially represented at the Cen-
tennial Exhibition in Boston and at the International Flower Show in New York.
13
Flowers for the Flozverless: The Society co-operated again last summer in the
movement sponsored by the Art Alliance to provide "Flowers for the Flowerless."
Mrs. Charles F. Derby ably represented the Society, and was on duty Friday mornings
in August to receive flowers at a booth in the central part of the city.
National Plant Registration: The Society was kept informed of the progress
of the Committee which is undertaking the work of national plant registration, and
has expressed its approval of the project and its desire to co-operate.
Rose Canker Fund: One hundred dollars was appropriated to the research work
that is being carried on by The American Rose Society at Cornell University in the
effort to combat this serious plant disease.
Council for Preservation of Natural Beauty in Pennsylvania: Fifty dollars was
appropriated by the Society for the purchase of cloth signs asking the public to spare
the wild flowers, to further the admirable work of the Council.
Proposed Pennsylvania State Federation of Garden Clubs: The Society sponsored
a meeting on November 25, 1929, to consider the formation of a Pennsylvania State
Federation of Garden Clubs. Mr. Boyd opened the meeting and then turned it over
to Mrs. J. Willis ^Martin, one of the founders of the first Philadelphia garden club,
which w"as organized twenty-six years ago. Plans were formulated for two meetings
to further the project early in 1930, and it is hoped the Federation will be founded
on March 26th during the week of the Philadelphia Flower Show. All Pennsylvania
garden clubs and horticultural organizations whose names are on our files have
been invited to send delegates to the meetings.
History: Mr. Boyd spent more than a year upon the compilation of the History,
which had long been planned. It was tragic that his death occurred before the book
was actually published, but all of the final proofs had passed through his hands and
he had the satisfaction of knowing that his part of the work had been completed.
The volume is intended as a book of reference, and contains not only a chronological
presentation of the Society's development, but many data of horticultural significance.
It is a cloth-bound volume, of over 500 pages, profusely illustrated, and is on sale at
the Society's Rooms. The price is $5.
I cannot conclude without mentioning the severe losses the Society has experi-
enced in the deaths of some of its most valuable and active members. Of course,
the death which affected the Society most profoundly was that of Mr. Boyd. His
loss is felt in every phase of our activities, and his wise counsel will be greatly
missed. By referring to the Resolution adopted upon his death by the Executive
Council, the particular ways in which his interest in the Society was manifested may
be seen and some conception gathered of how vitally he influenced its development.
Another valuable member whose death we deplore was that of Dr. John W. Harsh-
berger, who died in April, 1929. He was at the head of the Botany Department
of the University of Pennsylvania, and used our Rooms often for meetings of the
Pennsylvania Chapter of the Wild FloAver Preservation Society, of which he was
President. Andrew Wright Crawford, who visited our Rooms frequently in con-
nection with Board meetings of the John Bartram Association, was another member
whose constructive work will be missed. Altogether, the Society lost 31 members
by death in 1929 — one Honorary, six Life and twenty-four Annual Members.
JOHN C. WISTER,
Sccretarx.
14
2I[|? ppunagluanta l^nrttrultural Bamt^
Statement of Cash Receipts and Expenditures
YEAR 1929
GENERAL FUND
Receipts
Received from:
Schaffer Fund— Girard Trust Co., Trustee $20,338.15
Interest, Investments 1,416.53
Interest, Bank Balances 103.74
$21,858.42
Dues— 1929 Account $4,959.00
Dues— 1930 Account 276.00
5,235.00
Miscellaneous 7.10
Total Above Receipt.s $27,100.52
Expenditures
Expenditures by Committees:
Executive :
Rent $5,100.00
Salaries 8,160.00
Miscellaneous 2,384.46
$15,644.46 ^
Lecture :
Lecturers, Rent of Hall, etc 676.05
Exhibition :
Rent $500.04
Vases and Medals 364.48
Philadelphia Flower Show 373.25
Cash Prizes 679.00
New Equipment 506.75
Miscellaneous 566.16
2,989.68
Library :
Subscriptions, Periodicals $104.08
Books 352.81
Furniture and Fixtures 497.45
Rebinding 309.20
Miscellaneous 85.80
1,349.34
History :
Expenditures $711.72
Less Subscriptions to Society History 524.00
187.72
Special :
Subscriptions to Horticulture $1,495.18
Garden 429.93
Brown Canker Fund 100.00
2,025.11
Payment of Bank Loan — Girard Trust Co 2,000.00
Total Expenditures $24,872.36
Excess of Receipts Over Expenditures $2,228.16
Cash on Hand, January 1, 1929 1,404.49
Cash on Hand, December 31, 1929 $3,632.65
15
LIFE MEMBERSHIP FUND
Balance, January 1, 1929— Cash $1,975.00
Receipts during 3'ear 1929 — 79 new memberships 3,950.00
• $5,925.00
Invested in :
208 La Salle Street— 5/.% Mortgage ' $4,000.00
Southern Cities Public Service Conv. Deb. 6s 1,485.00
5,485.00
Balance, December 31, 1929 S440.00
LIBRARY FUND
Donation $250.00
S. S. PENNOCK,
Treasurer.
John P. Herr,
Certified Public Accountant.
16
®i|p 3Pfnn0ijluama Iforttrultural g'omJg
Statement of Condition
JANUARY 1, 1930
ASSETS
Cash :
General Fund $3,732.65
Life Membership Fund 440.00
Library Committee Fund 250.00
$4,422.65 .
Schaffer Fund :
Girard Trust Company, Trustee 353,820.81
Investments :
Life Membership and Other Funds 27,774.33
Equipment :
Office Furniture, etc $6,534.95
Library Books, Shelving, etc 6,063.39
Portraits 6,265.00
Exhibition Tables, Vases 2,865.34
21,728.68
Supplies and History Account 1,320.53
Total Assets $409,067.00
LIABILITIES
Schaffer Fund '. $353,820.81
Life Membership Fund 19,380.00
General Fund 22,388.20
Appraisal Adjustment 13,227.99
Library Committee Fund 250.00
Total $409,067.00
List of Stocks and Bonds held by The P emisylvania Horticultural Society covering
Life Membership and Accmnnlated Income Funds
■ N. O. Tex. & Mex. 51/^'s lOM $9,945.83
Penn. Power & Light 5's lOM 9,250.00
Am. Tel. & Tel. 5's 3M 3,093.50
208 S. La Salle Street, 5>4 Mtg 4M 4,000.00
Southern Cities Publ. Service 6's Comm. Deb.
Bond $1,500.00 1,485.00
$27,774.33
S. S. PENNOCK,
Treasurer.
John P. Herr,
Certified Public Accountant.
17
Resolution upon the Death of
JAMES BOYD
Adopted by the Executive Council of
(IIi]p Pfntifiyluama l^nrttruUural ^oriftQ
at a Special Meeting held December 2, 1929.
The Executive Council of Tlie Pennsylvania Horticultijral Society has
learned with profound regret of the death of James Boyd, its beloved Presi-
dent, which occurred on the second day of December, 1929 ; and
Whereas, James Boyd has served as President of the Society, without
remuneration, in a spirit of perfect devotion for eleven consecutive years, in
which time his knowledge of horticulture, his friendly approaches, together
with his vision and wisdom brought the Society from an inactive state, with
a membership of but three hundred and fifty, to its present flourishing con-
dition, with a total membership numbering two thousand. He was instru-
mental in the early years of his presidency in reorganizing the Council into
its various committees and establishing a budget system, whereby its income
was most wisely expended for the purposes for which the Society v/as organized
more than a hundred years ago. He planned for a new abode for the Society,
with spac: for its expanding library, adequate offices and Council Room, in
order to afford accommodations for the growing activities. He brought about
the development of the library to the present well-arranged collection of over
twenty-three hundred volumes. He secured and maintained the co-operation
of garden clubs and other horticultural organizations in the vicinity of Phila-
delphia. He fostered the present harmonious relations with the Massachusetts
Horticultural Society and The Horticultural Society of New York. He
evolved a method of conducting exhibitions which has been adopted by other
organizations, and he was continually looking for improved methods of trans-
acting all of the affairs of the Society. He established a regular course of
lectures and instituted the Garden Visiting Days as part of the educational
program of the Society. As the crowning accomplishments of his ever-faithful
effort, he instigated the celebration of the Society's Centennial Anniversary in
1927, and completed the History of the Society's first hundred years, a pains-
taking and carefully prepared volume which will serve as a fitting memorial
to him ; and
Whereas, James Boyd throughout his life was deeply interested in the
advancement of horticulture, and has served the American Peony Society as
President, as Treasurer and in 1928 as Editor of the "Peony Manual" ; and at
the time of his death was a Director in the American Peony Society, the
American Iris Society and the American Rose Society ; and
Whereas, The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, realizing the great
loss it has sustained, desires to place on record its acknowledgment of the loyal
service he has unfailingly rendered to the cause of horticulture; therefore be it
Resolved, That the Executive Council express its heartfelt
sympathy to the members of James Boyd's family, and direct
that a copy of this Resolution be prepared in proper form and
sent to his family and that it be inscribed upon the minutes
of the Society.
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY.
By C. F. C. Stout,
Vicc-FresidenL
Attest :
John C. Wister,
Secretary.
18
The following Is a list
Df the members of this Society whose deaths
have been reported during the
; year 1929:
Honorary
Mrs
. James Mauran Rhodes
Life
Mr.
G. A. Bisler
Mr.
James Boyd
Mrs
. George M. Chichester
Miss Mary A. Dobbins |
Mrs
. Harry G. Haskell |
Miss Mary Trimble 1
Annual
Mr.
Jacob Becker
Mr.
Samuel Bell, Jr.
Mr.
Edward Campbell
Mrs
. J. G. Cassatt
Mr.
George Corson
Mr.
Andrew Wright Crawford
Miss Sarah C. DeHaven |
Mr.
William Graham
Dr.
John W. Harshberger
Mrs
George W. Keys
Mr.
Rupert Kienle
Mrs
. Walter E. Knipe
Mr.
Martin Maloney
Mr.
Louis R. Page
Mrs
. Joseph Parrish
Mr.
T. H. Hoge Patterson
Mr.
J. Bunford Samuel
Mr.
Howard Sellers
Mr.
Nathan Snellenburg
Mrs
Henry Tatnall
Mrs
Paul Thompson
Dr.
Harry Toulmin
Mrs
Edward L. Welsh
Miss
Emily Whelen
19
5Ilj^ Pj^nnaijluanta Ifnrttrultural ^Btxtt^
LIST OF MEMBERS
Additions and Corrections up to February 1, 1930
Members of the Society will confer a favor by giving the Secretary notice of
any change which they may desire to have made in their addresses or of any inac-
curacies in the spelling of names or the classification of profession or business, etc.,
zi'hich may be found in this list.
HONORARY MEMBERS
ELECTED
1926 Burrage, Mr. Albert C, 85 Ames
Bldg., Boston, Mass.
1926 Havemeyer, Mr. T. A., 25 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
1902 Keller, Dr. Ida A., 17th and Spring
Garden Sts., Philadelphia.
1929 Macfarlane, Mr. John M., 427 W.
Hansberry St., Germantown.
ELECTED
1922 Pennell, Dr. Francis W., 1900 Race
St., Philadelphia.
1926 Thomas, Mr. George C., Jr., 1014
Crescent Drive, Beverly Hills,
Calif.
1875 Thunder, Mrs. Henrj^ Gordon, 272
S. 23d St., Philadelphia.
LIFE AND ANNUAL MEMBERS
Life Members in bold-face type.
G. Gardeners. C. Commercial Growers. S. Seedsmen. F. Retail Florists.
N. Nurserymen. L. Landscape Architects. W. Wholesale Florists.
Aaron, Mrs. Frederic E., 1839 Wynne-
wood Rd., Overbrook.
Abbott, Miss Gertrude, 400 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Acker, Mrs. Finley, 4943 Rubicam Ave.,
Germantown.
Acker, Mr. Warren T., Scranton.
Adam, Mrs. J. N., R. D. 5, West Chester.
Adams, Mr. Percy, care of Air. ]Maurice
Bower Saul, Mojdan-Rose Valley. (G.)
Adamson, Mrs. C. B., 415 W. Price St.,
Germantown.
Aiken, Mr. David, care of ]\Irs. Barclay
McFadden, Rosemont. (G.)
Aitkin, Mrs. A. K., 28 Conshohocken Rd.,
Bala.
Albert, Mrs. John S., Wallingford.
Albrecht, Air. John, Jr., Albrecht Nurser-
ies, Narberth. (N.)
Allen, Mr. George H., 2219 Starkamp
St., Pittsburgh.
Allen, Air. George R., 22 E. Essex Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Allen, Airs. William, Alarchwood Apts.,
Wissahickon Ave. and School Lane,
Germantown.
AUinson, Airs. E. Page, "Town's End
Farm," West Chester.
Ambler, Aliss Alice H., Plymouth Aleet-
Anderson, Air. Annesley AI., Blue Church
Road, Alorton.
Anderson, Airs. Harold C, "Three
Gates," R. D. 1, Phoenixville, Port
Providence.
Andre, Air. John R., 525 Spring Ave.,
Elkins Park. (C.)
Andrews, Air. E. A., R. 55, Trenton,
N. J. (C.)
Andrews, Airs. Frank C, "Ferrj- Lane,"
Vallejr Forge.
Andrews, Aliss Katharine J., 422 Dudley
Ave., Narberth.
Andrews, Airs. Schofield, 424 W. Aler-
maid La., Chestnut Hill.
Annett, Air. Cecil B., 310 E. Central
Ave., Aloorestown, N. J.
Anthony, Aliss Alice, Hotel Lincoln,
1222 Locust St., Philadelphia.
Antrim, Airs. Phvllis L., 3507 N. 22d
St., Philadelphia.
Arader, Air. Walter Graliam, 1920 N.
61st St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Archer, Airs. F. Alorse, 570 Warwick
Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Armistead, Air. W. AI., 223 S. Aberdeen
Ave., Wayne.
Armstrong, Airs. F. Wallis, Aleadow-
view Farms, Moorestown, N. J.
20
Armstrong, Mr. Leo A., 6730 Cornelius
St., Germantown.
Armstrong, Mr. William, Box 115, Ber-
wyn.
Arthur, Mr. Alec, care of Mrs. F. A. C.
Perrine, 413 W. State St., Trenton,
N. J. (G.)
Ash, Mrs. Theodore E., 444 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Philadelphia.
Ashbridge, Miss Emily, Rosetnont.
Ashbridge, Miss Lida, Rosemont.
Ashmead, Mrs. Duffield, Jr., Parke's Run
La., Ithan.
Ashton, Dr. Thomas G., Wynnewood.
Ashton, Mrs. Thomas G., Wynnewood.
Atkins, Mr. F. L., East Rutherford,
N. J. (N.)
Atkinson, Dr. Daniel A., 132 Oakwood
Ave., West View, Pittsburgh.
Atkinson, Mrs. Ellen D., 299 Maple Ave.,
Doylestown.
Atkinson, Miss Gertrude, 4106 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Atkinson, Miss Margaretta, Berwyn.
Atkinson, Mr. William H., Riverview
Cemetery, Trenton, N. J.
Atkiss, Mr. William, 1145 Herbert St.,
Frankford.
Atterbury, Mrs. W. W., Radnor.
Atwater, Miss Sophia M., Chadds Ford.
Austin, Miss Anna A., Rosemont.
Austin, Miss Lucyelle, Chestnut Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Austin, Mrs. William L., Rosemont.
Bachman, Mr. Frank H., Jenkintown.
Bacon, Mrs. Albert E., 6705 Springbank
La., Mt. Airy.
Bacon, Mrs. Ellis W., Wallingford.
Bailey, Mrs. Arthur H., 206 Paxtang
Ave., Paxtang.
Bailey, Mr. Charles H., 19 Greenfield
Ave., Ardmore.
Bailey, Mrs. Walter A., "High Point,"
Merion.
Baily, Mrs. Albert L., Haverford.
Baily, Mr. Albert L., Jr., Westtown.
Baily, Mr. William L., Ardmore.
Baird, Mrs. R. L., 6 E. Plumstead Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Baker, Mrs. G. F., Rosemont.
Baldelli, Mr. Ivo, 1947 E. Passyunk Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Balderston, Mrs. Henry L., 34 Simpson
Rd., Ardmore.
Balderston, Miss Martha W., Bowling
Green, Media.
Baldi, Mrs. V. A., S. E. cor. Parker and
Jackson Aves., Collingdale.
Ball, Mr. Charles D., Cor. Rhawn and
Dittman Sts., Holmesburg. (C.)
Ball, Mrs. Edward Ephraim, Gray's
Lane, Haverford.
Ball. Miss Mary L., 901 Glenside Ave.,
Wyncote.
Bancroft, Mrs. Samuel, Jr., Rockford,
Wilmington, Del.
Barclay, Miss Emily, 612 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Barclay, Mr. Hugh Balfour, 1268 Mont-
gomery Ave., Narberth. (C.)
Barnes, Mrs. A. C, Latches Lane,
Merion.
Barnes, Mrs. John Hampton, Devon.
Barnes, Mr. Parker T., 908 Highland
Ave., Palmyra, N. J.
Barney, Mrs. W. Pope, "Wychwood,"
Moylan.
Barrett, Mr. Franklin, 401-415 E. Wyom-
ing Ave., Philadelphia.
Barrie, Mrs. George, 116 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Barrows, Mr. Richard L., Haverford.
Barrows, Mrs. Richard L., Haverford.
Barton, Mrs. Thomas C, Pennway Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Barton, Mr. Warren H., Madison, N. J.
Bartram, Mr. Frank M., Kennett Square.
(L.)
Bates, Miss Jane, care of Miss M. E.
Morris, Rosemont.
Battles, Mr. H. H., 114 S. 12th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mr. Charles, 119 S. 2ath St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mr. Samuel N., S. W. Cor.
Morris and Abbotsford Sts., German-
town. (L.)
Bayliss, Mrs. C. W., 210 Pembroke Ave.,
Wayne.
Beckurts, Mrs. Charles L., Haverford.
Beebe, Airs. Lucius, 2101 Porter St.,
Philadelphia.
Beecher, Mrs. H. K., 1511 Mahantongo
St., Pottsville.
Beegle,.Mrs. Eliz. L., R. D. 4, Gibsonia.
Beggs, Mrs. Lawrence D., Merion.
Bein, Miss Amelia E., 1729 Wallace St.,
Philadelphia.
Bell, Mr. Edward J., 1428 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Bell, Mrs. H. A., 156 Union Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Belmont, Mrs. L. A., Latches Lane,
Merion.
Belville, Mrs. J. E., 5925 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Benz, Mr. C. J., 210 Harry St., Consho-
Berger, Mrs. Thomas W., "Rolling
Acres," Valley Forge.
hocken.
Berger, Mr. John, 1640 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Bernstein, Mr. Walter, North Wales.
(C.)
Bertsch, Airs. M. E.. 17 W. Kirklyn Ave.,
Kirklyn, Upper Darby.
Berwind, Mrs. Charles G., Radnor.
21
Berwind, Mrs. Henry A., 2112 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Biddle, Mrs. Arthur, 1821 DeLancey
PI., Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Charles, Andalusia.
Biddle, Miss Christine W., Route 5,
West Chester.
Biddle, Miss Edith F., 1821 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Miss Emily W., 1828 De-
Lancey PI., Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Moncure, Valley Forge
Farms, Devon.
Biddle, Mrs. Nicholas, Jenkintown.
Bigelow, Mr. Frederick S., Haverford.
Bihlmaier, Mr. W. T., 7147 Sprague St.,
Mt. Airy.
Bikle, Mrs. Henry Wolf, Straflford.
Billings, Mrs. Arthur E., Villa Nova.
Birch, Mr. George S., Vineland, N. J.
(C.)
Bird, Mrs. Minna M., 233 W. Hortter
St., Philadelphia.
Birkinbine, Miss Kate R., Bala-Cynwyd.
(L.)
Birnbrauer, Mr. Frank, 15th St. above
72d Ave., Oak Lane. (C.)
Bishop, Mrs. Richard E., Springbank La.,
Germantown.
Bisset, Miss Annie A., 2519 S. Garnet
St., Philadelphia.
Bitler, Mrs. Harry Y., 21 Oak Ave.,
Sharon Hill.
Black, Mrs. Ralph A., 513 West Chest-
nut St., Lancaster.
Blackman, Mrs. Wm. Jackson, Cold
Point Rd., Plymouth Meeting.
Blakiston, Miss Emma, Fort Wash-
ington,
Blakiston, Miss Mary, Fort Washing-
ton.
Bobbink, Mr. L. C, East Rutherford,
N. J. (N.)
Bockius, Mr. Morris R., 2107 Fidelity-
Phila. Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Bode, Mrs. William M., 15 N. Kirklyn
Ave., Upper Darby.
Bodine, Mrs. S. Laurence, "Greenbank
Farm," Newtown Square.
Bodine, Mr. Samuel T., U. G. I.
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Boericke, Mrs. Gideon, Wynnewood.
Bok, Mrs. W. Curtis, Pennstone Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Bolen, Miss Esther N., 232 Center St.,
Kennett Square.
Bollier, Mr. William, 1241 Dauphin Ave.,
Wyomissing. (G.)
Boltz, Miss Clara M., 241 West Chelten
Ave., Germantown. (L.)
Bond, Miss M. Florence, 345 Harrison
Ave., Elkins Park.
Borden, Mr. Eldon L., 6 Harvard Rd.,
W. Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Borie, Mrs. Beauveau, Abington, Mont-
gomery Co.
Borie, Mrs. Charles Louis, 3d, Rydal.
Bostock, Mrs. Mary E., South Ave.,
Bryn Athyn.
Boswell, Mrs. J. Iverson, 305 Kent Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Bott, Mr. John B., 327 S. Main St.,
Greensburg.
Boyce, Mrs. Henry S., Pembroke and
Aberdeen Aves., Wayne.
Boyd, Mr. Fisher L., Haverford.
Boyd, Mrs. Fisher L., Haverford.
Bradford, Mrs. John M., 136 Coulter
Ave., Ardmore.
Bradley, Mrs. Wm. H., 407 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
Brazier, Miss E. Josephine, Kenne-
bunkport, Maine,
Brazier, Mr. H. Bartol, Haverford.
Breck, Mr. William R., Rosemont.
Breck, Mrs. William R., Rosemont.
Brengle, Mr. Henry G., Radnor.
Brennen, Mr. John, 423 Leedom St.,
Jenkintown. (G.)
Bright, Miss Anna Linn, 2220 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Bright, Miss Mary DeHaven, 215 Wal-
nut Ave., Wayne.
Bringhurst, Mr. Edward, "Rockwood,"
Wilmington, Del.
Bringhurst, Miss Mary T., "Rockwood,"
Wilmington, Del.
Brinton, Mrs. Joseph Hill, 414 S. Car-
lisle St., Philadelphia.
Brinton, Miss Mary H., Jr., R. F. D. 4,
West Chester.
Brinton, Mr. Simeon M., 905 N. 65th
St., Philadelphia.
Broadbent, Mr. George C, 343 Vassar
Ave., Swarthmore.
Brock, Mrs. John Penn, Lebanon.
Brockie, Mrs. Arthur H., 8013 Crefelt
St., Chestnut Hill.
Bromer, Mrs. Jacob A., Schwenkville,
Montg. Co.
Bromer, Mrs. Ralph S., 504 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Philadelphia.
Bromley, Mrs. Henry S., 7000 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Bromley, Mrs. Phebe, York Rd. and
Lakeside Ave., Oak Lane.
Brooke, Mrs. Francis M., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Brown, Mrs. Ada A., 8012 Frankford
Ave., Philadelphia.
Brown, Mr. Andrew V., Bryn Athyn.
Brown, Mrs. Charles T., Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Brown, Miss Elizabeth, Street Rd.,
Southampton.
22
Brown, Miss Helen M., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Brown, Miss Helen M., 31 E. Clearfield
Rd., Oakmont, Upper Darby P. O.
Brown, Mrs. John Arthur, 100 W. Mer-
maid La., Chestnut Hill.
Brown, Mrs. J. Howard, 131 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore.
Brown, Mr. James Crosby, Ardmore.
Brown, Mrs. John A., Jr., Wayne.
Brown, Miss M. Etta, 100 Yale Rd.,
Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Brown, Mrs. Medford J., Haywood Rd.,
Marion.
Brown, Mr. Samuel B., Box 67, Haver-
ford.
Brown, Mrs. Samuel B., Box 67, Haver-
ford.
Brown, Mrs. T. Wistar, 3d, 5920 City
Ave., Overbrook.
Brown, Mr. Theodore E., Oak Rd., East
Falls Station.
Brown, Mr. Thomas, 2538 N. 34th St.,
Philadelphia. (G.)
Brown, Mrs. Wm. Findlay, P. O. Box
4386, Chestnut Hill.
Browning, Mrs. Edward, Rosemont.
Brumbaugh, Mrs. G. Edwin, Gwynedd
Valley.
Buck, Mrs. C. Douglass, "Buena Vista,"
Wilmington, Del.
Buckenham, Dr. J. E. Burnett, 8601
Germantown Ave., Chesnut Hill.
Buck, Mrs. Tycho, Penn Road, W3'nne-
wood.
Buchanan, Mrs. William, Ft. Washing-
ton.
Buck, Mrs. Stuart W., Cloverly La.,
Rydal.
Bucknell, Mr. Samuel R., Concordville
P. O., Del. Co.
Bullock, Mr. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore.
Bullock, Mrs. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore. (L.)
Bullock, Mrs. Horace, 150 Hodge Rd.,
Princeton, N. J.
Bunting, Mr. Josiah, Ardmore.
Burk, Mr. Louis, 1200 N. 3d St., Phila-
delphia.
Burpee, Mr. David, 485 N. 5th St.
Philadelphia. (S.)
Burpee, Mr. W. Atlee, Jr., 485 N. 5th
St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Burroughs, Mr. A. W., 262 Mansion
Ave., Audubon, N. J.
Bursk, Mr. _R. G., 216 S. Front St.,
Philadelphia.
Burt, Miss Edith B., 1203 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Burt, Miss M. Theodora, 1203 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Burton, Mr. Alfred, Wyndmoor, Chest-
nut Hill. (C.)
Burton, Mr. George, Wyndmoor, Chest-
nut Hill. (C.)
Burton, Mr. John, Wyndmoor, Chestnut
Hill. (C.)
Busch, Mr. Herman F., R. D. 2, Berkeley
Hills, Glenshaw.
Bush-Brown, Mr. James, Otis Building,
Philadelphia. (L.)
Bush-Brown, Mrs. James, Quarry Farm,
Ambler.
Butler, Mr. Jonathan E., 18 Colfax Rd.,
Oakmont, Upper Darby P. O.
Butler, Mrs. William, Jr., 424 N. High
St., West Chester.
Byler, Mrs. Paul Gabriel, 5814 Coleman
St., Overbrook.
Cabeen, Mrs. F. Von A., Old Conestoga
Rd., Devon.
Cadbury, Miss Eleanor A., 19 S. White
Hall Rd., Norristown.
Cadwalader, Mrs. John, Jr., 2100 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwalader, Mrs. Lambert, Villa Nova.
Cadwalader, Miss Sophia, 1519 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwallader, Mrs. T. Sidney, Yardley.
Cahn, Mrs. Tillman, 529 Elkins Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Calder, Mrs. W. C, 4310 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Caldwell, Mrs. J. Emott, Bryn Mawr.
Calvert, Mrs. Amelia S., Apple Top
Farm, Box 14, Cheyney.
Calwell, Mr. C. S., Wissahickon and
Westview Aves., Germantown.
Cameron, Mrs. S. P., 42 W. Queen Lane,
Germantown.
Camp, Mr. George R., Malvern.
Campbell, Mr. Alfred M., Strafford.
(C.)
Campbell, Mrs. Wilson A., Creek Drive,
Sewickley.
Canby, Mrs. William Marriott, Wissa-
hickon and Westview Aves., German-
town.
Caner, Mr. Harrison K., Jr., 2118 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Capp, Mr. Seth Bunker, 218 S. 19th
Street, Philadelphia.
Cardeza, Mr. T. D. M., E. Washing-
ton La., Germantown.
Carpenter, Mrs. J. S., Jr., 1335 Howard
Ave., Pottsville.
Carr, Mrs. James Wilson, 288 Maple
Ave., Doylestown.
Carroll, Mr. E. A., 82 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Carson, Miss Mildred Lee, 54 E. Stewart
Ave., Lansdowne.
Carson, Mr. Joseph, Winsford Rd., Bryn
Mawr.
Carstairs, Mrs. J. H., Haverford.
Carter, Mrs. James N., "Westover,"
Chadds Ford.
27>
Carter, Miss Sarah J., care of H. G.
Slacks, 40 Kent Rd., Stonehurst, Up-
per Darby.
Cartledge, Mr. A. B., 1514 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Gary, Mrs. C. Reed, 1 Lehman La., Ger-
mantown.
Case, Miss Marian Roby, Hillcrest
Gardens, Weston, Mass. (C.)
Casey, Mr. Bertram T., Thorofare, N. J.
Cassedy, Mr. Frank W., 545 Runnemede
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Catanese, Mrs. Anna, 321 DeKalb St.,
Norristown. (F.)
Caudill, Mrs. W. H., Middletown Rd.,
Lima.
Chaffee, Miss Helen L., 3418 Main St.,
Wesleyville. (F.)
Chamberlin, Mr. John R., St. Davids.
Chambers, Miss Blanche Arnold, 914 N.
6od St., Philadelphia.
Chambers, Mr. William W., 116 Ard-
more Ave., Ardmore.
Chandler, Mrs. A. F. M., Haverford.
Chapman, Mrs. Edward, Norwood Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Chapman, Mrs. Joseph, Haverford.
Chase, Miss Clara T., 261 S. Van Pelt
St., Philadelphia.
Chase, Mrs. Philip, 125 Levering Mill
Rd., Cynwyd.
Chase, Mr. Samuel Hart, 557 Pelham
Rd., Germantown.
Chen, Miss Jennie C. J., School of Hor-
ticulture, Ambler.
Cheston, Mrs. Charles S., Whitemarsh.
Cheston, Mrs. Edward M., Ambler.
Cheston, Mr. James, Jr., care of Girard
Trust Co., Philadelphia.
Chew, Mrs. Benjamin, "Vanor," Radnor.
Chew, Miss Elizabeth B., "Cliveden,"
Germantown.
Cheyney-Bartol, Mrs. C, Cheyney, Del.
Co.
Chillas, Miss Marie de la R., 233 Winona
Ave., Germantown.
Chrisman, Mr. C. S., 435 W. Miner St.,
West Chester.
Qirystie, Mrs. Walter, 40 Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Chubbs, Mr. Stephen, 122 W. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Church, Mrs. Herbert, Villa Nova.
Churchman, Mrs. W. Morgan, Penllyn.
Clark, Mrs. C. Howard, Jr., The Bar-
clay, 18th and Rittenhouse Sq., Phila-
delphia.
Clark, Mrs. Charles Davis, 2215 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Qark, Mrs. Edward Lyon, 512 E. Auburn
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Clark, Mrs. Frederic L.. Wissahickon
Ave. and Strafford St., Germantown.
Clark, Mr. Herbert L., Bryn Mawr.
Clark, Mrs. Joseph S., Kates Hall, Chest-
nut Hill.
Clark, Mrs. Percy H., Cynwyd.
Clarke, Mrs. Clement J., 30 W. Upsal
St., Mt. Airy.
Clattenburg, Mrs. A. Edwin, St. John's
Rectory, Bala- Cynwyd.
Clay, Mrs. Curtis, 122 Valley Rd., Ard-
more.
Clay, Mrs. Edward B., 5 E. Hampton
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Clemens, Dr. Thomas J., 2008 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Clemens, Mrs. Thomas J., Southampton.
Clement, Mrs. Allen B., 224 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Clemmencv, Mr. W. H., 804 Fidelitv-
Phila. Bldg., Philadelphia.
Clothier, Miss Caroline, "Ballytore,"
Wynnewood.
Clothier, Airs. Clarkson, Haverford.
Clothier, Mrs. Isaac H., Jr., Radnor.
Clothier, Mrs. Morris L., Villa Nova.
Clothier, Mrs. Walter, Wynnewood.
Clothier, Mrs. William J., Valley Hill
Farm, Valley Forge.
Cloud, Miss Beatrice M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Cloud, Miss Dorothy M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Cloud, Miss Katharine M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Clough, Mrs. Lillian Schofield, R. D. 2,
Media.
Clyde, Mrs. Caroline B., P. O. Box 12,
Bryn Mawr.
Clyde, Miss Margaret, The Bellevue-
Stratford, Philadelphia.
Coates, Mrs. J. Lloyd, Golf House Rd.,
Ardmore.
Cobb, Mr. E. F., 510 Merwyn Rd.,
Merion.
Cobb, Mr. Murray A., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Cobb, Mrs. Alurray A., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Cochran, Mrs. Wm. Allison, Wyncote.
Cohen, Mrs. Albert M., 274 Hathaway
La., Wynnewood.
Coho, Mrs. Eugene P., Cold Spring
Farm, Ambler.
Colegrove, Mr. John I., Lock Box 731,
Sheffield. (C.)
Coleman, Miss Edith, White Horse Rd.,
Phoenixville.
Coleman, Mrs. G. Dawson, Haverford
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Coles, Miss Mary R. 2010 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Coles, Mrs. Strieker, "Alscot," Bryn
Mawr.
Coll, Mr. Frank, care of Airs. J. Leslie
Davis, Haverford. (G.)
24
Collingwood, Miss Jennie, 3941 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Collingwood, Mrs. Joseph R., 510 S. 41st
St., Philadelphia.
Collins, Mrs. H. B., 4114 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Collins, Mrs. Philip S., Wyncote.
Colton, Mrs. Sabin W., Jr., Bryn
Mawr.
Combs, Mrs. Roger B., "The Meadow
House," Whitford.
Comegys, Miss Amy, 4205 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Comfort, Mr. William, care of Mr. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Comly, Aliss Emilie C, Hartford, Burl-
ington Co., N. J.
Conard, Mr. C. Wilfred, Lansdowne.
Connors, Mrs. Thomas A., 126 Valley
Rd., Ardmore.
Constable, Mr. Martin L., 4941 N. 6th
St., Philadelphia.
Converse, Mr. Bernard T., Rosemont.
Converse, Miss Mary E., Rosemont.
Conwell, Mr. H. Ernest, Milton, Del.
(N.)
Cook, Mrs. C. P., N. Rockland Rd.,
Merion.
Cooke, Mrs. George J., "Dawesfield,"
Ambler.
Cooke, Mr. Jay, "Brookfield," New and
Stenton Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Jay, "Brookfield," New
and Stenton Aves, Chestnut Hill.
Cope, Mrs. Edward, 124 W. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Corner, Mr. H. F., 709 Montgomery
Ave., Narberth.
Cornett, Mr. S. M., Roanoke, Va. (N.)
Cornog, Mrs. I. C, 48 E. Jefferson St.,
Media.
Corson, Mrs. Edward F., 325 Cynwyd
Rd., Cynwyd.
Corson, Mrs. George, Plymouth Meeting.
Corson, Mr. H. H., Avondale, Chester
Co. (N.)
Costain, Mrs. T. B., The Crest, Beth-
ayres.
Coster, Mr. William H., Jr., 159 Rhoads
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Couttes, Mr. Archibald, The Highlands,
Ambler. (G.)
Cover, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Cox, Mrs. T. B., Wyncote.
Coxe, Mrs. A. B., Paoli.
Coxe, Mrs. Charles Edmund, Malvern.
Coxe, Mr. Henry B., 1502 Phila. Bank
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Coxe, Mrs. Henry B., Penllyn.
Craft, Mrs. E. F., Race St., Ambler.
Craig, Mr. James A., 125 W. Louden St.,
Philadelphia.
Crane, Mrs. Theron I., 6440 Greene
St., Germantown.
Crawford, Mrs. Alan, White Horse Rd.,
Devon.
Crawford, Mr. John, care of Mr. S. M.
Vauclain, Rosemont. (G.)
Crellin, Miss Elizabeth E., 1005 Vine St.,
Scranton.
Cresson, Mr. William J., 32 Amherst
Ave., Swarthmore.
Cresswell, Mrs. Charles T., 1925 Panama
St., Philadelphia.
Cridland, Mr. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside. (L.)
Cridland, Mrs. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside.
Crittenden, Mrs. William J., Shields,
Allegheny Co.
Crofoot, Mr. George E., 4535 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Croft, Mrs. S. Harold, 435 State Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Crosman, Mr. J. H., Jr., Glenn Rd., Ard-
more.
Crosman, Mrs. J. H., Jr., Glenn Rd., Ard-
more.
Cross, Mrs. Sumner H., Jenkintown.
Crowder, Miss Emma A., West Upsal
St., Germantown.
Crowell, Mrs. R. Herbert, 237 E. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Crowninshield, Mrs. F. B., Mont-
chanin, Del.
Crowther, Dr. S. A., Ardmore.
Culver, Dr. Martin B., 332 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Cummings, Mr. George, Drexel Hill,
Delaware Co. (C.)
Cunningham, Mr. Edward, Spicewood,
Bon Air, Upper Darby P. O.
Cunningham, Airs. Ellen P., 1 W. Chest-
nut St., West Chester.
Cunnins, Mr. Howard, 524 Mulberry St.,
Reading.
Curtis, Mrs. Cyrus H. K., Wyncote.
Gushing, Mrs. Herbert Howard, 3816
Locust St., Philadelphia.
Dager, Mrs. Mary T., R. F. D. 1, Hat-
boro.
Dale, Mrs. E. C, Bryn Mawr.
Dallett, Miss Lucy, 307 South Ave.,
Media.
Dancy, Mrs. Henry H., Main & Bridge
Sts., Phoenixville.
Darlington, Miss Isabel, 16 E. Market
St., West Chester.
Darlington, Dr. Lewis W., 24 Pennock
Terrace, Lansdowne.
Darlington, Mrs. Percy Smedley, 418 N.
High St., West Chester.
Davidson, Mrs. William G., Brentwood
Farms, Abington.
Davison, Mrs. William AI., Jr., 90 W.
Mermaid La., Chestnut Hill.
25
Davies, !Mrs. James A., Rose Tree Rd.,
Media.
Davis, Mrs. J. Leslie, Haverford.
Dawkins, Air. Y. P., 22 Fairiston Rd.,
Wa}Tie.
Dawson, Mr. George Walter, Univ. of
Penna. Dormitories, Philadelphia.
Day, Mr. Charles, St. George's Rd., Mt.
Airy.
Day, Mrs. Charles, St. George's Rd., Mt.
Airy.
Dav, Airs. Frank Miles, Allen's La., Mt.
Airy.
Deacon, Miss Bessie, 15 Oak Ave.,
Sharon Hill.
Deacon, Mrs. G. H., McKean Ave. and
Clapier St., Germantown.
Deacon, Mrs. Horace P., 445 W. Price
St., Germantown.
Dean, Mrs. J. Simpson, Montchanin,
Del.
Dearden, Mr. Henry, care of Harrison,
Alertz & Emlen, 5328 Greene St., Ger-
mantown. (L.)
Debes, Mrs. Victor A., 1209 Folsom Ave.,
Moore.
Delaplaine, Miss Meribah, Merion Sta-
tion.
DeLong, Mrs. Perce, Princeton Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Demuth, Mr. Howard E., 210 Garrett
Ave., Swarthmore.
Denegre, Airs. William P., Rydal.
DePuy, Aliss Clara, 312 Florence Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Derby, Airs. Charles F., 235 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
deSherbinin, Air. E. AI., Sycamore and
Cross Rds., Alerion.
Detweiler, Airs. George A., Griffin St.,
Phoenixville.
Deubler, Dr. E. C, 3805 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Devney, Airs. Frank C, Forest City.
DeWitt, Air. Herman B., 85 Yeager Ave.,
Forty Fort.
Dick, Mr. John, Jr., 616 Longacre
Blvd., Yeadon.
Dick, Mrs. William A., 824C Crittenden
St., Chestnut Hill.
Dickey, Aliss Alaria Donnell, West St.,
Media.
Dickson, Airs. Arthur G., Pinebrook,
Paoli.
Dillon, Air. James L, Radnor,
d'invilliers, Aliss Virginia, 6630 AlcCal-
lum St., Germantown.
Disque, Mr. Robert C, Strath Haven
Ave., Swarthmore.
Disston, Airs. Jacob S., Chestnut Hill.
Diven, Mrs. Louis, 119 Derwen Rd., Bala-
Cvnwyd.
Dixon, Mr. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Airs. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Airs. J. Shipley, Villa Nova.
Doak, Airs. S. E., 436 W. School La.,
Germantown.
Doan, Mrs. C. E., Blue Bell. Alontg. Co.
Doan, Airs. Genevra B., 8315 Delaware
Ave., Upper Darbv.
Dodds,_ Air. John H., 344 Walnut St.,
Jenkintown.
D'Olier, Airs. Franklin, 98 Madison Ave.,
Alorristown, N. J.
Donaghy, Air. Albert, Jr., 7811 Chel-
wynde Ave., Philadelphia.
Donaldson, Air. Henry H., 4417 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Donnaldson, Aliss Helen, Alt. Pleasant
Ave., Ambler.
Doolittle, Air. Fred J., Oak Lane.
Dornbirer, Miss .Edith, Ithan.
Dorp, Air. Louis V., R. F. D. 3, Xorris-
town. ( C. )
Dorp, Air. V. V., 1170 N. 63d St.. Phila-
delphia.
Dougherty, Aliss Helen E., 'The Pines,"
School House La., Germantown.
Dougherty, Air. Thomas H., Jr., 1522
Locust St., Philadelphia.
Doughten, Airs. William W.. 228 S. 20th
St., Philadelphia.
Douglas, Mrs. Edward V., 30 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Douglas, Air. Alalcolm G., 30 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Downing, Mrs. F. B., Box 564, Erie.
Downing, Aliss Alatilde C, Les Silouettes
Tea House, Lincoln Highway, Rose-
mont.
Downs, Airs. Harold DeLancey, 5th Ave.
and Favette St., Conshohocken.
Downs. Dr. T. AIcKean, 8840 Towanda
St., Chestnut Hill.
Doyle, Air. William H., Cassatt Ave.,
Berwyn. (N.)
Drake, Aliss Helen P., 4256 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Drayton, Airs. Frederick R., Axilla Nova.
Drear, Mrs. William F., Rosemont.
Drew, Airs. Ernest C, Box 331, Nar-
berth.
Drew-Bear, Airs. Jessie, care of The
London Flower Shop, 1800 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Drexel, Air. George W. C, 350 Drexel
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Dudley, Airs. E. Lawrence, 336 S. 19th
St., Philadelphia.
Duer, Airs. Edward L., Haverford.
Duffield, Aliss Louise C, 212 S. 39th St.,
Philadelphia.
Dugan, Air. Dominick, care of Air. R. J.
Seltzer, 5700 Citv Ave., Overbrook.
(G.)
Duhring, Miss Lucy B., 71 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
26
Duke, Miss Florence B., 1508 W. Alle-
gheny Ave., Philadelphia.
Duke, Mrs. J. O., Swarthmore.
Dulles, Mrs. Heatly C, Villa Nova.
Duncan, Mr. James, care of Miss Anne
Thomson, Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Dunlap, Mr. George M., Jr., Chester Pike
and Clifton Ave., Sharon Hill.
Dunn, Mr. Sydney B., Haver ford.
duPont, Mrs. A. Felix, Box 31, Wilming-
ton, Del.
duPont, Mrs. E. Paul, Montchanin, Del.
duPont, Mrs. H. B., "Crestlea," Ard-
more.
duPont, Mr. H. F., Winterthur, Del.
duPont, Mr. Pierre S., "Longwood,"
Kennett Square.
duPont, Mrs. William, Jr., Rosemont.
duPont, Mrs. William K., Box 52,
Wilmington, Del.
Durie, Mr. William, "Sweetwater Farm,"
Glen Alills.
Dursch, Mr. Frank C. J., 318 E. Chelten
Ave., Germantown.
D wight, Mr. Edmund Waterman, 1729
Walnut St., Philadelphia.
Eades, Mrs. William H., Englemere
Farm, Downingtown.
Earle, Miss Elinor, 8840 Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Earle, Mrs. Ralph, Haverford.
Earnest, Airs. John K., 813 Euclid Ave.,
Ambler.
Earp, A'liss Anne Tucker, 4619 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia.
Easby, Mrs. Francis H., 3316 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Eastburn, Airs. Charles T., Yardley.
Eastman, Mrs. B. Dobson, Falls of
Schuylkill.
Eastman, Aliss Dorothy D., Smethport,
AIcKean Co.
Eastwick, Mr. Andrew M., Wallingford.
Eavenson, Airs. Francis V., Oaks.
Eavenson, Mrs. William J., 2201 Chest-
nut St., Philadelphia,
Ebeling, Air. Ralph George, 325 N. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Eddis, Air. George H., 3218 N. Stillman
St., Philadelphia.
Edelman, Mr. Samuel, 474 N. 6th St.,
Philadelphia.
Edgar, Air. Robert J., 632 Alontgomery
Ave., Narberth.
Edgcomb, Mr. Ervin R., 239 Harvey St.,
Germantown.
Edwards, Mr. George W., 135 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Edwards, Mrs. George W., 135 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Edwards, Mr. W. E., Rosemont. (L.)
Egbert, Miss Linda, 1403 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Ehrmann, Airs. J. William, 311 Lenox
Rd., Brookline, Del. Co.
Eisele, Mr. Jacob D., Riverton, N. J.
.(C.)
Eisenmenger, Mrs. Carl H., Arden, Del.
Elkins, Mrs. George W., Elkins Park.
Elliot, Mrs. R. AlcCall, Bryn Mawr.
Elliott, Mrs. Harold H., 106 Argyle Rd.,
Ardmore.
Elliott, Mr. Simon, care of Airs. George
Vaux, Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Elliott, Mrs. William J., Thornbrook,
Rosemont.
Elliott, Mrs. William T., 117 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Ellis,_ Mrs. Thomas S., 1013 S. 49th St.,
Philadelphia.
Ellis, Mr. William S., Foxhill Farm,
Bryn Mawr.
Ellis, Mrs. William S., Foxhill Farm,
Bryn Mawr.
Ellison, Airs. H. Howard, Jr., "Cre-
mona," Villa Nova.
Elridge, Mr. George C, Jr., Wenonah,
N. J.
Else, Air. Fred, care of Mrs. Lewis Neil-
son, St. Davids. (G.)
Elwyn, Air. Thomas L., 1606 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Ely, Miss Gertrude, Bryn Alawr.
Ely, Mrs. Van Horn, Haverford.
Embery, Mr. William, 4932 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Emmerling, Mrs. F. C, 3436 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Erben, Mr. George K., "Sunnyside,"
Rosemont.
Erben, Mrs. George K., "Sunnyside,"
Rosemont.
Erdman, Mrs. Henry P., 1020 Westview
Ave., Mt. Airy Station.
Ernst, Miss Helen, 100 Swarthmore Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Ervin, Mrs. Spencer, Bala.
Ervin, Mrs. Wilfred, 308 Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Estabrook, Airs. E. B., 3101 W. Coulter
St., Philadelphia.
Evans, Mr. A. J. R., Gwynedd Valley.
Evans, Mrs. George B., Rosemont.
Evans, Mr. Herbert B., 58 Price St.,
Lansdowne.
Evans, Airs. Lawrence R., Box 229, Rut-
ledge.
Evans, Mrs. Lawton, 2226 Pickens Rd.,
Augusta, Ga.
Evans, Miss Mary, Bryn Mawr.
Evans, Mrs. Rowland, Jr., Villa Nova.
Everett, Mr. Herbert E., 2206 Rittcn-
house St., Philadelphia.
Ewing, Aliss S. L., N. W. cor. Stewart
and Dudley Aves., Narberth.
Exley, Aliss Emily, Wayne. (L.)
27
Eysmans, Mr. J. L., Room 409, Broad St.
Sta., Philadelphia.
Eyster, Mr. L. Bert, 432 State Rd., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Falconer, Mr. Allan, 924 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia.
Fancourt, Mr. E. J., 1612 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia. (VV.)
Faries, Mrs. C. T., Box 47, Wynnewood.
Farnum, Mrs. E. S. W., 101 W. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Farnum, Mr. George Leiper, "The
A.crcs " IVTsdis.
Farr,_ Miss Edith M., 4603 Cedar Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Farrow, Mr. Henry R. L., Conestoga and
Roberts Rds., Bryn Mawr.
Faust, Mr. Henry L, Merion. (C.)
Faux, Miss Ida, IIH Allen Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Fav, Dr. Temple, Elbow La., Mt. Airy.
Fearon, Mr. Charles, 6720 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Fearon, Mrs. Charles, 6720 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Febiger, Miss Mary S., 3421 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Felin, Mr. Charles F., 280 S. Grand
Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
Felix, Mrs. Samuel P., 50 W. Plumstead
Ave., Lansdowne.
Fell, Mrs. F. J., Jr., R. F. D. 1, Phoenix-
ville.
Felton, Mr. Edgar C, Haverford.
Felton, Mrs. Edgar C., Haverford
Ferguson, Mrs. James A., 124 W. Thomp-
son St., Philadelphia.
Fernley, Miss Hattie M., 6110 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Fetterman, Mrs. J. Gordon, Media.
Finletter, Mrs. Edwin M., 8431 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill. (L.)
Fischer, Dr. Henry G., 108 Blooming-
dale Ave., Wayne.
Fisher, Miss Elizabeth Wilson, Ambler.
Fisher, Mrs. E. Monroe, 421 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Fisher, Mrs. F. S., 64 Sanhican Drive,
Trenton, N. J. (C.)
Fisher, Mrs. Henry M., Jenkintown.
Fisher, Mrs. Howard W., 327 E. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Fisher, Mrs. Philip B., 8000 Crefelt St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Fitler, Mrs. N. Alyers, Wynnewood.
Fitler, Mr. William W., Villa Nova.
Fitzgerald, Mr. Thomas M., 86 W. Bal-
timore Ave., Lansdowne.
Fitzpatrick, Mr. John, 1317 Wolf St.,
Philadelphia.
Flagg, Mr. Stanley G., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Flagg, Mrs. Stanley G., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Flagler, Mr. Joseph H., 225 Broad St.
Sta., Philadelphia.
Fleck, Mrs. Frederick W., 335 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
Fleer, Mrs. Henry, 15 Woodside Ave.,
_^ Narberth.
Meisher, Mrs. Alfred W., Box 70, Wyn-
cote.
Fleisher, Mr. Horace T., 808 Otis Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Fleisher, Mrs. Walter A., Cor. City Line
and Lakeside Ave., Oak Lane.
Flemer, Mr. William, Jr., Princeton
Nurseries, Princeton, N. J. (N.)
Ford, Mrs. Bruce, Sugar Loaf, Chest-
nut Hill.
Forstall, Mr. Walton, 1401 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Foulke, Mrs. Laura L., 105 Forest Ave.,
Ambler.
Fox, Mrs. C. F., Jr., Elkins Park.
Fox, Mrs. Gilbert R., 909 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Fox, Miss Hannah, 1024 Clinton St.,
Philadelphia.
Fox, Mrs. Herbert, Haverford.
Fox, Mrs. Joseph M., 7913 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Fox, Mrs. Milford C, 156 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mr. W. B., 316 Paxson Ave., Glen-
side.
Fraley, Mrs. Frederick, "Norwynden,"
Overbrook.
Francis, Miss Jeannette M., Bethayres.
Franklin, Mrs. C. P., 2025 Upland Way,
Overbrook.
Franklin, Mrs. William B., Haverford.
Frazier, Mrs. D. B., Ardmore.
Frazier, Mrs. G. Harrison, Jr., 100 W.
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Frazier, Mrs. Herbert, 45 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Frazier, Mr. John W., Jr., 904 City
Center Bldg., Philadelphia.
Frazier, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Jenkintown.
Freeman, Mrs. J. Howard, 55 W. Eagle
Rd., Upper Darby.
Freihofer, Mrs. Stanley, 415 Montgomery
Ave., Merion.
French, Mrs. J. Hansell, Collegeville.
Frick, Mr. Charles E., 6915 Clearview
St., Mt. Airy.
Fries, Mrs. William P., 323 Cynwyd Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Fritz, Mrs. Charles Tuller, Washington
Lane and Welsh Road, Huntingdon
Valley.
Fritz, Mrs. J. A., S. E. cor. 34th and
Hamilton Sts., Philadelphia.
Fromuth, Mr. Harry C, Holland, Bucks
Co.
Furness, Mr. Fairman R., Upper Bank
Farm, Media. (N.)
Furness, Mrs. Radclyffe, 207 Summit
Ave., Jenkintown.
28
Gable, Mr. Joseph B., Jr., Stewartstown.
Gabriel, Miss C. V., 413 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Gadsby, Mrs. Edmund J., 3129 Queen
La., East Falls.
Gallagher, Mr. Thomas G., "Edgely,"
Bristol.
Gardiner, Mrs. John, Jr., 614 Pembroke
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Garner, Mrs. S. Carl, 50 Byberry Ave.,
Hatboro.
Garrigues, Miss Hannah, Haverford.
Garson, Mr. Theodore S. B., 227 Cones-
toga Rd., Wayne.
Garvin, Mr. William, care of Mr. W. W.
Frazier, Jenkintown. (G.)
Gause, Mrs. C. Ingersoll, 1101 Qayton
St., Wilmington, Del.
Gearhart, Mrs. William M., 929 W. Mar-
shall St., Norristow^n.
Geiser, Miss K. Irene, Box 121, Mifflen-
burg.
Geist, Mrs. Clarence H., Launfal,
Villa Nova.
Gellhaus, Miss Olga E., Ashton Rd. and
Grant Ave., Holmesburg.
Gendell, Miss Elizabeth B., 320 Maple
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Gendell, Miss Lucy C, 320 Maple Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Gerhard, Mrs. Albert Pepper, 5635 Over-
brook Ave., Overbrook.
Gerhard, Miss Anna Rebecca, 5625 Over-
brook Ave., Overbrook.
Gest, Mrs. William P., Merlon Sta.
Gibbon, Mrs_. John H., 1608 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Gibbons, Mrs. Mary Stevi^art, 330 Bryn
Mawr Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Giblin, Miss Margaret, Arden, Del.
Gibson, Mrs. Henry C, Jenkintown.
Gibson, Miss. Mary K., Wjmnewood.
Gibson, Mrs. Murray, Griffon Hall,
Wynnewood.
Gibson, Mr. William R., 735 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Gilbert, Mrs. George L., 7104 Hazel Ave.,
Bywood.
Gilbert, Mrs. John, Rydal.
Gilbert, Mrs. Thomas B., 6328 Wood-
lawn Ave., Lawndale.
Gilchrist, Mr. Douglas, 41 W. Stratford
Ave., Lansdowne.
Giles, Mr. Edwin M., Limekiln Pike near
Waverly Rd., Glenside, Montg. Co.
Gill, Miss Mary Esther, Zl Wynnewood
Ave., Wynnewood.
Gillingham, Mrs. C. Stratton Howe, 4717
Kingsessing Ave., Philadelphia.
Gilmore, Mrs. Fernley P., Box 44, Reho-
both Beach, Del.
Gilpin, Mrs. John C. Sugar Loaf
Orchard, Chestnut Hill.
Girvin, Miss Mary, 2120 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Glackin, Mr. John J., 7635 Parkview Rd.,
Highland Park, Del. Co.
Glasse, Mrs. Josephine, 3423 Race St.,
Philadelphia.
Glendinning, Mrs. H. Percival, 529 E.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Glendinning, Mr. Robert, Packard Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Glendinning, Mrs. Robert, "The Squir-
rels," Chestnut Hill.
Glover, Aliss Deborah A., 2035 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Godfrey, Mr. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. William S., Ardmore.
Godwin, Miss Edith Nicholas, 206 S. 43d
St., Philadelphia.
Goff, Mrs. Le Roy, 2d, 115 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Goldey, Mrs. F. H., 614 W. Aliens Lane,
Philadelphia.
Goldhaber, Mr. Jack S., 5310 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Goldsmith, Mrs. Arthur, Montgomery
Ave. & Mill Rd., Wynnewood.
Goodman, Miss Ernestine A., 140 Bethle-
hem Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Gossling, Mr. John H., 1027 Allengrove
St., Frankford.
Gotwals, Mrs. Leo A., South Gay St.,
Phoenixville.
Gowen, Mrs. Francis L, Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Graf, Miss Emma, 36 S. 5th St., Phila-
delphia.
Graham, Mr. Hugh D., 8359 Ogontz
Ave., Elkins Park. (N.)
Grakelow, Mr. Charles H., Broad and
Cumberland Sts., Philadelphia. (F.) _
Grange, Mrs. William Drayton, Morris
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Gray, Mrs. Alfred M., 5965 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Gray, Mr. Elmer A., R. D. 1, Norris-
town.
Green, Mr. J. Weldon, West Ave. and
Newbold Rd., Jenkintown.
Green, Mrs. J. Weldon, West Ave. and
Newbold Rd., Jenkintown.
Greene, Mrs. Norman, "Rainbow Lodge,"
Berwyn.
Greene, Mr. Ryland W., Rose La.,
Haverford.
Greenlee, Mr. James, Jr., 511 Chester
Pike, Ridley Park.
Greinberg, Mr. Reinhold, Wayne. (C.)
Gresimer, Mrs. A. Dubosq. 2525 Bryn
Mawr Ave., Ardmore Park.
Gribbel, Mrs. John, Wyncote.
Gribbel, Mrs. W. Griffen, Mermaid and
St. Martins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
29
Griffith, Dr. J. P. Crozer, 1810 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Griffith, Miss Julia W., Laurel Lane,
Haverford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert E., Haverford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert M., Gwalia, Ambler.
Griffiths, Mrs. Thomas A., St. Davids.
Grim, Dr. Ella W., Rose Valley Rd.,
R. F. D. 3, Media.
Griscom, Miss Frances C, Haverford.
Griscom, Mrs. William B., Old Gulph
Rd. and Bryn Mawr Ave., Narberth.
Griswold, Mrs. Frank T., "Hothorpe,"
Radnor.
Groff, Mrs. Charles G., 1205 Kenilworth,
Alden Park, Germantown.
Groff, Mrs. John C., 519 N. High St.,
West Chester.
Groome, Mrs. Daingerfield M., Clover
Hill Farms, Media.
Groome, Mrs. John C, 1018 Clinton St.,
Philadelphia.
Gross, Dr. F. O., 1816 W. Erie Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Gross, Mr. Robert F., 726 S. 28th St.,
Harrisburg.
Grubb, Mrs. Joseph H., Haverford Court
Haverford.
Grubnau, Mr. Carl, Erie Ave. at N. 2d
St., Philadelphia.
Gudehus, Mr. E. R., S. E. Cor. 13th and
Locust Sts., Philadelphia.
Guernsey, Dr. Joseph C, Montgomery
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Gumbes, Mrs. Charles Wetherill, Box 6,
Oaks, Montg. Co.
Gunning, Miss Agnes, 310 Ashbourne
Rd., Elkins Park.
Gustin, Mrs. Richard J., Ivyland.
Guthrie, Mrs. Tracy W., Beaver Rd. at
Newbury Lane, Edgeworth, Sewickley.
Habermehl, Mr. John P., 2139 Diamond
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Hacker, Mr. Caspar W., 1429 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Hacker, Mrs. Caspar W., Bryn Mawr.
Haehlen, Mr. Walter L., Colwyn and
Rhyle La., Cynwyd.
Haines, Miss Edith Stokes, Fort Wash-
ington.
Haines, Miss Jane B., Cheltenham.
Haines, Mrs. Joseph, Jr., Meadowbrook.
Haines, Mrs. W. H., 606 Zollinger Way,
Merion.
Hall, Miss Florence R., Bryn Mawr
Court, Bryn Mawr.
Hall, Mr. H. F., 416 Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J. (C.)
Hallman, Mrs. Thomas, Collegeville.
Hallowell, Mr. Charles K., 247 S. Juni-
per St., Philadelphia.
Hallowell, Mrs. Israel R., Moreland Rd.,
Bethayres.
Halsey, Mrs. Edward B., Radnor.
Halstead, Mrs. David, 301 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
Hamilton, Miss Emma F., 50 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Hamilton, Mrs. Robert Devitt, Church
Rd., Wyncote.
Hammer, Mr. William D., 8014 Flour-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Hammond, Dr. Julian T., 3d, 1042 Wide-
ner Bldg., Philadelphia.
Hancock, Mrs. F. Woodson, Jr., Phoenix-
ville.
Hansell, Mrs. Frank R., Eddington
Farm, Eddington.
Harbidge, Mr. Herbert J., care of Mrs.
John A. Brown, Jr., Wayne. (G.)
Harding, Mr. Edward W., Brandywine
Lodge, Pocopson. (G.)
Hare, Miss Esther B., Radnor.
Hare, Mr. J. V., Reading Terminal,
Philadelphia.
Hare, Mrs. J. V., Trevose.
Harjes, Mrs. F. H., Valley Forge.
Harker, Mrs. Norman, 27 Hillside Rd.,
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Harper, Mr. William Warner, An-
dorra Nurseries, Chestnut Hill. (N.)
Harrington, Mrs. A. M., 821 Westview
St., Germantown.
Harrington, Mrs. Melvin H., 1016 West-
view St., Mt. Airy.
Harrington, Mrs. Willis F., 16th St. and
Mt. Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del.
Harris, Mr. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. J. Andrews, Jr., Lincoln
Drive and Willow Grove Ave., Chest-
nut Hill.
Harris, Mr. Lewis D., Aldan, Del. Co.
Harris, Mrs. Morrison, 2307 N. 58th St.,
Overbrook.
Harris, Mr. Wharton E., Union League,
Philadelphia.
Harris, Mr. William K., 1406 S. 51st
St., Philadelphia. (C.)
Harrison, Mr. George L., St. Davids.
Harrison, Mrs. George L., St. Davids.
Harrity, Mrs. W. F., Apt. 601-B, Alden
Park Manor, Germantown.
Hart, Mrs. Charles, Media.
Hart, Mrs. William H., Susquehanna
Rd., Ambler.
Hartline, Mrs. Daniel S., State Teachers
College, Box 14, Bloomsburg.
Hartshorne, Miss Amy, Haverford.
Hartshorne, Mr. E. Y., Haverford.
Harvev, Mr! Frederick W., 2241 N. 4th
St., "Philadelphia.
Harvey, Mr. John S. C, Radnor.
Haslam, Miss Elizabeth, 8730 German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Hassett, Mrs. Robert R., 41 E. Elmwood
Ave., Sharon Hill.
30
Hastings, Mr. John V., Jr., Box 591,
Haverford.
Hatton, Aliss Edith J., R. F. D. 5, West
Chester.
Hatton, Mr. George, care of Dr. Strieker
Coles, Fisher's La., Bryn Alawr. (G.)
Hauenstein, Mr. Arthur, 612 Edge Hill
Rd., Ardsley, IVIontgomery Co. (G.)
Haughton, Mrs. Richard, Paoli.
Hay, Mrs. Edward N., 108 W. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Haydock, Mrs. Amelia G., 2726 W.
Somerset St., Philadelphia.
Hayes, Mr. Robert L., No. 3 Chatham
Rd., Stonehurst, Del. Co.
Hayward, Mr. H., 308 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Hayward, Airs. Nathan, Brooke Rd.,
Wayne.
Hazard, Mr. C. W., 300 Alidland Ave.,
St. Davids.
Heacock, Mr. James W., Wyncote. (C.)
Head, Mrs. Joseph, 7125 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Headly, Mr. J. D., The Dingee & Conard
Co., West Grove. (N.)
Headly, Mrs. John F., 194 Midfield Rd.,
Ardmore.
Heald, Mrs. Lawrence R., 5127 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Heckscher, Mr. Gustave A., Strafford.
Heckscher, Mrs. Ledyard, Radnor.
Heckscher, Miss Lucretia Stevens, "Tre-
goze," Radnor.
Hedley, Mrs. T. Wilson, 1015 S. 47th
St., Philadelphia.
Heebner, Airs. Charles, 315 S. 41st St.,
Philadelphia.
Heebner, Miss Julia E., 320 E. Ever-
green Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Heffner, Mrs. Warren S., 1009 Belfield
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Heim, Miss Christine, 115 Biddle St.,
Kane.
Heimerdinger, Mrs. Leo H., 1001 Vallev
Rd., Oak Lane.
Heizmann, Mr. William A., 1133 Read-
ing Blvd., Wyomissing.
Helme, Mrs. William E., St. Davids.
Hemsley, Mrs. Frederick, 2018 De
Lancey Place, Philadelphia.
Hendershot, Mr. Joseph, 2201 E. Darbv
Rd., Upper Darby P. O.
Hendershot, Airs. Joseph, 2201 E. Darbv
Rd., Upper Darby P. O.
Henderson, Airs. Charles H., 413 Spring
Rd., Llanerch, Upper Darby P. O.
Henderson, Airs. George, 2013 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Henderson, Mrs. Samuel J., "Fordel
Farm," Media.
Henkels. Air. John B., Jr., 446 Church
La., Germantown. (L.)
Henry, Mrs. Bayard, W. Walnut La.,
Germantown.
Henry, Mrs. Charles W., Chestnut
Hill.
Henry, Airs. J. Norman, Gladwyne.
Henson, Aliss Hannah, 226 Cameron Rd.,
Willow Grove.
Heppe, Mr. Florence J., 1117 Chest-
nut Street, Philadelphia.
Herr, Mr. John P., 52 Stewart Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Herr, Airs. William, 122 Tyson Ave.,
Glenside.
Herring, Aliss L. K., 2807 Alidvale Ave.,
Germantow'n.
Herring, Aliss Louise C, 3822 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Herring, Airs. Willard E., Jenkintown.
Herzberg, Mr. Herbert I., 7945 N,
Park Ave., Elkins Park.
Hess, Airs. G. L., 200 Ardmore Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Hess, Airs. xMartin G., Alarket Square,
iUanheim.
Heyl, Mrs. John B., 209 Kent Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Heyl, Airs. Robert C, 120 Bleddyn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Heymann, Air. Joseph C, 1420 Walnut
S't., Philadelphia.
Hibbert, Airs. Walter, Providence Rd.,
Wallingford.
Hibbs, Miss Helen, Sycamore Ave.,
Alerion.
Hibbs, Air. Shelton A., 109 E. Alont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore
Hibbs, Airs. Shelton A., 109 E. Alont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Hiestand, Airs. George, 303 Alain St.,
Phoenixville.
Highley, Airs. George N., 314 Fayette
St., Conshohocken.
Hilles, Aliss Elizabeth, 965 Orthodox St.,
Philadelphia.
Hilliard, Airs. James, R. F. D. 1, Hat-
boro.
Hilsee, Airs. Donald Ashcraft, Gwynedd
Valley.
Hinchman, Miss Margaretta S.,
Haverford.
Hires, Airs. Charles E., Jr., Wynnewood.
Hires, Airs. J. Edgar, 107 Linwood Ave.,
Ardmore.
Hitch, Dr. David AI., Aledical Arts Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Hoag, Air. C. G., 3515 Powelton Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Hoban, Airs. Jennie, S. Broad St., Lans-
dale.
Hockaday, Aliss Elizabeth, 316 Shadeland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Hoelscher, Air. A. W., Box 52c, Hunt-
ingdon Vallev.
Hofmeier, Aliss Anna C, Andalusia.
31
Hoff, Mrs. L. P, 124 Levering Mill Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Hoffman, Mr. Benjamin R., The
Grange, City Line Ave., W. Over-
brook.
Hoffman, Mrs. C. Fenno, Radnor Rd.,
Radnor.
Hoffman, Dr. Norbert L., 231 Oneida
St., Mt. Washington Sta., Pittsburgh.
Hogeland, Mr. Elias W., Huntingdon
Valley. (L.)
Hogeland, Miss Helen B., 245 Hansberry
St., Germantown.
Holding, Mrs. A. M., 308 S. Walnut St.,
West Chester.
Hollingsworth, Mrs. I. Pemberton P.,
123 E. Virginia Ave., West Chester.
Holmes, Miss Harriet F., Selborne,
S. Batavia Rd., Batavia, 111.
Holmes, Mr. Jesse H., care of Thomas
Young Nurseries, Inc., Bound Brook,
N. J. (N.)
Holmes, Mrs. Lynwood R., 235 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia.
Hood, Mrs. Albert L., Wissahickon Ave.
and Hortter St., Mt. Airy.
Hoopes, Mrs. Macmillan, P. O. Box 831,
Wilmington, Del.
Hopkins, Mrs. J. Clement, 10 W. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Hopper, Mrs. Harry S., 211 Roberts Rd.,
Ardmore.
Hopper, Miss Marie Louise, 211
Roberts Road, Ardmore.
Hoopes, Mrs. Henry, 1304 Rodney St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Hopkins, Mrs. Thomas S., 264 E. Kings
Highway, Haddonfield, N. J.
Home, Mrs. S. Hamill, Morris Ave.,
Bryn Maw^r.
Horst, Mr. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave., Nar-
berth.
Horst, Mrs. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave.,
Narberth.
Horstmann, Mrs. William H., "Norwyn-
den," Overbrook.
Horter, Miss Emma, Fort Washington.
Hoskins, Mrs. Albert L., Devon.
House, Mrs. M. A., Chadds Ford, Dela-
ware Co.
Houston, Mrs. Samuel F., St. Martins.
Hovenden, Aliss Martha M., Plymouth
Meeting.
How, Mrs. Harold W., Rosemont.
Howard, Mrs. Edgar B., Bryn Mawr.
Howard, Mr. John C, Lancaster Pike
above City Line, Philadelphia.
Howe, Miss Edith, 712 Maple La., Se-
wickley.
Howe, Mrs. George, Hampton and Cre-
feld Sts., Chestnut Hill.
Howe, Mrs. L. Fielding, 220 Lantwyn
Lane, Narberth.
Howell, Mrs. Lardner, Whitford.
Howland, Mrs. Ralph B., Stirling Head-
quarters, Echo Valley Farms, Malvern.
Howson, Mrs. Charles H., 134 Walnut
Ave., Wayne.
Hubard, Mrs. Archibald B., 7908 York
Rd., Elkins Park.
Huey, Mr. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huey, Mrs. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huff, Miss Emelie DeGalley, 5925 Wood-
bine Ave., Overbrook.
Huff, Mrs. George F., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Hughes, Mr. Hugh M., 814 Stanbridge
St., Norristov^n. (G.)
Hughes, Mr. William D., 3300 Race
St., Philadelphia.
Hughes, Mrs. William Henry, Morris
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Hulse, Mrs. Herbert, 38 Wheeler Ave.,
Warwick, N. Y.
Hutchinson, Mr. Horace S., 328 Maple
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Hutchison, Mrs. John W., 108 Hampden
Ave., Narberth.
Hutchinson, Mrs. Joseph B., Jr., 5 Col-
lege Circle, Haverford.
Hyde, Mrs. Charles L., 6632 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Ide, Mrs. Herbert S., 31 Maple Ave.,
Troy, N. Y.
Iliff, Mrs. Arthur R., Old Ambler Home-
stead, Ambler.
Ilsley, Mrs. Edward, Devon.
Ingersoll, Miss Anna Warren, Penllyn.
Ingersoll, Mr. Henry McKean, Spring
House, Montgomery Co.
Ingraham, Mrs. Clayton C, 1900 Ritten-
house Square, Philadelphia.
Ingram, Mrs. James E., Jr., Wayne.
Ireland, Miss Sarah A., 4635 Leiper St.,
Frankford.
Irvine, Mr. Samuel, 1509 N. Carlisle St.,
Philadelphia. (G.)
Irwin, Mrs. Boyle, R. F. D. 2, Phoenix-
ville.
Irwin, Mrs. Franklin K., 129 Argyle Rd.,
Ardmore.
Tack, Dr. L. Foster, Haverford.
Jackson, Mrs. Ellis, 212 Glenn Rd., Ard-
more.
Jacobs, Mrs. John, Bryn Mawr.
Jacobs, Mrs. Reginald, Haverford.
Jacoby, Mr. Edward C, Gulph Rd. and
Montgomery Ave., Radnor.
Jacoby, Mrs. Edward C, Gulph Rd. and
Montgomery Ave., Radnor.
Jaggard, Mr. Herbert A., Merion Manor,
Merion.
James, Miss Elizabeth S., 908 Darby
Rd., Llanerch, Upper Darby P. O.
James, Miss Winifred L., Southampton.
32
Jameson, Mrs. Norman L., S. Bow-
man Ave., Merion.
Janeway, Mrs. P. W., 3d and Edgemont
Sts., Media.
Janney, Mr. Walter C, Bryn Mawr.
Janney, Mrs. Walter C., Bryn Mawr.
Jarrett, Mrs. F. H., Jarrett's Gardens,
Bethayres. (C.)
Jeanes, Mrs. Henry S., Devon.
Jeanes, Mrs. Joseph Y., Villa Nova.
Jeffords, Mr. Walter M., Glen Riddle.
Jelinek, Miss Anne, Kreisheim Lodge,
Chestnut Hill.
Jenkins, Mrs. Charles F., Kitchens La.,
Germantown.
Jenkins, Mrs. Edward A., 506 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Jenks, Mrs. Horace H., College Ave.,
Haverford.
Jenks, Mrs. John S., Seminole and Chest-
nut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Joachim, Miss Reba E., 939 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
John, Mrs. R. H., 27 St. Paul's Rd., Ard-
more.
Johnson, Mr. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Jr., Villa Nova.
Johnson, Miss Laura C, 116 W. State
St., Trenton, N. J.
Johnson, Miss Marian K., 441 Berkeley
Rd., Haverford.
Johnson, Mr. J. W., E. Shawmont Ave.,
Roxborough.
Johnson, Mrs. Russell H., Jr., Bell's Mill
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Johnson, Mr. W. Keating, 326 W.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Johnson, Mrs. Walter H., City Ave. and
Green Hill Farms Rd., Overbrook.
Jones, Mr. Henry W., 25 E. 5th St.,
Chester.
Jones, Mr. Horace C, 5th and Fayette
' Sts., Conshohocken.
Jones, Mrs. J. Clifford, Wynnewood.
Jones, Mr. Lawrence E., Alden Park,
Germantown.
Jones, Mr. William B., Supt., Highwood
Cemetery, 2800 Brighton Rd., Pitts-
burgh.
Jordan, Mrs. Frederick, Jordan's Pond,
Glenside.
Junkin, Mrs. George B., Bryn Mawr.
Justi, Mr. Henry M., 205 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Justice, Miss Hilda, St. George's Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Kammerer, Mr. Fred H., 229 Rhoads
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Kearns, Mrs. J. L., 4204 Walnut St,,
Philadelphia.
Kearns, Mr. Wilmer R., Echo Dale Gar-
dens, Norristown. (C.)
Keen, Mr. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Keen, Mrs. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Keen, Mrs. Frank A., 603 N. Walnut St.,
West Chester.
Keen, Mrs. Harold Perot, "Kynlyn,"
Bellevue, Del.
Keen, Mr. Harry R., 305 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Cynwyd.
Keenest, Mr. Esker L., 28 W. Fairview
St., Bethlehem.
Keeney, Miss Susan Dorothea, 318 E.
Lancaster Pike, Wayne.
Keffer, Dr. E. I., 5991 Drexel Rd., Over-
brook.
Kelley, Mr. John J., 752 Buck Rd., Bryn
Mawr.
Kelley, Mrs. Richard C, 8212 Cedar Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Kelly, Mrs. Fred, "Little Garden," Lans-
downe.
Kelly, Miss Margaret K., Box 328, West
Chester.
Kemble, Miss Annie L., 522 Parker Ave.,
Collingdale.
Kemble, Mrs. Francis W., Devon.
Kemp, Mr. John A., Little Silver, N. J.
(C.)
Kendall, Mrs. Paul, Haverford.
Kendrick, Mrs. George W., 3d, Villa
Nova.
Kendrick, Mrs. Murdoch, 242 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Kennedy, Mr. Andrew, 55 Franklin Ave.,
Rosemont. (G.)
Kennedy, Mrs. John M., 3d, Box 103,
Plymouth Meeting.
Kennedy, Mrs. M. C, 1830 Rittenhouse
Sq., Philadelphia.
Kennedy, Miss Marie E., 235 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kent, Mrs. A. Atwater, Ardmore.
Kent, Mrs. Edward H., R. D., Dallas.
Kerr, Mr. Thomas A., 3 Mansfield Ave.,
Lansdowae.
Kerr, Mrs. William M., Trainor.
Keyser, Mr. C. N., care of Lewis &
Valentine Co., Ardmore. (N.)
Keyser, Mrs. Romaine, 4532 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Kift, Mr. Robert, 4044 Haverford Ave.,
Philadelnhia.
Kilduff, Mrs. William Douglas, Navy
Yard, Washington. D. C.
Killian, Mr. Edward J., 2d, 6320 New-
town Rd., Lawndale.
Kimber, Miss N. B., 538 Locust Ave.,
Germantown.
King, Mrs. Joseph B., 7315 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
King, Mrs. Mary L., 316 Rhodes PI.,
New Castle.
Kinnard, Mrs. Leonard H., Wynnewood.
33
Kintz, Miss Ella, Box 146, Pittston.
Kircher, Mr. Walter C, 2671 N. Napa
St., Philadelphia.
Kirchner, Mrs. Edward J., Remington
Rd., Overbrook.
Kirkpatrick, Air. U. Glen, 230 S. 7th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kirshner, Miss Fannie S., 235 S. 49th
St., Philadelphia.
Kissell, Mrs. Blanche, 46 W. Liberty St.,
Chambersburg.
Klein, Mr. A. H., 3112 N. 27th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kleinheinz, Mr. William, care of Mr.
Jos. E. Widener, Elkins Park. (G.)
Klemm, Mrs. John W., St. Davids.
Klose, Mr. Henry C., 5339 Angora Ter.,
Philadelphia.
Klose, Mrs. Henry C., 5339 Angora Ter.,
Philadelphia.
Kneedler, Mrs. Howard S., Jr., 121 W.
Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Knellwolf, Mr. John, Oaklyn, N. J.
Knight, Mrs. Joseph S., Haverford.
Knipe, Mrs. James N., 322 Hathaway
La., Wynnewood.
Knowles, Air. Howard B., 5802 Cedar
Parkway, Chevy Chase, Aid.
Knox, Air. Irvin H., care of Airs. F. G.
Thomson, Devon. (G.)
Kohn, Mrs. Harry E., 682 S. Highland
Ave., Alerion.
Kolb, Air. Bert. Chas., 411 Haddon Ave.,
Collingswood, N. J.
Kolb, Air. Emmanuel, 1600 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Kommer, Air. John T., 519 E. Sedgwick
St., Alt. Airy.
Krauskopf, Airs. Joseph, 4715 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Krick, Airs. C. S., St. Davids.
Krouse, Air. Daniel H., Langhorne Gar-
dens, Langhorne. (C.)
Krumbhaar. Airs. E. B., Chestnut Hill.
Kuehnle, Air. C. Albert, Vine and 17th
Sts., Philadelphia.
Kuhn, Mr. C. Hartman, 1430 Walnut
Street, Philadelphia.
Kuhn, Mr. John, 405 W. Tabor Rd.,
Olney. (F.)
Kunde, Mrs. Carl O., 549 S. Wycombe
Ave., Lansdowne.
Kunkel, Airs. William B., "Dunroamin,"
Glenn Rd., Ardmore.
Kunz, Aliss Dorothea C, Prospectville,
Alontg. Co. (N.)
Kurrie, Air. George R., 333 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Kurtz, Mrs. William F., 7002 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Kyle, Airs. D. Braden, 250 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kyle, Airs. Jay, 311 S. Juniper St., Phila-
delphia.
Kyne;t, Air. H. H., Box 22, Wayne.
LaBoiteaux, Airs. Isaac, Bryn Alawr.
Lacey, Air. J. Aladison, 329 Waring Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Lacey, Airs. J. Aladison, 329 Waring Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Laedlein, Airs. Elizabeth W., 3600 Huey
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Lafore, Airs. J. A., Fairview Farm, Nar-
berth.
Laird, Airs. J. Packard, "Chesterbrook
Farm," Berwyn.
Lamb, Airs. Robert E., 225 W. Nippon
St., Alt. Airy.
Landis, Aliss Bertha L., The Ontario,
Washington, D. C.
Landis, Airs. W. R., 1447 69th Ave., Oak
Lane.
Landreth, Air. Burnet, Jr., 245 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill. (S.)
Landreth, Air. S. Phillips, Bristol. (S.)
Landry, Airs. W. A., 620 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Lane, Air. Alilford, 2004 Tulip St., Phila-
delphia.
Lane, Air. Thomas J., Dreshers. (N.)
Langdon, Airs. H. Alaxwell, Grays La.,
Haverford.
Lankford, Airs. Floyd, 4101 St. Paul St.,
Guilford, Baltimore, Aid.
Larzelere, Airs. Walter D., "Thorn-
hedge," St. Davids.
Lathrop, Air. Francis C, 237 Lenoir
Ave., Wayne.
Lauer, Air. Conrad N., P. O. Box 147,
Penllyn, Alontg. Co.
Lavell, Airs. E. F., 129 S. 23d St., Phila-
delphia.
Lavino, Air. E. J., E. Gravers La. and
Flourtown Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Lavino, Air. Edwin AI., "Twin Willows,"
Cresheim Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Lay, Aliss Harriet AI., 4015 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Lay, Air. J. Tracy, 4015 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Lazarus, Airs. James T., Ithan.
Lea, Airs. Arthur H., 2004 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Lea, Airs. Francis C, 421 Owen Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Lea, Airs. Langdon, Wynnewood.
League, Mr. H, M., Bryn Mawr.
Learning, Airs. E. B., 228 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Leas, Mrs. Donald S., Haverford.
Lebo, Mrs. EUerslie A., 37 Tackson Ave.,
Northfield, N. J.
LeBoutillier, Airs. Benj. Homer, Paoli.
LeBoutillier, Airs. Edward H., Haver-
ford.
Lederle, Airs. Robert B., 45 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
34
Lee, Miss Elizabeth Leighton, 12 Snow-
den Rd., Bala-Cynwyd. (L.)
Lee, Mrs. Horace H., 727 Panmure Rd.,
Haverford.
Leedom, Mrs. Elizabeth D., 108 Tenby
Rd., Llanerch, Delaware Co.
Leeds, Miss Sarah B., 84 Branch St.,
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Legters, Miss Alice L, 130 Runnymede
Ave., Wayne.
Lehman, Miss Emily, 1718 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Leibert, Miss E. Pauline, "Windermere,"
Monument Rd. and City Line, Bala.
Leidy, Mrs. Joseph, Rose Hill House,
Penllyn.
Lesley, Mrs. Robert W., Haverford.
LeRoy, Miss Charlotte Otis, 7428 Devon
St., Mt. Airy.
Lester, Mr. Joseph G., 2220 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Lever, Mrs. G. F., 4304 Frankford Ave.,
Frankford.
Levis, Mr. Edward H., 1428 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Levy, Mr. Howard S., 1429 N. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Lewis, Airs. Effie M., 12th and Fayette
Sts., Conshohocken.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 2207 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 3d, Fishers Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Lewis, Mrs. Howard W., 1928 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. John Frederick, More-
stein. Chester Co.
Lewis, Mrs. Leroy Moody, Curwen Rd.,
Rosemont.
Lewis, Mrs. Lynne K., 2004 W. Ontario
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Miss Maud E., 803 Mahantango
St., Pottsville.
Lewis, Mrs. Paul, Strafford.
Lewis, Mrs. Thomas H., Paoli.
Lieker, Mr. Emil, Lansdowne. (C.)
Ligget, Mrs. Howard B., Jr., Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Ligget, Mrs. J. Thomas, Haverford.
Ligget, Mrs. Robert C, Valley Forge.
Liggit, Mr. C. U., 1600 Arch St., Phila-
delphia. (C.)
Lightfoot, Mrs. J. C, Jr., Box 267, Villa
Nova.
Lilley,_Mrs. William, 309 Orchard Way,
Merion.
Lincoln, Mrs. George J., Jr., Emlen St.
and Allen La., Mt. Airy.
Lindenmayer, Miss Josephine A., 5024
Arch St., Philadelphia.
Lindner, Mrs. Mary E., 1233 W. Hilton
St., Philadelphia.
Lindroth, Air. Axel, Box 38, Bryn Mawr.
(G.)
Lineaweaver, Mrs. Charles P., The
Quarry, Laural Lane, Haverford.
Linton, Mrs. AI. Albert, 315 E. Oak Ave.,
Aloorestown, N. J.
Lippincott, Mr. Horace G., Wyncote.
Lippincott, Air. H. R., Alullica Hill,
N.J.
Lippincott, Mrs. J. Bertram, 1712
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Lippincott, Air. John H., 5920 Greene
St., Germantown.
Lippincott, Miss Mary W., Wyncote.
Lippincott, Mrs. Robert C, 266 W.
Tulpehocken St., Germantown.
Lippincott, Airs. Walter H., Wynnewood.
Lisle, Airs. R. AI., Paoli.
Littleton, Mrs. W. G., 303 Llandrillo Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Lloyd, Mr. Horatio Gates, "AUgates,"
Haverford.
Lloyd, Mrs. Horatio Gates, "All-
gates," Haverford.
Lloyd, Mr. Malcolm, Jr., 701 Com-
mercial Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Lloyd, Mrs. Stacy B., Ardmore.
Lober, Mrs. William D., 347 Aubrey Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Lodge, Miss Elizabeth C, R. F. D. 3,
Newtown Square, Delaware Co.
Loeb, Mrs. Howard A., Elkins Park.
Logan, Miss Alice, The Patch Box, West
Chester.
Logan, Mrs. L. J., 6543 E. Harvey Ave.,
Alerchantville, N. J.
Logan, Mrs. Robert R., Eddington.
Long, Mr. Thomas, 3782 Woodland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Long, Air. William Merrill, 309 Waring
Rd., Elkins Park. (N.)
Longmaid, Mr. J. H., Bryn Mawr.
Longsdorf, Mr. Paul W., Church Rd. and
Park Ave., Elkins Park.
Longshore, Mr. Frank H., Parish House,
E. Cumberland and Collins Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Lorgus, Mr. Rudolph G., The Lorgus Co.,
West Chester. (F.)
Lorimer, Mrs. Graeme, Aleadowbrook.
Love, Aliss K. G., 5011 Penn St., Frank-
ford.
Lovett, Miss Louise D., 46 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Low, Mrs. Howe, 8003 Navahoe St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Luckenbach, Airs. J. Lewis, 113 10th
Ave., Haddon Heights. N. J.
Ludington, Mrs. C. Townsend, Clo-
velly, Ardmore.
Ludlum, Airs. Sevmour DeWitt, 1827
Pine St., Philadelphia.
Lukens, Air. George E., 214 School St.,
North Wales. (C.)
Lukens, Mrs. Lewis N., Jr., Towanda
St., Chestnut Hill.
35
Lusson, Mrs. Louis Olry, 2i2 E. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Lusson, Miss Marie R., 319 St. Davids
Rd., Wayne.
Lycett, Miss Rebecca H., Haverford.
Lyle, Mrs. Clarence S., 1344 Powell St.,
Norristown.
Lyman, Mrs. J. V. R., 330 Wister Rd.,
Ardmore.
Lyman, Mrs. Moses, 16 Westmoreland
Ave., Longmeadow, Mass.
Lyman, Mrs. Walter M., Hotel Marlyn,
Walnut and 40th Sts., Philadelphia.
Lyon, Mrs. LeRoy S., 2107 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Lyons, Mrs. E. M., 18 Maple Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
McAllister, Miss Eliza Y., 3503 Baring
St., Philadelphia.
McAllister, Mrs. J. Rutherford, 8134
Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill.
McAllister, Miss Janet C, 326 W. State
St., Media.
McCawley, Mr. Edmund S., Ithan. (L.)
McCawley, Mrs. William M., care of
E. S. McCawley & Co., Haverford.
McCormick, Mrs. Roberdeau A., 3807
Fenchurch Rd., Baltimore, Md.
McCown, Mrs. Allison E., 351 Trevor
La., Bala-Cynwyd.
MacCoy, Mrs. W. Logan, 69th and City
Line, Overbrook.
McCracken, Mr. D. K., care of Mrs.
T. Williams Roberts, Bala. (G.)
McCracken, Mrs. Robert T., 1009 West-
view St., Germantown.
McCreary, Mrs. George D., St. Martins,
Chestnut Hill.
McCreery, Mrs. Samuel, 261 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
McCurdy, Miss Mary M., 6023 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
■McDougal, Mrs. George, 533 Elkins Ave.,
Elkins Park.
McFadden, Mrs. Barclay, Rosemont.
McFadden, Mr. George, Villa Nova.
McFadden, Mr. J. Franklin, Rosemont.
McFadden, Mrs. J. Franklin, Rosemont.
McFarland, Mrs. Harold B., 268 Lenox
Rd., Jenkintown.
McFarland, Mr. J. Horace, 2101 Bellevue
Rd., Harrisburg.
MacFarland, Mr. Walter G., Jr., Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
McGee, Mr. Lynn B., 522 E. Gates St.,
Roxborough.
McGill, Miss Mary E., 700 Hazelhurst
Rd., Merion.
Mcllhenny, Mrs. Francis S., 8765 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Hugh, Haverford.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Walter B., "Smoky Ridge
Farm," Downingtown.
McIIvaine, Miss Frances Edge, Down-
ingtown.
McKean, Mrs. Bispham, Ithan.
McKean, Mr. Thomas, Radnor.
McKee, Airs. James H., 6623 McCallum
St., Germantown.
McKnight, Mrs. T. H. B., 1615 Twenty-
first St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
McLain, Mrs. Louis, 620 Pembroke Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
McLean, Mrs. Robert, Fort Washing-
ton.
McLean, Mrs. Wm. L, Jr., St. Martin's
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
MacMeney, Miss Elizabeth, 439 Penn
Ave., Drexel Hill.
McMichael, Mr. Emory, Devon.
McMichael, Mrs. Emory, Devon.
McMicking, Miss Eliz. I. S., Girard Col-
lege, Philadelphia,
MacMillan, Mr. William, 7429' Bingham
St., Philadelphia.
MacMurchy, Mr. J. A., 504 Harrison St.,
Ridley Park.
McNaughton, Mr. Andrew D., Box 84,
Gladwyne. (G.)
McNeal, Mr. D. Raymond, Jericho Rd.,
Abington.
McNeely, Miss Florence, 444 N. High-
land Ave., Merion.
McNees, Mrs. W. G., Providence Rd. at
5th St., Media.
McNichol, Mrs. Tames P., St. Davids.
McOwen, Mrs. F., 5871 Drexel Rd.,
Philadelphia.
Madeira, Mrs. Crawford C, 208 Roberts
Rd., Ardmore.
Madeira, Mrs. E. W., School Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Magee, Miss Jane L, 315 Bala Ave., Cyn-
wyd.
Magill, Mrs. S. N., Elkins Ave., Elkins
Park.
Maguire, Mrs. Frank Hain, 146 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Makin, Mrs. Carrie, 7027 Greenway Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Maillot, Mrs. W. L., Meadowbrook.
Malcom, Airs. J. V., 3811 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Alalehorn, Mr. C. J., 423 Grove Place,
Narberth.
Mallon, Miss Louise Baeder, N. E. cor.
13th and Pine Sts., Philadelphia.
Manda, Mr. Joseph, 130 Main St.,
West Orange, N. J. (C.)
Alanda, Air. W. A., South Orange, N. J.
(C.)
Alarkle, Mrs.. George B., P. O. Box 426,
Hazleton.
Markoe, Mrs. John, 1630 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Alarsh, Airs. J. C, Box F, Tunbridge
Rd., Haverford.
36
Marshall, Mrs. F. Warren, Radnor.
Marshall, Mrs. John, 1718 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Marsland, Mrs. Roland, Moylan.
Marti, Mrs. O. K., 206 E. Cottage Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Martin, Mrs. Carl N., 2031 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Martin, Mr. Charles E., 135 Runnymede
Ave., Wayne.
Martin, Mrs. John C, "Wedgwood,"
Wyncote.
Martin, Mrs. J. Willis, 139 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Martin, Mrs. S. K., Harborton, Va.
Martindale, Mrs. Chester, West Chester.
Masland, Mr. Walter E., Lenox Road,
Jenkintown.
Mason, Mr. John H., Commercial Trust
Bldg., City Hall Sq., Philadelphia.
Mason, Mr. W. Laurence, Golf View
Rd., Doylestown.
Masters, Miss Jessie W., 3308 Baring
St., Philadelphia.
Matlawski, Mr. Adam, care of Mrs.
Stanley G. Flagg, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
(G.)
Matthews, Mr. Edward, care of Mr.
Geo. D. Rosengarten, Malvern. (G.)
Matthews, Mr. Edwin, Out Door Arts
Co., Flourtown. (N.)
Mattis, Mr. J. Stafford, 4542 Manayunk
Ave., Roxborough. (S.)
Alattison, Dr. R. V., Ambler.
Mattoon. Mr. Harold G., 425 Tregaron
Rd., Cynwyd.
Maxwell, Mrs. Harry Z., Blue Bell,
Montg. Co.
Maxwell, Mrs. John R., Villa Nova.
Mazer, Mr. David, Three Point Gar-
dens, E. Stroudsburg. (N.)
Mecray, Mrs. P. M., Oak Ave., Moores-
town, N. J.
Meehan, Mr. Charles E., 5 S. Mole St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Meehan, Mr. S. Mendelson, 380 Vernon
Rd., Mt. Airy. (N.)
]\Iegargee, Mrs. George M., 6807 Quincy
St., Germantown.
Mehl, Mrs. F. H., 125 Valley Rd., Ard-
more.
Meigs, Mrs. John F., 2d, Ithan.
Meirs, Mrs. Richard Wain, 2048 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Mellor, Mr. Sigourney, 721 Old Lan-
caster Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Mercer, Mrs. William R., "Aldie,"
Doylestown.
Merrick, Mrs. R. R., Villa Nova.
Merrick, Mrs. Samuel V., Bell's Mill
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Merritt, Mrs. James S., 8031 German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Meter, Dr. Edward G., 25th and Grand-
view Sts., Mt. Penn.
Meyer, Miss Ada, 325 N. 34th St., Phila-
delphia.
Meyer, Mr. Frank B., Frandama Gardens,
Elkins Park. (C.)
Michell, Mr. F. J., Jr., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Michell, Mr, Frank B., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Michell, Mr. Henry F., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Middleton, Mrs. Albert C, 232 E. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Middleton, Mrs. C. Wilmer, Haverford.
Middleton, Mr. H. C, Jr., 7 Shirley Rd.,
Narberth.
Miles, Mr. John M., "Fairway," Box
172, Roslyn, Va.
Miller, Dr. Edwin B., 204 W. Monument
Ave., Hatboro.
Miller, Mr. Frank A., 229 N. Hannevig
Ave., Brooklawn, N. J.
Mills, Mr. M. P., 5323 Chester Ave.,
Philadelphia. (C.)
Milne, Mr. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Milne, Mrs. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Minehart, Mrs. John R., 4821 German-
town Ave., Germantown.
Mingle, Mrs. M. B., 3041 N. Darien St.,
Philadelphia.
Mitchell, Mrs. Charles F., 2003 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Mitchell, Mr. George L., 5990 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Mitchell, Mrs. John K., Reculver, West
Chester.
Mitchell, Miss Mary B., 5149 Morris St..
Germantown.
Molthan, Mr. Emil H., Wayne.
Monroe, Mr. William H., Elkins Park.
(G.)
Montgomery, Mr. Gilbert M., Devon.
(N.)
Montgomery, Mr. Sidney, 439 E. State
St., Media. (N.)
Montgomery, Mr. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Montgomery, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Montgomery, Mrs. W. W., Glenmore.
Moon, Mr. Henry T., Morrisville. (N.)
Moore, Mrs. A. C, Highland Park,
111.
.^ifoore, Mrs. Bessie R., 299 J^laple Ave.,
Doylestown.
Moore, Mr. Clyde B., Sagamore Hill,
Greensburg.
Moore, Mr. Frederick H., care of Mrs.
Horatio Gates Lloyd, Haverford. (G.l
Moore, Mrs. H. McKnight, Box 96, Bryn
Mawr.
Moore, Mr. J. Clark, Jr., 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
n
Moore, Mr. John. 233 Sagamore Rd.,
Brookline, Del. Co.
Moore, Miss Marion S., Manoa, Upper
Darby P. O.
Moore, Mr. Philip H., 6644 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Moore, Mrs. Springer H., Railroad and
Walnut Aves., Haverford.
^loore, Mrs. William G., 257 Kings
Highway, West, Haddonfield, N. J.
Morgan, ^Irs. F. Corlies, Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. John B., 8635 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. Randal, 398 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
:Morgan, Mr. Robert C, 314 W. Sey-
mour St., Germantown.
Mormann, Mrs. M., 355 Windemere Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Morrell, Airs. Edward, Torresdale.
Morris, Mr. Effingham B., Ardmore.
Alorris, ^.liss Ellen, Villa Nova.
Morris, Airs. J. Cheston, Spring House.
Morris, Mr. Lawrence J., 212 La-
fayette Bldg., Philadelphia.
Morris, Miss Lydia T., "Compton,"
Chestnut Hill.
Aforris, Aliss Margaret E., Rosemont.
Morris, Mr. Samuel W., Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Morrison, Mr. John, West Gravers La.,
Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Morrow, Air. Robert J., Towanda St.,
Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Morton, Mrs. Arthur V., 1015 Clinton
St., Philadelphia.
Alorton, Airs. Robert Pearsall, 38 E.
Penn St., Germantown.
Morton, Mr. William, 148 N. 35th St.,
Camden, N. J. (G.)
AIoss, Air. Frank H., Bala.
AIoss, Airs. Frank H., Bala.
Mott, Aliss Alarion, Radnor.
Alouser, Airs. Otis, Alerion.
Alowry, Aliss Helen, 101 W. Allen Lane,
Alt. Airy.
Aloyer, Air. Alvin W., R. D. 3, Perkasie,
Bucks Co.
Aludd, Airs. Stuart, Aldwyn La., Villa
Nova.
AIuhl3% Airs. George C, 464 State Rd.,
Cynwyd.
A'lulford, Airs. Spencer K., Wyncote.
Mulford, Airs. S. K., Jr., Aleadowbrook.
Miiller, Mr. Adolf, DeKalb Nurseries,
Norristown. (N.)
Muller, Mr. O. A., Ambler. (G.)
Murphy, Air. J. Prentice, Wayne.
Murtagh, Airs. J. C, 310 N. High St.,
West Chester.
Alustin, Airs. G. B., Herford Place, Lans-
downe.
Mustin, Mr. Gilbert B., Jr., Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Alyers, Air. B. F., 7716 Navahoe St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Alyers, Airs. Charles, St. Davids.
Alyers, Airs. Lawrence, 710 Spring Ave.,
Nalle, Airs. Richard T., E. Bells Alill
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Neale, Air. James B., Buck Run, Schuvl-
kill Co.
Neall, Aliss Adelaide W., Roumfort Rd.,
Alt. Airy.
Nearing, Mr. G. Guy, Grubbs, Del. (N.)
Neilson, Airs. Edward S., Alliquippa
Farm, Alalvern.
Neilson, Airs. H. R., St. Davids.
Neilson, Mrs. Lewis, St. Davids.
Netter. Airs. Helen Staples, P. O. Box
25, Penllyn.
Neumeyer, Airs. Robert E., 452 N. New
St., Bethlehem.
Nevin, Mrs. William L., Hill Top
Farm, Radnor.
Newbold, Airs. David, Haverford.
Newbold, Airs. Eugene S., St. Davids.
Newbold, Airs. Fitz Eugene, Devon.
Newbold, Airs. John S., Jenkintown.
Newbold, Aliss Alargaret E. I., Irvine,
Warren Co.
Newburger, Airs. Frank L., 534 Elkins
Ave., Elkins Park.
Newcomer, Airs. S. S., IZ Fraley St.,
Kane.
Newhall, Mrs. Thomas, Ithan.
Newlin, Airs. Arthur, 1804 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Newlin, Airs. J. C, Bryn Alawr.
Nichols, Mrs. H. S. Prentiss, 345 Pel-
ham Rd., Germantown.
Nichols, Air. Roy B., Torresdale.
Nicholson, Airs. Percival, 16 W. Alont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Nicholson, Mrs. Wm. H., Jr., 118 E.
Oak Ave., Aloorestown, N. J.
Niessen, Air. Arthur A., 507 Liberty
Trust Bldg., Broad and Arch Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Norris, Airs. Charles C, Alt. Pleasant
Rd., Brvn Alawr.
Norris, Mrs. Charles C, Jr., Rose La.,
Haverford.
Norris, Air. George W., Gwvnedd \'al-
ley.
Norris, Airs. George W., Gwvnedd Val-
ley.
Norris, Airs. Wm. Fisher, Alt. Pleasant
Rd., Bryn Alawr.
Norstrom, Air. R. AL, ZZZ Sloan Ave.,
W. Collingswood, N. J.
North, Airs. Ralph H., 7301 Boyer St.,
Alt. Airv.
Nussle, Airs. Pauline AL, 2313 Green St.,
Philadelphia.
Oakford, Mrs. J. W., "Lowlands."
Waverly.
38
O'Connor, Mrs. Haldeman, 13 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
O'Donnell, Airs. Frank P., 325 Syca-
more Ave., Merion.
Ogden, Mrs. George D., Ithan.
Orr, Dr. A. V. B., 525 Welsh St., Ches-
ter.
Orr, Mrs. George P., Berwyn.
Orth, Mrs. S. Stern, 4322 Paul St.,
Frankford.
Osborn, Mrs. H. Fairfield, Sheaff La.,
Whitemarsh.
Osborne, Mrs. Frank, Alloway, N. J.
Ostheimer, Miss Elizabeth C., Jenkin-
town.
Ostheimer, Dr. Maurice, "Grimmet,"
Whitford.
Ottey, Mrs. Sara P., 108 Ashby Rd.,
Upper Darby.
Packard, Mrs. F. R., 304 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Packard, Mrs. George Randolph, Villa
Nova.
Packard, Mrs. John H., 3d, Cor. New St.
and Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Page, Mrs. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Edward Sydenham, Wayne.
Page, Mrs. George Bispham, Shipley
Farm, Secane.
Page, Mr. L. Rodman, Jr., 1510 Chest-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Page, Mrs. Robert H., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mr. Robert H., Jr., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Robert Holmes, "Willow-
brook Farm," Paoli.
Pallatt, Mrs. Winfield D., 7942 Mont-
gomery Ave., Elkins Park.
Palmer, Dr. Samuel C, Swarthmore Col-
lege, Swarthmore.
Pancoast, Mrs. Henry K., Gray's La.,
Haverford.
Parent, Mr. Albert, 338 N. Lawrence St.,
Philadelphia.
Parish, Mrs. H. G., Enfield, Montg. Co.
Park, Mrs. Frederick S., 343 Brookway
Ave., Merion.
Parker, Mr. Hiram, Moylan-Rose Val-
ley.
Parkhurst, Mrs. Charles W., 130 Der-
wen Rd., Bala-Cynwyd.
Parry, Mr. Edward H., Box 84, Wyn-
cote.
Parry, Mrs. George, 307 Wyncote Rd.,
Jenkintown.
Parsons, Mrs. Lewis H., Villa Nova.
Passmore, Mr. G. Edwin, 316 S. Ather-
ton St., State College.
Patrick, Airs. F. M., 204 Clwyd Rd., Cyn-
wyd.
Patterson, Mrs. Charles L., Fair Hills
Farm, Chadds Ford.
Patterson, Airs. Rufus C, R. D. 5, New
Castle.
Patterson, Air. Samuel, 131 Stratford
Ave., Aldan.
Patton, Mrs. Henry B., Rose and Laurel
Lanes, Haverford.
Paul, Air. A. J. Drexel, Radnor.
Paul, Mrs. Theodore S., 8009 Navahoe
St., Chestnut Hill.
Paxson, Miss Bertha R., 8764 Frankford
Ave., Holmesburg.
Payne, Air. W. Guy, 2104 Alarket St.,
Pottsville. (F.)
Peace, Mrs. William S., Rydal.
Pearce, Mrs. John W., "Endsleigh," 617
Pembroke Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Pearson, Air. Eric A., 215 W. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Pedigo, Aliss Elizabeth, Box 233, Tren-
ton, N. J.
Peirce, Airs. Daniel N., Bryn Athyn.
Peirce, Airs. Frederick, 370 Aubrey Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Peirce, Airs. Harold, Haverford.
Pelly, Miss May G., 507 Blythe Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Pemberton, Mrs. Ralph, Paoli.
Pennell, Aliss Elizabeth S., Hildemere
Gardens, Wawa. (C.)
Pennington, Mrs. A. G., Radnor.
Pennock, Airs. Anna C, 35 Violet Lane,
Lansdowne.
Pennock, Air. George L., 165 W. Essex
Ave., Lansdowne. (C.)
Pennock, Mr. J. Liddon, 1514 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Pennock, Mr. Samuel S., 1612 Ludlow
St., Philadelphia. (W.)
Pennock, Airs. Samuel S., Lansdowne
Court, Lansdowne.
Penrose, Miss Valeria F., 152 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Pepper, Mrs. Franklin, Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Devon.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Jr., St. Davids
Rd., St. Davids.
Pepper, Mrs. John W., Jenkintown.
Pepper, Mrs. O. H. Perry, Ithan.
Pepper, Mrs. William, Alelrose Park.
Perkins, Mrs. Charles C, Box 82, Bryn
Mawr.
Perrott, Mrs. Raymond F., 3119 Alidvale
Ave., Philadelphia.
Perry, Mrs. Henry Hillman, Alerion
Ave. and Gulph Rd., Bryn Alawr.
Perry, Mr. Joseph M., 16th and Chest-
nut Sts., Philadelphia.
Peter, Mr. Albert G., 6212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peter, Airs. Albert G., 6212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peters, Mrs. J. D., 812 Swede St., Nor-
ristown.
39
Pettiford, Mr. C. H, 75 W. Duval St.,
Germantown.
Pew, Mrs. Arthur E., Jr., "Spring-
brook Farm," Bryn Mawr.
Pew, Mrs. J. Howard, Ardmore.
Pew, Airs. John G., P. O. Box 23, Moy-
lan.
Pfahler, Mrs. Alfred E., "Seven Acres,"
Whitehorse Rd., Paoli.
Pfahler. Dr. George E., 6463 Drexel Rd.,
Overbrook.
Philips, Mrs. David L., 419 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Cynwyd.
Phillips, Mrs. Jos. L., Torresdale.
Phreaner, Dr. W. A., 1701 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Pickles, Mr. William W., 4143 Paul St.,
Frankford.
Pierce, Mr. F. G., 205 Llanfair Rd., Ard-
more.
Pierce, Mr. F. Hastings, care of Lord &
Burnham Co., Land Title Bldg., Phila-
delphia.
Pilling. Mr. Charles J., 42 Windemere
Ave., Lansdowne.
Pilling, Mr. W. S., 229 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Pitcairn, Mrs. Raymond, Bryn Athyn.
Plankinton, Mrs. John H., 3 W. Hillcrest
Ave., Oakmont, Upper Darby P. O.
Piatt, Mrs. Charles, 3d, Prospect Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Piatt, Air. J. C, Box 557, Scranton.
Piatt, Airs. John O., Paoli.
Plummer, Airs. William T., Bleddyn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Foley, Air. Corson, Salem Rd., Burling-
ton, N. J.
Pollock, Mrs. B. H., 510 Cheltena Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Pollock, Airs. Roland D., Stenton Ave.
and Spring Alill Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Pollock, Airs. Walter, 7721 St. Alartins
La., Chestnut Hill.
Pool, Airs. Sydney Herbert, 114 E. Alont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Porter, Airs. Andrew W., "Spring Hill,"
Valley Forge.
Porter, Aliss Catherine B., 2215 Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
Porter, Aliss Elva., 424 Owen Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Porter, Airs. W. Hobart, Woodleave Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Porter, Mrs. William W., Valley Forge.
Potts, Airs. Charles E., 313 E. Lancaster
Ave., Wayne.
Potts, Airs. Horace Allies, 1008 W. Hort-
ter St., Alt. Airy.
Potts, Mr. William M., Wyebrooke,
Chester Co.
Poultncy, Air. E. C, Box 381, Gwynedd
Valley.
Powell, Mrs. Charles, 41 E. Alontgomery
Ave., Ardmore.
Powell, Air. Gerald, 406 Woodland Ave.,
Wayne.
Powell, Mrs. Humbert Borton, Willow-
dale Farm, Devon.
Powell, Miss Alarion, Radnor.
Powers, Mr. Thomas Harris, First
St., Broadmoor, Colorado Springs,
Colo.
Pratt, Airs. Henry S., Haverford.
Price, Mr. Edward Trotter, Spotts-
wood Farm, Broad Axe, Montg. Co.
Price, Airs. Eli Kirk, 1709 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Prichard, Airs. Frank P., Railroad Ave.
and Polo Rd., Bryn Alawr.
Prichett, Air. W. B., 6205 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Prime, Mrs. Alfred C, Darby Rd., Paoli.
Prince, Mr. John W., 5439 Berks St.,
Philadelphia. (C.)
Puff, Mrs. Charles F., Jr., Noble Vista,
Jenkintown.
Pugh, Aliss Anne J., City Line Ave.,
Overbrook.
Pyle, Mr. Robert, Conard and Pyle
Co., West Grove. (C.)
Quann. Air. E. L., Alalvern, Chester Co.
Raff, Mrs. Anna R., 600^ Summit Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Ramsay, Airs. William G., Guvencourt,
Del.
Rand, Air. Louis AI., 42 Ridley Ave.,
Norwood, Del. Co.
Randolph, Air. Evan, Seminole and
Chestnut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Mrs. Evan, Seminole and
Chestnut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Rasmussen, Air. Alfred O., 45 E. Clear-
field Rd., Oakmont, Upper Darby.
Rasmussen, Air. Seren, care of Air. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Rauch, Mrs. Rudolph S., Villa Nova.
Ravdin, Dr. I. S., 4623 Larchmont Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Rawle, Aliss Louisa, Roberts Rd., Bryn
Alawr.
Ray, Air. C. Paul, Jr., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Alawr.
Rayford, Air. J. J., Henderson, Texas.
Razek Mrs. Frances, 6252 Wissahickon
Ave., Germantown.
Read, Airs. Qiarles N., Elkins Park.
Read, Mrs. W. B., Conshohockcn.
Reath, Airs. Theodore W., Pont Read-
ing House, Ardmore.
Reath, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., P. O. Box 4357,
Chestnut Hill.
Rebmann, Airs. G. R., Jr., Alillbrook
Lane, Haverford.
Rebmann, Airs. Paul C, 251 Hathaway
Lane, Wynnewood.
40
Reckefus, Dr. Charles H., Jr., 506 N.
6th St., Philadelphia.
Redgrave, Mr. Arthur R. O., 308 Vassar
Ave., Swarthmore.
Reed, Mrs. Alan H., Hall Rd., Wyn-
cote.
Reeve, Mrs. J. Stanley, Haverford.
Reeve, Miss Laura, 2222 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Reeve, Mrs. W. F., 170 E. Main St.,
Moorestovs^n, N. J.
Reeves, Mr. Frank A., 95 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Reeves, Mrs. Horace A., 519 W. Walnul
La., Germantown.
Reeves, Mr. William H., Phoenixville.
Register, Mrs. Henry C, Haverford.
Reid, Mr. Carn, 1611 Greenway Ave.,
Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Reid, Mr. Edward, 1633 Ranstead St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Reid, Mr. Lloyd, 1633 Ranstead St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Reilly, Mr. George K., Black Rock and
State Rd., Ardmore.
Remer, Mrs. David, W. Chestnut Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Rentschler, Mr. William H., Linwood,
N. J. (C.)
Rhoads, Mrs. Charles J., Bryn Alawr.
Rhoads, Mrs. Logan, 2112 Delancey PI.,
Philadelphia.
Rhoads, Mr. William E., R. D. 3, Box 3,
Moorestown, N. J.
Rich, Mr. Lewis D., 4820 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Richards, Miss Helen E., 809 Swede St.,
Norristown.
Richards, Mrs. J. Ernest, 1148 Fifth
Ave., Apt. 11 A, New York, N. Y.
Richards, Mrs. Robert H., 2102 Park-
wsiy, Wilmington, Del.
Richards, Mrs. Samuel Bartram, 1811
DeLancey Place, Philadelphia.
Richards, Mrs. W. J., 1311 Howard St.,
Pottsville.
Richardson, Mr. Frederick, 421 E. Lan-
caster Ave., St. Davids.
Richardson, Dr. Russell, 320 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Richie, Mr. Frederick, 2311 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Rigg, Mr. Arthur, 157 Vroom St., Jersey
City, N. J.
Righter, Miss Jane, Dublin Rd., Green-
wich, Conn.
Riley, Mr. George J., 1634 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Rinn, Mrs. E. W., 1210 Douglas Ave.,
Kalamazoo, Mich.
Ristine, Mrs. Charles S., 244 Hath-
away La., Wynnewood.
Ritchie, Mrs. C. L., St. Martins, Chest-
nut Hill.
Riter, Mrs. Michael M., Jr., 119 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Rittenhouse, Mrs. Leon H., 6 College
Lane, Haverford.
Ritter, Dr. Frank G., 1132 Divinity St.,
Philadelphia.
Ritter, Mr. W. H., 5424 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Robb, Mrs. Henry B., 1726 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Robbins, Mrs. George A., 109 W. Wil-
low Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Robbins, Mr. George S., Rose Lane,
Haverford.
Robbins, Mrs. George S., Rose La.,
Haverford.
Robbins, Mr. Henry D., Daretown, N. J.
Roberts, Mrs. A. C., Kimberton.
Roberts, Mrs. Algernon B., Bala.
Roberts, Miss Alice S., R. F. D. Box 133,
Willow Grove.
Roberts, Mr. Charles C, 75 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Roberts, Mr. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Mrs. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Mrs. G. W. B., 1806 DeLancey
PL, Philadelphia.
Roberts, Mrs. Isaac W., Bala.
Roberts, Miss Jane L, 6439 Cherokee
St., Germantown.
Roberts, Mrs. T. Williams, Pencoyd
Farm, Bala.
Roberts, Mr. Thomas, care of Mrs. Ed-
ward Morrell, Torresdale. (G.)
Roberts, Mrs. William H., Wynderley,
Moorestown, N. J.
Robertson, Mr. W. H., Glenmeade
Farms, R. D. 1, Malvern.
Robertson, Mr. William, Villa Nova.
(G.)
Robins, Mrs. Thomas, 618 Hazlehurst
Ave.. Merion.
Robinson, Mr. Anthony W., 780 Col-
lege Ave., Haverford.
Robinson, Mrs. Hanson, 221 S. Aberdeen
Ave., Wayne.
Robinson, Miss Lydia S. M., Paoli.
Robinson, Mrs. M. D., R. F. D. No. 1,
Ambler.
Rodeback, Miss Ella A., 413 9th St.,
Upland, Del. Co.
Rodman, Mrs. J. Stewart, 51 Manor Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Rogan, Mrs. John M., 313 St. Davids
Rd., St. Davids.
Rombach, Mrs. D. G., Haverford.
Root, Miss Fannie A., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Root, Miss Mary L., 631 E. Leverington
Ave., Roxborough.
Root, Mr. Stanley W., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Rosenbluth, Mr. Edwin M., Wallingford.
(C.)
41
Rosengarten, ]\Irs. Adolph, St. Davids.
Rosengarten, Mr. George D., Malvern.
Rosengarten, Mrs. George D., Mal-
vern.
Rosengarten, Mrs. J. Clifford, Villa
Nova.
Rosenwald, Mrs. Lessing J., Abington.
Rosenwald. Mrs. William, 8120 Cedar
Rd., Elkins Park.
Ross, Mr. Roderick W., P. O. Box 387,
Haverford.
Rossell, Mrs. Axel, Devon.
Rossmassler, Mrs. Richard, 208 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Rotan, Mrs. Ellwood J., "Old Oak
Farm," Valley F^rge.
Rotan, Mrs. Samuel P., E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Rowland, Mrs. Louis H., Radnor.
Rover, Mrs. Frank, Cleverly La., Rvdal.
Rudley, Air. William L, 721 Girard Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Rumpp, Mr. H. C, 5th and Cherry Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Rumpp, A/[iss Marie W., 5710 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Rush, Mr. Benjamin, 1600 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Rush, Mrs. Benjamin, West Chester.
Rust, Mr. David, 1010 Fayette St.,
Conshohocken.
Ryder, Miss Grace G., Box 97, Berwyn.
Sackett, Mrs. Franklin Page, 410 Love
Lane, Wynnewood.
Sanson, Mrs. Albert W., 5826 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Sapovits, Air. Alorris AI., P. O. Box 295,
Chester.
Sargent, Mr. Winthrop, Haverford.
Sargent, Airs. Winthrop, Jr., Haverford.
Sartain, Miss Harriet, School of Design,
Broad and Alaster Sts., Philadelphia.
Satterthwait, Air. Thomas C, W. Scott-
dale Ave., Lansdowne.
Satterthwaite, Air. Walter B., 5408
Gainor Rd., Wynnefield.
Saul, Mrs. Alaurice Bower, AIovlan-Rose
Valley.
Saunders, Airs. W. L., Idlewild Farms,
Bryn Mawr.
Savage, Mr. Walter P., 3115 N. 13th St.,
Philadelphia.
Savery, Mrs. Addison H., 429 W. John-
son St., Germantown.
Savidge, Airs. Alary AI., Ill Aloiitgomery
Ave., Bala-Cj'nwyd.
Savill, Mrs. Thomas M., 208 Cedar Lane,
Highland Park, Upper Darby P. O.
Sayres, Airs. Edward S., Box 51, Haver-
ford.
Scatchard, Air. Wm., 3911 Henry Rd.,
East Falls.
Scattergood, Airs. J. Henry, Villa Nova.
Scattergood, Air. T. Walter, 75 N. Owen
Ave., Lansdowne.
Scattergood, Mrs. Thomas, 3515 Powel-
ton Ave., Philadelphia.
Schaal, Mr. Harry, S. W. cor. Albemarle
and Beverly Rds., Drexel Hill Gardens,
Del. Co.
Schaffer, Mr. Wm. I., Haverford.
Schaffer, Mrs. Wm. I., Haverford.
Schearer, Mr. H. F., 30 Princeton Rd.,
Brookline. (N.)
Scheetz, Mrs. Francis H., 9 Gordon Ave.,
Haverford.
Scheetz, Mrs. William C, 433 Bryn
Mawr Ave., Cynwyd.
Schenck, Mrs. William A., R. F. D. 2,
Phoenixville.
Schindler, Miss Theresa Eliz., School of
Horticulture, Ambler.
Schissler, Aliss Rose, 2605 W. Harold
St., Philadelphia.
Schlacks, Airs. Charles H., Bryn Alawr.
Schmidt, Air. Edward A., 127 Edward
St., Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Mr. Fred W., 127 Edward St.,
Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Mrs. Helene K., Ashwood Rd.,
Villa Nova.
Schmitt, Mr. Xavier E. E., Horticul-
tural Hall, West Park, Philadelphia.
(G.)
Schneider, Air. Herbert C, 803 E. Wash-
ington La., Germantown.
Schneider, Air. Robert, 523 Jenkintown
Rd., Elkins Park. (G.)
Schoettle, Air. Edwin J., 533 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Schoneman, Mrs. R. A., 6429 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
Schrader, Air. A. F., Wynnewood.
Schraishuhn, Airs. Charles A., 703 N.
64th St., Philadelphia.
Schuck, Mrs. Leon H., 6 Fifth Ave.,
Haddon Heights, N. J.
Schultz, Air. Elmer K., 6101 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Schumann, Dr. Edward A., 15 Pelham
Rd., Alt. Airy.
Schuyler, Airs. James E., 35 N. Harwood
Rd., LTpper Darby.
Scott, Mr. Alexander B., Sharon Hill.
(C.)
Scott, Mrs. Arthur Hoyt, Todmorden
Farm, Brookhaven Rd., Media.
Scott, Airs. Charles Henry, Jr., St.
Davids.
Scott, Airs. Edgar, Woodbourne, Lans-
downe.
Scott, Miss Florence B., Box 119,
Wynnewood.
Scott, Air. Henry J.. 1012 Fox Bldg.,
1612 Alarket St., Philadelphia.
Scott, Air. Hugh, Jenkintown.
42
Scott, Mr. Joseph M., 137 Hewett Rd.,
Wyncote.
Scott, Mrs. William R., 5439 North-
umberland St., Pittsburgh.
Scull, Mrs. Marshall, 8525 Ardmore Rd.,
Chestnut Hill.
Scull, Mrs. Wm. C, Bryn Mawr.
Scull, Mrs. William S., Pelham Court,
Germantown.
Seal, Mrs. Joseph S., 230 Cornell Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Search, Mrs. Hendrick W., 202 St.
Mark's Square, Philadelphia.
Sears, Mr. Thomas Warren, 1600 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia. (L.)
Seeds, Mrs. Joseph R., 151 W. School
La., Germantown.
Seeler, Mrs. Edgar V., Dengleton Farm,
Newtown Square.
Seeley, Mrs. Oscar, White Horse Rd.,
Paoli.
Seipt, Mrs. Samuel A., 507 Wyndmoor
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Sellers, Mrs. Horace W., Ardmore.
Sellers, Mrs. Howard, "Shadowbrook,"
P. O. Box 249, Wynnewood.
Seltzer, Mr. Richard J., 5700 City Line,
Overbrook.
Senter, Mrs. Ralph, T., Lancaster and
Bowman Aves., Overbrook.
Serrill, Mr. William J., Haverford.
Serrill, Mrs. William J., Haverford.
Service, Mrs. Charles A., City Ave., Bala.
Seuffert, Mrs. George W., 3936 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Sewell, Mrs. Robert, Rydal.
Sewell, Mrs. W. J., Jr., St. Martins La.,
Chestnut Hill.
Seyler, Mr. H. G., Farr Nursery Co.,
Weiser Park. (N.)
Shaffer, Mrs. A. C, Forrest Ave.,
Wayne.
Shallcross, Mrs. Frank A., 4015 Tyson
St., Tacony.
Shand, Mr. Alexander C, "Burr Oaks,"
Merion.
Shand, Miss Helen E., "Burr Oaks,"
Merion.
Shannon, Mrs. T. Taylor, Malvern.
(C.)
Sharp, Miss Estelle L., Berwyn.
Sharpe, Mrs. John S., Haverford.
Sharpless, A^rs. S. F., 1919 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Shaw, Mr. George F., Bowman and Hay-
wood Aves., Merion.
Shaw, Mr. Richard M., Box 3, Rose-
mont. (G.)
Sheafer, Mrs. Arthur W., 1443 Mahon-
tongo St., Pottsville.
Shearer, Mrs. Christine S., Worcester,
Montg. Co.
Sheble, Mrs. Frank J., 311 Roumfort Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Sheble, Mrs. J. Howard, Jr., Rydal.
Sheldon, Mr. O. D., 416 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Shelton, Mrs. Frederick H., 1830 S. Rit-
tenhouse Sq., Philadelphia.
Sheppard, Mrs. E. M., 8012 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Sherk, Mr. David M., Garrett Hill.
Sherlock, Mr. Chesla C, Rose Tree Rd.,
Media.
Sherman, Mrs. H. G., 33 N. Harwood
Ave., Upper Darby.
Shermer, Mrs. George Y., 100 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Sherrerd, Mrs. Henry D. M., 41 Chew's
Landing Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Shirley, Mrs. Harold R., 6649 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Shisler, Mrs. G. W., 5951 Overbrook
Ave., Overbrook.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Edwin, Brookside
Farm, Paoli.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Harvey, 1727 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Shoemaker, Mr. Samuel, 1214-1215
Franklin Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Shrigley, Mr. Arthur, 150 Hilldale Rd.,
Lansdowne.
Shrigley, Miss Ethel Austin, 60 S.
Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne.
Shryock, Miss G. A., The Clinton, 10th
and Clinton Sts., Philadelphia.
Shryock, Mr. James R., 5722 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Shupert, Miss Florence, Newtown
Square.
Shute, Mrs. Albert Clemeiit, 740 High
St., Pottstown.
Shute, Mr. _E. L., 616 W. Upsal St.,
Philadelphia.
Sibley, Mrs. Walter G., Meadowbrook.
Sigafoos, Mrs. Michael H., 6910 Hey-
ward St., Mt. Airy.
Sigel, Mr. George Henry, 548 W. Lind-
ley Ave., Philadelphia.
Silver, Mrs. J. Robinson, 210 Lansdowne
Ave., Wayne.
Simkins, Mrs. Lena, 1200 CoUings Ave.,
W. Collingswood, N. J.
Simon, Mr. Andrew, York Rd., Towson,
Md.
Simpson, Hon. Alex., Jr., 5854 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
Simpson, Mr. Charles G., 213 N. l.?th
St., Philadelphia.
Simpson, Miss Ida., 906 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Simpson, Mr. Joseph F., 207 Forrest
Ave., Narberth. (C.)
Simpson, Miss Mary A., 203 S. High St.,
West Chester.
Simpson, Mrs. Percy, Overbrook.
Sims, Mrs. Joseph P., 319 E. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
43
Sinkler, Miss Caroline S., 1604 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Sinkler, Airs. Francis W., Bryn Mawr.
Sinkler, Mr. Wharton, Elkins Park.
Sinkler, Mrs. Wharton, Elkins Park.
Sinnickson, Mr. George R., Bryn Mawr.
Slade, Mrs. Alexander T., Wynne-
wood.
Slifer, MissLevina, 4250 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Sloan, Mrs. Burrows, Ardmore.
Slotter, Mr. John W., care of Mrs. M. A.
House, Chadds Ford. (G.)
Smedley, Mr. William Henry, Church
and Tacony Sts., Frankford.
Smith, Mrs. Arthur D., Remington Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Smith, Mr. Charles L., Box 15, West
Point, Montg. Co.
Smith, Mrs. C. Morton, 1718 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Smith, Miss Elizabeth, Gwynedd Vallev.
Smith, Mrs. Geoffrey S., Ft. Washing-
ton.
Smith, Mrs. Harrison, Radnor and
Clyde Rds., Bryn Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. I. H., 156 Mayland St., Ger-
mantown.
Smith, Mr. Lewis D. G., 40 Ridley Ave.,
Norwood.
Smith, Mrs. Lewis Lawrence, Strafford,
Chester Co.
Smith, Mrs. ' Mary F., Box 21, Beth-
ayres.
Smith, Miss Mary Grubb, 2201 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
Smith, Mr. W. Hinckle, Room 1943,
123 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. Wikoff, Morris Ave., Bryn
Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. William K., 332 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Smyth, Mrs. Fanny Belle D., "Home-
acre," West End, Fairmount, W. Va.
Snedaker, Mrs. E. R., 4921 Parkside
Ave., Wynnefield.
Sommer, Miss Charlotta, 876 N. 41st St.,
Philadelphia.
Sonneborn, Mrs. John G., 5019 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Sorg, Mr. C. A., 214 Brookdale Ave.,
Glenside.
Sowden, Miss Harriett, The Fairfax
Apts., Wayne Ave. and School La.,
Germantown.
Sowden, Mr. Lee, 3823 The Oak Rd.,
Philadelphia.
Sparks, Mr. John W., 1510 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia.
Speese, Dr. John, IIZ S. Latch's La.,
Merion.
Spencer, Mrs. Arthur R., Villa Nova.
Spiekermann, Mr. Leo, American Tree
& Flower Co., Fort Washington. (C.)
Spooner, Mrs. H. T. H., 106 S. 33th St.,
Philadelphia.
Sproat, Mrs. Harris L., 605 S. High St.,
West Chester.
Spruance, Mrs'. W. C, 2507 W. 17th
St., Wilmington, Del.
Stanton, Dr. H. C, Clifton Heights.
Starr, Airs. Charles S., Haverford.
Starr, Mrs. Isaac Tatnall, Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Steel, Mrs. A. G. B., "Sugar Loaf,"
Chestnut Hill.
Steele, Miss E. J., 6023 Drexel Rd.,
Overbrook.
Steele, Mr. Joseph M., 124 N. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Steigerwalt, Mrs. William H., Merion.
Stem, Mrs. S. G., 204 Chestnut Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Stengel, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Stephens, Airs. Lucie L., Moylan.
Stephenson, Mrs. W. B., Haverford.
Stern, Airs. Charles A., Baltimore and
Lincoln Aves., Swarthmore.
Stevenson, Mr. H. A., 60 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Stevenson, Air. Alarklev, 225 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia. (L.)
Stevick, Airs. Francis, 6325 Regent St.,
Philadelphia.
Stewardson, Miss E. P., 8611 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Stewart, Airs. Charles H., St. Davids.
Stewart, Mrs. Daniel C, St. Davids.
Stewart, Air. H. AL, Wawa Dairy Co.,
Wawa.
Stewart, Airs. Rowe, 652 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Germantown.
Stewart, Mrs. Thomas D. W., 35 Gowen
Ave., Alt. Airy.
Stewart, Air. W. Plunket, Alurray House,
Villa Nova.
Stichling, Air. Albert W., 195 W. Roselvn
St., Philadelphia.
Stokes, Airs. Charles P., "Lane's End,"
Narberth.
Stokes, Airs. J. Stogdell, Spring Valley
Farm, Huntingdon Valley P. O.
Stoner, Aliss Judith V, 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stormfeltz, Airs. Elvira K., 502 Har-
rison St., Ridlev Park.
Stout, Mr. C. Frederick C, 1051 N.
2d St., Camden, N. J.
Stout, Mrs. C. Frederick C, 214 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Stovell, Air. Alorris Lewis, Haverford.
Strachan, Air. Charles, Woodcrest, Rad-
nor. (G.)
Strassburger, Mr. Ralph B., Gwynedd
Valley.
Strauss, Airs. Berthold, Ashbourne Rd.,
Elkins Park.
44
Strawbridge, Mrs. George H., "Winder-
mere," Bala.
Street, Mrs. Gerald Basil, 1901 Greenhill
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Street, Mr. R. D., 119 Rosemont Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Stritzinger, Mrs. Lewis G., 520 Hamil-
ton St., Norristown.
Strohlein, Mr. George A., 218 Fulton St.,
Riverton, N. J. (C.)
Strong, Miss Elizabeth, Villa Nova.
Stroud, Mr. Edward A., 508 S. 41st St.,
Philadelphia.
Stroud, Mrs. Morris W., Jr., Villa
Nova.
Strubing, Mr. P. H., 307 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Stuart, Mrs. George H., 3d, Villa Nova.
Stuart, Mrs. Kenneth E., 367 Baird Rd.,
Merion.
Stuetz, Mrs. William A., 334 E. Phil-
Ellena St., Mt. Airy.
Stull, Mrs. C. Rodman, Glynwynne Rd.,
Haverford.
Sturgis, Mrs. Robert, Wyncote.
Summers, Mrs. Clarence Lynne, War-
wick Rd., Wynnewood.
Suplee, Mrs. William F., 68 Raynham
Rd., Merion.
Supplee, Mrs. Walter B., Levering Mill
Rd. and Lodge's La., Bala-Cynwyd.
Supplee, Mrs. William L., Merion Sta-
tion.
Sutro, Mrs. Paul E., 5115 Wissahickon
Ave., Germantown.
Swab, Miss Jennie E., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swab, Miss Nellie A., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swartley, Mr. H. C., R. D. 3, Phoenix-
ville.
Swindells, Dr. Walton C., 2049 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia.
Swing, Miss R. Elizabeth, 156 Strode
Ave., Coatesville.
Sykes, Mrs. Charles H., 334 Llandrillo
Rd., Bala-Cynwyd.
Synnestvedt, Mr. Arthur, Bryn Athyn.
Talimer, Mrs. Bernard, Hotel Ansonia,
New York, N. Y.
Tappan, Mrs. Paul, 108 Booth La.,
Haverford.
Tarburton, Mrs. C, 220 Volan St., Mer-
chantville, N. J.
Taylor, Mr. Charles D., 223 Oak Ter-
race, Merchantville, N. J.
Taylor, Mrs. Fred W., 239 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Taylor, Mrs. Herbert K., 8211 Cedar
Rd., Elkins Park.
Taylor, Mrs. Roland L., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Taylor, Mrs. W. J. Romeyn, 517 Cres-
heim Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Taylor, Mrs. William J., 1825 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Teamer, Mr. Thomas A., 213 Wayne
Ave., Lansdowne.
Templin, Mrs. John C, Gay St. and Vir-
ginia Ave., Phoenixville.
Tenbrook, Mrs. Philip, Berwyn.
Thaw, Mrs. William, Jr., 5427 Forbes
St., Pittsburgh.
Thav, Mrs. H. Lewis, Moylan-Rose Val-
ley.
Thayer, Mrs. A. D., Gwynedd Valley.
Thayer, Mrs. Edmund, Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. G. C, Villa Nova.
Thayer, Mr. Harry, "Many Corners,"
Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. John B., Redwood,
Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. Sydney, Jr., Beaumont Rd.,
Devon.
Thiele, Miss Marguerite E., Orthodox
St. at Frankford Ave., Frankford.
(F.)
Thomas, Airs. Arthur H., Haverford.
Thomas, Mrs. Edward Osgood, 525 Cedar
Lane, Swarthmore.
Thomas, Mrs. Frank Wister, 27 E. Mt.
Airy Ave., Mt. Airy.
Thomas, Mrs. George, 3d, Whitford
Game, Whitford.
Thomas, Miss Martha G., Whitford,
Chester Co.
Thomas, Mrs. Samuel Hinds, 2026
DeLancey PI., Philadelphia.
Thompson, Mrs. Arthur W., "Dun-
woodie," W. Chestnut Ave., Chestnut
Hill.
Thompson, Mr. Horace E., 5016 Schuyler
St., Germantown.
Thompson, Mrs. Ralph B., Millerstown.
Thompson, Mr. Robert W., Haverford.
Thompson, Mrs. Robert W., Haverford.
Thompson, Mrs. Rodman Ellison, Devon.
Thompson, Mr. Wesley E., P. O. Box 56,
Hulmeville.
Thomson, Miss Anne, Bryn Mawr.
Thomson, Mrs. F. G., Devon.
Thomson, Miss Helen Georgia, 301
Chestnut Rd., Glenside.
Thomson, Mrs. Walter S., 1722 Spruce
St., Philadelohia.
Thornton, Mrs. George H., 632 Overhill
Rd., Ardmore.
Tilden, Mrs. Marmaduke, Lenox Rd.,
Jenkintown.
Tily, Aliss Ethel H., 121 Alontgomery
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Tingle, Miss Eleanor M., 1134 S. Wilton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Todd, Mrs. F. Phelps, 517 E. Moreland
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Todd, Mr. H. Arnold, Dovlestown.
Toerring, Miss Helen C, 6399 Woodbinc-
Ave., Overbrook.
45
Tonkin. Mr. John, care of Miss L. T.
Morris, "Compton," Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Totten.Mrs. John F., 830 Stanbridge St.,
Norristown.
Toulmin, Mrs. Harry, Haverford.
Towill, Mr. Edward, Roslyn, Montgom-
ery Co. (C.)
Townsend, Mr. B. F., care of DeHaven
and Townsend, 14J.5 Walnut St., Phila-
delphia.
Townsend, Mrs. Edward P., 128 Edge-
wood Rd., Ardmore.
Townsend, Mrs. John Barnes, Radnor.
Townsend, Mr. John W., Box 162,
Bryn Mawr.
Trasel, Aliss Alarie L., Haverford.
Tresseh, Mr. Ralph E., 2419 Jefferson
St., Philadelphia.
Trimble, Mrs. J. K., Upland Way,
Wayne.
Trimble, Mr, William, 204 S. Walnut
St., West Chester.
Tryon, Airs. Charles Z., Rose Lane,
Haverford.
Tucker, Miss Bessy, 2000 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Tull, Mr. Herbert G., 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Tull, Air. T. Alitchell, 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Tunis, Airs. Joseph P., 18 Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Tyler, Aliss Helen B., Villa Nova.
Tyson, Mrs. Carroll S., Jr., Chestnut
Hill.
Ueland, Miss Elsa, Carson College,
Flourtown.
Ullman, Mrs. A. M., 129 First Ave., Col-
legeville.
Urban, Air. Abram L., Jr., 922 Edge-
wood Ave., Trenton, N. J. (L.)
Uthofif, Mr. Frederick H., Churchville,
Bucks Co.
Van den Hengel, Mr. Walter, 2095 N.
63d St., Philadelphia. (C.)
van den Hoek, Air. A. M., care of Koster
& Co., Bridgeton, N. J. (N.)
Vanderslice, Airs. Charles AI., 602 S.
Alain St., Phoenixville.
Van Fossen, Aliss Edith, 121 E. 4th St.,
Lansdale.
Van Hoesen, Airs. Stephen G., Fanwood,
N. J.
Van Horn, Airs. Rollin W., 2301 N. 50th
St., Philadelphia.
Van Lear, Airs. J. Findlay, 1701 Green-
hill Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Van Leeuwen, Air. Karel, care of Copex
Co., Inc., Room 805, 111 Broad St.,
New York, N. Y. (N.)
Vauclain, Mrs. J. L., Buck Lane, Bryn
Alawr.
Vauclain, Mr. Samuel M., 123 S.
Broad St., Philadelphia.
Vaughan, Airs. Cecil H., 24 Simpson Rd.,
Ardmore.
Vaux, Mrs. George, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Vaux, Airs. J. Wain, Penllyn P. O.
Verlenden, Miss Alary, 99 E. Greenwood
Ave., Lansdowne.
Vick, Air. A. F. W., Bentlev Ave., Cyn-
wyd. (C.)
Vodges, Aliss Dorothy, 347 Llandrillo
Rd., Cynwyd.
Vodges, Air. James AI., 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Vogel, Air. Fred, 23 Ridley Ave., Aldan,
Delaware Co. (F.)
VoUmer, Mr. Adrien Winston, 27 Trans-
portation Bldg., 26 S. 15th St., Phila-
delphia.
Von Hiller, Baroness E., 7908 York Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Wagner, Air. John, School House Lane,
Germantown.
Wainwright, Airs. F. King, Bryn Alawr.
Walbaum, Aliss E. C, Glyn Ython Farm,
Ithan.
Walcott, Mrs. Charles D., 1743 22nd
St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
Walker, Aliss Isabella, 40 Jacoby St.,
Norristown.
Walker, Mr. Thomas P., Ill E. Sedg-
wick St., Germantown.
Walleigh, Air. J. Walter, 110 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Waller, Mrs. L. W. T., Jr., 5 Red Oak
Rd., Wilmington, Del.
Wallis, Airs. Allen, Annandale, Alalvern.
Wallis, Mr. James T., 301 St. Davids
Rd., St. Davids.
Wain, Airs. Charlotte M., West Chester.
Walsh, Air. Stephen, Church Rd., Wyn-
cote. (G.)
Wanner, Air. William C, 1820 Susque-
hanna Ave., Philadelphia. (F.)
Ward, Mr. Joseph T., 5809-19 Baynton
St., Germantown.
Warden, Mrs. C. A., Haverford.
Ware, Airs. K. P., 116 W. Wayne Ave.,
Wayne.
Ware, Air. Romaine B., 128 W. Com-
merce St., Bridgeton, N. J.
Warner, Aliss Iva B., Alalvern.
Warner, Airs. AI. B., 421 Aleadowbrooke
Ave., St. Davids.
Warner, Aliss Alildred S., 1211 Stratford
Ave., Alelrose Park.
Warren, Airs. Frank B., 264 S. 46th St.,
Philadelphia.
Warriner, Airs. Samuel D., 250 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Warthman, Airs. J. Harris, 415 W. Alore-
land Ave., St. Alartin's, Chestnut Hill.
Wasserman, Airs. Joseph, Wissahickon
and Hortter Sts.. Germantown.
Waterall, Airs. William, 4714 Springfield
Ave., Philadelphia.
46
Waterer, Mr. Anthony, 714 Chestnut St..
Philadelphia. (S.)
Waterer, Mr. Harrv AL, 714 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Waters, Mrs. Edward, Woodmont.
Waters, Mrs. Henry, 107 Bentley Ave.,
Cynwyd.
Watson, Mr. Carl H., 4416 Ashburner
St., Philadelphia.
Watson, Mrs. Frank C, Providence Rd.,
Media, R. 3.
Watson, Mrs. L. V. G., 3936 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Watson, Mrs. Thomas Theodore, Wayne.
Wattles, Mr. W. P., 301 Hathaway Lane,
Wynnewood.
Way, iVirs. Channing, N. High St., West
Chester.
Wayman, Mr. Robert, First St., Bayside,
Long Island, N. Y. (C.)
Webb, Mr. Walter W., 516 Brookline
Blvd., Upper Darby.
Weihenmayer, Mr. H. W., 1621 Diamond
St., Philadelphia.
Weihenmayer, Mr. William J., Rydal.
Weihenmaver, Mrs. William J., Rydal.
Weild, Mrs. Charles M., 59th St. and
City Line, Overbrook.
Weir, Mrs. James, 671 Aleetinghouse
Rd., Jenkintown.
Weisenbach, Mrs. Fred, 220 Audubon
Ave., Wayne.
Wells, Airs. G. Harlan, 1627 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Welsh, Mr. Edward L., 304 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Wertsner, Miss Anne B., 79 Herman St.,
Germantown.
Wertsner, Mr. Clayton S., 221 N. 13th
St., Philadelphia.
Wertsner, Mr. George S., 79 Herman
St., Germantown.
Wertsner, Mrs. George S., 79 Herman
St., Germantown.
West, Mrs. William T., 627 Walnut La.,
Haverford.
Weston, Mrs. J. M., 107 Walnut St.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Wetherill, Mrs. Webster K., Jamestown,
R. I.
Weyl, Mrs. Julius, Elkins Park.
Whartnaby, Mr. George M., Sr., 45 S.
Eagle Rd., Manoa, Del. Co.
Wheaton, Mrs. T. C, 516 High St.,
MiUville, N. J.
Wheeler, Mr. Charles, Bryn Mawr.
Wheeler, Mrs. Susan F., Bryn Mawr.
Wheelwright, Mr. Robert, 225 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia. (L.)
Whelen, Mrs. T. Duncan, 5641 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Whitall, Mrs. William H. B., 5363 Mag-
uolia Ave., Germantown.
White, Mr. A. Alitchell, care of Mr.
Samuel P. Rotan, E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill. {G.)
White, Miss Anna D., 120 Hilldale Rd.,
Lansdowne.
White, Mr. Edward J., 9th and West-
moreland Sts., Philadelphia.
Wliite, Miss Elizabeth C, New Lisbon,
N. J.
White, Mrs. Errol, Moylan-Rose Valley.
White, Miss Frances M., 525 Walnut
La., Swarthmore.
White, Mrs. Helen Comly, 120 Hilldale
Rd., Lansdowne.
White, Airs. J. AL, 5806 Woodbine Ave.,
Overbrook.
White, Mrs. John, 824 Clifford Ave.,
Ardmore.
White, Mrs. Lawrence G., 20 E. 84th St.,
New York, N. Y.
White, Mrs. R. H., 304 Pembroke Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Whitehorn, Mrs. J. P., 56 W. Stratford
Ave., Lansdowne.
Whitney, IVirs. W. Beaumont, 300 W.
Gravers La., Chestnut Hill.
Whyte, Airs. Hilson H., 340 Rumford
Rd., Mt. Airy.
Widener, Mr. Joseph E., Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Wiederhold, Air. Louis, Jr., 414 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Wiederseim, Mr. William Caner, 1520
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Wigton, Mrs. Frank H., Grays Lane and
Mill Creek Rd., Ardmore.
Wilkinson, Mrs. Robert H., Moylan-Rose
Valley.
Willard, ■ Airs. DeForest P., 633 Wins-
ford Rd., Bryn Alawr.
Willcox, Air. James AL, 700 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Willcox, Mrs. William J., St. Davids.
Williams, Mrs. David E., Bala.
Williams, Aliss Elizabeth D., Box 86,
Haverford.
Williams, Airs. Henry S., Rosemont.
Williatns, Mr. John, Haverford.
Williams, Mrs. John J., 1101 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Williams, Mr. Leonard Willets, Box 566,
Haverford.
Williams, Airs. Leonard Willets, Box 566,
Haverford.
Williams, Air. Parker S., 600 Provident
Trust Bldg., 17th and Chestnut Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Williams, Mrs. Robert Martin, Bala.
Willing, Mrs. Charles, Hillcrest Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Willing, Airs. J. Kent, 1726 Rittenhouse
St., Philadelphia.
Willis, Miss M. Emma, 31 S. Brighton
Ave., Upper Darby.
Willits, Mr. I. Pearson, 31 W. Walnut
La., Germantown.
Wilson, Miss Alice, "Brookside Farm,"
Valley Forge.
Wilson, Mr. Clarence E.. Bryn Mawr.
Wilson, Mr. David, Woodcrest, Radnor
(G.)
Wilson, Mrs. Henry R., "Brookside
Farm," Valley Forge.
Wilson, Mrs. John Lewis, 1321 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. William K., Box 44, Bala-
Cynwyd.
Wilt, Mrs. M. D., 612 W. Hortter St.,
Germantown.
Winlock, Mrs. G. L., Alden Park Manor,
Germantown.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Haverford.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Jr., Ardmore.
Wintersteen, Mrs. A. H., 142 Grays La.,
Haverford.
Wistar, Miss Rebecca B., 3515 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wister, Mr. John C, Wister and
Clarkson Sts., Germantown. (L.)
Wister, Mrs. L. Caspar, Wynnewood.
Witmer, Mrs. L. J., 46 Linden Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Wohlert, Mr. A. E., Narberth. (N.)
Wolf, Mrs. Louis, Elkins Park.
Wolff, Mr. B. Frank, 4029 Green St.,
Philadelphia.
Wolstenholme, Miss Jane, 6900 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Wood, Mrs. A. L, 334 Louella Ave.,
Wayne.
Wood, Mrs. Charles Martin, 5950 Drexel
Rd., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. Clement Biddle, Consho-
hocken.
Wood, Miss Dorothea, 1313 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. Edward F. R., N. W. cor.
Prospect Ave. & Gravers La., Chest-
nut Hill.
Wood, Mrs. George B., 329 Hathaway
La., Wynnewood.
Wood, Mrs. Grahame, Wawa.
Wood, Mrs. Howard, Jr., Conshohocken.
Wood, Miss M. Louise, Bryn Mawr.
Wood, Miss Marion B., Conshohocken.
Wood, Mrs. Richard D., Wawa.
Wood, Mrs. Richard G., Bryn Mawr.
Wood, Miss Sarah Keen, 4326 Osage
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mr. Walter, 400 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Woodhouse, Mrs. S. W., 1015 S. 48th
St., Philadelphia.
Woods, Mrs. Ralph, Rydal Rd., Noble.
Woodward, Mrs. George, Chestnut
Hill.
Woodward, Miss Quita, Mermaid La.
and McCallum St., Chestnut Hill,
Woolman, Miss Anna, 21 N. Highland
Ave., Lansdowne.
Woolman, Mrs. Edward, Box 69,
Haverford.
Woolman, Mr. Henry N., 132 St.
George's Rd., Ardmore.
Woolverton, Mr. William, 224 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Philadelphia.
Worral, Mrs. Louise, 118 Shelbourne Rd.,
Upper Darby P. O., Manoa.
Worrall, Mrs. N. Y., 41 E. Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Worth, Mrs. Edward H., Claymont, Del.
Worth, Mrs. George S., St. Davids.
Wriggins, Mrs. Charles C, 470 Locust
Ave., Germantown.
Wright, Mrs. Alfred W., 52 E. Elm St.,
Norristown.
Wright, Mrs. Franklin L., R. F. D. 4,
Norristown.
Wright, Mrs. Harrison B., Green Hill
Farms, Overbrook.
Wright, Miss Mary F., R. D. 1, Ambler.
(N.)
Wright, Mrs. Minturn T., Jr., 8403 Nava-
hoe St., Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Raymond D. B., 300 W.
Gravers La., Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Robert C, Haverford.
Wyatt, Mrs. Walter S., The Wellington,
19th and Walnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Wynn, Mrs. J. M., Wayne.
Yarnall, Mr. Charlton, Devon.
Yarnall, Mr. William S., Box 152,
Haverford.
Yates, Mr. Harry D., Jr., Camden Co.
Vocational School, Merchantville, N. J.
Yeatman, Miss Georgina Pope, 520 E.
Graver's La., Chestnut Hiil.
Yeatman, Mrs. Pope, 1118 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Yerger, Mrs. Wilson S., 7312 Elbow
La., Mt. Airy.
York, Mrs. Edward H., Jr., Ithan.
Young, Mr. Frederick C, P. O. Box 201,
Palmyra, N. J.
Young, Mr. Howard E., 227 Park Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Young, Mr. John Welsh, Enfield. (C.)
Yowell, Mr. W. H., Narberth.
Zantzinger, Mrs. C. C, 8500 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Zieget, Mrs. Julius, 132 Edgewood Rd.,
Ardmore.
Zimmer, Mrs. George, Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Zimmerman, Miss Anna W., The
Hedges, Rydal.
Zimmerman, Dr. Mason W., Rydal.
Zipf, Mr. Carl H., 135 Bryn Mawr Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
48
1931
YEAR
BOOK
THE
PENNSYLVANIA
HORTICULTURAL
SOCIETY
I
193 1
YEAR BOOK
of
The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society
^^*^^iF^^^^*'
With Reports and Membership List for
193 0
Issued from the office of
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
'Let Nature be your Teacher."
— WOODSWORTH.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Officers and Executive Council for 1931 5
Committees for 1931 6
Object and Privileges of Society 7
Reports :
President 9
Secretary 10
Treasurer 13
Exhibition Committee 15
Awards in 1930 ' 16
Committee on Garden Awards 17
Lecture Committee 19
Library Committee 20
Gifts to the Library in 1930 20
The Office 20
Garden Consultant 21
Items of Interest About Members 22
Garden Days 24
Donations 24
Garden Calendar 25
The Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania 42
List of Officers, Directors and Member Organizations 42
"History" 45
Membership List, including summary of members, and list of Honor-
ary, Life and Annual Members 46
Necrology 86
Form of Bequest 87
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
C. Frederick C. Stout, President 4
John C. Wister, Secretary 8
Samuel S. Pennock, Treasurer 12
Portion of Garden of Mr. and Mrs. J. Franklin McFadden, awarded
a Gold Medal in 1930 18
Selinicereus grandiflorus (Night-blooming Cereus) 22
Path in Garden of Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. McCracken 41
James Boyd Memorial Medal 45
C. FREDERICK C. STOUT. President
Officers and Executive Council
President
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
Vice-Presidents
MRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
Honorary Vice-Presidents
MR. SAMUEL T. BODINE MR. C. HARTMAN KUHN
MR. HENRY F. MICHELL
Treasurer Secretary
MR. S. S. PENNOCK . MR. JOHN C. WISTER
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Term ending December 31, 1931
MR. LOUIS BURK
MRS. EDWARD M. CHESTON
MR. JOHN P. HABERMEHL
MR. JAY V. HARE
MR. HENRY F. MICHELL
MRS. THOMAS NEWHALL
MRS.. ARTHUR H. SCOTT
Term ending December 31, 1932
MR. MORRIS R. BOCKIUS
MR. W. ATLEE BURPEE, JR.
MRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD
MR. J. FRANKLIN McFADDEN
MR. W. HINCKLE SMITH
MR. JOHN WILLIAMS
MR. JOHN C. WISTER
Term ending December 31, 1933
MR. FITZ EUGENE DIXON
MRS. WILLIAM T. ELLIOTT
MR. GEORGE L. FARNUM
MR. FAIRMAN ROGERS FURNESS
MR. S. S. PENNOCK
MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
COMMITTEES
The President, ex officio, is a member of all Committees.
Executive Committee
Mr. William J. Serrill, Chairman Mr. Henry F. Michell
Mr. Benjamin Bullock Mr. John Williams
Mr. Louis Burk Mr. John C. Wister
Library Committee
Mrs. Horatio. Gates Lloyd, Chairman Mrs. Francis Von A. Cabeen, Jr.
Mrs. Arthur E. Billings Mrs. John H. Packard, 3d
Mrs. William J. Willcox
Lecture Committee
Mrs. William T. Elliott, Chairman Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd
Mr. John C. Wister
Finance Committee
Mr. Fitz Eugene Dixon, Chairman Mr. S. S. Pennock
Mr. W. Hinckle Smith
Exhibition Committee
Mr. George L. Farnum, Chairman Mr. Jay V. Hare
Mr. W. Atlee Burpee, Jr., Vice-Chair- Mrs. D. Braden Kyle
man
Mrs. William T. Elliott Mrs. Charles S. Starr
Mr. Fairman R. Furness Mr. John Williams
Committee on Garden Awards
Mr. William J. Serrill, Chairman Mrs. A. F. M. Chandler
Mrs. Richard L. Barrows Mrs. Edward H. LeBoutillier
Mrs. Benjamin Bullock Mrs. J. Thomas Ligget
Committee on Garden Consultation
Mr. John C. Wister, Chairman Mr. F. R. Furness
Mrs. Benjamin Bullock Mr. Thomas W. Sears
Mrs. Edward M. Cheston Dr. Rodney H. True
6
OBJECT AND PRIVILEGES OF THE SOCIETY
The Society's object is to promote and encourage Horticulture and
to create a love for, and interest in Plants and Flowers. It desires to
increase its membership in order that its work and influence may be
extended.
PRIVILEGES OF MEMBERSHIP INCLUDE
1. Subscription to "Horticulture," a magazine published semi-monthly in Boston
for the Horticultural Societies of Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania.
2. Service of Garden Consultant — the only charge is for actual traveling expenses
when members' gardens are visited. The Consultant may be seen at the rooms
of the Society by appointment.
3. Illustrated lectures by prominent horticulturists during the winter season.
4. Admission to the Society's Exhibitions of Plants, Flowers, Fruits and Vege-
tables, and to the Philadelphia Flower Show.
5. Use of the Library, including circulating privileges. The Library contains
2750 volumes, in addition to current horticultural magazines. The best of the
new publications are systematically added to the Library.
6. Admission to gardens listed in the School of Horticulture's "Garden Days."
In 1930, 38 gardens were so listed.
ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP, ^3.00
LIFE MEMBERSHIP, ^50.00
Make checks payable to
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
JOHN C. WISTER, Secretary
PRESIDENT'S REPORT FOR 1930
It is a great pleasure for me to be able to report to you that the year has proven
one of increasing interest and increasing activity in which your Society has continued
to grow and prosper in its work. We are so organized that the various phases of our
activities are represented in the Council by Chairmen of Committees who concentrate
in their allotted field of administration.
These Chairmen bring to the Council table for discussion wide and varied sub-
jects pertaining to horticulture. As we work under a budget system, the amount
allotted each department by the Finance Committee places a limit upon the extent
of the work in our various departments. The Society has an income from endow-
ments of $21,000.00'. To increase this income we must look for further endowments
and an increase in membership, and it is to these I wish to direct your special atten-
tion. If our Society continues to advance the cause of horticulture in a virile and
worthy way, I feel there will come to it further endowment from those, like Mr.
Schaffer, devoted to its interests. To this end it is for us to continue our efforts
vigorously in making the service of the Society substantial and lasting.
The increase in our membership this past year is outstanding. We have added
862, making our total membership 2730, as against 400 a decade ago. Whenever I
have had the opportunity I have stated the Society should have at least 5000 members.
This could be very easily accomplished if all of our members would take it upon
themselves to secure one or more. It is this appeal I make most urgently in this
Annual Report, as it is the one avenue at hand to increase our yearly income which, in
turn, will enable our Society to progress and become even more potent in the work
which the founders ascribed to it to fulfill.
I would be ;-emiss if I did not refer to the great loss the Society sustained in the
death of my predecessor, James Boyd, which took place December 2, 1929. His last
great contribution to the Society was the compilation and editing of our history from
the date of its foundation in 1827. He lived to see this work completed, and finished
his last annual message to you when death claimed him. With his demise the Society
lost a great executive and leader, and his administration will go down as one of the
most aggressive, constructive and unselfish of any in its history. In him horticulture
lost a staunch friend and advocate.
Mr. Boyd, assisted by some of our prominent women, had inaugurated the pre-
liminary work that led up to the formation of the Garden Club Federation of Pennsyl-
vania. It became my immediate duty to see these plans carried through, and, in ac-
cordance therewith, a meeting was held in the Society's room on March 26, 1930, at
which time the Federation became an accomplished fact, and Mrs. Thomas Newhall,
of the Executive Council of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, assumed the
Presidency. Its form of organization and by-laws were passed at this meeting, and it
was launched under most favorable auspices, and is receiving the enthusiastic support
of its constituent organizations.
In closing, I extend my appreciation and thanks to the Chairmen and members of
the various Committees and our executive force for the loyal and splendid support
which they have given to me in the efforts which we have put forth.
C. FREDERICK C. STOUT,
President.
SECRETARY'S REPORT FOR THE YEAR 1930
While my report will be brief, I wish to make it comprehensive enough to enable
our members to get a bird's-eye view of the year's work. This is the "oldest Horti-
cultural Society in America. It is pleasant to report that its 103d year has been most
successful, and that never before have we gained so rapidly in members.
The use of our offices also has increased during the year. Over 50O of our mem-
bers have used the Library from time to time, and over 700 others have come to our
offices on other business, often with questions relating to their gardens. The Council
Room has been used for ninety-one meetings by our own committees, and by various
allied organizations, such as the John Bartram Association, the Council for the Pres-
ervation of Natural Beauty in Pennsylvania, various Conservation and Wild Flower
Committees, the School of Horticulture, and many Garden Club activities.
Horticulture continues as the official organ of the Society, and our members
are referred to the inside of the back cover for notices of our various meetings and
activities. This magazine is edited by the Secretary of the Massachusetts Horticul-
tural Society for the members of that Society, and of the New York and Pennsyl-
vania Societies. We believe it is one of the best, if not the best, gardening paper
which is published in this country, and it has been very encouraging to find how much
our members value the privileges of receiving this paper twice a month.
Each winter a series of lectures is presented by the Society. This year we have
had Prof. A. P. Saunders on Peonies, Mrs. Charles H. Stout on Rock Gardens, Mr.
W. E. Marshall on Lilies, and Mr. Carl Purdy on California Wild Flowers. Aside
from any direct information which we may receive from lectures, the presence of emi-
nent horticulturalists at our meetings is an inspiration to us all. I feel that all our
members should be proud that our Society by co-operating with the New York and
Massachusetts Societies made Mr. Purdy's eastern trip possible. The persons whom
we have had to lecture in the past constitute almost an horticultural hall of fame.
Members who have been regular in attendance at the lectures have met some of the
greatest gardeners of our time.
In this connection I may mention that four times — in 1916, 1920, 1924 and 1927 —
our members have had the privilege of hearing Mr. E. H. Wilson, and through these
lectures here many of us felt that we knew him well. He has often helped our mem-
bers by identifying plants and answering various horticultural questions. Mr. Boyd
and I both called upon him often for advice and suggestions as to the work of the
Society.
Mr. Wilson's death in an automobile accident last October was a tragedy from
which American gardening will be slow to recover. He meant much to us here in
Pennsylvania. The plants he brought from China are well suited to our climate.
His work at the Arnold Arboretum taught us how to grow hundreds of plants which
formerly were unknown to us. His books, bulletins and magazine articles have been
of great value, and may now be considered a legacy to gardeners of the future.
Our Library is being kept up to date by the addition of new books as they appear,
and we hope that more and more members will make use of it.
Our Society co-operated with the Philadelphia Flower Show last March, and
took entire charge of the women's classes. We had a beautiful garden exhibit and a
booth which served as a meeting place for our members. We had a small Rose Show
in June in this building, and a Dahlia Show in connection with the Bryn Mawr Horse
Show in September, and a small Hardy Chrysanthemum Exhibition in Novernber.
This Society is unique in offering to its members the services of a gardening con-
sultant in order to encourage small gardens and raise their standard. The services of
Mr. David Rust are available without charge, except actual traveling expenses from
Philadelphia.
The Executive Council discussed at great length the question of a suitable
memorial to Mr. Boyd. Some of us hoped that this might take the form of the long-
hoped-for garden, which would be run by this Society, using Mr. Boyd's own plants
as a nucleus for a future collection. A sub-committee of the Council investigated the
possibilities of such a garden in Fairmount Park or some other public place, but many
difficulties arose and the Council felt that it would not be possible to create a garden
at this time that would be worthy of being known as a memorial to our late Presi-
dent. Therefore, it was voted to place a tablet to Mr. Boyd on the walls of the
Council Room, where our members can now see it, to establish a medal for Mr.
Boyd's favorite flower, the Peony, and to offer this each year at the annual exhibition
10
of the American Peony Society. This medal was awarded for the first time in July,
1930, at the Duluth Show of the American Peony Society, and was won by some fine
seedling Peonies which all felt Air. Boyd would have himself chosen.
The various activities of this Society are governed and controlled by the Execu-
tive Council of twenty-one members. This Council was re-organized by Mr. Boyd
when he became President in 1919, and is now divided into various committees which
have charge of exhibitions, lectures, library, garden awards, etc. At the beginning
of each year a budget is prepared showing the money available for each committee
to use, and their programs are made to fit these appropriations. I mention these in
detail, as many of our members have the mistaken idea that this is a very wealthy
Society that can do anything it wishes. It may, therefore, be of interest to know that
for three dollars which each member pays into the treasury of this Society, there is
added a sum of $8.50 for each member from our endowment fund. We owe this
endowment to the generosity and interest of the late William L. Schaffer, President
of this Society from 1867 to 1884. Mr. Boyd, during his eleven years as President,
constantly stressed the need of further endowments for a Society of this character,
and often commented on the fact that while we had but one endowment given to us,
the Massachusetts Horticultural Society has had large gifts from about a dozen dif-
ferent persons. Their total income is more than twice the size of ours, and still is
inadequate for their activities. We are unable to undertake any more activities under
our present endowment. It enables us to keep our offices in a central and convenient
part of the city, to build up our library, to give our lectures and exhibitions, and to
pay salaries of our office staff. No officer of the Society receives any salary, and all
of our officers and members of our Council are busy people who give without stint
of their time to make this Society a success. This was notably true of Mr. Boyd,
who practically devoted the last eleven years of his life to this Society and its work.
One of the things that he constantly emphasized was the need of more members.
Though we are proud of our growth, we look with envy at the Royal Horticultural
Society of England which has 27,000. Some of our members have attended the won-
derful English flower shows, and it may interest them to know that the Royal Hor-
ticultural Society has a yearly income of more than $215,000.00 from membership fees
alone. In addition to this it has large endowments and many special funds for prizes,
cups and medals. Royal Horticultural Hall with its library and offices has cost more
than $1,000,000.00, and again serves to emphasize the more serious interest in horticul-
ture which prevails abroad.
The Horticultural Society of New York and the National Association of Gar-
deners have for some time recognized the need of an American school to train garden-
ers. A special committee has been appointed to make recommendations as to how,
where and when such a school can be started. I have been made a member of this
committee as a representative of this Society, and thus will be enabled to keep our
members informed about the plans that are being made.
The Society has been asked to co-operate in the International Peace Garden,
which is to be established along the Canadian border by the National Association of
Gardeners and other co-operating organizations. Plans for this garden are in a
formative stage, and as yet we have taken no official part in the movement. It will
be brought up for action before our Council at the proper time in the future.
The Society is always interested in public gardens, and our members will watch
with great interest the final fate of the Painter Arboretum in Media. The owner of
this wonderful place, John J. Tyler, of Germantown, nephew of the two Painter
brothers who founded the Arboretum, died recently and legal complications concern-
ing his will have arisen. It is hoped, however, that his widow will carry out his
wishes to preserve the remarkable trees, and to allow the public to see and enjoy them.
In this connection I might also mention that the plans for the new Arboretum at
Swarthmore are progressing, and that in time this should become a valuable horticul-
tural asset to all who live near Philadelphia.
In closing, I wish to re-emphasize that your Society exists for the advancement
of Horticulture. Your officers are doing their best to guide the Society wisely. They
want your help, your guidance, your interest and your suggestions. Help them to
make 1931 and the years to come banner years for gardening.
JOHN C. WISTER,
Secretary.
11
SAMUEL S. PENNOCK, Treasurer
$22,525.53
$10,412.42
754.04
STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES
Year 1930
GENERAL FUND
Receipts
Received from:
Schaffer Fund— Girard Trust Co., Trustee $20,892.43
Interest on Investments 1,560.00
Interest on Bank Balances 73.10
Dues:
1930 Account $7,221.00
1931 Account 138.00
7,359.00
Total Above Receipts $29,884.53
Expenditures
Expenditures by Committees:
Executive :
Rent $3,825.00
Salaries 3,865.38
Printing and Stationery (including Year Book) . . 913.32
Postage 292.63
Telephone 191.79
Newf Equipment 172.50
Miscellaneous 1,151.80
Lecture :
Lecture Fees, Rent of Hall, etc
Exhibition :
Rent of Storeroom $500.04
Philadelphia Flower Show 2,090.40
Small Rose Show 237.44
Dahlia Show 1,141.54
Hardy "Mum" Show 149.01
New Equipment • 337.00
Salaries 1,300.00
Miscellaneous 571.68
Library :
Subscriptions, Periodicals $84.27
Salary, Librarian 1,500.00
New Books 512.99
Rent 1,275.00
Rebinding 183.45
Miscellaneous 50.43
History :
Expenses $5,434.76
Less Subscriptions to Society History 103.00
Special :
Subscriptions to Horticulture $1,874.83
Gardening Consultant, Salary 2,000.00
Garden Days 696.03
Brown Canker Fund 100.00
Membership Drive 602.50
James Boyd Memorial 720.00
Miscellaneous 163.30
6,156.66
Total Above Expenditures $32,588.13
13
6,327.11
3,606.14
5,331.76
Excess of Expenditures Over Receipts $2,703.60
Cash on Hand, January 1, 1930 3,632.65
Cash on Hand, December 31, 1930 $929.05
LIFE MEMBERSHIP FUND
Balance, January 1, 1930— Cash $440.00
Receipts during year 1930 — 51 new members 2,550.00
— $2,990.00
Invested in :
2M Georgia Power Co. 1st Ref. Mtge. 5% 2,002.50
Balance, December 31, 1930 $987.50
LIBRARY FUND
Balance, January 1. 1930— Cash $250.00
Donations during year 8.50
Balance, December 31, 1930 $258.50
S. S. PENNOCK,
Treasurer.
John P. Herr,
Certified Public Accountant.
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
January 1, 1931
ASSETS
Cash :
General Fund $1,029.05
Life Alembership Fund 987.50
Library Committee Fund 258.50
$2,275.05
Schaflfer Fund :
Girard Trust Company, Trustee 353,820.81
Investments :
Life Membership and Other Funds 29,776.83
Equipment :
Office Furniture, etc $5,759.45
Library Books 6,616.38
Portraits 6,265.00
Exhibition Equipment 2,827.35
21,468.18
Supplies — Medals on Hand • 100.00
Total Assets $407,440.87
LIABILITIES
Schaffer Fund $353,820.81
Life Membership Fund 21,930.00
General Fund 18.203.57
Appraisal Adjustment 13,227.99
Library Committee Fund 258.50
Total $407,440.87
S. S. PENNOCK,
Treasurer.
John P. Herr,
Certified Public Accountant.
14
REPORT OF THE EXHIBITION COMMITTEE
During 1930 the Society participated in the Philadelphia Flower Show and held
three exhibitions of its own. Arranged chronologically, these were :
March 24th-29th — The Philadelphia Flower Show. This was held in the Com-
mercial Museum as usual, and the Society again took complete charge of the classes
designed for members of garden clubs and similar organizations. The Society staged
a garden as its own exhibit, and in connection with this was a booth, which served
as a meeting-place for members and as an enrollment base for new members. More
than fifty new members were secured during the week. Over $2,000 was expended
by the Society for its part in the Show. A luncheon was arranged by the officers of
the Society in honor of State and Federal officials and for persons prominent in the
horticultural world, which took place on Tuesday, March 25th. Through the courtesy
of the management of the Philadelphia Flower Show, each member of the Society
received two complimentary admission tickets. The price of admission to the general
public was 75 cents.
June lOth-llth — Spring Flower Show. This Show was held on the sixth floor
of the Insurance Company of North America Building. It was very small, and, due
to the unfavorable weather conditions preceding the Show, was not as satisfactory
as could be desired. The Robert C. Wright Rose Medal was awarded for the best
individual rose shown by an amateur. No admission was charged. The attendance
was small — only about 150 persons for the two days.
September 26th-27th — Annual Dahlia Show. This exhibition was held in con-
junction with the Bryn Mawr Horse" Show, in Bryn Mawr, under ideal weather con-
ditions. Beautiful specimens of Hj^brid Cactus and decorative varieties of Dahlias
were shown, and a new type that attracted a great deal of attention was the miniature
decorative, a few specimens of which were shown by Mr. George L. Farnum, of
Media. Our members were admitted upon presentation of their member.ship cards in
lieu of our receiving any part of the gate receipts.
November 5th-6th — Hardy Chrysanthemum Exhibition. Held on the sixth floor
of the Insurance Company of North America Building. There were seven classes,
including seedlings, large and small Pompon varieties, single varieties, Anemone
varieties and artistic arrangements. There was no admission charge, and the atten-
dance was about 400 for the two days.
Respectfully submitted,
W. ATLEE BURPEE, JR.,
Chairman.
15
EXHIBITION AWARDS BY
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
in 1930
Gold Medals:
Exhibition Medal to W. Atlee Burpee Co., Philadelphia, Pa., for display of
Dahlias at the Dahlia Exhibition of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society held in
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September 26-27, 1930.
Exhibition Medal to Mr. George L. Farnum, Aledia, Pa., for fifty varieties of
Dahlias at the Dahlia Exhibition of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society held in
Bryn Mawr. Pa., September 26-27. 1930.
Exhibition Medal to Mr. Albert C. Burrage, Boston. ^lass.. for the most artistic
exhibit in the Fourth National Exhibition of the American Orchid Society held in
Washington, D. C, October 16-18, 1930.
James Boyd Memorial Medal to ^Ir. A. B. Franklin, Minneapolis, Minn., for
the most distinguished entry in the Annual Exhibition of the American Peony Society
held in Duluth, Minn., July 2-3, 1930.
Silver Medals:
Exhibition Medal to Islr. Reinhold Greinberg, Wayne, Pa., for displaj^ of Dahlias
at the Dahlia Exhibition of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society held in Bryn
Mawr, Pa.. September 26-27, 1930.
Exhibition Medal to Mr. Samuel M. Vauclain, Rosemont, Pa., for fifty Dahlias
of one varietv at the Dahlia Exhibition of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
held in Bryn 'Mawr. Pa., September 26-27, 1930.
Exhibition Medal to Lyndora Gardens, Moorestown. N. J., for seedling of 1928 at
the Dahlia Exhibition of The Pennsvlvania Horticultural Society held in Bryn Mawr,
Pa.. September 26-27, 1930.
Exhibition Medal to Air. Rudolph Becker. North Plainfield, N. J., as a Sweep-
stake Prize in Section 28 of the Dahlia Classes at the First National Atlantic City
Flower and Garden Pageant held in Atlantic City. N. J., September 9-14. 1930.
Robert C. Wright Rose Aledal to Mr. Joseph H. Flagler, Wayne, Pa., for the
best rose grown bv an amateur at the Tune Show of The Pennsvlvania Horticultural
Society held in Philadelphia. Pa.. June" 10-11, 1930.
Bronze Medals:
Exhibition Aledal to Echo Dale Gardens. Norristown. Pa., for display of Dahlias
at the Dahlia Exhibition of The Pennsvlvania Horticultural Society held in Brvn
Mawr. Pa.. September 26-27, 1930.
Exhibition Medal to Air. A. Dewey Mohr. Rockville Centre, N. Y., for a Sweep-
stake Prize in Section C at the Annual Exhibition of the American Dahlia Society
held in New York, September 16-18, 1930.
Challenge Cup:
Challenge Cup to the Weeders Garden Club for collection of mixed Dahlias at
the Dahlia Exhibition of The Pennsvlvania Horticultural Societv held in Brvn Mawr,
Pa., September 26-27, 1930.
Silver Flower Vase:
Silver Flower Vase to Air. Charles AI. Dififenderflfer. Baltimore. Aid., as a Sweep-
stake Prize in Section 29 of the Dahlia Classes at the First National Atlantic City
Flower and Garden Pageant held in Atlantic City, N. J., September 9-14, 1930.
Garden Club Plaquettes and Flower Vases:
Fifteen Garden Club Plaquettes and seven Flower Vases to local horticultural
societies and garden clubs, for award by them at their exhibitions during 1930.
Cash Prizes:
Philadelphia Flower Show $138.50
June Show 115.00
Dahlia Show 713.00
Hardy Chrysanthemum Show 56.00
$1,022.50
16
In addition to the above awards, the Gold Medal of The Massachusetts Horti-
cultural Society was given to us in exchange for our Gold Medal, and was awarded
to the Huntington Valley Garden Club as a Sweepstake Prize at the Philadelphia
Flower Show, March 24-29, 1930. The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society's Gold
Medal was awarded by The Massachusetts Horticultural Society at their Spring Show
held in Boston, March 25-30, to Mrs. Lester Leland, Essex, Mass., for the collection
of Cyclamen showing the best culture.
REPORT OF COMMITTEE ON GARDEN AWARDS
The committee, after visiting many gardens in the suburbs of Philadelphia during
the spring and summer of 1930, and giving careful consideration to the matter, recom-
mended that the following awards be made to gardens of members :
Gold Medal of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society:
A Gold Medal to Mr. and Mrs. J. Franklin McFadden, "Radnor Valley Farm,"
Rosemont, for their estate of surpassing beauty and charm. Three distinct seasons of
bloom — the flowering fruits, the pink and white dogwoods, and the delphinium with
climbing roses — testify to the skill and taste of the owners.
Silver Medals of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society:
A Silver Medal to Mr. and Mrs. John Barnes Townsend for their charming
place, "Montrose," at Radnor, in which the landscaping and the use of vistas and
views are deserving of admiration.
A Silver Medal to Mr. and Mrs. George W. Elkins, "Chelten House," Elkins
Park, for their well-rounded estate, including the most exquisite of gardens, whose
coloring and design merit unqualified praise.
A Silver Medal to Mr. and. Mrs. Thomas W. Sears, Ardmore, for a garden of
outstanding beauty, both as to design, plant material and coloring, and introducing
that most elusive of qualities — "atmosphere."
Bronze Medals of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society:
A Bronze Medal to Mrs. Henry S. Jeanes, Devon, for her farmhouse garden,
whose outstanding qualities are appropriateness, skill in execution, and the introduc-
tion of the personality of the owner.
A Bronze Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. McCracken, Germantown, for an
intimate garden of great charm, nestled with exquisite taste in the angle of the
dwelling house.
Respectfully submitted,
WILLIAM J. SERRILL, -
Chairmmi.
17
PORTION OF THE GARDEN OF MR. AND MRS. J. FRANKLIN
McFADDEN, AWARDED A GOLD MEDAL IN 1930
REPORT OF THE LECTURE COMMITTEE
Four lectures were given in 1930, all of them on Tuesday afternoons in the Audi-
torium on the sixteenth floor of the Insurance Company of North America Building.
Members were invited to bring their friends and no admission was charged. The
attendance varied from 150 to 400, the lecture on Rock Gardens attracting the largest
audience of the year.
The following lectures were presented :
January 21, 1930 — "Peonies" (illustrated), by Professor A. P. Saunders, ol
Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y.
February 4, 1930 — "Rock Gardens" (illustrated), by Mrs. Charles H. Stout, oi
Short Hills, N. J.
February 18, 1930 — "Lilies" (illustrated), by Mr. W. E. Marshall, of New York
City.
November 19, 1930 — "California Wild Flowers and Their Introduction Into
Gardens" (illustrated), by Mr. Carl Purdy, of Ukiah, Calif.
The text of Professor Saunders' talk on Peonies and that of Mrs. Stout on Rock
Gardens are on file in the offices of the Society and may be consulted at any time.
Mr. Marshall's book on Lilies may be found in the Society's library.
The Secretary, in his annual report, called attention to the fact that the Society
co-operates in many ways with kindred organizations, and one of the most active
points of contact is in the matter of lectures. The committee is very glad to be of
assistance to the Lecture Committees of other organizations and hopes to build up a
really worth-while Bureau of Information.
There is an increasing demand from garden clubs and similar organizations for
information about lecturers on horticultural subjects, and to meet this the Lecture
Committee has had a list of lecturers prepared, which is given out upon request. The
list, however, is by no means complete, and the committee will be grateful for any
additions or corrections. The committee cannot undertake to quote fees in this con-
nection except in a very general way, nor can it discriminate among the different
lecturers, and all financial and other arrangements should be made with the lecturers
direct.
An inquiry that comes to us very often is for lecturers who do not charge for
their talks. We have not been able to meet this demand very adequately in the past,
as the only person at the Society's disposal for such a purpose is Mr. Rust, our Garden
Consultant, who often has previous engagements, and sometimes the subject and type
of talk desired are unrelated to his experience. One of our members, upon hearing
of this demand, said she would be glad to give talks upon gardening books to small
nearby clubs. There are doubtless other members who are well qualified ai:d perhaps
willing to speak on special subjects, and the committee will appreciate greatly any
offers from members to address groups — the only remuneration being for their travel-
ing expenses, which would of course have to be paid by the organization inviting them
to speak.
The Secretary also reminded members in his report that Endowment Funds, either
for the general work of the Society or for particular purposes, are most welcome,
and, before closing, the Lecture Committee wishes to add that if anyone is interested
in creating or increasing interest in a particular branch of horticulture and cares to
endow a fund, the interest of which to be used to provide lectures on such a subject,
their gifts will be most gratefully received, and the committee will be delighted to use
them for the specified purpose.
Respectfully submitted.
ANNA ELLIOTT,
(Mrs. William T. Elliott),
Chairman.
19
REPORT OF THE LIBRARY COMMITTEE
The Librarj' Committee is pleased to report that during the past year the Library
has been used more than ever before. There were 563 visitors, and 850 books were
circulated. The use of the Library is not confined to members. Any interested person
is cordially invited to use it for reference, and the reading room is at his disposal.
The circulating privilege, however, is reserved for members. Our Librarian, Miss
Samuel, is glad to be of assistance in any way that is desired.
The list of books, both old and new, is constantly growing. There are now 2,775
books on the shelves, 253 of which were added in 1930. These include 34 gifts from
generous members of the Society, and the others were purchased from the committee's
appropriation. The committee wishes to remind the members they are always
delighted to receive donations of old or new volumes of horticultural interest.
The Library subscribes to 34 of the leading horticultural periodicals, and has on
file the recent catalogs of practically every important seedsman and nurseryman.
There are also many foreign catalogs.
The Library is open from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., and on Saturdays from 9 A. M.
to 12 noon. An experiment is being tried of keeping the Library open in the evening
one day a week to see whether the members avail themselves of this privilege. During
January, February and Alarch, 1931, the Library will be open from 9 A. M. to 9.30
P. M. on Tuesdays.
The committee expects to issue a complete catalog of the Librarj^ early in 1931.
This may be had upon application, b}' those desiring it, for ten cents.
Respectfully submitted,
MARY HELEN WINGATE LLOYD,
(Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd),
Chairman.
The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society wishes to thank the following donors for
their gifts to the Library in 1930 :
American Iris Society:
Alphabetical Iris check list, edited by E. A. S. Peckham. 1929.
Haines, Miss Jane:
Country gentleman, v. 1-32, 46, 64, 66-71. 1853-68, 81, 99, 1901-06.
Massacluisctfs Horticultural Society:
History of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, by A. E. Benson. 1929.
Nicolas, J. H. :
Rose manual, by J. H. Nicolas. 1930.
Scheepers, John:
Beauty from bulbs — spring, compiled by John Scheepers, Inc. 1930.
West, T. W.:
Annuals and biennials, by Gertrude Jekyll. n.d.
Wister, John C:
Bulbs for American gardens, by John C. Wister. 1930.
Lilac culture, by John C. Wister. 1930.
THE OFFICE
A detailed account of the work performed in the Society's office would make
tiresome reading, for of course much of the actual labor in any office is of a routine
nature. However, our members may like to know something about the kind of work
that is carried on in the office and the number of persons required for its accomplish-
ment ; and for their information the following report has been compiled.
In the first place, for the benefit of the newer members, we wish to call attention
to the fact that the officers of the Society give freely of their services and time without
any financial remuneration. There are four salaried employees, who work under their
direction, but only two of these are occupied exclusively with matters pertaining to
the office. The other two are the Gardening Consultant and Exhibition ]Manager,
whose work is mostly outside of the office, and the Librarian, who helps also with
exhibitions.
As the Society at the end of 1930 numbered 2,730 members, one can readily
understand that there is a large amount of work involved simply in keeping accurate
membership records. During 1930, 873 new members were enrolled, and each enroll-
20
ment requires six distinct processes — name and address added to membership roll,
membership card mailed to new member, check or cash deposited and recorded, two
cards made for the card index, and plate made for the addressograph. One hundred
and fifty-one members were lost during the year, requiring additional adjustment to
the records. Also, many persons changed their addresses through the year, and some
members had winter and summer addresses, which of course made the membership
recording more complicated.
The wrappers for all the copies of Horticulture, which go to our members, are
addressed twice a month in the office on the Society's addressograph, and the wrappers
are mailed to the Boston office of the magazine. Horticulture then is placed in the
wrapper in Boston and mailed. In this connection, changes in address should be sent
to this office, as the Boston office does not have a record of our members, and sends
communications of this nature that are sent there to this office for attention. Vouchers
are made for all bills and sent to the Chairman of the proper committee for approval,
and later checks are prepared for signature of the Treasurer.
The Secretary is in close touch with the affairs of the office and is in direct
charge of them. Letters that do not require his special attention are attended to by
the office force, who also answer routine inquiries from visitors. Such inquiries relate
mostly to lectures, the Garden Club Federation, domestic and foreign gardens and
nurseries, the Society's activities, the arrangement for committee meetings and the
use of the Council Room by outside organizations. The minutes of the Executive
Council and of many committees are recorded and distributed. News items are
prepared for publication.
The various communications which go to members throughout the year, such as
bills for annual dues, lecture programs and postcard reminders, flower show schedules,
programs for garden visiting days and special notices are part of the office work.
In addition to the regular work of the office, each year special pieces of work
develop with the needs of that particular year. In 1930 one of the extra activities that
demanded additional effort was the formation of the Garden Qub Federation of
Pennsylvania, in which the Society took a prominent part. Another special activity
was a membership, campaign, which was conducted by mail from the office with most
satisfactory results.
For these two extra activities, during the peak of the office work it was occa-
sionally necessary to employ additional help, but whenever possible the work was
planned ahead so as to avoid this.
Editor's Note. — We hope that our members will be interested in the above report
and make use of the office and find there the courtesy which has always been extended.
GARDEN CONSULTANT
Since January, 1929, Mr. David Rust has acted as Consultant to members of the
Society in horticultural, agricultural and arboricultural matters on which they need
advice. No garden is too small for Mr. Rust to visit, for it is primarily the small
garden that we wish to encourage. Persons with large estates and skilled gardeners
do not need a service of this character as do beginners with small places. We hope
our members will tell their friends that by joining this Society they can have this
valuable service. Mr. Rust also may be consulted at the office on specified Monday
afternoons, and other times by appointment.
Mr. Rust made over ninety garden visits in 1930. As it may be of interest to our
members to know on what subjects he was consulted, we are listing them in two
groups in the order of the frequency in which his advice was asked :
Group One Group Tzvo
Treatment of Lawns Treatment of Rhododendrons
Planting of Perennials Plants for shady places
Treatment of Outdoor Roses, including Moving of Trees
pruning Pruning of Trees
Treatment of Orchards, including prun- Location and planting of rock gardens,
ing of fruit trees and lists of varieties wall gardens, bulb gardens, vegetable
Planting of Evergreens gardens, asparagus beds, pools, etc.
Planting on old places
Spraying
Treatment of Box
Almost all visits included advice on insect pests, especially the Japanese Beetle.
21
ITEMS OF INTEREST ABOUT MEMBERS
The following notes present a list by no means complete of the accomplishments
along horticultural lines by some of our members in 1930. We hope members will
keep the office informed of anything unusual they are doing in order that we may have
a larger showing next year :
Mr. George L. Farnum acted as the Society's representative at the Ninth Inter-
national Horticultural Congress, held in London, August 7 to 15, 1930. On the same
trip he visited many of the most prominent European Dahlia gardens. Mr. Farnum
is a Vice-President of the American Dahlia Society.
SELINICEREUS GRANDIFLORUS (NIGHT-BLOOMING CEREUS)
Mrs. W. W. Frazier has reviewed several garden books in the Bulletin of the
Garden Club of America.
Mr. Fairman Rogers Furness is a grandson of Fairman Rogers, President of the
Society in 1864. His small but well-arranged, beautifully kept nursery impresses one
as a lovely garden, rather than as a commercial nursery — a most alluring quality
when the sale of plants is the object as well. Some of the rare plants are from the
South, and Mr. Furness is trying to grow them successfully in our Pennsylvania
climate.
Mr. Jay V. Hare was a delegate to the International Railway Congress in Madrid
last May, and visited many European gardens during the summer of 1930. He took
photographs from which he has had lantern slides made, and has given a number of
lectures with these. He is Secretary of the Trevose Horticultural Society.
22
Mrs. Bayard Henry has continued to serve as President of the John Bartram
Association, and has prepared plans for the two hundredth anniversary celebration of
the building of the Bartram house.
Mrs. J. Norman Henry has been .doing fine work in collecting new varieties of
plants, and has made several trips for the purpose of adding to the rare and beautiful
collection which she has in her greenhouse and garden. She does most of the garden-
ing herself. Mrs. Henry also has been a contributor to Horticulture.
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, one of our Vice-Presidents, has written thirteen inter-
esting short articles for the Bulletin of the Garden Club of America, under the head
of plant material and the culture of hardy and semi-hardy plants for outdoor and
indoor gardening.
Dr. J. Horace McFarland is President of the American Rose Society, as well as
its Editor. . He has been prominent in civic work for many years. During 1933 he
published "Modern Roses," a list of all roses in American commerce, with
descriptions.
Mr. Frank B. Meyer has introduced many aquatic plants to the little pools and
lakes in his garden, and in his rockeries a congenial setting has been found for unusual
subjects, like Tulip species and the California bulbous flowering plants recently
described in the lecture by Mr. Carl Purdy. Mr. Meyer's specialties are Peonies, Ins
and Oriental Poppies.
Dr. Francis J. Pennell attended the Fifth International Botanical Congress in
Cambridge, England, August 16-23, 1930. He spent the summer studying types of
American Scrophulariacese (snapdragon family) in England and France.
Mrs. Alfred C. Prime grew the Selenicereus grandiflorus (Night-blooming
Cereus) which is shown in the illustration. She has the plant growing in her small
greenhouse with other unusual things.
Mr. Robert C. Pyle made a rose pilgrimage to Europe last summer to visit rose
gardens and to collect new varieties. He visited a number of Rose Shows in France
and Spaiii. He is Secretary of the American Rose Society and Chairman of the
American Association of Nurserymen's Committee on Botanical Gardens and
Arboretums.
Mr. W. H. Ritter has been very successful in propagating Hardy Chrysanthe-
mums. He specializes in outdoor varieties and has introduced many beautiful
seedlings.
Mr. Edwin M. Rosenbluth has achieved remarkable success in protecting his
collection of roses from infestation by the Japanese Beetle in an area where the Beetle
was particularly prevalent.
Mr. Romaine B. Ware has written sixty articles on garden subjects in the follow-
ing magazines, and has also supplied a newspaper with a daily article : Ladies' Home
Journal, American Home, McCall's, Nature Magazine, Country Gentleman, Christian-
Herald, Country Life and Your Home.
Mr. John C. Wister, Secretary of the Society, has had two books published during
the year : "Lilac Culture" and "Bulbs for American Gardens." Last winter he made a
lecture trip to the Pacific coast, speaking in fourteen States. In June he was awarded
the Arthur Hoyt Scott Horticultural Medal, and in December the American Iris
Society Gold Medal in recognition of ten years' service as the Society's President.
Mrs. Clarence C. Zantzinger has worked very hard and with fine results in the
interest of billboard restriction and conservation of natural beauty. She has got in
touch by letter, telegram and radio with newspapers, magazines and organizations.
Mrs. John Hampton Barnes has also taken a very active part in furthering billboard
legislation, and has talked over the radio in the interest of conservation of natural
beauty, as have the following: Miss Emily Barclay, Mrs. Arthur Biddle, Mrs.
Francis Von A. Cabeen, Mrs. Nathan Hayward, Mrs. Isaac LaBoiteaux and Mrs.
Algernon B. Roberts.
Miss Mary Evans edited the current Year Book. She is the great-granddaughter
of the first President of the Society, Horace Binney.
23
GARDEN DAYS
In 1930 an arrangement was again made with the School of Horticulture for
Women in Ambler, Pennsylvania, whereby the members of The Pennsylvania Horti-
cultural Society were allowed the privilege of visiting the gardens listed on the
School's program of Garden Days.
Eight afternoons in May and June were devoted to the Garden visits, and the list
included thirty-eight unusually lovely gardens. All of the visits were made on Satur-
day afternoons, with the exception of Princeton, New Jersey, where the gardens were
opened on a Tuesday afternoon. One afternoon was taken up with visits to gardens
in the vicinity of Wilmington, Delaware, and the plan of including Princeton and
Wilmington gardens proved a delightful new feature of the 1930 program.
The Society was largely represented on these afternoons, and many hundreds
enjoyed the opportunity of seeing various types of gardens. It is planned to offer a
similar privilege to members in 1931.
DONATIONS
In addition to the books which have been given to the Library and which have
been mentioned in connection with the report of the Library Committee, we wish to
thank the persons who have given us flowers to beautify our rooms. The principal
donors were Mr. John C. Wister, who brought in Daffodils ; Mr. Edwin M. Rosen-
bluth, who presented us with some fine seedling Iris ; Mr. George L. Farnum, who
donated especially lovely Dahlias ; and Mr. W. H. Ritter, who kept us supplied with
Hardy Chrysanthemums during the fall season.
We also wish particularly to thank Mr. Henry H. Collins, who donated the
attractive cover of the current Year Book.
We are sorry that another year has gone by without any additions to our En-
dowment Fund. It is indeed strange that in the hundred years of its existence, only
one person, Mr. William L. Schalifer, a former President, has given money to endow
the Society. While his gift was a magnificent one and makes our present work
possible, we should like to enlarge our finances greatly and undertake many pieces of
work that at present cannot be considered on account of lack of funds.
24
For the convenience of members, the following Calendar of Garden Work
has been reprinted, through the courtesy of the editor,
from the 1930 file of "HORTICULTURE."
JANUARY
Early Work
Potted tulips can be forced readily from now on. It is well to remember that all
bulbs force more rapidly as the winter progresses.
Lilies-of-the- Valley can be brought into flower in three weeks from the time the
pips are planted at this season, provided they are given a temperature of from 75 to
80 degrees the first week.
The seeds of begonias for bedding purposes or for growing in the house may be
planted now if a greenhouse is available.
This is a good time to pot up gloxinias, which like a light, rich soil into which
some sand has been incorporated.
Calla lilies should be given a top dressing of bone meal once in ten days, as they
are heavy feeders.
Pussy willows can be brought into the house and forced from now on.
The new catalogues are beginning to arrive and it is none too early to begin mak-
ing up tentative lists of seeds, bulbs and plants.
Fruit trees and grape vines may be trimmed this month.
Greenhouse hydrangeas and rambler roses for Easter should be started into
active growth.
Martha Washington geraniums should be potted firmly and kept at 50 degrees in
full sunlight for Easter flov^ers.
Seeds which have been left over should be tested before they are planted. A
satisfactory way to test them is to sow a few seeds in small flats, labelling each kind
carefully as to the number of seeds sown.
Rhubarb can be forced quickly in the cellar from now on, but the roots should be
frozen before the forcing process is begun.
Late Work
Abutilons, or flowering maples, should not be given much water during the
winter months, unless an early bloom is desired ; but they should not be allowed to
get. so dry that they wilt.
An occasional sprinkling overhead, or dipping in a tub of water, will serve to
remove dust from the foliage of ferns grown in the house, and also to promote their
more healthy growth. Palms should be sponged.
Spraying with lime-sulphur, or with miscible oils, during warm winter weather
is the most effective method of eradicating scale pests from fruit trees, shade trees
and ornamentals.
Stocks and clarkias may now be sown in the greenhouse flowering indoors in
late spring.
Small hardy shrubs like Deitfcia gracilis, as well as the astilbes and spiraeas,
that have been stored away in a cool place for forcing, may now be brought into a
cool greenhouse and slowly started into growth.
Trees may be transplanted in winter, if the ground is not frozen too hard; large
ones should be moved and planted by digging around them gradually, and allowing
the root balls to freeze solid.
Preparations for starting seeds indoors may be begun by the end of this month.
Single tulips may be brought into heat now, but the double tulips cannot be forced
as readily until February.
The following house plants will grow well in a warm room : Palms, ferns. As-
paragus plumosus, aspidistra, cycas, pandanus, sansevieria, calla, cacti and ficus.
They grow best in a temperature of 68 to 75 degrees in the day-time and 64 to 68
degrees at night.
Dahlia tubers should be examined for signs of damping ofif or dry rot and all
diseased parts cut away.
25
It is not too early to order sash for the hotbed or coldframe. Some of the sub-
stitutes for glass are cheaper, lighter to handle and are satisfactory in many respects.
The pruning of fruit trees can be done at any time when the weather is not too
cold.
FEBRUARY
Early Work
Begin ordering hardy shrubs this month, keeping in mind the following consid-.
erations : Height, time of bloom, color, texture of foliage, spread of the whole plant
and preference for sun or shade.
Egg masses of the tent caterpillar should be gathered and burned during Febru-
ary and March, for they will hatch as soon as there is something green to feed upon.
Many trees and shrubs should be pruned before the buds begin to swell, but not
lilacs, forsythias, weigelas, deutzias, Japanese quince, tree peonies, most spiraeas or
the viburnums — until they have finished blooming, for their flower buds were formed
on last autumn's growth.
Oxalis and begonia bulbs should be potted in February or March. Place a dash
of sand under each bulb, plunge the pots in a box of wet ashes or sand up to the
rims, and put away in a cool part of the cellar. When signs of growth are apparent,
bring the plants into the light, but do not supply them with too much water until they
become well-rooted.
Keep Daphne cneorum well-protected in February, so that the tips of its ever-
green branches, which bear the clusters of pink buds, will not be burned by the sun.
The seeds of hardy annuals, biennials and perennials should be sown in hotbeds
by the middle of February ; seeds of asters for early bloom in the flower garden
should be planted bj' the fifteenth of this month, in the green house, or in boxes four
inches deep.
Hedera helix baltica is a hardy variety of the ordinary English ivy, and will lose
only a branch or two in the most severe New England winter ; but, if it is planted
where it gets direct sunlight during February and March, some sort of protection
will be needed — evergreen branches being best.
Take stock of garden tools ; replace all broken or worn-out parts, and have the
edges sharpened, so that when the gardening season opens they will be ready for im-
mediate use. If they are getting rusty, scrub them with a stiff, wnre brush and a
little benzine ; then paint them over with a mixture of white lead and lard ; this will
scrape off easily in the spring.
On very cold nights place newspapers between house plants and the window
panes.
Late Work
Twigs of the following native trees and shrubs may be brought indoors for win-
ter decoration, they will develop very rapidly in tepid water in a warm room : alder,
filbert, willow, maple, elm, hickory, sweet gum, cassandra, shadbush, cherry and crab
apple.
Grape vines should be pruned before they start into growth, because they bleed
very freely.
If you wish to buy small plants from commercial growers to set out in the gar-
den this spring, instead of raising them from seed, you should place your orders im-
mediately.
Keep window boxes that are filled with evergreens well-watered during the win-
ter months. Even if ice forms around the plants, no harm will be done to them, and a
constant supply of moisture will keep them fresh and luxuriant.
Repot ferns and foliage plants which start to grow in the greenhouse as the days
lengthen, and begin to propagate such plants as ferns, stevia, erica, Buddlcia asiatica.
genista, bouvardia and crotons.
Soil for seed flats should contain plenty of compost to make it light. Mix
it in the following proportions : one-third sand, one-third garden soil, and one-third
humus. No active fertilizer should be used.
Rhododendrons and boxwood should be protected during February and March
by some sort of covering such as evergreen boughs to protect them from the strong
sunlight.
26
Start Easter lilies before the end of this month in 55 degrees.
Warm the hotbed by leaving the sash on during sunny days, and, at the end of
the month, by tramping in two feet of manure in active fermentation. Seed of toma-
toes may be planted when the soil temperature drops to 90 degrees, and seed of
cooler plants such as onions, egg plants and peppers when it cools to 80 or 70.
When the weather is cold, and the ground free from snow, water should be set
out for the birds or the bird bath kept filled with cracked ice.
MARCH
Early Work
If dahlia tubers are started into growth during the first week in March, cuttings
can be taken from them, after the middle of April. A limited number may be
planted in boxes, rather close together in rich soil ; they should be given plenty
of light and a temperature not lower than 55 degrees.
Seeds of mignonette, stocks and candytuft sown now will produce good plants
by Memorial Day.
Pot bulbs and corms or tubers of fancy-leaved caladiums, tuberous begonias,
gloxinias and achimenes in a rich, mellow soil, and start them into active growth in
a fairly warm temperature.
Work in the garden begins underground and the time is approaching when this
work should be started. Well-rooted cow-manure not only provides the soil with the
four nutritive elements which plants demand from it, namely, nitrogen, phosphorous,
potash and lime, but it makes the soil more porous. This active fertilizer may be
spread over the surface of the ground, but it should not be plowed or spaded in until
the soil is dry enough to crumble in the hand.
Seeds of eggplants, tomatoes and peppers should be sown early in March ; but,
unless an early crop is desired, those of celery, cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts
and lettuce may wait a few weeks longer.
By the middle of this month, in sections where warm weather prevails, it is pos-
sible to start uncovering the flower borders, but this work should be left until early
April in the north. It should be done gradually in all sections, for late March is
likely to bring cold weather with high winds.
The pruning of grape vines, fruit trees, ornamentals and late-blooming shrubs
should be finished immediately.
It is time to get the hotbed ready for seed planting, but coldframes need not be
built until the end of the month.
Late Work
Begin to uncover the garden when the bulbs appear ; as soon as all danger from
frost is past remove the dead leaves and stalks from around the perennial plants, and
spray new growth with Bordeaux niixture to prevent fungus diseases. But do not be
too hasty.
Rock plants which have been heaved by the frost should be pressed firmly into
the soil and all rotting leaves of fleshy- or woolly-leaved plants cut away.
Spray apple tree at once with lime-sulphur or a miscible oil.
Apply a topdressing of salt and nitrate of soda or manure to the asparagus bed;
and sow such hardy vegetables as radishes, lettuce, spinach, smooth peas and parsnips
where the soil is dry enough so that it will crumble in the hand.
Start the seeds of slow-growing annuals, such as lobelias, zinnias, pot mari-
golds, petunias, asters, heliotropes, ageratums and salvias, in boxes of earth or in
pots in the house or in hotbeds.
Order rose bushes for planting while they are still in a dormant condition. Prune
the old plants when the weather is not too cold, cutting out all dead wood. Dig
bone meal and wood ashes around the roots when the ground is dry enough to work.
It is not too early to graft cherries and plums ; grafting operations on them should
be done earlier than on apples or pears.
Repot palms, dracaenas and rubber plants within the next month if they are too
large for their pots or not growing well.
Start tuberous rooted begonias in boxes or pots at once. Have them level with
the surface.
Start gloxinias into growth now.
Finish the pruning of trees and shrubs.
Sow the seeds of primroses and cyclamens for next season's bloom.
n
APRIL
Early Work
If deciduous nursery stock cannot be planted as soon as it arrives, heel it in care-
fully and provide it with plenty of water.
Young dogwoods that have died back will almost always send up new shoots if
they are cut back to the ground.
Clean the lawn of weeds, fill in the holes with fresh soil and seed over the bare
spots.
Old lawns may be repaired by covering them with an inch of good loam mixed
with peat moss and a little pulverized sheep manure.
Plant the following hardy vegetables as soon as the ground has been plowed or
spaded : Swiss chard, onions, turnips, kohl-rabi, carrots, beets, smooth peas, salsify,
spinach, parsnips and radishes.
All early sown plants should be hardened off in the coldframe before they are
moved to the open ground. They will need more thorough soakings of water as the
days get longer.
Seeds of Jerusalem Cherry sown in boxes of earth in the house early this month
will grow into fruiting plants by next Christmas or New Year's.
Perennials should be divided and planted as early as they can be handled in
workable soil. Each small division of a chrysanthemum clump will make a blooming
plant by autumn. Use only the outer portions of Michaelmas daisies.
Box and privet hedges should be trimmed before they start into growth.
New varieties may be grafted on fruit trees that bear unsatisfactory fruit ; but
dormant scions must be used.
Pachysandra terminalis should be started for quick ground-cover effects when
the plants are rather small, and the tops should be pinched out the year following the
first planting.
The following trees and shrubs prefer spring to fall planting : birches, magnolias,
tulip trees, sweet gums, Japanese maples, large-flowering dogwoods, roses, altheas.
flowering almonds, ornamental cherries and peaches.
Warm periods have made many plants start to grow earlier than usual this year ;
but uncovering the border should proceed gradually, for new shoots may be nipped
by late frosts.
Examine roses for scale ; cut off diseased twigs and spray.
Space rows of vegetables evenlj^ for convenience in cultivating ; group all early
maturing kinds together, so that the space can be used for another crop, and plant
those that occupy the ground all season in the same section of the garden.
Many tender vegetables, such as lima beans, squash and tomatoes, can be started
under glass in dirt bands or paper pots ; they will be protected from cut-worms when
they are transplanted into the open ground.
Prune and tie up vines on walls, arbors and trellises.
Stake and wire newly planted trees to prevent them from swaying in high winds.
Water all newly planted tree and shrub material at frequent intervals.
Plant the Japanese anemone as soon as danger of frost is past.
Do not forget that all root crops in the kitchen garden require potash.
Gladiolus can be planted now for early flowering effects.
All heavy plants such as evergreen trees should be balled and burlaped when
they are brought from the nursery They should be platformed as well, when trans-
planting, particularly during a dry spell ; the balls of earth must be damp enough so
that they do not fall apart during transportation or the setting out process.
Do not delay the planting of deciduous stock ; the earlier it is put into the
ground, the better showing it will make the first year, and a much better choice of
material can be had in the early spring months.
Work in a generous supply of fertilizer around perennials, but be careful not to
disturb those which have not yet started into growth. Bone meal is good.
Keep careful notes on the bulbs that are now in flower, for convenience in buy-
ing new bulbs next fall.
Destroy all nests of tent caterpillars as soon as they appear, by burning them
or painting them with creosote.
Sow seeds of Cinerarias and Chinese primroses now under glass for indoor bloom.
If the soil remains in a solid mass when squeezed in the hand, it is too wet to be
worked; it should fall apart before garden operations are commenced.
28
Late Work
Oak and elm trees should be sprayed with an arsenate of lead solution for canker
worms and "leaf rollers" as soon as the bud leaves begin to separate.
Do not scrape the bark of trees to destroy injurious insects, for irreparable dam-
age may be done to the cambium layer.
Pear trees infested with the "pear psylla" may be efifectively treated with a
"whitewash spray" of lime, Bordeaux mixture and nicotine.
The following late blooming or semi-hardy perennials are best transplanted in
the spring : Anemone japonica, fall asters, ceratostigma, shasta daisy, helenium
(sneezeweed) and monarda (beebalm).
Only the younger, outside divisions of perennial phlox should be reset. Phlox
should be divided at least every three years.
Plants which spread rapidly, such as achillea, boltonia and golden glow, should
be rooted out early.
Pansies, myosotis, daisies, canterbury-bells, aquilegias and foxgloves, that have
been carried over the winter in coldframes, can be moved into beds or borders now
to make room in the frames for early plantings of tender perennials.
Sow small herbs, such as thyme, sage, marjoram and dill, in the border.
To keep poppies from being trampled or blown down, place light brush over the
beds as soon as they are seeded.
Nemesias and lupines that have been grown in pots are often better than those
grown from seed sown in the open, because of the early start they get during the cool
months.
With the exception of the magnolia, which may be moved in May, all deciduous
trees and shrubs should be transplanted as soon as possible. There is no special hurry
about evergreens.
Delphiniums and hollyhocks should be sprayed with Bordeaux mixture, or with
lime and tobacco, or with a proprietary mixture, before they show signs of blight;
and the application should be repeated fortnightly in areas where this disease is
prevalent.
Sow seeds of lettuce, onions, beets, carrots, parsnips, radishes and the vegetable
oyster. A few radish seeds mixed with the others will come up quickly and mark
the rows.
The small worms which strip currant and gooseberry bushes of their foliage can
be destroyed by a thorough spraying with arsenate of lead or pyrethrum powder as
soon as they appear. It is well to remember that they begin eating at the bottom
of the plants and may escape observation for a long time.
Sweet peas should be sown immediately ; they should be planted five inches deep
and not too thickly. It has been found helpful to work peat moss into the soil with
which they are covered.
Thin out seedlings in the coldframes and give them plenty of air, so that they
will be hardened off when it is time to transplant them into the open ground.
Dig out the dandelions and other weeds as soon as they appear in the lawn
or else inoculate them with gasoline ; fill in the holes with good loam, reseed and roll.
One good rolling of the lawn is sufficient.
Cultivate all crops in the vegetable garden when they begin to come up to keep
the weeds from getting a start.
Complete the planting of new roses as early as possible. When the leaves are
well grown, start dusting them with Massey dust (nine parts of powdered sulphur,
one part arsenate of lead, one part tobacco dust) to control such common pests as the
leaf-eating worms, black spot and mildew.
It is time to put the bird houses in place. They should be painted, if at all, with
a dark color or stain.
Plants that have been touched by late frosts should be shaded and sprayed
frequently with cold water.
MAY
Early Work
Evergreens can be planted later than deciduous trees, but do not neglect to soak
them with plenty of water daily for several weeks after they have been moved, be-
cause if the roots once get dried out they cannot be revived.
29
Mark the bare spots in bulb beds for refilling in the fall, and when the bulbs
finish blooming, allow those that are to be dug to remain in the ground long enough
to ripen. .
Daffodils do not need to be disturbed for several years. When bulbs of ariy
kind are naturalized in the lawn, the grass should not be cut until their leaves begin
to turn yellow.
Prune early-flowering shrubs, such as the cornelian cherry, Cornus mas, the for-
sythias and some of the spiraeas, as soon as they have finished blooming, so that the
new wood for next season will have a chance to form during the summer.
Most of the hardy annuals can be sown early this month where they are to flower.
Dwarf varieties of alyssum and candytuft will make fine edgings if they are planted
along the front of the border immediately.
Peonies require an abundance of water while the buds are being formed in May.
A spray of one pound of blue stone and one pound of lime to 50 gallons of water,
applied when the buds are the size of buckshot, will prevent blight, and early applica-
tions of bone meal will supply nourishment. Wood ashes are good but should be kept
two or three inches from the crowns.
If aphids begin to attack the roses in great numbers, they can be checked by
applications of Black Leaf 40 or heavy soap suds made from hand soap.
Some of the more serviceable plants to grow in window boxes, besides the com-
mon geraniums, are petunias, verbenas, ageratums, lobelias, begonias, fuchsias (for
partial shade), lantanas, browallias and alyssums.
Special plantings of pot marigolds, zinnias or snapdragons are useful for filling
vacant spaces in the borders. The Mexican and Lilliput zinnias are most popular this
year.
Sow string beans, lima beans, pole beans, corn, squash, cucumbers, melons, okra
and spinach, and plant potatoes in the vegetable garden. Thin out vegetables sown in
April.
Continue to sow the short crop vegetables, such as lettuce, carrots, radishes and
peas. Feed lettuce and leaf crops with nitrate of soda.
Remember that iris forms the bulwark of bloom in the flower garden in late
May and early June.
When the bark of a tree is broken, the exposed wood should be protected with a
coating of grafting wax, tar, asphalt or hot paraffin, but the cambium layer around
the edges of the wound should be left uncovered.
Late Work
Magnolias, rose of Sharon bushes and coniferous evergreens dug with a solid
ball of earth about their roots may still be moved with safety.
Most perennials should be transplanted in late May or June and not as late as
mid-summer. Perennial seeds can be ordered now and the frames made ready for
them.
Best results in destroying weeds, with one-quarter the time and energy expended
in hoeing, are obtained by sprinkling a good weed killer over walks and drives and
washing it in with the hose.
Hollyhocks, delphinium and phlox should be sprayed every ten days for rusts and
other fungus diseases with Bordeaux mixture or one of the proprietary remedies.
Massey dust should be applied to roses and other perennials to control black
spot and mildew. It may be obtained ready for use under various trade names.
Daily sprinklings of the lawn will bring the grass roots to the surface of the soil,
which quickly becomes dried out in hot weather. It is better to give the lawn less
frequent but heavy soakings.
Newly seeded lawns should be cut high until the grass starts to grow vigorously
and thickens up.
Bone meal can be used with good effect around perennials and roses. The latter
respond well to applications of liquid manure when they are coming into bloom.
Sheep manure is a good fertilizer for damp places, because it does not hold
moisture.
Many of the summer blooming bulbs may still be planted ; they include three of
the best lilies : Lillium regale, L. auratnni and L. speciosum.
This is a good time for the principal planting of gladioli. Different varieties
should be selected for a long season of bloom.
30
Both cannas and dahlias can go in now but it is better to hold back the latter
for another week or two, since their greatest show comes in the cool months of
autumn.
Harden off annuals that have been started in boxes or frames before setting
them in the open ground.
The ordinary house plants will be rejuvenated if they are set out-of-doors after
all danger of frost is past.
Cut worms are already at work. A poison bait such as the seed stores sell
offers the best means of destroying them.
Ornamental hedges may be trimmed now.
Plant the double blue variety of bachelor's buttons or cornflower, Centaurea
cyanus, with the yellow perennial. Coreopsis lanceolata, for continuation of bloom in
the iris garden,
JUNE
Early Work
Remove water sprouts before they damage the growth of fruit trees.
Prune shrubs that are through flowering, removing some of the old wood at the
base and shorten the canes which are too long.
Order spring-blooming bulbs now for fall delivery and planting.
Sow seeds of the following biennials and perennials : fox-gloves, Canterbury bells,
hollyhocks, wallflowers, violas, cynoglossum, aquilegia (long-spurred hybrids), myo-
sotis and others.
Plant tropical waterlilies as annuals to give bright color over a long period,
with the more common water-loving plants, such as arrow-head, water hyacinth, water
forget-me-not and umbrella plant.
June is the ideal month for planting dahlias, either tubers or green plants. The
clumps should be separated, leaving a part of the neck with an eye on each tuber,
and the tubers should be placed six inches deep on their sides.
Moonflower plants may be set out now. They are difficult to grow from seed
but started plants may be purchased from nurserymen.
Petunias, alyssums and forget-me-nots make good fillers for rose beds, because
they do not draw much nourishment from the soil.
If peony buds are cut off before they break, and placed with their stems in deep
water in a cool cellar, they will form better flowers and their opening can be consid-
erably delayed. The buds should be soft to the touch when they are cut.
Cuttings may be taken from the following low-growing perennials when they
have finished blooming : creeping phloxes, cerastiums, sedums, aubrietias, arenarias
and iberis.
The leaf hoppers that disfigure rose foliage may be controlled by spraying the
under sides of the leaves with a nicotine preparation containing soap.
Oyster shell scale on lilacs may be eradicated at this season by spraying with
miscible oil or a whale oil emulsion. The larvae move about when they are first
hatched and this is the best time to kill them.
Striped beetles may be kept away from cucumber and melon plants by dusting
with tobacco dust and by pouring a little tobacco water around each plant to kill the
larvse in the soil.
Tobacco dust worked into the ground when asters are being set out will help
to protect the plants from root lice.
The use of a liquid spray or some form of Massey dust to protect roses from
mildew and black spot should be continued at least every ten days. Massey dust can
now be obtained in small packages under a trade name and combined with material
to prevent the staining of the foliage.
New Zealand spinach, the best substitute for common spinach, may be planted
now. Since the plants are not pulled when harvested and the leaves can be gathered
all summer, a short row will be enough in the ordinary garden.
Make a second planting of Golden Bantam corn, with four or five kernels to a
hill, and follow this with later varieties.
Thin out beets, radishes, turnips, kohlrabi and other vegetables before the plants
become so crowded as to make them weak and spindling.
31
Stop cutting asparagus and give it a large amount of commercial fertilizer, for
next year's shoots are now being formed. Spray the tops with arsenate of lead to
kill the beetles.
Plunge oleanders in shady spots until fall ; also put out the acacias, ficus and
other indoor plants.
Late Work
Continue to sow the seeds of perennials, to have plants ready to move into the
border by early fall.
Cut off the old flower heads on lilacs, and break of? those of rhododendrons with-
out removing any of the branches.
Clean up the foliage of tulips and early flowering bulbs as soon as it turns
brown. Order bulbs for fall planting.
Transplant bearded irises when they have finished blooming, cutting the leaves
back half waj^ shortening the roots and dividing the clumps into pieces with two or
three shoots on each.
Clip the tops of alyssum, forget-me-not and helianthemum plants when the flow-
ers have faded, to insure a second bloom.
If it is necessary to cut back the leaders of evergreen trees, the work should be
done at this season when the wood is soft, green and watery. Leave at least an inch
to give an opportunity for the setting of a new bud. Do not cut the tops of ever-
green hedges until they reach the desired height.
Final plantings of gladioli, tuberoses and dahlias should be made before the end
of the month.
The following annuals make good potted plants for porch or terrace decoration :
petunias, salpiglossis, Drummond's phlox, annual larkspur, snapdragons, Arcfofis
grandis, heliotrope, mignonette and stocks ; but they must receive more or less fre-
quent applications of plant food and be watered faithfully throughout the summer.
Fuchsias are among the few flowering plants that will bloom in the shade.
Do not neglect to spray delphiniums and hollyhocks with Bordeaux mixture every
ten days during the growing season.
Plants with lice on them should be sprayed with a nicotine preparation as soon
as they become infested.
Currant worms can be killed with hellebore.
Spray grape vines with ammoniacal copper carbonate solution or potassium sul-
phide for mildew and black rot ; spray or dust them with arsenate of lead to kill the
little worm found in the curled up leaves.
Dust the young plants of melons, cucumbers and squashes with arsenate of lead
and lime or with tobacco dust, to keep away the striped beetle and the flea beetle.
Spray evergreens with a solution of lime-sulphur to prevent the appearance of the
red spider during hot weather.
Thin apples, peaches and plums, leaving only perfect specimens that do not
touch each other.
Sow the following vegetables : Chinese cabbage, kale, corn, beans, Xew Zealand
spinach, winter turnips and beets, carrots, kohlrabi, pumpkins and squashes. Replace
tomatoes destroyed by cutworms. Set out celery plants in rich soil where water
can be applied freely.
JULY
Early Work
Thin out the old wood of shrubs that have finished blooming.
Stake tall perennials before they begin to bend and break. Tie them with raffia
or keep them confined in wire hoops.
Lawns should not be cut as closely now as in the spring, and the clippings should
be left as protection from the scorching sunshine.
Cut back the old, hard canes of rambler roses when their blooming period is
over ; prune hybrid perpetuals ; feed and mulch the teas for autumn bloom.
Daphne cneorum may be propagated by layering the trailing branches at this
season. Make a small incision in the under part of the stem and bury it two inches
underground.
32
Divide trollius clumps after they have finished blooming and set them in a par-
tially shaded position. Since flowering clumps will not mature for two or three years,
they should be set in a light and well-drained soil.
Pinch off the lateral stems on dahlias to throw the growth into those that will
bear flowers at the tops of the plants.
To prevent blight or rust on phlox, aconite, shasta daisies and snapdragons, spray
the plants with Bordeaux mixture.
Thin out rows of vegetables, leaving two or three inches between carrots, onions
and salsify, three or four inches between beets, parsnips and small turnips, and four
to six inches between large turnips, and rutabagas.
Set out late celery plants, being sure that the ground is thoroughly saturated with
water; and in setting late cabbage and cauliflower plants, press the soil firmly over
the roots.
Tie up tomatoes to stakes and keep the side shoots pinched out for the early
ripening of good fruit.
Sow seeds of cinerarias, Chinese primroses and calceolarias now to give plants
for winter blooming.
Plant violets as a ground cover in shady places; their delicate bloom is desirable
in the spring, and their foliage is pleasing throughout the summer months.
This is a good time to repot house ferns.
Late Work
Keep the ground about newly planted trees and shrubs well-watered during dry
summer weather. Give the lawn a good soaking, if it shows signs of turning brown.
Mulch the rose beds and perennial borders with leaf-mold or peat moss to pre-
vent their drying out.
Cut out old raspberry canes and burn them, when they are through bearing, to
strengthen the new growth and keep diseases in check.
Sow the seed of delphinium as soon as it is ripe, for blooming plants of the ordi-
nary varieties next summer ; but obtain divisions of a selected strain of plants from
which to grow prize-winning spikes.
Bearded irises may be lifted and divided at any time in the next six weeks.
Japanese irises need dividing every three or four years. Do this work soon after
they have flowered, lifting the crowns carefully and separating them with a sharp
knife. They should be set deeper than the bearded kinds.
Sow the seed of columbines and perennial lupines.
Make final sowings of annual lupines, Shirley poppies, and mignonette.
Autumn crocuses should be ordered now for planting in early August.
The tarnished plant bug that punctures the growing tips of asters in hot weather
can be kept in check with a tobacco spray or by dusting with air-slaked lime. Spray-
ing the seedlings with Bordeaux mixture on the under sides of the leaves will act as
a preventive of rust.
Spray nasturtiums, sweet peas and golden glow with a nicotine preparation, to
eradicate the aphis.
Give tomato plants liberal side-dressings of sodium _ nitrate or ammonium sul-
phate, just as the plants begin to set fruit, for maximum yields; but be sure that these
fertilizers do not come in contact with the vines.
Rhubarb, sea-kale and asparagus should be given liberal applications of fertilizer
and cultivated to obtain strong roots which will yield a good crop next spring.
Sow late cabbage, cauliflower, Brussel sprouts, beets, kohlrabi, and turnips, in the
vegetable garden; the last may be planted where early potatoes have been dug.
Endive, lettuce, kale and spinach may be sown through early August.
This is a good time to set out clumps of Virginia cow^slip, Mertensia virginica.
The best way to obtain winter blooming geraniums is to start slips or cuttings
in early summer, and to grow the plants in pots, shifting them into larger pots as
they develop.
AUGUST
Early Work
Remove all dead and dying branches from trees to keep out injurious insects and
diseases.
_ Do not allow either herbaceous plants or shrubs to set seeds, unless these are
desired for propagation. Nothing so exhausts new plants as the production of fruit,
and some varieties — such as garden phlox — do not come true from seed.
Take two-inch root cuttings of bleeding heart and oriental poppies. They will
take hold in any good garden soil that is moist but well drained and form new plants
for next year.
Cut strawflowers and other "everlastings" when they are free from moisture and
just before the blossoms open wide.
Sow the seeds of pansies, English daisies and forget-me-nots at once in a frame
and supply some shade during hot weather.
Put a mulch of lawn clippings or anj' safe refuse around gladioli and dahlias.
Disbud the latter for extra large blooms and give them both plenty of water.
Use liquid manure on chrysanthemums, dahlias and hydrangeas, but do not apply
this when the soil is drJ^
Set out daffodil bulbs for early spring bloom.
Madonna lily bulbs should be ordered now and planted three or four inches deep
as soon as they arrive.
Prepare the soil for peonies several weeks in advance, digging it to a depth of
one and one-half to two feet, so that it will settle before planting time in September.
Sow the following cover crops : crimson clover, hairy vetch, rj'e, buckwheat and
millet.
Pinch off the tips of squash, pumpkin and tomato vines.
Make final sowings of spinach, cress, radishes, lettuce and turnips.
Potato blight may be prevented by spraying with Bordeaux mixture.
Cut a few leaves from the grape vines so that enough sunlight will enter to
ripen the fruit, but do not prune them.
Pot up freesias for forcing. Place the bulbs in a coldframe, water them well,
cover with hay or dry leaves and shade them with a partial covering of boards.
Late Work
Water all plants during a period of drought until the ground is saturated not less
than four inches in depth ; never spray them when the temperature drops suddenly,
for this causes mildew.
Remove plantains and other weeds from the lawn with a small trowel and seed
over the bare spots. Do the filling and grading for new lawns, which should be sown
by the middle of next month.
Cut the galls from spruce trees and burn them. The special oil sprays that are
used to eradicate gall aphids and the pine needle scale should not be applied at this
time of year but in early spring.
Take cuttings of English ivy, poinsettia and heliotrope, and pot them up for
house plants next winter.
Transplant perennials grown from seed in June and July.
Cut garden phlox to the ground when it has finished blooming and fertilize with
sheep manure ; it is best grown from late summer divisions.
Continue to use Massey dust or one of the prepared sprays on roses to prevent
mildew and black spot.
Watch for the appearance of black beetles on aster plants.
Potted strawberries should be set now — IR inches from each other in rows three
feet apart, with the crowns even with the surface.
Harvest onions when the tops turn yellow, spread them out in the sun to dry, then
store them in a cool place.
Plant a few freesia bulbs every two weeks. Use three-quarter inch bulbs for
early flowers. Keep the pans or pots shaded a little until growth starts.
34
Elm trees infested with elm leaf beetles should be sprayed immediately.
Start the planting of daffodils as soon as the bulbs can be obtained at the stores.
Plant the bulbs of fall crocuses as soon as they arrive. They do well in the
rock garden.
Privet hedges should have a final trimming now.
Planting of evergreens can be undertaken at any time now. They should not be
pruned.
SEPTEMBER
Early Work
Order deciduous trees and shrubs for fall planting.
Begin to make the new border for perennials now, using at least a foot of mel-
low, moisture-holding soil. Save only the vigorous pieces of the outside growths on
each clump to be divided and reset.
If lily-of-the-valley plants have become over-crowded and flower rather sparsely,
the entire bed should be dug up at this time and the larger pips or roots reset two or
three inches apart and just under the surface. A dressing of well-rotted manure and
leafmold may be applied after the leaves have died down to ensure a better bloom
next spring.
Divide and plant peonies this month so that they will become well established
before the hard frost. Mix a handful of bone meal with the soil around each plant
and supply plenty of wgiter ; select strong divisions with three to five eyes and set them
with the topmost eye two inches below the surface.
Withhold fertilizers from the rose garden from now on, but keep the soil well
mulched.
Continue to plant narcissi and all other bulbs that are available, except tulips,
which should not go into the ground until October.
Sow new lawns by the middle of the month and stimulate old ones to crowd out
the weeds, by applying six pounds each of sulphate of ammonia, phosphoric acid and
potash over 1,000 square feet of surface, once now and twice in the early spring.
Spanish and Dutch irises may be planted now in clumps about five inches deep,
provided they are set in a well-drained part of the border and given the protection
of a liberal mulch during the winter. They will not stand alternate freezing and
thawing.
English irises are more difficult to grow but will survive under careful treat-
ment. They should be planted in a rich black soil and be given plenty of moisture
during the spring months.
Calendulas will continue to bloom quite late in the garden, but the smaller plants
.nay be cut back and potted up to produce flowers for several weeks and perhaps
months longer indoors.
Place one-half to three-quarters of an ounce of paradichloro-benzene in a narrow
band around peach trees that are over three years old to exterminate the borers. Do
not allow it to come in contact with the bark but cover it with five inches of soil and
tramp it down hard.
Late Work
Most shrubs, with the exception of Spicebush {Bensoin aestivale), Butterfly Bush
(Buddlia), Sweetshrub (Calycanthus floridus), Bladdersenna (Colntea arboresccns) ,
Hawthorn {Crataegus), Shrub-althea {Hibiscus syriacus), Sumac (Rhus), magnolia,
tamarisk and Japanese Snowball {Viburnum plicatum), can be moved readily and
safely from now until the end of October. The leaves should be stripped off and
plenty of water supplied to the roots.
Continue to sow new lawns and renovate those which are old.
Many perennials may be divided now, and in particular peonies, phlox, Bleeding
Heart and oriental poppy.
Chrysanthemums should be staked, given liquid manure and sprayed or dusted
with a nicotine preparation.
Do not allow bulbs that have been saved from the home garden to remain out
of the soil any longer than necessary, and plant crocuses, snowdrops, chionodoxas and
scillas by the end of this month.
35
Plant Mariposa lilj' bulbs (Calochorhts) three inches deep in a light loam mixed
with sand, sawdust or road grit, and a little powdered charcoal, in a raised bed facing
south. They must have perfect drainage.
Among the hardy annuals which may be treated as biennials and sown now in
vacant places in the herbaceous borders are larkspur, sweet alyssum, eschscholtzia,
calliopsis and Centaurea cyanus. Do not forget these little plants when spading up
the borders.
Dwarf asters may be taken from the garden and set into small pots for flowering
in the house. The ground around the plants should be thoroughly watered an hour
or two in advance and the pots should be placed in a sunny window.
Sow seeds of nasturtiums, petunias and sweet peas to be grown in the greenhouse.
Get ready to protect cosmos, dahlias and other annuals from the first frost.
Sow such hardy vegetables as cabbage and cauliflower in protected coldframes for
spring use.
Set out all fruit trees, except the stone fruits, when their leaves begin to drop.
Do not allow pears to ripen on the trees but pull them while they are still firm.
Purchase house plants from the florist as soon as possible, so that they will be-
come gradually inured to the dry house air while the windows may still be left open.
Dig potatoes when the tops have died and before the coming of hard frosts ; dry
them so that the soil will fall off easily and store in a cool, dark cellar.
Bank winter celery with soil on a dry day, but be careful not to get any in the
centers of the plants.
Lettuce and radish seeds may be sown in a coldframe for a continued succession
of these vegetables up to Thanksgiving.
OCTOBER
Early Work
If trees are fed with a slow-acting commercial fertilizer at this time, they are
supplied with nourishment as soon as the ground thaws in the spring.
Crocus bulbs should be planted immediately, but not over an inch deep. Deep
planting is often the cause of failure to bloom.
Plant the bulbs of chionodoxas, fritillarlas, scillas, snowdrops, hyacinths and
grape hyacinths this month.
Hardy lilies are often held over until spring, but it is much better to plant them,
when possible, in the autumn or early winter. This is particularly true as applied to
Lilimn auratum, which deteriorates rapidly over winter.
Use well-rotted barn manure or bone meal as a fertilizer when setting out bulbs.
If the soil is very hard or filled with clay, work in a liberal amount of peat moss.
Freeslas for winter forcing should be potted up at once. They need a cool tem-
perature— but not darkness — until they start to grow.
Tulips, daffodils and hyacinths which are to be forced indoors must be buried in a
trench outside or kept in a cold frame or a cool cellar for several weeks until root
growth has been started.
Due Van Thol tulips potted up early can be forced for Christmas. This is true
of no other tulip.
Continue to make over the flower borders, heeling in plants that must be taken
up temporarily until there is room to reset them. If perennials are not to be trans-
planted, it is best to allow their tops to die down naturally, but be sure to remove all
refuse this fall.
Plant all varieties of garden tulips this month. Try some of the following wild
species in the rock garden : Tulipa clusiana, T. eichleri, T. greigii, T. Kaufmanniana,
T. sylvestris.
Be sure to plant bulbs right-side-up ; most spring-blooming kinds have a pointed
top and a kind of ring at the bottom, where the roots were attached. Lily bulbs have
scales pointing towards the top and should be tilted slightly so that water will not
lodge in the scales and cause them to rot. The bottom of a crocus bulb is slightly
depressed.
36
Dig tender material like gladioli, cannas, caladiums, tigridias, tuberoses, Red Hot
Poker plant (Tritoma) and Salvia patens. Leave as much earth as possible on the
cannas and store the others in boxes of sand or peat moss in a cellar or cold frame.
Cut everlasting flowers and parsley, sage, thyme, sweet marjoram and other
herbs, and hang them up to dry.
Plant the eremurus in a sunny position against a background of shrubs as soon
as its foliage dies down in the fall. It should be set in a rich and moist but well-
drained soil, with the crown just below the surface.
Mulch the bush fruits to protect their shallow root systems.
Grape-vines planted in the autumn will make much more rapid growth next spring
than when planted in March or April.
Many vegetable crops can be protected from early frosts by covering them with
hay, straw, strips of cloth and paper, or pieces of old burlap on cold nights. Late egg
plants can be covered with boxes or barrels.
Pot up Indian and Chinese azaleas, rhododendrons, lilacs, deutzias and other
shrubs to be forced in the greenhouse, and store them in a pit, where they will get
the light in the daytime but be protected from frost at night.
Repot callas which have been resting during the summer in a good compost
containing leafmold and sand. Plant the tubers just under the surface, give them only
a moderate amount of water until they have started into growth, and keep them in a
cool, dark place for at least a month.
Late Work
There is still time to make over the perennial beds, but it is not wise to under-
take this work in sections where the drought continues.
Roses may be planted out after October 20th.
Apple trees, pear trees and raspberries, blackberries, currants and gooseberries
may be set out now.
Tulips may be planted to best advantage within the next two weeks.
Early tulips, hyacinths, narcissi (including paper whites and Soleil d'Or), freesias
and the oxalis may be started now for flowering indoors.
Such of the hardy lilies as are now in the stores should be planted at once. The
Japanese bulbs will not arrive until later in the season.
Several of the ferns which grow wild in the woods make very good house plants.
They should be taken up after the frost has destroyed the tops, but before the ground
has been frozen. It is best to leave them in a large pot until they freeze solid and to
take them indoors early in December.
In northern sections, where the red hot poker (Kniphofia Pfitseri) is not reliably
hardy, the plants may be lifted and carried through the winter in boxes of sand in
the cellar or in a covered cold frame.
Four-o'clock plants grown from seed this season may be lifted and wintered in
the cellar. They will make very large plants with myriads of flowers next summer.
After pumpkins and squashes have been lifted they should be thoroughly dried in
the sun and stored in a warm place like the furnace cellar or a dry chamber. The
best temperature is from 50 to 60 degrees. They should not be stored in the vegetable
cellar.
Nothing is gained by picking apples before they are ripe for winter storage. The
skin of ripe fruit is bruised by the use of an apple picker.
It will be well to make a ring of earth around newly set trees and shrubs this
autumn to hold as much rainfall as possible. They may be mulched after the ground
freezes.
Dahlia tubers may be stored in boxes of sand, sawdust or peat moss, preferably
with the stems down.
Lemon verbenas, Salvia patens and incarvilleas may be carried over the winter
in a cool cellar with plenty of earth around the roots.
Lily-of-the- Valley may be reset now, being divided so that there will be about
six roots to a clump. They should be set two inches underground. Beds of lily-of-
the-valley should be made over at least once in four years.
Apples or other fruit should never be put into winter quarters while wet with
dew or rain. A very good way to keep apples and pears in a crisp, fresh state is to
pack them in clean, nearly dry leaves. Use a layer of leaves, then a layer of apples.
37
NOVEMBER
Early Work
Sweet peas may be sown in pots and kept in cold frames over winter, or even
sown in the open ground in deeply prepared trenches. When the ground is frozen,
mulch the rows with three inches of straw.
There is still time to plant roses, hardy lilies and bedding bulbs. Wherever late
planting of imported bulbs is necessary, the ground should be mulched to prevent it
from freezing.
Wherever peonies, delphiniums and hollyhocks have been troubled with blights
or rust, be sure to remove all old stalks and leaves from about the crowns. In the
case of delphiniums, it will be wise to cover the plants with coal ashes.
Bulb beds and perennial borders should not be mulched until the ground is well
frozen. Otherwise, a nesting place for mice will be provided.
Slaked lime may be worked into the soil among bearded irises.
Mark the spots in the perennial border where plants which start late in the spring,
such as mallows, are located.
Young fruit trees must be protected against girdling by mice. Wrap ordinary
building paper around the trunk and heap up earth for a few inches about the lower
end to prevent the mice from entering there. Close mesh wire may also be used.
A few strong clumps of rhubarb may be dug with a large ball of soil and placed
in a shady place until they have been thoroughly frozen, when they will be ready for
forcing in the cellar. This will not be until after the first of the year. While they
are outside cover them with burlap so that the soil will not be washed away.
The vegetable garden and any borders intended for planting in the spring may be
spaded deeply now and left in a rough condition, even as the farmer plows in fall.
After the ground has frozen, a mulch of straw or buckwheat hulls may be applied
to the strawberry bed.
Carrots, beets and parsnips may be stored in a cool cellar in sand for winter use.
In the vegetable garden gather and burn all refuse which is likely to harbor pests.
Keep celery well banked with earth or boards to protect the hearts. However,
avoid getting soil into the center of celery.
Late Work
After the hardy Chrysanthemums are through flowering, cut them back to within
a few inches of the ground. If this is done, heavy shoots will appear in the spring
which will be excellent as cuttings.
Be sure that choice garden plants are marked properly with permanent labels.
This applies to bulbs and tubers in storage as well.
Store the garden furniture and clean all tools. Grease or oil the metal parts to
prevent them from rusting.
Cover the bulb beds with a light litter when freezing weather has set in. The
deeper the mulch, the later the bulbs will be in starting next spring. Crocus bulbs
should not be too near the top or they will heave and will also be easily dug out
by mice.
Make haste to get imported lily bulbs into the ground as soon as they arrive.
This applies as well to the rare little bulbs shipped from the Western coast.
All hyacinths that are to be forced should be potted by the end of November.
Be sure that the ground is soaked before they go into the cellar or their roots will
not start. An occasional watering may even be necessary.
Heap manure around the rhubarb plants, especially those which have been
established for several years. Rhubarb is a gross feeder.
Cold frames and hot beds which are to be used next spring should be covered
witl) wooden tops to keep them dry and in good condition,
38
Winter varieties of celery may be replanted in deep frames, where they will staj'
in excellent condition for the holiday season. Keep the frost out with wooden tops
and mats.
Be sure to ventilate cold frames on sunny days, when perennials or half-hardy
materials are being stored over winter. This will prevent their heating and avoid
rotting.
Mulch the cane fruits with leaves or manure, but use hay or straw on late plant-
ings of onions or spinach, just as is done with strawberries. Use clods of soil to hold
the mulch in place.
Stagnant surface water from melting snow during the winter months is dangerous
to perennials. This condition can be averted now in many instances by digging shallow
ditches to carry off this surface water when the ground is frozen.
Newly planted shade trees are often injured by sun scald during the winter
months. This may easily be prevented by wrapping the trunks from the ground up
loosely with burlap.
Now that poison ivy is as dormant as it will ever be, grub out the plants, roots
and all, and pile them to dry, ready for burning late in winter — but only on a quiet day.
One never thinks of the berried shrubs until fall. Make a list of the ones liked
best and order them for spring planting.
DECEMBER
Early Work
Those who have conservatories may start clarkias and godetias from seed now.
Salmon Queen is a good variety of clarkia; seed should be sown in flats or pans.
Transplant the seedlings later into small pots.
Japanese lilies may still be planted in the garden. Speciosums and auratums may
be potted singly and kept under the bench in the conservatory for forcing into bloom
later. Both these lilies must be forced slowly.
Seeds of schizanthus should be planted as soon as possible in order to have flowers
next May. Gloxinia and heliotrope seed may also be sown this month, but the latter
will germinate very slowly.
Seeds collected from the garden must be kept dry over winter. Stout paper bags
or envelopes are best, and each should be plainly marked and arranged alphabetically
in boxes.
Lilies-of-the-valley may be forced into flower quickly if pips from the seed stores
are used. Plant them closely together in soil or fiber, adding a little moisture. Keep
the pots in a shaded place for a week or ten days, maintaining a temperature of at
least 70 degrees.
Those bulbs in pots which are showing white roots at the bottom are ready for
forcing.
Look over the dahlia tubers that are in storage and, if decay has begun, cut out
the bad spots and sprinkle the cuts with sulphur.
Deciduous shrubs, such as deutzia, philadelphus, forsythia, Prunits triloba and
azaleas, should be potted now and put into storage for forcing in late January.
Trees to be moved by the frozen ball method should be trenched around the base
now. Fill this trench with strawy manure.
Late Work
If young fruit trees are pruned early and the branches allowed to remain on tlie
ground, mice will eat their bark in preference to girdling the trees.
When manure is spread on the ground around shrubs in the shrub border, be sure
that none comes near the trunks of flowering crabs, because mice will winter in it and
damage the trees.
39
All garden statuary that is movable should be stored away. Otherwise, it should
be covered over with water-tight boxes, particularly if it is of soft stone. Formal
gardens which adjoin the house should be neat appearing even in winter. For this
reason, statuary should be moved from them instead of being covered.
Tubbed bay trees, box bushes and hydrangeas are best stored in a dark, cool,
well-ventilated cellar that is frostproof. It is necessary to water them only occa-
sionally.
Deciduous shrubs in tubs can be kept over winter in a cold pit or cold frame,
but in either case they will need ventilation to prevent damping off. It is just as
satisfactory to knock them out of the tubs, plant them in a sheltered place and mulch
heavily.
Lilies and bulbs should now receive their winter mulch. A light covering of peat
moss or buckwheat hulls will do.
Give the rose bed a mulch of manure, peat moss, buckwheat hulls, straw or ever-
green boughs — whichever is preferred.
Ventilate cold frames in which pansies, English daisies, campanulas and other
perennials are being wintered until the ground is thoroughly frozen. Then mulch
lightly and replace the sash, covering it with straw mats for the rest of the winter.
The stems of poinsettias and Euphorbia jacqninaeflora bleed when cut, but this
bleeding may be stopped by dipping the ends of the stems in hot water for a few
minutes or by burning them with a match.
Water should not be allowed to drip from the gutters onto the perennial borders.
Therefore, clean all rubbish from the drain spouts and save the perennials.
Garden books make attractive gifts for the holiday season.
Be sure that choice garden plants are marked properly with permanent labels.
This applies to bulbs and tubers in storage.
The leaves of foliage plants in the house, such as palms and rubber plants, should
be scrubbed with a soap solution to free them of dust. Also, it is well to clean the
pots of green algae.
Newly planted evergreens should have the protection of a windbreak this winter.
Burlap stretched over stakes driven into the ground or an A-shaped barricade made
of boards will serve the purpose.
Window boxes may be planted for the winter with little evergreens, such as
arborvitaes, spruces, pines and hemlocks. It is usually best to use one kind only in
each box. Water the soil thoroughly and mulch with peat moss.
Globe artichokes in the field should be cut back to the ground and mulched with
six inches of coarse manure.
40
PATH IN GARDEN OF MR. AND MRS. ROBERT T. McCRACKEN
THE GARDEN CLUB FEDERATION OF PENNSYLVANIA
The Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania was organized on March 26, 1930,
at a meeting held at the invitation of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society at 1600
Arch Street. Thirty-nine organizations enrolled as charter members. According to
the Constitution and By-Laws adopted at this meeting, the objects of the Federation
shall be "to co-ordinate the interests of the Garden Qubs of the State and to bring
them into closer relations of mutual helpfulness by association, conference and corre-
spondence, and to co-operate with other educational agencies furthering the interests
of horticulture and conservation."
A second meeting of the Federation was held on Wednesday, October 15, 1930,
at the Allegheny County Country Club, Sewickley Heights, Pennsylvania. Most
inspiring reports were read, listing the activities of the various member organizations,
and it was announced that Mrs. George L. Harrison, Corresponding Secretary of the
Federation, is offering a Gold Medal to the club that can show the greatest achieve-
ment for the year.
The Executive Committee of the Federation has held regular monthly meetings
and other committees have functioned successfully. The Committee on Conservation
and Billboard Restriction has co-operated with a similar committee of the Garden
Club of America and with the Pennsylvania State Highways and Forestry Depart-
ments in endeavoring to conserve native material and to restrict billboard advertising
in scenic locations.
(The first annual meeting of the Federation will be held in Philadelphia on March
17-18, 1931, at which time a full report of the year's work will be made and the Medal
offered by Mrs. Harrison will be awarded.)
The names of the officers and Directors of the Federation and a list of the
member organizations are as follows :
President — Mrs. Thomas Newhall, Ithan, Delaware Co.
Treasurer — Mr. Garrett V. Clark, Trevose, Bucks Co.
Corresponding Secretary — Mrs. George L. Harrison, St. Davids, Delaware Co.
Recording Secretary — Mrs. Walter G. Sibley, Meadowbrook, Montgomery Co.
Vice-President — ■
Western Division —
Mrs. Carroll P. Davis, 346 Ridge Avenue, Pittsburgh.
Vice-President —
Central Division —
Mrs. Harvey Smith, State Street, Harrisburg.
Vice-President —
Eastern Division —
Mrs. Clarence C. Zantzinger, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia.
Directors —
Western Division —
Mrs. Matthew Griswold, 265 West Tenth Street, Erie.
Mrs. Edwin A. Walton, 365 Chestnut Street, Meadville.
Miss Catherine Miller, "Glen Osborne," Sewickley.
Central Division —
Mrs. Joseph H. Bovaird, 119 Jackson Street, Bradford.
Mrs. S. S. Newcomer, Kane, McKean Co.
Mrs. Allan D. Thompson, 261 Louther Street, Carlisle.
Eastern Division —
Mrs. William F. Moyer, 229 East Fornance St., Norristown.
Mrs. G. B. Littell, 640 Monroe Street. Scranton.
Mrs. E. Page AUinson, West Chester.
42 " ■ ■ •■ '
Abington Garden Club,
Waverly, Pa.
Mrs. Edward W. Warren, President,
430 Quincy Avenue, Scranton, Pa.
Bethlehem Garden Club,
Bethlehem, Pa.
Mrs. James F. Findlay,
Cor. Beech and Elm Streets,
Bethlehem, Pa.
Bushkill Garden Club,
Bushkill, Pa.
Mrs. George Young, President,
Bushkill, Pa.
Carlisle Garden Club,
Carlisle, Pa.
Mrs. Allan D. Thompson, President,
261 West Louther Street, Carlisle, Pa.
Century Qub of Scranton, Pa.
Garden Dept.,
Mrs. C. H. Welles,
615 Vine Street, Scranton, Pa.
Clarion County Garden Club,
Clarion Co., Pa.
Mrs. W. L. Fox, President,
Enfield, Montg. Co., Pa.
Club of Little Gardens,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mrs. Fred G. Blackburn, President,
6615 Kinsman Road, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Delaware County Horticultural Society,
Mr. H. F. Schearer, President,
30 Princeton Road, Brookline, Pa.
Dingman's Ferry Garden Club,
Dingman's Ferry, Pa.
Mrs. L. K. Lewis, President,
2004 West Ontario Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Four Counties Garden Club,
Mrs. J. Packard Laird, President,
Berwyn, Pa.
Garden Club of Allegheny Co.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mrs. Frank F. Brooks, President,
Shields, Pa.
Garden Qub of Bala-Cynwyd, The,
Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
Mrs. Philip Chase, President,
icy Levering Mill Road,
Ba\?i-Cynwyd, Pa.
Garden Club of Bradford,
Mrs. Joseph H. Bovaird, President,
119 Jackson Avenue, Bradford, Pa.
Garden Club of Butler,
Butler, Pa.
Mrs. George F. Jackson,
615 North McKean Street, Butler, Pa.
Garden Club of Kane,
Miss Christine Heim, President,
Biddle Street, Kane, Pa.
Garden Club of Lansdowne,
Mrs. Samuel P. Felix, President,
50 West Plumstead Avenue,
Lansdowne, Pa.
Garden Club of Philadelphia,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. John Hampton Barnes, President,
Devon, Pa.
Garden Qub of Wyoming Valley,
Wyoming, Pa.
Mrs. Alfred Sword, President,
Trucksville, Luzerne Co., Pa.
Garden Club of York,
Conservation Society of York Co.,
Mrs. Charles B. Heinley, Chairman,
347 Keesey Street, York, Pa.
Garden Workers,
Haverford, Pa.
Mrs. D. G. Romback, President,
424 Montgomery Avenue, Haverford, Pa.
Gardeners, The,
Mrs. Robert C. Wright, President,
Haverford, Pa.
Germantown Horticultural Society,
Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
Mr. S. Mendelson Meehan, President,
380 Vernon Road,
Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa.
Harrisburg Garden Club,
Mrs. Arthur H. Bailey, President,
Harrisburg, Pa.
Huntingdon Valley Garden Qub,
Mrs. Alan H. Reed, President,
"Arboretum," Hall Road,
Wyncote, Pa.
Irwin Garden Club,
Irwin, Westmoreland Co.
Mrs. C. M. Laffoon, President,
Irwin, Pa.
Kittanning Garden Club,
Kittanning, Pa.
Mrs. C. B. McNees, President,
101 Hazel Avenue, Kittanning, Pa.
43
Laurence County Club,
New Castle, Pa.
Mrs. W. C. Eckenroad,
Fairfield Avenue, New Castle, Pa.
Little Garden Qub of Sewickley, Pa.
Mrs. T. Bourdett Kirkendall, President,
202 Beaver Road, Sewickley, Pa.
Meadville Garden Club,
Meadville, Pa.
Miss Mary T. Heydrick, President,
Zn North Main Street, Meadville, Pa.
Media Garden Club,
Media, Pa.
Mrs. Lillian Schofield-Clough, President,
R. D. 2, Media, Pa.
Monroe County Garden Club,
E. Stroudsburg, Pa.
Mrs. R. Qifford Smith, President,
Shawnee-on-Delaware, Pa.
Montrose Garden Club,
Mrs. Louise Vail Grififes, President,
Montrose, Pa.
Neighborhood Garden Club,
North Side, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mrs. D. Lerch,
3616 California Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Norristown Garden Club,
Norristown, Pa.
Miss Estelle Thomas, President,
623 West Main Street, Norristown, Pa.
Oakmont Farm & Garden Club,
Mrs. H. S. Paul, Jr.,
904 Washington Avenue,
Oakmont, Allegheny Co., Pa.
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, The,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mr. C. F. C. Stout, President,
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Rutledge Horticultural Society,
Rutledge, Pa.
Mr. W. A. Whittaker, Secretary,
Box 255, Rutledge, Pa.
Society of Little Gardens,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. Howard W. Lewis, President.
1928 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
State College Garden Club,
State College, Pa.
Mrs. A. J. Wood, President,
410 Allen Street, State College, Pa.
State Federation of Pennsylvania Women,
Gardens,
Mrs. Frank A. Kaiser, Chairman,
1710 Monsey Avenue, Scranton, Pa.
Suburban Garden Club of Delaware Co.,
Upper Darby, Pa.
Mrs. Edward Cunningham, President,
"Spicewood," Bon Air, Upper Darby, Pa.
Trevose Horticultural Society,
Trevose, Pa.
Mr. Garrett V. Clark, President,
4404 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Twin Valleys' Garden Club,
Valley Forge, Pa.
Mrs. Boyle Irwin, 3d,
R. D., Phoenixville, Pa.
Village Garden Qub,
Sewickley, Pa.
Mrs. Strickland Kneass, President,
55 Thorn Street, Sewickley, Pa.
Watson, Carrie T., Garden Club,
Erie, Pa.
Mrs. Matthew Griswold, President,
265 West Tenth Street, Erie, Pa.
Weeders, The.
Mrs. Charles S. Starr, President,
Haverford, Pa.
West Chester Garden Club,
West Chester, Pa.
Mrs. E. Page Allinson, President,
Town's End Farm, West Chester, Pa.
Westmoreland Garden Club,
Greensburg, Pa.
Mrs. John Barclay, President,
320 West Pittsburgh Street, Greensburg,
Pa.
West Philadelphia Garden Club,
Mrs. William C. Dill, President,
902 South Forty-eighth Street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Woman's National Farm & Garden Asso.,
Keystone Branch.
Miss Emma Blakiston, President,
Fort Washington, Pa.
Woman's National Farm & Garden Asso.,
Somerset Unit,
Mrs. George L Krebs, President,
Somerset, Pa.
Member-.^t-Large
Miss Ruth Rapp,
47 East Market Street,
Bethlehem. Pa.
44
JAMES BOYD MEMORIAL MEDAL
Established 1930. To be offered each year as a prize at the National Show of
the American Peony Society. Awarded for the first time at the Twenty-seventh
Annual Peony Show, in Duluth, Minnesota, July 2, 1930, to Mr. A. B. Franklin,
Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the most distinguished entry — some exceptionally fine
seedlings.
TAMES BOYD MEMORIAL MEDAL
History of
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1827-1927
I
The History of the First Hundred Years of the Society's existence, written,
compiled and edited by its late President, James Boyd, has been published recently by
the Society.
It is a cloth-bound volume, of 500 pages, profusely illustrated, and includes a
section of 60 pages describing Philadelphia's gardens of a hundred years ago and today.
Copies may be obtained upon application to the Secretary, accompanied by check
for $5.00. (Postage prepaid.)
John C. Wister, Secretary
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
45
LIST OF MEMBERS
Additions and Corrections up to January 1, 1931
Members of the Society will confer a favor by giving the Secretary notice of
any change which they may desire to have made in their addresses or of any inac-
curacies in the spelling of names or the classification of profession or business, etc.,
which may be found in this list.
HONORARY MEMBERS
ELECTED
1930 Bailey, Dr. L. H., Ithaca, N. Y.
1926 Burrage, Mr. Albert C, 85 Ames
Bldg., Boston, Mass.
1926 Havemeyer, Mr. T. A., 25 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
1930 Keith, Mrs. Sidney W., 226 S. 21st
St., Philadelphia.
1902 Keller, Dr. Ida A., 4424 Osage Ave.,
Philadelphia.
1929 Alacfarlane, Dr. John M., 427 W.
Hansberry St., Germantown.
1922 Pennell, Dr. Francis W., 1900 Race
St., Philadelphia.
1930 Purdy, Mr. Carl, Ukiah, Calif.
1926 Thomas, Mr. George C, Jr., 1014
Crescent Drive, Beverly Hills.
Calif.
1875 Thunder, Mrs. Henry Gordon. 272
S. 23d St., Philadelphia.
LIFE AND ANNUAL MEMBERS
Life Members in bold-face type.
G. Gardeners. C. Commercial Growers. S. Seedsmen. F. Retail Florists.
N. Nurserymen. L. Landscape .Architects. W. Wholesale Florists.
Aaron, Mrs. Frederic E., 1839 Wynne-
wood Rd., Overbrook.
Abbott, :Miss Gertrude, 400 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Abbott, Miss Julia Boggs, 907 Radcliflfe
St., Bristol.
Acker, Mrs. Finley, 4943 Rubicam Ave.,
Germantown.
Acker, Mr. Warren T., Scranton.
Adam, Mrs. J. N., R. D. 5, West Chester.
Adams, Mr. Percy, care of Mr. Maurice
Bower Saul, Moylan-Rose Valley. (G.)
Adamson, Mrs. C. B., 415 W. Price St.,
Germantown.
Aiken, Mr. David, care of Mrs. Barclay
McFadden, Rosemont. (G.)
Aitken, Mrs. John N., 233 W. Hortter
St., Philadelphia.
Aitkin, Mrs. A. K., 28 Conshohocken Rd.,
Bala.
Albert, Mrs. John S., Wallingford.
Albrecht, Mr. John, Jr., Albrecht Nurser-
ies, Narberth. (N.)
Alexander, Mrs. E. G., Wyncote.
Alexander, Mrs. J. S., Box 377, Bryn
Mawr.
Alexander, Mr. W. W., Stokley and
Coulter Sts., Germantown.
Allen, Mrs. Edward F., Huntingdon
Valley.
Allen, Mrs. Frank B., Box 283, Narberth.
Allen, Mr. George R., 22 E. Essex Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Allen, Mrs. J. Rex, R. F. D. 2, Phoenix-
ville.
Allen, Miss Laura, 2100 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Allen, Mrs. Perry, 135 S. 18th St., Phila-
delphia.
Allinson, Mrs. E. Page, "Town's End
Farm," West Chester.
Alpern, Aliss Gertrude B., 6622 Greene
St., Germantown.
Ambler, Miss Alice H., Plymouth Meet-
ing.
Ambler, Mrs. Annie F., Plymouth Meet-
ing.
Anderson, Mr. Annesley M., Blue Church
Road, Morton.
Anderson, Mrs. Harold C, "Three
Gates," R. D. 1, Phoenixville, Port
Providence.
Andre, Mr. John R., 525 Spring Ave.,
Elkins Park. (C.)
Andrews, Mr. E. A., R. 55, Trenton,
N. J. (C)
46
Andrews, Mrs. Frank C, "Ferry Lane,"
Valley Forge.
Andrews, Mrs. Schofield, 424 W. Mer-
maid La., Chestnut Hill.
Annett, Mr. Cecil B., 310 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Arader, Mr. Walter Graham, 1920 N.
61st St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Archer, Mrs. F. Morse, 570 Warwick
Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Armistead, Mr. W. M., 223 S. Aberdeen
Ave., Wayne.
Armstrong, Mrs. F. Wallis, Meadow-
view Farms, Moorestown, N. J.
Armstrong, Mr. Leo A., 6730 Cornelius
St., Germantown.
Armstrong, Mr. William, Box 115, Ber-
wyn.
Arthur, Mr. Alec, care of Mrs. F. A. C.
Perrine, 413 W. State St., Trenton,
N. J. (G.)
Arthur, Mrs. Burch D., 157 Carpenter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Arthur, Mrs. James L., 6512 N. 7th St.,
Arthur, Miss Ruth L., 6512 N. 7th St.,
Oak Lane.
Ashbridge, Miss Eleanor, R. D. 2, Down-
ingtown.
Ashbridge, Miss Emily, Rosemont.
Ashbridge, Miss Lida, Rosemont,
Ashbridge, Mr. Richard L D., Downing-
town.
Ashenfelter, Mrs. L B., 2846 N. 26th St.,
Philadelphia.
Ashenfelter, Mrs. R. B., 103 Llanfair
Road, Ardmore.
Ashmead, Mrs. Duffield, Jr., Parke's Run
La., Ithan.
Ashton, Dr. Thomas G., Wynne wood.
Ashton, Mrs. Thomas G., Wynnewood.
Atkinson, Dr. Daniel A., 132 Oakwood
Ave., West View, Pittsburgh.
Atkinson, Mrs. Ellen D., 299 Maple Ave.,
Doylestown.
Atkinson, Miss Gertrude, 4106 Locust St.,
^ Philadelphia.
p Atkinson, Miss Margaretta, Berwyn.
Atkinson, Mr. William H., Riverview
Cemetery, Trenton, N. J.
Atkiss, Mr. William, 1145 Herbert St.,
Frankford.
Atterbury, Mrs. W. W., Radnor.
Atwater, Miss Sophia M., Chadds Ford.
Atwood, Mrs. John C, Jr., 325 Roum-
fort Road, Mt. Airy.
Austin, Miss Anna A., Rosemont.
Austin, Miss Lucyelle, Chestnut Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Austin, Mrs. William L., Rosemont.
Bachman, Mr. Frank H., Jenkintown.
Bacon, Mrs. Albert E., 6705 Springbank
La., Mt. Airy.
Bacon, Mrs. Ellis W., Wallingford.
Bailey, Mrs. Arthur H., 206 Paxtang
Ave., Paxtang.
Bailey, Mr. Charles H., 19 Greenfield
Ave., Ardmore.
Bailey, Mr. James B., Church Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Bailey, Mrs. James B., Church Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Bailey, Mrs. Walter A., "High Point,"
Merion.
Baily, Mrs. Albert L., Haverford.
Baily, Mr. Albert L., Jr., Westtown.
Baily, Mr. William L., Ardmore.
Baird, Mrs. John, Malvern.
Baird, Mrs. R. L., 6 E. Plumstead Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Baker, Mrs. Franklin, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Baker, Mrs. G. F., Rosemont.
Baldelli, Mr. Ivo, 1947 E. Passyunk Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Balderston, Mrs. Henry L., 34 Simpson
Rd., Ardmore.
Balderston, Miss Mary L., "Fairhope
Farm," Glen Mills.
Balderston, Mrs. Robert W., Vista
Homes, Apt. 15 F, 5840 Stony Island
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Baldi, Mrs. V. A., S. E. cor. Parker and
Jackson Aves., Collingdale.
Ball, Mrs. Edward Ephraim, Gray's
Lane, Haverford.
Ball, Mrs. Herbert K., 59 Sussex Road,
Wynnewood.
Ball, Miss Mary L., 901 Glenside Ave.,
Wyncote.
Ballinger, Mrs. Walter F., 6733 Emlen
St., Germantown.
Bancroft, Mrs. Samuel, Jr., Rockford,
Wilmington, Del.
Barbour, Mrs. Charles E., 244 School
House Lane, Germantown.
Barclay, Miss Emily, 612 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Barclay, Mr. Hugh Balfour, 1268 Mont-
gomery Ave., Narberth. (C.)
Barker, Miss Grace, 426 N. 33d St.,
Philadelphia.
Barnes, Mrs. A. C, Latches Lane,
Merion.
Barnes, Mrs. John Hampton, Devon.
Barnes, Mr. Parker T., 908 Highland
Ave., Palmyra, N. J.
Barney, Mrs. W. Pope, "Wychwood,"
Moylan.
Barrett, Mr. Franklin, 401-415 E. Wyom-
ing Ave., Philadelphia.
Barrie, Mrs. George, 116 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Barrows, Mr. Richard L., Haverford.
Barrows, Mrs. Richard L., Haverford.
Barton, Mrs. Harry L., 315 South Ave.,
Media.
Barton, Mrs. Thomas C, Pennway Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
47
Barton, Mr. Warren H., Madison, N. J.
Bartram, Mr. Frank M., Kennett Square.
(L.)
Batchelder, Mrs. G. H., Lakeview Apts.,
Wynnewood Ave., Narberth.
Bates, Miss Jane, care of Miss M. E.
Morris, Rosemont.
Baton, Miss Grace S., 5112 Newhall St.,
Germantown.
Battey, Mrs. William A., 605 Walnut
Lane, Haverford.
Battles, Mr. H. H., 114 S. 12th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mr. Charles, 119 S. 20th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mr. Samuel N., S. W. Cor.
Morris and Abbotsford Sts., German-
town. ( L. )
Bayer, Miss Elizabeth, The Tracy, 36th
and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Bayliss, Mrs. C. W., 210 Pembroke Ave.,
Wayne.
Beaumont, Mrs. G. Berry, Bryn Mawr.
Beckurts, Mrs. Charles L., Haverford.
Beebe, Mrs. Lucius, 2101 Porter St.,
Philadelphia.
Beegle, Mrs. Eliz. L., R. D. 4, Gibsonia.
Bein, Miss Amelia E., 1729 Wallace St.,
Philadelphia.
Bell, Mr. Edward J., 1428 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Bell, Mrs. H. A., 156 Union Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Belmont, Mrs. L. A., Latches Lane,
Merion.
Belville, Mrs. J. E., 5925 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Bencker, Mrs. Ralph B., Haverford.
Bentley, Miss Mary, Malvern.
Bentz, Mr. William P., 800 Lewis Tower,
225 S. 15th St., Philadelphia.
Benz, Mr. C. J., 210 Harry St., Consho-
hocken.
Berger, Mr. John, 1640 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Berger, Mrs. Thomas W., "Rolling
Acres," Valley Forge.
Bergner, Mrs. Amy Brooks, 615 Naylor's
Run Road, Llanerch.
Bernstein, Mr. Walter, North Wales.
(C.)
Bertsch, Mrs. M. E., 17 W. Kirklyn Ave.,
Kirklyn, Upper Darby.
Berwind, Mrs. Charles G., Radnor.
Berwind, Mrs. Henry A., 2112 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Bettison, Mrs. W. R., "Wilmarlyn,"
Wayne.
Bettle, Mrs. Griscom, Gladwyn.
Beury, Mrs. Charles E., 112 W. Upsal
St., Germantown.
Beyer, Mrs. Erich, 4 Wellington Road,
Stonehurst, Del. Co.
Bickley, Mrs. I. Walter, 341 Pelham
Road, Germantown.
Biddle, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Biddle, Mrs. Arthur, 1821 DeLancey
PI., Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Charles, Andalusia.
Biddle, Miss Christine W., Route 5,
West Chester.
Biddle, Miss Edith F., 1821 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Miss Emily W., 1828 De-
Lancey PI., Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. George, 2017 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Moncure, Valley Forge
Farms, Devon.
Biddle, Mrs. Nicholas, Jenkintown.
Bieg, Mrs. O. H., Ill E. Sedgwick St.,
Germantown.
Bigelow, Mr. Frederick S., Haverford.
Bikle, Mrs. Henry Wolf, Strafiford.
Billings, Mrs. Arthur E., Villa Nova.
Bird, Mrs. Minna M., 233 W. Hortter
St., Philadelphia.
Birkinbine, Miss Kate R., Bala-Cynwyd.
(L.)
Birnbrauer, Mr. Frank, 15th St. above
72d Ave., Oak Lane. (C.)
Bishop, Mrs. Richard E., Springbank La.,
Germantown.
Bisset, Miss Annie A., 2519 S. Garnet
St., Philadelphia.
Bitler, Mrs. Harry Y., 21 Oak Ave.,
Sharon Hill.
Black, Mrs. Ralph A., 513 West Chest-
nut St., Lancaster.
Blackburn, Mrs. Arthur H., 2814 Midvale
Ave., Germantown.
Blackburne, Mrs. John S., Box 111, Rose-
mont.
Blackman, Mrs. Wm. Jackson, R. F. D.
No. 4, Norristown.
Blaess, Mrs. August A., 22 Elmwood
Ave., Narberth.
Blakiston, Miss Emma, Fort Wash-
ington,
Blakiston, Miss Mary, Fort Washing-
ton.
Bobbink, Mr. L. C, East Rutherford,
N. J. (N.)
Bockius, Mr. Morris R., 2107 Fidelity-
Phila. Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Bodine, Mrs. S. Laurence, "Greenbank
Farm," Newtown Square.
Bodine, Mr. Samuel T., U. G. I.
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Boericke, Mrs. Gideon, Wynnewood.
Bohlen, Mrs. F. H., Jr., Woodleave Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Bohlen, Mrs. Woodville, Berwyn.
Bok, Mrs. W. Curtis, Pennstone Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Bollier, Mr. William, 1241 Dauphin Ave.,
Wyomissing. (G.)
48
Boltz, Miss Clara M., 241 West Chelten
Aye., Germantown. (L.)
Bond, Miss M. Florence, 345 Harrison
Ave., Elkins Park.
Bonnell, Mrs. Henry H., Ill W. More-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Bonsall, Mrs. R. T., 222 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Bonynge, Mrs. Frank, The Vicarage,
2631 Wharton St., Philadelphia.
Borden, Mr. Eldon L., 6 Harvard Rd.,
W. Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Borie, Mrs. Beauveau, Abington, Mont-
gomery Co.
Borie, Mr. C. L., Jr., 112 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Borie, Mrs. Charles Louis, 3d, Rydal.
Bostock, Mrs. Mary E., South Ave.,
Bryn Athyn.
Bosvi'ell, Mrs. Arthur, 127 W. Hortter
St., Mt. Airy.
Boswell, Mrs. J. Iverson, 305 Kent Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Bott, Mr. John B., 327 S. Main St.,
Greensburg,
Boudwin, Mrs. Helen A., 29 W. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Bovard, Mrs. H. F., Seminary Ave.,
Greensburg.
Boyce, Mrs. Henry S., Pembroke and
Aberdeen Aves., Wayne.
Boyd, Mr. Fisher L., Haverford.
Boyd, Mrs. Fisher L., Haverford.
Boyd, Mrs. Herbert W., 307 Waring
Road, Elkins Park.
Boyd, Mr. William, 250 W. Tulpehocken
St., Germantown.
Boyer, Mrs. Charles S., 205 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Bracken, Mr. Francis B., 430 Aliens
Lane, Philadelphia.
Bradford, Mrs. John M., 136 Coulter
Ave., Ardmore.
Bradley, Mrs. Wm. H., 407 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
Brakeley, Mr. George A., 300 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Branson, Mrs. Thomas F., Box 44, Rose-
mont.
Braun, Mrs. C F. Harold, Kent Road,
Wynnewood.
Brazier, Miss E. Josephine, Kenne-
bunkport, Maine.
Brazier, Mr. H. Bartol, Haverford.
Breck, Mr. William R., Rosemont.
Breck, Mrs. William R., Rosemont.
Bregy, Mrs. Louis, 5941 Woodbine Ave.,
Overbrook.
Brengle, Mr. Henry G., Radnor.
Bright, Miss Anna Linn, 2220 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Bright, Miss Mary DeHaven, 215 Wal-
nut Ave., Wayne.
Bringhurst, Mr. Edward, "Rockwood,"
Wilmington, Del.
Bringhurst, Miss Mary T., "Rockwood,"
Wilmington, Del.
Brinton, Mrs. Joseph Hill, 414 S. Car-
lisle St., Philadelphia.
Brinton, Miss Mary H., Jr., R. F. D. 4,
West Chester.
Britton, Mrs. A. D., 816 S. 47th St.,
Philadelphia.
Brock, Mrs. John Penn, Lebanon.
Brock, Mrs. John W., Jr., Wyncote.
Brockie, Mrs. Arthur H., 8013 Crefelt
St., Chestnut Hill.
Bromer, Mrs. Jacob A., Schwenkville,
Montg. Co.
Bromer, Mrs. Ralph S., 504 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Philadelphia.
Bromley, Mrs. Phebe, York Rd. and
Lakeside Ave., Oak Lane.
Brooke, Mrs. Francis M., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Brown, Mrs. Ada A., 8012 Frankford
Ave., Philadelphia.
Brown, Mr. Andrew V., Bryn Athyn.
Brown, Mrs. Charles L., 1426 Mt. Ver-
non St., Philadelphia.
Brown, Mrs. Charles T., Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Brown, Mrs. Ellis Y., Downingtown.
Brown, Mrs. George H., 314 E. Lan-
caster Ave., St. Davids.
Brown, Mrs. Harry M., 7440 Devon St.,
Mt. Airy.
Brown, Miss Helen M., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Brown, Mrs. J. Howard, 131 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore.
Brown, Mrs. John A., Jr., Wayne.
Brown, Miss M. Etta, 100 Yale Rd.,
Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Brown, Mrs. Medford J., Haywood Rd.,
Merion.
Brown, Mr. Samuel B., Box 67, Haver-
ford.
Brown, Mrs. Samuel B., Box 67, Haver-
ford.
Brown, Mrs. T. Wistar, 3d, 5920 City
Ave., Overbrook.
Brown, Mr. Theodore E., Oak Rd., East
Falls Station.
Brown, Mr. Thomas, 2538 N. 34th St.,
Philadelphia. (G.)
Brown, Mrs. Wm. Findlay, P. O. Box
4386, Chestnut Hill.
Brownell, Miss Eleanor O., Bryn Mawr.
Browning, Mrs. Edward, Rosemont.
Brubaker, Mrs. Albert P., 3426 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Bruen, Mrs. Albert E., 330 Roumfort
Road, Mt. Airy.
Brumbaugh, Mrs. G. Edwin, Gwynedd
Valley.
49
Buchanan, Mrs. William, Ft. Washing-
ton.
Bucher, Mr. Otto, Gardener, Eagleville
Sanatorium, Eagleville. (G.)
Buck, Mrs. C. Douglass, "Buena Vista,"
Wilmington, Del.
Buck, Mrs. Stuart W., Cloverly La.,
Rydal.
Buckenham, Dr. J. E. Burnett, 8601
Germantown Ave., Chesnut Hill.
Bucknell, Mr. Samuel R., Concordville
P. O., Del. Co.
Buek, Mrs. Tycho, Penn Road, Wynne-
wood.
Buffum, Mrs. William P., 41 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Bullock, Mr. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore.
Bullock, Mrs. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore. (L.)
Bullock, Mrs. Horace, 150 Hodge Rd.,
Princeton, N. J.
Burk, Mr. Louis, 1200 N. 3d St., Phila-
delphia.
Burpee, Mr. David, 485 N. 5th St.
Philadelphia. (S.)
Burpee, Mr. W. Atlee, Jr., 485 N. 5th
St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Burrell, Mrs. Horace H., 404 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Burroughs, Mr. A. W., 262 Mansion
Ave., Audubon, N. J.
Bursk, Mr. R. G., 216 S. Front St.,
Philadelphia.
Burt, Miss Edith B., 1203 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Burt, Miss M. Theodora, 1203 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Burton, Mr. Alfred, Wyndmoor, Chest-
nut Hill. (C.)
Burton, Mr. George, Wyndmoor, Chest-
nut Hill. (C.)
Burton, Mr. John, Wyndmoor, Chestnut
Hill. (C.)
Busch, Mr. Herman F., R. D. 2, Berkeley
Hills, Glenshaw.
Bush-Brown, Mr. James, Architect's
Bldg., 17th and Sansom Sts., Philadel-
phia. (L.)
Bush-Brown, Mrs. James, Quarry Farm,
Ambler.
Busser, Mrs. Frank S., 720 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Butcher, Miss Margaret, Llanfair and
Wister Roads, Ardmore.
Butler, Mrs. Edgar H., W. Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Butler, Mr. Jonathan K, 18 Colfax Rd.,
Oakmont, Upper Darby P. O.
Butler, Mrs. William, Jr., 424 N. High
St., West Chester.
Byler, Mrs. Paul Gabriel, 5814 Coleman
St., Overbrook.
Cabeen, Mrs. F. Von A., Old Conestoga
Rd., Devon.
Cadbury, Miss Eleanor A., 19 S. White
Hall Rd., Norristown.
Cadbury, Mrs. William E., 408 E. Wood-
lawn Ave., Germantown.
Cadwalader, Mrs. John, Jr., 2100 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwalader, Mrs. Lambert, Villa Nova.
Cadwalader, Miss Sophia, 1519 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwallader, Mrs. T. Sidney, Yardley.
Cahan, Mrs. M. C, B 101, Oak Lane
Manor, Oak Lane.
Cahn, Mrs. Tillman, 529 Elkins Ave.,
fyllcins P3J*k
Calder, Mrs. 'W. C, 4310 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Caldwell, Mrs. J. Emott, Bryn Mawr.
Calvert, Mrs. Amelia S., Apple Top
Farm, Box 14, Cheyney.
Calwell, Mr. C. S., Wissahickon and
Westview Aves., Germantown.
Cameron, Mrs. S. P., 510 W. Coulter St.,
Germantown.
Camp, Mr. George R., Malvern.
Campbell, Mr. Alfred M., Strafford.
(C.)
Campbell, Mrs. E. Perry, 8117 Eastern
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Campbell, Mrs. Wilson A., Creek Drive,
Sewickley.
Canby, Mrs. W. P., Box 116, Downing-
town.
Canby, Mrs. William Marriott, Wissa-
hickon and Westview Aves., German-
town.
Caner, Mr. Harrison K., Jr., 2118 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Capelle, Mrs. George S., Jr., 1303 Dela-
ware Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Capp, Mr. Seth Bunker, 218 S. 19th
Street, Philadelphia.
Cardeza, Mr. T. D. M., E. Washing-
ton La., Germantown.
Carpenter, Mrs. J. S., Jr., 1335 Howard
Ave., Pottsville.
Carpenter, Mrs. John T., Radnor.
Carpenter, Mrs. W. S., Jr., 18th and Ris-
ing Sun Lane, Wilmington, Del.
Carr, Mrs. James Wilson, 288 Maple
Ave., Doylestown.
Carroll, Mr. E. A., Box 166, Lansdale.
Carroll, Mrs. Franklin B., 19 Elmwood
Ave., Narberth.
Carrow, Miss Sara E., 416 Church Lane,
Germantown.
Carson, Mrs. John B., 1802 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Carson, Airs. John T., Box 162, Island
Heights, N. J.
Carson, Mr. Joseph, Winsford Rd., Bryn
Mawr.
50
Carson, Miss Mildred Lee, 54 E. Stewart
Ave., Lansdowne.
Carson, Mrs. Robert J., 147 E. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Carstairs, Mrs. J. H., Haverford.
Carter, Mrs. James N., "Westover,"
Chadds Ford.
Carter, Miss Sarah J., care of H. G.
Slacks, 40 Kent Rd., Stonehurst, Up-
per Darby.
Cartledge, Mr. A. B., 1514 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Cartmell, Mr. B. G., care of Mr. Harold
Pitcairn, Bryn Athyn.
Cary, Mrs. C Reed, Ellet Lane and Wis-
sahickon Ave., Mt. Airy.
Case, Miss Marian Roby, Hillcrest
Gardens, Weston, Mass. (C.)
Casey, Mr. Bertram T., Thorofare, N. J.
Casey, Mrs. Herbert S., 18 Hampstead
Road, Wynnewood.
Cassedy, Mr. Frank W., 545 Runnemede
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Catlin, Mrs. Sheldon, St. Davids Road,
St. Davids.
Caudill, Mrs. W. H., Middletown Rd.,
Lima.
Chaffee, Mrs. Carl H., 395 Swarthmore
Ave., Swarthmore.
Chamberlin, Mr. John R., St. Davids.
Chambers, Miss Blanche Arnold, 914 N.
63d St., Philadelphia.
Chambers, Miss Mary B., Newtown,
Bucks Co.
Chambers, Mr. William W., 116 Ard-
more Ave., Ardmore.
Chandler, Mrs. A. F. M., Haverford.
Chapman, Mrs. Edward, Norwood Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Chapman, Mr. EUwood B., 731 Harvard
Ave., Swarthmore.
Chapman, Mrs. EUwood B., 731 Harvard
Ave., Swarthmore.
Chapman, Mrs. Joseph, Haverford.
Chapman, Mrs. Julia N., 816 Carpenter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Chase, Miss Clara T., 261 S. Van Pelt
St., Philadelphia.
Chase, Mrs. Clement E., 410 Oak Lane,
Wayne.
Chase, Mrs. E. D., 126 W. Birch St.,
Hazleton.
Chase, Mrs. Philip, 125 Levering Mill
Rd., Cynwyd.
Chase, Mrs. Randall, 8241 Crittenden St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Chase, Mr. Samuel Hart, 557 Pelham
Rd., Germantown.
Chen, Miss Jennie C. J., School of Hor-
ticulture, Ambler.
Cheston, Mrs. Charles S., Whitemarsh.
Cheston, Mrs. Edward M., Ambler.
Cheston, Mr. James, Jr., care of Girard
Trust Co., Philadelphia.
Chew, Mrs. Benjamin, "Vanor," Radnor.
Chew, Miss Elizabeth B., "Cliveden,"
Germantown.
Cheyney-Bartol, Mrs. C, Cheyney, Del.
Co.
Chichester, Mrs. Arthur M., "Wid-
worthy," Leesburg, Va.
Chillas, Miss Marie de la R., 233 Winona
Ave., Germantown.
Chrisman, Mr. C. S., 435 W. Miner St.,
West Chester.
Chrystie, Mrs. Walter, 40 Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Church, Mrs. Herbert, Villa Nova.
Churchman, Mrs. W. Morgan, Penllyn.
Clamer, Mrs. G. H., 128 Woodland Road,
Asheville, N. C.
Clark, Mr. C. M., Queen Lane, Falls
of Schuylkill.
Clark, Mrs. Charles Davis, 2215 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Clark, Mr. Clarence H., 3d, Wynnewood.
Clark, Mrs. Clarence H., 3d, Wynnewood.
Clark, Mrs. Frederic L., Wissahickon
Ave. and Strafford St., Germantown.
Clark, Mr. Garrett V., 4404 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Clark, Mr. Herbert L., Bryn Mawr.
Clark, Mrs. Joseph S., Kates Hall, Chest-
nut Hill.
Clark, Mr. Lewis N., 2101 Clarkson Ave.,
Germantown.
Clark, Mrs. Lewis N., 2101 Qarkson
Ave., Germantown.
Clark, Mrs. Percy H., Cynwyd.
Clark, Mrs. Roy E., 62 Lodges Lane,
Bala-Cynvi^/^d.
Clark, Mrs. Sallie W., 4404 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.-
Glark, Mrs. Sydney P., McCallum St.
and Elbow Lane, Mt. Airy.
Clarke, Mrs. Clement J., 30 W. Upsal
St., Mt. Airy.
Clattenburg, Mrs, A. Edwin, St. John's
Rectory, Bala-Cynwyd.
Clay, Mrs. Curtis, 122 Valley Rd., Ard-
more.
Clemens, Dr. Thomas J., 2008 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Qemens, Mrs. Thomas J., Southampton.
Clement, Mrs. Allen B., 224 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Clothier, Miss Caroline, "Ballytore,"
Wynnewood.
Clothier, Mrs. Clarkson, Haverford.
Clothier, Mrs. Isaac H., Jr., Radnor.
Clothier, Mrs. Morris L., Villa Nova.
Clothier, Mrs. Walter, Wynnewood.
Clothier, Mrs. William J., Valley Hill
Farm, Valley Forge.
Cloud, Miss Beatrice M.-P., Ardmore.
Cloud, Miss Dorothy M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
51
Cloud, Miss Katharine M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Clough, Mrs. Lillian Schofield, R. D. 2,
Media.
Clower, Miss Eleanor V., Zlll N. Park
Ave., Philadelphia.
Clyde, Mrs. Caroline B., P. O. Box 12,
Bryn Mawr.
Clyde, Miss Margaret, The Bellevue-
Stratford, Philadelphia.
Coates, Mrs. J. Lloyd, Golf House Rd.,
Ardmore.
Cobb, Mr. E. F., 510 Merwyn Rd.,
Merion.
Cobb, Mr. Murray A., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Cobb, Mrs. Murray A., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Cochran, Mrs. Wm. Allison, Wyncote.
Coho, Mrs. Eugene P., Cold Spring
Farm, Ambler.
Colby, Miss A. L., Torresdale.
Colegrove, Mr. John I., Lock Box 731,
Sheffield. (C.)
Coleman, Miss Edith, White Horse Rd.,
Phoenixville.
Coleman, Mrs. G. Dawson, Haverford
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Coleman, Mr. Leonard W., "Sunny
Corners," Prospect Avenue, Chestnut
Hill.
Coles, Mrs. Anna M., 6742 Irving Ave.,
Merchantville, N. J.
Coles, Miss Charlesanna B., 6742 Irving
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Coles, Miss Mary R. 2010 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Coles, Mrs. Strieker, "Alscot," Bryn
Mawr.
Colfelt. Mrs. Brinton W., Righters Mill
Road, Wynnewood.
Colket. Mrs. C. Howard, The Ritten-
house Plaza, Philadelphia.
Collingwood, Miss Jennie, 3941 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Collingwood, Mrs. Joseph R., 510 S. 41st
St., Philadelphia.
Collins, Mrs. Alan C., Rydal.
Collins, Mrs. H. B., 4114 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Collins, Mrs. Lester, Moorestown, Burl-
ington Co.. N. J.
Collins, Mrs. Philip S., Wyncote.
Colton, Mrs. Sabin W., Jr., Bryn
Mawr.
Combs, Mrs. Roger B., "The Meadow
House," Whitford.
Comegys, Miss Amy, 4205 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Comfort, Mr. William, care of Mr. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Comly, Miss Emilie C, Hartford, Burl-
ington Co., N. J.
Conard, Mr. C. Wilfred, Lansdowne.
Connelly, Miss Gladys, "Wayside," Corn-
wells.
Connors, Mrs. Thomas A., 472 E. Illinois
Road, Lake Forest, 111.
Constable, Mr. Martin L., 4941 N. 6th
St., Philadelphia.
Converse, Mr. Bernard T., Rosemont.
Converse, Miss Mary E., Rosemont.
Conwell, Mr. H. Ernest, Milton, Del.
(N.)
Cook, Mrs. C. P., N. Rockland Rd.,
Merion.
Cook, Airs. Edmund Garretson, Pennock
Terrace, Lansdowne.
Cook, Mrs. Henry W., 5339 Knox St.,
Germantown.
Cooke, Mrs. George J., "Dawesfield,"
Ambler.
Cooke, Mr. Jay, "Brookfield," New and
Stenton Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Jay, "Brookfield," New
and Stenton Aves, Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Jay, 2d, Montgomery Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Morris Llewellyn, St.
Georges Road, Chestnut Hill.
Cooper, Mr. Qark, Jr., 417 E. 2d St.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Cooper, Mrs. Walter I., 250 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Cope, Mrs. Edward, 124 W. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Cornell, Miss Ella C, Boothwyn R. D.
Cornett, Mr. S. M., Roanoke, Va. (N.)
Cornog, Mrs. I. C, 48 E. Jefferson St.,
Media.
Corson, Mr. C. Russell, Curren Terrace,
Norristown.
Corson, Mrs. Edward F., Maple Hill,
Plymouth Meeting.
Corson, Mrs. George, Plymouth Meeting.
Corson, Mr. H. H., Avondale, Chester
Co. (N.)
Costain, Mrs. T. B., The Crest, Beth-
ayres.
Coster, Mr. William H., Jr., 159 Rhoads
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Couttes, Mr. Archibald, The Highlands,
Ambler. (G.)
Cover, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Cox, Mrs. T. B., Wyncote.
Coxe, Mrs. A. B., Paoli.
Coxa, Mrs. Charles Edmund, Malvern.
Coxe, Mrs. Henry B., Penllyn.
Cozens, Miss Henrietta, "Cogshill," Allen
Lane, Philadelphia.
Craft, Mrs. E. F., Race St., Ambler.
Craig, Mr. James A., 125 W. Louden St.,
Philadelphia.
Crane, Mrs. Theron I., Bellevue-Strat-
ford Hotel, Broad and Walnut Sts.,
Philadelphia.
52
Cranmer, Mrs. Walter S., 48 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Craven, Miss Jessie T., care of Mrs.
George D. Richmond, Nantucket, Mass.
Craven, Mr. William H., Enfield.
Craven, Mrs. William H., Enfield.
Crawford, Mrs. Alan, White Horse Rd.,
Devon.
Crawford, Mr. John, care of Mr. S. M.
Vauclain, Rosemont. (G.)
Crawford, Mrs. L. B., 201 Mt. Vernon
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Crellin, Miss Elizabeth E., 1005 Vine St.,
Scranton.
Cresson, Mrs. Caleb, Oakland Hall,
Oaks.
Cresson, Miss Caroline C, N. E. Cor.
Clapier and Schuyler Sts., German-
town.
Cresson, Mr. William J., 32 Amherst
Ave., Swarthmore.
Cresswell, Mrs. Charles T., 15 W. Bells
Mill Road, Chestnut Hill.
Cridland, Mr. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside. (L.)
Cridland, Mrs. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside.
Crittenden, Mrs. William J., Shields,
Allegheny Co.
Crofoot, Mr. George E., 4535 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Croft, Mrs. S. Harold, 435 State Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Cronin, Mrs. Charles I., 78 E. Stewart
Ave., Lansdowne.
Crosman, Mrs. J. H., Jr., Glenn Rd., Ard-
more.
Crowder, Miss Emma A., West Upsal
St., Germantown.
Crowninshield, Mrs. F. B., Mont-
chanin, Del.
Crozer, Mr. George K., Jr., Montgomery
Ave. and Cherry Lane, Wynnewood.
Culver, Dr. Martin B., 332 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Cummings, Mr. George, Drexel Hill,
Delaware Co. (C.)
Curmingham, Mr. Edward, Spicewood,
Bon Air, Upper Darby P. O.
Cunningham, Mr. Fred. E., 212 Third
Ave., Haddon Heights, N. J.
Cunningham, Mrs. J. W., 1 W. Chest-
nut St., West Chester.
Cunnius, Mr. Howard, 524 Mulberry St.,
Reading.
Curtis, Mrs. Cyrus H. K., Wyncote.
Curtis, Mr. John R., 302 N. Jericho Road,
Abington.
Gushing, Mrs. Herbert Howard, The Sat-
terlee Apt. 502, 4517 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Dager, Mrs. Mary T., R. F. D. 1, Hat-
boro.
Dale, Mr. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Dale, Mrs. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Dallett, Miss Lucy, 307 South Ave.,
Media.
Dancy, Mrs. Henry H., Main & Bridge
Sts., Phoenixville.
Danenhauer, Mr. George E., Box 5,
Primos, Del. Co.
Daniel, Mrs. Channing W., St. Davids.
Daniels, Mrs. Harry C, 3122 W. Coulter
St., Philadelphia.
Daniels, Miss Mabel, 55 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Dannenbaum, Mrs. Walter, 1011 Sharp-
less Ave., Melrose Park.
Darlington, Miss Isabel, 16 E. Market
St., West Chester.
Darlington, Dr. Lewis W., 24 Pennock
Terrace, Lansdowne.
Darlington, Mrs. Percy Smedley, 418 N.
High St., West Chester.
David, Mrs. Edward W., 310 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Davidson, Mrs. William G., Brentwood
Farms, Abington.
Davies, Mrs. James A., Rose Tree Rd.,
Media.
Davis, Mrs. Carroll P., 846 Ridge Ave.,
N. W., Pittsburgh.
Davis, Mrs. J. Leslie, Haverford.
Davis, Miss Mildred, 713 Redwood Ave.,
Yeadon.
Davison, Mrs. William M., Jr., 90 W.
Mermaid La., Chestnut Hill.
Dawkins, Mr. Y. P., 22 Fairiston Rd.,
WajTie.
Dawson, Mr. George Walter, Univ. of
Penna. Dormitories, Philadelphia.
Day, Mr. Charles, St. George's Rd., Mt.
Airy.
Day, Mrs. Charles, St. George's Rd., Mt.
Airy.
Day, Mrs. Frank Miles, Allen's La., Mt.
Airy.
Deacon, Miss Bessie, 15 Oak Ave.,
Sharon Hill.
Deacon, Mrs. G. H., McKean Ave. and
Clapier St., Germantown.
Deacon, Mrs. Horace P., 445 W. Price
St., Germantown.
Deal, Miss Emma, 308 W. Lancaster
Ave., Wayne.
Dean, Mrs. J. Simpson, Montchanin,
Del.
Dearden, Mr. Henry, care of Harrison,
Mertz & Emlen, 5328 Greene St., Ger-
mantown. (L.)
Debes, Mrs. Victor A., 1209 Folsom Ave.,
Moore.
DeGroat, Mrs. H. R., 1913 Diamond St.,
Philadelphia.
Delaplaine, Miss Meribah, Merion Sta-
tion.
53
DeLong, Mrs. Perce, Princeton Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Demuth, Mr. Howard E., 210 Garrett
Ave., Swarthmore.
Denegre, Mrs. William P., Rydal.
Denison, Mr. Cyril W., Jenkintown P. O.
Denney, Mrs. George H., 323 Pembroke
Road, Cynwyd.
DePuy, Miss Clara, 312 Florence Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Derby, Mrs. Charles R, 235 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Derbyshire, Mrs. H. B., 71 Euclid Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
deSherbinin, Mr. Eric M., Sycamore and
Cross Rds., Merion.
deSherbinin, Mrs. Eric M., Sycamore and
Cross Roads, Merion.
Detweiler, Mrs. George A., Griffin St.,
Phoenixville.
Devney, Mrs. Frank C, Forest City.
DeWitt, Mr. Herman B., 85 Yeager Ave.,
Forty Fort.
Dick, Mr. John, Jr., 616 Longacre
Blvd., Yeadon.
Dick, Mrs. William A., 8240 Crittenden
St., Chestnut Hill.
Dickey, Mrs. Charles D., Jr., Chestnut
Hill.
Dickey, Miss Maria Donnell, West St.,
Media.
Dickson, Miss Agnes MacA., "Hill-0-
Skye," Wawa.
Dill, Mrs. \yilliam A., 902 S. 48th St.,
Philadelphia.
Dillon, Mr. James L., Radnor.
d'Invilliers, Miss Virginia, 6630 McCal-
lum St., Germantown.
Disque, Mr. Robert C, Strath Haven
Ave., Swarthmore.
Disston, Mrs. Jacob S., Chestnut Hill.
Diven, Mrs. Louis, 119 Derwen Rd., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Dixon, Mr. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Mrs. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Mrs. J. Shipley, Villa Nova.
Doak, Mrs. S. E., 436 W. School La.,
Germantown.
Doan, Mrs. C. E., Blue Bell, Montg. Co.
Dodds, Mr. John H., 344 Walnut St.,
Jenkintown.
Dohan, Mrs. Joseph M., Darling P. O.,
Del. Co.
D'Olier, Mrs. Franklin, 98 Madison Ave.,
Morristown, N. J.
Donaghy, Mr. Albert, Jr., 7811 Chel-
wynde Ave., Philadelphia.
Donahower, Mrs. Clifford L., Green-
wood Terrace Apt., Jenkintown.
Donaldson, Mr. Henry H., 4417 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Donnaldson, Miss Helen, Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Ambler.
Doolittle, Mr. Fred J., Oak Lane.
Dornbirer, Miss Edith, Ithan.
Dorp, Mr. Louis V., R. F. D. 3, Norris-
town. ( C. )
Dorp, Mr. V. V., 1170 N. 63d St., Phila-
delphia.
Dothard, Mrs. Robert J., 221 Wynne-
wood Ave., Narberth.
Dougherty, Miss Helen E., "The Pines,"
School House La., Germantown.
Dougherty, Mr. Thomas H., Jr., 1522
Locust St., Philadelphia.
Doughten, Mr. Maurice B., R. D. 1,
Royersford.
Doughten, Mrs. Maurice B., R. D. 1,
Royersford.
Doughten, Mrs. William W., 228 S. 20th
St., Philadelphia.
Douglas, Mrs. Edward V., 30 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Douglas, Mr. Malcolm G., 30 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Downing, Mrs. F. B., Box 564, Erie.
Downing, Miss Matilde C, Bryn Mawr
Gables, Bryn Mawr.
Downs, Mrs. Harold DeLancey, 5th Ave.
and Fayette St., Conshohocken.
Downs, Dr. T. McKean, 8840 Towanda
St., Chestnut Hill.
Doyle, Mr. William H., Cassatt Ave.,
Berwyn. (N.)
Drake, Miss Helen P., 4256 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Draper, Mrs. J. A., Jr., Penna. Ave. and
Tower Road, Wilmington, Del.
Drayton, Mrs. Frederick R., Villa Nova.
Dreer, Mrs. William F., Rosemont.
Drew, Mrs. Ernest C, Box 331, Nar-
berth.
Drew-Bear, Mrs. Jessie, care of The
London Flower Shop, 1800 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Drexel, Mr. George W. C, 350 Drexel
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Drinker, Mrs. James B., Foxchase Road,
Jenkintown.
Duane, Mrs. William, Haverford.
Dubs, Mr. J. George, 505 E. Tulpe-
hocken St., Germantown.
Dubs, Mrs. J. George, 505 E. Tulpe-
hocken St., Germantown.
Dudley, Mrs. E. Lawrence, 336 S. 19th
St., Philadelphia.
Duerr, Miss Amelia B., 2049 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Duerr, Mrs. Mary A., Naaman's-on-the-
Delaware, Claymont, Del.
Duffield, Miss Louise C, 212 S. 39th St.,
Philadelphia.
Dugan, Mr. Dominick, 1 N. Warner
Ave., Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Duhring, Mrs. H. Louis, 208 Rex Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Duhring, Miss Lucy B., 71 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
54
Duke, Miss Florence B., 1508 W. Alle-
gheny Ave., Philadelphia.
Duke, Mrs. J. O., Swarthmore.
Dulles, Mrs. Heatly C, Villa Nova.
Duncan, Mr. James, care of Miss Anne
Thomson, Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Dunkelberger, Mr. George G., P. O. Box
6, Flourtown.
Dunlap, Mr. George M., Jr., Chester Pike
and Clifton Ave., Sharon Hill.
Dunn, Mr. Sydney B., Haverford.
duPont, Mrs. A. Felix, Box 31, Wilming-
ton, Del.
duPont, Miss Aileen M., 1026 duPont
Bldg., Wilmington, Del.
duPont, Mrs. E. Paul, Montchanin, Del.
duPont, Mr. Eugene, "Owl's Nest,"
Greenville, Del.
duPont, Mrs. Eugene, "Owl's Nest,"
Greenville, Del.
duPont, Mrs. H. B., "Crestlea," Ard-
more.
duPont, Mr. H. P., Winterthur, Del.
duPont, Mr. Pierre S., "Longwood,"
Kennett Square.
duPont, Mrs. William, Jr., Rosemont.
duPont, Mrs. William K., Box 52,
Wilmington, Del.
Durgin, Miss Mary E., 332 Kathmere
Road, Brookline, Del. Co.
Durie, Mr. William, "Sweetwater Farm,"
Glen Mills.
Durnall, Miss Ethel M. Bartram, The
Coach & Four Inn, Coatesville.
Dursch, Mr. Frank C. J., 318 E. Chelten
Ave., Germantown.
Dutton, Miss K. M., Rosemont.
Dwight, Mr. Edmund Waterman, 1729
Walnut St., Philadelphia.
Dyer, Mrs. William E. S., Old York
Road, Noble.
Eades, Mrs. William H., Englemere
Farm, Downingtown.
Eagleson, Mrs. John, Wyncote.
Eagleson, Mrs. William B., Wyncote.
Earle, Miss Elinor, 8840 Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Earle, Mrs. Ralph, Haverford.
Earnest, Mrs. John K., 313 Euclid Ave.,
Ambler.
Earp, Miss Anne Tucker, 4619 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia.
Easby, Mrs. Francis H., 3316 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Easby ,_ Mr. John P., 112 Rockland Road,
Merion.
Eastman, Mrs. B. Dobson, Falls of
Schuylkill.
Eastman, Miss Dorothy D., Smethport,
McKean Co.
Eastwick, Mr. Andrew M., Wallingford.
Eavenson, Mrs. William J., 2201 Chest-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Ebeling, Mr. Ralph George, 325 N. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Eberbach, Mrs. Nelson F., 441 W. Staf-
ford St., Germantown.
Eckford, Miss Eugenia, Town Hill
School, Wilmington, Del.
Eddis, Mr. George H., 3218 N. Stillman
St., Philadelphia.
Edelman, Mr. Samuel, 474 N. 6th St.,
Philadelphia.
Edgar, Mr. Robert J., 632 Montgomery
Ave., Narberth.
Edgcomb, Mr. Ervin R., 239 Harvey St.,
Germantown.
Edge, Mrs. Jacob, Downingtown.
Edmonds, Mrs. Franklin S., Whitemarsh.
Edwards, Mr. George W., 135 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Edwards, Mrs. J. R. Lincoln, Lansdowne
and Lincoln Aves., Lansdowne.
Edwards, Mr. W. E., Rosemont. (L.)
Egbert, Miss Linda, 1403 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Ehrmann, Mrs. J. William, 311 Lenox
Rd., Brookline, Del. Co.
Eisele, Mr. Jacob D., Riverton, N. J.
(C.)
Eisenmenger, Mrs. Carl H., Arden, Del.
Elgin, Miss Hattie, R. F. D. 3, Vienna,
Fairfax Co., Va.
Elkins, Mrs. George W., Elkins Park.
Elliot, Mrs. R. McCall, Bryn Mawr.
Elliott, Mrs. George A., 1 Red Oak Road,
Wilmington, Del.
Elliott, Mrs. Harold H., 106 Argyle Rd.,
Ardmore.
Elliott, Mr. Simon, care of Mrs. George
Vaux, Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Elliott, Mrs. William J., Thornbrook,
Rosemont.
Elliott, Mrs. William T., 117 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Ellis, Miss A. Willoughby G., The Well-
ington, Philadelphia.
Ellis, Mr. Frank H., 3d, "Casa Blanca."
Lansdowne.
Ellis, Mrs. Thomas S., "Green Acres,"
Ellis Farm, West Chester.
Ellis, Mrs. William J., 906 Morgan Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Ellis, Mr. William S., Foxhill Farm,
Bryn Mawr.
Ellis, Mrs. William S., Foxhill Farm,
Bryn Mawr.
Ellison, Mrs. H. Howard, Jr., "Cre-
mona," Villa Nova.
Eltinge, A/[rs. Frank R., 27 W. Upsal St.,
Mt. Airy P. O.
Elwyn, Mr. Thomas L., 1606 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Ely, Miss Gertrude, Bryn Mawr.
Ely, Mrs. Van Horn, Haverford.
Ely, Mrs. William Newbold, Jr.,
Gwynedd Valley.
55
Embery, Mr. William, 4932 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Emlen, Mr. Arthur C, 5328 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Emlen, Mrs. George W., Jr., 1030 E.
Washington Lane, Germantown.
Emmerling, Mrs. F. C, 3436 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Ensslen, Mrs. Carl; 321 Summit Ave.,
West Reading.
Erben, Mrs. George K., "Sunnyside,"
Rosemont.
Erdman, Mrs. Henry P., 1020 Westview
Ave., Mt. Airy Station.
Ernst, Miss Helen, 100 Swarthmore Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Ervin, Mrs. Spencer, Bala.
Ervin, Mrs. Wilfred, 308 Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Eshner, Mrs. A. A., 1019 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Eshner, Miss Juliet F., 1019 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Esler, Mrs. Lewis H., 254 Hathaway
Lane, Wynnewood.
Estabrook, Mrs. E. B., 3101 W. Coulter
St., Philadelphia.
Esty, Mrs. Robert P., 207 Llanfair Road,
Ardmore.
Evans, Mrs. George B., Rosemont.
Evans, Mr. Herbert B., 58 Price St.,
Lansdowne.
Evans, Mrs. Lawrence R., Box 229, Rut-
ledge.
Evans, Mrs. Lawton, 2226 Pickens Rd.,
Augusta, Ga.
Evans, Miss Mary, Bryn Mawr.
Evans, Mrs. Ralph B., Haverford.
Evans, Mrs. Rowland, Jr., Villa Nova.
Evans, Mrs. William S., 518 Cedar Lane,
Swarthmore.
Everett, Mr. Herbert E., 2206 Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
Everham, Mrs. H. V., Forest Ave.,
Ambler.
Ewing, Miss S. L., N. W. cor. Stewart
and Dudley Aves., Narberth.
Exley, Miss Emily, Wayne. (L.)
Eysmans, Mr. J. L., Room 409, Broad St.
Sta., Philadelphia.
Eyster, Mr. L. Bert, 432 State Rd., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Falconer, Mr. Allan, 924 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia.
Famous, Mr. Joseph G., Royersford,
R. D. 1.
Fancourt, Mr. E. J., 1612 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Faries, Mrs. C. T., Box 47. Wynnewood.
Faries, Mrs. Robert, St. Davids.
Farnum, Mrs. E. S. W., 101 W. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Farnum, Mr. George Leiper, "The
Acres," Media.
Farr, Miss Edith M., 4603 Cedar Ave.,
Philadelphia,
Farrow, Mr. Henry R. L., Conestoga and
Roberts Rds., Bryn Mawr.
Faust, Mr. Henry L, Merion. (C.)
Faux, Miss Ida, 737 Allen Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Fawley, Mr. W. A., 4002 Cedar Lane,
Drexel Hill.
Fay, Dr. Temple, Elbow La., Mt. Airy.
Fearon, Mr. Charles, 6720 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Fearon, Mrs. Charles, 6720 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Felin, Mr. Charles F., 280 S. Grand
Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
Fell, Mrs. F. J., Jr., R. F. D. 1, Phoenix-
ville.
Fellows, Mr. James A., 14 Marlborough
Road, Upper Darby.
Felton, Mr. Edgar C, Haverford.
Felton, Mrs. Edgar C., Haverford
Fenimore, Mrs. Walter H., 6641 Boyer
St., Mt. Airy.
Ferguson, Mrs. James A., 124 W. Thomp-
son St., Philadelphia.
Ferguson, Mrs. Lincoln, 8031 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Fernley, Miss Frances Sabena, 6110
Wayne Ave., Germantown.
Fernley, Miss Hattie M., 6110 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Fetterman, Mrs. J. Gordon, Media.
Fife, Mrs. Charles A., 3421 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Finletter, Mrs. Edwin M., 8431 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill. (L.)
Fischer, Dr. Henry G., 108 Blooming-
dale Ave., Wayne.
Fisher, Mrs. E. Monroe, 421 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Fisher, Miss Elizabeth Wilson. Ambler.
Fisher, Mrs. F. S., 121 Abernethy Drive,
Trenton, N. J. (C.)
Fisher, Mrs. Henry M., Jenkintown.
Fisher, Mrs. Howard W., 327 E. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Fisher, Mrs. Philip B.. 7801 Cresheim
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Fisher, Mr. Russell W., Wyndmoor,
Chestnut Hill.
Fitler, Mrs. N. Myers, Wynnewood.
Fitler, Mr. William W., Villa Nova.
I'^itzpatrick, Mrs. Florence B., 141 E.
Gorgas Lane, Germantown.
Flack, Dr. Arthur M., 3414 Baring St.,
Philadelphia.
Flagg, Mr. Stanley G., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Flagg, Mrs. Stanley G., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Fla<iler, Mr. Joseph H., 225 Broad St.
Sta., Philadelphia.
Fleck, Mrs. Frederick W., 335 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
56
Fleer, Mrs. Henry, 15 Woodside Ave.,
Nar berth.
Fleisher, Mrs. Alfred W., Box 70, Wyn-
cote.
Fleisher, Mr. Horace T., 808 Otis Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Fleisher, Mrs. Walter A., Cor. City Line
and Lakeside Ave., Oak Lane.
Flemer, Mr. William, Jr., Princeton
Nurseries, Princeton, N. J. (N.)
Ford, Mrs. Bruce, Sugar Loaf, Chest-
nut Hill.
Forstall, Mr. Walton, 1401 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Fort, Mrs. Pierson I., 414 W. Stafford
St., Germantown.
Foster, Mrs. William B., 1101 Westover
Road, Wilmington, Del.
Foulke, Mrs. Laura L., 105 Forest Ave.,
Ambler.
Foulkrod, Mrs. Collin, 3910 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Fowler, Mrs. J. Scott, 1014 70th Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Fox, Mrs. C. F., Jr., Elkins Park.
Fox, Mr. Cyril G., 94 W. Essex Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mrs. Cyril G., 94 W. Essex Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mrs. Gilbert R., 909 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Fox, Miss Hannah, 1024 Clinton St.,
Philadelphia.
Fox, Mrs. Herbert, Haverford.
Fox, Mrs. Joseph M., 7913 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Fox, Mr. Milford C, 156 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mrs. Milford C, 156 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mr. W. B., 316 Paxson Ave., Glen-
side.
Fraley, Mrs. Frederick, "Norwynden,"
Overbrook.
Francis, Mrs. Isaac Hathaway, "West-
leigh Farm," Devon.
Francis, Miss Jeannette M., Bethayres.
Franklin, Mrs. C. P., 2025 Upland Way,
Overbrook.
Frazier, Mrs. D. B., Ardmore.
Frazier, Mrs. G. Harrison, Jr., 100 W.
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Frazier, Mrs. Herbert, 45 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Frazier, Mrs. John Nalbro, "Farwoods,"
Rydal.
Frazier, Mr. John W., Jr., 904 City
Center Bldg.. Philadelphia.
Frazier, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Jenkintown.
Freeman, Mrs. J. Howard, 55 W. Eagle
Rd.. Uooer Darby.
French, Mrs. J. Hansell, Collegeville.
Frick, Mr. Charles E., 6915 Clearview
St., Mt. Airy.
Fries, Mrs. William P., Z2Z Cynwyd Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Fritz, Mrs. Charles Tuller, Washington
Lane and Welsh Road, Huntingdon
Valley.
Fritz, Mrs. J. A., S. E. cor. 34th and
Hamilton Sts., Philadelphia.
Fromuth, Mr. Harry C, Holland, Bucks
Co.
Fronefield, Mrs. J. M., 225 Audubon
Ave., Wayne.
Fry, Mrs. Henry S., 110 Llanfair Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Fry, Mrs. James Woods, 4612 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia.
Fry, Mrs. T. Y. Dietz, 410 Waring Road,
Elkins Park.
Fuguet, Mr. Raymond, "Fairacre," Edge-
water Park, N. J.
Fuller, Mrs. Sara K., N. Merion Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Fuller, Mrs. William A. M., Germantown
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Furness, Mr. Fairman R., Upper Bank
Farm, Media. (N.)
Furness, Mrs. Radclyffe, 207 Summit
Ave., Jenkintown.
Gable, Mr. Harry S., 25 W. Langhorn
Ave., Llanerch, Upper Darby.
Gable, Mr. Joseph B., Jr., Stewartstown.
Gadsby, Mrs. Edmund J., 3129 Queen
La., East Falls.
Gallagher, Mr. Thomas G., "Edgely,"
Bristol.
Galloway, Mrs. C. D., 520 Jarden Road,
Chestnut Hill.
Gallup, Mrs. W. H., Smethport.
Gamble, Mrs. Clarence J., 537 Allen's
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Gardiner, Mrs. John, Jr., 614 Pembroke
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Gardner, Mrs. Lillian Pine, Louella Ave.,
Wayne.
Garrett, Mrs. Thomas Cresson, 1419
County Line Road, Rosemont.
Garrigues, Miss Hannah, Haverford.
Garrigues, Mr. John' S., 742 College Ave.,
Haverford.
Garson, Mr. Theodore S. B., 227 Cones-
toga Rd., Wayne.
Gaskill, Mrs. Marion M., 957 W. Chester
Pike, Manoa, Upper Darbv P. O.
Gaul, Miss Myrtle E., 836 Whitby Ave.,
Yeadon.
Cause, Mrs. C. Ingersoll, Greenville,
Wilmington, Del.
Gawthrop, Mrs. Robert S., 325 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
Gayley, Mrs. Samuel A., Whitehorse-
Rocky Hill Road, Newtown Square.
Gayley, Mrs. William Crichton, General
Knox Road, Wayne.
Gearhart, Mrs. William M., 929 W. Mar-
shall St., Norristown.
57
Geist, Mrs. Clarence H., Lavtnfal,
Villa Nova.
Gellhaus, Miss Olga E., Ashton Rd. and
Grant Ave., Holmesburg.
Gendell, Miss Elizabeth B., 320 Maple
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Gendell, Miss Lucy C, 320 Maple Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Gerhard, Mrs. Albert Pepper, 5635 Over-
brook Ave., Overbrook.
Gerhard, Miss Anna Rebecca, 5625 Over-
brook Ave., Overbrook.
Gest, Mrs. William P., Merion Sta.
Getze, Mrs. Edward Bioren, 6005 Over-
brook Ave., Philadelphia.
Gibb, Mrs. Walton, 330 FairhiU Road,
Wynnewood.
Gibbon, Mrs. John H., 1608 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Gibbons, Mrs. Lewis, Owen Road and
Chichester Lane, Ardmore.
Gibbons, Mrs. Mary Stewart, 330 Bryn
Mawr Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Giblin, Miss Alargaret, Arden, Del.
Gibson, Mrs. Henry C., Jenkintown.
Gibson, Miss Mary K., Wynnewood.
Gibson, J^Irs. Murray, Griffon Hall,
Wynnewood.
Gibson, Mr. William R., 735 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Gilbert, Mrs. George L., 7104 Hazel Ave.,
Bj^vood.
Gilbert, Mrs. John, Rydal.
Gilbert, Mrs. Samuel H., Rydal.
Gilbert, Mrs. Thomas B., 6328 Newtown
Road, Lawndale.
Gilchrist, Mr. Douglas, 41 W. Stratford
Ave., Lansdowne.
Giles, Mrs. Florence M., 190 Menlo Ave.,
Glenside.
Gill, Miss Mary Esther, 27 Wynnewood
Ave., Wynnewood.
Gillin, Mr. James R., Ambler Nurseries,
Ambler. (C.)
Gillingham, Mrs. C. Stratton Howe, 4717
Kingsessing Ave., Philadelphia.
Gilmore, Mrs. Fernley P., Box 44, Reho-
both Beach, Del.
Gilpin, Mrs. John C., Sugar Loaf, Chest-
nut Hill.
Gilpin, Mrs. Samuel B., 2d, 115 Kenil-
worth Road, Alerion.
Girvin, Miss Mary, 2120 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Glackin, Mr. John L, 7635 Parkview Rd.,
Highland Park, Del. Co.
Glasgow, Airs. W. A,, 81 Haws Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Glasse, Mrs. Josephine, 3423 Race St.,
Philadelphia.
Gleason, Mrs. James F., 212 Greenwood
Ave., Jenkintown.
Glendinning, Mrs. H. Percival, 529 E.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Glendinning, Mr. Robert, Packard Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Glendinning, Mrs. Robert, "The Squir-
rels," Chestnut Hill.
Glover, Miss Deborah A., The Welling-
ton, 19th and Walnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Godfrey, Mr. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. William S., Ardmore.
Godwin, Miss Edith Nicholas, 206 S. 43d
St., Philadelphia.
Goff, Mrs. Le Roy. 2d, Ithan.
Goheen, Mrs. John P., 524 W. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Goldey, Mrs. F. H., 614 W. Aliens Lane,
Philadelphia.
Goldhaber, Mr. Jack S., 5310 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Goldsmith, Airs. Arthur, Alontgomery
Ave. & Alill Rd., Wynnewood.
Good. Airs. Bella, Green Lane, Fern
Rock.
Goodman, Air. Charles E., Fishers Road,
Bryn Alawr.
Goodman, Aliss Ernestine A., 140 Bethle-
hem Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Goodwin. Dr. A. Helena, 321 Bala Ave.,
Cynwyd.
Gossling, Air. John H., 1027 Allengrove
St., Frankford.
Gotwals, Airs. Leo A., South Gay St.,
Phoenixville.
Graf, Aliss Emma, 36 S. 5th St., Phila-
delphia.
Grafif, Aliss Isabella A., Haverford.
Graham. Airs. Fred W. W., 52 Summit
St.. Chestnut Hill.
Graham, Airs. J. W., 537 Orchard Ave.,
Yeadon.
Graham, Airs. Warren C, Ashwood
Road, Villa Nova.
Grakelow, Mr. Charles H., Broad and
Cumberland Sts.. Philadelphia. (F.) _
Grange, Airs. William Drayton, Morris
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Gray, Airs. Alfred AL, 5965 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Green, Airs. Edward A., 20 W. Alont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Green, Mr. J. Weldon, West Ave. and
Newbold Rd., Jenkintown.
Green, Airs. J. Weldon, West Ave. and
Newbold Rd., Jenkintown.
Greene, Airs. Norman, "Rainbow Lodge,"
Berwyn.
Greene, Air. Ryland W., Rose La.,
Haverford.
Greene, Airs. William Houston, 2128
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Greenlee. Air. James, Jr., 511 Chester
Pike. Ridlev Park.
Greenwood, Airs. A. S., Trevor Lane,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Greinberg, Air. Reinhold, Wayne. (C.)
58
Gresimer, Mrs. A. Dubosq, 2525 Bryn
Mawr Ave., Ardmore Park.
Gribbel, Mrs. J. Bancker, 135 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Gribbel, Mrs. John, Wyncote.
Gribbel, Mrs. W. Griffen, Mermaid and
St. Martins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Griffith, Dr. J. P. Crozer, 1810 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Griffith, Miss Julia W., Laurel Lane,
Haverford.
Griffith, Miss Mary F., Laurel Lane,
Haverford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert E., Haverford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert M., Gwalia, Ambler.
Grim, Dr. Ella W., Rose Valley Rd.,
R. F. D. 3, Media.
Griscom, Miss Frances C, Haverford.
Griscom, Mr. Rodman E., Haverford.
Griscom, Mrs. William B., Old Gulph
Rd. and Bryn Mawr Ave., Narberth.
Griswold, Mrs. Frank T., "Hothorpe,"
Radnor.
Griswold, Mrs. Matthew, Jr., 265 W. 10th
St., Erie.
Groff, Mrs. Charles G., 1205 Kenilworth,
Alden Park, Germantown.
Grofif, Mrs. John C, 519 N. High St.,
West Chester.
Groome, Mrs. Daingerfield M., Clover
Hill Farms, Media.
Groome, Mrs. John C, 1018 Clinton St.,
Philadelphia.
Gross, Dr. F. O., 1816 W. Erie Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Grubb, Mrs. Joseph H., Haverford Court,
Haverford.
Grubnau, Mr. Carl, Erie Ave. at N. 2d
St., Philadelphia.
Gudehus, Mr. E. R., S. E. Cor. 13th and
Locust Sts., Philadelphia.
Gumbes, Mrs. Charles Wetherill, Box 6,
Oaks, Montg. Co.
Gunning, Miss Agnes, 310 Ashbourne
Rd., Elkins Park.
Gustin, Mrs. Richard J., Ivyland.
Guthrie, Mrs. Tracy W., Beaver Rd. at
Newbury Lane, Edgeworth, Sewickley.
Gutman, Mrs. Milton R., 330 Marvin
Road, Elkins Park.
Haas, Mrs. H. J., 214 Roberts Road,
Ardmore.
Haas, Airs. Otto, Fishers Road, Haver-
ford.
Haber, Mrs. Henry, 502 Westview Ave.,
Germantown.
Habermehl, Mr. John P., 2139 Diamond
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Hacker, Mr. Caspar W., Bryn Mawr.
Hacker, Mrs. Caspar W., Bryn Mawr.
Haehnlen, Mr. Walter L., Colwyn and
Rhyle La., Cynwyd.
Haeseler, Mrs. Alice P. S., 2006 W.
Tioga St., Philadelphia.
Haggart, Mrs. W. R., 6341 Ridge Ave.,
Roxborough.
Haines, Mrs. Benjamin W., 326 N.
Church St., West Chester.
Haines, Miss Edith Stokes, Fort Wash-
ington.
Haines, Miss Jane B., CheltenhJim.
Haines, Mrs. Joseph, Jr., Meadowbrook.
Haines, Mrs. W. H., 606 Zollinger Way,
Merion.
Hale, Mrs. Chandler, "His Lordship's
Kingdom," Upper Marlboro, Md.
Halford, Mrs. John H., Hartrauft Woods,
Norristown.
Hall, Mrs. Clarence A., 7951 Winston
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Hall, Miss Florence R., Bryn Mawr
Court, Bryn Mawr.
Hall, Mr. H. F., 416 Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J. (C.)
Hallahan, Mrs. John, 351 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Hallman, Mrs. Thomas, Collegeville.
Hallowell, Mrs. Israel R., Moreland Rd.,
Bethayres.
Halsey, Mrs. Edward B., Radnor.
Halstead, Mrs, David, 301 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
Hamersly, Mr. Edmund G., Devon.
Hamilton, Mrs. Charles Lacey, The
Warwick Hotel, 17th and Locust Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Hamilton, Miss Emma F., 50 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Hamilton, Mrs. Robert Devitt, Church
Rd., Wyncote.
Hammer, Mr. William D., 8014 Flour-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Hammond, Dr. Julian T., 3d, 1042 Wide-
ner Bldg., Philadelphia.
Hancock, Mrs. F. Woodson, Jr., Phoenix-
ville.
Hansell, Mrs. Frank R., Eddington
Farm, Eddington.
Harbidge, Mr. Herbert J., care of Mrs.
John A. Brown, Jr., Wayne. (G.)
Hare, Miss Esther B., Radnor.
Hare, Mr. J. V., Reading Terminal,
Philadelphia.
Hare, Mrs. J. V., Trevose.
Harjes, Mrs. F. H., Valley Forge.
Harper, Mrs. John M., Box 171, Villa
Nova.
Harper, Mrs. William Ross, 626 W.
Hortter St., Germantown.
Harper, Mr. William Warner, An-
dorra Nurseries, Chestnut Hill. (N.)
Harrar, Mrs. John J., 311 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Harrington, Mrs. A. M., 6618 Greene
St., Germantown.
Harrington, Mrs. Melvin H., 1016 West-
view St., Mt. Airy.
59
Harrington, Mrs. Willis F., 16th St. and
Mt. Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del.
Harris, Airs. Frank B., "Wee House,"
Rosemont.
Harris, Mr. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Airs. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. J. Andrews, Jr., Lincoln
Drive and Willow Grove Ave., Chest-
nut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. Alorrison, 2307 N. 58th St.,
Overbrook.
Harris, Air. Wharton E., Union League,
Philadelphia.
Harris, Air. William K., 1406 S. 51st
St., Philadelphia. (C.)
Harrison, Airs. Charles C, Jr., Villa
Nova.
Harrison, Mr. George L., St. Davids.
Harrison, Mrs. George L., St. Davids.
Harrison, Air. Jerome G., 361 Trevor
Lane, Cj-nwvd.
Harrity, Mrs.'W. F., Apt. 601-B, Alden
r'ark Alanor, Germantown.
Hart, Airs. Charles, Aledia.
Hart, Airs. William H., Susquehanna
Rd., Ambler.
Hartshorne, Aliss Amy, Haverford.
Hartshorne, Air. E. Y., Haverford.
Harvey, Airs. Edward F., Gwynedd
A'alley.
Harvev, Air. Frederick W., 2241 N. 4th
St., Philadelphia.
Harvey, Air. John S. C, Radnor.
Haslam, Aliss Elizabeth, 8730 German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Hassett, Airs. Robert R., 41 E. Elmwood
Ave., Sharon Hill.
Hastings, Mr. John V., Jr., Box 591,
Haverford.
Hatton, Miss Edith J., R. F. D. 5, West
Chester.
Hatton, Air. George, care of Dr. Strieker
Coles, Fisher's La., Bryn Alawr. (G.)
Hauenstein, Air. Arthur, 612 Edge Hill
Rd., Ardsley, Alontgomery Co. (G.)
Haughton, Mrs. Richard, Paoli.
Hay, Airs. Edward N., 108 W. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Haydock, Airs. Amelia G., 2726 W.
Somerset St., Philadelphia.
Hayes, Airs. Ernest B., 501 Parker Ave.,
CoUingdale.
Hayes, Air. Robert L., No. 3 Chatham
Rd., Stonehurst, Del. Co.
Hays, Airs. Raphael S., N. Hanover St.,
Carlisle.
Hayward, Air. H., care of Air. Ayres, W.
Washington Sq., Philadelphia.
Hayward, Airs. Nathan, Brooke Rd.,
Wayne.
Hazard, Air. C. W., 300 Alidland Ave.,
St. Davids.
Heacock, Mr. James W., Wyncote. (C.)
Heacock, Mrs. Joseph Linden, 26 Car-
penter Lane, Ait. Airy.
Head, Mrs. Joseph, 7125 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Headly, Air. J. D., The Dingee & Conard
Co., West Grove. (N.)
Heald, Airs. Lawrence R., 5127 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Heckscher, Mr. Gustave A., Strafford.
Heckscher, Airs. Ledj^ard, Radnor.
Heckscher, Aliss Lucretia Stevens, "Tre-
goze," Radnor.
Hedley, Airs. T. Wilson, 1015 S. 47th
St., Philadelphia.
Heebner, Airs. Charles, 315 S. 41st St.,
Philadelphia.
Heebner, Aliss Julia E., 320 E. Ever-
green Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Heergeist, Aliss Anna K., 6606 N. 6th
St., Oak Lane.
Helifner, Airs. Warren S., 1009 Belfield
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Heim, Aliss Christine, 115 Biddle St.,
Kane.
Heimerdinger, Airs. Leo H., 1001 Valley
Rd., Oak Lane.
Heisley, Airs. George, 445 X. Sterling
Road, Elkins Park.
Heizmami, Air. William A., 1133 Read-
ing Blvd., Wj'omissing.
Helbert, Airs. George K., 305 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Hellwig. Aliss Anna. 2325 N. 52d St.,
Philadelphia.
Helme, Airs. William E., St. Davids.
Hemphill, Airs. John AL, 210 E. Biddle
St., West Chester.
Hemsley, Mrs. Frederick, 2018 De
Lancey Place, Philadelphia.
Hendershot, Air. Joseph, 2201 E. Darbv
Rd., Upper Darby P. O.
Hendershot. Airs. Joseph, 2201 E. Darby
Rd., Upper Darby P. O.
Henderson, Airs. Charles H., 413 Spring
Rd., Llanerch, Upper Darby P. O.
Henderson, Airs. George, 2013 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Henderson, Mrs. Samuel J., "Fordel
Farm," Media.
Henkels, Air. John B., Jr., 446 Church
La., Germantown. (L.)
Henry, Mrs. Bayard, W. Walnut La.,
Germantown.
Henry, Mrs. Charles W., Chestnut
Hill.
Henrv, Aliss Edith O., 414 Chestnut St..
Darby.
Henry, Mrs. J. Norman, Gladwyne.
Hensel, Airs. William H.. 346 Roumfort
Road, Alt. Airy.
Henson, Aliss Hannah, 226 Cameron Rd.,
Willow Grove.
Heppe, Mr. Florence J., 1117 Chest-
nut Street, Philadelphia.
60
Hergesheimer, Mr. Russell U., 1015
Chestnut St., Philadelphia.
Herold, Mrs. Otto, 127 Harrison Ave.,
Glenside.
Herr, Mr. John P., 52 Stewart Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Herr, Mrs. William, 122 Tyson Ave.,
Glenside.
Herring, Miss L. K., 2807 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Herring, Miss Louise C., 3822 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Herring, Mrs. Willard E., Jenkintown.
Hershey, Mrs. H. T., 3026 W. Coulter
St., Queen Lane Manor, Philadelphia.
Hershey, Mr. Lloyd E., Downingtown.
Herzberg, Mr. Herbert I., 7945 N.
Park Ave., Elkins Park.
Hess, Mrs. G. L., 200 Ardmore Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Hess, Mrs. Martin G., Market Square,
Manheim.
Heyl, Mrs. Jacob E., 124 Springfield
Ave., St. Martins.
Heyl, Mrs. John B., 209 Kent Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Heyl, Mrs. Robert C, 120 Bleddyn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Heymann, Mr. Joseph C, 1420 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Hibbert, Mrs. Walter, Providence Rd.,
Wallingford.
Hibbs, Miss Helen, Sycamore Ave.,
Merion.
Hibbs, Mrs. Shelton A., 109 E. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Hiestand, Mrs. George, 303 Main St.,
Phoenixville.
Hiester, Mrs. Isaac, 138 N. 5th St.,
Reading.
High, Miss Flora M., 3436 Warden
Drive, Germantown.
Highley, Mrs. George N., 314 Fayette
St., Conshohocken.
Hill, Mrs. George H., Jr., 116 Birch
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Hill, Mrs. Llewellyn G., 55 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Hilles, Miss Elizabeth, 965 Orthodox St.,
Philadelphia.
Hilles, Mr. Robert L.. 4530 Adams Ave.,
Frankford.
Hilles, Mrs. William S., Wilmington,
Del.
Hilliard, Mrs. James, R. F. D. 1, Hat-
boro.
Hilsee, Mrs. Donald Ashcraft, 5336
Wakefield St., Philadelphia.
Hinchman, Miss Margaretta S.,
Haverford.
Hiney, Mrs. Alice E., Malvern.
Hinkson, Mrs. Joseph H., 224 Chester
Pike, Ridley Park.
Hires, Mrs. Charles E., Jr., Wynnewood.
Hires, Mrs. J. Edgar, 107 Linwood Ave.,
Ardmore.
Hitch, Dr. David M., Medical Arts Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Hitzrot, Mrs. Lewis H., 3105 W. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Hoag, Mr. C. G., 3515 Powelton Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Hoban, Mrs. Jennie, S. Broad St., Lans-
dale.
Hockaday, Miss Elizabeth, 316 Shadeland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Hodge, Mrs. Henry L., 300 Wheatsheaf
Lane, Abington.
Hodge, Miss Katharine C, 112 W.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Hodge, Mrs. T. L., Delmar-Morris Apts.,
Germantown.
Hoeischer, Mr. A. W., Box 52c, Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
Hoff, Mrs. L. P., 124 Levering Mill Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Hoffman, Mr. Benjamin R., The
Grange, City Line Ave., W. Over-
brook.
Hoffman, Mrs. C. Fenno, Radnor Rd.,
Radnor.
Hoffman, Dr. Norbert L., 231 Oneida
St., Mt. Washington Sta., Pittsburgh.
Hofmeier, Miss Anna C, Andalusia.
Hogeland, Mr. Elias W., Huntingdon
Valley. (L.)
Hogeland, Miss Helen B., 245 Hansberry
St., Germantown.
Hogue, Mrs. Robert M., 434 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Holden, Mrs. Robert F., Tunbridge Road,
Haverford.
Holgate, Mr. Stuart J., 201 Crestmont
Terrace, CoUingswood, N. J.
Holladay, Mrs. Charles B., Chadd's
Ford.
Hollingsworth, Mrs. L Pemberton P.,
123 E. Virginia Ave., West Chester.
Holmes, Miss Harriet F., Selborne,
S. Batavia Rd., Batavia, 111.
Holmes, Mr. Jesse H., care of Thomas
Young Nurseries, Inc., Bound Brook,
N. J. (N.)
Holmes, Mrs. Lynwood R., 235 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia.
Holtsizer, Mrs. Leon, Skippack Pike,
Blue Bell.
Hood, Mrs. Albert L., Wissahickon Ave.
and Hortter St., Mt. Airy.
Hoopes, Mr. Edward, "Highland Farm,"
West Chester.
Hoopes, Mrs. Henry, 1304 Rodney St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Hoopes, Mrs. Macmillan, P. O. Box 831,
Wilmington, Del.
Hoopes, Mrs. Robert P., "Wolverton,"
Chestnut Hill.
61
Hopkins, Mrs. J. Qement, 10 W. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Hopkins, Mrs. Thomas S., 264 E. Kings
Highway, Haddonfield, Js^. J.
Hopper, Mrs. H. Boardrnan, 315 Berk-
ley Road, ]Merion.
Hopper, Airs. Harry S., 211 Roberts Rd.,
Ardmore.
Hopper, Miss Marie Louise, 211
Roberts Road, Ardmore.
Horn, Mr. Herman, Jr., 132 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Horst, Mr. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave., Nar-
berth.
Horst, Mrs. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave.,
Narberth.
Horst. Mrs. John D., P. O. Box 734,
Reading.
Horstmann, Mrs. Walter, 1900 Ritten-
house Sq., Philadelphia.
Horstmann, Mrs. William H., "Norwyn-
den," Overbrook.
Hoskins, Mrs. Albert L., Rosemont.
House, Mrs. M. A., Chadds Ford, Dela-
ware Co.
Houston, Mrs. George H., The Barclay,
Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia.
Houston, Mrs. Samuel F., St. Martins.
Hovenden, Aliss Martha M., Plymouth
Meeting.
How, Mrs. Harold W., Rosemont.
Howard, Mrs. Edgar B., Brvn Mawr.
Howarth, Mrs. H. A. S., "Tall Oaks,"
Torresdale.
Howe, Miss Edith, 712 Maple La., Se-
wickley.
Howe, Mrs. George, 9189 Germantown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Howe, Mrs. L. Fielding, 220 Lantwyn
Lane, Narberth.
Howell. Mrs. Aubrey. 1206 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Howell. Airs. Cooper. Blue Bell.
Howell, Aliss Josephine R., 1206 Spruce
St.. Philadelphia.
Howell, Mrs. Lardner. Whitford.
Howell. Mr. Samuel L.. The Lenox, 13th
and Spruce Sts., Philadelphia.
Howland, Miss Alice G., The Shipley
School. Bryn Mawr.
Howland, Mrs. Ralph B.. Stirling Head-
quarters, Echo Valley Farms, Malvern.
Howson. Mrs. Charles H., 134 Walnut
Ave.. Wavne.
Hubard. Mrs. Archibald B., 7908 York
Rd.. Elkins Park.
Huey, Mr. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huey, Mrs. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huff, Miss Emelie DeGalley, 5925 Wood-
bine Ave., Overbrook.
Huff, Mrs. George F., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Hughes, Mr. Hugh M., 814 Stanbridge
St., Norristown. (G.)
Hughes, Mr. William D., 3300 Race
St., Philadelphia.
Hughes, Airs. William Henry, Morris
Ave.. Bryn Mawr.
Hulley; Air. George D., 213 Pusey St.,
CoUingdale.
Hulse, Airs. Herbert, 38 Wheeler Ave.,
Warwick, N. Y.
Humphreys, Aliss Belle G., Box 156,
Woodstown, N. J.
Hunecker, Airs. John, The Lenox, 13th
and Spruce Sts., Philadelphia.
Hunt, Aliss Edith Baker, Enfield.
Huston, Aliss Laetitia P., 219 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Huston, Aliss Alar}^ P., 219 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Hutchinson, Airs. Joseph B., Jr., 5 Col-
lege Circle, Haverford.
Hutchison, Airs. John W., 108 Hampden
Ave., Narberth.
Hyde, Airs. Charles L., 6632 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Iliff, Airs. Arthur R., Old Ambler Home-
stead, Ambler.
Ilsley, Airs. Edward, Devon.
Ingersoll, Miss Anna Warren, Penllyn.
IngersoU. Airs. C. Jared, Fort Wash-
ington.
Ingersoll, Air. Henry AIcKean, Spring
House, Alontgomer}^ Co.
Ingraham, Airs. Clayton C, 1900 Ritten-
house Square, Philadelphia.
Ingram, Airs. James E., Jr., Horseshoe
Lane, Paoli.
Ireland, Aliss Sarah A., 4635 Leiper St.,
Frankford.
Irvine. Mrs. James, "The Alooring,"
Radnor.
Irvine, Air. King. P. O. Box 36, Devon.
(G.)
Irvine. Air. Samuel. 1509 N. Carlisle St.,
Philadelphia. (G.)
Irwin, Airs. Boyle, R. F. D. 2, Phoenix-
ville.
Irwin. Airs. Franklin K., 129 Argyle Rd..
Ardmore.
Jack, Dr. L. Foster, Haverford.
Jackson. Airs. W. C, 3716 School Lane.
Drexel Hill.
Jacobs, Mrs. John, Bryn Mawr.
Jacobs. Airs. AI. L., Tioga Ave., Bethle-
hem.
Jacobs, Airs. Reginald. Haverford.
Jacoby, Air. Edward C, Gulph Rd. and
Alontgomery Ave., Radnor.
Jacoby, Airs. Edward C, Gulph Rd. and
Alontgomerj'- Ave., Radnor.
James. Aliss Elizabeth S.. 908 Darby
Rd., Llanerch. Upper Darby P. O.
James, Aliss Winifred L., Southampton.
62
Jameson, Mrs. Norman L., S. Bow-
man Ave., Merion.
Jamison, Airs. B. K., Jr., 250 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Janeway, Mrs. P. W., 3d and Edgemont
Sts., Media.
Janney, Mr. Walter C, Bryn Mawr.
Janney, Mrs. Walter C, Bryn Mawr.
Jarden, Mrs. Walter H., 7048 German-
town Ave., Mt. Airy.
Jarrett, Miss Anna, Hallowell.
Jarrett, Mrs. F. H., Jarrett's Gardens,
Bethayres. (C.)
Jeanes, Mrs. Henry S., Devon.
Jeanes, Mrs. Isaac W., Moreland Ave.
and St. Martin's Lane, Chestnut
Hill.
Jeanes, Mrs. Joseph Y., Villa Nova.
Jefferis, Mr. Charles R., Jr., 409 Aledical
Arts Bldg., Wilmington, Del.
Jeffords, Mr. Walter M., Glen Riddle.
Jelinek, Miss Anne, Krisheim Lodge,
Chestnut Hill.
Jenkins, Mrs. Charles F., Kitchens La.,
Germantown.
Jenkins, Mrs. Edward A., 506 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Jenkins, Mrs. G. Chapin, 6437 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Jenks, Mrs. Charles T., 611 Winsford
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Jenks, Mrs. Horace H., College Ave.,
Haverford.
Jenks, Mrs. John S., Seminole and Chest-
nut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Joachim, Miss Reba E., 939 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
John, Mrs. R. H., 27 St. Paul's Rd., Ard-
more.
Johnson, Mr. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Jr., Villa Nova.
Johnson, Mrs. Guy R., Birchrunville,
Chester Co.
Johnson, Mr. J. W., E. Shawmont Ave.,
Roxborough.
Johnson, Mrs. Joseph Esrey, Jr., Valley
View Farm, Whitford.
Johnson, Mrs. Lester B., "Gwyncroft
Farm," North Wales.
Johnson, Miss Marian K., 441 Berkeley
Rd., Haverford.
Johnson, Mrs. Russell H., Jr., R. D. 2,
Norristown.
Johnson, Mr. W. Keating, 326 W.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Johnson, Mrs. Walter H., City Ave. and
Green Hill Farms Rd., Overbrook.
Johnson, Mrs. Walter J., 158 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Johnson, Mrs. William F. B., 314 Car-
penter Lane, Germantown.
Johnson, Mrs. William J., St Davids
Ave., St. Davids.
Johnston, Mr. J. W., 383 Bourse Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Jones, Mrs. Edward Morris, 654 Carpen-
ter Lane, Mt. Airy.
Jones, Mr. Henry W., 25 E. 5th St.,
Chester.
Jones, Mr. Horace C, 5th and Fayette
Sts., Conshohocken.
Jones, Mrs. J. Clifford, Wynnewood.
Jones, Mr. Joseph L., 200 Wyncote
Road, Jenkintown.
Jones, Mrs. Joseph L., 3d, 324 Waring
Road, Elkins Park.
Jones, Mr. Lawrence E., Alden Park,
Germantown.
Jones, Mrs. Livingston, "Chellowe,"
Chestnut Hill.
Jones, Mr. William B., Supt., Highwood
Cemetery, 2800 Brighton Rd., Pitts-
burgh.
Jordan, Mrs. Frederick, Jordan's Pond,
Glenside.
Junkin, Mrs. George B., Bryn Mawr.
Justi, Mr. Henry M., 205 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Justice, Miss Hilda, St. George's Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Justice, Mrs. Randolph F., Wynnewood.
Kain, Mrs. Robert E., 38 Linwood Ave.,
Ardmore.
Kammerer, Mr. Fred H., 229 Rhoads
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Kane, Mrs. John Kent, Shirley Farm,
West Chester.
Kaufmann, Mrs. Eugene M., 617 W.
Hortter St., Germantown.
Kaufmann, Mrs. Morris A., Elkins Park.
Kearns, Mrs. J. L., 4204 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Kearns, Mrs. Wilmer R., Echo Dale Gar-
dens, Norristown. (C.)
Keator, Mrs. John Frisbee, The Oak
Road and School House Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Keefer, Mrs. J. B., Lansdowne and Pen-
nock Ter., Lansdowne.
Keen, Mr. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Keen, Mrs. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Keen, Mrs. Frank A., 603 N. Walnut St.,
West Chester.
Keen, Mrs. Harold Perot, "Kynlyn,"
Bellevue, Del.
Keen, Mr. Harry R., 305 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Cynwyd.
Keenest, Mr. Esker L., 28 W. Fairview
St., Bethlehem.
Keeney, Miss Susan Dorothea, 318 E.
Lancaster Pike, Wayne.
Keffer, Dr. E. L, 5991 Drexel Rd., Over-
brook.
Kelley, Mr. John J., 752 Buck Rd.,
Haverford.
63
Kelley, Mrs. Richard C, 8212 Cedar Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Kellogg, Mrs. Thomas M., 608 E. Gor-
gas Lane, Mt. Airy.
Kelly, Mrs. Fred, "Little Garden," Lans-
downe.
Kelly, Mr. Gregory C., 7 Snowden Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Kelly, Miss Margaret K., Box 328, West
Chester.
Kemble, Miss Annie L., 522 Parker Ave.,
CoUingdale.
Kemble, Mrs. Francis W., Devon.
Kemp, Mr. John A., Little Silver, N. J.
(C.)
Kendall, Mrs. Paul, Haverford.
Kendrick, Mrs. George W., 3d, Villa
Nova.
Kendrick, Mrs. Murdoch, 242 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Kennedy, Mr. Andrew, 55 Franklin Ave.,
Rosemont. (G.)
Kennedy, Mrs. John M., 3d, Box 103,
Plymouth Meeting.
Kennedy, Mrs. M. C, 1830 Rittenhouse
Sq., Philadelphia.
Kennedy, Miss Marie E., 235 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kent, Mrs. A, Atwater, Ardmore.
Kent, Mrs. Edward H., R. D., Dallas.
Kern, Mrs. Raymond C, Valley Ridge
Farm, Phoenixville.
Kerr, Mr. Thomas A., 3 Mansfield Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Kerr, Mrs. William M., Trainor.
Kessler, Mrs. Harry C, 300 Fairhill
Road, Wynnewood.
Keyser, Mr. C. N., care of Lewis &
Valentine Co., Ardmore. (N.)
Keyser, Mrs. Herman J., Panther Road,
Rydal.
Keyser, Mrs. Romaine, Colton Manor,
Atlantic City, N. J.
Kieferle, Mrs. Charles J., 334 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kift, Mr. Robert, 4044 Haverford Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Kille, Miss Helen, Wheat Road, Vine-
land, N. J.
Killian, Mr. Edward J., 2d, 6320 New-
town Rd., Lawndale.
Kimber, Miss N. B., 538 Locust Ave.,
Germantown.
Kind, Mrs. Charles L., j51 Highland
Ave., Lansdowne.
Kind, Mrs. Philip, Lenox Road, Jenkin-
town.
King, Mrs. Caroline B., 1610 Pelham
Road, Beechwood Park, Del. Co.
King, Mrs. Edward, New Castle.
King, Mrs. Florence B., 3622 Hamilton
St., Philadelphia.
King, Mrs. Joseph B., 7315 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
King, Mrs. Mary L., 316 Rhodes PI.,
New Castle.
Kinnard, Mrs. Leonard H., Wynnewood.
Kintz, Miss Ella, Box 146, Pittston.
Kircher, Mr. Walter C, 2671 N. Napa
St., Philadelphia.
Kirchner, Mrs. Edward J., Remington
Rd., Overbrook.
Kirkpatrick, Mr. M. Glen, 230 S. 7th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kirshner, Miss Fannie S., 235 S. 49th
St., Philadelphia.
Kissell, Mrs. Blanche, 46 W. Liberty St.,
Chambersburg.
Klapp, Mrs. Wilbur P., Jr., Chew Road
and Lancaster Pike, Radnor.
Klein, Mr. A. H., 3112 N. 27th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kleinheinz, Mr. William, care of Mr.
Jos. E. Widener, Elkins Park. (G.;
Klemm, Miss Eva R., Montgomery Ave.,
Villanova.
Klemm, Mrs. John W., St. Davids.
Klevan, Mrs. Oscar J., 506 N. Church
St., West Chester.
Klose, Mr. Henry C, 1130 Yeadon Ave.,
Yeadon.
Klose, Mrs. Henry C, 1130 Yeadon Ave.,
Yeadon.
Knellwolf, Mr. John, 300 Newton Ave.,
Oaklyn, N. J.
Knight, Mr. D. Allen, 7201 McCallum
St., Germantown.
Knight, Mrs. D. Allen, 7201 McCallum
St., Germantown.
Knight, Mrs. Joseph S., Haverford.
Knight, Mrs. Thomas L., Serpentine
Lane, Wyncote.
Knitter, Mr. William C, 152 N. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Knowles, Mr. Howard B., 5802 Cedar
Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md.
Knox, Mr. Irvin H., care of Mrs. F. G.
Thomson, Devon. (G.)
Knox, Mrs. Jay, 624 Wood Lane, Had-
donfield, N. J.
Koch, Mrs. Roscoe R., 1701 Howard
Ave., Pottsville.
Koehn, Mrs. H. W., 107 Orchard Way,
Rosemont.
Koethe, Mrs. Barbara D., 523 Martin St.,
Roxborough.
Kohn, Mrs. Harry E., 682 S. Highland
Ave., Merion.
Kolb, Mr. Bert. Chas., 411 Haddon Ave.,
Collingswood, N. J.
Kolb, Mr. Emmanuel, 1600 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Kommer, Mr. John T., 519 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Kopp, Mr. Charles L, 119 Lewis Ave.,
E. Lansdowne.
Kraeger, Mr. Robert H., Harper Ave.,
Jenkintown.
64
Krauskopf, Mrs. Joseph, 4715 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Krauss, Mrs. Lee, 1400 Greywall Lane,
Overbrook Hills.
Krebs, Mrs. George J., 476 W. Main St.,
Somerset.
Krick, Mrs. C. S., St. Davids.
Krick, Miss Helen, 430 Meadowbrook
Road, St. Davids.
Krouse, Mr. Daniel H., Langhorne Gar-
dens, Langhorne. (C.)
Krumbhaar, Mrs. E. B., Chestnut Hill.
Kuehnle, Mr. C. Albert, Vine and 17th
Sts., Philadelphia.
Kuhn, Mr. C. Hartman, 1430 Walnut
Street, Philadelp
Kuhn, Mr. John, 4a5 W. Tabor Rd.,
• Olney. (F.)
Kuhn, Mrs. John, Jr., 547 Olney Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Kunde, Mrs. Carl O., 549 S. Wycombe
Ave., Lansdowne.
Kunkel, Mrs. William B., "Dunroamin,"
Glenn Rd., Ardmore.
Kunz, Miss Dorothea C, Prospectville,
Montg. Co. (N.)
Kunze, Miss Hedwig M., 6399 Woodbine
Ave., Philadelphia.
Kurrie, Mr. George R., 333 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Kurtz, Mrs. William F., 70O2 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Kyle, Mrs. D. Braden, 250 S. 18th St..
Philadelphia.
Kyle, Mrs. Jay, 4414 Overbrook Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Kynett, Mr. H. H., Box 22, Wayne.
LaBoiteaux, Mrs. Isaac, Bryn Mawr.
Lacey, Mr. J. Madison, 329 Waring Rd.,
Elicins Park.
Lacey, Mrs. J. Madison, 329 Waring Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Laedlein, Mrs. Elizabeth W., 3600 Huey
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Lafore, Mrs. J. A., Fairview Farm, Nar-
berth.
Lahm, Mrs. J. H., 150 S. Church St.,
Hazleton.
Laird, Mrs. J. Packard, "Chesterbrook
Farm," Berwyn.
Laird, Mrs. John L., 2d, Chestnut Hill
Apts., Chestnut Hill.
Lamb, Mrs. Robert E., 225 W. Nippon
St., Mt. Airy.
LaMent, Mrs. Ernestine, Cor. Pembroke
and Meadowbrook Aves., Wayne.
Lammot, Miss Dorothy, 495 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Landell, Mrs. Herbert, 3203 W. Penn St.,
Queen Lane Manor, Philadelphia.
Landis, Miss Bertha L., The Ontario,
Washington, D. C.
Landis, Mrs. W. R., 1447 69th Ave., Oak
Lane.
Landreth, Mr. Burnet, Jr., 245 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill. (S.)
Landreth, Mr. S. Phillips, Bristol. (S.)
Landry, Mrs. W. A., 620 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Landt, Mrs. G. E., Curren Ter., Norris-
town.
Lane, Mr. Milford, Box 75, Hainesport,
N. J.
Lane, Mr. Thomas J., Dreshers. (N.)
Langdon, Mrs. H. Maxwell, Grays La.,
Haverford.
Lankford, Mrs. Floyd, 4101 St. Paul St..
Guilford, Baltimore, Md.
Lansdale, Mrs. W. Moylan, St. Davids.
Larzelere, Mrs. Walter D., "Thorn-
hedge," St. Davids.
Lathrop, Mr. Francis C, 237 Lenoir
Ave., Wayne.
Lauer, Mr. Conrad N., P. O. Box 147,
Penllyn, Montg. Co.
Lavell, Mrs. E. F., 129 S. 23d St., Phila-
delphia.
Laverty, Mrs. Maris Alexander, 229 Der-
wen Road, Merion.
Lavino, Mr. Edwin M., "Twin Willows,"
Cresheim Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Lay, Miss Harriet M., 4015 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Lay, Mr. J. Tracy, 4015 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Lazarus, Mrs. James T., Ithan.
Lea, Mrs. Charles M., "West Thorpe
Farm," Devon.
Lea, Mrs. Francis C, 421 Owen Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Lea, Mrs. Langdon, Calvert and Syca-
more Roads, Merion. (L.)
League, Mr. H. M., Bryn Mawr.
Leaming, Mrs. E. B., 228 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Leas, Mrs. Donald S., Haverford.
Leas, Miss Mabel Alice, Roberts Road
and Wyndon Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Lebo, Mrs. Ellerslie A., 37 Jackson Ave.,
Northfield, N. J.
LeBoutillier, Mrs. Benj. Homer, Paoli.
LeBoutillier, Mrs. Edward H., Haver-
ford.
Lederle, Mrs. Robert B., 45 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Lee, Miss Elizabeth Leighton, Radnor.
Lee, Mrs. Horace H., 727 Panmure Rd.,
Haverford.
Leedom, Mrs. Elizabeth D., 108 Tenby
Rd., Llanerch, Delaware Co.
Leeds, Mr. M. E., 4901 Stenton Ave.,
Germantown.
Leeds, Miss Sarah B., 84 Branch St.,
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Legters, Miss Alice L, 130 Runnymede
Ave., Wayne.
Lehman, Mr. Harry A., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
65
Leibert, Miss E. Pauline, 421 N. New
St., Bethlehem.
Leidy, Mrs. Alfred S., 1100 Larchmont
Ave., Pennfield, Del. Co.
Leidy, Mrs. Joseph, Rose Hill House,
Penllyn.
LeRoy, Miss Charlotte Otis, 7428 Devon
St., Mt. Airy.
Lesley, Mrs. Robert W., Haverford.
Lester, Mr. Joseph G., 2220 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Lever, Mrs. G. F., 4304 Frankford Ave.,
Frankford.
Levin, Mrs. Alan, 305 Kent Road,
Wynnewood.
Levis, Mr. Edward H., 438 Main St., Mt.
Holly, N. J.
Levy, Mr. Howard S., 1429 N. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Lewis, Miss Caroline M., "Awbury,"
Germantown.
Lewis, Mrs. Effie M., 12th and Fayette
Sts., Conshohocken.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 2207 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 3d, Fishers Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Lewis, Mrs. Howard W., 1928 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. John Frederick, More-
stein. Chester Co.
Lewis, Mrs. Leroy Moody, Curwen Rd.,
Rosemont.
Lewis, Mrs. Lynne K., 2004 W. Ontario
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Miss Maud E., 803 Mahantango
St., Pottsville.
Lewis, Mrs. Paul, Strafford.
Lewis, Mrs. Saunders, 240 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Thomas H., Paoli.
Ligget, Mrs. Howard B., Jr., Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Ligget, Mrs. J. Thomas, Haverford.
Ligget, Mrs. Robert C, Valley Forge.
Lightfoot, Mrs. J. C, Jr., Box 267, Villa
Nova.
Lilley, Mrs. William, 309 Orchard Way,
Merion.
Lincoln, Mrs. George J., Jr., Emlen St.
and Allen La., Mt. Airy.
Lindenmayer, Miss Josephine A., 5024
Arch St., Philadelphia.
Lindner, Mrs. Mary E., 1233 W. Hilton
St., Philadelphia.
Lindroth, Mr. Axel, Box 38, Bryn Mawr.,
(G.)
Lindsay, Mrs. John C, 445 Hansberry
St., Germantown.
Lineaweaver, Mrs. Charles P., Thcl'1
Quarry, Laural Lane, Haverford.
Linton, Mrs. M. Albert, 315 E. Oak Ave.J
Moorestown, N. J.
Lippincott, Mr. Bertram, "Fallow Field,"
Church Road, Wyncote.
Lippmcott, Air. C. Carroll, 135 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
Lippincott, Mr. H. R., Mullica Hill,
N.J.
Lippincott, Mr. Horace G., Wyncote.
Lippincott, Mrs. J. Bertram, 1712
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Lippincott, Mr. John H., 5920 Greene
St., Germantown.
Lippincott, Mrs. Joseph W., Bethayres.
Lippincott, Miss Mary W., Wyncote.
Lippincott, Mrs. Robert C, 266 W,
Tulpehocken St., Germantown.
Lippincott, Mrs. Walter H., Wynnewood.
Lisle, Mrs. R. M., Paoli.
Littleton, Mr. Arthur, 24 E. Newfield
Way, Bala-Cynwyd.
Littleton, Mrs. W. G., 303 Llandrillo Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Lloyd, Mr. Horatio Gates, "AUgates,"
Haverford,
Lloyd, Mrs. Horatio Gates, "All-
gates," Haverford.
Lloyd, Mr. Malcolm, Jr., 701 Com-
mercial Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Lloyd, Mrs. Stacy B., Ardmore.
Lober, Mrs. William D., 347 Aubrey Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Lodge, Miss Elizabeth C, R. F. D. 3,
Newtown Square, Delaware Co.
Loeb, Mrs. Adolf, S. E. Cor. Wissa-
hickon and Cliveden Sts., Germantown.
Loeb, Mrs. Howard A., Elkins Park.
Loeffler, Miss Helen, 427 Ruscomb St.,
Philadelphia.
Logan, Mrs. A. S., 3924 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Logan, Miss Alice, The Patch Box, West
Chester.
Logan, Mrs. Robert R., Eddington.
Long, Mr. Chudleigh E., 239 Kath-
mere Road, Brookline.
Long, Mr. Thomas, 3782 Woodland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Long, Mr. William Merrill, 309 Waring
Rd., Elkins Park. (N.)
Longsdorf, Mr. Paul W., Church Rd. and
Park Ave., Elkins Park.
Longshore, Mr. Frank H., Parish House,
E. Cumberland and Collins Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Lorgus, Mr. Rudolph G., The Lorgus Co.,
West Chester. (F.)
Lorimer, Mrs. George H., Wyncote.
Lorimer, Mrs. Graeme, Meadowbrook.
Love, Miss K. G., 5011 Penn St., Frank-
ford.
JLovering, Mrs. Joseph S., Jr., 33 E.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
|Lovett, Miss Louise D., 46 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Low, Mrs. Howe, 8003 Navahoe St.,
Oiestnut Hill.
Luckenbach, Mrs. J. Lewis, 113 10th
Ave., Haddon Heights, N. J.
Ludington, Mrs. C. Townsend, Clo-
velly, Ardmore.
Ludington, Mr. Wright S., Ardmore.
Ludlam, Mrs. Howard W., 46 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Ludlum, Mrs. Seymour DeWitt, 1827
Pine St., Philadelphia.
Lukens, Mrs. Charles K., 8051 Stenton
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Lukens, Mr. George E., 214 School St.,
North Wales. (C.)
Lukens, Mrs. Lewis N., Jr., Towanda
St., Chestnut Hill.
Lusson, Miss Marie R., 319 St. Davids
Rd., Wayne.
Lycett, Miss Rebecca H., Haver ford.
Lyman, Mrs. J. V. R., 330 Wister Rd.,
Ardmore.
Lyman, Mrs. Moses, 16 Westmoreland
Ave., Longmeadow, Mass.
Lyman, Mrs. Walter M., Hotel Marlyn,
Walnut and 40th Sts., Philadelphia.
Lyon, Mrs. LeRoy S., 2107 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Lyons, Mrs. E. M., 18 Maple Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
McAllister, Miss Eliza Y., 326 W. State
St., Media.
McAllister, Mrs. J. Rutherford, 8134
Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill.
McAllister, Miss Janet C, 326 W. State
St.. Media.
McArel, Mr. E. P., care of H. A. Dreer,
Inc., 1306 Spring Garden St., Phila-
delphia.
McCaleb, Mr. William S. B., St. Davids.
McCausland, Miss Margaret; Glenolden.
McCawley, Mr. Edmund S., Ithan. (L.)
McCawley, Mrs. William M., care of
E. S. McCawley & Co., Haverford.
McClellan, Mrs. Emma B., Warburton
House, 20th and Sansom Sts., Philadel-
phia.
McCormick, Mrs. Roberdeau A., 3807
Fenchurch Rd., Baltimore, Md.
McCown, Mrs. Allison E., 351 Trevor
La.. Bala-Cynwyd.
MacCoy. Mrs. W. Logan. 69th and City
Line, Overbrook.
McCracken, Mr. D. K.. care of Mrs.
T. Williams Roberts, Bala. (G.)
McCracken, Mrs. Robert T., 1009 West-
view St., Germantown.
McCreary, Mrs. George D., St. Martins,
Chestnut Hill.
McCreerv, Mrs. Samuel, 261 Sycamore
Ave.. Merion.
McCurdy, Miss Mary C, 309 Llandrillo
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
McCurdy, Miss Mary M., 6023 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
McDougal, Mrs. George, 533 Elkins Ave.,
Elkins Park.
McDowell, Miss Katherine D., 815 Mont-
gomery Ave., Narberth.
McDowell, Miss Louise A., 3749 Wood-
land Ave., Drexel Hill.
McFadden, Mrs. Barclay, Rosemont.
McFadden, Mr. J. Franklin, Rosemont.
McFadden, Mrs. J. Franklin, Rosemont.
McFarland, Mrs. George K., "Wind-
ridge," West Chester.
McFarland, Mrs. Harold B., 268 Lenox
Rd., Jenkintown.
McFarland, Mr. J. Horace, 2101 Bellevue
Rd., Harrisburg.
MacFarland, Mr. Walter G., Jr., Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
McGee, Mr. Lynn B., 522 E. Gates St.,
Roxborough.
McGill, Miss Mary E., 700 Hazelhurst
Rd., Merion.
McGovern, Miss Mary C., 1931 Ventura
Road, Honolulu, T. H.
Mcllhenny, Mrs. Francis S., 8765 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Mcllhenny, Mrs. John D., Lincoln
Drive and Johnson St., Germantown.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Dickerson, "Pine Hill,"
Ardmore.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Hugh, Haverford.
Mcllvain, Mrs. J. Gibson, "Lowebrook,"
Downingtown.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Walter B., "Smoky Ridge
Farm," Downingtown.
Mcllvaine, Miss Frances Edge, Down-
ingtown.
Mcllvaine, Mrs. Gilbert, Downingtown.
Mclnnes, Mr. Walter S., 1808 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
McKaig, Mrs. Edgar S., Radnor.
McKean, Mrs. Bispham, Ithan.
McKee. Mrs. James H., 6623 McCallum
St., Germantown.
McKeever, Mrs. William, 331 Louella
Ave., Wayne.
McKelvey, Mrs. J. Eugene, Sylvan Hills,
Hollidaysburg.
McKni!?ht, Mrs. T. H. B., 1615 Twenty-
first St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
McLain, Mrs. Louis, 620 Pembroke Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
McLaughlin, Mr. W. J., Jr., 403 Green-
wood Ave., Wyncote.
McLean, Mrs. Robert, Fort Washing-
ton.
McLean, Mrs. Wm._ L., Jr., St. Martm's
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
MacLeod, Mrs. Twiggs, .Ardmore.
MacMeney, Miss Elizabeth. 439 Penn
Ave.. Drexel Hill.
McMichael. Mr. Emory, Devon.
McMichael, Mrs. Emory, Devon.
(>1
McMicking, Miss Eliz. I. S., Girard Col-
lege, Philadelphia.
MacMillan, Mr. William, 7429 Bingham
St., Philadelphia.
McMullan, Mrs. James, 7030 Wissahickon
Ave., Mt. Airy.
MacMurchy, Mr. J. A., 504 Harrison St.,
Ridley Park.
McNaughton, Mr. Andrew D., Box 84,
Gladwyne. (G.)
McNeal, Mr. D. Raymond, Jericho Rd.,
Abington.
McNeal, Mrs. James Hector, Newtown
Square.
McNeely, Miss Florence, 444 N. High-
land Ave., Merlon.
McNees, Mrs. C. B., 101 Hazel Ave.,
Kittanning.
McNees, Mrs. W. G., Providence Rd. at
5th St., Media.
McNichol, Mrs. James P., St. Davids.
McOwen, Mrs. F., 5871 Drexel Rd.,
Philadelphia.
Madeira, Mrs. Crawford C, 208 Roberts
Rd., Ardmore.
Madeira, Mrs. E. W., School Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Magaziner, Mr. Louis, 3504 Hamilton
St., Philadelphia.
Magee, Miss Jane L, 315 Bala Ave., Cyn-
wyd.
Magill, Mrs. S. N., Elkins Ave., Elkins
Park.
Maguire, Mrs. Frank Hain, 146 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Majodeh, Miss Najave, Chew's P. O.
Box 24, N. J.
Makin, Mrs. Carrie, 7027 Greenway Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Malcom, Mrs. J. V., 3811 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Malehorn, Mr. C. J., 423 Grove Place,
Narberth.
Mallon, Miss Louise Baeder, N. E. cor.
13th and Pine Sts., Philadelphia.
Manda, Mr. Joseph, 130 Main St.,
West Orange, N. J. (C.)
Manda, Mr. W. A., South Orange. N. J.
(C.)
\ Markle, Mrs. Alvan, "Highacres," Hazle-
ton.
Markle, Mrs. Alvan, Jr., 338 W. Green
St., Hazleton.
Markle, Mrs. George B., P. O. Box 426,
Hazleton.
Markoe, Mrs, John, 1630 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Marsh, Mrs. J. C, Box F, Tunbridge
Rd., Haverford.
Marshall, Mrs. F. Warren, Radnor.
Marshall, Mrs. John, 1718 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Marshall, Mrs. T. C, Yorklyn, Del.
Marti, Mrs. O. K., 206 E. Cottage Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Martin, Mrs. Carl N., 2031 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Martin, Mrs. J. Willis, 139 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Martin, Mrs. John C, "Wedgewood,"
Wyncote.
Martin, Mrs. Sydney E., Elkins Park.
Masland, Mrs. Charles W., 1202 Strat-
ford Ave., Melrose Park.
Masland, Mr. Walter E., Lenox Road,
Jenkintown.
Mason, Mr. John H., Commercial Trust
Co., P. O. Box 1342, Philadelphia.
Mason, Miss Laura K., 5528 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Mason, Mr. W. Laurence, Golf View
Rd., Doylestown.
Mason, Mr. William Clarke, 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Master, Rev. Dr. Henry B,, "Glen-
thorne," Devon.
Master, Mrs. Henry B., "Glenthorne,"
Devon.
Masters, Miss Jessie W., 3308 Baring
St., Philadelphia.
Mather, Miss Caroline T., Meadowbrook.
Mathieu, Mr. Alfred E., "Playwickey,"
Rydal.
Mathieu, Mrs. Peter N., 1500 N. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Matlawski, Mr. Adam, care of Mrs.
Stanley G. Flagg, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
(G.)
Mattern, Mrs. E. L., R. D. No. 1, Erie.
Matthews, Mr. Edward, care of Mr.
Geo. D. Rosengarten, Meilvern. (G.)
Matthews, Mr. Edwin, Out Door Arts
Co., Flourtown. (N.)
Mattis, Mr. J. Stafford, 4542 Manayunk
Ave., Roxborough. (S.)
Mattison, Dr. R. V., Ambler.
Mattoon, Mr. Harold G., 425 Tregaron
Rd., Cynwyd.
Mauck, Mrs. F. F., East Watch, Port
Kennedy.
Maxwell, Mrs. John R., Villa Nova.
Mayberry, Mrs. Charles B., 225 Lans-
downe Ave., Wayne.
Mazer, Mr. David, Three Point Gar-
dens, E. Stroudsburg. (N.)
Means, Mrs. C. G., 2008 DeLancey Place,
Philadelphia.
Mecray, Mrs. P. M., Oak Ave., Moores-
town, N. J.
Meeds, Mrs. Hollyday S., Jr., "Good-
stay," Wilmington, Del.
Meehan, Mr. Charles E., 5 S. Mole St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Meehan, Mr. T. Franklin, 400 Vernon
Road, Mt. Airy. (L.)
Meehan, Mr. S. Mendelson, 380 Vernon
Rd., Mt. Airy. (N.)
68
Megargee, Mrs. Gtorge M., 6807 Quincy
St., Germantown.
Meigs, Mrs. John F., 2d, Ithan.
Meirs, Mrs. Richard Wain, 2048 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Melcher, Mrs. Webster A., State Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Mellor, Mr. Sigourney, 721 Old Lan-
caster Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Mercer, Mrs. William R., "Aldie,"
Doylestown,
Merrick, Mrs. R. R., Villa Nova.
Merrick, Mrs. Samuel V., Bell's Mill
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Merritt, Mrs. James S., 8031 German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Mertz, Mrs. Oscar E., 29 Pelham Road,
Germantown.
Mervine, Mrs. William G., Drexel Hill.
Meter, Dr. Edward G., 25th and Grand-
view Sts., Mt. Penn.
Meyer, Miss Ada, 325 N. 34th St., Phila-
delphia.
Meyer, Mr. Frank B., Frandama Gardens,
Elkins Park. (C.)
Meyer, Mrs. Herman, 325 N. 34th St.,
Philadelphia.
Michell, Mr. F. J., Jr., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Michell, Mr. Frank B., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Michell, Mr. Henry F., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Middleton, Mrs. Albert C, 232 E. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Middleton, Mrs. C. Wilmer, Haverford.
Middleton, Mr. H. C, Jr., 7 Shirley Rd.,
Narberth.
Miehle, Miss Edith, 571 E. Norwegian
St., Pottsville.
Miles, Mr. John M., 541 Rock Spring
Drive, Clarendon, Va.
Miller, Mrs. Augustus J., 413 Newbold
Road, Jenkintown.
Miller, Miss Carrie C, The Fenwick
Gardens, Box 212, Salem, N. J. (C.)
Miller, Mrs. Clinton H., 3121 W. Coulter
St., Germantown,
Miller, Dr. Edwin B., 204 W. Monument
Ave., Hatboro.
Miller, Mrs. Henry F., 3711 Bonsall
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Mills, Mr. M. P., 5323 Chester Ave.,
Philadelphia. (C)
Milne, Mr. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Milne, Mrs. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Minehart, Mrs. John R., 4821 German-
town Ave., Germantown.
Mingle, Mrs. M. B., 3041 N. Darien St.,
Philadelphia.
Mirkil, Mrs. Thomas H., 3027 Queen
Lane, Philadelphia.
Mitchell, Mrs. Charles F., 2003 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Mitchell, Mr. George L., 5990 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Mitchell, Mrs. J. B., 6432 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Mitchell, Mrs. J. Clayton, North Wales.
Mitchell, Mrs. John K., Reculver, West
Chester.
Mitchell, Miss Mary B., 5149 Morris St.,
Germantown.
Molthan, Mr. Emil H., Wayne.
Monroe, Mr. William H., care of Mrs.
Bruce Ford, Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Montgomery, Mr. Sidney, 439 E. State
St., Media. (N.)
Montgomery, Mr. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Montgomery, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Montgomery, Mrs. W. W., Glenmore.
Moon, Mrs. Owen, Winston Salem, N. C.
Moore, Mrs. A. O., Highland Park,
111.
.^ifoore, Mrs. Bessie R., 299 Maple Ave.,
Doylestown.
Moore, Mr. Clyde B., Sagamore Hill,
Greensburg.
Moore, Mr. Frederick H., care of Mrs.
Horatio Gates Lloyd, Haverford. (G.)
Moore, Mrs. H. McKnight, Box 96, Bryn
Mawr.
Moore, Mr. J. Clark, Jr., 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Moore, Mr. John, 233 Sagamore Rd.,
Brookline, Del. Co.
Moore, Mr. Philip H., 6644 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Moore, Mrs. Powers M., 19 Colwyn
Lane, Bala-Cynwyd,
Moore, Mrs. Springer H., Railroad and
Walnut Aves., Haverford.
Moore, Mrs. William G., 257 Kings
Highway, West, Haddonfield, N. J.
Morgan, Mrs. F. Corlies, Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. John B., 8635 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. Randal, 398 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mr. Robert C, 314 W. Sey-
mour St., Germantown.
Morian, Mrs. Clarke H., 506 Anthwyn
Road, Merion.
Mormann, Mrs. M., 355 Windemere Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Morrell, Mrs. Edward, Torresdale.
Morris, Mrs. A. Saunders, Haverford.
Morris, Mr. Effingham B., Ardmore.
Morris, Miss Elizabeth Canby, 5442 Ger-
mantown Ave., Philadelphia.
Morris, Miss Ellen, Villa Nova.
Morris, Mrs. Herbert C, Scotforth Road,
Mt. Airy.
Morris, Mrs. J. Cheston, Spring House.
Morris, Mr. Lawrence J., 212 La-
fayette Bldg., Philadelphia.
69
Morris, Miss Lydia T., "Compton,"
Chestnut Hill.
Morris, Miss Margaret E., Rosemont.
Morris, Mr. Samuel W., Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Morris, Mrs. Samuel W., Sunset and
Norwood Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Morris, Mrs. W. P., Berwyn.
Morrison, Mrs. J. I., 223 E. Alt. Pleasant
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Morrison, Mr. John, West Gravers La.,
Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Morrow, Mr. Robert J., Towanda St.,
Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Morton, Mrs. Arthur V., 1015 Clinton
St., Philadelphia.
Morton, Mr. George D., Honey Brook,
Chester Co.
Morton, Mrs. Robert Pearsall, 38 E.
Penn St., Germantown.
Morton, Mr. William, 148 N. 35th St.,
Camden, N. J. (G.)
Moss, Mr. Frank H., Bala.
Moss, Mrs. Frank H., Bala.
Mott, Miss Marion, Radnor.
Moyer, Mr. Alvin W., "Floral Croft,"
Box 106, Dublin. (F.)
Moyer, Mrs. William F., 229 E. Fornance
St., Norristown.
Mudd, Mrs. Stuart, Aldwyn La., Villa
Nova.
Muhly, Mrs. George C, 464 State Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Mulford, Mrs. S. K., Jr., Meadowbrook.
MuUer, Mr. Adolf, DeKalb Nurseries,
Norristown. (N.)
Muller, Mrs. Frank, St. Davids.
MUller, Mr. O. A., Ambler. (G.)
Mullineaux, Mrs. Joseph, 3d, 5 Union
Ave., Bala- Cynwyd.
Murphy, Mr. J. Prentice, Wayne.
Murtagh, Mrs. J. C, 310 N. High St.,
West Chester.
Musser, Mrs. Charles S., 25 Dudley Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mrs. Gilbert B.. Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. Gilbert B., Jr., Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. J. Burton, Rosemont.
Myers, Mr. B. F., 7716 Navahoe St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Myers, Mrs. Charles, St. Davids.
Myers, Mrs. Lawrence, 710 Spring Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Myers, Mrs. William Kurtz, 206 Winding
Way, Merion.
Nack, Mrs. Harriet A., 7825 Avenue D,
Philadelphia.
Nalle, Mrs. Jesse, Whitemarsh.
Nalle, Mrs. Richard T., E. Bells Mill
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Nash, Mrs. Elizabeth C, 231 City Line.
Kirklyn, Upper Darby P. O.
Neale, Mr. James B., Buck Run, Schuyl-
kill Co.
xVeall, Miss Adelaide W., Roumfort Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Nearing, Mr. G. Guy, Guyencourt, Del.
(N.)
Neely, Mrs. Matthew A., Apt. 5, West
Chelten Apts., 146 W. Chelten Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Neff, Mrs. R. C, 76 Sussex Road,
Wynnewood.
Neilson, Mrs. Edward S., AUiquippa
Farm, Malvern.
Neilson, Mrs. H. R., St. Davids.
Neilson, Mrs. Lewis, St. Davids.
Netter, Mrs. Helen Staples, P. O. Box
25, Penllyn.
Neumeyer, Mrs. Robert E., 452 N. New
St., Bethlehem.
Nevin, Mrs. William L., Hill Top
Farm, Radnor.
Newbold, Mrs. David, Haverford.
Newbold, Mrs. Eugene S., St. Davids.
Newbold, Miss Frances C., 3300 Pacific
Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
Newbold, Mrs. John S., Jenkintown.
Newbold, Miss Margaret E. L, Irvine,
Warren Co.
Newburger, Mrs. Frank L., 534 Elkins
Ave., Elkins Park.
Newcomer, Mrs. S. S., IZ Fraley St.,
Kane.
Newhall, Mr. D. A., Old Gulph Road,
Narberth.
Newhall, Mrs. D. A., Old Gulph Road,
Narberth.
Newhall, Mrs. David, Rose Tree Road,
Aledia.
Newhall, Mr. Thomas, Ithan.
Newhall, Mrs. Thomas, Ithan.
Newlin, Mrs. Arthur, 1804 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Newtown, Mrs. E. Swift, Davlesford.
i^ichols, Mrs. H. S. Prentiss, 346 Pel-
ham Rd., Germantown.
Nichols, Mr. Roy B., Torresdale.
Nicholson, Miss Edythe, 308 Florence
Ave., Jenkintown.
N'icholson, Mr. L. A., Rosemont.
Nicholson, Mrs. Percival, 16 W. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Nicholson, Mrs. V. D., P. O. Box 4325,
Chestnut Hill.
Nicholson, Mrs. W. R., 2023 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Nicholson, Mrs. Wm. H., Jr., 118 E.
Oak Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Niessen, Mr. Arthur A., 507 Liberty
Trust Bldg., Broad and Arch Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Niessen, Mrs. Leo, Box 62, Meadow-
brook.
Norcross, Mrs. Theodore F., Ivyland,
Bucks Co.
70
Norris, Mrs. Charles C, Mt. Pleasant
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Norris, Mrs. Charles C, Jr., Box 336,
Haverford.
Norris, Miss Elizabeth F., 237 Montgom-
ery Ave., Haverford.
Norris, Mr. George W., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Norris, Mrs. George W., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Norris, Mrs. Wm. Fisher, P. O. Box 146,
Bryn Mawr.
Norstrom, Mr. R. M., 333 Sloan Ave.,
W. Collingswood, N. J.
North, Mrs. Ralph H., 7301 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
Nowland, Mrs. Paul J., 2325 W. 16th
St., Wilmington, Del.
Oakford, Mrs. J. W., "Lowlands,"
Waverly.
Obdyke, Miss Mary, Radnor.
Oberholtzer, Mr. Ellis P., 506 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
O'Connor, Mrs. Haldeman, 13 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
O'Donnell, Mrs. Frank P., 325 Syca-
more Ave., Merion.
O'Neill, Mrs. W. Paul, Rydal.
Orr, Dr. A. V. B., 525 Welsh St., Ches-
ter.
Orr, Mrs. George P., Berwyn.
Orth, Mrs. C J., 303 Forrest Ave.,
Ambler.
Osborn, Mrs. H. Fairfield, Sheaff La.,
Whitemarsh.
Osborne, Mrs. Frank, Gladwyn, Alloway,
N-J- . .
Ostheimer, Miss Elizabeth G., Jenkin-
town.
Ostheimer, Dr. Maurice, "Grimmet,"
Whitford.
Ottey, Mrs. Sara P., 108 Ashby Rd.,
Upper Darby.
Outen, Dr. Charles Wesley, 1606 S. 4th
St., Philadelphia.
Owen, Mrs. W. P., 328 Kent Road, Bala-
Cynwyd.
Packard, Mrs. F. R., 304 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Packard, Mrs. Frederick A., W. Sunset
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Packard, Mrs. George Randolph, Villa
Nova.
Packard, Mrs. John H., White Horse
Road, Berwyn.
Packard, Mrs. John H., 3d, Cor. New St.
and Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Page, Mrs. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Edward Sydenham, Wayne.
Paa:e, Mrs. George Bispham, Shipley
Farm, Secane.
Page, Mr. George C, Beech Tree Lane,
Wayne.
Page, Mrs. George C, Beech Tree Lane,
Wayne.
Page, Mr. L. Rodman, Jr., 1510 Chest-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Page, Mrs. Robert H., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mr. Robert H., Jr., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Robert Holmes, "Willow-
brook Farm," Paoli.
Pallatt, Mrs. Winfield D., 7942 Mont-
gomery Ave., Elkins Park.
Palmer, Mrs. Horace J., 241 W. Maple
Ave., Langhorne.
Palmer, Dr. Samuel C, Swarthmore Col-
lege, Swarthmore.
Pancoast, Mrs. Albert, The Wellington,
Philadelphia.
Pancoast, Mrs. Henry K., Gray's La.,
Haverford.
Parent, Mr. Albert, 338 N. Lawrence St.,
Philadelphia.
Parish, Mrs. H. G., Enfield, Montg. Co.
Park, Mrs. Frederick S., 343 Brookway
Ave., Merion.
Parker, Mr. Hiram, Moylan-Rose Val-
ley.
Parkhurst, Mrs. Charles W., 130 Der-
wen Rd., Bala-Cynwyd.
Parry, Mr. Edward H., Box 84, Wyn-
cote.
Parry, Mrs. George, 307 Wyncote Rd.,
Jenkintown.
Parry, Mrs. Henry C, Langhorne.
Parry, Mrs. William G., Langhorne.
Parsons, Mrs. J. Clarence, S. Main St.,
Phoenixville.
Parsons, Mrs. Lewis H., Villa Nova.
Passmore, Mr. Gilbert E., 132 Lacey St.,
W^est Chester.
Patrick, Mrs. F. M., 2 Radcliff Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Patterson, Mrs. Charles L., Fair Hills
Farm, Chadds Ford.
Patterson, Mrs. Rufus C, R. D. 5, New
Castle.
Patterson, Mr. Samuel, 131 Stratford
Ave., Aldan.
Patterson, Mrs. William T., Bethlehem
Pike, Ambler.
Patton, Mrs. Henry B., Rose and Laurel
Lanes, Haverford.
Paul, Mr. A. J. Drexel, Radnor.
Paul, Mrs. Theodore S., 8009 Navahoe
St., Chestnut Hill.
Paxson, Miss Bertha R., 8764 Frankford
Ave., Holmesburg.
Payne, Mr. W. Guy, 2104 Market St.,
Pottsville. (F.)
Peace, Mrs. William S., Rydal.
Peachey, Dr. George F., 32 W. Upsal
St., Germantown.
Pearce, Mrs. H. G., Haverford.
71
Pearce, Mrs. John W., "Endsleigh," 617
Pembroke Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Pearce, Dr. Richard M., 150 E. 73d St.,
New York, N. Y.
Pearson, Mr. Eric A., 215 W. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Pease, Mrs. Henry H., 2307 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Peck, Mrs. Frank C, 29 E. Benezet St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Peck, Mrs. Staunton B., Montgomery
Ave. and Buck Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Peck, Mr. William J., 220 Washington
St., Pittston.
Pedigo, Miss Elizabeth, Draper Hall,
Mass. Agricultural College, Amherst,
Mass.
Pedlow, Mrs. J. D., 8 Oak Ave., Had-
donfield, N. J.
Pedrick, Mr. H. C., 6th Ave. and Fayette
St., Conshohocken.
Pedrick, Mrs. H. C, 6th Ave. and Fayette
St., Conshohocken.
Peirce, Mrs. Daniel N., Bryn Athyn.
Peirce, Mrs. Frederick, 370 Aubrey Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Peirce, Mrs. Harold, Haverford.
Peirce, Mr. Robert F., 1961 Woodvale
Ave., Mt. Penn.
Peirson, Mrs. Edith M., 244 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Peirson, Mrs. Edwin J., Virginia Ave.,
Phoenixville.
Peirson, Mrs. Walter, Jr., King of Prus-
sia Road, Radnor.
Pemberton, Mrs. Ralph, Paoli.
Pennell, Miss Elizabeth S., Hildemere
Gardens, Wawa. (C.)
Pennington, Mrs. A. G., Radnor.
Pennock, Mrs. Anna C, 35 Violet Lane,
Lansdowne.
Pennock, Mr. George L., 165 W. Essex
Ave., Lansdowne. (C)
Pennock, Mr. T. Liddon, 1514 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Pennock, Mr. Samuel S., 1612 Ludlow
St., Philadelphia. (W.)
Pennock, Mrs. Samuel S., Lansdowne
Court, Lansdowne.
Penrose, Miss Valeria F., 152 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Pepper, Mrs. Franklin, Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Devon.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Jr., St. Davids
Rd., St. Davids.
Pepper, Mrs. John W., Jenkintown.
Pepper, Mrs. O. H. Perry, Ithan.
Pepper, Mrs. William, Melrose Park.
Perkins, Mrs. Charles C, Box 82, Bryn
Mawr.
Perrott, Mrs. Raymond F., 3119 Midvale
Ave., Philadelphia.
Perry, Mrs. Henry Hillman, Merion
Ave. and Gulph Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Perry, Mr. Joseph M., 16th and Chest-
nut Sts., Philadelphia.
Peter, Mr. Albert G., o212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peter, Mrs. Albert G., 6212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peterman, Mr. C. W., 1115 Merrick Ave.,
Collingswood, N. J.
Peters, Mrs. J. D., 812 Swede St., Nor-
ristown.
Pettit, Mrs. Hannah T., 429 W. Stafiford
St., Germantown.
Petty, Mrs. David M., Paul and Beverly
Aves., Bethlehem.
Pew, Mrs. Arthur E., Jr., "Spring-
brook Farm," Bryn Mawr,
Pew, Mrs. J. Howard, Ardmore.
Pew, Mrs. John G., P. O. Box 23, Moy-
lan.
Pfahler, Mrs. Alfred E., "Seven Acres,"
Whitehorse Rd., Paoli.
Pfahler. Dr. George E., 6463 Drexel Rd.,
Overbrook.
Pharo, Mrs. Albert E., 224 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Pharo, Mrs. Walter W., Haverford.
Phelps, Mr. W. E., Guyencourt, Del.
Phillips, Mrs. Jos. L., Torresdale.
Phreaner, Dr. W. A., 1701 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Pickford, Mrs. Albert W., 206 Clwyd
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Pickles. Mr. William W., 4143 Paul St.,
Frankford.
Pierce, Mr. F. G., 205 Llanfair Rd., Ard-
more.
Pierce, Mr. F. Hastings, 69th and Mar-
ket Sts., Upper Darby.
Pilling, Mr. Charles J., 42 Windemere
Ave., Lansdowne.
Pilling, Mr. W. S., 229 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Pitcairn, Mrs. Raymond, Bryn Athyn.
Plankinton, Mrs. John H., 3 W. Hillcrest
Ave., Oakmont, Upper Darby P. O.
Piatt, Mrs. Charles, 3d, Prospect Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Piatt, Mr. J. C, Waverly.
Piatt, Mrs. John O., Paoli.
Plummer, Mrs. William T., Bleddyn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Poley, Mr. Corson, Salem Rd., Burling-
ton, N. J.
Pollock, Mrs. Roland D., 8319 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Pollock, Mrs. Walter, 7721 St. Martins
La., Chestnut Hill.
Pond, Mrs. C. P., 6712 N. 11th St., Oak
Lane.
Poole, Mrs. Frank, Eagle Road, Bon Air,
Upper Darby.
72
Porter, Mrs. Andrew W., "Spring Hill,"
Valley Forge.
Porter, Miss Catherine B., 2215 Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
Porter, Miss Elva., 424 Owen Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Porter, Mrs. W. Hobart, Woodleave Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Porter, Mrs. William W., Valley Forge.
Potts, Mrs. Charles E., 313 E. Lancaster
Ave., Wayne.
Potts, Mr. Harrison I., 1006 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Potts, Mrs. Harrison I., 1006 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Potts, Mrs. Horace Miles, 1008 W. Hort-
ter St., Mt. Airy.
Potts, Mrs. Joseph, Walnut Ave., Wayne.
Potts, Mr. William M., Wyebrooke,
Chester Co.
Poultney, Mr. E. C, Box 381, Gwynedd
Valley.
Powell, Mrs. Charles, 41 E. Montgomery
Ave., Ardmore.
Powell, Mr. Gerald, 406 Woodland Ave.,
Wayne.
Powell, Mrs. Humbert Borton, Willow-
dale Farm, Devon.
Powell, Miss Marion, Radnor.
Powers, Mr. Thomas Harris, First
St., Broadmoor, Colorado Springs,
Colo.
Pratt, Mrs. Henry S., Haverford.
Preston, Mr. Albert W., Solebury, Bucks
Co.
Price, Mr. Edward Trotter, Spotts-
wood Farm, Broad Axe, Montg. Co.
Price, Mr. Eli Kirk, 709 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Price, Mrs. Eli Kirk, 1709 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Prichard, Mrs. Frank P., Railroad Ave.
and Polo Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Prichett, Mr. W. B., 6205 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Prime, Mrs. Alfred C, Darby Rd.,
Paoli.
Prince, Mr. John W., 5439 Berks St.,
Philadelphia. (C.)
Puflf, Mrs. Charles F., Jr., Noble Vista,
Jenkintown.
Pugh, Miss Anne J., City Line Ave.,
Overbrook.
Pugh, Mrs. William Barrow, 226 W.
Mowry St., Chester.
Pusey, Mrs. F. S., 734 Millbrook Lane,
Haverford.
Pusey, Mr. H. Carroll, Swarthmore.
Putnam, Mrs. Earl B., 1926 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Pyle, Mr. Robert, Conard and Pyle
Co., West Grove. (C.)
Pyle, Mrs. Robert C, 3d, Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Rader, Mrs. Archibald F., Box 1, Haver-
ford.
Radford, Mrs. Robert, care of The
Southern Hotel, Fifth St., Ocean City,
N.J.
Raiguel, Miss Ellen M., 217 W. Michigan
Ave., DeLand, Fla.
Rakestraw, Mr. Frederick A., 5917
Drexel Road, Overbrook.
Rakestraw, Mrs. Frederick A., 5917
Drexel Road, Overbrook.
Ramsay, Mrs. William G., Guyencourt,
Del.
Rand, Mr. Louis M., 42 Ridley Ave.,
Norwood, Del. Co.
Randolph. Miss Anna, 218 W. Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Mr. Evan, Seminole and
Chestnut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Mrs. Evan, Seminole and
Chestnut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Rasmussen, Mr. Alfred O., 7 Heather-
bloom Apts., State College.
Rasmussen, Mr. Seren, care of Mr. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Ratcliff, Mr. Wayne W., 152 Montgom-
ery Ave., Cynwyd.
Rauch, Mrs. Rudolph S.. Villa Nova.
Ravdin, Dr. L S., 4623 Larchmont Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Rawle, Miss Louisa, Roberts Rd,,
Bryn Mawr.
Rawson, Mrs. Edmund G., 7 W. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Rav. Mr. C. Paul, Jr., Winsford Rd.,
Brvn Mawr.
Rayford. Mr. T. J., Henderson. Texas.
Razek, Mrs. Frances, 6252 Wissahickon
Ave.. Germantown.
Read, Mrs. Charles N., Elkins Park.
Read. Mrs. W. B.. Conshohocken. _
Reath. Mrs. Benjamin, The Wellington,
Philadelphia.
Reath, Mrs. Theodore W., Pont Read-
ing House, Ardmore.
Reath, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., P. O. Box 4357,
Chestnut Hill.
Rebmann, Mrs. G. R., 216 Glenn Road,
Ardmore.
Rebmann, Mrs. G. R., Jr., Millbrook
Lane, Haverford.
Rebmann. Mrs. Paul C, 251 Hathaway
Lane, Wynnewood.
Reckefus, Dr. Charles H., Jr., 506 N.
6th St., Philadelphia.
Redgrave, Mr. Arthur R. O., 308 Vassar
Ave., Swarthmore.
Reed, Mrs. Alan H., Hall Rd., Wyn-
cote.
Rees, Mrs. James L, R. D. 1, Bridgeport.
Reese, Mrs. Charles Lee, 16th and
Brinckle Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Reeve, Mrs. J. Stanley, Haverford.
73
Reeve, Miss Laura, 2222 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Reeve, Mrs. W. F., 170 E. Main St.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Reeves, Miss Eleanor ]M., 519 W. Wal-
nut Lane, Germantown.
Reeves, Mr. Frank A., 95 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Reeves, Mrs. Horace A., 519 W. Walnul
La., Germantown.
Reeves, :Mrs. S. K., 220 Pembroke Ave.,
St. Davids.
Register, Mrs. Henry C., Haverford.
Reichert, Miss Emma H., 48 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Raid, Mr. Carn, 1611 Greenway Ave.,
Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Reid, Mr. Edward, 1633 Ranstead St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Reid, Mr. Lloyd, 1633 Ranstead St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Reinhardt, Mrs. Henry B., Laurel Lane,
Haverford.
Remer, Mrs. David, St. Georges Road,
Mt. Airy.
Rentschler, Mr. William H., Linwood,
N. J. (C.)
Rhoads, Airs. Charles J., Bryn Alawr.
Rhoads, Mrs. Logan, 2112 Delancey PI.,
Philadelphia.
Rhoads, Mr. William E., R. D. 3, Box
143, Moorestown, N. T.
Rhoads, Mrs. William E., R. D. 3. Box
143, Moorestown, N. J.
Rich, Mr. Lewis D., 4820 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Richards. Mr. Arthur, 15 N. Scott Ave.,
Glen Olden.
Richards, Aliss Helen E., 809 Swede St.,
Norristown.
Richards. Mrs. J. Ernest, 1148 Fifth
Ave., Apt. 11 A, New York, N. Y.
Richards, Mrs. Robert H., 2102 Park-
•vTiy, Wilmington, Del.
Richards, Mrs. Samuel Bartram, 1811
DeLancev Place, Philadelphia.
Richards, Mrs. W. J., 1311 Howard St.,
Pottsville.
Richardson, Mr. Frederick, 421 E. Lan-
caster Ave., St. Davids.
Richardson, Dr. Russell, 320 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Richardson, Airs. Tolbert X., West
School House Lane, Germantown.
Ridgely, Airs. Henry, Dover, Del.
Riehle, Air. Frederick, 2311 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Righter, Aliss Jane, Dublin Rd., Green-
wich, Conn.
Riley, Air. George J., 1634 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Rinn, Airs. E. W., 1210 Douglas Ave.,
Kalamazoo, Alich.
Ristine, Mrs. Charles S., 244 Hath-
away La., Wynnewood.
Ristine, Airs. F. P., Wayne.
Ritchie, Airs. C. L., Livezey Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Riter, Mrs. Alichael AL, Jr., 119 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Rittenhouse, Airs. Leon H., 6 College
Lane, Haverford.
Ritter, Dr. Frank G., 1132 Divinity St.,
Philadelphia.
Ritter, Air. W. H., 5424 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Robb, Airs. Henry B., 1726 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Robbins, Mrs. George A., Butler Pike,
Ambler.
Robbins, Air. George S., Rose Lane.
Haverford.
Robbins, Airs. George S., Rose La.,
Haverford.
Roberts, Airs. A. C, Kimberton.
Roberts, Mrs. Algernon B., Bala.
Roberts, Aliss Alice S., R. F. D. Box 133,
Willow Grove. ■
Roberts, Air. C. Howard, Centre Square.
Roberts, Air. Charles C, 75 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Roberts, Air. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Mrs. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Airs. G. W. B., 1806 DeLancey
PL, Philadelphia.
Roberts, Airs. Isaac W., Bala.
Roberts, Aliss Jane L., 6439 Cherokee
St., Germantown.
Roberts, Airs. T. Williams, Pencoj^d
Farm, Bala.
Roberts, Air. Thomas, care of Airs. Ed-
ward Alorrell, Torresdale. (G.)
Roberts, Airs. William H., Wynderley,
Aloorestown, N. J.
Robertson, Airs. Tate AlacEwen, Wynne-
wood.
Robertson, Air. W. H., Glenmeade
Farms, R. D. 1, Alalvern.
Robertson, Air. William, Wayne. (G.)
Robins, Airs. Thomas, 618 Hazlehurst
Ave., Alerion.
Robinson, Mr. Anthony W., 780 Col-
lege Ave., Haverford.
Robinson, Airs. H. N., 211 Franklin Ave.,
Norristown.
Robinson. Airs. Hanson, 221 S. Aberdeen
Ave., Wavne.
Robinson, Airs. Louis Barclav, 235 S.
15th St., Philadelphia.
Robinson, Aliss Lydia S. AL, Paoli.
Robinson, Airs. M. D., R. F. D. No. 1,
Ambler.
Robinson, Air. ^'. Gilpin, 312 Baltimore
Ave., Clifton Heights.
Robinson, Airs. V. Gilpin, 312 Baltimore
Ave., Clifton Heights.
74
Rodeback, Miss Ella A., 413 9th St..
Upland, Del. Co.
Rodgers, Mrs. James, 630 W. Allen Lane,
Germantown.
Rodgers, Mrs. John J. P., 169 Maplewood
Ave., Germantown.
Rodman, Mrs. J. Stewart, 51 Manor Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Roehm, Mrs. Mary J., 515 Hamilton St.,
Norristown.
Rogan, Mrs. John M., 313 St. Davids
Rd., St. Davids.
Rogers, Mrs. Guy W., 36 Linden Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Rogers, Miss Lillian E., 1011 Larchmont
Ave., Penfield, Upper Darby.
Rombach, M"rs. D. G., P. O. Box 411.
Haverford.
Root, Miss Fannie A., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Root, Miss Mary L., 631 E. Lever ington
Ave., Roxborough.
Root, Mr. Stanley W., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Rosenbluth, Mr. Edwin M., Wallingford.
(C.)
Rosengarten, Mrs. Adolph, St. Davids.
Rosengarten, Mr. George D., Malvern.
Rosengarten, Mrs. George D., Mal-
vern.
Rosengarten, Mrs. J. Clifford, Villa
Nova.
Rosengarten, Mr. Joseph G., Jr., 916
Parrish St., Philadelphia.
Rosenwald, Mrs. Lessing J., Abington.
Rosenwald, Mrs. William, 8120 Cedar
Rd., Elkins Park.
Ross, Mrs. Adam A., 121 Bleddyn Road,
Ardmore.
Ross, Mrs. Donald P., Montchanin,
Del.
Ross, Mrs. Henry A., Huron St. and
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ross, Miss Matilda, 7 Gordon Ave.,
Haverford.
Ross, Mr. Roderick W., 202 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ross, Miss Sophia L., 8014 Crefeldt St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Ross, Mrs. T. Edward, 119 Bleddyn
Road, Ardmore.
Rossell, Mrs. Axel, Devon.
Rossmassler, Mrs. Richard, 208 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Rotan, Mrs. Ellwood J., "Old Oak
Farm," Valley Forge.
Rotan, Mrs. Samuel P., E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Roth, Mrs. William H., 447 E. Mt. Pleas-
ant Ave., Germantown.
Rothe, Mr. Max H.. 7142 Germantown
Ave., Mt. Airy. (F.)
Rowland, Mrs. Louis H., Radnor.
Rowland, Mrs. William C, 145 Maple-
wood Ave., Germantown.
Rowland, Mrs. William L., Rose Tree
and Crum Creek Roads, Media.
Royer, Mrs. Frank, Qoverly La., Rydal.
Rudley, Mr. William L, 721 Girard Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Rue, Mrs. Howard S., Fisher Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Rumpp, Mr. H. C, 5th and Cherry Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Rumpp, Miss Marie W., 5710 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Rupert, Mrs. Charles G., "Sedgely," Wil-
mington, Del.
Ruschenberger, Mrs. Charles Wister,
Strafford.
Rush, Mrs. Arthur, Highland and Wyn-
cote Aves., Jenkintown.
Rush, Mr. Benjamin, 1600 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Rush, Mrs. Benjamin, West Chester.
Rust, Mr. David, 1010 Fayette St.,
Conshohocken.
Ryder, Miss Grace G., Box 97, Berwyn.
Saam, Miss Amalia, 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Saam, Miss Anna S., 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Saam, Miss C. Elsa, 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Sackett, Mrs. Benjamin R., 6109 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Sackett, Mrs. Franklin Page, 410 Love
Lane, Wynnewood.
Sallade, Miss Florence D., 50 N. Wake-
field Road, Norristown.
Sanson, Mrs. Albert W., 5826 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Sapovits, Mr. Morris M., P. O. Box 295,
Chester.
Sargent, Mr. Winthrop, Haverford.
Sargent, Mrs. Winthrop, Jr., Haverford.
Sartain, Miss Harriet, School of Design,
Broad and Master St-s., Philadelphia.
Satterthwait, Mr. Thomas C, W. Scott-
dale Ave., Lansdowne.
Satterthwaite, Mr. Walter B., 5408
Gainor Rd., Wynnefield.
Saul, Mrs. Maurice Bower, Moylan-Rose
Valley.
Saunders, Mrs. W. B., 5930 City Line
Ave., Overbrook.
Saunders, Mrs. W. L., Idlewild Farms,
Bryn Mawr.
Savage, Mrs. D. Fitzhugh, 4249 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Savage, Airs. Ernest C., E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Savage, Mr. Walter P., 3115 N. 13th St.,
Philadelphia.
Savery, Mrs. Addison H., 429 W. John-
son St., Germantown.
75
Savidge, Mrs. Mary M., Ill Montgomery
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Savill, Mrs. Thomas M., 208 Cedar Lane,
Highland Park, Upper Darby P. O.
Sayres, Mrs. Edward S., Box 51, Haver-
ford.
Scatchard, Mr. Wm., 3911 Henry Rd.,
East Falls.
Scattergood, Mrs. Alfred G., "Av^bury,"
Germantown.
Scattergood, Mrs. J. Henrv, Villa Nova.
Scattergood, Mr. T. Walter, 75 N. Owen
Ave., Lansdowne.
Scattergood, Mrs. Thomas, 3515 Powel-
ton Ave., Philadelphia.
Schaal, Mr. Harry, S. W. cor. Albemarle
and Beverly Rds., Drexel Hill Gardens,
Del. Co.
Schaffer, Mr. Wm. I., Haverford.
Schaffer, Mrs. Wm. I., Haverford.
Schaible, Mrs. Charles M., 25 Columbia
Ave., Vineland, N. J.
Schearer, Mr. H. F., 30 Princeton Rd.,
Brookline. (N.)
Schedin, Mrs. P. H., School of Horticul-
ture, Ambler.
Scheetz, Mrs. Francis H., 9 Gordon Ave.,
Haverford.
Scheetz, Mrs. William C, 433 Bryn
Mawr Ave., Cynwyd.
Schenck, Mrs. William A., R. F. D. 2,
Phoenixville.
Schimpf, Mrs. Henry L., Jr., 7100 Mc-
Callum St., Mt. Airy.
Schindler, Miss Theresa Eliz., The Fair-
mont School, 1711 Alassachusetts Ave.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
Schissler, Miss Rose, 2605 W. Harold
St., Philadelphia.
Schlacks, Mrs. Charles H., Bryn Mawr.
Schmidt, Mrs. Charles E., 7837 York
Road, Elkins Park.
Schmidt, Mr. Edward A., 127 Edward
St., Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Mr. Fred W., 127 Edward St.,
Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Mrs. Helene K., Ashwood Rd.,
Villa Nova.
Schmitt, Mr. Xavier E. E., Horticul-
tural Hall, West Park, Philadelphia.
(G.)
Schneider, Mr. Herbert C, 803 E. Wash-
ington La., Germantown.
Schneider, Mr. Robert, 523 Jenkintown
Rd., Elkins Park. (G.)
Schoettle, Mr. Edwin J., 533 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Schofield, Mr. James D., 545 E. Hermi-
tage St., Roxborough.
Schoneman, Mrs. R. A., 6429 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
Schraishuhn, Mrs. Charles A., 703 N.
64th St., Philadelphia.
Schuck, Mrs. Leon H., 6 Fifth Ave.,
Haddon Heights, N. J.
Schultz, Mr. Elmer K., 6101 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Schultz, Miss Emma K., Worcester.
Schulze, Mr. Albert W., 3611 Jasper St.,
Philadelphia.
Schumacher, Mr. William H., 226 Hewitt
Road, Glenside.
Schumann, Dr. Edward A., 15 Pelham
Rd., Mt. Airy.
Schutt, Mrs. Harold S., 2204 Grant Ave.,
Wilmington, Del.
Schuyler, Mrs. James E., 35 N. Harwood
Rd., Upper Darby.
Scott, Mr. Alexander B., The Coving-
ton Hotel, 37th and Chestnut Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Scott, Mrs. Arthur Hoyt, Todmorden
Farm, Brookhaven Rd., Media.
Scott, Mrs. Charles Henry, Jr., St.
Davids.
Scott, Mrs. Edgar, Woodbourne, Lans-
downe.
Scott, Miss Florence B,, Box 119,
Wynnewood.
Scott, Mr. Henry J., 1012 Fox Bldg.,
1612 Market St., Philadelphia.
Scott, Mrs. Henry P., Delaware City,
Del.
Scott, Mrs. Hugh D., Jr., 348 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
Scott, Mr. Joseph M., 137 Hewett Rd.,
Wyncote.
Scott, Airs. Samuel B., 1 Norman Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Scott, Mrs. W. M., Jr., 7207 Boyer St.,
Philadelphia.
Scott, Mrs. William R., 5439 North-
umberland St., Pittsburgh.
Scull, Mrs. Marshall, 8525 Ardmore Rd.,
Chestnut Hill.
Scull, Mrs. William C, Bryn Mawr.
Scull, Mrs. William S., Pelham Court,
Germantown.
Seabrease, Mrs. N. McLean, Whitpain
Farm, Ambler.
Seal, Mrs. Joseph S., 230 Cornell Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Sealey, Mrs. J. N., Langhorne.
Search, Mrs. Hendrick W., 202 St.
Mark's Square, Philadelphia.
Sears, Mr. Thomas Warren, 1600 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia. (L.)
Seeds, Mrs. Joseph R., 151 W. School
La., Germantown.
Seeler, Mrs. Edgar V., Dengleton Farm,
Newtown Square.
Seelev, Mrs. Oscar, White Horse Rd.,
Paoli.
Seipt, Mrs. Samuel A., 507 Wyndmoor
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Selig, Mrs. B., 6501 N. 13th St., Phila-
delphia.
76
Sellers, Mrs. Horace W., Ardmore.
Sellers, Mrs. Howard, "Shadowbrook,"
P. O. Box 249, Wynnewood.
Seltzer, Mr. Richard J., 5700 City Line,
Overbrook.
Senat, Mrs. Herbert D., 301 Glenolden
Ave., Glenolden, Del. Co.
Seneff, Mrs. Edward H., Canterbury
Lane, St. Davids.
Senter, Mrs. Ralph T., Lancaster and
Bowman Aves., Overbrook.
Serrill, Mr. William J., Haverford.
Serrill, Mrs. William J., Haverford.
Service, Mrs. Charles A., City Ave., Bala.
Seth, Mrs. Harry V., Cascade and Hill-
crest Roads, Springfield.
Seuffert, Mrs. George W., 3936 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Sewell, Mrs. Robert, Rydal.
Sewell, Mrs. W. J., Jr., St. Martins La.,
Chestnut Hill.
Seyler, Mr. H. G., Farr Nursery Co.,
Weiser Park. (N.)
Shaffer, Mrs. A. C, Forrest Ave.,
Wayne.
Shallcross, Mrs. Frank A., 4015 Tyson
St., Tacony.
Shallcross, Mrs. J. Burton, 710 W. Aliens
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Shand, Miss Helen E., 226 Upland Way,
Wayne.
Shannon, Mrs. T. Taylor, Malvern.
(C.)
Sharp, Miss Estelle L., Berwyn.
Sharp, Mrs. Marie B., Pembroke Ave.,
St. Davids.
Sharpe, Mrs. John S., Haverford.
Sharpless, Mrs. S. F., 1919 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Shaw, Mr. George F., Bowman and Hay-
wood Aves., Merion.
Shaw, Mrs. Joseph, 418 Vernon Road,
Jenkintown.
Shaw, Mr. Richard M., Box 3, Rose-
mont. (G.)
Sheafer, Mrs. Arthur W., 1443 Mahon-
tongo St., Pottsville.
Shearer, Mrs. Christine S., Worcester,
Montg. Co.
Sheble, Mrs. Frank J., 311 Roumfort Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Sheble, Mrs. J. Howard, Jr., Rydal.
Sheets, Mr. George, 39 E. Knowles Ave.,
Glenolden, Del. Co.
Sheldon, Mr. O. D., 416 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Shelton, Mrs. Frederick H., 1830 S. Rit-
tenhouse Sq., Philadelphia.
Sheppard, Mrs. E. M., 8012 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Sherk, Mr. David M., Garrett Hill.
Sherman, Mrs. C. Lester, Jr., N. E. Cor.
Bala and Kent Roads, Bala-Cynwyd.
Sherman, Mrs. H. G., 33 N. Harwood
Ave., Upper Darby.
Shermer, Mrs. George Y., 100 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Sherrerd, Mrs. Henry D. M., 41 Chew's
Landing Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Sherwood, Mrs. Deming, Valley Forge.
Shirley, Mrs. Harold R., 6649 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Shisler, Mrs. G. W., 5951 Overbrook
Ave., Overbrook.
Shoe, Mrs. Oliver M., 425 Wellington
Road, Narberth.
Shoemaker, Miss Amalia L, 8203 Forest
Ave., Elkins Park.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Edward C, 904 DeKalb
St., Norristown.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Edwin, Brookside
Farm, Paoli.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Harvey, 1727 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Shoemaker, Mr. Samuel, 1214-1215
Franklin Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Shrigley, Mr. Arthur, 150 Hilldale Rd.,
Lansdowne.
Shrigley, Miss Ethel Austin, 60 S.
Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne.
Shryock, Miss G. A., The Clinton, 10th
and Clinton Sts., Philadelphia.
Shryock, Mr. James R., 5722 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Shupert, Miss Florence, Newtown
Square.
Shute, Mrs. Albert Qement, 740 High
St., Pottstown.
Shute, Mr. E. L., 616 W. Upsal St.,
Philadelphia.
Sibley, Miss Florence, 1937 Panama St.,
Philadelphia.
Sibley, Mrs. Walter G., Meadowbrook.
Sigafoos, Mrs. Michael H., 6910 Hey-
ward St., Mt. Airy.
Sigel, Mr. George Henry, 548 W. Lind-
ley Ave., Philadelphia.
Sigel, Mrs. Louis, 8216 Seminole Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Silver, Mrs. J. Robinson, 210 Lansdowne
Ave., Wayne.
Simkins, Mrs. Lena, 1200 CoUings Ave.,
W. Collingswood, N. J.
Simon, Mr. Andrew,' York Rd., Towson,
Md.
Simon, Mrs. Edward P., 533 Arbutus St.,
Mt. Airy.
Simpson, Hon. Alex., Jr., 5854 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
Simpson, Mr. Charles G., 213 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Simpson, Miss Ida., 906 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Simpson, Mr. Joseph F., 207 Forrest
Ave., Narberth. (C.)
Simpson, Miss Mary A., 116 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
77
Simpson, Mrs. Percy, Overbrook.
Sims, Mrs. Joseph P., 319 E. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Sinkler, Miss Caroline S., 1604 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Sinkler, Mrs. Francis W., Bryn Mawr.
Sinkler, Mr. Wharton, Elkins Park,
Sinkler, Mrs. Wharton, Elkins Park.
Sinnickson, Mr. George R., Bryn Mawr.
Skerrett, Mrs. W. Henry W., Skeragay
Hill, Wayne.
Skillman, Mrs. Thomas J., 124 St.
Georges Road, Ardmore.
Slade, Mrs. Alexander T., Wynne-
wood.
Slaymaker, Mrs. S. E., Harrison Road,
Ithan.
Slifer, Miss Levina, 4250 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Sloan, Mrs. Burrows, Ardmore.
Sloan, Mr. William, Eagleville.
Slotter, Mr. John W., care of Mrs. M. A.
House, Chadds Ford. (G.)
Smaltz, Mrs. John H., 32 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Smedley, Mr. William Henry, Church
and Tacony Sts., Frankford.
Smith, Mrs. Arthur D., Remington Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Smith, Mrs. Arthur D., Jr., 414 Chiches-
ter Lane, Ardmore.
Smith, Mrs. C. Morton, 1718 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. Charles Harper, David
Grove Road, Hatboro.
Smith, Miss Elizabeth, Gwynedd Valley.
Smith, Miss Elizabeth W., 131 Montgom-
ery Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Smith, Miss Emily Stewart, 240 E. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Smith, Mrs. G. G., 6812 Quincy St., Ger-
mantown.
Smith, Mrs. Geoffrey S., Ft. Washing-
ton.
Smith, Mrs. George Mark, 6470 Drexel
Road, Overbrook.
Smith, Mrs. Harrison, Radnor and
Clyde Rds., Bryn Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. Herbert Aubrey, 147 Fern-
brook Ave., Wyncote.
Smith, Mr. Horace E., Glyn-Wynne
Road, Haverford.
Smith, Mrs. Horace E., Glyn-Wynne
Road, Haverford.
Smith, Mrs. I. H., 156 Mayland St., Ger-
mantown.
Smith, Mrs. Ira A., 828 W. Main St.,
Norristown.
Smith, Miss Jessie Willcox, "Cogshill,"
Allen Lane, Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. John T., 15 Cynwyd Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Smith, Mr. Lewis D. G., 40 Ridley Ave.,
Norwood.
Smith, Mrs. Lewis Lawrence, Strafford,
Chester Co.
Smith, Mrs. Manning J., 103 W. More-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Smith, Mrs. Mary F., Box 21, Beth-
ayres.
Smith, Miss Mary Grubb, 2201 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. W. A., 7406 Mountain Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Smith, Mr, W, Hinckle, Bryn Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. Walter Karsner, 339 E.
Wharton Road, Glenside.
Smith, Mrs. Wikoff, Morris Ave., Bryn
Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. William K., 332 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Smyth, Mrs. Fanny Belle D., "Home-
acre," West End, Fairmount, W. Va.
Snader, Mrs. E. Roland, Jr., "Ogston
House," Sussex Road, Wvnnewood.
Snedaker, Mrs. E. R., 4921 Parkside
Ave., Wynnefield.
Snowden, Mrs. George Grant, "Highland
Hall," Rosemont.
Snyder, Mr. John M., Elkins Park.
Snyder, Mrs. R. Maurice, Germantown
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Somers, Mr. Lewis S., Jr., 6936 Ridge
Ave., Philadelphia.
Somers, Mrs. Lewis S., Jr., 6936 Ridge
Ave., Philadelphia.
Sonneborn, Mrs. John G., 5019 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Sorg, Mr. C. A., 214 Brookdale Ave.,
Glenside.
Sowden, Miss Harriett, The Fairfax
Apts., Wayne Ave. and School La.,
Germantown.
Sowden, Mr. Lee, 3823 The Oak Rd.,
Philadelphia.
Sparks, Mr, John W,, 5820 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia,
Spatola, Mrs. James V., 421 ^Montgomery
Ave., Merion.
Speese, Dr. John, 723 S. Latch's La.,
Merion.
Spellissy, Mrs. F. F., 308 W. Hortter St.,
Germantown.
Spooner, Mrs. H. T. H., 106 S. 38th St.,
Philadelphia.
Sproat, Mrs. Harris L., 605 S. High St.,
^Vest Chester.
Spruance, Mrs, W. C, 2507 W. 17th
St., Wilmington, Del.
Stanton, Dr. H. C, Clifton Heights.
Starr, Mrs. Charles S., Haverford.
Starr, Mrs. Isaac Tatnall, Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Starr. Mr. James, 1324 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Stecker, Mrs. P. J., 315 Rex Ave., Chest-
nut Hill.
78
Steel, Mrs. A. G. B., "Sugar Loaf,"
Chestnut Hill.
Steele, Miss E. J., 6023 Drexel Rd.,
Overbrook.
Steele, Mrs. Edward A., 8212 St. Mar-
tins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Steele, Mr. Joseph M., 124 N. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Steele, Mrs. William, 3d, East Bells Mill
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Steere, Mrs. Jonathan, Walnut Lane,
Haverford.
Steigerwalt, Mrs. William H., Merion.
Stem, Mrs. S. G., Rolling Road, Bryn
Mawr.
Stengel, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Stephens, Mrs. Frank, Mattison Ave.,
Ambler.
Stephens, Mrs. Lucie L., Moylan.
Stephenson, Mr. G. H., 220 S. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Stephenson, Mrs. W. B., Haverford.
Stern, Mr. Arthur K., Hillcrest, Fox
Chase.
Stern, Mrs. Charles A., Baltimore and
Lincoln Aves., Swarthmore.
Stevenson, Mr. H. A., 60 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Stevenson, Mr. Markley, 225 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia. (L.)
Stevenson, Mrs. Milton W., 136 W. Mt.
Airy Ave., Mt. Airy.
Stevick, Mrs. Francis, 6325 Regent St.,
Philadelphia.
Stewardson, Miss E. P., 8611 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Stewart, Mrs. Charles H., St. Davids.
Stewart, Mrs. Daniel C, St. Davids.
Stewart, Mr. H. M., Wawa Dairy Co.,
Wawa.
Stewart, Miss Katharine, 1612 Pelham
Road, Beechwood Park, Upper Darby
P. O.
Stewart, Mrs. Rowe, 652 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Germantown.
Stewart, Mrs. Thomas D. W., 35 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Stewart, Mrs. Thomas S., 1532 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Stewart, Mr. W. Plunket, Murray House,
Villa Nova.
Stitekr, Mr. Fred D., 665 N. 63d St.,
Philadelphia.
Stites, Mrs. Fletcher W., 413 Haverford
Road, Narberth.
Stokes, Mrs. Charles P., "Lane's End,"
Narberth.
Stokes, Mrs. J. Stogdell, Spring Valley
Farm, Huntingdon Vallev P. O.
Stoner, Rev. A. B., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stoner, Mrs. A. B., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stoner, Miss Judith V., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stoner, Miss Mary H., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stormfeltz, Mrs. Elvira K., 502 Plar-
rison St., Ridley Park.
Stotesbury, Mrs. Edward T., White-
marsh Hall, Chestnut Hill.
Stout, Mrs. A. L., 403 W. School Lane,
Germantown.
Stout, Mr. C. Frederick C, 1051 N.
2d St., Camden, N. J.
Stout, Mrs. C. Frederick C, 214 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Stout, Mrs. F. Sturgis, Righters Ferry-
Road, Cynwyd.
Stout, Dr. George C, 2015 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Stovell, Mr. Morris Lewis, Haverford.
Strachan, Mr. Charles, Woodcrest, Rad-
nor. (G.)
Strassburger, Mr. Ralph B., Gwynedd
Valley.
Strauss, Mrs. Berthold, Ashbourne Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Strawbridge, Mrs. George H., "Winder-
mere," Bala.
Strayer, Mr. Franklin R., Box 22, West
Chester.
Street, Mrs. Gerald Basil, 1901 Greenhill
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Street, Mr. R. D., 119 Rosemont Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Stritzinger, Mrs. B. F., 556 Hamilton St.,
Norristown.
Stritzinger, Mrs. Lewis G., 520 Hamil-
ton St., Norristown.
Strohlein, Mr. George A., 218 Fulton St.,
Riverton, N. J. (C.)
Stroman, Mrs. C. M., 21 W. Upsal St.,
Philadelphia.
Strong, Miss Elizabeth, Villa Nova.
Stroud, Mr. Edward A., 508 S. 41st St.,
Philadelphia.
Stroud, Mrs. Morris W., Jr., Villa
Nova.
Stroud, Mrs. William D., County Line
Road, Villa Nova.
Strubing, Mr. P. H., 307 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Stuart, Mrs. George H., 3d, Villa Nova.
Stuart, Mrs. Kenneth E., 367 Baird Rd.,
Merion.
Stuart, Mrs. William H., 443 Carpenter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Stuetz, Mrs. William A., 334 E. Phil-
Ellena St., Mt. Airy.
Sturgis, Mrs. Robert, Wyncote.
Styer, Miss Ardella Gould. 309 Forest
Ave., Ambler.
Suddards, Miss Elizabeth C, Wynne-
wood.
Sullivan, Mr. J. J., Jr., Spring Knoll'.
Farm, Ambler.
79
Summers, Mrs. Clarence Lynne, War-
wick Rd., Wynnewood.
Suplee, Airs. William F., 68 Raynham
Rd., Merion.
Supplee, Mrs. Walter B., Levering Mill
Rd. and Lodge's La., Bala-Cynwyd.
Supplee, Mrs. William L., Merion Sta-
tion.
Sutro, Mrs. Paul E., 5115 Wissahickon
Ave., Germantown.
Swab, Miss Jennie E., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swab, Miss Nellie A., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swartley, Mr. H. C, R. D. 3, Phoenix-
ville.
Swing, Miss R. Elizabeth, 156 Strode
Ave., Coatesville.
Sykes, Mrs. Charles H., 334 Llandrillo
Rd., Bala-Cynwyd.
Synnestvedt, Mr. Arthur, Bryn Athyn.
Taggart, Mrs. Paul Leidy, 621 W. Clive-
den Ave., Germantown.
Talimer, Mrs. Bernard, The Warwick,
1701 Locust St., Philadelphia.
Tappan, Mrs. Paul, 108 Booth La.,
Haverford.
Tarburton, Mrs. C, 220 Volan St., Mer-
chantville, N. J.
Tatnall, Airs. H. Chace, Whitemarsh.
Taylor, Air. Charles D., 223 Oak Ter-
race, Merchantville, N. J.
Taylor, Mrs. Fred W., 239 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Taylor, Airs. George B., 150 W. 6th St.,
Erie.
Tavlor, Airs. Herbert K., 8211 Cedar
Rd., Elkins Park.
Taylor, Mrs. Roland L., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Taylor, Mrs. W. J. Romevn, 517 Cres-
heim Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Taylor, Airs. William J., 1825 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Taylor, Mrs. William Rivers, 516 Auburn
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Taylor, Mrs. William Shipley, 530 Cres-
heim Valley Road, Chestnut Hill.
Teamer, Mr. Thomas A., 213 Wayne
Ave., Lansdowne.
Teeuwen, Air. John, care of American
Shipping Co., 29 Broadway, New York,
N. Y.
Templin, Mrs. John C, Gay St. and Vir-
ginia Ave., Phoenixville.
Tenbrook, Mrs. Philip, Berwvn.
Thaw, Mrs. William, Jr., 5427 Forbes
St., Pittsburgh.
Thayer, Mrs. A. D., Gwynedd Valley.
Thaver, Airs. Edmund, Haverford.
Thayer, Airs. G. C, Villa Nova.
Thayer, Mrs. John B., Redwood,
Haverford.
Thayer, Airs. Sydney, Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. Sydney, Jr., Beaumont Rd.,
Devon.
Thayer, Mr. Walter, Green Hill Farms
Hotel, Overbrook.
Thiele, Miss Marguerite E., Orthodox
St. at Frankford Ave., Frankford.
(F.)
Thomas, Mrs. Arthur H., Haverford.
Thomas, Mrs. Edward Osgood, 525 Cedar
Lane, Swarthmore.
Thomas, Miss Estelle, 623 N. Alain St.,
Norristown.
Thomas, Mrs. Frank Wister, 27 E. Mt.
Airy Ave., Mt. Airy.
Thomas, Mrs. George, 3d, Whitford
Game, Whitford.
Thomas, Miss Martha G., Whitford,
Chester Co.
Thomas, Mrs. Samuel Hinds, Torres-
dale.
Thompson, Mrs. Arthur W., "Dun-
woodie," W. Chestnut Ave., Chestnut
Hill.
Thompson, Mr. Horace E., 5016 Schuyler
St., Germantown.
Thompson, Mr. Robert W., Haverford.
Thompson, Airs. Robert W., Haverford.
Thompson, Mrs. Rodman Ellison, Devon.
Thompson, Mr. Wesley E., R. F. D. No.
2, Bristol.
Thomson, Miss Anne, Bryn Mawr.
Thomson, Mrs. F. G., Devon.
Thomson, Miss Helen Georgia, 301
Chestnut Rd., Glenside.
Thomson, Mrs. Walter S., 1722 Spruce
St., Philadelnhia.
Thorn, Air. Fred G., Jr., 307 West Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Thornley, Mrs. George H., 416 W.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Tilden, Mrs. Marmaduke, Skippack Pike,
Blue Bell.
Tily, Miss Ethel H., 121 Montgomery
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Tily, Mrs. Harry C, 2d, 32 Overhill
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Timanus, Airs. J. Herbert R., 431 W.
Johnson St., Germantown.
Tindle, Mrs. James R., "Valley Forge
Farms," Valley Forge.
Tingle, Aliss Eleanor M., 1134 S. Wilton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Todd, Mr. H. Arnold, Doylestown.
Toerring, Miss Helen C, 6399 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Tonkin. Air. John, care of Miss L. T.
Morris. "Compton," Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Torrey, Mrs. James C, 206 Greenwood
Ave., Jenkintown.
Totten, Mrs. John F., 830 Stanbridge St.,
Norristown.
Toulmin, Mrs. Harry, Haverford.
Towill. Mr. Edward, Roslyn, Montgom-
ery Co. (C.)
Town, Mrs. Edwin C, 200 N. Isarberth
Ave., Narberth.
Townsend, Mr. B. F., care of DeHaven
and Townsend, 1415 Walnut St., Phila-
delphia.
Townsend, Mrs. Edward P., 128 Edge-
wood Rd., Ardmore.
Townsend, Mrs. John Barnes, Radnor.
Townsend, Mr. John W., Bryn Mawr.
Trasel, Miss Mane L., Haverlord.
Trask, Mrs. John E. D., 2024 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Tresselt, Mr. Ralph E., 2419 Jefferson
St., Philadelphia.
Trimble, Mrs. J. K., Upland Way,
Wayne.
Trimble, Mr. William, 204 S. Walnut
St., West Chester.
True, Dr. Rodney H., 4111 Baltimore
Ave., Philadelphia.
Tryon, Mrs. Charles Z., Rose Lane,
Haverford.
Tucker, Mr. Chester E., 6200 Greene
Street, Germantown.
Tull, Mr. Herbert G., 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Tull, Mr. T. Mitchell, 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Tunis, Mrs. Joseph P., 18 Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Twining, Mrs. Iredell, Hatboro R. F. D.
Tyler, Miss Helen B., Villa Nova.
Tyler, Miss Mary G., Apt. 213, Lincoln
Court, Overbrook.
Tyson, Mrs. Carroll S., Jr., Chestnut
Hill.
Tyson, Mrs. T. M., 400 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Ueland, Miss Elsa, Carson College,
Flourtown.
Ullman, Mrs. A. M., 129 First Ave., Col-
legeville.
Underwood, Mrs. J. A., 130 W. Penn St.,
Germantown.
Urban, Mr. Abram L., Jr., 922 Edge-
wood Ave., Trenton, N. J. (L.)
Uthofif, Mr. Frederick H., Bristol Road,
Churchville.
Valle, Mrs. I. Bodine, care of Mr. S. T.
Bodine, Villanova.
Vandegrift, Mrs. Anna D., 76 E. Logan
St., Germantown.
Vandegrift, Miss Dorothy A., 76 E.
Logan St., Germantown.
Van den Hengel," Mr. Walter, 2095 N.
63d St., Philadelphia. (C.)
van den Hoek, Mr. A. M., care of Koster
& Co., Bridgeton, N. J. (N.)
Vanderslice, Mrs. Charles M., 602 S.
Main St., Phoenixville.
Van Fossen, Miss Edith, 121 E. 4th St.,
Lansdale.
Van Hoesen, Mrs. Stephen G., Fanwood,
N. J.
Van Horn, Mrs. R. W., 15 E. Greenwood
Ave., Lansdowne.
Van Lear, Mrs. J. Findlay, 1701 Green-
hill Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Van Leeuwen, Mr. Karel, care of Copex
Co., Inc., Room 805, HI Broad St.,
New York, N. Y. (N.)
Vansant, Mr. Joseph A., Lafayette Hill,
Montgomery Co.
Vauclain, Mrs. J. L., Buck Lane, Haver-
ford.
Vauclain, Mr. Samuel M., 123 S.
Broad St., Philadelphia.
Vaughan, Mrs. Cecil H., 24 Simpson Rd.,
Ardmore.
Vaughan, Mrs. Charles P., 58th and City
Ave., Philadelphia.
Vaux, Mrs. George, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Vaux, Mrs. J. Wain, Penllyn P. O.
Velie, Mr. Phil. J., 29'^ Spruce St., Mar-
cus Hook.
Verlenden, Miss Mary, 99 E. Greenwood
Ave., Lansdowne.
Verner, Miss Anna M., 3811 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Vick, Mr. A. F. W., Bentley Ave., Cyn-
wyd. (C.)
Vogdes, Miss Dorothy, 347 Llandrillo
Rd., Cynwyd.
Vogdes, Mr. James M., 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Vogel, Mr. Fred, 23 Ridley Ave., Aldan,
Delaware Co. (F.)
Vollmer, Mr. Adrien Winston, 27 Trans-
portation Bldg., 26 S. 15th St., Phila-
delphia.
Von Hiller, Baroness E., 7908 York Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Wagner, Mrs. Earl G., 268 Hathaway
Lane, Wynnewood.
Wagner, Mrs. J. Earl, 2113 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Wagner, Mr. John, School House Lane,
Germantown.
Wainwright, Mrs. F. King, Bryn Mawr.
Walbaum, Miss E. C, Glyn Ython Farm,
Ithan.
Walbridge, Airs. C. C, Elbow Lane and
McCallum St., Mt. Airy.
Walcott, Mrs. Charles D., 1743 22nd
St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
Walker, Mrs. Arthur M., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Walker, Miss Elizabeth F. L.. 2131
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Walker, Mrs. I. C, 1202 DeKalb St..
Norristown.
Walker, Miss Isabella, 40 Jacoby St.,
Norristown.
Walker, Mr. Thomas P., Ill E. Sedg-
wick St., Germantown.
Walker, Mrs. Thomas P., Ill E. Sedg-
wick St., Germantown.
81
Walker, Mrs. William W., 354 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
Walleigh, Mr. J. Walter, 110 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Waller, Mrs. L. W. T., Jr., 5 Red Oak
Rd., Wilmington, Del.
Wallis, Mrs. Allen, Annandale, Malvern.
Wallis, x\ir. James T., 301 St. Davids
Rd., St. Davids.
Wallis, Mrs. Phillip, 310 Qwyde Road,
Cynwyd.
Wain, Mrs. Charlotte M., West Chester.
Walsh, Mr. Stephen, Church Rd., Wyn-
cote. (G.)
Walter, Mr. C. S., 817 Seneca St., Beth-
lehem.
Walters, Air. Harry L., 27 Washington
St., Mt. Holly, N. J.
Walton, Mrs. Georgia Bonnell, St.
Davids.
Wanamaker, Aliss Louise, 290 N. High-
land Ave., Merion.
Wanner, Mr. William C, 1820 Susque-
hanna Ave., Philadelphia. (F.)
Ward, Mr. Joseph T., 5809-19 Baynton
St., Germantown.
Ward, Mrs. T. J., Merion.
Warden, Mrs. C. A., Haverford.
Ware, Mrs. K. P., 116 W. Wayne Ave.,
Wayne.
Ware, Mr. Romaine B., 128 W. Com-
merce St., Bridgeton, N. J.
Warner, Mrs. Charles, 2311 W. Uth St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Warner, Mrs. Frederick H.. Jr., 110 St.
Pauls Road, Ardmore.
Warner, Airs. Irving, 1109 Broome St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Warner, Aliss Iva B., Alalvern.
Warner, Mrs. AI. B., 421 Aleadowbrooke
Ave., St. Davids.
Warner, Aliss Mildred S., 1211 Stratford
Ave., Alelrose Park.
Warren, Airs. Frank B., 264 S. 46th St.,
Philadelphia.
Warriner, Mrs. Samuel D., 250 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Washburn, Airs. Louis AI., 7943 Winston
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Wasserman, Mrs. Joseph, Wissahickon
and Hortter Sts., Germantown.
Waterall, Airs. William, 4714 Springfield
Ave., Philadelphia.
Waterer, Mr. Anthony, 714 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Waterer, Mr. Harry AI., 714 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Waters, Airs. Edward, Woodmont.
Waters, Mrs. Henry, 107 Bentley Ave.,
Cynwyd.
Watson, Airs. F. R., Montgomery Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Watson, Airs. Frank C, Providence Rd.,
Media, R. 3.
Watson, Mrs. L. V. G., 3936 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Watson, Airs. Ihomas Theodore, Wayne.
Wattles, Mr. W. P., 301 Hathaway Lane,
Wynnewood.
Watts, Mrs. H. L., 527 E. Alermaid Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Way, Airs. Channing, N. High St., West
Chester.
Wayman, Air. Robert, First St., Bayside,
Long Island, N. Y. (C.)
Wayne, Airs. Joseph, Jr., 8200 St. Alar-
tins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Weaver, Aliss Florence S., 208 Summit
Ave., Jenkintown.
Webb, Air. Walter W., 516 Brookline
Blvd., Upper Darby.
Weckerle, Mrs. W. C, 425 Anthwyn
Road, Narberth.
Weeks, Mrs. Horace F., Rosemont.
Weidel, Airs. H. F., 701 S. Latches Lane,
Alerion.
Weihenmayer, Air. H. W., 1621 Diamond
St., Philadelphia.
Weihenmayer, Air. William J., Rydal.
Weihenmayer, Airs. William J., Rydal.
W^eikel, Airs. William D., 116 E. Alaple
Ave., Alerchantville, N. J.
Weild, Airs. Charles AI., 59th St. and
City Line, Overbrook.
Weir, Airs. Campbell, P. O. Box 282,
Wilmington, Del.
Weir, Airs. James, 671 Aleetinghouse
Rd., Jenkintown.
Weisenbach, Airs. Fred, 220 Audubon
Ave., Wayne.
Wells, Aliss Annie D., 3305 Baring St.,
Philadelphia.
Wells, Airs. G. Harlan, 1627 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Wells, Airs. William B., Pine Hill,
Alinersville.
Welsh, Mr. Edward L., 304 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Welsh, Mrs. Herbert S., Elbow Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Wertsner, Miss Anne B., 79 Herman St.,
Germantown.
Wertsner, Mr. Clayton S., 221 N. 13th
St., Philadelphia.
Wertsner, Air. George S., 79 Herman
St., Germantown.
Wertsner, Airs. George S., 79 Herman
St., Germantown.
West, Airs. James, 3d, Emlen Arms, Alt.
Airy.
West, Mrs. William T., 627 Walnut La.,
Haverford.
Weston, Airs. J. AI., 107 Walnut St.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Wetherill, Rev. Francis AI.. 3012 W.
Coulter St.. Philadelphia.
Wetherill, Airs. Francis AI., 3012 W.
Coulter St., Philadelphia.
82
Wetherill, Mrs. W. Chattin, Box 4381,
Chestnut Hill P. O.
Wetherill, Mrs. Webster K., Jamestown,
R. I.
Weyl, Mrs. Julius, Elkins Park.
Weyl, Mr. Maurice N., 6506 Lincoln
Drive, Mt. Airy.
Whartnaby, Mr. George M., Sr., 134 N.
61st St., Philadelphia.
Wheaton, Mrs. T. C, 516 High St.,
Millville, N. J.
Wheeler, Mr. Charles, Bryn Mawr.
Wheeler, Mrs. Susan F., Bryn Mawr.
Wheelwright, Mr. Robert, 225 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia. (L.) _
Whelen, Mrs. T. Duncan, 5641 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wherry, Mrs. Edgar T., 27 Oberlin Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Whitall, Mrs. William H. B., 5363 Mag-
aoiia Ave., Germantown.
White, Miss Anna D., 120 Hilldale Rd.,
Lansdowne.
White, Mr. Edward J., 9th and West-
moreland Sts., Philadelphia.
White, Miss Elizabeth C, New Lisbon,
N. J.
White, Mrs. Errol, Moylan-Rose Valley.
White, Miss Frances M., 525 Walnut
La., Swarthmore.
White, Mrs. Helen Comly, 120 Hilldale
Rd., Lansdowne.
White, Mrs. J. M., 5806 Woodbine Ave.,
Overbrook.
White, Mrs. John, 824 Clifford Ave.,
Ardmore.
White, Mrs. Lawrence G., Stockbridge,
Mass.
White, Miss Mary Louise, 1807 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
White, Mrs. R. H., 304 Pembroke Rd.,
Cynwyd.
White, Mrs. Thomas Raeburn, Penllyn.
White, Airs. Walter Rhoads, 130 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
White, Mrs. William, Cheswold Lane,
Haverford.
Whitehorn, Mrs. J. P., 56 W. Stratford
Ave., Lansdowne.
Whitesell, Mrs. James E., 92 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Whiting, Mrs. Allen E., Devon.
Whitney, Mrs. Daniel, 8005 Navahoe St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Whitney, Mrs. W. Beaumont, 300 W.
Gravers La., Chestnut Hill.
Whitridge, Mrs. Roland Barker, 135 S.
18th St., Philadelphia.
Whyte, Mrs. Hilson H., 340 Rumford
Rd., Mt. Airy.
Widener, Mr. Joseph E., Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Wiederhold, Mr. Louis, Jr., 414 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Wiederseim, Mr. William Caner, 1520
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Wigton, Mrs. Frank H., Grays Lane and
Mill Creek Rd., Ardmore.
Wilbur, Mrs. Rollin Henry, "Old Stone
House," St. Davids.
Wiley, Mrs. Harry E., 1440 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Wilkening, Mrs. Louise D., 33 Owen
Ave., Lansdowne.
Wilkins, Mr. George W., 138 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
Wilkinson, Mrs. Robert H., 688 S. High-
land Ave., Merion.
Willard, Mrs. DeForest P., 633 Wins-
ford Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Willcox, Mr. James M., 700 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Willcox, Mrs. William J., St. Davids.
Williams, Mrs. Charles S., Wrightstown.
Williams, Mrs. David E., Bala.
Williams, Miss Elizabeth D., Box 86,
Haverford.
Williams, Mrs. Henry S., 520 Panmure
Road, Haverford.
Williams, Mr. J. Randall, Jr., Wynne-
wood.
Williams, Mrs. J. Randall, Jr., Wynne-
wood.
Williams, Mr. John, Haverford.
Williams, Mrs. John J., 1101 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Williams, Mr. Leonard Willets, Box 566,
Haverford.
Williams, Mr. Parker S., 600 Provident
Trust Bldg., 17th and Chestnut Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Williams, Mrs. Robert Martin, Bala.
Williams, Mr. S. Monroe, 412 Haddon
Ave., Camden, N. J.
Williams, Miss Sarah D., 1321 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Williams, Mrs. Thomas S., Jenkintown.
Williamson, Mrs. H. H., 129 Levering
Mill Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Willing, Mrs. Charles, Hillcrest Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Willing, Mrs. E. S., Bryn Mawr.
Willing, Mrs. J. Kent, 1726 Rittenhouse
St., Philadelphia.
Willis, Miss M. Emma, 31 S. Brighton
Ave., Upper Darby.
Willits, Mr. I. Pearson, 31 W. Walnut
La., Germantown.
Willits, Mrs. M. N., Jr., 609 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Wilson, Mrs. Alan, Old Gulph Road,
Villa Nova.
Wilson, Miss Alice, "Brookside Farm,"
Valley Forge.
Wilson, Mrs. C. Colket, Paoli.
Wilson, Mr. Clarence E.. Bryn Mawr.
Wilson, Mr. David, care of Mr. William
duPont, Newtown Square. (G.)
83
Wilson, Miss Helen, 1509 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. Henry R., "Brookside
Farm," Valley Forge.
Wilson, Mrs. John Lewis, 1321 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. Mabel Reed, Malvern
R. D. 2.
Wilson, Mrs. Stanley E., 400 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. William K., Box 44, Bala-
Cynwyd.
Wilt, Mrs. M. D., 612 W. Hortter St.,
Germantown.
Windle, Mrs. W. Butler, Virginia Ave.,
West Chester.
Winlock, Airs. G. L., Alden Park Manor,
Germantown.
Winternitz, Mrs. Hiram, Jr., 320 Sum-
mit Ave., Wayne.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Haverford.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Jr., Ardmore.
Wintersteen, Mrs. A. H., 142 Grays La.,
Haverford.
Wirz, Mrs. Henry M., Wallingford.
Wistar, Miss Rebecca B., 3515 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wister, Mr. John C, Wister and
Clarkson Sts., Germantown. (L.)
Wister, Mrs. L. Caspar, Wynnewood.
Wister, Air. Owen, Bryn Alawr.
Witmer, Mrs. L. J., 46 Linden Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Wohlert, Mr. A. E., Narberth. (N.)
Wolf, Airs. Albert, 250 S. 17th St., Phila-
delphia.
Wolf, Mrs. Louis, Elkins Park.
Woltemate, Air. A. W.. Alt. Airy Ave.
and Ardleigh St.. Philadelphia. (F.)
Wonsetler, Mrs. Howard, 619 W. Main
St., Norristown.
Wood, Mrs. A. I., 334 Louella Ave.,
Wayne.
Wood, Mrs. Charles Martin, 5950 Drexel
Rd., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. Clement Biddle, Consho-
hocken.
Wood, Miss Dorothea, 1313 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. E. R., 2206 St. James' Place,
Philadelphia.
Wood, Airs. E. Stearns, 2127 Sansom St.,
Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. Edward F. R., N. W. cor.
Prospect Ave. & Gravers La., Chest-
nut Hill.
Wood, Airs. George B., 329 Hathaway
La., Wynnewood.
Wood, Airs. Grahame, Wawa.
Wood, Mr. Harry, 329 Cornell Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Wood, Mrs. Howard, Jr., Conshohocken.
Wood, Miss Julia L., Wayne.
Wood, Miss Katharine H., Baltimore
Ave. and Monroe St., Media.
Wood, Aliss M. Louise, Green Hill
Farms, Overbrook.
Wood, Miss Marion B., Conshohocken.
Wood, Mrs. Richard D., Wawa.
Wood, Airs. Richard G., Green Hill
Farms, Overbrook.
Wood, Mrs. Robert F., 237 Forrest Ave.,
Narberth.
Wood, Miss Sarah Keen, 4326 Osage
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mr. Walter, 400 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Woodall, Mr. John, 227 Washington
Lane, Jenkintown.
Woodall, Mrs. John, 227 Washington
Lane, Jenkintown.
Woods, Airs. Ralph, Rydal Rd., Noble.
Woodward, Mrs. George, Chestnut
Hill.
Woodward, Miss Quita, Mermaid La.
and McCallum St., Chestnut Hill.
Woolman, Aliss Anna, 21 N. Highland
Ave., Lansdowne.
Woolman, Mrs. Edward, Box 69,
Haverford.
Woolman, Mr. Henry N., 132 St.
George's Rd., Ardmore.
Woolverton, Air. William, 224 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Philadelphia.
Worrall, Mrs. N. Y., 41 E. Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Worth, Mrs. Edward H., Claymont, Del.
Worth, Mrs. George S., St. Davids.
Wriggins, Mrs. Charles C, 470 Locust
Ave., Germantown.
Wright, Airs. Alfred W., 52 E. Elm St.,
Norristown.
Wright, Airs. Franklin L., R. F. D. 4,
Norristown.
Wright, Airs. Harrison B., Green Hill
Farms, Overbrook.
Wright, Airs. John Castle, 44 Lincoln
Ave., Lansdowne.
Wright, Airs. M. G., 11th and Oak Lane
Sts., Oak Lane.
Wright, Miss Mary F., R. D. 1, Ambler.
(N.)
Wright, Mrs. Minturn T., 130 W.
Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Airs. Alinturn T., Jr., White-
marsh Road, Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Raymond D. B., 300 W.
Gravers La., Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Airs. Robert C, Haverford.
Wyatt, Airs. Walter S., The Barclay,
E. Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia.
Wynn, Airs. J. AI., Wayne.
Yarnall, Air. Charlton, Devon.
Yarnall, Airs. Harold E., 811 Packard
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Yarnall, Mr. William S., Box 152,
Haverford.
84
Yates, Mr. Harry O., Jr., Camden Co.
Vocational School, Merchantville, N. J.
Yeatman, Miss Georgina Pope, 520 E.
Graver's La., Chestnut Hill,
Yeatman, Mrs. Pope, 520 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Yerger, Mrs. Wilson S., 7312 Elbow
La., Mt. Airy.
Yerkes, Mrs. Louise A., Box 560, Hat-
boro.
Yerkes, Mrs. M. R., 812 Old Lancaster
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Yocom, Mrs. Thomas Corson, 321 Cyn-
wyd Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
York, Mrs. Edward H., Jr., Ithan.
Young, Mr. Frederick C, P. O. Box 201,
Palmyra, N. J.
Young, Mr. Howard E., 227 Park Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Young, Mr. John Welsh, Enfield. (C.)
Yowell, Mr. W. H., Narberth.
Zantzinger, Mrs. C. C, 8500 Seminole
Zeigler, Miss Elvie, 1603 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Zieget, Mrs. Julius, 132 Edgewood Rd.,
Ardmore.
Zieget, Miss Marcia Stuart, 132 Edge-
wood Road, Ardmore.
Zimmer, Mrs. George, Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Zimmerman, Miss Anna W., The
Hedges, Rydal.
Zimmerman, Dr. Mason W., Rydal.
Zipf, Mr. Carl H., 135 Bryn Mawr Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Zook, Mrs. S. Townsend, Bowman and
Linden Lane, Merion.
SUMMARY
Honorary Members 10
Life Members 221
Annual Members 2500
Total Membership 2731
85
N^rrologg
The following is a list of the members of this Society whose deaths
have been reported during the year 1930:
Life
Mr. Edward W. Bok
Miss Emily Lehman
Mr. George K. Reilly
Annual
Mr. F. L. Atkins
Mr. Simeon M. Brinton
Mr. James Crosby Brown
Mr. Josiah Bunting-
Mrs. C. Howard Clark, Jr.
Mrs. J. Milton Colton
Mr. Henry B. Coxe
Mrs. Francis V. Eavenson
Mr. Thomas M. Fitzgerald
Mr. John Fitzpatrick
Dr. Horace Howard Furness, Jr.
Miss Deborah H. Gay
Mrs. Francis I. Gowen
Dr. Joseph C. Guernsey
Mr. Shelton A. Hibbs
Mr. E. J. Lavino
Mrs. Arthur H. Lea
Mrs. F. H. Lewisson
Mr. J. H. Longmaid
Mrs. Fitz Eugene Newbold
Mr. William H. Reeves
Mr. Alexander C. Shand
Mr. James Thompson
Mr. A. Mitchell White
FORM OF BEQUEST
I GIVE AND BEQUEATH to THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTI-
CULTURAL SOCIETY
FOR
Name
1932
YEAR
BOOK
THE
PENNSYLVANIA
HORTICULTURAL
SOCIETY
^
• *.
±
<#
19 3 2
YEAR BOOK
of
The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society
*^'tto NOV/£*'^*'
With Reports and Membership List for
19 3 1
Issued from the office of
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
"Let Nature be your Teacher."
— WOODSWORTH.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Officers and Executive Council for 1932 5
Committees for 1932 6
Object and Privileges of Society 7
Eeports:
Annual Meeting 9
President 10
Secretary 12
Treasurer 18
Exhibition Committee 21
Awards— 1931 24
Committee on Garden Awards 28
Lecture Committee 30
Library Committee 30
Accessions — ^1931. 31
Periodicals— 1931 85
Garden Days 36
Consultant in Horticulture 37
Editor's Notes 37
In Appreciation 43
The John Bartram Celebration , 44
Gardens — A Comjuunity Asset 46
Development of the Dahlia in Recent Years 57
Book Mark Cut and 1932 Calendar 63
Garden Calendar 64
Report of Garden Division of State Federation of Pennsvlvania Women —
1931 \ 76
The Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania — 1931 76
By-Laws 82
Membership List, Including Summary of Members 87
Necrology 139
Form of Bequest 140
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
William J. Serrill, Vice-President 4
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Vice-President 8
Henry F. Michell, Honorary Vice-President 16
Samuel T. Bodine, Honorary Vice-President 32
C. Hartman Kuhn, Honorary Vice-President 34
H. H. Battles, Window Display 38
Daffodils at "Ronaele Manor" 42
Garden Walk in "Aysgarth" 56
Wall Planting in "Carrington" 80
WILLIAM J. SEERILL
Vice President
OFFICERS AND EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
President
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
Vice-Presidents
MRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
Honorary Vice-Presidents
MR. SAMUEL T. BODINE MR. C. HARTMAN KUHN
MR. HENRY F. MICHELL*
Treasurer Secretary
MR. S. S. PENNOCK MR. JOHN C. WISTER .
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Term ending December 31, 1932
MR. MORRIS R. BOCKIUS
MR. W. ATLEE BURPEE, JR.
MRS. J. NORMAN HENRY
MRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD
MR. J. FRANKLIN McFADDEN
MR. W. HINCKLE SMITH
MR. JOHN 0. WISTER
Term ending December 31, 1933
MR. FITZ EUGENE DIXON
MRS. WILLIAM T. ELLIOTT
MR. GEORGE L. FARNUM
MR. FAIRMAN ROGERS FURNESS
MR. S. S. PENNOCK
MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
Term ending December 31, 1934
MR. JOHN P. HABERMEHL
MR. JAY V. HARE
MR. ALEXANDER MacLEOD
DR. J. HORACE McFARLAND
MR. HENRY F. MICHELL*
MRS. THOMAS NEWHALL
MRS. ARTHUR H. SCOTT
*Died February 20, 1932.
COMMITTEES
The President, ex officio, is a member of all Committees.
Executive Committee
Me. William J. Serrill, Chairman Mr. W. Atlee Burpee, Jk.
Mr. Benjamin Bullock Mr. Henry F. Michell*
Mr. John C. Wister
Library Committee
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Chaii-man Mrs. Nathan Haywaru
Mrs. E. Page Allinson Mrs. John H. Packard
Miss Kitty Brinton Mrs. Alan H. Eeed
Mrs. Edward H. York, Jr.
Lecture Committee
Mrs. William T. Elliott, Chairman Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd
Mr. John C. Wister
Finance Committee
Mr. Fitz Eugene Dixon, Chairman Mr. S. S. Pennock
Mr. W. HmcKLE Smith
Exhibition Committee
Mr. George L. Farnum, Chairman Mr. Jay V. Hare
Mr. W. Atlee Burpee, Vice-Chairman Mrs. D. Braden Kyle
Mrs. William T. Elliott Mr. Alexander MacLeod
Mr. Fairman E. Furness Mrs. Charles S. Starr
Committee on Garden Awards
Mr. William J. Serrill, Chaii-man Mrs. A. F, M. Chandler
Mrs. Richard L. Barrows Mrs. Langdon Lea
Mrs. Benjamin Bullock Mrs. J. Thomas Ligget
Committee on Garden Consultation
Mr. John C. Wister, Chairman Mr. F. R Furness
Mrs. Benjamin Bullock Mr. Thomas W, Sears
Mrs. Edward M, Cheston Dr. Rodney H. True
*Died February 20, 1932.
OBJECT AND PRIVILEGES OF THE SOCIETY
The Society's object is to promote and encourage Horticulture
and to create a love for, and interest in, Plants and Flowers. It
desires to increase its membership in order that its work and
influence may be extended.
PRIVILEGES OF MEMBERSHIP INCLUDE
1. Subscription to Horticulture, a magazine published semi-
monthly in Boston for the Horticultural Societies of Massa-
chusetts, New York and Pennsylvania.
2. Services of Consultant in Horticulture — the only charge is
for actual traveling expenses when members' gardens are
visited. The Consultant may be seen at the rooms of the
Society by appointment.
3. Illustrated lectures by prominent horticulturists during the
winter season.
4. Admission to the Society's Exhibitions of Plants, Flowers,
Fruits and Vegetables.
5. Admission to the Philadelphia Flower Show.
6. Use of the Library, including circulating privileges. The
Library contains over 3000 volumes, in addition to current
horticultural magazines. The best of the new publications
are systematically added to the Library.
7. Admission to gardens listed in the School of Horticulture 's
Garden Bays.
8. Year Book, including reports, list of members, etc.
CLASSES OF MEMBERSHIP
Patrons : Who contribute the sum of $10,000.
Benefactors : Who contribute the sum of $5,000.
Sustaining Members: Who contribute the sum of $1,000.
Life Members : Who make a contribution of $100.
(Life Membership fee will remain fifty dollars until May
1, 1932.)
Annual Members: Who make an annual contribution of $3.00.
Make checks payable to
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
7
MES. HOEATIO GATES LLOYD
Vice President
THE ANNUAL MEETING, 1931
The President, Mr. C. Frederick C. Stout, presided at the an-
nual meeting of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, held at
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, on November 18, 1931, at 3 P. M.
After welcoming the members, Mr. Stout asked the Secretary,
Mr. John C. Wister, to announce the election of members to the
Executive Council for the term ending December 31, 1934. These
were as follows : Mrs. Thomas Newhall, Mrs. Arthur H. Scott, Mr.
John P. Habermehl, Mr. Jay V. Hare, Mr. Alexander MacLeod,
and Mr. Henry F. Michell.
The President then presented his annual report * and follow-
ing this the Secretary announced the election to Honorary Mem-
bership of the active officers of the Horticultural Societies of
Massachusetts and New York.
The Secretary presented his report for 1931,* in which he out-
lined the activities of the Standing and Special Committees and
noted the Society's accomplishments during the year.
An opportunity was given to the members to ask questions and
offer recommendations in regard to the Society's work. A horti-
cultural forum was then held, at which the Secretary presided.
Many questions were asked on various phases of gardening and the
following authorities were on hand to answer them — Mr. George L.
Farnum (dahlias), Mr. Harold G. Mattoon (injurious insects),
Mr. William H. Hitter (hardy chrysanthemums), Mr. David Rust
(general gardening), Mr. John C. Wisiter (bulbs and spring
flowers) .
After the meeting adjourned, the members were invited to the
Board Room, where tea was served.
*Published on following pages.
PRESIDENT'S REPORT FOR 1931
In this day and hour of so much financial and economic dis-
tress wherever we turn, it is indeed a great pleasure and privilege
for me to report to you that your Society has been able to maintain
its financial status and prosecute its mission with even greater vigor
and scope than heretofore. And if our success is to be measured by
jDopular favor, the fact that we have taken in an additional thou-
sand members, and lost but two hundred, is significant not only of
the need for our existence, but also a recognition of the help and
inspiration which the work of this Society is giving forth in the
great field of horticulture. Our membership today stands at thirty-
five hundred. Last year I said to you the Society should have at
least five thousand members. To obtain this goal we need fifteen
hundred new members. It would indeed be easy to acquire these
if all of our members would exert their influence on one or more of
their friends. The Society actually spends about eight dollars for
the services which it makes available to its members for three dol-
lars. The Society cannot enrich itself financially only by acquiring
new members, but should seek endowments and legacies that can
be placed in trust. We have a fine example of this in the Schaffer
Memorial.
I wish to announce the gifts to the Library of a complete set of
Curtis's Botanical Magazine, 1787-1926, by Mr. George L. Farnum,
Professor Sargent 's North America Silva in fourteen volumes, pre-
sented by the Executive Council, and the two supplementary vol-
umes. Trees and Shrubs, given by Mr. Hare. In this connection
I wdsh to say the Library has outgrown its present quarters. This
coupled with the many activities that take place in the offices of
the Society, has compelled us to look for more room, and we have
concluded negotiations with the lessors of our offices for an addition
of nine hundred square feet, and in renewing our lease we Avill get
this addition without any advance of rent. It is going to take
quite a little money for the changes that will have to be made in
furnishings. Many of you can make contributions to this expense
and should take it up with the Library Committee.
Your Society co-operated with the John Bartram Association,
the Academy of Natural Sciences and the American Philosophical
Society in observing the Two Hundredth Anniversary of the found-
ing of John Bartram 's Garden, June 5th and 6th last. Your
Society contributed five hundred dollars toward the replanting of
trees and shrubs in the Garden.
We make an annual contribution of one hundred dollars toward
the fund that is being built up to fight Rose Canker at Ithaca,
New York, sponsored by the American Rose Society and Cornell
University.
We also contributed six hundred and seventy-five dollars to
the School of Horticulture at Ambler in exchange for privilege of
Garden Daj^s.
10
The Society co-operated Avith the Philadelphia Flower Show
Association in the presentation of their great spring exhibit, held
in the month of March at the Commercial Museum, West Philadel-
phia, and the Philadelphia Flower Show Association again accorded
our members the privilege of two tickets for this Show.
We have maintained friendly relations with the Horticultural
Societies of New York and Massachusetts and exchanged gold
medals with them at important Flower Shows, as we did in previous
years. In this connection I regret, indeed, to note the passing of
Mr. Albert C. Burrage, President of the Massachusetts Horticul-
tural Society.
The Centenary Gold Medal of this Society was first given to
Mr. Boyd for his life work in the interests of this Society, and then
two years later to the Massachusetts Horticultural Society when it
commemorated its Centennial Anniversary. Your Council at the
October, 1931, meeting awarded this medal for the third time to
Mr. and Mrs. Pierre S. duPont for their accomplishments in the
field of horticulture, as expressed at their country estate, "Long-
wood." For its beauty, grandeur, and its vast collection of speci-
mens and rare plants it is outstanding and unexcelled.
In closing, I wish to extend my appreciation and thanks to the
Chairmen and members of the various Committees who have done
and are doing outstanding work in their own particular field, and
also the executive force for the loyal and splendid support which
they have given to me in the efforts which we have put forth.
C. FREDERICK C. STOUT,
President.
11
SECRETARY'S REPORT FOR 1931
It is gratifying to report that your Society has made such a
splendid growth this past year in spite of general business condi-
tions. There has been a corresponding increase in use of the
rooms and the Library, and also, I am glad to report, in the number
of meetings held in our Board Room. As you know, our quarters
are at the disposal of allied organizations for their meetings, and
among those who use our Board Room in this way are : the John
Bartram Association, the Council for the Preservation of Natural
Beauty in Pennsylvania, Conservation and Wild Flower Commit-
tee, Keystone Branch of the "Woman's National Farm and Garden
Association, the Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania, the
Pennsylvania Forestry Association, the Executive Board of the
Philadelphia Flower Show Association, the School of Horticulture 's
Executive Board, and various Garden Club Committees.
Our relations with our sister Societies of New York and Massa-
chusetts continue to be most friendly. The magazine Horticulture,
sponsored by the three Societies, but edited and published by the
Massachusetts Society, is probably the most outstanding privilege
offered to the members of these three organizations, and we are
proud that we are able to include it in every member's subscription.
In regard to our finances, the Treasurer asks me to tell you
that he will not make a formal report this afternoon, as his com-
plete statement will be published in the Year Book. However,
he would like me to mention to you that your Society is in good
condition and has not shared so far, to any appreciable extent,
in the prevailing depression. It looks now as if we shall be able to
keep within the budget this year, which is encouraging, as w^e
expect to incur some unusual expenses next year,
I shall not attempt to enumerate in this report the various
activities engaged in during the year, as they also will be set forth
in detail in the various Committee reports in the Year Book, but I
should like to mention some of the more important and interesting
things that have been accomplished,
Mr, Stout has told you that the Library has grown out of its
present quarters, and that within a few months or so we hope to
have it installed in its new location. We hope that its attractive
new home will encourage more members to use its splendid books
and periodicals. The Library has been the recipient of some impor-
tant books during the year — first. Professor Sargent's North
American Silva, in fourteen volumes, was presented by the Execu-
tive Council. As our President has told you, two supplementary
volumes, Trees and SJit^uhs, were given by one of the members of
our Council, Mr. Jay V. Hare, from his own collection, to complete
the Society's set, and Mr. George L. Farnum, another member of
the Council, gave the Society a complete set of Curtis 's Botanical
Magazine, the first issue of which was published in 1787. There
are about 135 volumes altogether, and the books constitute an out-
12
standing and valuable addition to the Library. This is the most
important gift the Library has ever had, and we are all very
grateful to Mr. Farnum.
The Library Committee published a catalogue of the books last
spring, and the cost of this cut pretty deeply into their appropria-
tion for the year, so that they were curtailed in the purchase of
books and welcomed donations with more than usual gratitude.
The catalogue was not distributed to every member, as the cost of
printing was high, and it was felt that a certain proportion of the
members would have no occasion to use it, but copies are available
for all who are interested, and may be obtained, without cost, at
any time from the Librarian.
The Lecture Committee is planning a series of three lectures
for January and February next, and announcement of these will
be made around the first of the year. Notices of the lectures and
all other activities are sent to all members, but I might remind you
that our events are also announced in advance in Horticulture, and
I would refer you to the regular space assigned to our Society on
the inside of the back cover for all items of general interest to
members.
This past spring an experiment was tried of holding the So-
ciety's Peony and Spring Flower Show jointly with that of the
Trevose Horticultural Society, upon the invitation of that organi-
zation. The exhibition Avas held in Trevose and was an interesting
and creditable one, but it was so far for many of our exhibitors to
carry their exhibits that it would hardly seem fair to ask them to
go to distant suburban territory in a different direction every year.
However, if a suitable hall cannot be found that is fairly accessible
to the majority of our exhibitors, this plan may be the best that is
available.
The Dahlia Show was held in conjunction with the Bryn Mawr
Horse Show in Bryn MaA\a% and perfect weather the first day made
an outdoor Show most alluring, but a steady downpour of rain the
second day resulted, naturally, in an almost empty tent as far as
spectators were concerned.
The Philadelphia Flower Show in March, in which this Society
co-operated as usual, was, I believe, the most beautiful yet staged
by the Flower Show Association. The Society sponsored classes
which were, as always, a very popular feature of the Show, and
also, through the courtesy of the Four Garden Clubs, which have
always been closely associated with the Society 's exhibitions, staged
an exhibit of a Courtyard in the French Manner.
The Philadelphia Flower Show Association in the past has
very generously allowed us to give two tickets to each of our mem-
bers for this exhibition, but, as we are growing so rapidly, there has
been a question in their minds as to whether they were justified in
keeping up this practice indefinitely. I am glad to report that at
their first meeting in preparation for the 1932 Show (which will
be held March 7th to 12th, inclusive) they voted that we might
again offer two tickets to our entire membership.
13
This year there were eleven Grarden Days, with 57 Gardens,
opened on certain Saturdays in tlie spring, early summer and
auturon, and our members attended them in greater numbers than
ever before. Perhaps most of you realize that these Days are
under the auspices of the School of Horticulture and that this
Society is a co-operating agency. For several years both the School
and the Society conducted series of these Garden Days, but finally,
in order to avoid duplication, it seemed simpler for the Society to
give up the affairs and to co-operate in the School's Days. The
School conducts the series in order to raise money for current
expenses, and the Days are an important source of revenue, and
the Society therefore contributes to the School for the privilege of
admission to our members.
I hope everyone realizes by this time that Mr. Rust, our gar-
dening consultant, is at the service of all our members, and that
no garden is too unimportant for him to visit, nor no problem is
too insignificant to consult him about. Our new members and
members with very small gardens seem to be rather reluctant to
bother him with their questions, but I assure you he will be very
happy to help in any way he can. This afternoon we are trying
something rather new for us in a horticultural forum or round
table, and Mr. Rust and others are here at hand to help us answer
your questions. If the members like this kind of a meeting and
would welcome them at different periods of the year, we shall be
glad to arrange them.
The Horticultural Society of New York invited our members
to participate with them in a pilgrimage to Charleston, South
Carolina, in April, to visit Magnolia Gardens and Middleton Place
when the azaleas were in bloom. Nine of our members availed
themselves of the opportunity. They were most enthusiastic about
the trip and reported that under Mr. Leonard Barron's guidance
they were able to visit some lovely private gardens and also to view
a cypress swamp, not seen by the average visitor.
Our members were also invited to visit Dr. J. Horace McFar-
land's gardens at ''Breeze Hill" in Harrisburg in early June,
when his roses were at their height, and the trip proved well worth
while to those who made it.
The Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania, of which this
Society is a Charter Member, has been very active this past year
and has grown in influence and membership. We have tried to
co-operate with them fi'om the beginning in every way possible
and are happy to see that they are in such a flourishing condition.
At the last Philadelphia Flower Show the Society arranged a
special class, open only to members of the Federation. "We have
been requested by the Federation to use our influence to have a
judging course conducted in Philadelphia, at this building if pos-
sible, some time this winter. We are making inquiries about the
cost and other details at the present time and it looks as if such a
course could be arranged, to last three or four days, at a cost of
$10.00 per person, if a hundred people are interested. The New
York Federation presented such a course last winter and are plan-
14
ning another one .this season. I hope you will all remember that
through your membership in this Society you are also members of
the Federation and are eligible to exhibit in Federation classes in
the Flower Show, to enroll in the judging course if it is given, or
in anything else that is open to Federation members.
There is nothing to report to you in regard to Painter Arbo-
retum, but I am simply mentioning it, as I know that several of
you are wondering whether there have been any developments. It
is hoped that Mrs. Tyler will wish to properly endow the property
and leave it as a memorial to her husband, but she has not shown
any inclination to do this so far, although she has deeded a certain
portion of the place to her attorney, to be given to the public at
some future time as a park.
I am sorry to report that I have no announcement to make of
large additions to our endowment fund. Every year we hope that
someone who is interested in our work may wish to make it possible
for us to broaden our scope and undertake important things that
are impossible now on account of lack of funds, but as yet no one
has been moved to do it. Some of the things we should like to do
if we had the money are :
1. To establish a test garden where scientific experiments could
be conducted. An ornamental garden would also be a good
feature.
2. To make our Library more valuable by buying old and rare
books that are available and by buying more of the modern
books. There are many horticultural periodicals that the
Library cannot afford.
3. To increase the number and variety of our lectures and to
arrange the subjects in courses — one for beginners and one
for more advanced members.
4. To establish a scholarship at the School of Horticulture,
and to be able to help worthwhile movements in allied or-
ganizations from time to time as they occur.
Your officers have felt that it is a fitting and nice thing to
have flowers in our rooms whenever possible. Therefore, in past
years, a certain sum was appropriated in the budget for this pur-
pose. This year, however, the officers felt that perhaps the mem-
bers would like to contribute flowers, so that the money might be
devoted to other things. This is the first time I have had an oppor-
tunity to bring the matter to your attention, and if any of you
would like to assume responsibility for any particular week or
month, I shall be very glad if you will communicate with the office
and inform them of the period you would like. We take good care
of the flowers, and if they are brought in on Monday morning they
will usually last through most of the week. Some of the Council
members and other members have been very generous this year,
and I am sure you will all join me in thanking the following persons
for the flowers they have provided : ]Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd,
Mrs. Thomas Newhall, Mrs. Arthur H. Scott, Mrs. John ^Y. Hutch-
15
HEXEY F. J^IICHELL
Vice-President 1899-1930
Honorary Vice-President 1930-1932
We are glad that we obtained this photograph from Mr. Michell
in December, 1931, to use in the current Yeae, Book. Mr. Michell's
death, which occurred on February 20, 1932, just as the Year
Book was going to press, is a great loss to the Society.
inson, Mrs. C. J. Orth, Mrs. Edgar T. Wherry, Mr. Fitz Eugene
Dixon, Mr. George L. Farnum, Mt. S. S. Pennock, Mr. C. F. C.
Stout, Mr. W. Atlee Burpee, Jr., Mr. W. H. Eitter, the School of
Horticulture.
During the year we have been sorry to learn of the deaths of
twenty-three of our members. We have also sympathized with the
Massachusetts Society in the death of their President, Mr. Albert
C. Burrage, on June 28th, and with the Horticultural Society of
New York in the death of their former Secretary and Treasurer,
Mr. Frederick E,. Newbold, on June 30th. Both of these men gave
unselfishly of their time and money for the advancement of horti-
culture and were outstanding figures in horticultural circles in this
country.
JOHN C. WISTER,
Secretary.
17
STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Year 1931
GENERAL FUND
EECEIPTS
Received from:
Schaffer Fund — Girard Trust Company,
Trustee $20,700.03
Interest on Investments 1,498.52
Interest on Bank Balances 108.89
Eeimbursement from State for Premiums
Paid at Dahlia Show 311.00
$22,618.44
Eeceipts from Sales of Books and His-
tories $49.65
Dues :
1931 Account ". 9,584.00
1932 Account 114.00
— 9,747.65
Contribution from Executive Council to purchase Sar-
gent's Silva of North America 352.00
Total Above Receipts (not including donation by Mr.
Farnum) $32,718.09
Expenditures "by Committees:
Executive :
Eent $3,825.00
Salaries— Office 3,985.38
Insurance 96.12
Postage 316.53
Treasurer's Bond 25.00
Printing and Stationery 603.20
Office Laundry and Ice Water 134.50
Telephone 189.99
Tear Book 780.61
Xew Equipment 261.80
Miscellaneous 655.51
$10,873.64
Lecture :
Fees — -Lecturers $185.00
Eent of Auditorium 150.00
Lantern and Operation 30.00
Postage and Printing 239.35
Tea — Annual Meeting 43.00
Miscellaneous 23.45
670.80
Exhibition :
Eent of Storeroom $500.04
Philadelphia Flower Show 2,005.58
June Show 610.92
Dahlia Show 1,030.41
Hardy Chrj'santhemuui Show 96.84
Salaries 1,300.00
Eepairs and Miscellaneous 595.37
$6,139.16
18
Library :
Subscriptions, Periodicals $121.63
Salary— Librarian 1,500.00
New Books 333.74
Eent 1,275.00
Eebinding 58.00
Library Catalog 490.00
Miscellaneous 72.45
Total Expenditures out of Appro-
priation $3,850.82
Sargent's Silva of North America, do-
nated 352.00
Special:
Subscription to Horticulture $2,515.47
Gardening Consultant — Salary . 2,000.00
Garden Visiting 801.50
Brown Canker Fund 100.00
John Bartram Association 500.00
MembersMp Drive 573.68
Philadelphia Flower Show — Luncheon. . 208.25
Garden Awards 314.69
4,202.82
— 7,013.59
Total Above Expenditures $28,900.01
Excess of Eeceipts Over Expenditures. $3,818.08
Investments Paid Off During the year:
lOM Pennsylvania Power & Light 5s, 1952 (cost
$9,250), sold for $10,400.00
Investments Made During the Year:
3M Union Gulf $2,840.00
3M Pennsylvania Eailroad General 2,847.50
3M Norfolk & Western 2,775.00
3M New York Central Eailroad 2,396.25
— — ■ 10,858.75
Excess of Investments made over those paid off 458.75
Excess of Eeceipts for year over year's Expenditures $3,359.33
Cash on Hand, January 1, 1931 929.05
Cash on Hand, December 31, 1931 $4,288.38
LIFE MEMBERSHIP FUND
Balance, January 1, 1931— Cash $987.50
Eeceipts during year — 39 New Members 1,950.00
$2,937.50
Investments Made During the Year:
IM Philadelphia Electric $932.50
IM Lehigh Coal & Navigation 1,005.00
1,937.50
Cash on Hand, December 31, 1931 $1,000.00
LIBRARY FUND
Balance, January 1, 1931 — Cash $258.50
Donations during year 54.20
Balance, December 31, 1931 $312.70
19
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
January 1, 1932
ASSETS
Cash:
General Fund |4,388.38
Life Membership Fund 1,000.00
Library Committee Fund 312.70
$5,701.08
Schaffer Fund:
Girard Trust Company, Trustee 353,820.84
Investments :
Life Membership and Other Funds 33,323.08
Equipment :
Office Furniture, etc $5,056.00
Library Books (not including donation by Mr.
Farnum) 7,302.12
Portraits 6,265.00
Exhibition Equipment 2,418.66
21,041.78
Supplies — Medals on Hand 238.65
Total Assets #414,125.43
LIABILITIES
None
Funds :
Schaffer Fund $353,820.84
Life Membership Fund 23,880.00
General Fund 22,883.90
Appraisal Adjustment 13,227.99
Library Committee Fund 312.70
Total Funds $414,125.43
S. S. PENNOCK.
Treasurer.
John P. Hekr,
Certified Public Accountant.
20
REPORT OF EXHIBITION COMMITTEE FOR 1931
There has been a most gratifying advancement in the exhibi-
tions which your Society staged or in which it co-operated with
other societies. This advancement has been gradual but most con-
sistent during the past four or five years, and only by looking
backward for a period of some years, by those who remember our
earlier shows, is this change really noticeable to the proper degree.
The Spring Flower Show, held by the Philadelphia Flower
Show at the Commercial Museum, was undoubtedly the best show
in point of quality and variety of plants and flowers as well as
artistic effect ever staged in this section. The increased attendance
and popularity attested to the public interest and approval. In
this great Show The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society sponsored
the Amateur Exhibits. These were most ably carried out by the
several committees of ladies in charge. In addition to the com-
petitive classes, the Society staged a Norman courtyard, which
received much favorable comment. This was planned and con-
structed for the Society by a group of ladies under the leadership
of Mrs. John Hampton Barnes and Mrs. George L. Harrison.
The June Show was held at Trevose in co-operation with The
Trevose Horticultural Society. It was a beautiful Show and was
visited by many people. The Dahlia Show was held in Bryn Mawr
as in previous years and a small Chrysanthemum Show was held at
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia.
Your Committee most earnestly feels that The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society will achieve the most for horticulture by
reaching out to all affiliated soceties and welcoming everyone inter-
ested in floriculture to active participation in all its exhibitions.
The fact that one has but a small garden and does most of the work
therein should not prevent one from specializing on some tj^pe of
plant or flower and bringing it to the greatest perfection. It is to
these small growers that the Exhibition Committee wishes to make
a special appeal.
The President and the Secretary suggested to the Exhibition
Committee that special appeal be made to the Philadelphia branch
of the National Association of Gardeners to take greater interest in
our Shows. The Chairman of the Exhibition Committee talked
with a number of the gardeners with most gratifying results. Later
a committee of three of the leading gardeners and superintendents
met with the Exhibition Committee. The Fall Dahlia Show sched-
ule was discussed and a new class of five exhibits for gardeners
exclusively was planned and introduced in this new schedule. AVith
the election of a member of the local chapter of the National Asso-
ciation of Gardeners, Mr. Alexander MacLeod, as a member of the
Council, it is our earnest hope that true relations with this Associa-
tion may become closer.
The Exhibition Committee is fully alive to the importance of
local societies and local garden clubs in our section, and it is not
our wish to in any way interfere with their exhibits and other
21
activities. AVe do not wish to "steal their thunder," but rather
it is our wish for them to continue along these lines of special
effort which in many instances has been so ably carried out both
by their officers and members. We would, however, like to have
them associate themselves with us from time to time in giving an
outstanding exhibition. We feel that these societies and smaller
clubs, which are growing up Avith great rapidity on every hand,
give an impetus to horticulture and should be, in every way, encour-
aged in their local competitions. AYe believe they will be benefited
b}' the contact and experience of meeting at certain intervals in
the shows of a larger society. It is our hope that we will have this
co-operation to an increasing degree, with the result that we may
establish an outstanding spring (June) and fall show, centrally
situated in the near suburbs of Philadelphia, in the not-too-distant
future.
Another innovation in our schedule during the past year
which met with encouraging results Avas the introduction of a class
for new seedlings, new^ sports or new importations of plants and
flowers. This applied to new types not mentioned specially in the
schedule and w^as introduced Avith the object of bringing out novel-
ties and outstanding introductions. At the Trevose Show it was
very gi'atifying indeed to have the judges call our attention to a
display of seedling peonies Avhich they considered the most unusual
new seedlings ever exhibited in one class, and they were unanimous
in insisting that a gold medal be awarded Mrs. Arthur H. Scott
for this most praiscAvorthy exhibit. Also in this same class a ncAv
golden juniper Avas displayed, to AA'hich the judges unanimously
aAvarded a sihxr medal as another outstanding introduction.
We feel that it should be the object of a horticultural society
to bring out seedlings and new varieties and giA-e the originators
due credit w^here these proA^e to be of unusual merit. This Ave feel
is even more important than the groAving of the giant floAvers which
are already Avell knoAvn and classified. AYith this object in a'Icav,
the Society has returned to the issuing of certificates of merit and
blue ribbons as a rcAvard in these classes and it is hoped that each
year Avill see more work done along these lines. It is recommended
that prizes or medals be giA^en only AA^here the exhibitions are of
unusual merit.
Abroad the greatest interest is giA^en to all types of ncAv floAvers
and plants and Ave recommend that this practice be folloAved in our
exhibitions and that The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society should
stand for ach^ancement of floriculture along all its lines in the
broadest possible Avay.
A summary of the exhibitions held in 1931, arranged chrono-
logically, f ollOAVS :
March 16th-21st. The Philadelphia Flower ShoAv. The Society
participated in tAvo AA'ays — first, by making an exhibit, and second,
by sponsoring certain classes. Its exhibit took the form of a
"Courtyard in the French Planner," Avhieh Avas planned and
staged by the ladies of the four Garden Clubs Avhich have been
closely identified with the Society 's exhibitions for many years. In
connection witli this, the Society maintained headquarters where
literature was displayed and new members enrolled. Altogether
135 members were secured on account of the Show. The section
sponsored by the Society was composed of sixteen classes and there
were 130 exhibitors and 215 entries. For the first time a special
class was staged exclusively for member organizations of the Garden
Club Federation of Pennsylvania. The Society was able, through
the courtesy of the Philadelphia Flower Show, to give two tickets
to each of its members. Admission to the general public was
seventy-five cents. The attendance was 110,000 — the largest in the
history of the Show.
June 2nd-3rd. Peony and Spring Flower Show. At the invi-
tation of the Trevose Horticultural Society, our Peony and Spring
Flower Show was held in conjunction with them at Trevose, Pa.,
on June 2nd and 3rd. There were 480 entries by 140 exhibitors,
one-third of which were from our Society. The Committee is grate-
ful to those of our members who came such a distance to exhibit to
help make the Show a success. The attendance at this Show was
pver 2,000.
September 25th-26th. Dahlia Show. The Annual Dahlia Show
was held again this year in conjunction with the Bryn Mawr Horse
Show on the Polo Grounds at Bryn Ma\vr. It was housed in a ten'.
228 feet long. There was a good attendance the first day of the
exhibition, but very few the second, owing to continuous rain
throughout the day. Sixty-four of our members exhibited, with
300 entries in the various classes. The new classification of the
American Dahlia Society was explained in the schedule and the
entries were made in accordance with this classification. Our mem-
bers were admitted to the Polo Grounds upon presentation of their
membership cards. The general admission was fifty cents.
October 28th-29th. Hardy Chrysanthemum Show. This ex-
hibition was held on the sixth floor of the Insurance Company of
North America Building, 1600 Arch Street, in rooms adjoining the
Society's offices. In spite of the unusually late season, the display
of flow^ers was profuse and the quality exceptionally good. An
increasing number of seedling classes added interest to the Show,
and a collection of berry-bearing shrubs, exhibited by Mrs. Horatio
Gates Lloyd, attracted favorable attention. Admission w^as free,
but the attendance was disappointingly small.
Respectfully submitted,
GEORGE L. FARNUM,
Chairman.
'^'6
EXHIBITION AWARDS IN 1931
EXHIBITIONS OF THE SOCIETY
Presented by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
Exhibition Gold Medals:
Mrs. Arthur Hoyt Scott, Media, Pa., for collection of seedling
peonies, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
W. Atlee Burpee Company, Philadelphia, Pa., for display of
dahlias, BrjTi Ma^vi', Pa., September, 1931.
Exhibition Silver Medals:
Mrs. J. Willis Martin, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa., for
peonies, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Ambler Nurseries, Ambler, Pa., for variety seedling, Pfitzer
juniper, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mr. Stanley Johnson, Cheltenham, Pa., for bowl of perennials,
Trevose, Pa., June, 1931. •
Mrs. Alexander Laverty, Merion, Pa., for a collection of roses,
Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Haverford, Pa., for a collection of
roses, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mr. Walter M. Jeffords, Glen Riddle, Pa., for twenty-five
dahlias, Bryn Ma^vr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. George L. Farnum, Media, Pa., for collection of seedling
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931,
Mr. George L. Farnum, ]\Iedia, Pa., for collection of miniature
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. David M. Sherk, Eosemont, Pa., for artistic basket of
pompon dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Miss Virginia Stout, Short Hills, N. J., seedling dahlias of
1929 and 1930, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. Samuel Patterson, Aldan, Pa., for basket of twelve dahlias,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
W. Atlee Burpee Company, Philadelphia, Pa., for collection of
ten varieties of gladioli, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Conard-Pyle Company, West Grove, Pa., for collection of
roses, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Robert C. Wright Silver Medal:
Mrs. Robert C. Wright, Ha\
by an amateur, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931
Mrs. Robert C. Wright, Haverford, Pa., for the best rose grown
Bronze Medals:
Frandama Gardens, Elkins Park, Pa., for collection of peonies,
Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mrs. E. William Roberts, Bala, Pa., for collection of roses,
Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
24
Mrs. 0. H. Perry Pepper, Ithan, Pa., for collection of roses,
Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Clieltenliam Nurseries, Cheltenham, Pa., for bowl of perennials,
Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mrs. Stanley G. Flagg, Jr., Bryn Mawr, Pa., for twenty-five
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. David M. Sherk, Rosemont, Pa., for collection of seedling
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mrs. Helen J. Burroughs, Audubon, N. J., for basket of dahlias,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. Alvin W. Moyer, Dublin, Pa., for collection of gladioli,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. George Masson, Jr., Trenton, N. J., for collection of
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Challenge Cup :
The Rutledge Horticultural Society, Rutledge, Pa., for collec-
tion of mixed dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Silver Flower Vases:
Mrs. George Purdy, Huntingdon Valley, Pa., for arrangement
of flowers in window vase, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mrs. Frank Zeiss, Torresdale, Pa., for arrangement of flowers
in pair of vases for mantel, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Haverford, Pa., for arrangement of
table decoration in pewter container, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mrs. Thomas C. Barton, Bryn Mawr, Pa., for miniature flower
picture, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
The School of Horticulture, Ambler, Pa., for arrangement of
flowers in copper container for living room, Trevose, Pa., June,
1931.
Certificates of Merit:
Mrs. Charles Biddle, Andalusia, Pa., for Italian cypress, Tre-
vose, Pa., June, 1931.
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Haverford, Pa., for Rhynchosper-
mum Jasminoides, Trevose, Pa., June, 1931.
Joseph Breck & Sons, Boston, Mass., for new hardy chrysanthe-
mum, "Aladdin," 1600 Arch Street, October, 1931.
Mr. A. W. Burroughs, Audubon, N. J., for new dahlia, ''Helen
J. Burroughs," 1600 Arch Street, October, 1931.
W. H. Ritter, Philadelphia, Pa., for collection of hardy chrj's-
anthemums, 1600 Arch Street, October, 1931.
Mr. W. H. Ritter, Philadelphia, Pa., for 1931 hardy chrysan-
themum seedling, 1600 Arch Street, October, 1931.
Mr. Alvin W. Moyer. Dublin, Pa., for gladioli, 1600 Arch
Street, October, 1931.
25
Blue Ribbons:
Mr. David M. Sherk, Rosemont, Pa., for dahlia seedling of
1931, semi-cactus type, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. George L. Farnum, Media, Pa., for dahlia seedling of 1931,
pompon type, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
Mr. George L. Farnum, Media, Pa., for dahlia seedling of 1931,
miniature decorative type, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1931.
ishP
rizes ;
Philadelphia FloAver Show $90.00
June Show 342.50
Dahlia Show 450.00
Hardy Chrysanthemum Show 71.00
$953.50
Presented by Other Organizations and Individuals
Gold Medal:
The Gold Medal of The Horticultural Society of New York
(given in exchange) to Mrs. Bruce Ford, Chestnut Hill, Pa., as the
Sweepstake Prize for an individual at the Philadelphia Flower
Show, March 16-21, 1931.
Silver Cups:
The Mrs. J. Willis Martin Cup, donated by Mrs. E. Plorens
Rivinus, to the Junior Gardeners for Sweepstake Prize, for a gar-
den club or horticultural society at the Philadelphia Flower Show,
March 16-21, 1931.
The Philadelphia Record Cup to the Garden Club of Philadel-
phia for a "section of a garden featuring water" at the Philadel-
phia Flower Show, March 16-21, 1931.
The Iris Cup, donated by Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, to Mr.
Morton Smith, Bethayres, Pa., for a display of iris at the Peony
and Spring Flower Show of the Trevose and Pennsylvania Horti-
cultural Societies, held at Trevose, Pa., June 2-3, 1931.
Orders :
Orders were generously contributed by the following firms
(Philadelphia Flower Show) :
Conard-Pyle Company, West Grove, Pa. ; DeKalb Nurseries,
Norristown, Pa. ; Flower Grower ; Garden Nurseries, Narberth, Pa. ;
Gardener's Chronicle; Hengel Brothers, Ardmore, Pa.; Henry A.
Dreer, Philadelphia, Pa. ; Henry F. Michell, Philadelphia, Pa. ;
House and Garden ; Hugh B. Barclay Company, Narberth, Pa. ;
John Albrecht Nurseries, Narberth, Pa. ; Outdoor Arts Company,
Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. ; Upper Bank Nurseries. Media,
Pa. ; W. Atlee Burpee Company, Philadelphia, Pa. ; AVilliam Henry
Maule Company, Philadelphia, Pa.
26
EXHIBITIONS OF OTHER ORGANIZATIONS
Presented by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
Exhibition Gold Medals:
Awarded by the Massaebusetts Horticidtural Society, Boston,
Mass., March 17-21, 1931, to Mrs. E. B. Dane, Chestnut Hill, Mass.,
for an exhibit of native ferns.
Awarded by The Horticultural Society of New York at their
Annual Autumnal Exhibition held in New York, N. Y., November
5-8, 1931, to Orchidwood, Inc., New Rochelle, N. Y., as a Sweep-
stake for Orchids.
Exhibition Silver Medal:
Awarded by the Atlantic City Flower and Garden Pageant at
their Second Annual Exhibition, held in Atlantic City, N. J., Sep-
tember 4-10, 1931, to Dr. F. F. Moore, of Woodlynne, N. J., as a
Sweepstake Prize.
Awarded by the American Dahlia Society at the Annual Exhi-
bition, held in New York, September, 1931, to Mr. H. R. Chapman.
Bronze Medal:
Awarded by the American Dahlia Society at the Annual Ex-
hibition, held in New York, September, 1931, to the Douglaston
Garden Club.
Flower Vases:
Awarded by the following local horticultural societies and
garden clubs at their exhibitions during 1931 :
Camden Dahlia Society
Delaware County Horticultural Society
Doylestown Nature Club
Garden Club of Conshohocken
Lansdowne Flower Show Association
Rutledge Horticultural Society (2 vases)
Men's Club of Wayne
Garden Club Plaquettes:
Awarded by the following local horticultural societies and
garden clubs at their exhibitions during 1931 :
Bethlehem Garden Club Kearney and Arlington Garden
Bloomfield Floral Society Club
Camden Dahlia Society Norwood Horticultural Society
Delaware County Horticultural Rutledge Horticultural Society
Society Suburban Garden Club
Doylestown Nature Club Twin Valleys Garden Club
Fanwood Garden Club Woman's Club of Ardmore
Garden Club of Bala-Cynwyd AVoman's Club of Germantown
Garden Club of Conshohocken Woodridge Garden Club
Garden Club of Westfield, N. J. Worcester Flower Club
27
REPORT OF COMMITTEE ON GARDEN AWARDS
FOR 1931
Upon the recommendation of the Committee, the following
awards were made to gardens of members during 1931 :
Gold Medal of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society:
A Gold Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Fitz Eugene Dixon, of ' ' Ronaele
Manor," Elkins Park, Pa., for a very beautiful estate of about 120
acres. Its rolling lawns and superb old trees, together with its
beautiful landscaping, are deserving of both admiration and praise ;
in the spring millions of narcissus blooms adorn the fine stretches
of woodland. In close proximity to the house, which is a replica of
Compton Wynyates, the residence of the Marchioness of North-
ampton, in Warwickshire, England, are the gardens, both formal
and informal, including borders, flower gardens, rock gardens, a
picturesque and exquisitely planted pool, and a charming vista to
a stone tower ' ' ruin, ' ' forming a perfect whole. The greenhouses
contain one of the finest collections of orchids in the country. Mr.
and Mrs. Dixon take great interest in their estate and give it mucli
personal supervision.
Silver Medals of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society:
A Silver Medal to Mr. William Caner Wiederseim, of "Ays-
garth," Abington, Pa., for the magnificent display of old garden
boxwood wdiich dominates his large garden and which is in such
perfect keeping with the spacious lawn, the stately trees and the
picturesque tAvo-hundred-y ear-old stone dwelling house. There are
old prints showing the design of its original gardens ; these have
been reclaimed and replanted with consummate skill by Mr. Thomas
Sears, and the romance and restfulness of other days has been
conserved. The charm, which only old age can impart, is on this
place, and, with faultless taste, the garden has been designed and
developed so as to enhance this peculiar charm.
A Silver Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Grenville Dodge Montgomery,
of " Carrington, " Bryn Mawr, Pa., for a hillside garden of great
charm, which is an outstanding achievement of both skill and
knowledge. Built on a barren hillside — with a beautiful grove of
fine trees at one end — less than two years ago, it is already a fin-
ished product, giving no sign of its extreme youth. Mr. and Mrs.
Montgomery achieved this remarkable effect themselves with the
aid of their architect and personally selected every tree and shrub.
The plant material was all of mature age and choice specimens,
and, having already established itself, looks as if it had been there
always.
A Silver Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Wharton Sinkler, of '^ Thorn-
bury," Elkins Park, Pa., for a small enclosed garden, in which the
gardener's art reaches its acme of perfection. The splendid box-
wood, symmetrically planted in an intricate pattern, imparts a
sense of age ; the exquisite coloring attests to a faultless taste ; the
plant material indicates a thorough knowledge; the maintenance
is perfect. Intimacy and charm are the qualities which character-
ize this gem of a garden.
Bronze Medals of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society:
A Bronze Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sewell, of "Ard-
naree," Rydal, Pa., for the unique treatment of an arbor-covered
terrace. This arbor, which extends the length of the house, is com-
pletely adorned and ceiled for one-half of its length with Bougain-
villea and for the other half with Japanese wisteria, the suspended
blossoms of which, with their great length, form an unusually
beautiful effect which it is impossible to describe. Extended walks,
skillfully planted, form each end of the terrace, and a sloping
pasture meadow in front complete this unusual garden. It is one
of the places you want to live with.
A Bronze Medal to Mr. and Mrs. J. Andrews Harris, Jr., of
Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa., for an unpretentious garden set
in front of the terrace of this beautiful replica of a famous dwelling
house — Sulgrave Manor. The gray of low stone retaining walls
and the blooms of soft colors which harmonize with it characterize
this garden. No false note of color impairs its serene beauty. The
plant material and coloring were carefully planned by the owners
and are both exquisite and restful. This simple garden is surely a
constant source of pleasure to its owners and their friends.
Garden Certificate of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society:
A Garden Certificate to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rodman Page, of
Bryn Mawr, Pa., in recognition of the skill and taste displayed in
the creation of their new garden, which promises in a few years to
become one of great beauty and charm.
Centenary Gold Medal:
A Special Award of the Centenary Gold Medal (awarded on
only two occasions before) to Mr. and Mrs. Pierre S. duPont, of
"Longwood," Kennett Square, Pa., in recognition of their unique
service to the cause of horticulture. The great conservatory ball-
room, equipped with stage and pipe organ and approached through
a "garden" with blooming flowers and green grass maintained
throughout the winter months, is original in design and in plant
decoration, r The greenhouses, covering many acres, contain a great
variety of plants and fruits. The great formal green outdoor
garden, with its changing fountains and mobile lighting effects in
color, is in extent and variety believed to surpass anything of its
kind. The perennial gardens, in charming succession, extend in
terrace after terrace down a gentle hillside to a pair of mirror-like
ponds nestled in an idyllic forest-enclosed valley. At the foot of
this valley lies a strictly formal rectangular sunken garden with
29
|1 central pool, viewed from an elevated esplanade at one end. This
:i' sunken garden is elaborately planted and is so equipped with piping
that, by means of a "keyboard," a great variety of water sprays
jlj and fountains, in countless ever-changing combinations, enchant
l| the eye with their beauty.
Respectfully submitted,
I WILLIAM J. SERRILL,
Chairman.
REPORT OF THE LECTURE COMMITTEE FOR 1931
Three regular lectures were given in 1931 in the following
order :
Mrs. Edith Banghart, of Medina, Wash., January 20, 1931;
subject, ''Alpine Plants." (Attendance 210.)
Mr. Jay V. Hare, Trevose Horticultural Society and The
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, on "Impressions of Spain and
Its Gardens," February 3, 1931. (Attendance 550.)
Dr. George M. Reed, Curator, Brooklyn Botanic Garden ; sub-
ject, "An Iris Pilgrimage to Japan," on February 17, 1931.
(Attendance 386.)
Instead of having a lecture in connection with the Annual
Meeting on November 18th, it was decided to try an experiment in
the form of a horticultural forum or question box. Although the
attendance was only seventy, those who came enjoyed this type of
meeting and were greatly pleased with the information they re-
ceived. The question box was conducted by the Secretary, who
referred the inquiries to the following authorities : Mr. George L.
Farnum (dahlias), Mr. Harold G. Mattoon (trees, shrubs and in-
jurious insects), Mr. W. H. Ritter (hardy chrysanthemums) and
Mr. David Rust (general gardening questions).
Respectfully submitted,
ANNA ELLIOTT
(Mrs. William T. Elliott),
Chairman.
REPORT OF THE LIBRARY COMMITTEE FOR 1931
The Library Committee is pleased to report that in addition to
the books purchased through its regular appropriation for 1931, it
received several unusually interesting gifts. The most important
of these was a complete set of Curtis 's Botanical Magazine (1787-
1926) — a gift from Mr. George L. Farnum, surpassing in value
any in the history of the Library. Another interesting accession
was Professor Sargent's North America Silva, in fourteen a'^oI-
umes, which was presented by the Executive Council. The two
supplementary volumes. Trees and Shrubs, were given by Mr. Jay
V. Hare.
30
Seven hundred and thirty-three persons have used the Library
during the year — a considerable increase over last year. The Com-
mittee has felt for some time that the space at the Library 's disposal
is totally inadequate for its needs and is glad to report that arrange-
ments are now being made to house it in larger and more suitable
quarters. The use of the Library is not confined to members, and
all persons are cordially invited to use it for reference, and a Bead-
ing Room is at their disposal. The circulating privilege is, however,
reserved for members.
The Librarian is glad to be of assistance to visitors, and the
Library is open on weekdays from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. and on
Saturdays, 9 A. M. to 12 noon. For the benefit of members who
are employed during the day and who would like to use the Library
in the evening, appointments may be made w^th the Librarian to
have the Library opened one evening a week.
The Committee published a complete catalog early last year
which lists the 2,800 volumes then in the Library, and a copy of
this catalog may be obtained upon application to the Librarian.
This publication cost practically half of the Committee's entire
appropriation for new books for the year, but it was thought a
necessary expenditure, and the Committee brings to the attention
of the members that by keeping the catalog and the accessions as
published in the Year Book each year they may have a complete
record of the books in the Library. At the end of 1931 the total
number of volumes was over 3,000.
MARY HELEN WINGATE LLOYD
(Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd),
CTiairman, Library Committee.
LIBRARY ACCESSIONS, 1931
Aa;ricultural index. 1928-30.
American Association of Nurserymen. Report of the Committee on Botanical
gardens and arboretums. 1931.
American forests and forest life. v. 36, 1930.
American Gladiolus Society. Bulletin, v. 7. 1930.
American home. n.s. v. 3-4. 1929-30.
American Nature Association. Highway entrances to Washington, n.d.
Roadsides of California, n.d.
■American Rose Society. American Rose Annual, v. 16. 1931.
What every rose-grower should know. 1931.
Anthony, R. D. Soil organic matter as a factor in the fertility of apple orch-
ards. 1931.
Sulphate of ammonia and nitrate of soda in a sod orchard. 1930.
Arnold arboretum. Journal v. 6-11. 1925-30.
Bartlett tree research laboratories. Radio tree talks. 1929.
Beavers, J. C. Farm practice in the use of commercial fertilizers in the south
Atlantic states. 1910.
Bisset, Peter. Book of water gardening. 1929.
Briggs, George R. Gardening in the south. 1931.
Brooklyn Bontanic Garden. Leaflets, ser. 1-16. 1913-28.
Record, v. 1-18. 1912-29.
Brooks and Ward. Correspondence on soda and potash. 1899.
Burgess, Thornton W, Burgess flower book for children. 1923.
31
SAMUEL T. BODINE
Honorary Vice-President
Calthrop, D. 0. Charm of gardens. 1917.
Calvert and Calvert. Year of Costa Eiean natural history. 1917.
Capek, Karel. Gardener's year. 1931.
Chappell and Hunt. Gardener's friend and other pests. 1931.
Charles, Vera K. Mushroom culture for amateurs. 1929.
City parks association of Philadelphia. Annual reports, v. 40-41. 1928-30.
Clute, Willard N. Common names of plants and their meanings. 1931.
Coon, Nelson. Practical violet culture. 1925.
• Small nursery. 1923.
Cox, E. H. M., ed. New flora and sylva. v. 2. 1930.
Curtis's botanical magazine. Complete set, vol. 1-date. 1787-date.
Denny, F. E. Excitation of buds under external stimulus. 1931.
Dobyns, W. S. California gardens. 1931.
Dodson, J. H. Your bird friends and how to win them. n.d.
DuCane, Florence. Flowers and gardens of Madeira. 1926.
Earle, Mrs. C. !W. More pot-pourri. 1899.
— ■ ■ — ■ Pot-pourri from a Surrey garden. 8th ed. 1897.
Eberlin, H. D. Villas of Florence and Tuscany. 1926.
Fagan and Anthony. Training and pruning apple trees. 1928.
Farrer, Reginald. Among the hills, n.d.
— '■ Dolomites. 1913.
Farrington, E. I. Ernest H. Wilson^ plant hunter. 1931.
Felt, E. P. Insects affecting park and woodland trees. 2 v. 1905-06.
Fisher. Edith E. Garden Club Manual. 1931.
Fitting and others. Strasburger's text -book of bontany. 6th Eng. ed. 1930.
Fletcher, F. J. Cut flowers for market. 1929.
Fletcher, S. W. History of fruit growing in Pennsylvania. 1931.
Florist and horticultural journal, v. 2-3. 1853-54.
Florist Exchange Publishing Company. Floral designs de luxe. 9th ed. 1929.
Flower grower, v. 17. 1930.
Garden Club of America. Bulletin. 1929-30.
Gardener's chronicle, v. 87-88. 1930.
Gardener's monthly, v. 2-25, 27-29. 1860-83, 85-87.
Gothein, M. L. History of garden art. 2 v. 1928.
Grieve, Mrs. M. Modern herbal. 2 v. n.d.
Harbison, T. G. Highlands museum and biological laboratory. 1931.
Harry, W. C. Art of floral designing. 1930.
Heald, F. D. Manual of plant diseases. 1926.
Higgins, E. B. Our native cacti. 1931.
Hill, Peckham and others. American iris society — discard list 1931.
Holmes, Eber. Eose garden primer. 1930.
Homes and Gardens, v. 11. 1930.
Horticulture, v. 8. 1930.
Horticulturist, v. 10-30. 1855-75.
Hottes, A. C. Home gardener's pronouncing dictionary. 1930.
Houghton, A D. Cactus book. 1930.
Howard, Edwin L. Chinese garden architecture. 1931.
Hume, H. H. Azaleas and camellias. 1931.
Jennings, A. J. Complete home landscape. 1929.
Keller and Brown. Handbook of the flora of Philadelphia and vicinity. 1905,
Kerner and Oliver. Natural history of plants. 2 v. 1902.
Kift, Jane Leslie. Woman's flower garden. 1927.
King, Caroline B. Eosemary makes a garden. 1930.
King, Mrs. Francis. Beginners ' garden. 1930.
Kruckeberg, H. W. George Christan Eoeding. 1930.
Lamplugh, Anne. Flower and vase. 1929.
Landscape architecture, v. 20. 1929-30.
Laurie, Alex. Chrysanthemums under glass and outdoors. 1930.
Laurie and Edmond. Fertilizers for greenhouse and garden crops. 1929.
Lodewick and Holmes. Notable trees of Virginia. 1931.
Leow and May. Relation of lime and magnesia to plant growth. 1901.
McCuUy, Anderson. American alpines in the garden. 1931.
McFarland, J. Horace. Finding-list of plants at Breeze Hill Gardens. 1931.
33
C. HARTMAN KUHN
Honorary Vice-President
Mackail, Denis. Flower show. 1927.
Macself, A. J. Chrysanthemums for amateurs. 1930.
Metcalf and Flint. Destructive and useful insects. 1928.
Monthly flora, v. 1. 1846.
Mulford, F. L. Planting the roadsides. 1926.
Muller, E. T. American greenhouse construction. 1927.
New Jersey — state geologist. Final report, v. 2, pt. 1-2. 1889-90.
O'Brien, Harry 0. Better gardening. 1931.
Oliver and Hottes. Plant culture. 5th ed. 1926.
Olver, E. W. Landscaping the small home. 1931.
Ortloff, H. Stuart. Perennial gardens.
Pack, C. L. George Washington bicentennial tree planting, n.d.
Parsons and Cook. Garjjens of England. 1923.
Peacock, L. K. Dahlia. 1931.
Pellett, F. C. Birds of the wild. 1928.
Pellett and Pellett. Practical tomato culture. 1930.
Pennsylvania agricultural experiment station. Annual report, v. 43. 1930.
Preston, Isabella. Garden lilies. 1930.
Ramsey and Lawrence. Garden pools, large and small. 1931.
Rhododendron Society. Species of rhododendron. 1930.
Roberts and Rehmann. American plants for American gardens. 1929.
Robinson and Fernald. Gray's new manual of botany. 7th ed. 1908.
Rohde, E. S. Scented garden. 2nd imp. 1931.
Royal Horticultural Society. Classified list of daffodil names, new ed. 1931.
Rush, M. W. Ignoramus garden book. 1931.
Sanders, T. W. Encyclopedia of gardening, n.d.
Sargent, Charles Sprague. Silva of North America. 14 v. 1890-1902.
■ • Trees and Shrubs. 2 v. 1905-13.
Sawyer and Perkins. Water gardens and goldfish. 1928.
Schrepfer, F. A. Hardy evergreens. 1928.
Seward, A. C. Plant life through the ages. 1931.
Shull, J. Marion. Eainbow fragments. 1931.
Slack and others. More gardens and houses of Maryland. 1931.
Smith, E. D. Staith's chrysanthemum manual. 1930.
Smythe and others. Carolina low-country. 1931.
Speller, Florence C. Garden clubs; their activities and organization. 1931.
Spruce up your garden. 1931.
Stapf, 0. Index Londinensis. v. 5-6. 1931.
Taylour, Mrs. Basil. Japanese gardens. 1929.
Thayer, C. L. Spring flowering bulbs. 1928.
Thayer, Paul. Training the young apple tree. 1927.
Trelease, William. Winter botany. 2nd ed. rev. 1925.
Turner, William. Fruits and vegetables under glass. 1912.
Vines, S. H. Proteases of plants. 1930.
Waugh, Frank A. Experiments with hedges. 1931.
Hardy shrubs, a simple handbook of practical information. 1928.
White, E. A. Principles of flower arrangement. 1926.
Wilder, Louise Beebe. Adventures in a suburban garden. 1931.
Wilson, Ernest Henry. If I were to make a garden. 1931.
Wilstach, Paul. Tidewater Maryland. 1931.
Zimmerman and Crocker. Eesponse of plants to illuminating gas. 1930.
S'ulfur dioxide injury to plants. 1930.
LIST OF PERIODICALS RECEIVED BY THE PENNSYLVANIA
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, 1931
*Addisonia.
* Agricultural Index.
*Alpine Garden Society. Bulletin.
*American Dahlia Society. Bulletin.
* American Fern Journal.
* American Forests.
35
* American Home.
*Americaii Iris Society. Bulletin.
*Americaii Peony Society. Bulletin.
* American Bose Quarterly.
*Arnold Arboretum. Bulletin of Popular Information.
^Arnold Arboretum. Journal.
Better Homes and Gardens.
*Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Eesearcli. Contributions.
*Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research. Professional Papers.
*Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Leaflets.
*Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Records.
California Rosarian.
Covimon Speech.
^Curtis's Botanical Magazine.
Desert.
Federated Garden Clubs of Maryland. News.
Florist's Review.
^Floiver Grower.
*Garden Club of America. Bulletin.
Garden Digest.
Garden Glories.
Garden Gossip.
Garden Greetings.
Garden Path.
Gardener's Chronicle of America.
'^Gardener's Chronicle (English).
'^Gladiolus Review.
Home Acres.
^Homes and Gardens.
^Horticulture.
House and Garden.
^Journal of Pomology and Horticultural Science.
Landmarl'.
^Landscape Architecture.
*Missouri Botanical Garden. Bulletin.
*Morton Arboretum. Bulletin of Popular Information.
National Council of State Garden Club Federations. Bulletin.
^National Horticidtural Magazine.
Nature Magazine.
*New Flora and Silva.
New Jersey Gardens.
*New York Botanical Garden. .Journal.
Roadside Bulletin.
*Eoyal Horticultural Society. Journal.
Wisconsin Horticulturist.
*Periodicals permanently kept.
GARDEN DAYS
In 1931 members had the privilege of visiting on eleven Satur-
days of the spring, early summer and autumn fifty-seven lovely
and varied gardens in Philadelphia suburbs. The Garden Days
were presented under the auspices of the School of Horticulture
for Women at Ambler, Pa., with this Society a co-operating agency.
For several years both the School and the Society conducted
separate series of Garden Days, but finally, in order to avoid dupli-
cation and for other good reasons, it was considered wise for the
36
Society to give up the Days and to co-operate in those of the School.
The School conducts the series in order to raise money for current
expenses, and the Days are an important source of revenue, and the
Society, therefore, contributes to the School for .this privilege.
CONSULTANT IN HORTICULTURE
Mr. David Rust held office hours each Monday last January
and February and was available for consultation on others days by
appointment. During the year he visited ninety-two gardens of
members and has listed the subjects about which he was most often
consulted as follows, arranging them according to the frequency
of the inquiries :
Group One Group Two
Treatment of Lawns Moving of Trees
Planting of Perennials Location and Planting : ..
Treatment of Outdoor Roses Rock Gardens
Spraying Vegetable Gardens
Planting of Evergreens Treatment of Orchards
Pruning Stepping Stone Walks
Treatment of Rhododendrons Wall Gardens
Plants for Shady Places Bulb Gardens
Japanese Beetle Asparagus Beds
Judging Shows Pools
Talks Before Garden Clubs Planting on old places
Treatment of Box
In addition to visiting gardens and holding office consulta-
tions, Mr. Rust has given eleven talks to garden organizations and
has judged at sixteen, flower shows.
(Mr. Rust is at the service of all members and is glad to visit
gardens in order to advise about garden problems or to be consulted
at the office. The only charge is for his actual traveling expenses
when he goes to gardens.)
EDITOR'S NOTES
Mrs. Bernard T. Converse describes her woodland garden as
follows : ' ' Last summer we decided to make a woodland park out
of a bare and neglected patch of ground adjoining a neighboring
woods. Native rhododendrons, azalea and laurel, large rocks hauled
from a farm and old logs have entirely transformed the spot; but
the most successful part of the planting was the ground cover we
selected, which consisted of Galax aphylla, with very ornamental
bronze and green leaves; GaulthetHa prociimhens, wintergreen,
which keeps its red berries all winter ; Shortia galacifolia, with
evergreen leaves, and fine for shade spots; Asarum shuttleivorth,
mottled wild ginger, with large heart-shaped green leaves. It was
a fascinating undertaking, not expensive, and the birds have taken
it as a sanctuary."
37
^ w
HI o
X
One of our Life Members, Mr. Henry H. Battles, has very
kindly allowed us to publish the picture on the opposite page. It
is a privilege for the pul)lic to see these rare liowers displayed with
the interesting antique objects shown in the photograph. The
numbers on the photograph represent the following :
1. Antique Roman drinking cup. Second century B. C.
2. Leucadendron leaves from South Africa in Roman glass
pitcher, found near Nazareth.
3. Antique glass urn, found near Nazareth. Third century
B. C.
4. Fossilized fern embedded in rock.
5. Chincherichee flowers in antique jug from Cyprus. Middle
Bronze Age, 2000 to 1500 B. C.
6. Egyptian bronze sacred eat, found near Assouan. 1500
B. C.
The Chincherichee flowers were grown in Africa and shipped
to this country on November 14, 1931, via London. They still
were in good condition on January 15th. This wonderful keeping
quality has few if any parallels.
Ornithogcdum lacteum (the Chincherichee) is a famous South
African plant related to the well-known Star of Bethlehem. Dr.
David Griffiths, of the United States Department of Agriculture,
is making an effort to establish it in the United States.
All the available material is from imported seed. The seed
germinates readily if sown in the spring, and the plants w411 de-
velop during summer, but cannot endure a hard frost. The Chin-
cherichee has bloomed profusely the second year in unheated green-
houses in California and at Washington, D. C. Full flowering
occurs the third year.
The plants are easily forced in a greenhouse. Potted in No-
vember they will flower by Easter. At the Arlington Farm,
Rosslyn, Va., they began blooming in March and continued until
the middle of May. The plants mature about the middle of June,
when the bulbs may be tried off and stored until October, when
they may be potted up again. Dr. Griffiths is endeavoring to re-
verse the season of the plants so they will flower in beds and
borders in the garden.
Under conditions which are adverse to the welfare of the
plants, such as maturity in wet weather, bulblet formation may
occur from any portion of the plant that may be kept moist and
poorly aerated. The inside of the leaf sheet or the blade of the
leaf itself may be covered with bulblets or they may appear on the
flower scapes or in the axils of the floral pedicels.
It is hoped the Chincherichees may become established in this
country. They may become inured to the Northern Hemisphere
seasons so we may have them in bloom in summer and autumn in
the East.
Miss Mary Evans recommends a neat iron garden stake and
embossed plant label which does not rust or twist. These are made
39
by Mr. Hunter Filbert, of Holmes, Pa., and may be seen with other
stakes at the office of the Society.
Mrs. Charles A. Fife writes us: ''I have had great success
with trillium in my city garden and have had some plants for
seven years. I seem to have just the spot they like — ^by the porch,
very protected, and where the sun scarcely touches them at all. I
planted these in wood soil, and since I have been using about one-
half inch of peat moss they have flourished more than ever. I dig
this in about twice a year. I did try a little fertilizer called Sacco,
but very little, and I do not know really whether that was safe or
not, but the trilliums were unusually large last year under it.
Lime must never go near them. Trilliums are queer, temperamen-
tal things, I find. I had some by the porch and planted among
ferns that always did well. I had some not ten feet from them by
a high fence, where the sun came a little more, and they grew
smaller and smaller and were pining away when I moved them
back to the porch garden bed and they immediately improved."
Mrs. John H. Halford writes of her success with the following,
which she grows in her woods near Norristown, Pa.: "Erythro-
nium — Dog Tooth Violet. New introduction from the Rocky
Mountain region — easy culture, perfectly hardy in East. Flowers
larger than native eastern species. A variety of colors. Shade-
loving plants, light gritty soil preferred. ' '
Mrs. J. Norman Henry spent last summer plant collecting in
the "Blind Spot" of Canada. Much of the nine hundred miles
with pack horses was through unmapped, unexplored country. Mrs.
Henry made a herbarium collection for the Royal Botanic Garden,
Edinburgh, and also for the Academy of Natural Sciences, Phila-
delphia. She gave the Royal Botanic Garden a collection of native
seeds and brought home a number of interesting plants for her
experimental garden in Gladwyne.
Mrs. G. E. Landt, of Norristown, contributes the following
interesting information : ' ' The dwarf Mertensias — Alpine Blue-
bells— two to six inches in height, with flower clusters of intense
azure blue, are among our beautiful native alpines. Together with
the Alpine Polemonium, they furnish the dazzling blues of the
Alpine turf. They are not difficult in cultivation ; their roots may
be moved when dormant or they may be grown from seed. We
have had the glories of Polemonium confertum. and viscosum pre-
sented in photograph and prose by our alpine enthusiasts. The
Mertensias equal these in loveliness and charm."
Mrs. Paul Lewis, an enthusiast in the botanical world, writes
of the beautiful Gentian found in the woods on the farm of ]\Irs.
Powell, also one of the members of the Society. ' ' The most beauti-
ful member of the Gentian family, the Fringed Blue Gentian
(Gentiana crinata), has been discovered by Mrs. Humbert Borton
Powell on her farm, Willowdale Farm, near Devon. Mrs. Powell
found it blooming near her swimming pool. It is a biennial plant
and had not been seen on the farm since the Powells moved there
about three years ago. Whether the plant came from seeds scattered
by a well-wisher or whether it was native, Mrs. Powell does not
40
know; but anyway she has the lovely Blue Gentian, with nearby
Ladies Tresses (Sjnranthes gracilis) and Bottle Gentian (Gentiana
andrewsii) . ' '
Miss Frances Edge Mcllvaine, author of garden books, and a
worker in her own lovely garden in Downingtown, suggests the
following shrubs for winter bloom : ' ' For those who like fragrance
from their gardens, even in winter, plant Lonicera fragrantissima
and Meratia prcecox, the 'winter sweet.' The Lonicera is a shrub-
like honeysuckle, and neither plant is especially ornamental, nor
do they need shelter. A sunny place will bring out their blossoms
quite as well as against a wall, which should be saved for some
more tender thing."
Miss Florence D. Sallade recommends the following, which
she has proved to be successful in her Norristown garden. "Bap-
tisia will form a shrub-like plant and flower profusely in a damp,
sunny location, but resents being transplanted frequently. I found
a flour measure spoon with a short wooden handle at the ten-cent
store, and it is wonderful to use in potting seedlings with fine soil.
I just could not resist writing about it."
Mrs. C. C. Zantzinger, Chairman, reports the completion of
the plans to plant red oak trees on City Line between the Schuyl-
kill River Bridge and Monument Avenue, Philadelphia. The plant-
ing is being done as part of the George Washington Bicentennial
Tree-Planting Program of the Garden Club Federation of Penn-
sylvania. The Garden Club of Philadelphia, the Gardeners, the
Four Counties Garden Club, the Weeders and the Girl Scouts of
Philadelphia are taking a prominent part in this fine piece of work
undertaken by the Federation.
Note. — The Society is greatly interested in the Washington
Bicentennial Celebration plans, and particularly in the movement
to mark the anniversary by planting trees. Although as an organi-
zation it is not sponsoring any particular program, many members
are doing valuable work on special committees that are engaged in
the planting of shade, roadside and other memorial trees, forest
planting, town forests and Arbor Day exercises.
Miss Mary Evans, who edited the 1931 Year Book, has also
edited the current publication. She will be glad to receive garden-
ing items of interest from members, and they may be sent to her at
any time in care of the Society.
41
«4 'H
IN APPRECIATION
In addition to the valuable and interesting books which are
noted in the report of the Library Committee and the prizes for
flower shows which are mentioned under Exhibition Awards, we
are happy to announce the following gifts to the Society during
1931 — Cash contribution to the Library Endowment Fund by Mrs.
Mary C. Pugh, of Bryn Mawr, Pa. Framed plan of the original
planting of Washington Square, Philadelphia, Pa. (at least 100
years old) , presented by Mrs. W. Moylan Lansdale and Miss Julia
Binney, St. Davids, Pa. Nursery list of Bernard McMahon
(framed), Philadelphia, Pa., published about 1800, presented bv
Mr. E. C. Vick, of Newark, N. J.
Flowers for the Board Room and offices given by Mr. W. Atlee
Burpee, Jr., Mr. Fitz Eugene Dixon, Mr. George L. Farnum, Mrs.
John W. Hutchinson, Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Mrs. Thomas
Newhall, Mrs. C. J. Orth, Mr. S. S. Pennock, Mr. AV. H. Ritter,
the School of Horticulture, Mrs. Arthur H. Scott, Mr. C. F. C.
Stout, Mrs. Edgar T. Wherry, Mr. John C. Wister.
The Society is particularly grateful to Mrs. Alice Cope Reh-
fuss, one of our members and a granddaughter of Caleb Cope,
President from 1842 to 1851, for the cover design of the current
Year Book and for the designs which head the monthly Gardening
Calendars in the book.
The Society expresses its appreciation to the Public Ledger for
its interest in our work and to the Garden Editor, Dr. Jane Leslie
Kift, for her helpful co-operation.
43
THE JOHN BARTRAM CELEBRATION
(Reprinted through the courtesy of the editor of the Bulletin
of The Garden Clul) of America)
"The Two Hundredth Anniversary of the Founding of the
First Botanic Garden in the American Colonies by John Bartram"
— to quote from the invitation, was celebrated in Philadelphia on
June 5 and 6, 1931, by The John Bartram Association, of which
Mrs. Bayard Henry is President. Acting as hosts with the
Bartram Association were the Academy of Natural Sciences, the
Philosophical Society and The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society,
three of the oldest societies in the city. Invitations had been sent
to important societies and individuals here and abroad with botani-
cal interests, and many representatives attended.
The first meeting was held at the Academy of Natural Sciences
and w^as presided over by Mr. Effingham Morris and Mr. C. Frederick
C. Stout. Dr. Rodney True, Professor of Botany in the University
of Pennsylvania, who has made a great study of the life of the
first important botanists of America, gave a distinguished address
on ''John Bartram 's Life and Botanical Explorations." Dr. Wit-
mer Stone, Vice-President of the Academy, was to have spoken on
the "Work of William, Son of John Bartram," but, unfortunately,
illness prevented and his paper was read by Dr. Francis Harper,
of the staff of Biological Abstracts. Dr. John Hendley Barnhart,
Bibliographer of the New York Botanical Garden, spoke on the
"Significance of John Bartram 's Work to Botanical and Horticul-
tural Knowledge," linking the work of the past with the develop-
ments of today.
In the hall of the Academy, where the meeting was held, Mrs.
Edward M. Cheston had arranged some cases filled with most inter-
esting papers, books and articles pertaining to John Bartram, his
work and his contemporaries. There were also drawings and manu-
scripts of his son, William, who was a botanical artist and writer
of more than usual talent. The collecting of this material had
taken much research and the exercise of a certain amount of per-
suasion and tact to convince the various societies, descendants and
collectors that they wanted to lend their treasures. The co-opera-
tion of the British Museum had been most helpful, and through
Dr. Ramsbottom and Mr. A. W. Exell, Keeper and Under-keeper
of Botany there, nine photographs of John Bartram 's Herbarium
specimens, with his memorandum that had been originally sent to
Peter Colinson, were sent to Mrs. Cheston. Reproductions of
William Bartram 's drawings in the Museum and copies of his
paintings were also sent and permission given to print two of seven
unpublished letters of Dr. John Fothergill in the Catalogue of the
Exhibit — most delightful reading they are.
John Bartram 's Bible, much worn, a fork he carried on his
expeditions, a bell he used to tie on his horse when it grazed, a
teacup and spoon from a set given Mrs. Ann Bartram by Mrs.
Franklin, and a vaccination box he used to aid his neighbors were
among the more personal articles, A small portrait by Chai'les
44
Wilson Peale, a manuscript Journal of 1765, and copies of letters
he sent to Collinson, Peter Miller, and Sir Hans Sloane were placed
with books presented to the American student by the English
friends who were interested in the flora of the new country. The
Herbal of John Parkinson, the Garden Dictionary of Philip Miller,
Bartram's two books, were included. The silver cup, presented by
Sir Hans Sloane in 1742 in token of his appreciation of Bartram's
services to the gardens of England, a gold medal, sent him by a
group of gentlemen at Edinborough — 1772, gave evidence of honors.
Quite the most touching of all was the magnifying glass used at his
work when his eyesight failed.
Refreshments were served in the library of the Academy and
later a dinner was given at the historic Belmont Mansion in Fair-
mount Park. This was presided over by Mr. John C. Wister, Vice-
President of the Bartram Association. A few informal speeches
were made by representatives of other societies, telegrams of greet-
ing were read and Mrs. Henry outlined some of the purposes of
the Bartram Association.
On Saturday morning the visitors were scattered — some went
to educational institutions, some visited gardens outside the city
and others were taken to see some of the historic houses that form
a chain through Fairmount Park. They all assembled at Straw-
berry Mansion for an informal luncheon, given by Miss Sophy
Cadwallader and Mrs. J. Willis Martin. This was followed by a
visit to Horticultural Hall, the largest greenhouse in this country,
built for the Centennial and containing much fine botanical mate-
rial— Washington's Palm being part of it. From the Hall the
buses went to John Bartram's old farm, where he established his
botanical garden and where his family lived for so many years.
The quaint old gray house that Bartram built has been carefully
restored by the Bartram Association, who rescued it from a sad
state of neglect. With the co-operation of the City Park Associa-
tion, much has been done to restore the grounds and to replace
such trees and shrubs as have died by the same species. Many very
fine old trees still exist, and the grounds stretching down to the
Schuylkill are stilly very beautiful, and on this lovely June after-
noon gave a most suggestive picture of its past. Tea was served
outside, and members of the Association were present to show the
strangers the house and grounds.
MARY HELEN WINGATE LLOYD
(Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd).
45
GARDENS— A COMMUNITY ASSET
(Abstract of an Illustrated Lecture presented 'before the Society
on February 6, 19S2)
By John C. Wister, Secretary
Interest in gardens and love of plants are both very ancient.
References to them may be found in the oldest of writings. Indeed,
it may have been the first chapter of Genesis that inspired Bacon
to say, "God Almighty first planted a garden."
Most of us will agree with Bacon that a garden is the purest
of human pleasures. AYe know that it is an excellent hobby for
the individual, that it encourages outdoor life, aids health and
brings a greater reverence for beauty and for the miracles of
nature. A few of us may even be heretical enough to think that
in these respects it is superior to golf !
And just as we believe gardening benefits the individual, so
do most of us agree that the interest in gardens makes the home
and its surroundings more attractive. Those who love gardens
plant fine trees, which not only add beauty to the house, but also
bring grateful shade in hot weather and protection from cold north
winds in winter.
It is not, however, my intention to dwell on these well-known
matters. I am taking for granted the benefits to the individual
and the beauty and utility of the individual flower, vegetable and
fruit garden. It is my purpose to emphasize instead what gardens
have done in the past, are doing now, and can do in the future to
make our countryside, our villages, our towns and our cities better
places to live in. I wish to show what an enormous asset gardens
have been to our communities and how, through the increased
present-day interest in gardens, the entire future development of
our country may be influenced.
First, let us see what planting by individuals has done for the
community. Can you visualize what America would be like with-
out gardens? Can you picture villages, towns, cities of bleak bar-
ren houses without trees, shrubs, flowers and grass around them?
Think of the old main street of a frontier mining town. Do you
want to live in it ?
"We in the older settled sections of the country find it difficult
to picture these things because we have always been accustomed to
trees, shrubs, flowers and grass. The growth in civic consciousness,
in civic pride and in public spirit that has come with the growth
in gardening, and largely because of the growth in gardening, we
have taken for granted, too. There were enough Philadelphians
interested in plants to warrant the organization of The Pennsyl-
vania Horticultural Society in 1827. The Society brought together
persons interested in various types of plants. Fruit culture held
the center of the stage at first, and later came interest in hard-
wooded greenhouse plants like camellias and azaleas. During the
past half century interest in these has dwindled. Greenhouses
have become less popular with amateurs and now hardy plants are
the most important.
46
The last ten or twenty years has seen a great change in Ameri-
can gardening. A wave of enthusiasm has spread over the country,
brought about chiefly by gardeners who have preached the use of
hardy flowers. Hardy flowering shrubs and herbaceous plants can
be grown in the smallest backyard with little care, and they are
inexpensive to purchase, easy to plant and give a long season of
bloom. It was the interest in hardy plants that brought about the
organization of the modern garden clubs. These at first confined
themselves entirely to instructing their own members in practical
gardening. But as the clubs progressed they speedily took on
certain civic aspects. New members, who had been helped by the
knowledge and enthusiasm of the founders, became missionaries,
telling their neighbors of the joys of gardens and neglecting as
much as possible to mention the troubles that went with the joys !
Wherever one person has started a good garden, the neighbors
have become ashamed that their places look shabby and have fixed
them up also. It has happened often that entire city blocks have
been changed by the starting of a garden in one backyard and
having this garden spread from yard to yard and block to block.
Furthermore, the good gardener soon begins to cast a very critical
eye upon the condition of the parks or in some cases upon the lack
of parks. Having enjoyed his plants on a small piece of ground,
he is anxious to see other plants which can be grown only in bigger
places. He wishes to beautify his city so that he can enjoy it more.
In my lecture trips across the country I have visited many
small cities where new parks have been started under the inspira-
tion of garden clubs or where existing parks have been greatly
improved. I have visited many places where garden clubs have
established plantings of irises, peonies, roses, tulips, lilacs or other
plants in the public parks. I know many gardeners who regularly
give their surplus of rare plants to the park commission to plant
where all may enjoy them.
So many persons have done this that this statement also seems
a commonplace. But think for a minute of the spirit of gardeners
a few centuries ago and note the contrast. When the tuberose, a
Mexican plant, was first taken to Europe, it was kept in a church
garden, and the priests did not part with a single bulb for sixty-
four years. Later, when a double tuberose was raised in Holland,
its owner, equally selfish, desired to be the only possessor of what
he considered the finest plant in the world. Therefore, after he
had propagated all the bulbs he needed for his own garden, he
annually caused every surplus bulb to be cut in pieces and de-
stroyed, so that no one else might enjoy it. A certain new dahlia
was kept in a French monastery garden for nearly forty years in
the same way. A Belgian amateur in 1836 developed from seed a
very beautiful double tree peony, which, in a burst of patriotic
pride, he called Gloria Belgarum. But his curious brand of patri-
otism seemed to require that he would not show it to any but his
most intimate friends. He would not allow anyone to have seeds
or cuttings from it. For over thirty years he kept the original
plants in his garden, guarded by huge dogs, so that no one could
47
get in to get a piece of these plants. His interest was tlie totally
selfish miserly interest of possession. Today people enjoy giving
pleasure to othei*s. It is the characteristic habit of American
gardeners to give cuttings and seeds of their choicest plants to
their friends. They make every effort to have propagated worthy
plants that may have originated in their gardens. They invite peo-
ple into their gardens to enjoy the flowers of the different seasons.
Think, for instance, of Mr. Pierre S. duPont, who has opened Ms
magnificent greenhouses to the public so that all may enjoy his
rare plants.
An interest in orderly arrangement comes soon from garden-
ing. No sensible gardener plants a rose bush in a position where
he knows that tomorrow he is going to put in a pine tree, but we
all build our cities without plans and allow the regions around the
city to grow up helter-skelter with factories and slums on areas
that should be kept for beautiful parks or private grounds. Archi-
tects and engineers have for years urged the need of city and
community planning, but today they are being backed up by thou-
sands of ordinary citizens whose interest in civic welfare has grown
from their interest in their own gardens.
Let me now take up the second part of mj- subject and show
you how public gardens are a community asset. Public parks and
gardens can benefit the community in a number of different ways.
By making the city more attractive they bring a desirable type of
citizens. European cities like Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Rome and
oMadrid have long spent time and effort to attract both citizens and
visitors by their attractive parks and boulevards in addition to
their existing historical and architectural monuments. Our most
beautiful city, Washington, in addition to its interest as a Govern-
ment center, attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors each spring
to see its cherry blossoms. Philadelphia, in celebrating the Cen-
tennial in 1876, built in addition to its temporary buildings our
great Horticultural Hall, which was the wonder of its time and
still attracts thousands of visitors yearly.
I wish to mention briefly a few of the more important parks
where fine plants are grown. The oldest and best knoAvn plant
collection in America is the Arnold Arboretum near Boston,
founded in 1873 ; on its 265 acres are today growing over 6,500
species of plants in over 300 genera. It was the wish of the founder
that every tree and shrub capable of enduring the New England
climate should be planted there, and this ideal has been very nearly
realized. It seems almost impossible to believe that one of its
explorers, the late Ernest H. Wilson, brought to New England
more new kinds of hardy trees and shrubs than were growing there
naturally. The list of plants which the Arboretum has introduced
from foreign countries is long and includes such well-known favor-
ites as the Japanese barberry and the white Japanese clematis.
There is a constant succession of bloom of trees and shrubs from
early April into midsummer, and from then there come the beauti-
ful colors of autumn foliage and fruit. Even when the snow is on
the ground one can see flowers, for the Japanese witch liazel blooms
in February with the thermometer near the zero mark. Many
plants which New England gardeners fifty years ago considered too
tender to use are today flourishing in the most exposed situations,
swept by the coldest winter winds. If a few garden-loving people
made possible the Arnold Arboretum, it is also true to state that
today the Arnold Arboretum, through the work of its great director,
the late Professor Charles S. Sargent, has made possible thousands
of garden-loving citizens within a great radius around Boston.
The Arboretum is visited by about a million people a year, and
Professor Sargent's influence and the influence of Frederick Law
Olmsted, Sr., and Charles Eliot, who designed the Arboretum, and
the Boston Metropolitan Park system can be noticed by any motor-
ist as he nears Boston. The gardens are better planned and better
kept. There is a greater variety of trees and shrubs and flowering
plants to be seen within thirty or forty miles of Boston than in
any other American community that I have ever visited, and this
in spite of the fact that the new England climate is severe and
prevents the growth of many plants which are available to us who
live further south.
There are many newer public plantings in various parts of
New England. On the reservation of the Society for the Protec-
tion of New Hampshire Forests at Lost River, N. H., a lovely wild
garden has been made by cutting out overhanging trees to give the
existing wild flowers a chance to increase. Plants from other parts
of the State have been brought in from time to time and planted
on the natural rock slope going down to the stream — all plants
being carefully labeled. The Lost River Reservation is visited by
about 50,000 people a year, and many of them have visited this
wild flower garden and made notes of the names of the various
flowers.
In Springfield, Mass., the superintendent of Forest Park has
put in magnificent plantings of rhododendrons and iris, so that
many visitors are attracted in the spring months. A still newer
planting of a one-hundred-acre wild garden and arboretum has
been recently undertaken on the grounds of the Connecticut Col-
lege, at New London. The Marsh Botanical Garden at Yale Uni-
versity, New Haven, recently established a display garden of irises,
sponsored by the American Iris Society, and these flowers attract
many persons who would not ordinarily visit a botanic garden.
The parks and public gardens of Providence, R. I., and Hart-
ford, Conn., have long been famous. The Rose Garden in Elizabeth
Park, Hartford, is particularly popular and many thousands of
people go there daily during rose season. A few years ago an
interested official took the trouble to copy the license numbers of
the cars that were parked outside the garden on Sunday. On look-
ing up the residences of owners of these automobiles he found that
they represented citizens of every single town and village within a
radius of more than one hundred miles of Hartford. Those who go
to the Arnold Arboretum have often commented on the fact that
it is very rare to enter any of the Arboretum gates without finding
parked outside an automobile bearing the license plates of some
49
distant state. I have myself noticed there on various occasions cars
from all the other New England States, from New York, AVashing-
ton, D. C, Ohio, Missouri and Quebec.
Central Park, New York, was one of the first of the great parks
of American cities. Its location and the tremendous population
that uses it both tend against much display of flowers, but New
York has two other splendid public gardens. The New York
Botanical Garden in Bronx Park was founded in 1895 and covers
about four hundred acres. It is visited by over a million and a
half people yearly. The Dutch Bulb Growers' Association has for
a number of years believed it good business to give to it annually
something like 80,000 tulip bulbs so that tremendous displays of
flowers may be seen in the spring. The hard-headed Dutch busi-
ness man is not going to give bulbs away unless he believes that
the persons seeing these flowers will go home more conscious of the
beauty of the tulip, so that next year they "^^'ill want to buj^ a few
bulbs, if only to force in the window of an apartment. At the New
York Botanical Garden, also, are to be seen tremendous masses of
daffodils naturalized in the grass and in the woods. There is also a
great iris garden, a great rose garden, a great lilac garden and
great plantings of peonies and other hardy plants and two large
greenhouse ranges.
The Brooklyn Botanic Garden was founded in 1910 and has
about fifty acres. In its great collections of plants are growing
about six thousand species and about fifteen hundred different
genera. It has a staff of over fifty people, and over a million people
a year visit its great collections of flowering plants, among which
irises, water lilies and alpine plants are features.
Each year in March a series of great gardens is built at Grand
Central Palace, New York City. Over 100,000 people from all
over the country pay admission to see these gardens. • If you think
flowers do not attract as many visitors as automobile shows or
conventions do, try to get a room at a New York hotel that week !
The great Philadelphia Show, held at the Commercial Museum,
attracts similar crowds here.
Highland Park in Rochester, N. Y., has become so famous that
the railroads run special excursions on Sundays so that people in
outlying districts may see the lilacs when they are in bloom.
Rochester prides itself on being The Flower City, and has long
been the home of many nurserymen, florists and seedsmen. Among
the most prominent of these a generation or two ago were Elwanger
and Barry, who built up one of America's finest nurseries. They
were ever public-spirited citizens, and it was their land that the
city took to make Highland Park. Here, under the direction of
the late John Dunbar, were established great plantings of lilacs,
crabapples, hawthornes, peonies and other plants which do so well
in that climate. Mr. Dunbar did not stop with plants that flourish
in AVestern New York, but added a great collection of rhododen-
drons and azaleas, which ordinarily cannot be grown in that sec-
tion on account of the lime in the soil. He was one of the first who
took the trouble to take out the natural soil and replace it with
50
acid soil from the woods in order to grow these beautiful plants.
The fame of Rochester and its parks is nation wide, and certainly
every cent that has been spent on Highland Park and the other
parks might be regarded as good advertising, in the fame that it
brings to its city.
Several cities have followed Philadelphia 's lead and built great
greenhouses. The one in Garfield Park, Chicago, is particularly
fine. But it is in St. Louis that the greatest combination of indoor
and outdoor gardening is to be found. What is now the Missouri
Botanical Garden was for many years the private estate of Mr.
Henry Shaw and at his death was left to trustees to be managed
for the benefit of the public. The increasing interest that the
public feels for the garden is shown from the attendance statistics,
which in the last ten years have increased from a comparatively
few thousand to four hundred thousand yearly. In addition to
Mr. Shaw's garden, which is now in the city limits of St. Louis, a
tract of over twelve hundred acres has recently been purchased
about forty miles from the city, and the planting has been begun
there that will undoubtedly be the largest of its kind in the world.
This new tract of land has, of course, not yet been developed, and
any planting on it is small and immature and will not be of great
interest to the public for another generation, but the garden in
St. Louis has become important in the life of the city, and even the
ordinary sightseeing buses stop there as they drive their visitors
through the various points of interest. In the great greenhouses
many tropical plants are arranged in natural surroundings and
are most effective. The center of one large house is given up to a
continuous flower show, the exhibits varying with the different sea-
sons of the year. I was interested particularly in two typical
''backyards" about thirty feet square. One of these, labeled "Be-
fore," is a place where tin cans grow in ashes and waste. It is
surrounded by a dilapidated fence, against which lean bits of old
lumber and stovepipes and the whole place is a mass of weeds.
Next to it is another plot of the same size, labeled "After." It is
surrounded by a neatly painted fence with a little lawn in the
center and a border of a few inexpensive and generally known
flowers, such as zinnias or petunias. The difference between this
"before" and "after" treatment is astounding. I have no doubt
that those St. Louis people who have seen this have gone home and
changed their backyards so that they look like "after" and not
"before." The interest at the Missouri Botanical Garden in
proper planting of a small space is so great that certain sections
are given over to demonstrations of various hedge plants and vari-
ous flowering shrubs that can be had very cheaply and which grow
well in that climate.
Like St. Louis, Kansas City has fine boulevards and parks,
but its greatest and finest park area is private, not public, and is
controlled by a real estate firm, the J. C. Nichols Company. For
over twenty-five years this company has planned a great region of
several thousand acres in such a way that the roads and houses
seem to blend into one great big park, with fine trees and shrubs
51
and lawns and gardens. Planned long in advance, carefully zoned
and restricted, this area is not only one where the individual may
live without fear of encroachment of the city, but is a great and
permanent asset to its city.
To show that parks and gardens are not confined to warm,
mild climates, it is well to call attention to the public park system
of one of our coldest cities — Duluth. The park extends for miles
along the lake front, which reminds the easterner of parts of the
Maine coast. In that climate toboggan slides are one of the most
popular park features ! The spring is so late that the annual peony
show is held about the Fourth of July !
During the administration of President Taft the city of Tokio
presented to the city of Washington a large quantity of Japanese
flowering cherries. Today there are few parts of the country that
have not heard of the beauty of Washington in cherry blossom
time. Great railroads run special excursions to Washington and
advertise in the papers of distant cities the fact that the cherry
blossoms are open. Often these advertisements are accompanied
by pictures showing the blossoms. Great railroads are not in busi-
ness for the enjoyment of beauty, but they see in these flowers a
chance to increase their business by encouraging people to travel
to Washington at that season. A year or two ago one of the great
steamship companies evidently noticed that people were beginning
to be interested in flowers as well as automobile shows and moving
pictures, and boldly advertised special excursions from New York
to Charleston at the time when azaleas were in bloom. This cer-
tainly could not have happened ten or twenty years ago. The
three great azalea gardens in Charleston are private, but are opened
to the public upon payment of a small admission fee. I understand
that the money received from these admissions is sufficient to pay
for the upkeep of the gardens, which otherwise might have been
abandoned by their owners.
Magnolia Gardens, the best known of the three, is a wooded
estate with many winding walks bordered with azaleas of great size.
The gray moss hanging from the trees is reflected in the black
waters of the many small lagoons. At Middleton Place the plant-
ings are more open and formal and there are fine stretches of lawn,
with views down the river. The azaleas here, for the most part,
are not as large as those at Magnolia Gardens, but, being more in
the open, are often more compact and more covered with bloom.
The color range also is much greater. The Cypress Gardens have
only recently been opened to the public. A fresh water lake on a
former rice plantation was here abandoned to nature more than a
century ago and a great water forest of cypress trees has grown
up. Paths and small canals have been constructed and along these
azaleas and other flowers have been planted in great quantities,
making a wilderness of bloom in the spring months.
Golden Gate Park in San Francisco is one of the most beautiful
American parks. It was made by a brave man who dared to plant
trees on what was practically desert. He was laughed at for years
for thinking that anything would grow in such an exposed situa-
52
tion, but today trees fifty or more feet high and beautiful flowering
shrubs of all kinds show that he has had the last laugh on the
people who said it could not be done. California is a land of
wonderful gardens, and in most eases these gardens have been
developed on pieces of ground that were desert before water was
brought in. In the case of Golden Gate Park, the situation was
made still more difficult by strong winds coming in from the Pacific,
which made the growth of trees difficult.
A beautiful park was created by the city of San Diego as a
setting for its famous Panama-Pacific Exposition in 1915. This
exposition was different from any ever held before, in that most of
the buildings were planned to be permanent and are now used as
museums. To create quickly a great park from practically desert
land was a most expensive undertaking which many people must
have regretted. The exposition was an artistic triumph, but cer-
tainly not a financial one ; only fifteen years later did the city
begin to realize the great permanent asset it had in its great park.
A New York millionaire^ the late Col. William Boyce Thomp-
son, who endowed The Boyce Thompson Institute at Yonkers, evi-
dently noted the few plants grown near his winter home in Su-
perior, Ariz. In 1924 he founded an arboretum containing two
thousand acres of wild land, ranging from river valley to a moun-
tain peak. About six thousand species of plants have already been
planted here, which seems an amazing number when the lack of
rainfall is remembered. Part of the valley planting has, of course,
been put under irrigation, but most of the land is in its natural dry
condition, and only species of plants that can live and flourish with
the minimum of water are used. It is reported that even in this
out-of-the-way place, and with the planting so new, about five
thousand visitors come there every year. This arboretum has had
only a few years to test plants, but already people are coming out
from Phoenix, sixty miles away, to see the directors and find out
what plants are recommended for backyard planting.
The region around Philadelphia has been one long favored by
luxurious growth of native trees and shrubs. It was the home over
two hundred years ago of the first botanic garden of America — the
John Bartram Garden on the banks of the Schuylkill. Bartram's
example was followed by many people, and among old arboreta
which are famous for their fine trees are the Pierce Arboretum,
now the property of Mr. Pierre S. duPont; the Evans Arboretum,
now the property of Mr. W. Hinckle Smith, and the Marshall
Arboretum near West Chester. An old arboretum, now long neg-
lected, was that planted by the Painter brothers near Lima, Pa.,
about a hundred years ago. They were botanists and planted a
great number of fine trees, many of which have survived the fifty
years of neglect which have passed since the two Painter brothers
died. Notable here are such fine trees as the redwood and giant
Sequoia and a magnificent specimen of cedar of Lebanon, which is
ten feet six inches in circumference. Recent events lead to the
belief that this arboretum will be preserved for the public. The
great collection of plants, brought together by Mr. John T. Morris
53
at Compton, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, has not been open to the
public, although many interested persons have from time to time
been given permission to visit it. By the will of Miss Lydia T.
Morris, who died recently, this estate of 170 acres will be preserved
under the supervision of the Botanical Department of the Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania. Thus Philadelphia gardeners are again for-
tunate in receiving another public garden where they may study
plants. The beauty of Fairmount Park has always been a matter
of pride to them; but it has been a regret to many that the fine
collection of tropical plants in Horticultural Hall has not a more
practical counterpart in a carefully labeled collection of hardy
plants, which all might visit either for enjoyment or scientific
study. I have been one of many Philadelphia gardeners who have
felt forced to visit Washington, Rochester, Boston, Hartford and
New York to study cherries, lilacs, azaleas, rhododendrons, crab-
apples, hawthornes, roses, daffodils, tulips, irises, peonies and other
hardy flowers.
The late Arthur Hoyt Scott, of Media, who for a time served
both the American Peony Society and the American Iris Society in
the capacity of treasurer, was a most enthusiastic grower of lilacs,
peonies, irises, daffodils, chrj^santhemums and other hardy flowers.
He had long felt the need of a public garden near Philadelphia
where persons who could not visit distant cities might study hardy
plants suitable for small gardens. A Swarthmore graduate, he
wished to beautify its campus by establishing such a garden there.
His early and tragic death prevented this, but in his memory The
Arthur Hoyt Scott Horticultural Foundation has now been estab-
lished at Swarthmore. It has been my privilege to act as Director
of this Foundation for the past two years and to work with the
college authorities in planting a series of demonstration collections
of plants that Mr. Scott loved. We hope to plant on the Swarth-
more campus not so much rare botanical specimens as representa-
tive groups of trees, shrubs and flowers which can be recommended
for planting in small gardens in the vicinity of Philadelphia. Such
flowering trees as magnolias, dogwoods, Japanese cherries, flower-
ing peaches, flowering plums, flowering crabapples and hawthornes
will have prominent places. Among the flowering shrubs planted
will be the finer varieties of lilacs, azaleas, rhododendrons, mock-
oranges, bush honeysuckles and other well-known but worthy plants
for ordinary planting. Herbaceous plants will be grown only in
small quantities, but they will include named collections of early
spring bulbs, followed by daffodils, tulips, irises, peonies and end-
ing with chrysanthemums. It is hoped that this planting will do
for the beginner and the amateur gardener what the Arnold Ar-
boretum and Missouri Botanical Garden have done for the more
advanced gardener, and that it will be a constant demonstration
to the people of the neighborhood of the possibility of beautifying
their grounds by the use of plant material which is not expensive
and which is not difficult to grow. In addition, the college woods,
extending down the steep hillsides to Crum Creek, will be brought
into better condition. Paths will be opened, dead and decayed
54
trees removed and naturalistic underplanting made to show Penn-
sylvania gardeners how very lovely our native woods can be made
with proper treatment.
A good beginning has already been made on this project, which
must feel its way slowly for lack of large resources. From Mr.
Scott's garden have come twenty-five varieties of lilacs, which are
planted along the walk up to the Meeting House. One friend of
Mrs. Scott has given a collection of Japanese cherries and another
friend a collection of azaleas. The Arboretum of the Westtown
School has given some rare conifers, and a nearby garden club
three Franklinia trees. Members of The Pennsylvania Horticul-
tural Society will be interested to know that the famous collection
of peonies and iris of our late President, Mr. James Boyd, has been
given by his children to the Scott Foundation. It has been my
privilege to give from my garden several rare trees and shrubs
that I had raised from seed, given me years ago by Professor
Sargent. The Arnold Arboretum has already sent us many kinds
of seeds, and Dr. Moore, of the Missouri Botanical Garden, is send-
ing some trees this spring. Next fall we expect to have in bloom a
large collection of outdoor chrysanthemums, the gift of the New
York Botanical Garden. Two nurseryman interested in the college
have sent plants literally by the truckload. I mention a few of
these gifts to show how prompt and generous has been the response
of gardeners to a new public garden which wishes to serve its com-
munity. May I ask all Philadelphia gardeners to come out now
and see the small beginning, so that in years to come they may
enjoy watching it grow like a great oak from a small acorn. And
if you have some rare plant of which you are proud and can spare
a layer, a division, some seeds or cuttings, remember that we shall
welcome such gifts joyfully, and that we shall try to be worthy of
such generosity by growing the plants well and letting all inter-
ested persons enjoy them from year to year. I hope our citizens
will feel that not only this new garden but all the other fine gardens
open to the public around Philadelphia are a great asset to our
community and that in addition to giving pleasure to individuals
they will in the future prove a business asset in attracting to us far
greater numbers of visitors, and perhaps even more desirable ones,
than those we missed when Chicago outbid us for the National
Convention of the Republican Party!
JOHN C. WISTER.
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o 5
DEVELOPMENT OF THE DAHLIA IN RECENT YEARS
The first dahlia grown in Europe was grown from seed sent
from Mexico to the Abbe Cavanilles, priest and botanist, and cura-
tor of the Botanical Gardens in Madrid, and named by him after
his friend and fellow-botanist, Andreas Dahl, of Sweden, dahlia
pinnata (winged leaved), in 1789. This was a small single flower
of a brick red color, of about two inches in diameter, borne on a
frail stem and plant, faintly similar to a cosmos in appearance,
which, in fact, is a near cousin. The color appears not to have
been fixed, and plants grown from seed immediately began to show
a considerable variance in color, which gave rise to many disputes
during its early existence. If we compare this little two-inch flower
with Margaret E. Broomall, a giant white decorative shown at the
Atlantic City Flower and Garden Pageant in September, 1930,
which measured fifteen inches in diameter and was more than six
inches in depth, we at once get a picture which would seem almost
verging on the impossible.
This development is of outstanding interest and we know of
no other flower in existence today that has shown such progress in
size and perfection of both plant and flower, not to mention the
really marvelous range of color in so many different shades and
tones too wonderful to even attempt to describe, and all this, mind
you, in the very short space of time, as science rates time, has
occurred in just 141 years.
First, little dahlia pinnata soon gave of itself to help the hy-
bridist, and very shortly double forms appeared. These were
developed soon both in England and Holland until the most perfect
ball type came into being, and in 1850 to 1855 interest seemed to
wane, as the round could get no rounder and a more perfect formal
arrangement of petals could not be accomplished. Then in 1870
appeared a tiny ball-shaped blossom, originated by Sieckmann, of
Kostritz, which he called pompon. This was undoubtedly devel-
oped with much patience and selection, as it remains a true dwarf
type today. I shall have occasion to refer to this type later.
In 1872 a collection of plants and roots was sent from Mexico
to M. J. T. Van der Berg, of Holland. Among them a rather poor-
looking root was planted and when it came to bloom it proved to
be a dahlia of new form and type and was named Juarezii, after
the then President of Mexico. Nothing like it had ever been seen
before and its origin is still a mystery. It bore red flowers of a
semi-double form, the petals were pointed and incurved in a most
unusual way. This was soon developed into a fully double floAver
and after further refinement a cactus dahlia was produced and
given that name. This is the direct grandparent of the true in-
curved cactus of today.
Dahlia pinnata possibly developed along lines of evolution and
selection to form a perfect ball type. But when the ball dahlia
was crossed with this newly developed Juarezii, or its descendants,
it was quite a different story, for neither the gradual evolution of
Darwin nor the principles of Mendel seemed in any way to apply,
57
and the more recent accepted theory of mutations, or breaks, must
be accepted. For from this point on the dahlia seemed to have a
new lease on life, one break after another appearing with great
persistency, and we have hybrid cactus, semi-cactus, peony flowered
and finally the decorative type, all occurring in rapid succession.
These new hybrids soon found their way to California and
there, under most favorable conditions of both soil and climate,
first the giant California peony dahlias were produced and then
soon followed the giant decorative dahlia of today, and in but a
short time eastern growers were developing new varieties from this
California strain, until now the east and the west are running a
close race to see which can produce the greatest number of out-
standing dahlias each year. This, however, is not true only in
America ; England, Holland, in fact, all Europe as well, are pro-
ducing quite wonderful large flowered varieties. More recently
the hill country of India, East Africa, South Africa, Australia and
New Zealand have been raising the standard new dahlias, and in
many new parts of the Temperate Zone, both north and south,
seedlings are being raised and new varieties produced. This is
especially true of Australia, where lately most creditable new
dahlias have been produced. These have already found their way
to England and Holland and have proved most worthy.
Along this road of progress of the modern dahlias certain
varieties stand out in our minds like milestones. First came
Countess of Lonsdale (English, 1896), straight cactus, the first
cactus to have stamina of both plant and flower and still good
today. Then F. W. Fellows (Stredwick, 1913), incurved cactus,
the first really perfect, fine petaled cactus with flower and stem of
equally good substance. Stredwick has done more to develop the
true English cactus than any man in its recent development and
perfection.
Then appeared from Holland InsuUnde (Kriest, 1914), an
informal decorative, with flower right on top of the stem, to show
what stem really should be. And shortly thereafter appeared Mrs.
I. de Ver Warner (Marean, 1920), formal decorative. This, in
the minds of most experts, marks a new period in the development
of the decorative dahlia, as it had size, form and substance to a
degree not seen until then, and it is the parent or grandparent of
many outstanding varieties of today. Anibassador (Broomall,
1920), straight cactus, creamy yellow suffused pink, fine type of
American cactus, is the outstanding straight cactus and typifies
that type. It is the forerunner of many lovely California cactus,
a consistent winner at all shows and unexcelled to date.
Then follows Jersey's Beauty (Waite, 1923), formal decora-
tive of a spinal pink color and supremely lovely, not so large as
Warner, but of a color and form so perfect that it remains today
the leading dahlia in the cut flower market, both in America and
Europe. Finally Jane Cowl (Downs, 1927), informal decorative,
of a pleasing bronze, buff and gold combination of color. This
plant, for sheer consistency of form, stem and plant; for general
ruggedness and insect-resisting qualities, has never been equaled,
and is the outstanding dahlia of proven worth.
58
RECENT LARGE FLOWERED DAHLIAS
Having briefly outlined the progress of the dahlia, it is but
fitting that a list of the most outstanding varieties of recent date
be given, yet we undertake this naming of our favorite dahlias
with a degree of hesitancy, knowing that but few could be suffi-
ciently familiar with all the noteworthy introductions to discuss
them authoritatively. Mr. Derrill W. Hart, in his ''Roll of Honor,"
published annually in the December issue of the American Home,
has listed twenty-six dahlias for 1930 and thirty-four for 1931.
Dahlias will not do equally well in different soils and under varying
treatment, and the following list must be considered as a very
limited selection, and apologies are made for many varieties of
possibly equal worth that have been omitted.
RECENT VARIETIES
Kathleen N orris (Fisher and Masson), Monmouth Champion
(Kemp), Jane Cowl (Downs), Eliza London Shepherd (Peacock),
Bagdad (Redfern), F. W. Butler (Bessie Boston), The World
(Dahliadel), Ame^Hcan Triumph (American Dahlia Farms), Omar
Khayyam (Stout), Jean Trimhee (Trimbee-Waite), Thomas A.
Edison (Dahliadel), Treasure Island (Dahliadel).
1930 VARIETIES
Frau 0. Bracht (Berger), Bwight W. Morrow (Dahliadel),
Andrea Ericson (Fisher and Masson) , Eagle Rock Fantasy (Broom-
all-Success).
1931 VARIETIES
Myra Howard (Glutzbeck-Dahliadel), informal decorative,
ochraceous orange, winner of the American Home Achievement
Medal at New York Show, September, 1931. American Legion
(American Dahlia Farms), informal decorative, pale primrose yel-
low, achievement medal this year at Atlantic City and medal at
Baltimore. Girl of Hillcrest (Scott-Kemp), informal decorative,
apricot buff, medal at Baltimore. We saw this growing at Storrs
and predict a bright future for it. Originated in West Virginia.
Murphy's Masterpiece (Murphy-Success), informal decorative, red
shaded towards garnet. Highly recommended by its introducer,
Mr. Reed, and also Mr. Hart. Satan (Ballay), semi-cactus, flaming
red. An outstanding western variety. Maryland's Glory (Mary-
land Dahlia Gardens), formal decorative, deep American beauty
red. Winner at Atlantic City. A very pleasing color. Maryland
Orange (Maryland Dahlia Gardens), semi-cactus, orange tones.
We saw this win at Camden. It is one of the most pleasing we saw
this year. Mary Ellen (Lord Baltimore Gardens), informal deco-
rative. Margaret E. Broomall (Broomall-Suceess), formal decora-
tive, white. This seemed to all who have seen it growing in the
fleld to be the superlative dahlia to date ; imagine a rugged, yet not
ungraceful plant of a little over six feet in height, bearing huge,
massive flowers on strong, woody stems, held free and well above
the foliage, the flowers quite graceful for such a massive bloom,
59
measuring thirteen, fourteen and even a few have been fifteen
inches in diameter and well over six inches in depth. All experts
who have seen this dahlia are unanimous in agreeing that it is
supreme in the dahlia world. We saw it growing at Storrs under
natural conditions, not fed or forced, or even disbudded, and
measured one bloom that was over thirteen inches in diameter and
a good six inches in depth. It would be unwise to state that in
Margaret E. Brooniall we have the largest dahlia that can be pro-
duced, but we cannot but feel that this dahlia has reached the
ultimate as far as beauty or usefulness is concerned, and that
anything larger would lose in charm and grace where further size
might be attained.
We feel that this attainment of size and form is worthy of
great praise as a horticultural accomplishment, showing what a
marvelous development has been attained in America, and the
propagators who are responsible for this steady advance in recent
years should be highly commended for these successful accomplish-
ments, but we cannot but feel that many lovely dahlias have come
into being and been discarded in this wild rush for everything that
suggested grandeur. Little regard has been paid for very lovely
and worthwhile varieties that w^ould have been very suitable and
highly appreciated as a garden flower.
Abroad, where they work possibly along simpler but well-
established lines, they have been less prone to consider size as the
only object to be obtained, and they have developed and are grow-
ing today most extensively very lovely decorative, semi-cactus
varieties. They range from five to seven inches in diameter and
are considered by them as a cut flower, or, as they are usually
termed, a garden variety of dahlia. Our attention was continually
being called to the free-blooming quality of these dahlias on the
other side. They are very pronounced in their opinions that a
dahlia should be useful and bring a return to the grower, either as
an ornamental plant in the garden, border or as a free-blooming
variety for the commercial grower, who helped his overhead by
selling these blooms for the florist trade; and it would seem that
by their appreciation of all that is lovely and practical in the
dahlia, they have derived more pleasure out of their dahlias than
we have. This does not mean that they do not try to raise the
giant types ; they do, and are just as pleased as we are when they
develop a new large flowered type. But they do not neglect the
smaller flowered types. You will see in the average dahlia gardens
of the growers abroad all types of dahlias being given equal space
and consideration, which makes a visit to these commercial growers
both a matter of interest and pleasure.
And now to the last phase in the development of the dahlia,
namely :
MINIATURE DAHLIAS
The pompon, developed in 1870, and already referred to, is
the first in point of time of the miniatures to be developed. Next
came the mignon, and a short description would seem fitting at this
60
conjuncture. Mr. Joseph Cheal has described this most graphically
in the 1930 Year Book of the National Dahlia Society. He states
that he was attempting to dwarf the single dahlia and met with
considerable success and was about to introduce several varieties
when he received a letter from Mr. T. W. Girdlestone, then Secre-
tary of the National Society, inviting him to come and see a new
type of dahlia that he, Mr. Girdlestone, had developed. Imagine
his surprise to find that they had both been working along the same
lines and had both achieved the same results at the same time.
These were combined and put out by Mr. Cheal two years later
under the name of Tom Thumb dahlias, and this new type of
dahlia was accredited to Messrs. Girdlestone and Cheal in the
Gardener's Magazine of August, 1891. Later this family was given
the name of Mignon, which w^as considered more suitable, and they
are still known by that name today.
These two types, the pompon and the mignon, had both been
developed with great care over a period of years until a true type
was formed, and most of the miniatures of today are directly due
to one or the other of these small varieties. They both breed true
where isolated, at least 80 per cent of their seedlings coming true
to form. To be sure, the pompon will not all be double and a
majority will show a small eye or have open centers, but in form it
remains a pompon, showing that this dwarfing has developed or
been fixed into a true type. The same can be said to even a greater
degree of the mignon. They also breed true to form to a great
degree and retain their low growth of about eighteen to twenty
inches, and their branching form with plants carrying many flowers
in quick succession.
Of the charm and star dahlias, which are nothing more than
miniature peonies, the former rather favors the cactus type, while
the latter resembles the decorative varieties. These are undoubt-
edly crossed flowers developed on the smaller varieties, or else
among the garden type of dahlia where the pollen has been carried
from either the mignon or pompon.
Mr. Harry Stredwick, writing in this season's Year Book of
the National Dahlia Society, says, ''What has happened in late
years is, first one grower and then another has broken away from
old traditions and is naming and introducing a mongrel type that
thirty years ago would have been considered useless." Neverthe-
less, these little dahlias, which have occurred from time to time as
seedlings, have been saved and developed and the seed now is being
taken from these small types and a lovely family of small, free-
blooming dahlias have come into being, and possibly the most
lovely of them all and the one most worthy of consideration and
development is the miniature decorative. This lovely little flower
of less than four inches in diameter, fully double and resembling
the larger types of dahlias, has come into great popularity abroad.
Its parentage is also more or less a chance, but one can readily see
by its form of growth a similarity to the pompon ; in fact, we have
developed among our seedlings in the last few years quite a few
miniature decoratives which were found among pompon seedlings
61
that were nothing more than the pompons attempting to go back
to an earlier form and throw slightly larger flowers of a decorative
type. These come in lovely pastel shades, are very floriferous and
have the branching characteristics so noticeable in the pompon and
mignon types. The miniatures were classified by the National
Dahlia Society in the small pamphlet entitled Classification and
Description of Dahlias With Illustrations, published in 1924, and
were limited to four inches in diameter. The first to be grown in
this country was Little Jewel. This little dahlia was developed in
Holland under the name of Juweeltje and was produced by Older,
of Holland, in 1921. The next is Rhoda (Burrell, 1921), a minia-
ture peony; then Garden Love (Carlee, 1924), Rapallo (Severin,
1924). This last decorative may be at times a little over four
inches, nevertheless, it is of such an interesting type that it must
be included with the miniatures. Many more have been produced
since then, notable, Irene, salmon pink ; Corone, white ; Pink Pearl,
rose pink, and Nesthakchen, lovely peach tones.
These miniatures have met with great popularity abroad, and
I was surprised to note in the report of the Trial Grounds at Wisley
it was stated that visitors to the Royal Horticultural Society's
Gardens, both this year and last, paid more attention to the minia-
ture dahlias than they did to the larger types. These lovely little
dahlias have met with instant approval where flower lovers have
become familiar with them in America during the last two or three
years, and probably their reception and cultivation is the most out-
standing feature of the last year. They were shown and classified
in practically all of the eastern shows this fall, and we predict a
growing popularity for these smaller types of dahlias that lend
themselves so readily to flower arrangements. They are most useful
for the lunch table and where a small vase of flowers is wanted.
The tendency of recent years has been against the large and formal
flower arrangements of other times, so these newer types have had
a pleasant reception, especially among the ladies of the garden
clubs, and we hope that America will soon follow Europe in giving
due recognition to these miniatures as well as to the garden type of
dahlias, which give an abundance of bloom and are of a very useful
size, and will amply repay one for the effort involved.
A well-balanced collection of dahlias should include all types.
I do not advocate discarding the larger flowering dahlias ; they most
emphatically should be kept as leaders, and any worthwhile collec-
tion would suffer by their omission. Many of these smaller types
lend themselves most admirably to border planting, the smaller
dahlias fronting the larger types, and it is to he regretted that they
have not been used in this way more in America. It is our earnest
hope that these miniatures will find their proper place in our
gardens, and by this addition we feel that their popularity will be
enhanced and greater pleasure derived in the growing of the dahlia.
GEORGE L. FARNUM.
62
The above engraving was made for the Society in 1836 and
was the work of a London artist by the name of Cozzens. It was
originally designed for the Society's Diploma and served that pur-
pose until a few years ago, when the Diploma was discontinued
and the design adopted for the book plate of the Society.
1932 CALENDAR 1932
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH
APRIL
S M T W T F S
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10111213141516
17181920 2122 23
24 2526 27 28 2930
31
S M T W T F S
12 3 4 5 6
7 8 910111213
14151617181920
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29
5 M T W T F S
12 3 4 5
6 7 8 9101112
13141516171819
202122 23 24 25 26
2728293031
S M T W T F S
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10111213141516
171819 20 2122 23
24 25 26 2728 2930
MAY
JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
12 3 4 5 6 7
8 91011121314
151617181920 21
2223 24 25 26 2728
29 30 31
S M T W T F S
12 3 4
5 6 7 8 91011
12131415161718
19 20 2122 23 24 25
26 2728 2930
S M T W T F S
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10111213141516
171819 20 2122 23
24 2526 2728 2930
31
S M T W T F S
12 3 4 5 6
7 8 910111213
14151617181920
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 3031
SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 910
11121314151617
1819 20 212223 24
25 26 27282930
OCTOBER
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9101112131415
16171819 20 2122
23 24 25 26 272829
30 31
S M T W T F S
12 3 4 5
6 7 8 9101112
13141516171819
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
2728 2930
S M T W T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 910
11121314151617
1819 20 2122 23 24
2526 272829 30 31
63
But who can paint
Like Nature? Can Imagination 'boast
"iteoAr Amid its gay creation, hues like hers? fascination
Or can it mix them tvith that matchless skill,
And lose them in each other as appears
In every hud that blows?
Thompson.
For the convenience of members, the following Calendar of Garden
Work has been reprinted, through the courtesy of the editor,
from the 1931 file of "HORTICULTURE."
Almost all evergreens may be propagated by tip cuttings
taken during the winter months. Certain varieties of thujas and
biotas root more easily, of course, than others. But they all require
a moderate amount of bottom heat under the cutting bench and
some shade overhead. Never should the cuttings dry out.
Poinsettias usually drop their leaves when the flowers begin to
fade, which is usually a few weeks after Christmas. This indicates
that the plant is going into its natural resting period. Therefore,
put it away in a cool place with only enough moisture in the soil
to keep the stems from withering. Repot the plant in fresh soil
next spring and grow it outdoors until fall.
Seeds of torenia. Begonia semperflorens, abutilons, Vinca rosea
and heliotrope should be sown late this month.
Hydrangeas intended for Easter should be started into growth
at 50 degrees in the conservatory at once. It is wise to get them
under way early. Bougainvilleas, genistas and azaleas should not
have over 45 degrees of heat for the rest of the month.
Single early tulips may be brought into flower now, although
the doubles will not flower Avell until later. Miniature hyacinths
and narcissi, such as Golden Spur and double Von Sion, may also
be forced.
Take root cuttings of hardy phlox, making them one inch long.
They may either be planted in pots or flats, and usually every piece
will make a plant. Cover the cuttings with one-half inch of light
soil or sand and keep them in a cool place. Phlox Miss Lingard
must be propagated by divisions or tip cuttings ; root cuttings will
not grow.
Good-sized aquilegia plants grown from seed sown this month
will be ready to set out in May. The long-spurred hybrids are best,
and there are several promising new ones being introduced this year.
All old seeds should be tested before plans are made for this
year's garden. The blotter test is easy to make. Place sheets of
blotter in a dish of water. On these lay the seeds after they have
been carefully counted out and labeled. Cover the dish with a
piece of glass.
Send for seed and nursery catalogues early this year. The
smallest catalogue occasionally lists the rarest plants.
64
"Glowing hriglit
\^mmmi^ Beneath the various foliage
Wildly spreads charm ■
The arhuttis, and rears his sca,rlet fruit
Luxuriant mantling o'er
The craggy steeps."
Bulbs will force easier from now on. This is particularly true
of the double tulips. Hyacinth blooms may be drawn up from
the foliage by placing a paper cone over the plant. Unless this is
done the flower stems are frequently very short. Other bulbs may
bloom with very short stems as a result of giving them too much
heat at first after bringing the pots up from the cellar.
Dahlia tubers that were stored away in sawdust, oak leaves,
peat moss or wrapped in paper should be unpacked now and care-
fully looked over to discover if any are rotting. All soft parts of
the tubers should be cut off and the exposed surfaces dusted with
sulphur. Dampness and very low temperatures are the chief causes
for decay. Store the tubers where the temperature ranges from
forty to fifty degrees.
Viola Jersey Gem can be propagated by cuttings if a few
plants are brought indoors now and are cut back hard to encourage
new shoots. Root the cuttings in sand and when they have started,
plant them singly in pots or in boxes. All the cornuta varieties
can be propagated this way, but the variety Apricot is best started
each year from seed.
Persons with conservatories may begin to take cuttings from
now on of fuchsia, heliotrope, stevia, salvia, geraniums and other
bedding plants. These cuttings should be taken from young wood
only.
Cover the hotbeds, which are to be used for early vegetables,
with sash now, so that they will warm. Spread mats over the sash
on cloudy days and at night.
Fruits trees may be pruned any time from now on when the
temperature is above freezing and the wood is not frozen. Dormant
sprays may be applied to fruit trees and ornamental plants, too.
Seeds of belladonna and bellamosum delphiniums may be
sown now in pots or seed boxes. The seeds of choice hybrids lose
their vitality quickly and, therefore, the sooner they are sown the
better. Delphinium seeds start quickly and will produce plants
large enough to set out in spring. Many of these will flower the
first 3^ear and thus lengthen the season of bloom.
The verbenas Mayflower and Beauty of Oxford can be repro-
duced only by cuttings, which may be taken now or later. Fre-
quently the verbenas sold as Mayflower are nothing more than the
variety Miss AA^ilmott. The cuttings will root easily in sand, but
before taking them be sure they are not infested with mite. Ver-
bena seeds do not need to be planted until later.
65
MARCH
Beside a fading hank of snow
A lovely anemone blew,
THE.F15HE.S TT J! IJ- J -17 » 7 • 7 -1 7 EXPECTATION
Unfolding to the suns bright glow
Its leaves of Heaven's serenest hue.
"Percival."
Although some persons find it more convenient to increase
their dahlias by dividing the clumps of tubers, just as satisfactory
results may be obtained from cuttings. Plant the tubers in peat
moss and as soon as the sprouts have made several inches of growth
cut them off and place them in sharp sand. If one or two pairs of
eyes are left on the original shoot, these will start into growth, and
still more cuttings may be made later. If tubers of Coltness Gem
dahlias were saved from last season these may be increased by
cuttings in the same manner.
Palms and similar house plants are best repotted at this season,
so that they will be ready to make their annual growth next sum-
ber. Use a pot one size larger and a compost having one-third
manure. Ram the soil around the edges very tightly with a stick —
so tight, in fact, that the pot will not drop away when the palm is
lifted by its leaves.
The first sowing of hardy vegetables, such as cabbage, cauli-
flower and lettuce, may be made in the conservatory or window
garden. Use a light compost without fertilizer and see to it that
there is drainage in the flats or seed pans. Be careful not to wash
away the fine seeds when watering them.
Clean up the garden and burn all refuse left from last year.
By doing this early the chances of loss from plant diseases will be
decreased and great numbers of hibernating insects will be de-
stroyed. Do not forget the corners; usually more insects will be
found there than elsewhere.
Although early flowering bulbs may be uncovered gradually
now, most perennial borders and rose beds should be left covered
until the turn of the month. When uncovering the beds, do the
work preferably on a dull, cloudy day.
Prune rose bushes according to their uses: those pruned hard
will give the largest blooms on long cutting stems; roses pruned
lightly bloom more freely. In general, cut away two-thirds the
length of each cane with hybrid teas and hybrid perpetuals. All
dead wood, of course, must be cut out at the bottom.
Most large tubbed plants do not need to be repotted each year
if they are given a stimulant. Scrape away the top layer of spent
soil and replace it with a rich compost.
Sow sweet peas as soon as the ground can be worked. If the
trench was not prepared last fall, dig deeply now, working in
well-rotted manure in the lower depths.
Toward the end of the month spray fruit trees and ornamentals
with one of the oil mixtures before the buds begin to swell for the
control of San Jose scale.
66
j^PRIL
"/ gase upon her violet heds,
Laburnum's golden tress'd,
™e RAri j^^^ flower-spiked almonds; Ireath perfume -^AiTHPULNtss-
From lilac and syringa bloom,
And cry, 'I love spring best!'"
When flowering heads of single hydrangeas purchased at Easter
time begin to fade, cut the branches out at the bottom to encourage
new shoots. Later in the spring plunge the pots outdoors in a
sunny place. Stimulate the plants occasionally with a weak liquid
manure and never let them go dry until the approach of fall.
Tuberous rooted begonias are excellent for the shady garden.
If the tubers have not been started, plant them at once in boxes
of peat or sand in a warm cellar. Cover the tubers lightly and be
sure they are right side up. Keep them moist, and as soon as the
plants are two or three inches high pot them singly in small pots.
They will be ready for planting in rich, well-drained soil after the
middle of May.
Trees best transplanted in the spring include beeches, mag-
nolias, tulip trees, sweet gums, Japanese maples and large flowering
dogwoods. Shrubs to move now are althaeas, flowering almonds, fire
thorns and ornamental cherries and peaches. In preparing shrub-
bery borders, dig deeply and put well-rotted compost deep in
the soil.
The first sowings of hardy vegetables, such as peas, radishes,
lettuce, parsnips and beets, may be made in the open ground as
soon as the soil is dry enough to cultivate ; that is, when it will
crumble in the hand if squeezed.
Many perennials are divided easily early in the spring. They
include aconitums, fall asters, hardy chrysanthemums, which in-
variably grow better from young plants; platycodons, gaillardias,
phloxes, veronicas and Lysimachia cletJiroides.
Seeds of regal lilies grow very well when sown in a frame
early. The best soil is made by adding leafmold, old manure and
sand. Broadcast the seeds and water them thoroughly before
covering them lightly with a sand and peat mixture. Water them
again and cover the frame for one month with a shaded sash.
A number of kinds of lily bulbs may still be set in the border,
especially the regal lily, the speciosums and the tiger lily.
Potatoes bear the best crops if planted early.
When sowing pole bean seed, set out the poles at the same time.
Work in the mulch between the strawberry rows, but leave a
light covering to prevent soil from spattering on the berries.
Get the bird houses in place at once.
Japanese spurge, botanically Pacliysandra terminalis, is one
of the few evergreen ground covers that will grow under trees
where it is impossible to get grass to live.
67
MJi^^
"Thou art the 'Iris'
Who, armed with Golden
And winged xvith celestial, azure, li ear est
The message of some god."
Following the general rule that shrubs should be pruned just
after they have flowered, prune the flowering almonds and for-
sythias now, the former lightly, the latter heavily, if the plants are
getting out of bounds.
Hollyhock leaves are often covered on the under side with little
brown spots, which are a rust. Delphiniums are often bothered
both with blight and mildew, the latter attacking phlox as well.
It is much easier to prevent these diseases than to attempt to con-
trol them after they have started. Therefore, begin spraying with
Bordeaux mixture or any of the proprietary remedies recommended
for these diseases.
The first plantings of gladiolus bulbs can be made now. Pansies
and hardy bedding plants can be set out, but not tender things
like coleus. Dahlias should go in later.
From Massachusetts south all kinds of annuals can be sown in
the open ground during the early part of the month. The first
plantings of perennial seeds can go in, too.
Do not delay the planting of hardy materials such as peren-
nials, shrubs, trees, evergreens, rhododendrons and rock plants.
In many sections of the country the ground is already drying out
and each newly set out plant will need watering.
Aphids begin their work early, especially on roses. Use a
nicotine solution with a little soap added as a spreader or any of
well-known plant sprays.
Begin to mow the lawn before the grass gets too long, except
where crocuses are naturalized. The foliage of all bulbs must be
allowed to ripen or the bulbs will run out.
Summer flowering bulbs to plant are the montbretias, Hyacin-
thus candicans, the kniphofias, Ismene cuJailiina, Zephyrantkes
Candida, the tigridias, Lycoris squamigera, the Elephants-ear
(Caladnmi esculentum) and numerous lilies.
Keligiously spray all the fruits this year. Early spraying is
important, and if you are not sure when this should be done, send
to your state college for a spray schedule.
Make sowings of string beans, lima beans, pole beans, corn,
squash, cucumbers, melons, okra and spinach. Soak the corn seed
in a repellent solution to keep the crows and blackbirds from
eating it.
Tubbed plants, such as Agapanthus umhellatus, Clivia miniata,
Caladium esculentum and hydrangeas can be moved outdoors now.
Tubbed bay trees and boxwoods can be set on the terrace or in the
garden, too.
68
'■"■■■^ The iutteroup catches the sun in its chalice, ^OULWA
TVIE TWINS A J J.1 i 1 J T^T J -, ' PENSIVE.NES4'
And there s never a leaf nor a blade too mean
To be some happy creature's palace."
Garden slugs can be controlled with a dust, either of hydrated
lime or tobacco, sprinkled about in moist and out-of-the-way places,
along walks and corners where leaves have collected.
Cut worms as well as slugs may be killed with a poisonous
bran bait, made by mixing together five pounds of bran and one-
half ounce of either Paris green or arsenate of lead, to which is
mixed pint of molasses dissolved in one gallon of water. Spread
this bait in the garden every evening. There are proprietary mix-
tures as well.
From now on applications of insecticides on currant bushes to
control the small green currant worms should consist of fresh
hellebore, mixed with flour to make it stick to the foliage. This
dust loses its strength quickly and, therefore, does not leave a
poisonous coating on the fruit.
Ants in the lawn can be eliminated by making a few holes
around each ant hill to a depth of eight to twelve inches. In each
of these holes pour a tablespoonful of carbon bi-sulphide. Plug the
holes with wads of wet earth. Carbon bi-sulphide is highly inflam-
mable, but two excellent commercial sprays, that have pyrethrum
as a base, are also very efficient in controlling ants.
The best way to keep beetles from cucumbers, melons, pump-
kins and squashes is to cover the plants with netting, supported
by wooden frames. Make these frames about two or three feet
across and put on the netting as soon as the plants show through
the ground. Keep the vines covered as long as possible.
It is advisable to stop cutting asparagus early in June. As
the tops grow, keep them well sprayed with arsenate of lead.
The diseases mildew, black spot and anthracnose on grapes are
best controlled with Bordeaux mixture. The first spraying should
be done just before the blossoms open ; the second one shortly after
the blossoming period.
Clumps of Phlox divaricata should be divided and reset now
so that strong, healthy plants will have formed by next fall.
Evergreens that are turning rusty, especially junipers and
spruces, are no doubt infested with red spiders. This mite spins a
web at the base of the needles and the dead needles hang in wads.
Red spider can be checked by spraying the branches with a swift
stream of water from the hose, but spraying with an oil solution
or other proprietary sprays, recommended by reliable dealers, will
be more effective. Inspect the lilacs to see if young oyster shell
scales are hatching. To eliminate this pest spray with kerosene
emulsion or any of the proprietary solutions recommended for this
purpose. Direct the spray on the branches.
69
xjruiu^-
"When the heat like a mist-veil floats,
And poppies flame in the rye, ^"^tiHd
HECR«B ^^^ ^^g silver note in the streamlet's throat conjolat.on"
Has softened almost to a sigh.
It is July."
It is important to keep the soil well cultivated, especially after
rains, both in the flower and vegetable gardens. The soil should
not be stirred deeper than an inch or two, because the fine, feeding
roots of most plants are near the surface.
Hydrangeas are heavy feeders. Their blooms will be much
larger this fall if the plants have been well fertilized, preferably
with manure.
Like all other annuals, sweet peas will stop flowering if seed
pods are allowed to form. Other requirements of sweet peas are
plenty of water, protection against mildew and aphids, a mulch of
straw or other material and weak liquid fertilizer every two or
three weeks. Damp weather may cause the buds to drop off, but
this condition will aright itself when the weather clears.
Mildew on perennials such as phlox and delphiniums, on roses,
especially kinds like Frau Karl Druschki and Dorothy Perkins, and
sweet peas, can be controlled by dusting with any of the specially
prepared sulphur dusts.
Plant lice are now to be found in masses on all sorts of garden
subjects, even shrubs, at the very top of climbing roses and often
in trees. A nicotine or popular proprietary spray solution will
kill them.
One rose expert recommends the following fertilizer for late
July application at the rate of one trowelful to each average size
rose bush and two trowelfuls to very large bushes and climbers:
one part pulverized sheep manure, one part bone meal, one part
wood ashes and one-half part slacked lime. Dig the fertilizer into
the soil thoroughly.
Mulch the rose beds now with peat moss to keep the soil moist
and cool. Continue to water the plants, however. Roses lose their
foliage later in the summer if the plants get dry.
Prune rambler roses of the Dorothy Perkins type now, remov-
ing to the ground all old bushy canes. Train the new canes as they
grow. Climbing roses like Dr. W. Van Fleet flower better from
old canes, but the flowering stems can be shortened to a few inches
now, unless the hips or seed pods are wanted for fall color.
Perennial seeds will germinate better if the seed beds are cov-
ered with burlap or cloth to keep the soil moist. Any watering
should be done with a fine spray. Young perennial seedlings need
protection from the sun. Use a lath or light cloth screen.
After delphiniums have fiowered, the stalks should be cut back.
If the plants are to be replaced by fresh ones next season, cut the
stalks to the ground so that another crop of blooms may be had.
70
The sunflower turns to her
God, when he sets,
The same looTc ivhich she turned
When he rose.
"More."
Crab grass, worst of all lawn pests, will he seeding soon.
Therefore, rake the lawn before mowing to bring up all seed stalks
so that they may be cut off. Sweep off all lawn clippings where
crab grass is present to prevent their taking root. Crab grass is
sometimes brought into the lawn in manure. Moral : Use peat moss
and a chemical fertilizer instead. Lime encourages crab grass
particularly.
Wisterias that did not flower, and those that did, too, should
have their long, lanky growths shortened considerably in order that
side spurs may develop, which, alone, will bear flowers next spring.
Finish any rose pruning of climbers that may be left, unless
the hips are wanted for their winter beauty. Cultivate the rose
beds lightly, just enough to keep the weeds down. Pick up and
burn all fallen, diseased foliage. Apply the dust gun regularly.
Destroy any chestnut-brown pupae found among irises, when
dividing the clumps, for these undoubtedly are borers ready to
hatch into moths that will soon be laying eggs.
August is the month for planting pansy seeds. Excellent
plants and blooms can be had only from high-quality seeds. Soav
also, for the spring garden, forget-me-nots and English daisies.
Columbines often die after two or three years and therefore
should be treated as biennials for the best results. Seeds are best
sown now. Aquilegias hybridize freely, so that choice kinds will
come among the seedlings only if the finest strains in the garden are
allowed to cross pollinize.
Peonies may be planted at any time in the next month.
Orders should be placed at once for daffodils, so that they may
be set out in September.
Dahlias to be used for house decorations should be cut early in
the morning while the stems are full of sap. If they are to be
exhibited it is best to keep them in a cool, dark cellar for twelve
hours or more.
Bleeding hearts are easily propagated at this season by digging
up the plant, cutting off the roots to one inch or two of the crowns,
cutting these roots into sections three inches long and planting them
two inches deep in a bed of good, soft earth. The old plants may be
replanted also.
There is still time for setting out potted strawberry plants.
Madonna lily bulbs should be planted as soon as they arrive.
They deteriorate rapidly when exposed to the air. Three or four
inches is deep enough to set them.
Japaneses irises need to be divided every three or four years,
and this work can be done to advantage now.
71
l^gaPTJilMBEFL
"It is the Autumn breeze
That lightly floating on,
Just shims the loeedy leas, ' tears
Just stirs the glowing trees,
And is gone."
Fuclisias wliicli have been kept dry througli the summer may
be started into growth this month. They should be repotted and
the plants cut back hard, leaving only one or two inches of the
previous season's growth.
Nearly all the early flowering perennials may be set out now.
Perennials started from seed early in the season may be set in
rows in the open ground and given their permanent locations in
the spring.
Roses for fall planting should be ordered at once.
There should be no delay in getting evergreens into the ground.
It is much better to plant them early in the month than later.
This is the ideal month for dividing and transplanting peonies.
It is well to have at least three eyes to a division, and the crown
should be planted from two to three inches under the ground.
Deeper planting may keep the plants from flowering.
Plant narcissus bulbs as soon as they are available. Other
bulbs, such as tulips, crocuses, hyacinths and similar bulbs will be
available from the seed stores by the end of the month.
Gladiolus bulbs should be dug as soon as the leaves start to turn
yellow, before any danger of hard frost. Cut the tops back to
three inches from the soil and dig the bulbs carefully. Dry the
bulbs thoroughly in a frostproof place before storing.
Save the flower and vegetable garden from early frost by
spraying the plants with the hose very early in the morning before
sunlight strikes the plants. This will defrost them.
Late September is an ideal time to make new lawns or repair
old ones.
Plant bulbous irises in groups either in the rock garden or in
protected spots in the mixed border. These irises are admirable
for frame culture in the north, where man}- kinds are not reliably
hardy.
Prune trees, especially those that bleed in the spring. They
may be more easily shaped while the foliage is still on.
Replant bulbs that have become so crowded that they do not
flower well. In this class are narcissi, grape hj-acinths, crocuses
and scillas. Fertilize with bone meal.
Most of the sedums, thjnnes, pinks, Oenotheras, polemoniums
and saxifrages may be divided this month.
This is an excellent time to make a compost heap, using garden
refuse. If Adco is added, an excellent grade of manure will be
provided for use next spring.
72
OCTOBER
"When gentians roll their fringes tight
To save them for the morning,
THE SCALES ^Tj-d chestnuts fall from satin iurrs
Withoiit a word of warning."
Trees may be set out in the fall, except such subjects as red
and sugar maples, flowering- dogwoods, tuliptree, magnolias and
the sweetgum (Liquidam'bar st yraciflua) .
In the Middle Atlantic States hardy annual seeds may be
planted in carefully prepared beds. Some in the list are sweet
peas (to be trenched), candytuft, sweet alyssum, snapdragons and
cornflowers.
Hasten with the planting of narcissi. Tulips can be planted
until mid-November. Leave room for the lilies and plant the bulbs
promptly upon arrival.
Set in a store of potted bulbs for forcing in winter. To a five-
inch pot plant one hyacinth bulb or two narcissus bulbs or three
tulips. An eight-inch pot or pan will hold three hyacinths (not
the smaller Romans), six narcissi and eight tulips.
Excellent Darwin tulips to force are Rose Luisante, Prince of
Austria, Fred Moore, Yellow Prince, Belle Alliance, La Reine,
Flamingo and De Wet.
Geranium cuttings taken now in those sections of the country
that have not yet had a frost will root better than those taken
earlier. The wood will be firmer and there will be less danger of
the cuttings rotting.
Dig tender plants, such as cannas, caladiums and tuberoses
before frost can damage the roots. Cannas are best stored with
soil left on the roots. A'arieties like Mrs. Pierre S. duPont will not
winter over unless kept growing inside all winter long.
Lilacs transplant best during October, doing better by far
than those moved in the spring. The new hybrids excel the old
sorts in every day, and they have the added advantage of flowering
at an early age.
Dig beets, carrots, winter radishes and other root crops for
storing in the cellar or vegetable pit. Pumpkins and squashes, of
course, have to be kept in a warm, dry place, as, for instance, a
closed attic.
Celery dug and planted upright, roots and all, in a deep frame
will last in fine condition, in spite of frost, until Thanksgiving and
later. When hard frost is expected, cover the sash with matting.
Ventilate thoroughly on warm days. Do not dig the celery until
nearly time for freezing weather. Trenching is also satisfactory.
One of the most effective ways of controlling insects and
diseases in the garden is to clean up all refuse and to destroy all
the weeds in fall. This does not mean that leaves should be gath-
ered from around the shrubs. On the contrary, the shrubs will be
better off for this protection during the winter.
73
KOVEiVlBER
071 the moors it dwelleth free,
Like a fearless mountain child,
With a rosy cheeJc, a lightsome look, '^"'^^
And a spirit strong and ivild.
TWAIILEY.
AVhen planting roses, set them so that the "knuckle" is just
below the surface of the ground. Prune back the long tap roots,
as this will encourage many fibrous roots to form quickly.
This is the ideal time to plant tulips. Cover them five inches
deep ; space the bulbs six inches apart. Do not locate beds of bulbs
under eaves or where water will collect during the winter months.
Straw and heavy manure mulches should not be applied to the
garden or around fruit trees until the ground has become perma-
nently frozen.
Fall planting of apples is more advisable the farther south
one goes. Select several varieties, because many kinds, such as
Mcintosh, Delicious, Gravenstein and Cortland, will set but little
fruit to their own pollen. However, when interplanted, a good
crop of apples may be expected.
Hardy chrysanthemums intended for propagation of new
plants next year should be moved to the cold frame for winter
protection if the varieties are of questionable hardiness. Plant
conservatory chrysanthemums in boxes of soil and keep them in a
cool, well-aired place.
Windbreaks, to be placed around rhododendron beds, exposed
evergreens and along seaside gardens, should be put in place before
the ground freezes. Painted wooden barricades or burlap stretched
over wooden frames are desirable. Cornstalks make a good wind-
break, but are not as neat looking.
Continue to jDlant beds of tulips, which can be safely set out
until early December. Try some of the tulip species in the rock
garden.
Hardy lilies, such as L. regale, L. henryi and L. ienuifolium,
are now available, and the Japanese lilies will arrive from Japan
shortly. Be sure to get these lilies into the ground quickly, and
wherever freezing weather is expected, mulch the ground heavily
to keep it open.
Give all evergreens, including rhododendrons, a last good
watering before the ground freezes. This will be especially neces-
sary with plants recently set out. Warning to do this Avork would
not be repeated so often if watering at this time were not so
important.
Bone meal is a good garden fertilizer, but it takes so long to
decompose that it should be applied to the garden in the fall. It
sweetens the soil and is good for most perennials, shrubs, roses, etc.
Never use it around ericaceous plants such as rhododendrons and
mountain laurel.
74
"Warmth within, all snow outside,
Gay wreaths upon your door,
A finer, cheerier Christmas-ttde
Than you have known before."
When the ground has become stiffened with frost, give all
evergreens, especially those transplanted late this fall, a heavy
mulch of straw or well-rotted manure. This applies to woody
ornamentals, too. When mulching boxwood do not get the mulch
directly against the plants.
Windbreaks for rhododendrons and similar plants should, of
course, be in place. This work is bothersome, however, and it
would be wise to consider planting hardy evergreens as a natural
windbreak next season. Pines may be used or even deciduous trees
and tall shrubs.
Apply the winter mulch for the perennial border during dry
weather when the plants are dry and the ground is frozen. Oak
leaves are good, although salt hay is neater and more easily applied.
Hold the mulch in place with branches or clods of soil.
Poinsettias should be watered daily and kept at a room tem-
perature of not over seventy degrees. Cut poinsettia blooms as
well as those of Euphorbia jacquinceflora will not keep well unless
the ends of the stems are seared over a flame or dipped quickly into
hot water.
Jerusalem cherries and Christmas peppers will lose their foli-
age and fruit if there is the slightest trace of coal or illuminating
gas in the air. Dry air is also injurious, but this may be counter-
acted by sprinkling the plants with an atomizer.
Primroses do well in a cool place. Cyclamen, too, prefer a cool
position, but they require sunlight for several hours during the day.
The large flowering begonias are difficult to keep for a long
time in the house. Give the plants plenty of water and be sure
that they do not become chilled. Morning sun is best. Avoid get-
ting water on the leaves of rex begonias.
Christmas will be a happy day for the birds if they find the
feeding stations well supplied with food, especially if the ground is
covered with glistening snow. Chickadees, nuthatches and wood-
peckers like suet particularly.
All bird foods should be placed out of the reach of cats. Hang
suet from the branches of trees or tall shrubs. The special wire
feeding baskets are very satisfactory. Many birds enjoy dough-
nuts ; the grease keeps them warm in cold weather.
Sunflower seeds, finely ground chicken feed, pork rinds, rolled
oats, pumpkin or squash seeds and the especially mixed bird foods
are recommended.
Birds need grit during the winter. Keep a dish of sand or
coal ashes handy. Even fine poultry grit will do. The special
bird foods contain the proper amount of coarse material.
75
1931 REPORT OF GARDEN DIVISION OF
STATE FEDERATION OF PENNSYLVANIA WOMEN
The State Federation of Pennsylvania AYomen has tifty thou-
sand members, many of whom are interested in growing plants.
The Garden Division of the Federation aims to stimulate interest
in plant growth and in the importance of plants from the point of
view of health and beauty.
The State Chairman of Gardens has shared her enthusiasm by
giving talks to various clubs and through personal correspondence
by answering questions in regard to community j^lantings, pro-
grams, flower shows and cultivation of various plants.
The Garden Division appreciates most keenly the cordiality of
Dr. S. W. Fletcher, head of the Department of Horticulture of
the Penus3"lvania State College, and his able assistants who, with
the heads of the Botanic Department, made Horticultural Week at
State College a most valuable and enjoyable one.
During the past year a State-wide contest was held for the
best garden dining room. This was judged entirely by photo-
graphs, and awards were made at the Annual Federation Conven-
tion in York in October.
The Chairman of the Garden Division of the State Federation
believes that Pennsylvania, with her natural beauty, her various
soils, temperature and altitudes, can become "The State of Beauti-
ful Gardens," and her women made healthy of mind and body by
an increased understanding of the place this interest may hold in
their lives and the lives of the members of their families.
ALICE PECK KAISER
(Mrs. Frank A. Kaiser),
Chairman of the Garden Division,
State Federation of Pennsylvania Woynen.
THE GARDEN CLUB FEDERATION OF
PENNSYLVANIA, 1931
The first Annual Meeting of the Garden Club Federation of
Pennsylvania was held in Philadelphia on March 17-18, 1931.
Representatives from thirty-eight organizations answered the roll
call at the opening session at Strawberry Mansion in Fairmount
Park on the afternoon of the 17th. Following the election of
officers and presentation of reports by committee chairmen and
delegates, the Gold jMedal of Achievement, given by i\Irs. George L.
Harrison, was awarded to the Lawrence County Garden Club for
the most outstanding work in the Federation for the year 1930.
As a tribute to their splendid efforts, six other clubs were given
Honorable Mention; the Carrie T. Watson Garden Club (Erie),
the Garden Club of the Conservation Society of York County, the
Kittanning Garden Clul), the Nori'istown Garden Club, the Carlisle
76
Garden Club and the AYestmoreland Garden Club. At the close of
the meeting the delegates visited the charming old houses in Fair-
mount Park, returning to Strawberry Mansion for a buffet supper
as the guests of Mrs. Thomas Newhall, President of the Federation.
A lecture followed the supper. The second day of the meeting was-
devoted to the Philadelphia Flower Show Annual Luncheon, with
speakers and inter-club conferences.
The Semi-Annual Meeting of the Federation was held in
Harrisburg on October 7-8, 1931. This w^as the second semi-annual
meeting, the first having been held in Sewickley, Allegheny County,
the previous autumn. It is at present the policy of the Federation
to hold these semi-annual meetings alternately in the Western and
Central Divisions. Twenty-three clubs were represented at the
Harrisburg meeting. A visit to the garden of Mr. J. Horace Mc-
Farland and a dinner with speakers were pleasant features of the
first day of the session ; a Question Box Meeting, a luncheon with
speakers, and tea at the Executive Mansion as the guests of Mrs.
Pinchot occupied the second day.
The Executive Committee of the Federation has held regular
monthly meetings, and the several Standing Committees — Admis-
sion, Conservation, Publicity, Legislation, Activities and Garden
Club Organization — have all been zealous in their efforts.
The progress of the movement is shown hj the fact that, start-
ing in March, 1930, with thirty-nine organizations as Charter
Members, the Federation now includes sixty clubs and societies.
Much enthusiasm has been displayed by these member units and
the interest shown is very marked. Those who have guided the
Federation in its infancy can but feel certain that the way is open
for a tremendous advance throughout the State in conservation, in
civic pride, in the furthering of horticultural knowledge among
children and adults and in the application of such knowledge to the
benefit of the cities, towns and rural communities in Pennsylvania.
The second Annual jMeeting of the Federation will be held in
Philadelphia on March 9-10, 1932.
MARY HARRISON
(Mrs. George L. Harrison),
Secretary.
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS OF THE FEDERATION
FOR 1932
President — Mrs. Alan Reed, Wyncote, Pa.
Treasurer — Mr. Garrett V. Clark, 4404 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Corresponding Secretary — Mrs. Samuel P. Felix, Lansdowne, Pa.
Recording Secretary — Mrs. James M. Shellenburger, Dovlestown,
Pa.
Vice-President —
Eastern Division —
Mrs. Clarence C. Zantzinger, Chestnut llill. Pa.
77
Vice-President —
Central Division —
Mrs. Vance McCoi-mick,
Harrisburff, Pa.
Vice-President —
Western Division —
Mrs. Carroll P. Davis,
Directors —
Eastern Division —
Miss Estelle Thomas.
Mrs. Boyle Irwin.
Mrs. Thomas Newhall.
Central Division —
Mrs. Allan D. Thompson.
Mrs. Arthur J. Wood.
Mrs. S. S. Newcomer.
Western Division —
Mrs. Wm. Logan Fox.
Mrs. George B. Taylor.
Mrs. John Barclay.
846 Ridge Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
MEMBER CLUBS OF THE FEDERATION
Eastern Division
Abington Garden Club,
Mrs. Edward W. Warren, Pres.,
430 Quincy Ave., Scranton, Pa.
Bala-Cyn-svyd, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Harry Tily, Pres.,
Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.
Bethlehem Garden Club,
Mrs. James F. Pindlay, Pres.,
Cor. Beech and Elm Sts.,
Bethlehem, Pa.
Bushkill Garden Club,
Mrs. Alice Young, Pres.,
Bushkill, Pa.
Council for Preservation of
Natural Beauty in Pennsylvania,
Mrs. Wm. Townsend Elliott, Pres.,
117 Glenn Eoad, Ardmore, Pa.
Delaware Co. Horticultural Society,
Mr. H. F. Schearer, Pres.,
30 Princeton Rd., Brookline, Pa.
Chester Branch,
Mrs. J. H. MeConechy,
208 W. Mowry St., Chester, Pa.
Delaware Co., Suburban Garden
Club of,
Mr. Edward Cunningham, Pres.,
"Spicewood," Bon Air,
Upper Darby, Pa.
Dingman's Ferry Garden Club,
Mrs. Lynne K. Lewis, Pres.,
2004 W. Ontario St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Four Counties Garden Club,
Mrs. Samuel J. Henderson, Pres.,
Media, Pa.
Gardeners, The,
Mrs. Isaac H. Clothier, Pres.,
Eadnor, Pa.
Garden Workers,
Mrs. D. G. Rombaeh, Pres.,
424 Montgomery Ave., Haverford, Pa.
Germantown Horticultural Society,
Mr. S. Mendelson Meehan, Pres.,
380 Vernon Ed., Mt. Aiiy, Phila., Pa.
Glenside, Everywoman's Club of,
Garden Department,
Mrs. Charles Rabenold, Chairman,
Oakdale Ave., Glenside, Pa.
Huntingdon Valley Garden Club,
Mrs. Alan Eeed, Pres.,
Wyncote, Pa.
Keystone Branch,
Woman's National Farm and
Garden Association,
Miss Emma Blakiston, Pres.,
Fort Washington, Pa.
78
Lansdowne Flower Show Association,
Mr. 0. W. Conard, Pres.,
"The Knoll," Lansdowne, Pa,
Lansdowne, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Samuel P. Felix, Pres.,
50 W. Plumstead St., Lansdowne, Pa.
Little Gardens ITnit,
Doylestown Nature Club,
Mrs. James Shellenburger, Pres.,
Doylestown, Pa.
Media Garden Club,
Mrs. P. W. Janeway, Pres.,
3rd and Edgewater Sts., Media, Pa.
Millville, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Francis Bobbins, Pres.,
Millville, Pa.
Monroe County Garden Club,
Mrs. W. K. LaBar, Pres.,
Box 65, Stroudsburg, Pa,
Montrose Garden Club,
Mrs. Euel Warriner, Pres.,
Montrose, Pa,
Norristown Garden Club,
Miss Eena S. Middleton, Pres.,
1851 W. Marshall St., Norristown, Pa.
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society,
Mr. C. Frederick C. Stout, Pres.,
1600 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Philadelphia, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Frazer Harris, Pres.,
Chestnut Hill, Pa.
Scranton, Century Club of.
Garden Department,
Mrs. Charles H. Welles, Jr., Chairman,
615 Vine St., Scranton, Pa.
Society of Little Gardens,
Mrs. Howard W. Lewis, Pres.,
1928 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Trevose Horticultural Society,
Mr. Garrett V. Clark, Pres.,
Trevose, Pa.
Twin Valleys Garden Club,
Mrs. F. H. Harjes, Jr., Pres.,
Valley Forge, Pa,
Weeders, The,
Mrs. Charles S. Starr, Pres.,
Haverford, Pa,
West Chester Garden Club,
Mrs. Eoger B. Combs, Pres.,
Whitford, Pa,
West Philadelphia Garden Club,
Miss Sarah K. Wood, Pres.,
4326 Osage Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
Wyoming Valley, Garden Club of,
Mr. W. J. Peck, Pres.,
220 Washington St., W. Pittston, Pa.
Mrs. Gifford Pinchot,
Executive Mansion,
Harrisburg, Pa,
Members-at-Large
Miss Euth Eapp,
47 E. Market St.,
Bethlehem, Pa.
Central Division
Altoona Garden Club, Kane, Garden Club of.
Dr. Frederick D. Willis, Pres., Mrs. A. A. Nicolas, Pres.,
Hollidaysburg, Pa, 123 Edgar St., Kane, Pa.
Bradford, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Joseph H. Bovaird, Pres.,
119 Jackson Ave., Bradford, Pa.
Carlisle Garden Club,
Mrs. Allan D. Thompson, Pres.,
261 W. Louther St., Carlisle, Pa.
Harrisburg Garden Club,
Mr. Joseph N. Hobart, Pres.,
1554 Bridge St., New Cumberland, Pa.
State College Garden Club,
Mrs. Arthur J. Wood, Pres.,
410 Allen St., State College, Pa.
Williamsport Garden Club,
Mrs. George L. Holland, Pres.,
707 Campbell St., Williamsport, Pa.
York County Conservation Society,
Garden Club of,
Mrs. Charles B. Heinley, Pres.,
34 N. Keesey St., York, Pa.
Western Division
Allegheny County, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Frank F. Brooks, Pres.,
Shields, Pa.
Butler, Garden Club of,
Mrs. George H. Jackson, Pres.,
615 N. McKean St., Butler, Pa.
Clarion County Garden Club,
Mrs. W. Logan Fox., Pres.,
Enfield, Pa,
Club of Little Gardens,
Mrs. Wm. E. Scott, Pres.,
5439 Northumberland St.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
79
WALL PLANTING IN "CAERINGTON"
Estate of Mr. and Mrs. Grenvill:e Dodge Montgomery
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Awarded Silver Medal in 1931
Irwin Garden Club,
Mrs. 0. B. Keister, Pres.,
Irwin, Pa.
Kittanning Garden Club,
Mrs. C. B. McNees, Pres.,
101 Hazel Ave., Kittanning, Pa.
Lawrence County Garden Club,
Mrs. Walter Eckenroid, Pres.,
117 Fairfield Ave., New Castle, Pa.
Meadville Garden Club,
Miss Marguerite McClintock, Pres.,
473 Walnut St., Meadville, Pa.
Neighborhood Garden Club,
Mrs. R. E. Sanbord, Pres.,
430 Teece Ave., Bellevue, Pa.
New Kensington Garden Club,
Mr. D. M. McBride, Pres.,
307 Sixth Ave., Parnassus, Pa.
Oakmont Farm and Garden Club,
Mrs. B. W. Dunham, Pres.,
Oakmont, Pa.
Sewickley, Little Garden Club of,
Mrs. William Galbraith, Pres.,
Woodland Rd., Edgeworth,
Sewickley, Pa.
Sewickley, Village Garden Club of,
Mrs. Strickland Kneass, Pres.,
55 Thorn St., Sewickley, Pa.
Shady Side Unit,
Woman's National Farm and
Garden Association,
Mrs. E. B. Meller, Pres.,
D'Arlington Apts.,
Neville & Bayard Sts., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Somerset Garden Club,
Mrs. George J. Krebs, Pres.,
476 W. Main St., Somerset, Pa.
Titusville Garden Club,
Mrs. F. L. Nuse, Pres.,
500 N. Washington St., Titusville, Pa.
Carrie T. Watson Garden Club,
Mrs. Matthew Griswold, Pres.,
265 W. Tenth St., Erie, Pa.
Westminster Garden Club,
Mrs. E. C. Feidler, Pres.,
Colonial Drive, R. D. 2,
Westminster, Erie, Pa.
Westmoreland Garden Club,
Mrs. John Barclay, Pres.,
320 W. Pittsburgh St., Greensburg, Pa.
81
BY-LAWS OF
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
Rewritten and Adopted March 20, 1929
(With amendments in 1930 and 1931)
I
OFFICERS
The officers of the Societj'^ shall be a President, two Vice-Presidents, a
Secretary and a Treasurer.
II
PRESIDENT
1. The President, or in his absence one of the Vice-Presidents, shall
preside at the meetings of the Society and the Executive Council. The Presi-
dent, ex officio, shall be a member of all committees. He shall have general
direction of all the activities of the Society and shall in every way seek to
promote the interests and extend the usefulness of the Society.
2. He shall submit to the Executive Council at the January meeting a
general report of the affairs of the Society.
ni
VICE-PRESIDENTS
In the absence of the President, his duties shall be performed by the
Vice-Presidents in the order of their seniority.
IV
TREASURER
The Treasurer shall collect all dues and other income and shall keep the
accounts of the Society, disburse its money, and report thereon at the regular
meeting of the Executive Council in January. He shall deposit the funds of
the Society in such Bank or Trust Company as the Executive Council shall
designate. All payments shall be made by check. He shall pay bills only
upon the approval of the Chairman of the Committee authorizing the purchase
or contract. He shall, with the approval of the President or one of the Vice-
Presidents, have authority to borrow money in order to provide funds for the
legitimate expenses of the Society or when in his judgment it is for the best
interests of the Society so to do. He shall furnish a bond in such amount as
the Executive Council may determine, the premium for which shall be paid by
the Society, and the Bond shall at all times be in the custody of the President.
V
SECRETARY
1. The Secretary shall give notice of all meetings of the Society and of
the Executive Council and shall keep minutes of such meetings. He shall
conduct the correspondence and keep the records of the Society. He shall be
the keeper of the seal of the Society. He shall notify persons elected to mem-
bership of their election. He shall send by mail to each member of the Execu-
tive Council at least seven days' notice of each stated meeting. He shall
perform such other duties as may from time to time be assigned to him by
the Executive Council.
2. The Secretary may, if the Executive Council so directs, act as Assist-
ant Treasurer, performing such duties as the Treasurer may delegate to him,
with the approval of the Executive Council. As Assistant Treasurer, he shall
82
furnish a bond in such amount as the Executive Council may determine, the
premium for which shall be paid by the Society, and the Bond shall at all times
be in the custody of the President.
3. The Secretary may be paid a monthly salary, to be determined by the
Executive Council. This salary may be increased or decreased by the Executive
Council at any regular meeting.
4. In the absence of the Secretary at any meeting the President or
presiding officer shall appoint a Secretary pro tempore.
VI
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
1. The Executive Council shall consist of twenty-one members. It shall
have general charge of the affairs, funds and property of the Society, and
shall have authority to designate the person or persons who may make con-
tracts or purchases for the Society. It shall have full power, and it shall be
the duty of its members to carry out the purposes of the Society according to
its Charter and By-Laws.
2. The Executive Council shall, as soon as may be, after each Annual
Meeting elect from its own body a President, two Vice-Presidents, a Secretary
and a Treasurer, who shall hold office for one year from the first day of the
succeeding January, or until their successors are elected.
3. The Executive Council shall meet once a month, except during the
months of June, July and Augnist, and Special Meetings may be called by
order of the President. Seven members shall constitute a quorum of the
Executive Council.
4. The Executive Council shall have power to elect annual members, life
members and honorary members.
5. The Executive Council may fill any vacancy in its body by election of
a member of the Society to hold office until the next Annual Election.
6. Any member of the Executive Council or of any Standing Committee
who shall be absent from three consecutive meetings shall cease to be a member
of the Council or the Standing Committee, unless a satisfactory reason be.
offered to the Council or the Committee for such absence.
VII
MEETINGS
1. There shall be an Annual Meeting of the Society on the third Wednes-
day of November in each year. Special meetings of the Society may be called
by the Secretary upon order of the President, or of any five members of the
Executive Council or upon request of fifteen members of the Society. At each
Annual Meeting there shall be elected seven members of the Executive Council
to serve for three years, and at such Annual Meeting any vacancy in the
Executive Council shall be filled by the election of a member to serve the
unexpired term.
2. Officers and members of the Executive Council shall hold office during
the term for which they are elected and until their successors are chosen.
3. Ten members shall constitute a quorum at any meeting of the Society.
VIII
NOMINATIONS AND ELECTIONS
1. As soon as may be after the September meeting of the Executive
Council in each year a Nomination Committee, consisting, ex officio, of the
members of the Executive Council who have more than one year but less than
two years to serve as such members, shall nominate candidates for all the
offices which are to be filled by election for the coming year. The Committee
shall file its nominations with the Secretary before the first day of October,
and the Secretary shall, on receiving them, cause the nominations to be pub-
lished in Horticulture at least tliirty days previous to the Annual Meeting.
83
Additional nominations may be made in writing by fifteen or more members
of the Society. They shall be addressed to the Secretary and mailed prior to
the first day of November.
2. If no nominations are made in addition to those submitted by the
Nominating Committee an election by ballot will not be necessary, and the
Executive Council shall, by motion, elect the candidates nominated by the
Committee.
If additional nominations are received, the Secretary shall cause ballots
to be printed containing the names of all the candidates, and shall maU them
to every member of the Society as soon after November 1st as possible.
3. Members shall vote by placing an "X" opposite the names selected.
To secure secrecy in the election, the ballots shall be provided with inner and
outer envelopes. The member, after marking his ballot, shall enclose and seal
it in the inner envelope. The latter should then be enclosed and sealed in the
outer envelope, on which the member shall sign his name, after which it should
be mailed to the Election Committee. If the member's signature is omitted on
the outer envelope, or if more names are marked than required, the vote shall
be disqualified.
4. The President or presiding officer shall appoint an Election Committee
of three to receive, assort and count the ballots cast, and to report the result
to the Secretary. A plurality shall elect, and the President or presiding officer
shall declare who are elected. Voting by proxy shall not be allowed at any
meeting.
IX
HONOEAEY OFFICERS AND MEMBEES
1. Honorary Vice-Presidents may be elected by the Executive Council at
any regular meeting. This honor is reserved for persons who have served the
Society as officers or members of its Executive Council.
2. Honoraiy Members may be elected by the Executive Council at any
regular meeting. This honor is reserved for persons of pre-eminence in horti-
culture and kindred sciences, and signifies the high regard in which they are
held. No dues are required from Honorary Members. They shall not be
permitted to vote or hold office.
X-.
EESIGNATIONS
1. Eesignations of membership shall be made to the Secretary in writing.
2. Eesignations shall not be accepted until all indebtedness to the Society
of the member resigning shall have been discharged.
XI
DUES
1. The dues of all Annual Members shall be three dollars, payable in
advance. If such dues are not paid within four months of the date of the
bill, such persons shall cease to be members of the Society.
2. Candidates elected, on payment of the dues for the current year, shall
become members of the Society, and the election of any candidate shall be
void if he fails to make such pajTnent within thirty days after notice of his
election is made, addressed to him at the place given as his residence in his
application for membership.
3. Any person may be elected a Patron upon the payment of ten thou-
sand dollars. Any person may be elected a Benefactor upon the payment of
five thousand dollars. Any person may be elected a Sustaining Member upon
the payment of one thousand dollars. Any person may be elected a Life Mem-
ber upon the payment of one hundred dollars. (Life Membership fee wUl
remain fifty dollars until May 1, 1932.)
4. All moneys received from Patron, Benefactor, Sustaining or Life
Membership dues shall be treated as trust funds in perpetuity. The income
only from these funds shall be used by the Society.
84
XII
SUSPENSIONS OR EXPULSION
Any member may be suspended or expelled for cause by vote of three-
fifths of all the members of the Executive Council, fifteen days' previous
notice in writing having been given to the member of the charges preferred
against him. Any action under this Article may be revoked or modified by
subsequent vote of the Executive Council.
XIII
STANDING COMMITTEES
1. There shall be six Standing Committees, to be known as the Executive
Committee, the Finance Committee, the Library Committee,' the Lecture Com-
mittee, the Garden Committee and the Exhibition Committee.
2. The President, as soon as may be after the first of the year, shall
appoint the members of all Standing Committees, with the approval of the
Executive Council. The Chairman of each Committee must be a member of
the Council, but other members may be drawn from the Society. They shall
hold office for one year from appointment and until their successors are ap-
pointed. All vacancies in such Committees shallbe filled by the President and
Executive Council, or during its recess by the Executive Committee. Each
Committee shall have power to fix its own quorum.
3. The Executive Committee shall consist of not more than five members.
It shall be its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to order
purchases, to regulate salaries and wages (except the Secretary's salary), to
receive complaints, to redress grievances, to appoint and dismiss employees, to
manage the Society's Eooms and to perform such other similar duties as may
from time to time be assigned to it by the Executive Council. During the
recess of the Executive Council the Executive Committee shall be vested with
all the powers of the Executive Council so far as the same can be legally
delegated, but it shall be its duty to exercise such powers only whenever imme-
diate action is required.
4. The Finance Committee shall consist of three or more members, of
which the Treasurer shall be one. It shall be its duty, subject to the control
of the Executive CouncO, to supervise the finances and investments of the
Society, to annually make a budget setting forth the estimated receipts and
expenses of the Society for the ensuing year, commencing on the first day of
January, and to present such budget to the Executive Council for consideration
at its January meeting. It shall be its duty to engage a Certified Public
Accountant or Accountants annually to audit the Society's accounts. It shall
report to the Executive Council the accounts audited and allowed since its
previous report, and perform such other similar duties as may from time to
time be assigned to it by the Executive Council.
5. The Library Committee shall consist of five or more members. It
shall be its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to regulate
the use of the Library, the Eeading Room, and of all the books, periodicals,
newspapers, etc., to purchase books and periodicals, and to perform such other
similar duties as may from time to time be assigned to it by the Executive
Couneil.
6. The Lecture Committee shall consist of not more than three members.
It shall be its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to prepare
a list of lectures to be delivered during the year, to make arrangements with
the lecturers, to supervise the arrangements for the delivery of the lectures,
and to perform such other similar duties as may from time to time be assigned
to it by the Executive Council.
7. The Garden Committee shall consist of not more than five members.
It shall be the duty of this Committee to consider plans for the development
and promotion of the horticultural purposes of the Society and, subject to and
with the approval of the Executive Council, to carry out such plans and to
perform such other similar duties as may from time to time be assigned to it
by the Executive Council.
85
8. The Exhibition Committee shall consist of five or more members. It
shall be its duty, subject to the control of the Executive Council, to organize
and supervise all of the Society's Exhibitions. It shall determine dates of
Exhibitions and places where they shall be held, which, however, shall be
subject to the approval of the Executive Council. It may contract for printing
and advertising in connection with the Shows, the cost of which shall not
exceed an amount appropriated for such pui-pose by the Executive Council. It
shall appoint all Judges, arrange for their reception and entertainment, and
perform such other similar duties as may from time to time be assigned to it
by the Executive Council.
XIV
EULES AND AMENDMENTS
1. The rules contained in "Robert's Rules of Order Revised" shall govern
the Society in all cases to which they are applicable and in which they are not
inconsistent with these By-Laws.
2. These By-Laws may be amended by the Executive Council at any
regular or special meeting by the affirmative vote of a majority of the entire
membership of the Executive Council, provided a notice of the proposed
amendments has been sent to the members of the Executive Council with the
notice for the meeting; or they may be amended if proposed at an annual or
special meeting of the Society and recommended by a majority vote of those
present, when submitted by letter ballot to the members, a two-thirds favorable
vote of the ballots cast being required.
86
The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
LIST OF MEMBERS
Additions and Corrections up to February 15, 1932
Members of the Society will confer a favor by giving the Secretary notice of
any change which they may desire to have made in their addresses or of any inac-
curacies in the spelling of names or the classification of profession or business, etc.,
which may be found in this list.
HONORARY MEMBERS
1931 Ames, Mr. John S., North Easton,
Mass.
1930 Bailey, Dr. L. H., Ithaca, N. Y.
1931 Bertron, Mr. Samuel R., 40 Wall
St., New York, N. Y.
1931 Farrington, Mr. Edward I., 300
Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass
1926 Havemeyer, Mr. T. A., 25 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
1930 Keith, Mrs. Sidney W., 226 S. 21st
St., Philadelphia.
1902 Keller, Dr. Ida A., 4424 Osage Ave.,
Philadelphia.
ELECTED
1929 Macfarlane, Dr. John M., 220 Wi-
nona Ave., Germantown.
1922 Pennell, Dr. Francis W., 1900 Race
St., Philadelphia.
1930 Purdy, Mr. Carl, Ukiah, Calif.
1875 Thunder, Mrs. Henry Gordon, 272
S. 23d St., Philadelphia.
1931 Webster, Mr. Edwin S., 300 Massa-
chusetts Ave., Boston, Mass.
1931 Wright, Mr. Richardson, Graybar
Bldg., 420 Lexington Ave., New
York, N. Y.
LIFE AND ANNUAL MEMBERS
Life Members in bold-face type.
G. Gardeners. C. Commercial Growers. S. Seedsmen. F. Retail Florists.
N. Nurserymen. L. Landscape Architects. W. Wholesale Flonsxs.
Abbott, Miss Gertrude, 400 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Abbott, Miss Julia Boggs, 907 Radcliffe
St., Bristol.
Abernethy, Mrs. S. C, 3130 N. Broad St..
Philadelphia.
Achenbach, Mrs. Leonard J., 509 Wynd-
moor Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Acker, Mrs. Finley, 4943 Rubicam Ave.,
Germantown.
Acton, Mrs. Frank M., 323 Harrison
Ave., Elkins Park.
Adam, Mrs. J. N., R. D. 5, West Chester.
Adams, Mr. Percy, care of Mr. Maurice
Bower Saul, Moylan-Rose Valley. (G.)
Adamson, Mrs. C. B., 415 W. Price St.,
Germantown.
Adee, Mrs. John N., Horsham.
Aiken, Mr. David, care of Mrs. Barclay
McFadden, Rosemont. (G.)
Aitken, Mrs. John N., 233 W. Hortter
St., Philadelphia.
Aitkin, Mrs. A. K., 28 Conshohocken Rd.,
Bala.
Albert, Mrs. E. S., 802 Main St., Strouds-
burg.
Albert, Mrs. John S., Walling ford.
Albrecht, Mrs. A. C, 1207 W. Allegheny
Ave., Philadelphia.
Albrecht, Mr. H. Carl, 1207 W. Alle-
gheny Ave., Philadelphia.
Albrecht, Mr. John, Jr., Albrecht Nurser-
ies, Narberth. (N.)
Alexander, Mrs. E. G., Wyncote.
Alexander, Mrs. J. S., Box 377, Bryn
Mawr.
Alexander, Mr. W. W., Stokley and
Coulter Sts., Germantown.
Algeo, Miss Elisabeth W., 612 Columbia
Ave., Lansdale.
Algeo, Mrs. John, 612 Columbia Ave.,
Lansdale.
Allen, Mr. Earl L. V., 1147 Harding
Drive, Llanerch.
Allen, Mrs. Frank B., Box 283, Narberth.
Allen, Mr. Fred H., 3915 Henry St., Phil-
adelphia.
Allen, Mrs. J. Rex, 1125 S. 48th St.,
Philadelphia.
Allen, Miss Laura, 2100 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
87
Allinson, Mrs. E. Page, "Town's End
Farm," West Chester.
Allshul, Mrs. Arthur C, 131 St. Georges
Rd., Ardmore.
Alpern, Mrs. M., 6622 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Altemus, Mrs. Charles A., 117 Bucking-
ham Drive, Trenton, N. J.
Ambler, Miss Alice H., Plymouth Meet-
ing.
Ambler, Mrs. Annie F., Plymouth Meet-
ing.
Ames, Miss Ella E., 203 St. Marks Sq.,
Philadelphia.
Anders, Mr. Monroe, Simpson and Argyle
Rds., Ardmore.
Anders, Mrs. Warren Z., 477 Main St.,
Collegeville.
Anderson, Mrs. Claude J. K., Riverton,
N.J.
Anderson, Mrs. Robert M., 6308 Moylan
St., Philadelphia.
Anderson, Mrs. William M., Box 142,
Wynnewood.
Andre, Mr. John R., 525 Spring Ave.,
Elkins Park. (C.)
Andrews, Mr. E. A., Marshall Ave., Glen
Afton, Trenton, N. J. (C.)
Andrews, Mr. James C, Moylan Ave.,
Moylan.
Andrews, Mrs. Schofield, 9002 Crefeldt
St., Chestnut Hill.
Annett, Mr. Cecil B., 310 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Appel, Mrs. William N. 419 E. King St.,
Lancaster,
Arader, Mr. Walter Graham, 1920 N.
61st St., Philadelphia, (S.)
Archambault, Miss A. Margaretta, 426 S.
40th St., Philadelphia.
Archer, Mrs. F. Morse, 570 Warwick
Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Armentrout, Miss Clara B., 6320 Bur-
bridge St., Germantown.
Armistead, Mr. W. M., 223 S. Aberdeen
Ave., Wayne.
Armitage, Mrs. Harry, 2506 Chestnut St.,
Chester.
Armstrong, Mrs. F. Wallis, Meadow-
view Farms, Moorestown, N. J.
Armstrong, Mr. William, Box 115, Ber-
wyn.
Arnold, Mrs. M. E., 1717 Jefferson St.,
Philadelphia.
Arthur, Mr. Alec, care of Mrs. F. A. C.
Perrine, 413 W. State St., Trenton,
N. J. (G.)
Arthur, Mrs. Burch D., 157 Carpenter
Lane, Mt, Airy.
Ash, Miss Florence, 5636 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Ashbridge, Miss Emily, Rosemont.
Ashbridge, Miss Lida, Rosemont.
Ashbridge, Mr, Richard I. D., Downing-
town.
Ashenfelter, Mrs. L B., 2846 N. 26th St.,
Philadelphia.
Ashenfelter, Mrs. R. B., 103 Llanfair
Road, Ardmore.
Ashmead, Mrs. Duffield, Jr., 205 Poplar
Ave., Wayne.
Ashton, Mrs. Leonard, Elm Ave., Swarth-
more.
Ashton, Dr. Thomas G., Wynnewood.
Ashton, Mrs. Thomas G., Wynnewood.
Atkinson, Dr. Daniel A., 132 Oakwood
Ave., West View, Pittsburgh.
Atkinson, Mrs. Ellen D., 299 Maple Ave.,
Doylestown.
Atkinson, Miss Gertrude, 4106 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Atkinson, Miss Margaretta, Berwyn.
Atkinson, Mr. William H., Riverview
Cemetery, Trenton, N. J.
Atkiss, Mr. William, 1145 Herbert St.,
Frankford.
Atlee, Mrs. John L., "Wild Acres," Lan-
caster.
Atlee, Miss Ruth A., % Pa. Mutual Life
Ins. Co., 6th and Walnut Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Atterbury, Mrs. W, W., Radnor.
Atwater, Miss Sophia M., Chadds Ford.
Atwood, Mrs. John C, Jr., 325 Roum-
fort Road, Mt. Airy.
Audenried, Mrs. Lewis, 1800 DeLancey
St., Philadelphia.
Aull, Mrs. William F., 305 Audubon Ave..
Wayne.
Austin, Miss Anna A., Rosemont,
Austin, Miss Lucyelle, Chestnut Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Austin, Mrs. William, 407 Roberts Ave.,
Glenside,
Austin, Mrs. William L., Rosemont.
Ayres, Miss Helen, 336 S. 21st St., Phila-
delphia.
Bachman, Mr. Frank H., Jenkintown.
Bacon, Mrs. Albert E., 6705 Springbank
La., Mt. Airy,
Bacon, Mrs. Ellis W., Wallingford.
Bacon, Miss Florence C, 138 W. Sey-
mour St., Germantown.
Bader, Mr. George G., 122 Edgehill Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Bailey, Mrs. Arthur H., 206 Paxtang
Ave., Paxtang.
Bailey, Mr. Charles H., 19 Greenfield
Ave., Ardmore.
Bailey, Mr. James B., Church Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Bailey, Mrs. James B., Church Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Bailey, Mrs. Walter A., "High Point,"
Merion.
Baily, Mrs. Albert L., Haverford.
Baily, Mr. Albert L., Jr., Westtown.
88
Baily, Mrs. Samuel L., Jr., 124 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Baily, Mrs. Theodore L., Bryn Mawr
Court Apts., Bryn Mawr.
Baird, Mrs. John, Malvern.
Baker, Mrs. Franklin, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Balderston, Mrs. John Peck, The Kenil-
worth, Alden Park, Germantown.
Balderston, Miss Mary L., "Fairhope
Farm," Glen Mills.
Balderston, Mrs. Robert W., Vista
Homes, Apt. 15 F, 5840 Stony Island
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Baldi, Mrs. Fred S., Green Lane and Dex-
ter St., Philadelphia.
Baldi, Mrs. V. A., S. E. cor. Parker and
Jackson Aves., Collingdale.
Baldwin, Mrs. Laura F., 230 E. Fornance
St., Norristown.
Baldy, Mrs. J. Montgomery, Devon.
Ball, Mrs. Herbert K., 59 Sussex Road,
Wynnewood.
Ball, Miss Mary L., 901 Glenside Ave.,
Wyncote.
Ballinger, Mrs. Walter F., 6733 Emlen
St., Germantown.
Bancroft, Mrs. Samuel, Jr., Rockford,
Wilmington, Del.
Barber, Mrs. Charles William, Ardmore.
Barbour, Mrs. Charles E., 244 School
House Lane, Germantown.
Barclay, Miss Emily, 612 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Barclay, Mrs. John, 320 W. Pittsburgh
St., Greensburg.
Barclay, Mrs. William K., Golf House
Rd., Haverford.
Bard, Mrs. Leon, 116 Paris Ave., Brook-
lawn, N. J.
Baringer, Mrs. Milton F., Bend Terrace,
Wyncote.
Barker, Dr. T. Ridgway, R. D. 1, Bridge-
port.
Barnard, Mrs. Everett P., 1820 S. Ritten-
house Sq., Philadelphia.
Barnes, Mrs. A. C, Latches Lane,
Merion.
Barnes, Mrs. E. F., "Pineacres," Cardi-
nal, Mattews Co., Va.
Barnes, Mr. E. H., 113 Warwick Rd.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Barnes, Mrs. E. H., 113 Warwick Rd.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Barnes, Mrs. John Hampton, Devon.
Barnes, Mr. Parker T., 908 Highland
Ave., Palmyra, N. J.
Barnett, Mrs. William, Jr., Box 50,
Media.
Barney, Mrs. W. Pope, "Wychwood,"
Moylan.
Barr, Mrs. George W., Villa Nova.
Barrett, Mr. Franklin, 401-415 E. Wyom-
ing Ave., Philadelphia.
Barrie, Mrs. George, 116 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Barrows, Mr. Richard L., Haverford.
Barrows, Mrs. Richard L., Haverford.
Barry, Mrs. David S., Jr., Golf House
Rd., Haverford.
Barton, Mrs. Harry L., 315 South Ave.,
Media.
Barton, Mrs. Thomas C, Pennway Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Bartow, Mrs. J. B., 515 E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Bartram, Mr. Frank M., Kennett Square.
(L.)
Bartram, Miss Mary S., Kennett Square.
Easier, Mrs. W. J., Box 6, West Leesport.
J3assett, Mrs. Edward M., 315 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Bassett, Mrs. R. M., 29 Wellington Rd.,
Upper Darby.
Bates, Miss Jane, care of Miss M. E.
Morris, Rosemont.
Batchelor, Dr. Marjorie D., 117 Columbia
Ave., Palmerton.
Battey, Mrs. William A., 605 Walnut
Lane, Haverford.
Battles, Mr. H. H., 114 S. 12th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mr. Charles, 119 S. 20th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mrs. J. Barry, Gordon Heights,
Wilmington, Del.
Baxter, Mr. Samuel N., S. W. Cor.
Morris and Abbotsford Sts., German-
town. (L.)
Bayer, Miss Elizabeth, The Tracy, 36th
and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Bayersdorfer, Mrs. Sydney H., 7902
Rambler Rd., Elkins Park.
Bayliss, Mrs. C. W., 210 Pembroke Ave.,
Wayne.
Bean, Miss Anna M., 1729 N. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Beardwood, Mrs. Joseph T., Jr., Melrose
Park.
Beaumont, Mrs. G. Berry, Bryn Mawr.
Bechtel, Mrs. John C, 6608 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Beck, Mrs. Charles W., Jr., Crescent Rd.,
Wyncote.
Becker, Dr. C. Fred., 620 Benson St.,
Camden, N. J.
Beckurts, Mrs. Charles L., Haverford.
Beechwood, Miss Kitty, Huntingdon Val-
ley P. o.
Beegle, Mrs. Eliz. L., R. D. 4, Gibsonia.
Bein, Miss Amelia E., 1729 Wallace St.,
Philadelphia.
Belding, Mrs. W. S., Bryn Mawr.
Belk, Mrs. William P., 433 Owen Rd.,
Ardmore.
Bell, Mr. Edward J., 1428 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
89
Bell, Mrs. Frank T., 31 Sproul Rd.,
Broomall.
Bell, Mrs. Gibson, Wj'nnewood.
Bell, Mrs. H. A., 156 Union Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Bell, Dr. Thomas, 1520 Spruce St., Phila-
delphia.
Belmont, Mrs. L. A., Latches Lane,
Merion.
Bencker, Mrs. Ralph B., Haverford.
Benn, Airs. James S., Wynnewood.
Benz, Mr. C. J., 14th Ave. and Fayette
St., Conshohocken.
Berger, Mr. John, 1640 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Berger, Mrs. Thomas W., "Rolling
Acres," Valley Forge.
Berger, Mrs. William, Jr., 126 Maplewood
Ave., Germantown.
Bergner, Mrs. Amy Brooks, 7004 Penarth
Ave., Bywood.
Bernstein, Mr. Walter, North Wales.
(C)
Berwind, Mrs. Charles G., Radnor.
Berwind, Mrs. Henry A., 2112 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Bettison, Mrs. W. R., "Wilmarlyn,"
Wayne.
Betts, Miss Marguerite, 11 Countv Line
Rd., Brvn :\Ia\vr.
Beury, Mrs. Charles E., 112 W. Upsal
St., Germantown.
Beyer, Mrs. Erich, 4 Wellington Road,
Stonehurst, Del. Co.
Bickley, I^Irs. L Walter, 341 Pelham
Road, Germantown.
Biddle, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Biddle, Mrs. Arthur, 1821 DeLancey
PI., Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Charles, Andalusia.
Biddle, Mrs. Charles J., Andalusia, Bucks
Co.
Biddle, Miss Christine W., Route 5,
West Chester.
Riddle, Miss Edith F., 1821 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Miss Emily W., 1828 De-
Lancey PL, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. George, 2017 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Hugh McIIvain, 201 Bank
Ave., Riverton, N. J.
Biddle, Mrs. Moncure, Valley Forge
Farms, Devon.
Biddle, Mrs. Nicholas, Jenkintown.
Biddle, Mrs. Robert, Hotel Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Robert, 2d, 607 Bank Ave..
Riverton, N. J.
Bieg, Mrs. O. H., Ill E. Sedgwick St.,
Germantown.
Bigelow, Mr. Frederick S., Haverford.
Biggs, Mrs. John R., 821 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Bikle, Mrs. Henry Wolf, Strafford.
Billings, Mrs. Arthur E., Villa Nova.
Binner, Miss Elizabeth I., 617 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Birch, Mrs. Alice H., 110 Harvey St.,
Germantown.
Bird, Mrs. Minna M., 233 W. Hortter
St., Philadelphia.
Birdsell, Mrs. David C, Enfield.
Birdsell, Mrs. R. W., McCallum and
Hortter Sts., Germantown.
Birdsell, Mrs. R. W., Jr., 732 Meeting
House Rd., Elkins Park.
Birkinbine, Miss Kate R., Bala-Cynwyd.
(L.)
Birnbrauer, Mr. Frank, 15th St. above
72d Ave., Oak Lane. (C)
Bishop, Mrs. Richard E., Springbank La.,
Germantown.
Bissell, Miss Sarah E., 717 .Ajnberson
Ave., E. E., Pittsburgh.
Bisset, Aliss Annie A., 2519 S. Garnet
St., Philadelphia.
Bitler, Mrs. Harry Y., 21 Oak Ave.,
Sharon Hill.
Black, Mrs. Ralph A., 513 West Chest-
nut St., Lancaster.
Blackburne, Mrs. John S., Box 111, Rose-
mont.
Blades, Mrs. H. P., 622 N. Chester Rd.,
Swarthmore.
Blakiston, Miss Emma, Fort Wash-
ington,
Blakiston, Miss Mary, Fort Washing-
ton,
Blechschmidt, Dr. J., 2203 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Bliss, Mrs. John W., 15 W. Monument
Ave., Hatboro.
Bloch, Mrs. Louis, "The Gables," 69th
Ave. and 11th St., Oak Lane.
Blood, Mrs. Ernest, Cor. Lincoln Drive
and Alermaid Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Blumenthal, Mrs. AL L., 416 Shoemaker
Rd., Elkins Park.
Boal, Mrs. William, 518 E. Durham St..
Mt. Airy.
Bobbink, Mr. L. C, East Rutherford,
N. J. (N.)
Bockius, Mr. Morris R., 2107 Fidelity-
Phila. Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Bockus, Miss Blanche, Yeadon.
Bodine, Mrs. S. Laurence, "Greenbank
Farm," Newtown Square.
Bodine, Mr. Samuel T., U. G. I.
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Bodman, Mrs. F. L., Eagle Rd., Wayne.
Boenning, Mr. Henry D., 1606 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Boericke, Mrs. Gideon, Wynnewood.
Bogan, Mrs. John C, 618 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Boinet, Mr. Robert C, Oakwood, We-
nonah, N. J. (G.)
90
Bohlen, Mrs. Woodville, Berwyn.
Bok, Mrs. Edward, Merion.
Bok, Mrs. W. Curtis, Pennstone Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Boltz, Miss Clara M., 241 West Chelten
Ave., Germantown. (L.)
Bond, Mrs. Charles, 319 Ashbourne Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Bond, Miss M. Florence, 345 Harrison
Ave., Elkins Park.
Bonnell, Mrs. Henry H., Ill W. More-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Bonsall, Mrs. R. T., 222 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Borden, Mr. Eldon L., 6 Harvard Rd.,
W. Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Borie, Mrs. Beauveau, Abington, Mont-
gomery Co.
Borie, Mir. C. L., Jr., Architects'
Bldg., 17th and Sansom Sts., Phila.
Borie, Mrs. Charles Louis, 3d, Rydal.
Borie, Mrs. W. J. Sewell, Washington
Lane, Rydal.
Bostock, Mrs. Mary E., South Ave.,
Bryn Athyn.
Bostwick, Mrs. J. V., 139 Grays Lane,
Haverford.
Boswell, Mrs. Arthur, 127 W. Hortter
St., Mt. Airy.
Boswell, Mrs. J. Iverson, 305 Kent Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Bott, Mr. John B., 327 S. Main St.,
Greensburg.
Bovard, Mrs. H. F., Seminary Ave.,
Greensburg.
Bowman, Mrs. C. M., 514 Waring Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Boyd, Mr. Fisher L., Haverford.
Boyd, Mrs. Fisher L., Haverford.
Boyd, Mrs. Herbert W., 307 Waring
Road, Elkins Park.
Boyd, Mr. Roy Martin, 130 Strathmore
Rd., Brookline, Delaware Co.
Boyd, Mr. William, 250 W. Tulpehocken
St., Germantown.
Boyer, Mrs. Charles S., 205 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Boyle, Mr. Orrin E., 226 S. 16th St.,
Allentown.
Bracken, Mr. Francis B., 430 Aliens
Lane, Philadelphia.
Bradbury, Mrs. Samuel, Jr., 151 W. Coul-
ter St., Germantown.
Bradford, Mrs. John M., 136 Coulter
Ave., Ardmore.
Bradley, Mrs. Thomas W., 7437 Devon
St., Mt. Airy.
Bradley, Mrs. Wm. H., 407 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
Brakeley, Mr. George A., 300 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Branson, Mrs. Thomas F., Box 44, Rose-
mont.
Braugham, Mrs. George A., Smethport,
McKean Co. (N.)
Braun, Mrs. C. F. Harold, Kent Road,
Wynnewood.
Brautigam, Miss Hollis, 39 Benezet St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Brazier, Miss E. Josephine, Kenne-
bunkport, Maine.
Brazier, Mr. H. Bartol, Haverford.
Breck, Mr. William R., Rosemont.
Breck, Mrs. William R., Rosemont.
Bregy, Mrs. Louis, 5941 Woodbine Ave.,
Overbrook.
Brengle, Mr. Henry G., Radnor.
Brenneman, Mrs. J. E., Wister and Rob-
erts Rds., Ardmore.
Brewer, Mrs. Robert W., P. O. Box 152,
Jenkintown.
Bright, Miss Anna Linn, Cliveden Hali,
Germantown.
Bright, Miss Mary DeHaven, 215 Wal-
nut Ave., Wayne.
Bringhurst, Mr. Edward, "Rockwood,"
Wilmington, Del.
Bringhurst, Mrs. Henry R., 1306 Dela-
ware Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Bringhurst, Miss Mary T., "Rockwood,"
Wilmington, Del.
Brinton, Miss Elizabeth, 4540 Adams
Ave., Frankford.
Brinton, Mrs. Joseph Hill, 414 S. Car-
lisle St., Philadelphia.
Brinton, Miss Kitty, 5900 Drexel Rd.,
Overbrook.
Brinton, Miss Mary H., Jr., R. F. D. 4,
West Chester.
Britt, Mrs. G. Harris, Randolph and
Glenco Rds., Ambler.
Brock, Mrs. Horace, 1830 S. Rittenhouse
Sq., Philadelphia.
Brock, Mrs. John Penn, Lebanon.
Brock, Mrs. John W., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Brockie, Mrs. Arthur H., Box 4359,
Chestnut Hill.
Bromer, Mrs. Jacob A., Schwenkville,
Montg. Co.
Bromer, Mrs. Ralph S., 504 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Philadelphia.
Brooke, Mrs. Francis M., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Brooke, Mrs. H. Carroll, 105 Lismore
Ave., Glenside.
Brooks, Mrs. John Jay, 7925 Park Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Brown, Mrs. Ada A., 8012 Frankford
Ave., Philadelphia.
Brown, Mr. Andrew V., Bryn Athyn.
Brown, Mrs. Charles T., Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Brown, Mrs. Crosby, R. F. D. 2, Malvern.
Brown, Mrs. George H., 104 Sunset Lane,
Haverford.
Brown, Mrs. Harry M., 7440 Devon St.,
Mt. Airy.
91
Brown, Miss Helen M., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Brown, Mrs. J. Howard, 131 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore.
Brown, Mrs. John A., Jr., Wayne.
Brown, Mrs. John Lothrop, Willow Burn
Rd., Villa Nova.
Brown, Mr. John T., Jr., 118 Mather
Ave., Wyncote.
Brown, Mrs. Medford J., Haywood Rd.,
Merion.
Brown, Mrs. Norman, 104 N. Jefferson
Ave., Wenonah, N. J.
Brown, Mrs. Robert Pitfield, 448 W.
School House Lane, Germantown.
Brown, Mrs. Samuel B., Box 67, Haver-
ford.
Brown, Mrs. T. Wistar, 3d, 5920 City
Ave., Overbrook.
Brown, Mrs. Wm. Findlay, P. O. Box
4386, Chestnut Hill.
Browne, Mrs. Joseph M., 529 Pine Rd.,
Sewickley.
Brownell, Miss Eleanor O., Bryn Mawr.
Browning, Mrs. Edward, Rosemont.
Bruen, Mrs. Albert E., 330 Roumfort
Road, Mt. Airy.
Brumbaugh, Mrs. G. Edwin, Gwynedd
Valley.
Brunner, Mrs. F. Sands, 6033 Webster
St., Philadelphia.
Brunot, Miss P. M., Kitchens Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Bryan, Miss Elizabeth, 1620 Widener
Place, Germantown.
Bryan, Mrs. Olin, 421 Berkley Rd., Hav-
er ford.
Brj^ans, Mrs. H. B., Germantown Pike,
R. D. 3, Norristown.
Bryce, Miss Dorothy E., 224 S. Easton
Rd., Glenside.
Brjxe, Mrs. Edith, 224 S. Easton Rd.,
Glenside.
Buchanan, Mrs. William, Ft. Washing-
ton.
Bucher, Mr. Otto, Gardener, Eagleville
Sanatorium, Eagleville. (G.)
Buck, Mr. C. A., Prospect Ave., Beth-
lehem.
Buck, Mrs. C. Douglass, "Buena Vista,"
Wilmington, Del.
Buck, Mrs. Stuart W., Cloverly La.,
Rydal.
Buckenham, Dr. J. E. Burnett, 8601
Germantown Ave., Chesnut Hill.
Buckman, Miss Ida, 1 Barrie Rd., Nar-
berth.
Bucknell, Mr. Samuel R., % J. J. Styer
& Son, Concordville.
Buckwalter, Mrs. Samuel, R. F. D. 3,
Phoenixville.
Buek, Mrs. Tycho, Penn Road, Wynne-
wood.
Buell, Miss Frances M., Bryn Athyn
Buffum, Airs. William P., 41 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Bullard, Mr. Geoffrey E., 117 E. Provi-
dence Rd., Yeadon.
Bullitt, Mrs. O. H., Whitemarsh.
Bullock, Mr. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore.
Bullock, Mrs. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Rd., Ardmore. (L.)
Bullock, Mrs. Horace, P. O. Box
7609, Ardmore.
Burk, Mr. Louis, 1200 N. 3d St., Phila-
delphia,
Burk, Airs. William Cooper, 42 E. Gowen
Ave., Alt. Airy.
Burkart, Airs. F. P., 1635 Allengrove St.,
Frankford.
Burnett, Aliss Alarguerite H., State Dept.
of Public Instruction, Uth and Wash-
ington Sts., Wilmington, Del.
Burnham, Airs. George, 3d, 367 Aubrey
Rd., Wynnewood.
Bums, Mrs. Robert Bruce, Warner Rd.,
Colonial Village, Wayne.
Burns, Air. William H., 515 Hansel Rd.,
Nafberth.
Burpee, Mr. David, 485 N. 5th St.
Philadelphia. (S.)
Burpee, Mr. W. Atlee, Jr., 485 N. 5th
St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Burrell, Airs. Horace H., 404 Gowen
Ave., Alt. Airy
Burroughs, Mr. A. W., 262 Mansion
Ave., Audubon, N. J.
Bursk, Air. R. G., 216 S. Front St.,
Philadelphia.
Burt, Miss Edith B., 1203 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Burt, Miss M. Theodora, 1203 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Burton, Air. Alfred, 1001 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill. (C.)
Burton, Airs. Alfred, 1001 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Burton, Air. George, Wyndmoor and Ard-
more Aves., Chestnut Hill. (C)
Burton, Air. John, 1103 E. Willow Grove
Ave., Chestnut Hill. (C.)
Busch, Mr. Edward J., R. D. 4, Alillvale
Branch, Pittsburgh.
Bush, Aliss Iretta J. P., 7915 Alontgomery
Ave., Elkins Park.
Bush-Brown, Mr. James, Architect's
Bldg., 17th and Sansom Sts., Philadel-
phia. (L.)
Bush-Brown, Airs. James, Quarry Farm,
Ambler.
Bussell, Air. G. R., Valley Forge.
Busser, Airs. Frank S., 720 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Butcher, Aliss Alargaret, Llanfair and
Wister Roads, Ardmore.
92
Butcher, Miss Mary Louise, Llanfair and
Wister Rds., Ardmore.
Butler, Mrs. Edgar H., W. Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Butler, Mrs. George Thomas, 513 W.
Front St., Media.
Butler, Mrs. John L., Rydal.
Butler, Mrs. William H., 7105 Greene
St., Mt. Airy.
Butler, Mrs. William, Jr., 424 N. High
St. West Chester.
Button, Miss Helen R., 249 Harvey St.,
Germantown.
Butts, Mrs. Mary H., 6733 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Buzby, Miss H. L. M., 505 W. Chelten
Ave., Germantown.
Buzby, Miss Idella Haines, 505 W. Chel-
ten Ave., Germantown.
Cabeen, Mrs. F. Von A., Old Conestoga
Rd., Devon.
Cadbury, Miss Eleanor A., 19 S. White
Hall Rd., Norristown.
Cadbury, Mrs. William E., 408 E. Wood-
lawn Ave., Germantown.
Cadden, Mrs. Grace C, Churchville.
Cadwalader, Mrs. John, Jr., 2100 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwalader, Mrs. Lambert, Villa Nova.
Cadwalader, Miss Sophia, 1519 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwallader, Mrs. T. Sidney, Yardley.
Cahall, Mrs. Thomas, Wallingford.
Cahan, Mrs. M. C, 6035 Christian St..
Philadelphia.
Cahn, Mrs. Tillman, 529 Elkins Ave.,
Ellcins Park
Calder, Mrs. 'w. C., 4310 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Caldwell, Mrs. J. Emott, Brvn Mawr.
Calhoun, Miss Jean D., 915 "S. 48th St.,
Philadelphia.
Calvert, Mrs. Alan, 310 Pembroke Ave.,
St. Davids.
Calvert, Mrs. Amelia S., Apple Top
Farm, Box 14, Cheyney.
Calwell, Mr. C. S., W^issahickon and
Westview Aves., Germantown.
Cameron, Mrs. S. P., 510 W. Coulter St.,
Germantown.
Camp, Mrs. George R., Maple Creek
Farm, Malvern.
Campbell, Mr. Alfred M., Strafford.
(C.)
Campbell, Mrs. E. Perry, 8117 Eastern
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Campbell, Mrs. G. A., Elkins Park.
Campbell, Mrs. Wilson A., Creek Drive,
Sewickley.
Campion, Mrs. Howard F., 513 Wynd-
moor Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Canby, Mrs. William Marriott, Wissa-
hickon and Westview Aves., German-
town.
Candoni, Mrs. Blanche W., 419 W.
Orange St:, Lancaster.
Canizares, Mrs. A., 305 E. Lancaster
Ave., Wayne.
Cannon, Mr. Harry L., Bridgeville, Del.
Capelle, Mrs. George S., Jr., 1303 Dela-
ware Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Capp, Mr. Seth Bunker, 218 S. 19th
Street, Philadelphia.
Cardeza, Mr. T. D. M., E. Washing-
ton La., Germantown.
Carels, Mrs. Robert E., Riverview Rd.,
Swarthmore.
Carnwath, Airs. James, Jr., 309 Washing-
ton Lane, Jenkintown.
Carpenter, Mrs. J. S., Jr., 1335 Howard
Ave., Pottsville.
Carpenter, Mrs. John T., Radnor.
Carpenter, Mrs. W. S., Jr., 18th and Ris-
ing Sun Lane, Wilmington, Del.
Carr, Mr. Arthur H., Trevose.
Carr, Mrs. Campbell M., 116 Argyle Rd.,
Ardmore.
Carr, Mrs. James Wilson, Holicong,
Bucks Co.
Carroll, Mr. E. A., Box 166, Lansdale.
Carrow, Miss Sara E., 416 Church Lane,
Germantown.
Carson, Mrs. John B., 1802 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Carson, Mrs. John T., 5344 Magnolia
Ave., Germantown.
Carson, Mr. Joseph, Winsford Rd., Bryn
Mawr.
Carson, Miss Mildred Lee, 54 E. Stewart
Ave., Lansdowne.
Carson, Mrs. Robert J., 147 E. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Carstairs, Mrs. J. H., Haverford.
Carter, Mrs. Charles L., Willow Dell
Farm, Gwynedd Valley.
Carter, Mrs. James N., "Westover,"
Chadds Ford.
Carter, Mrs. Louis M., Lock Box 58, Fall-
sington, Bucks Co.
Carter, Mrs. S. T.. Jr., 940 Woodland
Ave., Plainfield, N. J.
Carter, Miss Sarah J., 57 S. Eagle Rd.,
Manoa, Upper Darbv.
Cartledge, Mr. A. B., 1514 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Cartmell, Mr. B. G., care of Mr. Harold
Pitcairn, Bryn Athyn.
Gary, Mrs. C Reed, Ellet Lane and Wis-
sahickon Ave., Mt. Airy.
Case, Miss Marian Roby, Hillcrest
Gardens, Weston, Mass. (C.)
Casey, Mr. Bertram T., National Park,
N. J.
Casey, Miss Eleanor S.. Central Ave..
Paoli.
Casey, Mrs. Herbert S., Villa Nova.
Cassedy, Mr. Frank W., 545 Runnemede
Ave., Drexel Hill.
93
Cassel, Mrs. Harry E., 7149 Anderson
St., Mt. Airy.
Casselberry, Mrs. A. H., Oaks, Mont-
gomery Co.
Casselman, Mr. William S., 317 Penn St.,
Camden, N. J.
Cassidy, Miss Sarah Trueman, E. Wash-
ington Lane and City Line, German-
town.
Catlin, Mrs. Sheldon, Eagle Rd., Radnor.
Chadwick, Miss Eva., 12 Pelham Rd., Mt.
Airy.
Chaffee, Mrs. Carl H., 395 Swarthmore
Ave., Swarthmore.
Chamberlin, Mr. John R., St. Davids.
Chambers, Miss Blanche Arnold, 914 N.
63d St., Philadelphia.
Chambers, Miss Mary B., Newtown,
Bucks Co.
Cliambers, Mr. Samuel H., Penna. Insti-
tute for the Deaf, Mt. Airj-.
Chambers, Mr. William W., 116 Ard-
more Ave., Ardmore.
Chandler, Mrs. A. F. M., Haverford.
Chapman, Mrs. Joseph, Haverford.
Chapman, Mrs. Joseph C, 544 St. Davids
Rd.. St. Davids.
Chappell, Miss Elizabeth D., 419 Green
Lane, Roxborough.
Chase, Miss Clara T., 261 S. Van Pelt
St., Philadelphia.
Chase, Mrs. Clement E., 410 Oak Lane,
Wayne.
Chase, Mrs. E. D., 126 W. Birch St.,
Hazleton.
Chase, Mrs. Philip, 125 Levering Mill
Rd., Cynwyd.
Chase, :Mrs. Randall, 8241 Crittenden St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Chase, Air. Samuel Hart, 557 Pelham
Rd., Germantown.
Chase, Mrs. Walter J., Roslyn, Montgom-
er\' Co.
Chauveau, Miss Blanche, 310 Wyncote
Rd.. Jenkintown.
Chen, Miss Jennie C. J., School of Hor-
ticulture, Ambler.
Cheston, Mrs. Charles S., Whitemarsh.
Cheston, Mrs. Edward M., Ambler.
Cheston, Mr. James, Jr., care of Girard
Trust Co., Philadelphia.
Chew, Mrs. Benjamin, "Vanor," Rad-
nor.
Chew, Miss Elizabeth B., "Cliveden,"
Germantown.
Chew. Mrs. Samuel C, 10 Woodleave
Rd.. Bryn Mawr.
Chichester, Mrs. Arthur M., "Wid-
worthy," Leesburg, Va.
Chillas, Miss Marie de la R., 233 Winona
Ave., Germantown.
Chrisman, Mr. C. S., 435 W. Miner St.,
West Chester.
Church, Mrs. Herbert, Villa Nova.
Churchman, Mrs. W. Morgan, Penllyn.
Clair, Mrs. Jefferson C, 317 Euclid Ave.,
Ambler.
Clair, Mrs. Maurice, 12 N. Lynn wood
Ave., Glenside.
Clamer, Mrs. G. H., 128 Woodland Road,
Asheville, N. C
Clark, Mr. C. M., Queen Lane, Falls
of Schuylkill.
Clark, Mrs. Charles Davis, 2215 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Clark. Air. Clarence H., P. O. Box 146,
Brvn Alawr.
Clark, Mrs. Clarence H., P. O. Box 146,
Br3-n Mawr.
Clark, Aliss Darthela, Stenton and Ab-
ington Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Clark, Airs. Frederic L., Wissahickon
Ave. and Strafford St., Germantown.
Clark, Air. Garrett V., 4404 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Clark, Airs. Garrett A\, 4404 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Clark, Airs. H. H., 61 N. Broad St.,
Woodbury, N. J.
Clark, Mr. Herbert L., Bryn Mawr.
Qark, Mrs. Joseph S., Kates Hall, Chest-
nut Hill.
Clark, Mrs. Lewis N., 2101 Clarkson
Ave., Germantown.
Clark, Mrs. Percy H., Cynwyd.
Clark, Airs. Roy E., 62 Lodges Lane,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Clark, Airs. Sydney P., 8128 St. Alartins
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Clarke. Mrs. Clement J., 30 W. Upsal
St., Mt. Airy.
Clarke, Airs. J. O., 402 W. School Lane,
Germantown.
Clattenburg, Mrs. A. Edwin, St. John's
Rectory, Bala-Cynwyd.
Clay. Airs. Alfred G., 1935 Panama St.,
Philadelphia.
Clay, Airs. Curtis, 122 Valley Rd., Ard-
more.
Clemens, Aliss Emily A., 220 Alattison
Ave., Ambler.
Clemens, Aliss Isabella C, 720 Alattison
Ave., .Ambler.
Clemens. Dr. Thomas J., 908 Elverson
Bldg., Broad and Callowhill Sts.. Phila-
delphia.
Qemens, Mrs. Thomas J.. Southampton.
Qement, Airs. Allen B., 224 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. T.
Clement. Airs. John S.. Aleeting House
Rd., Jenkintown.
Cliff, Aliss Anna Search, Langhorne
Alanor, Bucks Co.
Cline, Miss Gertrude, 218 E. Philadelphia
St., York.
Cline, Airs. Sarah AI., 36 E. Aloreland
Ave., Hatboro.
94
Clothier, Miss Caroline, "The Farm
House," Wynnewood.
Clothier, Mrs. Clarkson, Haverford.
Clothier, Mrs. Isaac H., Jr., Radnor.
Clothier, Mrs. Morris L., Villa Nova.
Clothier, Mrs. Walter, Wynnewood.
Clothier, Mrs. William J., Valley Hill
Farm, Valley Forge.
Cloud, Miss Beatrice M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Cloud, Miss Dorothy M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Cloud, Miss Katharine M.-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Clough, Mrs. Lillian Schofield, R. D. 2,
Media.
Clower, Miss Eleanor V., 3723 N. Park
Ave., Philadelphia.
Qyde, Mrs. Caroline B., P. O. Box 12,
Bryn Mawr.
Clyde, Miss Margaret, The Bellevue-
Stratford, Philadelphia.
Coates, Mrs. J. Lloyd, Golf House Rd.,
Ardmore.
Cobb, Mr. E. F., 510 Merwyn Rd.,
Merion.
Cobb, Mrs. Murray A., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Cobb, Mrs. Palmer, Whitehall, Haver-
ford.
Cochran, Mrs. Wm. Allison, Wyncote.
Coe, Mrs. Margaret S., 807 Earlington
Rd., Upper Darby P. O.
Cogswell, Miss Elizabeth Rae, 352 W.
Mt. Airy Ave., Mt. Airy.
Coho, Mrs. Eugene P., Cold Spring
Farm, Ambler.
Colby, Miss A. L., Torresdale.
Colegrove, Mr. John I., Lock Box 731,
Sheffield. (C.)
Coleman, Mrs. G. Dawson, Haverford
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Coleman, Mr. Leonard W., "Sunny
Corners," Prospect Avenue, Chestnut
Hill.
Coles, Mrs. Anna M., 6742 Irving Ave.,
Merchantville, N. J.
Coles, Miss Charlesanna B., 6742 Irving
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Coles, Mrs. Henry B., 224 E. Main St.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Coles, Miss Mary R. 2010 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Colfelt. Mrs. Brinton W., Righters Mill
Road, Wynnewood.
Colket, Mrs. C Howard, The Ritten-
house Plaza, Philadelphia.
Colket, Mrs. Tristram C, 2d, Villa Nova.
Collier, Mrs. Clarence Bispham, 319 W.
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Collingwood, Miss Jennie, 3941 Locust
St.. Philadelphia.
Collingwood, Mrs. Joseph R., 510 S. 41st
St., Philadelphia,
Collins, Mrs. Alan C., Rydal.
Collins, Mrs. Lester, Moorestown, Burl-
ington Co., N. J.
Collins, Mrs. Philip S., Wyncote.
Collins, Mrs. William J., N. W. Cor.
Chelten Ave. and 7th St., Oak Lane.
Colt, Mrs. Lyman R., E. Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Colton, Mrs. Sabin W., Jr., Bryn
Mawr.
Combs, Mrs. Roger B., "The Meadow
House," Whitford.
Comegys, Miss Amy, 4205 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Comfort, Mr. William, care of Mr. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Comly, Miss Emilie C, Hartford, Burl-
ington Co., N. J.
Comly, Mr. G. Norwood, Moylan-Rose
Valley.
Comly, Miss Marion S., Moylan-Rose
Valley.
Conard, Mr. C. Wilfred. Lansdowne.
Condit, Mrs. Kenneth H., 34 Westcott
Rd., Princeton, N. J.
Connelly, Miss Gladys, "Wayside," Corn-
wells.
Conner, Mrs. J. Barratt, 320 Cynwyd Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Connors, Mrs. Thomas A., 472 E. Illinois
Road, Lake Forest, 111.
Conrad, Mrs. William Y., Devon.
Constable, Mr. Martin L., 4941 N. 6th
St., Philadelphia.
Converse, Mrs. Bernard T., Rosemont
Converse, Miss Mary E., Rosemont.
Conway, Miss Florence H., 147 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Cook, Mrs. C. P., N. Rockland Rd.,
Merion.
Cook, Mrs. Edmund Garretson, Pennock
Terrace, Lansdowne.
Cook, Mr. Gustavus W., Wynnewood.
Cook, Mrs. Gustavus W., Wynnewood.
Cook, Mrs. Henry W., 5339 Knox St.,
Germantown.
Cooke, Mr. Jay, "Brookfield," New and
Stenton Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Jay, "Brookfield," New
and Stenton Aves, Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Jay, 2d, Montgomery Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Morris Llewellyn, St.
Georges Rd., Mt. Airy.
Cooper, Mrs. L. N., 121 E. Mt. Carmel
Ave., Glenside.
Cooper, Mrs. Richard M., 563 Warwick
Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Cooper, Mrs. Stuart, 2808 Midvale Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Cooper, Mrs. Walter L, Haverford.
Cope, Mrs. Edward, 124 W. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Cornell, Miss Ella C., Boothwyn R. D.
95
Cornog, Mrs. I. C., 48 E. Jefferson St.,
Media.
Cornogg, Miss Margaret S., % T. W.
Scattergood, 75 Owen Ave., Lansdowne.
Corson, Mr. C. Russell, Curren Terrace,
Norristown.
Corson, Mrs. Edward F., Maple Hill,
Plymouth Meeting.
Corson, Mrs. George, Plymouth Meeting.
Corson, Mrs. N. W., 367 Brookway,
Merion.
Costain, Mrs. T. B., The Crest, Beth-
ayres.
Coster, Mr. William H., Jr., 159 Rhoads
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Couttes, Mr. Archibald, The Highlands,
Ambler. (G.)
Cover, Airs. Thomas, Jr., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Cowan, Mrs. Julia A., 600 Columbia Ave.,
Lansdale.
Cox, Mrs. Gerry W., Phoenixville.
Cox, Mrs. Robert F., Manchester Ave.,
Media.
Cox, Mrs. T. B., Wyncote.
Coxe, Mrs. A. B., Paoli.
Coxa, Mrs. Charles Edmund, Malvern.
Coxe, Mrs. Henry B., Penllyn.
Cozens, Miss Henrietta, "Cogshill," Allen
Lane, Philadelphia.
Craft, Miss A. E., Mt. Pleasant Ave.,
Ambler.
Craft, Mrs. E. F.. Race St., Ambler.
Craig, Mrs. C. Chester, 41 W. Walnut
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Craig, Mr. James A., 125 W. Louden St.,
Philadelphia.
Crane, Mrs. Theron I., Bellevue-Strat-
ford Hotel, Broad and Walnut Sts,,
Philadelphia.
Cranmer, Miss Frances, 48 E. Sedgwick
St., Philadelphia. (L.)
Cranmer, Mrs. Walter S., 48 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Craven, Miss Jessie T., Nantucket, Mass.
Craven, Mr. William H., Enfield.
Craven, Mrs. William H., Enfield.
Crawford, Mrs. Alan, White Horse Rd.,
Devon.
Crawford, Mrs. Baxter L., Wyncote.
Crawford, Mr. John, care of Mr. S. M.
Vauclain, Rosemont. (G.)
Crawford. Mrs. L. B., 201 Mt. Vernon
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Crellin. Miss Elizabeth E., 1005 Vine St.,
Scranton.
Cresson, Mrs. Caleb, Oakland Hall,
Oaks.
Cresson, Miss Caroline C. N. E. Cor.
Clapier and Schuyler Sts., German-
town.
Cresson, Miss Nancy Corson, 721 Sandy
St., Norristown.
Cresswell, Mrs. Charles T., 15 W. Bells
Mill Road, Chestnut Hill.
Cridland, Mr. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside. (L.)
Cridland, Mrs. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside.
Crittenden, Mrs. William J., Shields,
Allegheny Co.
Crofoot, Mr. George E., 4535 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Croft, Mrs. S. Harold, 435 State Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Cronin, Airs. Charles L, 78 E. Stewart
Ave., Lansdowne.
Crosman, Airs. J. H., Jr., Glenn Rd., Ard-
more.
Crossan, Dr. Edward T., 5324 Wayne
Ave., Philadelphia.
Crossan, Mrs. Edward T., 5324 Wayne
Ave., Philadelphia.
Crowder, Miss Emma A., West Upsal
St., Germantown.
Crowninshield, Mrs. F. B., Mont-
chanin, Del.
Crozer, Air. George K., Jr., Montgomery
Ave. and Cherry Lane, Wynnewood.
Cullinan, Mrs. Thomas H., 349 Lodges
Lane, Cynwyd.
Culver, Dr. Martin B., 332 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Culver, Airs. Theodore B., 201 Greenwood
Ave., Jenkintown.
Cummings, Air. George, Drexel Hill,
Delaware Co. (C.)
Cunningham, Air. Edward, Spicewood,
Bon Air, Upper Darby P. O.
Cunningham, Mr. Fred. E., 212 Third
Ave., Haddon Heights, N. J.
Cunningham, Air. John W., 266 W. 3d
St., Aloorestown, N. J.
Cunnius, Mr. Howard, 524 Mulberry St.,
Reading.
Curll, Mrs. Harold E., 1335 Locust St.,
Norristown.
Curry, Airs. Grant, 814 Alorewood Ave.,
Pittsburgh.
Curtis, Mrs. Cyrus H. K., Wyncote.
Curtis, Air. John R., 302 N. Jericho Road,
Abington.
Gushing, Airs. Herbert Howard, Walnut
Park Plaza, Apt. 602, Walnut and 63d
Sts., Philadelphia.
Dager, Airs. Alary T., R. F. D. 1, Hat-
boro.
Dale, Air. Edward C, Bryn Alawr.
Dale, Mrs. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Dancy, Airs. Henry H., Main & Bridge
Sts., Phoenixville.
Danenhauer, Air. George E., Box 5,
Primes, Del. Co.
Daniel, Airs. Channing W., St. Davids.
Daniels, Aliss Alabel, 55 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
96
I
Dannenbaum, Mr. Edwin M., Mountain
Ave., Oak Lane.
Dannenbaum, Mrs. Harry M., 6315 N.
Park Ave., Philadelphia.
Dannenbaum, Mrs. Walter, 1011 Sharp-
less Ave., Melrose Park.
Darlinprton, Miss Isabel, 16 E. Market
St.. West Chester.
Darlington, Dr. Lewis W., 24 Pennock
Terrace, Lansdowne.
Darlington, Mrs. Percy Smedley, 418 N.
High St., West Chester.
David, Mrs. Edward W., 310 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Davidson, Mrs. William G., Brentwood
Farms. Abington.
Davies, Miss Anna F., The College Set-
tlement, 433 Christian St., Philadelphia.
Davies. Mrs. James A., Rose Tree Rd.,
Media.
Davies, Mrs. John R., Jr., 2 E. Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Davis, Miss Amanda Melvin, 5148 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Davis, Mrs. Carroll P., Shields.
Davis, Mrs. Charles H., 60S Medary Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Davis, Mrs. J. Leslie. Haverford.
Davis, Miss Mildred, 713 Redwood Ave.,
Yeadon.
Davis, Mr. WilHam George, Bryncoed
Farms, Kimberton. (G.)
Davis, Mr. WilHam Saxton, Grand Ave.
and Manoa Rd., Manoa.
Davison, Mrs. William M.. Jr., 90 W.
Mermaid La.. Chestnut Hill.
Dawson, Mr. George Walter, Univ. of
Penna. Dormitories. Philadelphia.
Day, Mrs. Charles, St. Georges Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Dav. Mrs. Frank Miles, Allen's La., Mt.
Airv.
Day, Mrs. Rodney, P. O. Box 7606, Ard-
more.
Deacon, Miss Bessie, IS Oak Ave.,
Sharon Hill.
Deacon, Mrs. G. H., McKean Ave. and
Clapier St., Germantown.
Deacon. Mrs. Horace P., 445 W. Price
St., Germantown.
Deal, Miss Emma, 308 W. Lancaster
Ave., Wayne.
Dean, Mrs. J. Simpson, Montchanin,
Del.
Dearden, Mr. Henry, care of Harrison,
Mertz & Emlen, 5328 Greene St., Ger-
mantown. CL.)
Debes, Mrs. Victor A., 1209 Folsom Ave.,
Moore.
Dechert, Mrs. Robert, Rosemont.
Deemer, Mr. H. W. Scott, 702 E. Wil-
low Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Degn. Mrs. William L., Hope Lodge,
Whitemarsh.
DeGroat, Mrs. H. R., 1913 Diamond St.,
Philadelphia.
Deily, Mrs. Howard E., 122 E. Durham
St., Mt. Airy.
Delaplaine, Miss Meribah, Merion Sta-
tion.
DeLangh, Miss Mary D., 5116 Greene
St., Germantown.
DeLangh, Mrs. William F., 5116 Greene
St., Germantown.
Delany, Mrs. Charles, 1900 Rittenhouse
Sq., Philadelphia.
DeLong, Mrs. Perce, Princeton Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Demuth, Mr. Howard E., 210 Garrett
Ave., Swarthmore.
Denegre, Mrs. William P., Rvdal.
Dengler, Mr. C. G., 4513 N. Carlisle St.,
Philadelphia.
Denison, Mr. Cyril W., Jenkintown P. O.
Denney, Mrs. George H., 323 Pembroke
Road, Cynwyd.
Dennisson, Miss Ruth, Madison, N. J.
DePuy. Miss Clara, 312 Florence Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Derby. Mrs. Charles F., 235 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
deSchauensee, Baron Rodolphe Meyer,
Devon.
deSchauensee, Baroness Rodolphe Meyer,
Devon.
deSherbinin, Mr. Eric M., Sycamore and
Cross Rds., Merion.
Deubler, Dr. E. C, 3805 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Dewees, Mrs. Lovett, Sweetwater Farm,
Glen Mills, Delaware Co.
deWitt, Miss Ellen, 510 W. 10th St., Erie.
DeWitt, Mr. Herman B., 8S Yeager Ave.,
Forty Fort.
Diament, Mrs. A. L., Box 145, Wayne.
Dick, Mr. John, Jr., 616 Longacre
Blvd.. Yeadon.
Dick, Mrs. Lewis Craig, Jarden Rd.,
Chestnut Hill.
Dick, Mrs. William A., 8240 Crittenden
St., Chestnut Hill.
Dickel, Miss Agnes K., 1004 Sharpless
Ave., Melrose Park.
Dickey, Mrs. Charles D., Jr., Chestnut
Hill.
Dickey, Miss Eloise P., The Wellington,
19th and Walnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Dickey, Miss Maria Donnell, West St.,
Media.
Dickson, Miss Agnes MacA., "Hill-0-
Skye," Wawa.
Dickson, Mrs. Alexander, Box 305,
Wynnewood.
Dilks, Mrs. Walter H., 8201 St. Martins
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Dill, Mrs. William A., 902 S. 48th St.,
Philadelphia.
97
Dillard, Mrs. Henry, 234 S. 20th St.,
Philadelphia.
Dillon, Mr. James L., Radnor.
Dintenfass, Mrs. Benjamin, 1034 W. Up-
sal St., Mt. Airy.
Disque, Mr. Robert C, Strath Haven
Ave., Swarthmore.
Disston, Mrs. Jacob S., Chestnut Hill.
Diven, Mrs. Louis, 119 Derwen Rd., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Dixon, Mr. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Mrs. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Mr. Gilbert Willoughby, 86 Beth-
lehem Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Dixon, Mrs. J. Shipley, Villa Nova.
Dixon, Mrs. T. Henry, Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Doak, Mrs. S. E., 436 W. School La.,
Germantown.
Doan, Mrs. Clarence E., Blue Bell, Mont-
gomery Co.
Dodds, Mr. John H., 344 Walnut St.,
Jenkintown.
Dodge, Mr. Donald D., 32 Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Dodge, Mrs. Donald D., 32 Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Dodson, Mrs. Leonidas, 356 W. Durham
St., Mt. Airy.
Dohan, Mrs. Joseph M., Darling P. O.,
Del. Co.
D'Olier, Mrs. Franklin, 98 Madison Ave.,
Morristown, N. J.
Donaghy, Mr. Albert, Jr., 7811 Chel-
wynde Ave., Philadelphia.
Donahower, Mrs. Clifford L., Green-
wood Terrace Apt., Jenkintown.
Donaldson, Mr. Henry H., 4417 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Donaldson, Mrs. Wharton, 14th and Wal-
nut Sts., Chester.
Donnaldson, Miss Helen, Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Ambler.
Donnelly, Mrs. Harold L, 58 Mercer St.,
Princeton, N. J.
Donnelly, Mrs. L. R., 208 Washington
Ave., Manoa, Delaware Co.
Doolittle, Mr. Fred J., Oak Lane.
Dooner, Mrs. Richard T., 523 Kenilworth
Rd., Merion.
Dorp, Mr. Louis V., R. F. D. 3, Norris-
town. (C.)
Dorp, Mr. V. V., 1170 N. 63d St., Phila-
delphia.
Dorrance, Mrs. John T., R. F. D.,
Riverton, N. J.
Dothard, Mrs. Robert J., 221 Wynne-
wood Ave., Narberth.
Dougherty, Mrs. James L., 219 Warwick
Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Dougherty, Mr. Thomas H., Jr., Wayne.
Doughten, Mrs. William W., 228 S. 20th
St., Philadelphia.
Douglas, Mrs. Edward V., 30 W. Qiest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Douglas, Mr. Malcolm G., 30 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
DowHn, Mrs. Cornell M., 8102 Ardmore
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Downing, Mrs. F. B., Box 564, Erie.
Downing, Miss Mary, Rosemont.
Downing, Miss Matilda C, Rosemont.
Downs, Mrs. Harold DeLancey, 5th Ave.
and Fayette St., Conshohocken.
Downs, Mrs. Norton, Mt. Pleasant Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Downs, Dr. T. McKean, Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Doyle, Mr. William H., Cassatt Ave.,
Berwyn. (N.)
Drake, Miss Helen P., 4256 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Draper, Mrs. J. A., Jr., Penna. Ave. and
Tower Road, Wilmington, Del.
Drayton, Mrs. Frederick R., Villa Nova.
Drear, Mrs. William F., Rosemont.
Drew, Mrs. Ernest C, Box 331, Nar-
berth.
Drew-Bear, Mrs. Jessie, care of The
London Flower Shop, 1800 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Drexel, Mr. George W. C, 350 Drexel
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Drinker, Mrs. James B., Foxchase Road,
Jenkintown.
Dripps, Miss Ethel L., 19 St. Paul Rd.,
Ardmore.
Duane, Mrs. William, Haverford.
Dubs, Mr. J. George, 505 E. Tulpe-
hocken St., Germantown.
Dubs, Mrs. J. George, 505 E. Tulpe-
hocken St., Germantown.
Dudley, Mrs. E. Lawrence, 336 S. 19th
St., Philadelphia.
Duerr, Miss Amelia B., 2049 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Duerr, Mrs. Mary A., Naaman's-on-the-
Delaware, Claymont, Del.
Duffield, Miss Louise C, 212 S. 39th St.,
Philadelphia.
Dufour, Mrs. Frank O., 452 Sabine Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Dugan, Mr. Dominick, 1 N. Warner
Ave., Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Duhring, Mrs. H. Louis, 208 Rex Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Duhring, Miss Lucy B., 71 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Duke, Miss Florence B., 1508 W. Alle-
gheny Ave., Philadelphia.
Duke, Mrs. J. O., Swarthmore.
Dulles, Miss Elizabeth W., 140 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Dulles, Mrs. Heatly C, Villa Nova.
Dunkelberger, Mr. George G., P. O. Box
6, Flourtown.
98
Dunlap, Miss Annie M., Nutts Rd.,
Phoenixville.
Dunlap, Mr. George M., Jr., Chester Pike
and Clifton Ave., Sharon Hill.
Dunleavy, Mr. Joseph, 8222 Ardleigh St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Dunn, Mrs. Charles B., 8928 Norwood
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Dunn, Mr. Sydney B., Haverford.
duPont, Mrs. A. Felix, Box 31, Wilming-
ton, Del.
duPont, Miss Aileen M., 1026 duPont
Bldg., Wilmington, Del.
duPont, Mrs. E. Paul, Montchanin, Del.
duPont, Mrs. Ernest, Box 545, Wilming-
ton, Del.
duPont, Mr. Eugene, "Owl's Nest,"
Greenville, Del.
duPont, Mrs. Eugene, "Owl's Nest,'"
Greenville, Del.
duPont, Mrs. H. B., "Crestlea," Ard-
more.
duPont, Mr. H. F., Winterthur, Del.
duPont, Mr. Pierre S., "Longwood,"
Kennett Square.
duPont, Mrs. Pierre S., Kennett Sq.
duPont, Mrs. William, Jr., Rosemont.
duPont, Mrs. William K., Box 52,
Wilmington, Del.
Durant, Mr. Anthony, Box 127, Rose-
mont P. O.
Durgin, Miss Mary E., 332 Kathmere
Road, Brookline, Del. Co.
Durie, Mr. William, "Sweetwater Farm,"
Glen Mills.
Dursch, Mr. Frank C. J., 318 E. Chelten
Ave., Germantown.
Dutton. Miss K. M., Rosemont.
Dwight, Mr. Edmund Waterman, 1729
Walnut St., Philadelphia.
Dyer, Mr. John R., Chadwicks, N. Y.
Dyer, Mrs. William E. S., Old York
Road, Noble.
Eades, Mrs. William H., Englemere
Farm, Downingtown.
Eagleson, Mrs. John, Wyncote.
Eagleson, Mrs. William B., Wyncote.
Earle, Miss Elinor, 8840 Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Earle, Mrs. Ralph, Haverford.
Earnest, Mrs. John K., 313 Euclid Ave.,
Ambler.
Earp, Miss Anne Tucker, 4619 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia.
Easby, Mrs. Francis H., 3316 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Easby, Mr. John P., 112 Rockland Road,
Merion.
Eastman, Mrs. B. Dobson, Falls of
Schuylkill.
Eastwick, Mr. Andrew M., Wallingford.
Eavenson, Mrs. Lewis L., Masonville,
N.J.
Eavenson, Mrs. William J., 2201 Chest-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Ebeling, Mr. Ralph George, 325 N. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Eberbach, Miss Margaret S., 17 Colwyn
Lane, Bala-Cynwyd.
Eberbach, Mrs. Nelson F., 441 W. Staf-
ford St., Germantown.
Eckels, Mrs. Howard S., Wyncote.
Edelman, Mr. Samuel, 474 N. 6th St.,
Philadelphia.
Edgcomb, Mr. Ervin R., 239 Harvey St.,
Germantown.
Edge, Mrs. Jacob, Downingtown.
Edmonds, Mrs. Franklin S., Whitemarsh.
Edwards, Mr. George W., 135 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Edwards, Mrs. J. R. Lincoln, Lansdowne
and Lincoln Aves., Lansdowne.
Edwards, Mr. W. E., Rosemont. (L.)
Egan, Mrs. James H., Fishers Rd., Bryn
Mawr.
Egbert, Miss Linda, 1403 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Egmore, Mrs. Herbert J., Box 232,
Wayne.
Ehrmann, Mrs. J, William, 311 Lenox
Rd., Brookline, Del. Co.
Eisele, Mr. Jacob D., Riverton, N. J.
(C.)
Eisenbrey, Mrs. R. Howard, College
Ave., Haverford.
Eisenmenger, Mrs. Carl H., Arden, Del.
Eissele, Mr. Herbert F. W.,_333 Morris
Ave., Bryn Mawr. ' '"' =
Elder, Mr. Herman, Blue Bell, Mont-
gomery Co.
Elgin, Miss Hattie, R. F. D. 3, Vienna,
Fairfax Co., Va.
Elkins, Mrs. George W., Elkins Park.
Elliot, Mrs. R. McCall, Pembroke,
Bryn Mawr.
Elliott, Mrs. George A., 1 Red Oak Road,
Wilmington, Del.
Elliott, Mrs. Harold H., 106 Argyle Rd.,
Ardmore.
Elliott, Mrs. William J., P. O. Box
233, Bryn Mawr.
Elliott, Mrs. William T., 117 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Ellis, Miss A. Willoughby G., The Well-
ington, Philadelphia.
Ellis, Mr. Frank H., 3d, "Casa Blanca."
Lansdowne.
Ellis, Mrs. Thomas S., "Green Acres,"
Ellis Farm, West Chester,
Ellis, Mrs. William J., 906 Morgan Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Ellis, Mr. William S., Fox Fields, Bryn
Mawr.
Ellis, Mrs. William S., Fox Fields, Bryn
Mawr.
Ellison, Mrs. H. Howard, Jr., "Cre-
mona," Villa Nova.
99
Eltinge, Mrs. Frank R., 27 W. Upsal St.,
Mt. Airy P. O.
Elwyn, Mr. Thomas L., 1606 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Ely, Miss Gertrude, Bryn Mawr.
Ely, Mrs. Thomas C, 3912 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Ely, Mrs. Van Horn, Haverford.
Ely, Mrs. WilHam C, 3912 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Ely, Mrs. William Newbold, 8210 Ard-
more Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ely, Mrs. William Newbold, Jr.,
Gwynedd Valley.
Embery, Mr. William, 4932 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Emlen, Mr. Arthur C, 5328 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Emlen, Mrs. George W., Jr., 1030 E.
Washington Lane, Germantown.
Emmerling, Mrs. F. C, 222 Hyslip Ave.,
Westfield, N. J.
Emmons, Mrs. H., 430 Carpenter Lane,
Germantown.
Enburg, Mr. John M., 5141 Baltimore
Ave., Philadelphia.
Englebert, Mrs. Nicholas J., 8232 Marion
Rd., Elkins Park.
Ensslen, Mrs. Carl, 321 Summit Ave.,
West Reading.
Erdman, Mrs. Henry P., 1020 Westview
Ave., Mt. Airy Station.
Ergood, Mrs. M. H., 6439 Morris Park
Rd., Overbrook.
Ernst, Miss Helen, 100 Swarthmore Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Ervin, Mrs. Spencer, Bala.
Eshner, Mrs. A. A., 1019 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Eshner, Miss Juliet F., 1019 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Esler, Mrs. Lewis H., 254 Hathaway
Lane, Wynnewood.
Espen, Mrs. Frank B., 6601 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Estabrook, Mrs. E. B., 3101 W. Coulter
St., Philadelphia.
Esty, Mrs. Robert P., 207 Llanfair Road,
Ardmore.
Evans, Mrs. George B., Rosemont.
Evans, Mrs. Harold, "Awbury," German-
town.
Evans, Mr. Herbert B., 58 Price St.,
Lansdowne.
Evans, Mrs. Lawrence R., Box 229, Rut-
ledge.
Evans, Mrs. Lawton, 2226 Pickens Rd.,
Augusta, Ga.
Evans, Mrs. Margaret W., 24 School St.,
Ambler.
Evans, Miss Mary, Bryn Mawr.
Evans, Mrs. Ralph B., Haverford.
Evans, Mrs. William S., 518 Cedar Lane,
Swarthmore.
Everett, Mr. Herbert E., 2206 Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
Everham, Mrs. H. V., Forest Ave.,
Ambler.
Evoy, Mrs. Charles H., 6 Royal Ave.,
Glenside.
Exley, Miss Emily, Wayne. (L.)
Eysmans, Mr. J. L., 1524 Broad St. Sta
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Eyster, Mr. L. Bert, 432 State Rd., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Fahnestock, Miss Ruth, Southampton.
Fail-child, Mrs. S. E., Jr., 6910 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Falconer, Mr. Allan, 924 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia.
Famous, Mr. Joseph G., Royersford,
R. D. 1.
Fancourt, Mr. E. J., 1612 Ludlow St..
Philadelphia. (W.)
Farenwald, Mr. Arno S., Greenwood Ave.
and York Rd., Jenkintown.
Faries, Mrs. C. T., Box 47, Wynnewood.
Faries, Mrs. Robert, St. Davids.
Farnum, Mrs. E. S. W., 101 W. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Farnum, Mr. George Leiper, "The
Acres," Media.
Farr, Miss Alice L., 11 County Line Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Farr, Miss Edith M., 4603 Cedar Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Farr, Miss Ruth, 11 County Line Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Farrow, Mr. Henry R. L., Conestoga and
Roberts Rds., Bryn Mawr.
Faunce, Mrs. W. W., Villa Nova.
Faust, Mr. Henry L, Merion. (C.)
Faux, Miss Ida, IZl Allen Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Fawley, Mr. W. A., 4002 Cedar Lane,
Drexel Hill.
Fay, Dr. Temple, Elbow La., Mt. Airy.
Fearon, Mr. Charles, 6720 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Fearon, Mrs. Charles, 6720 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Fegley, Mrs. Nelson P., 1956 W. Main
St., Norristown.
Feigley, Mrs. H. P., 32 S. 10th St.,
Quakertown.
Felin, Mr. Charles F., 280 S. Grand
Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
Fell, Mrs. F. J., Jr., R. F. D. 1, Phoenix-
ville.
Fellows, Mr. James A., 14 Marlborough
Road, Upper Darby.
Felton, Mrs. Alvenia R., Ashbourne Rd.
and Washington Lane, Elkins Park.
Felton, Mr. Edgar C, Haverford.
Felton, Mrs. Edgar C, Haverford
Fenton, Mrs. Carl F., 419 Chestnut Lane,
Wayne.
Ferguson, Mrs. Bassett, Ridley Park.
100
Ferguson, Mr. Frank M., 53 W. Tulpe-
hocken St., Germantown.
Ferguson, Mrs. James A., 124 W. Thomp-
son St., Philadelphia.
Ferguson, Mrs. Lincoln, 8031 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Fernley, Miss Frances Sabena, 6110
Wayne Ave., Germantown.
Fernley, Miss Hattie M., 6110 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Fetterman, Mrs. J. Gordon, Media.
Field, Miss Rebecca W., 2601 Lombard
St., Philadelphia.
Fife, Mrs. Charles A., 3421 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Findlay, Mrs. James F., Cor. Beech and
Elm Aves., Bethlehem.
Finletter, Mrs. Edwin M., 204 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill. (L)
Firth, Mrs. Gerald, 5575 Northumberland
St., Pittsburgh.
Fischer, Dr. Henry G., 108 Blooming-
dale Ave., Wayne.
Fischer, Dr. Herbert L., 3420 Warden
Drive, E. Falls P. O.
Fisher, Mrs. E. Monroe, 421 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Fisher, Mrs. Henry M., Jenkintown.
Fisher, Mrs. Howard W., 327 E. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Fisher, Mrs. Philip B., 7801 Cresheim
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Fitzpatrick, Mrs. Florence B., 141 E.
Gorgas Lane, Germantown.
Flack, Dr. Arthur M., 3414 Baring St.,
Philadelphia.
Flagg, Mrs. H. W., CoUegeville.
Flagg, Mrs. Stanley G., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Flagler, Mr. Joseph H., 1740 Broad St.
Sta. Bldg., Philadelphia.
Flanigen, Mrs. Donald, 5939 Drexel Rd.,
Philadelphia.
Flanigen, Miss Jessy, Haverford.
Fleck, Mrs. Frederick W., 335 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
Fleer, Mrs. Henry, 15 Woodside Ave.,
Narberth.
Fleisher, Mrs. Alfred W., Peacock
Hedges, Wyncote.
Fleisher, Mr. Horace T., 1901 Architects'
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Fleisher, Mrs. Moyer, 2223 Green St.,
Philadelphia.
Fleisher, Mrs. Walter A., Cor. City Line
and Lakeside Ave., Oak Lane.
Flood, Mrs. Edward A., 807 Carpenter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Foote, Mrs. A. Girand, "Beech Terrace,"
Merion.
Forbes, Mrs. Robert R., Mt. Holly, N. J.
Ford, Mrs. Bruce, Sugar Loaf, Chest-
nut Hill.
Ford, Miss Frances L., 902 Oak Lane,
Philadelphia.
Forstall, Mr. Walton, 1401 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Fort, Mrs. Pierson L, 414 W. Stafford
St., Germantown.
Foster, Mrs. Frank B., Haverford.
Foster, Mrs. William B., 1101 Westover
Road, Wilmington, Del.
Foulke, Mrs. Laura L., Ill Forest Ave.,
Ambler.
Fbulkrod, Mrs. Collin, 3910 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Fowler, Mrs. J. Scott, 1014 70th Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Fowler, Mrs. W. M., 8138 Cadwalader
Rd., Elkins Park.
Fox, Mrs. C. F., Jr., Elkins Park.
Fox, Mr. Charles Y., 422 Sabine Ave.,
Wynnewood.
Fox, Mrs. Gilbert R., 909 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Fox, Miss Hannah, 1024 Clinton St.,
Philadelphia.
Fox, Mrs. Herbert, Haverford.
Fox, Mrs. Joseph M., 7913 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Fox, Mr. Milford C, 156 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mrs. Milford C, 156 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mr. W. B., 316 Paxson Ave., Glen-
side.
Fraley, Mrs. Frederick, "Norwynden,"
Overbrook.
Francis, Miss Jeannette M., Bethayres.
Frankel, Mrs. Perry, The Warwick, 17th
and Locust Sts., Philadelphia.
Franklin, Mrs. Waher S., "Ivy Cottage,"
Rosemont.
Frayer, Mr. W. A., Bureau of University
Travel, 11 Boyd St., Newton, Mass.
Frazier, Mrs. D. B., Ardmore.
Frazier, Mrs. G. Harrison, Jr., 100 W.
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Frazier, Mrs. George H., Jenkintown.
Frazier, Mrs. Herbert, 45 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Frazier, Mr. John W., Jr., 904 City
Center Bldg., Philadelphia.
Frazier, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Jenkintown.
Freeman, Mrs. Harold A., St. Davids.
Freeman, Mrs. J. Howard, 55 W. Eagle
Rd., Upper Darby.
Freeman, Mrs. M. M., Valley Rd., Mel-
rose Park.
French, Mrs. C. Dunning, 145 E. Coulter
St., Germantown.
French, Mrs. J. Hansell, CoUegeville.
Fretz, Mrs. William F., Pipersville.
Fretz, Mrs. William H., 503 Cedar St.,
Jenkintown.
Frick, Mr. Charles E., 6915 Qearview
St., Mt. Airy.
Frick, Mr. George G., 393 S. Center St.,
Pottsville
101
Frick, Mrs. John A., Salisbury House,
Allentown.
Fries, Mrs. William P., 323 Cynwyd Rd.,
Bala-CjTiwyd.
Fritz, Mrs. J. A., S. E. cor. 34th and
Hamilton Sts., Philadelphia.
Fritz, Mrs. William H., Windemere Court
Apts., Wayne.
Fromuth, Mr. Harry C, Holland, Bucks
Co.
Fronefield, Mrs. J. M., 225 Audubon
Ave., Wayne.
Frorer, Mr. Henry R., Wayne. (N.)
Fry, Mrs. Henry S., 110 Llanfair Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Fry, Mrs. James Woods, 4612 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia.
Fry, Mrs. T. Y. Dietz, 410 Waring Road,
Elkins Park.
Fuguet, Mr. Raymond, "Fairacre," Edge-
water Park, N. J.
Fuller, Mrs. Sara K., N. Merion Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Fuller, Mr. W. D., Penn Valley, Nar-
berth.
Fuller, Mrs. William A. M., Germantown
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Fulton, Mrs. V. M., 106 Browning Rd.,
Merchantville, N. J.
Funk, Mrs. E. H., 6307 Sherwood Rd..
Overbrook.
Furness, Mr. Fairman R., Upper Bank
Farm, Media. (N.)
Furness, Mrs. Radclyffe, 207 Summit
Ave., Jenkintown.
Fussell, Miss Alice, 24 E. Jefferson St.,
Media.
Fussell, Mr. Robert, 24 E. Jefferson St.,
Media.
Gable, Mr. Joseph B., Jr., Stewartstown.
Gadsby, Mrs. Edmund J., 3129 Queen
La., East Falls.
Gallagher, Mrs. David, Rowland Park,
Cheltenham.
Gallagher, Mr. Thomas G., "Edgely,"
Bristol.
Gallagher, Mrs. W. M., Hilldale Rd.,
Villa Nova.
Galloway, Mrs. C. D., 520 Jarden Road,
Chestnut Hill.
Gamble, Mrs. Clarence J., 537 Allen's
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Gardiner, Mrs. John, Jr., 614 Pembroke
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Gardner, Mrs. Lillian Pine, Louella Ave.,
Wayne.
Garratt, Mrs. L. W., 220 Lansdowne Ave.,
Wayne.
Garrett, Mrs. Thomas Cresson, 5301 Old
York Rd., Logan.
Garrigues, Miss Hannah, Haverford.
Garrigues, Mr. John S., 742 College Ave.,
Haverford.
Garrison, Mr. E. M., 87 W. Broadway,
Salem, N. J. (C.)
Gar son, Mr. Theodore S. B., 227 Cones-
toga Rd., Wayne.
Gaskill, Mrs. J. Franklin, 104 Tenby Rd.,
Llanerch.
Gaskill, Mrs. Marion M., 957 W. Chester
Pike, Manoa, Upper Darby P. O.
Gaskill, Mrs. Samuel R., 2525 S. Cleve-
land Ave., Philadelphia.
Gaul, Miss Myrtle E., 836 Whitby Ave.,
Yeadon.
Gause, Mrs. C. Ingersoll, Greenville, Del.
Gawthrop, Mrs. Robert S., 325 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
Gay, Mrs. James H., Paoli.
Gayley, Mrs. Samuel A., Whitehorse-
Rocky Hill Road, Newtown Square.
Gayley, Mrs. William Crichton, General
Knox Road, Wayne.
Gearhart, Mrs. William M., 929 W. Mar-
shall St., Norristown.
Geiger, Mrs. W. J., 215 Rosemore Ave.,
Glenside.
Geist, Mrs. Clarence H., Laxinfal,
Villa Nova.
Gellhaus, Miss Olga E., Ashton Rd. and
Grant Ave., Holmesburg.
Gendell, Miss Elizabeth B., 320 Maple
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Gendell, Miss Lucy C, 320 Maple Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Gerhard, Mrs. Albert Pepper, 5635 Over-
brook Ave., Overbrook.
Gerhard, Mrs. S. L., 5336 Wakefield St.,
Germantown.
Gerstley, Mrs. I., 421 Ashbourne Rd.,
Elkiiis Psrlv
Gest, Miss Margaret R., 5620 City Ave.,
Overbrook.
Gest, Mrs. William P., Merion Sta.
Getze, Airs. Edward Bioren, 6005 Over-
brook Ave., Philadelphia.
Geyelin, Mrs. Emile C, Devon.
Gibb, Mrs. Walton, 330_^Fairhill Road,
Wynnewood.
Gibbon, Mrs. John H., 1608 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Gibbons, Mrs. J. E., 2311 N. 17th St.,
Philadelphia.
Gibbons, Mrs. Mary Stewart, 330 Bryn
Mawr Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Giblin, Miss Margaret, Arden, Del.
Gibson, Mrs. Henry C, Jenkintown.
Gibson, Miss Mary K., Wynnewood.
Gibson, Mr. William R., 735 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Gilbert, Mrs. George L., 7104 Hazel Ave.,
Bywood.
Gilbert, Mrs. John, Rydal.
Gilbert, Mrs. Samuel H., Rydal.
Gilbert, Mrs. Thomas B., 6328 Newtown
Road, Lawndale.
102
Gilchrist, Mr. Douglas, 41 W. Stratford
Ave., Lansdowne.
Giles, Mrs. Florence M., 109 Menio Ave.,
Glenside.
Gill, Miss Mary Esther, 37 Wynnewood
Ave., Wynnewood.
Gillespie, Miss Jannie F., 79 Wynnewood
Ave., Merion.
Gillin, Mr. James R., Ambler Nurseries,
Ambler. (C.)
Gillin, Mrs. James R., E. Tennis Ave.,
Ambler.
Gillingham, Mrs. C. Stratton Howe, 4717
Kingsessing Ave., Philadelphia.
Gilmore, Mrs. Fernley P., Box 44, Reho-
both Beach, Del
Gilmour, Miss Dora, 64 Harvey St., Ger-
mantown.
Gilpin, Mrs. John C, Sugar Loaf, Chest-
nut Hill.
Gilpin, Mrs. Samuel B., 2d, 115 Kenil-
worth Road, Merion.
Gipson, Dr. Lawrence H., P. O. Box 183,
Bethlehem.
Gipson, Mrs. Lawrence H., P. O. Box
183, Bethlehem.
Girvin, Miss Mary, 2120 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia,
Glackin, Mr. John J., 7635 Parkview Rd.,
Highland Park, Del Co.
Glading, Mr, George W., Wenonah, N. J.
Glasgow, Mrs. W. A., 81 Haws Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Gleason, Mrs. James F,, 212 Greenwood
Ave., Jenkintown.
Glendinning, Mrs. H. Percival, 529 E.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Glendinning, Mr. Robert, Packard Bldg.,
Philadelphia,
Glendinning, Mrs. Robert, "The Squir-
rels," Chestnut Hill.
Glenn, Mr. William G., 537 Elkins Ave.,
£lkins P3,rk
Glenn, Mrs. William G., 537 Elkins Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Glover, Miss Deborah A., The Welling-
ton, 19th and Walnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Godfrey, Mr. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. M. Helen, 126 Woodland
Ave., Wyncote.
Godfrey, Mrs. William S., Ardmore.
Godshalk, Mrs. Elizabeth C, 424 Mont-
gomery Ave., Haver ford.
Goff, Mrs. Le Roy, 2d, Ithan.
Goheen, Mrs. John P., 524 W. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Goldbaum, Mr. J. S., 4234 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Goldbaum, Mrs. J. S., 4234 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Goldey, Mrs. F. H., 614 W. Aliens Lane,
Philadelphia.
Goldey, Mr. Robert P., Holly Oak, Del.
Goldhaber, Mr. Jack S., 5310 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia,
Goldsmith, Mrs. Arthur, Montgomery
Ave, & Mill Rd., Wynnewood.
Goll, Mr. George, Hobby-Nobby Farm,
Somers Point, N. J.
Goodall, Mr. H. W., 8315 Seminole Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Goodman, Mr. Charles E., Fishers Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Goodman, Miss Ernestine A., 140 Bethle-
hem Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Goodwin, Dr. A. Helena, 321 Bala Ave.,
Cynwyd.
Goodwin, Mrs. Daniel R., 510 Walnut
Lane, Swarthmore.
Goodwin, Mrs. Ralph, W. Durham St.
near Lincoln Drive, Mt. Airy.
Goshorn, Mrs. C. B., King Rd., Malvern.
Gossling, Mr. John H., 1027 AUengrove
St., Frankford.
Gotwals, Mrs. Leo A., South Gay St.,
Phoenixville.
Gowen, Mrs. James, Emlen St., Chestnut
Hill,
Graf, Miss Emma, 36 S. 5th St., Phila-
delphia,
Graiif, Miss Isabelle A., 409 Lancaster
Ave., Haverford.
Graham, Mrs. Fred W, W., 52 Summit
St., Chestnut Hill.
Graham, Mrs. J. W., 537 Orchard Ave.,
Yeadon,
Graham, Mrs. Warren C, Ashwood
Road, Villa Nova.
Grakelow, Mr. Charles H., Broad and
Cumberland Sts., Philadelphia. (F.)
Grandy, Mrs. Charles R., 355 W. Free-
mason St., Norfolk, Va.
Grange, Mrs. William Drayton, Morris
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Gray, Mrs. Alfred M., 5965 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Gray, Mrs. Ellen M., 432 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Gray, Miss M. May, 1112 AUengrove St.,
Philadelphia.
Greaves, Mr. John E., 7437 Devon St.,
Mt. Airy,
Green, Mrs. Edward A., 20 W. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Green, Miss Gertrude E., 29 E. Jefferson
St., Media.
Green, Mr. J. Weldon, West Ave. and
Newbold Rd., Jenkintown.
Green, Mrs. J. Weldon, West Ave. and
Newbold Rd., Jenkintown.
Greene, Mrs. Norman, "Rainbow Lodge,"
Berwyn.
Greene, Mr. Ryland W., Rose La.,
Haverford.
Greene, Mrs. William Houston, 2128
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
103
Greenwood, Mrs. A. S., Trevor Lane,
Bala-Cjmw'yd.
Greinberg, Mr. Reinhold, Wayne. (C.)
Gribbel, Mrs. J. Bancker, 135 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Gribbel, Mrs. John, Wyncote.
Gribbel, Mrs. W. Griffen, Mermaid and
St. Martins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Griflfin, Mrs. Frank H., Wawa.
Griffith, Mrs. Arthur B., 501 Monroe St.,
Media,
Griffith, Dr. J. P. Crozer, 1810 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Griffith, Miss Julia W., Laurel Lane,
Haver ford.
Griffith, Miss Mary F., Laurel Lane,
Haverford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert E., Haverford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert M., Gwalia, Ambler.
Grim, Dr. Ella W., Rose Valley Rd.,
R. F. D. 3. Media.
Griscom, Miss Frances C, Haverford.
Griscom, Mr, Rodman E., Haverford.
Griscom, Mrs. William B., Old Gulph
Rd. and Bryn Mawr Ave., Narberth.
Griswold, Mrs. Frank T., "Hothorpe,"
Radnor,
Griswold, Mrs. Matthew, Jr., 265 W. lOth
St. Erie.
Groif, Mrs. John Charles, 519 N,
High St., West Chester.
Groome, Mrs. Daingerfield M., Clover
Hill Farms, Media.
Groome, Mrs. John C, 1018 Qinton St.,
Philadelphia.
Gross, Dr. F. O., 1816 W. Erie Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Groves, Miss Juliet F., 735 Westview St.,
Germantown.
Grubnau, Mr. Carl, Erie Ave. at 2d St.,
Philadelphia.
Grullemans, Mr. J. J., % Wayside Gar-
dens, Mentor, Ohio. (C.)
Guckes, Mr. E. M., 6200 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Guckes, Mrs. P. E., 123 Bleddyn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Gudehus, Mr. E. R,, S, E. Cor. 13th and
Locust Sts., Philadelphia.
Guest, Mrs. Arthur B., 5111 Newhall St.,
Germantown.
Gumbes, Mrs. Charles Wetherill, Box 6,
Oaks, Montg. Co.
Gunning, Miss Agnes, 310 Ashbourne
Rd., Elkins Park.
Gurley, Mrs. W. B., 301 W. School House
Lane, Germantown.
Gumey, Mrs. Charlotte E., 447 Flamingo
St., Roxborough.
Gustin, Mrs. Richard J., Ivyland.
Guthrie, Mrs. Tracy W., Beaver Rd. at
Newbury Lane, Edgeworth, Sewickley.
Gutman, Mrs. Milton R., 330 Marvin
Road, Elkins Park.
Gwyer, Mrs. Frederick D., 210 Roberts
Rd., Ardmore.
Gyllenhaal, Miss Vida L., Br>'n Athyn.
Haas, Mrs. H. J., Haverford.
Haas, Mrs. Otto, Fishers Road, Haver-
ford.
Haber, Mrs. Henry, 502 Westview Ave.,
Germantown.
Haber, Mrs. J., 8148 High School Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Habermehl, Mr. John P., 2139 Diamond
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Hacker, Mr. Caspar W., Bryn Mawr.
Hacker, Mrs, Caspar W., Bryn Mav?r.
Hacker, Mrs. William P., 8711 Navajo
St., Chestnut Hill.
Haehnlen, Mr. Walter L., Colwyn and
Rhyle La., Cynwyd.
Haeseler, Mrs. Alice _P, S., 2006 W.
Tioga St., Philadelphia.
Haggart, Mrs. W, R., 6341 Ridge Ave.,
Roxborough.
Haggerty, Mrs. George L, 4330 Sansom
St., Philadelphia.
Hagner, Mrs. Samuel D., 274 Harvey St.,
Philadelphia.
Hahn, Mrs. Elizabeth G., 5528 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Haines, Mrs. Benjamin W., 326 N.
Church St., West Chester,
Haines, Miss Edith Stokes, Fort Wash-
ington.
Haines, Miss Jane B,, Cheltenham.
Haines, Mrs. Joseph, 516 E. Durham St.,
Mt. Airy.
Haines, Mrs. Joseph, Jr., Meadowbrook.
Haines, Mrs. Robert B., Jr., 156 School
Lane, Germantown.
Haines, Mrs, W, H., 606 Zollinger Way,
Merion,
Haldeman, Miss Pearl, 8110 West Ches-
ter Pike, Highland Park, Upper Darby.
Hale, Mrs. Chandler, "His Lordship's
Kingdom," Upper Marlboro, Md.
Halford, Mrs. John H., Hartrauft Woods,
Norristown.
Hall, Mrs. Clarence A., 7951 Winston
Road, Chestnut Hill,
Hall, Miss Elizabeth, Front and Lemon
Sts., Media.
Hall, Miss Florence R., Bryn Mawr
Court, Bryn Mawr,
Hall, Mr, H. F., 416 Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N, J. (C.)
Hall, Mrs. Perry E., Darby and Paoli
Rds., Villa Nova.
Hallman, Mrs. Thomas, Collegeville,
Hallowell, Miss H. R., 2100 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Hallowell, Mrs. Israel R., Moreland Rd.,
Bethayres.
Hallowell, Miss Martha, Meadowbroolc,
Montgomery Co.
Halsey, Mrs. Edward B., Radnor.
101
Halstead, Mrs. David, 301 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
Hamersly, Mr. Edmund G., Devon.
Hamilton, Miss Emma F., 50 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Hamilton, Mrs. J. M. H., "Glenburn,"
Phoenixville.
Hamilton, Mrs. Robert Devitt, Church
Rd., Wyncote.
Hammond, Dr. Julian T., 3d, 1042 Wide-
ner BIdg., Philadelphia.
Hancock, Mrs. F. Woodson, Jr., Phoenix-
ville.
Hand, Mrs. Alfred, 1724 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Hankele, Mr. Allen J., % Alanwold Nur-
sery, Neshaminy P. O., Bucks Co. (N.)
Hankinson, Mrs. C. Charles, 1303 65th
Ave., Oak Lane.
Hansell, Mrs. Frank R., Eddington
Farm, Eddington.
Hanson, Miss Lillian C, 250 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Harbidge, Mr. Herbert J., care of Mrs.
John A. Brown, Jr., Wayne. (G.)
Hare, Miss Esther B., Radnor.
Hare, Mr, J. V., Reading Terminal,
Philadelphia.
Hare, Mrs. J. V., Trevose.
Harjes, Mrs. F. H., Valley Forge.
Harkins, Mr. George W., Jr., 422 W.
Stafford St., Germantown.
Harlan, Mrs. S. P., Idle Dell, Hatboro.
Harper, Mr. B. Frank, 133 S. 12th St.,
Philadelphia.
Harper, Mrs. George V., Shippensburg.
Harper, Mrs. John M., Box 171, Villa
Nova.
Harper, Mrs. William Ross, 626 W.
Hortter St., Germantown.
Harper, Mr. William Warner, An-
dorra Nurseries, Chestnut Hill. (N.)
Harrar, Mrs. John J., 311 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Harrington, Mrs. A. M., Sheaff Rd.,
Whitemarsh.
Harrington, Miss Jessie, Kings Highway,
Dover, Del.
Harrington, Mrs. Melvin H., 1016 West-
view St., Mt. Airy.
Harrington, Mrs. Willis F., 16th St. and
Mt. Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del.
Harris, Mrs. Frank B., "Wee House,"
Rosemont.
Harris, Mr. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. J. Andrews, Jr., Lincoln
Drive and Willow Grove Ave., Chest-
nut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. Morrison, 2307 N. 58th St.,
Overbrook.
Harris, Mr. Wharton E., Union League,
Philadelphia.
Harris, Mr. William K., 1406 S. 51st
St., Philadelphia. (C.)
Harrison, Mrs. Charles C, Jr., Villa
Nova.
Harrison, Mr. George L., St. Davids.
Harrison, Mrs. George L., St. Davids.
Harrison, Mrs. T. R., 140 Hewett Rd.,
Wyncote.
Harrison, Mr. Theodore L., Rosemont.
Harrison, Mrs. Theodore L., Rosemont.
Harrity, Mrs. W. F., Apt. 601-B, Alden
^ark Manor, Germantown.
Harry, Rev. Ernest J., Oaks, Montgom-
ery Co.
Harshberger, Miss Elyonta C, The
School of Horticulture, Ambler.
Hart, Mrs. Charles, Media.
Hart, Mrs. William H., Susquehanna
Rd., Ambler.
Hartley, Mrs. Thomas R., 5825 5th Ave.,
Pittsburgh.
Hartshorne, Miss Amy, Haverford.
Hartshorne, Mr. E. Y., Haverford.
Harvey, Mr. Charles B., Linda Vista and
Cheltena Ave., Jenkintown.
Harvev, Mr. Frederick W., 2241 N. 4th
St., Philadelphia.
Harvey, Mrs. J. S. Curtis, Jr., Radnor.
Harvey, Mr. John S. C, Radnor.
Haskell, Mr. Harry G., Mt. Salem Lane,
Wilmington, Del.
Hassan, Miss Mary H., 6433 Lawndale
Ave., Philadelphia.
Hastings, Mr. John V., Jr., Box 591,
Haverford.
Hatfield, Mr. Henry Reed, 1725 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Hatton, Miss Edith J., R. F. D. 5, West
Chester.
Hatton, Mr. George, care of Dr. Strieker
Coles, Fisher's La., Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Hauenstein, Mr. Arthur, 612 Edge Hill
Rd., Ardsley, Montgomery Co. (G.)
Haug, Mr. John S., 9509 Germantown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Haughton, Mrs. J. Paul, Sugartown Rd.,
Malvern.
Haughton, Mrs. Richard, Paoli.
Haupt, Mrs. William K., 2112 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Hawkes, Mrs. T. G., "Edgely," Bristol.
Hawlk, Mrs. L. J., 8024 York Rd., Elkins
Park.
Hay, Mrs. Edward N., 108 W. Gravers
La., Chestnut Hill.
Haydock, Mrs. Amelia G., 2726 W.
Somerset St., Philadelphia.
Haydock, Mrs. Roger, Kent Rd., Wyn-
cote.
Haydock, Mrs. Thomas O., 309 Trainor
St., Ridley Park.
Hayes, Mrs. Ernest B., 501 Parker Ave.,
CoUingdale.
105
Hayes, Mr. Robert L., No. 3 Chatham
Rd., Stonehurst, Del. Co.
Hayhurst, Mrs. C. Lamar, 343 E. Hortter
St., Mt. Airy.
Hays, Mrs. Raphael S., Box 287, Carlisle.
Hayward, Mrs. Nathan, Brooke Rd.,
Wayne.
Hazard, Mr. C. W., 300 Midland Ave.,
St. Davids.
Heacock, Mr. James W., Wyncote. (C.)
Heacock, Mrs. Joseph Linden, 26 Car-
penter Lane, Mt. Airy.
Head, Mrs. Joseph, 7125 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Headly, Mr. J. D., The Dingee & Conard
Co., West Grove. (N.)
Heal, Mr. Harry R., 3365 Hollywood
Circle, Merchantville, N. J.
Heald, Mrs. Lawrence R., 5127 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Hebard, Mrs. Morgan, W. Chestnut Ave.,
Chestnut Hill
Heck, Mrs. Helen H., 324 Harrison Ave.,
Glenside.
Heckscher, Mr. Gustave A., Strafford.
Heckscher, Mrs. Ledyard, Radnor.
Heckscher, Miss Lucretia Stevens, "Tre-
goze," Radnor.
Hedley, Mrs. T. Wilson, 1015 S. 47th
St., Philadelphia.
Hcebner, Mrs. Charles, The Mermont.
Bryn Mawr.
Heebner, Miss Julia E., 320 E. Ever-
green Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Heergeist, Miss Anna K., 6606 N. 6th
it Cjjilc T sriG
Heffner, Mrs. Warren S., 1009 Belfield
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Heim, Miss Christine, 115 Biddle St.,
Kane.
Heimerdinger, Mrs. Leo H., 1001 Valley
Rd., Oak Lane.
Heines, Mrs. Frieda W., 309 Hartel Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Heinz, Mrs. Howard, Morewood Heights,
Pittsburgh.
Heisley, Mrs. George, 445 N. Sterling
Road, Elkins Park.
Heist, Mrs. Lee H., 6445 Emlen St., Mt.
Airy.
Heizmann, Mr. William A., 1133 Read-
ing Blvd., Wyomissing.
Helbert, Mrs. George K., 305 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Hell\yig, Miss Anna, 2325 N. 52d St.,
Philadelphia.
Helme, Mrs. William E., St. Davids.
Hemphill, Mrs. John M., 210 E. Biddle
St., West Chester.
Hemsley, Mrs. Frederick, 2018 De
Lancey Place, Philadelphia.
Hendershot, Mr. Joseph, 2201 E. Darby
Rd., Upper Darby P. O.
Henderson, Mrs. Charles H., 413 Spring
Rd., Llanerch, Upper Darby P. O.
Henderson, Mrs. George, 2013 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Henderson, Miss Grace S., 2807 Midvale
Ave., Germantown.
Henderson, Mrs. Lawrence, 211 Dudley
Ave., Narberth.
Henderson, Mrs. Samuel J., "Fordel
Farm," Media.
Henderson, Mrs. W. Alan, Oak Lane
Manor, Oak Lane.
Hendrick, Mrs. Thomas A., 143 W. 3d
Ave., Conshohocken.
Hendrickson, Mrs. H. S., Spruce Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Henkels, Mr. John B., Jr., 446 Church
La., Germantown. (L.)
Henning, Miss Mary E., 50 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Henry, Mrs. Bayard, W. Walnut La.,
Germantown.
Henry, Mrs. Charles W., Chestnut
Hill.
Henry, Mrs. J. Norman, Gladwyne.
Hensel, Mrs. William H., 346 Roumfort
Road, Mt. Airy.
Henson, Miss Hannah, 5025 N. 12th St..
Philadelphia.
Heppe, Mr. Florence J., 1310 Land
Title Bldg., Broad and Chestnut
Sts., Philadelphia.
Hergesheimer, Mr. Russell U., 1616 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Herkner, Miss Anne, Krisheim Lodge,
Chestnut Hill.
Herkness, Mrs. A. Morris, Jr., Rydal.
Herold, Mrs. Otto, 127 Harrison Ave.,
Glenside.
Herr, Mrs. Albert M., "Cedar Crest,"
Lancaster.
Herr, Mr. John P., 52 Stewart Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Herr, Mrs. William, 122 Tyson Ave.,
Glenside.
Herring, Miss L. K., 2807 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Herring, Mrs. Willard E., Jenkintown.
Hershey, Mr. Lloyd E., 4906 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia.
Herzberg, Mr. Herbert I., 7945 N.
Park Ave., Elkins Park.
Herzog, Mr. Adolph, 6900 N. 20th St.,
Philadelphia.
Hess, Mrs. Martin G., Market Square,
Manheim.
Hessenbruch, Mrs. Hermann M., Wynne-
wood.
Heyl, Mrs. Jacob E., 124 Springfield
Ave., St. Martins.
Heyl, Mrs. John B., 209 Kent Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Heyl, Mrs. Robert C, 120 Bleddyn Rd.,
Ardmore.
106
Heymann, Mr. Joseph C, 1420 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Heyward, Mrs. R. B., 6730 Emlen St.,
Mt. Airy.
Hibbert, Mrs. Walter, Providence Rd.,
Wallingford.
Hibbs, Miss Helen, Sycamore Ave.,
Merion.
Hibbs, Mrs. Shelton A., 109 E. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Hiestand, Mrs. George, 303 Main St.,
Phoenixville.
Hiester, Mrs. Isaac, 138 N. 5th St.,
Reading.
Higgins, Miss Helen T., R. D. 3, Nor-
ristown.
High, Miss Flora M., 3436 Warden
Drive, Germantown.
Highley, Mrs. George N., 314 Fayette
St., Conshohocken.
Hilbroner, Mrs. Tillie, 1849 N. 17th St.,
Philadelphia.
Hildabrand, Mrs. Frank A., 220 Noreg
Place, Brooklawn, N. J.
Hill, Mrs. George H., Jr., 116 Birch
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Hill, Mr. J. Bennett, Wynnewood.
Hill, Mrs. Llevi^ellyn G., 55 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Hillborn, Miss Annie, 508 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Hilles, Miss Elizabeth, 965 Orthodox St.,
Philadelphia.
Hilles, Mr, Robert L.. 4530 Adams Ave.,
Frankford.
Hilles, Mrs. William S., Wilmington,
Del.
Hilliard, Mrs. James, R. F. D, 1, Hat-
boro.
Hilsee, Mrs. Donald Ashcraft, 5336
Wakefield St., Germantown.
Hilton, Miss Alice, 4137 Pechin St., Rox-
borough.
Hinchman, Miss Margaretta S.,
Haverford.
Hinkel, Mrs. Harry W., 813 W. Broad
St., Quakertovi^n.
Hinkson, Mrs. Joseph H., 224 Chester
Pike, Ridley Park.
Hippie, Mrs. Frank E., 320 Roumfort
Rd., Mt. Airy.
Hires, Mrs. Charles E., Jr., Wynnewood.
Hires, Mrs. J. Edgar, 107 Linwood Ave.,
Ardmore.
Hitzrot, Mrs. Lewis H., 4953 McKean
Ave., Germantown.
Hoag, Mr. C. G., Haverford.
Hoban, Mrs. Jennie, S. Broad St., Lans-
dale.
Hockaday, Miss Elizabeth, 316 Shadeland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Hodge, Mrs. Henry L., 300 Wheatsheaf
Lane, Abington.
Hodge, Miss Katharine C, 112 W.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Hodge, Mrs. T. L., Delmar-Morris Apts.,
Germantown.
Hoeischer, Mr. A. W., Box 52c, Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
Hoff, Mrs. L. P., 124 Levering Mill Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Hoffman, Mr. Benjamin R., The
Grange, City Line Ave., W. Over-
brook.
Hoffman, Mrs. C. Fenno, Radnor Rd.,
Radnor.
Hoffman, Mrs. Mary R., 341 Mansion
Ave., Audubon, N. J.
Hoffman, Dr. Norbert L., 231 Oneida
St., Mt. Washington Sta., Pittsburgh.
Hogeland, Mr. Elias W., Huntingdon
Valley. (L.)
Hogeland, Miss Helen B., 245 Hansberry
St., Germantown.
Hogue, Mrs. Robert M., 434 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Holcombe, Mrs. Alex. Henry, 343 Bala
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Holgate, Mr. Stuart J., 201 Crestmont
Terrace, Collingswood, N, J.
HoUaday, Mrs. Charles B., Chadd's
Ford.
Hollerith, Mr. Richard, 307 Shrewsbury
Rd., Riverton, N. J.
Hollingsworth, Mrs. L Pemberton P.,
123 E. Virginia Ave., West Chester.
Holman, Mrs. E. Richard, 328 E. More-
land Ave., Hatboro.
Holmes, Miss Harriet F., Selborne,
S. Batavia Rd., Batavia, 111.
Holmes, Mr. L C, 268 Wembley Rd.,
Upper Darby.
Holmes, Mr. Jesse H., care of Thomas
Young Nurseries, Inc., Bound Brook,
N. J. (N.)
Holmes, Mr. Joshua M., Elkins Park.
Holmes, Mrs. Lynwood R., 235 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia.
Holmes, Miss Mary S., 147 Manheim St.,
Philadelphia.
Holmes, Mrs. W. Lyle, Jr., 409 Shoe-
maker Rd., Elkins Park.
Holmes, Mrs. William L., 7005 N. 12th
St., Oak Lane.
Holt, Mrs. John, Jr., 589 Hansel Rd.,
Narberth P. O.
Holtsizer, Mrs. Leon, Skippack Pike,
Blue Bell.
Holtzhausser, Mrs. Ralph S., 2300 E.
York St., Philadelphia.
Hood, Mrs. Albert L., Wissahickon Ave.
and Hortter St., Mt. Airy.
Hooper, Mrs. Robert P., "Wolverton,"
Chestnut Hill.
Hoopes, Mr. Edward, "Highland Farm,"
West Chester.
107
Hoopes, Mrs. Henry, 1304 Rodney St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Hoopes, Mrs. Macmillan, P. O. Box 831,
Wilmington, Del.
Hopkins, Mrs. J. Qement, 10 W. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Hopkins, Mrs. Thomas S., 264 E. Kings
Highway, Haddonfield, N. J.
Hopper, Mrs. H. Boardman, 315 Berk-
ley Road, Merion.
Hopper, Mrs. Harry S., 211 Roberts
Rd., Ardmore.
Hopper, Miss Marie Louise, 211
Roberts Road, Ardmore.
Horn, Mr. Herman, Jr., 132 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Horner, Miss Hannah Mee, 24 Kent Rd.,
Upper Darby.
Hornor, Mr. Harold, E. Garden St., Mt.
Holly, N. J.
Hornor, Miss Ruth, E. Garden St., Mt.
Holly, N. J.
Horst, Mr. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave., Nar-
berth.
Horst, Mrs. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave.,
Narberth.
Horst, Mrs. George D., R. F. D. 1,
Reading.
Horst, Mrs. John D., P. O. Box 734,
Reading.
Horstmann, Mrs. Walter, 1900 Ritten-
house Sq., Philadelphia.
Horstmann, Mrs. William H., "Norwyn-
den," Overbrook.
Hoskins, Mrs. Albert L., Rosemont.
House, Mrs. M. A., Chadds Ford, Dela-
ware Co.
Houseman, Dr. Percy A., % MacAndrews
& Forbes Co., 3d St. and Jefiferson Ave.,
Camden, N. J.
Houston, Mrs. George H., The Bar-
clay, Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia.
Houston, Mrs. Samuel F., St. Martins.
Hovenden, Miss Martha M., Plymouth
Meeting.
How, Mrs. Harold W., Rosemont.
Howard, Mrs. Edgar B., Bryn Mawr.
Howarth, Mrs. H. A- S., "Tall Oaks,"
Torresdale.
Howe, Mrs. A. Leighton, 2037 Upland
Way, Philadelphia.
Howe, Mrs. George, 9189 Germantown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Howell, Mrs. Aubrey, 1206 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Howell, Mrs. Cooper, Blue Bell.
Howell, Miss Josephine R., 1206 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Howell, Mrs. Lardner, Whitford.
Howell, Mr. Samuel L., The Lenox, 1301
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Howell, Mrs. Samuel L., The Lenox, 1301
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Howland, Miss Alice G., The Shipley
School, Bryn Mawr.
Howland, Mrs. Ralph B., Stirling Head-
quarters, Echo Valley Farms, Malvern.
Howson, Mrs. Charles H., 134 Walnut
Ave., Wayne.
Hubard, Mrs. Archibald B., 7908 York
Rd., Elkins Park.
Huber, Mrs. Charles Willing, Spring Mill
Rd., Villa Nova.
Huber, Dr. Dawson H., 1823 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Huey, Mr. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huey, Mrs. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huff, Miss Emelie DeGalley, 5925 Wood-
bine Ave., Overbrook.
Huff, Mrs. George F., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Huggins, Mrs. George A., 8309 Stenton
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Hughes, Mr. Hugh M., 814 Stanbridge
St., Norristown. (G.)
Hughes, Mrs. Percy, 819 Tioga Ave.,
Bethlehem.
Hughes, Mrs. Thomas, 2522 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Ardmore.
Hughes, Mr. William D., 3300 Race
St., Philadelphia.
Hull, Mrs. Alton S., 505 E. Washington
Lane, Germantown.
Hummel, Mrs. Walter R., 1600 S. 4th St.,
Philadelphia.
Humphreys, Miss Belle G., Box 156,
Woodstown, N. J.
Hunecker, Mrs. John, Browns Mills, N. J.
Hunt, Mrs. C. R., Enfield.
Hunter, Miss Helen May, 527 W. Sedg-
wick St., Mt. Airy.
Hunter, Miss Lillian M., 5032 Schuyler
St., Germantown.
Huston, Mrs. A. F., Graystone, Coates-
ville.
Huston, Miss Laetitia P., 219 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Huston, Miss Mary P., 219 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Hutchinson, Mrs. H. B., Weldy Ave.,
Oreland.
Hutchinson, Mrs. Joseph B., 1304 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Hutchinson, Mrs. Joseph B., Jr., White-
hall, Haverford.-
Hutchison, Mrs. John W., 108 Hampden
Ave., Narberth.
Hyde, Mrs. Charles L, 6632 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Idell, Mrs. George S., 210 E. Go wen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Iliff, Mrs. Arthur R., Old Ambler Home-
stead, Ambler.
Ilsley, Mrs. Edward, Devon.
108
IngersoU, Miss Anna Warren, Penllyn.
Ingersoll, Mrs. C. Jared, Fort Wash-
ington.
IngersoU, Mr. Henry McKean, Spring
House, Montgomery Co.
Ingraham, Mrs. Clayton C, The Drake,
1512 Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Ingram, Mrs. James E., Jr., Horseshoe
Lane, Paoli.
Ireland, Miss Sarah A., 4635 Leiper St.,
Frankford.
Irvine, Mrs. James, P. O. Box 145, Devon.
Irvine, Mr. John, Grove Ave., Flourtown,
Montgomery Co.
Irvine, Mr. King, P. O. Box 36, Devon.
(G.)
Irwin, Mrs. Boyle, R. F. D. 2, Phoenix-
ville.
Irwin, Mr. Franklin K., Haver ford Court,
Haverford.
Irwin, Mrs. Franklin K., Haverford
Court, Haverford.
Irwin, Mrs. Samuel B., 530 Spring Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Jack, Dr. L. Foster, Haverford.
Jackson, Mrs. Albert Atlee, Chestnut
Hill.
Jackson, Mrs. George H., 615 N. McKean
St., Butler.
Jackson, Mrs. Henry W., Montgomery
and Bowman Aves., Merion.
Jackson, Mrs. John, Owen and Stewart
Aves., Lansdowne.
Jackson, Mrs. W. C, 3716 School Lane,
Drexel Hill.
Jacobs, Mrs. Frank D., 122 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Jacobs, Mrs. John, Bryn Mawr.
Jacobs, Mrs. M. L., 837 Tioga Ave., Beth-
lehem.
Jacobs, Mrs. Reginald, Haverford.
Jacoby, Mrs. Edward C, Gulph Rd. and
Montgomery Ave., Radnor.
James, Miss Elizabeth S., 908 Darby
Rd., Llanerch, Upper Darby P. O.
James, Mrs. John E., Jr., Devon.
James, Miss Winifred L., Southampton.
Jameson, Mrs. Norman L., S. Bow-
man Ave., Merion.
Jamison, Mrs. B. K., Jr., 250 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Janeway, Mrs. P. W., 3d and Edgemont
Sts., Media.
Janney, Mrs. Walter C, Bryn Mawr.
Janson, Mr. Paul L., 114 E. Chester Pike,
Sharon Hill, (C.)
Jarden, Mrs. Charles P., 242 Wyncote
Rd., Jenkintown.
Jarden, Mrs. Walter H., 7048 German-
town Ave., Mt. Airy.
Jarrett, Miss Anna. Hallowell.
Jarrett, Mrs. F. H., Jarrett's Gardens,
Bethayres. (C.)
Jeanes, Mrs. Henry S., Devon.
Jeanes, Mrs. Isaac W., Moreland Ave.
and St. Martin's Lane, Chestnut
Hill.
Jeanes, Mrs. Joseph Y., Villa Nova.
Jefferis, Mr. Charles R., Jr., 409 Medical
Arts Bldg., Wilmington, Del.
Jeffords, Mr. Walter M.. Glen Riddle.
Jelinek, Miss Anne, Krisheim Lodge,
Chestnut Hill.
Jenkins, Mrs. Charles F., Kitchens La.,
Germantown.
Jenkins, Mrs. Edward A., 506 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Jenkins, Mrs. H. Lawrence, Beaumont
Lodge, Devon.
Jenks, Mrs. Charles T., 611 Winsford
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Jenks, Mrs. Horace H., College Ave.,
Haverford.
Jenks, Mrs. John S., Seminole and Chest-
nut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Jetter, Mrs. William F., Academy and
Loller Rds., Hatboro.
Joachim, Miss Reba E., 939 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
John, Mrs. R. H., 27 St. Paul's Rd., Ard-
more.
Johnson, Mr. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Jr., Villa Nova.
Johnson, Mr. Archibald T., R. F. D. 2,
Willow Grove.
Johnson, Mrs. Archibald T., R. F. D. 2,
Willow Grove.
Johnson, Mrs. C. W., Deanewald Acres,
Fletcher Rd., Wayne.
Johnson, Mrs. Guy R., Birchrunville,
Chester Co.
Johnson, Mrs. H. D., Cheltenham.
Johnson, Mr. J. W., E. Shawmont Ave.,
Roxborough.
Johnson, Mrs. Joseph Esrey, Jr., Valley
View Farm, Whitford.
Johnson, Mrs. Lester B., "Gwyncroft
Farm," North Wales.
Johnson, Miss Margaret P., R. F. D. 2,
Willow Grove.
Johnson. Miss Marian K., 441 Berkeley
Rd., Haverford.
Johnson, Mrs. Russell H., Jr., R. D. 2,
Norristown.
Johnson, Mr. W. Keating. 326 W.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Johnson, Mrs. Walter H., City Ave. and
Green Hill Farms Rd., Overbrook.
Johnson, Mrs. Walter J., 158 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Johnson, Mrs. William F. B., 314 Car-
penter Lane, Germantown.
Johnson, Mrs. William J., St Davids
Ave., St. Davids.
Johnston, Mrs. Carrol, S. Main St., North
Wales.
109
Johnston, Mr. J. W., 383 Bourse Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Jones, Mrs. Arthur Wells, 5 Arbuta Rd.,
Abington.
Jones, Mrs. C. Clothier, 144 Valley Rd.,
Ardmore.
Jones, Mrs. E. Thompson, 520 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Tones, Mr. Edward Morris, 310 N. 16th
St., Philadelphia.
Jones, Mrs. Edward Morris, 310 N. 16th
St., Philadelphia.
Jones, Mr. Henry W., 25 E. 5th St.,
Chester,
Jones, Mr. Horace C, 5th and Fayette
Sts., Conshohocken.
Jones, Mrs. J. Clifford, Wynnewood.
Jones, Mr. Joseph L., 200 Wyncote
Road, Jenkintown.
Jones, Mrs. Joseph L., 3d, 324 Waring
Road, Elkins Park.
Jones, Mr. Lawrence E., Alden Park,
Germantown.
Jones, Mrs. Spencer L., Conshohocken.
Jones, Mrs. Thomas E., Ashwood Rd.,
Villa Nova.
Jones, Mr. William B., Supt., Highwood
Cemetery, 2800 Brighton Rd., Pitts-
burgh.
Jordan, Mrs. Frederick, Jordan's Pond,
Glenside.
Jump, Mr. John Austin, Swarthmore Col-
lege, Swarthmore.
Junkin, Mrs. George B., Bryn Mawr.
Justice, Miss Hilda, St. George's Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Justice, Mrs. Randolph F., Wynnewood.
Kain, Mrs. Robert E., 38 Linwood Ave.,
Ardmore.
Kaiser, Mrs. Frank A., 1710 Monsey Ave.,
Scranton.
Kammerer, Mr. Fred H., 229 Rhoads
Ave., Haddonfield. N. J.
Kane, Mrs. John Kent, Shirley Farm,
West Chester.
Karb, Mrs. John, 305 Rodman St., Jenkin-
town.
Kaufmann, Mrs. Eugene M., 617 W.
Hortter St., Germantown.
Kaufmann, Mrs. Morris A., Elkins Park.
Kay, Miss Elizabeth E., 100 Warwick
Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Kearns, Mrs. Wilmer R., Echo Dale Gar-
dens, Norristown. (C.)
Keator, Mrs. John Frisbee, The Oak
Road and School House Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Keen, Mrs. Carl T., 323 E. Phil-Ellena
St., Mt. Airy.
Keen, Mr. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Keen, Mrs. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Keen, Mrs. Frank A., 603 N. Walnut
St., West Chester.
Keen, Mrs. Harold Perot, "Kynlyn,"
Bellevue, Del.
Keen, Mr. Harry R., 305 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Cynwryd.
Keenest, Mr. Esker L., 28 W. Fairview
St., Bethlehem.
Keeney, Miss Susan Dorothea, 318 E.
Lancaster Pike, Wayne.
Keffer, Dr. E. L, 5991 Drexel Rd., Over-
brook.
Keiser, Mrs. George M., 1546 Mahan-
tongo St., Pottsville.
Kelley, Mrs. Edward, Bent Rd., Wyncote.
Kelley, Mr. John J., 752 Buck Rd.,
Haverford.
Kelley, Mrs. Richard C, 8212 Cedar Rd.,
Elkins p3.rlc
Kellogg, Mrs.' Thomas M., 608 E. Gor-
gas Lane, Mt. Airy.
Kelly, Miss Emma E., Box 356, Villa
Nova.
Kelly, Mrs. Fred, "Little Garden," Lans-
downe.
Kelly, Mr. Gregory C., 7 Snowden Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Kelly, Miss Margaret K., Box 328, West
Chester.
Kemble, Miss Annie L., 522 Parker Ave.,
Collingdale.
Kemble, Mrs. Francis W., Devon.
Kemp, Mr. John A., Little Silver, N. J.
(C.)
Kendall, Mrs. Paul, Haverford.
Kendrick, Mrs. Murdoch, 242 S. 21st St..
Philadelphia.
Kennard, Miss Anita B., 122 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, Burlington Co.,
N. J.
Kennedy, Mr. Andrew, 55 Franklin Ave.,
Rosemont. (G.)
Kennedy, Mrs. B. H., 2405 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Kennedv, Miss Katharine, 2405 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Kennedy, Mrs. M. C, 1830 Rittenhouse
Sq., Philadelphia.
Kennedy, Miss Marie E., 2131 Cypress
St., Philadelphia.
Kent, Mrs. A. Atwater, Ardmore.
Kent, Mrs. William C. Wvncote.
Kern, Mr. Addison D., 222 W. Linton
St., Philadelphia.
Kerr, Mrs. Anna \Y., Downingtown.
Kerr, Mr. Thomas A., 3 Mansfield Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Kerr, Mrs. William M., Trainor,
Kessler, Mrs. Harry C, 300 Fairhill
Road, Wynnewood.
Ketcham, Mrs. O. W.. Stenton and Wil-
low Grove Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Keyser, Air. C. N.. "Brookcroft,"
Plymouth Meeting. (N.)
110
Keyser, Mrs. Herman J., Panther Road,
Rydal.
Keyser, Mrs. Romaine, Colton Manor,
Atlantic City, N. J.
Kieferle, Mrs. Charles J., 334 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kift, Mr. Robert, 4044 Haverford Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Kille, Miss Helen, Wheat Road, Vine-
land, N. J.
Killian, Mr. Edward J., 2d, 6320 New-
town Rd., Lawndale.
Kimber, Miss N. B., 538 Locust Ave.,
Germantown.
Kind, Mrs. Philip, Lenox Road, Jenkin-
town.
Kindig, Mr. Eli, Jr., 225 N. Lansdowne
Ave., Lansdowne.
King, Mrs. Caroline B., 1610 Pelham
Road, Beechwood Park, Del. Co.
King, Mrs. Florence B., 3622 Hamilton
St., Philadelphia.
King, Mrs. Joseph B., 7315 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy,
King, Mrs. Mary L., 316 Rhodes PI.,
New Castle.
Kinnard, Mrs. Leonard H., Wynnewood.
Kintz, Miss Ella, Box 146, Pittston.
Kipp, Mrs. Katherine, 31 Benezet St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Kircher, Mr. Walter C, 2671 N. Napa
St., Philadelphia.
Kirchner, Mrs. Edward J., Remington
Rd., Overbrook.
Kirk, Mrs. John, 5 Tenby Rd., Llanerch.
Kirkpatrick, Mr. M. Glen, 230 S. 7th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kittredge, Mr. Benjamin R., % Cypress
Gardens, Charleston, S. C.
Klapp, Mrs. Wilbur P., Jr., Chew Road
and Lancaster Pike, Radnor.
Klapp, Mrs. Wilbur Paddock, 1716 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Klein, Mr. A. H., 3112 N. 27th St.,
Philadelphia.
Klein, Mrs. Thomas, Brentford Rd., Hav-
erford.
Kleinheinz, Mr. William, care of Mr.
Jos. E. Widener, Elkins Park. (G.)
Klemm, Miss Eva R., Montgomery Ave.,
Villanova.
Klemm, Mrs. John W., St. Davids.
Klevan, Mrs. Oscar J., 506 N. Church
St., West Chester.
Klink, Mrs. Clarence K., 6848 Stenton
Ave., Germantown.
Klose, Mr. Henry C., 1130 Yeadon Ave.,
Yeadon.
Klose, Mrs. Henry C, 1130 Yeadon Ave.,
Yeadon.
Knauf, Mrs. Paul W., 5 Cynwyd Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Knight, Mr. D. Allen, 7201 McCallum
St., Germantown.
Knight, Mrs. D. Allen, 7201 McCallum
St., Germantown.
Knight, Miss Helen, Haverford.
Knight, Mrs. Thomas L., Serpentine
Lane, Wyncote.
Knight, Mrs. W. B., 101 Congress St.,
Newtown.
Knipe, Mrs. Jay C, 6629 N. 8th St., Oak
Lane.
Knitter, Mr. William C, 5810 Whitby
Ave., Philadelphia.
Knowles, Mr. Howard B., 5802 Cedar
Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md.
Knox, Mr. Irvin H., care of Mrs. F. G.
Thomson, Devon. (G.)
Knox, Mrs. Jay, 34 Lakeview Drive,
Moorestown, N. J.
Knox, Mrs. Kerro, 420 Wister Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Koch, Miss Florence E., 1 Windsor Ave.,
Narberth.
Koehler, Miss Mary H., 4815 Hazel Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Koehn, Mrs. H. W., 107 Orchard Way,
Rosemont.
Kohn, Mrs. Bernard, 1516 N. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kohn, Mrs. Harry E., 682 S. Highland
Ave., Merion.
Kohn, Mrs. Irving, 1830 S. Rittenhouse
Sq., Philadelphia.
Kolb, Mr. Bert. Chas., 411 Haddon Ave.,
Collingswood, N. J.
Kolb, Mr. Emmanuel, 1925 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Kommer, Mr. John T., 519 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Koons, Mrs. Andora S., 507 Cherry St.,
Norristown.
Kraeger, Mr. Robert H., Harper Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Krause, Mr. G. Fred, 215 E. Church St.,
Bethlehem.
Krauskopf, Mrs. Joseph, 4715 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Krauss, Mrs. Lee, 1400 Greywall Lane,
Overbrook Hills.
Krebs, Mrs. George J., 476 W. Main St.,
Somerset.
Krewson, Mrs. Frank, Central Ave.,
Cheltenham.
Krick, Mrs. C. S., St. Davids.
Krick, Miss Helen, 430 Meadowbrook
Road, St. Davids.
Kriebel, Mrs. Samuel C, 217 N. Main
St., North Wales.
Krips, Mr. H. A., 612 Upland Ave., Jen-
kintown.
Krumbhaar. Mrs. E. B., Chestnut Hill.
Krusen, Mrs. Mabel A., 214 E. Freedley
St., Norristown.
Kuehnle, Mr. C. Albert, Vine and 17th
Sts., Philadelphia.
Ill
Kuhn, Mr. C. Hartman, 1430 Walnut
Street, Philadelphia.
Kuhn, Mr. John, 405 W. Tabor Rd.,
Olney. (F.)
Kuhn, Mrs. John, Jr., 547 Olney Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Kunde, Mrs. Carl O., 549 S. Wycombe
Ave., Lansdowne.
Kunkel, Mrs. William B., "Dunroamin,"
Glenn Rd., Ardmore.
Kunze, Aliss Hedwig M., 6399 Woodbine
Ave., Philadelphia.
Kunzig, Mrs. August P., 2003 W. Tioga
St., Philadelphia.
Kurrie, Mr. George R., 333 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Kurtz, Mrs. Walter R., Jr., 202 Roberts
Rd., Ardmore.
Kurtz, Mrs. William F., 7002 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Kyle, Mrs. D. Braden, St. Davids.
Kynett, Mr. H. H., Box 22, Wayne.
LaBar, Mrs. W. K., Box 65, Stroudsburg.
LaBoiteaux, Mrs. Isaac, Bryn Mawr.
Lacey, Mr. J. Madison, 329 Waring Rd.,
Elicins Park.
Lacey, Mrs. J. Madison, 329 Waring Rd.,
Elicins Park.
Laessle, Mrs. Albert, 511 Runnymede
Ave., Jenkintown.
Lafore, Mrs. J. A., Penn Valley Farm,
Narberth.
Laird, Mrs. J. Packard, "Chesterbrook
Farm," Berwyn.
Laird, Mrs. John L., 2d, Chestnut Hill
Apts., Chestnut Hill.
Laird, Mrs. W. W., 3200 W. 17th St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Lamb, Mrs. Robert E., 225 W. Nippon
St., Mt. Airy.
Lamb, Mrs. John G., 6329 N. 6th St., Oak
Lane.
Lambert, Mrs. George L., 717 Meeting
House Rd., Elkins Park.
Lammot, Miss Dorothy, 495 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Landes, Mrs. Howard M., 200 Highland
Ave., Jenkintown.
Landis. Miss Bertha L., The Ontario,
Washington, D. C.
Landis, Mrs. W. R., 1447 69th Ave., Oak
Lane.
Landreth, Mr. Burnet. Jr.. 245 W. High-
land Ave.. Chestnut Hill. (S.)
Landreth, Mr. S. Phillips. Bristol. (S.)
Landry. Mrs. W. A., 620 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Landt, Mrs. G. E., Curren Ten, Norris-
town.
Lane, Mrs. Reba ^L, Cotswold Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Lane, Mr. Thomas J., Dreshers. (N.)
Langdon. Mrs. H. Maxwell, Grays La.,
Haverford.
Lankford, Mrs. Floyd, 4101 St. Paul St..
Guilford, Baltimore, Md.
Lansdale, Mrs. W. Moylan, St. Da-
vids.
Lapp, Mr. Walter S., 724 Derstine Ave.,
Lansdale.
Larzelere, Mrs. Walter D., "Thorn-
hedge," St. Davids.
Laskin, Mrs. Benjamin, 6310 Wissahickon
Ave., Germantown.
Lathrop, Mr. Francis C, Frazer Nur-
series, Lincoln Highway, Frazer. (N.)
Latimer, Mr. T. D., 5420 Westford Rd.,
Olney.
Latimer, Mrs. J. D., 5420 Westford Rd.,
Olney.
Lauer, Mr. Conrad N., P. O. Box 147,
Penllyn, Montg. Co.
Laughlin, Mrs. George M., Jr., Woodland
Rd., Pittsburgh.
Lavell. Mrs. E. F., 129 S. 23d St., Phila-
delphia.
Laverty, Mrs. Maris Alexander, 229 Der-
wen Road, Merion.
Lavino, Mr. Edwin M., "Twin Willows,"
Cresheim Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Lay, Miss Harriet M., 4015 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Lay, Mr. J. Tracy 4015 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Layton,_Mrs. Caleb S., 908 duPont Rd.,
Wilmington, Del.
Lea, Mrs. Charles M., "West Thorpe
Farm," Devon.
Lea, Mrs. Francis C, 421 Owen Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Lea, Mrs. Langdon, Calvert and Syca-
more Roads, Merion. (L.)
League, Mr. H. M., Bryn Mawr.
Leaming, Mrs. E. B.. 228 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. T.
Lear, Mrs. John B., 319 W. Mermaid
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Leas, Mrs. Donald S., Haverford.
Leas, IMrs. LeRoy P., Overbrook, West
Park Station.
Leas, Aliss ^label Alice, Roberts Road
and Wyndon Ave.. Bryn Mawr.
Leatherman, Mrs. J. Kirk, 254 Greene
St., Doylestown.
Lebo, Mrs. Ellerslie A., Zl Jackson Ave.,
Northfield, N. J.
LeBoutillier, Mrs. Benj. Homer, Paoli.
LeBoutillier, Mrs. Edward H., Haver-
ford.
Lechler, Mr. W. A., Huntingdon Valley.
Lederle, Mrs. Robert B., 45 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Ledwith, Mr. WilHam L., 6460 Sherwood
Rd., Overbrook.
Ledwith. Mrs. William L., 6460 Sherwood
Rd., Overbrook.
Lee, Mrs. Alfred P., 4713 Springfield
Ave., Philadelphia.
112
Lee, Mr. Arthur, A and V Sts., Swede-
land.
Lee, Miss Elizabeth Leighton, 12 Snow-
den Rd., Bala-Cynwyd.
Lee, Mrs. Horace H., 121 Panmure Rd.,
Haverford.
Leedom, Mrs. Elizabeth D., 108 Tenby
Rd., Llanerch, Delaware Co.
Leeds, Mr. M. E., 4901 Stenton Ave.,
Germantown.
Leeds, Miss Mary R., 162 S. Pennsyl-
vania Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
Leeds, Miss Sarah B., 84 Branch St.,
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Legters, Miss Alice I., Sherman, N. Y.
Lehman, Mr. Harry A., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Leibert. Miss E. Pauline, 421 N. New
St., Bethlehem.
Leidy, Mrs. Alfred S., 1100 Larchmont
Ave., Pennfield, Del. Co.
Leidy, Mrs. Joseph, Rose Hill House,
Penllyn.
Leighton, Mrs. Archibald O., Rosemont.
Lentz, Mrs. William O., Rydal.
Leopold, Mrs. Max S., 1848 N. 17th St.,
Philadelphia.
LeRoy. Miss Charlotte Otis, 7428 Devon
St., Mt. Airv.
Lesley, Mrs. Hugh, 155 W. Washington
Lane, Germantown.
Lesley, Mrs. Robert W., Haverford.
Lester, Mr. Joseph G., 2220 Land Title
Bldg.. Philadelphia.
Lever, Mrs. G. E., 4304 Frankford Ave.,
Frank ford.
Levi, Mrs. Julius C, Latham Park, Oak
Lane.
Levis, Mr. Edward H., 438 Main St.-, Mt.
Holly, N. J.
Levy, Mr. Hovs^ard S., 220 W. Rob-
erts Ave., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mr. Christian B., 309 S. 19th St.,
Brigantine, N. J.
Lewis, Mrs. Effie M., 12th and Fayette
Sts., Conshohocken.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 2207 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 3d, Fishers Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Lewis, Mrs. How^ard W., 1928 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. John Frederick, More-
stein. Chester Co.
Lewis, Mrs. Leroy Moody, Curwen Rd.,
Rosemont.
Lewis, Mrs. Lynne K., 2004 W. Ontario
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Miss Maud E., 803 Mahantango
St., Pottsville.
Lewis, Mrs. O. G. L., Valley Rd., Paoli.
Lewis, Mrs. Owen B., 3917 Vaux St.,
Queen Lane Manor, Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Paul, Strafford.
Lewis, Mrs. _ Saunders, 240 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Thomas H., Paoli.
Lewis, Mrs. William Draper, "Awbury,"
Germantown.
Ligget, Mrs. Howard B., Jr., Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Ligget, Mrs. J. Thomas, Haverford.
Ligget, Mrs. Robert C, Valley Forge.
Lightfoot, Mrs. J. C, Jr., Box 267, Villa
Nova.
Lilley,_ Mrs. William, 309 Orchard Way,
Merion.
Lincoln, Mrs. George J., Jr., Emlen St.
and Allen La., Mt. Airy.
Lindenmayer, Miss Josephine A., Box 66,
R. F. D. 1, Newtown.
Lindner, Mrs. Mary E., 1233 W. Hilton
St., Philadelphia.
Lindroth, Mr. Axel, Box 38, Bryn Mawr.
(G.)
Lindsay, Mrs. John C, 445 Hansberry
St., Germantown.
Lineaweaver, Mrs. Charles P., The
Quarry, Laural Lane, Haverford.
Ling, Mr. Edward S., 100 E. Lynnwood
Ave., Glenside.
Linn, Mrs. G. R., Bowling Green, Media.
Linton, Mrs. M. Albert, 315 E. Oak Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Lippincott, Mr. Bertram, "Fallow Field,"
Church Road, Wyncote.
Lippincott, Mr. C. Carroll, 135 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
Lippincott, Mr. H. R., MuUica Hill,
N.J.
Lippincott, Mr. Horace G., Wyncote.
Lippincott, Mrs. J. Bertram, 1712
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Lippincott, Mrs. J. Lawrence, Riverton,
N.J.
Lippincott, Mr. John H., 5920 Greene
St.. Germantown.
Lippincott, Mrs. Joseph, 219 E. Alain St.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Lippincott, Mrs. Joseph W., Bethayres.
Lippincott, Miss Mary W., Wyncote.
Liomncott, Mrs. Robert C, 266 W.
Tulpehocken St., Germantown.
Lippincott, Mrs. Walter H., Wynnewood.
Lisle, Mrs. R. M., Paoli.
Littleton. Mr. Arthur, 24 E. Newfield
Way, Bala-Cynwyd.
Littleton. Mrs. Arthur, 24 E. Newfield
Way, Bala-Cynwyd.
Lloyd, Mr, Horatio Gates, "AUgates,"
Haverford.
Lloyd, Mrs. Horatio Gates, "All-
gates," Haverford.
Lloyd, Mr. Malcolm, Jr., 701 Com-
mercial Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Lloyd, Mrs. Stacy B., Ardmore.
Lloyd, Mrs. William H., 259 S. Van Pelt
St.. Philadelphia.
113
Lober, Mrs. William D., 347 Aubrey Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Lodge, Miss Elizabeth C, R. F. D. 3,
Newtown Square, Delaware Co.
Loeb, Mrs. Adolf, S. E. Cor. Wissa-
hickon and Cliveden Sts., Germantown.
Loeb, Mrs. Howard A., Elkins Park.
Loeb, Mrs. Rudolf, 227 Summit Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Loeffler, Miss Helen, 427 Ruscomb St.,
Philadelphia.
Logan, Mrs._ A. S., 3924 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Logan, Miss Alice, The Patch Box, West
Chester.
Logan, Mrs. Robert R., Eddington.
Long, Mr. Chudleigh E., 239 Kath-
mere Road, Brookline.
Long, Mr. Thomas, 3782 Woodland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Long, Mr. William Merrill, 309 Waring
Rd., Elkins Park. (N.)
Longsdorf, Mr. Paul W., Church Rd. and
Park Ave., Elkins Park.
Longshore, Mr. Frank H.. Parish House,
E. Cumberland and Collins Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Lord-Wood, Mr. E. Russell, 132 S.
Chester Rd., Glenolden.
Lord- Wood, Mrs. Elizabeth, 132 S. Ches-
ter Rd., Glenolden.
Lorgus, Mr. Rudolph G., The Lorgus Co.,
West Chester. (F.)
Lorimer, Mrs. George H., Wyncote.
Lorimer, Mrs. Graeme, Meadowbrook.
Louchheim, Mrs. Joseph A., Meeting
House and York Rds., Elkins Park.
Love, Miss K. G., 5011 Penn St., Frank-
ford.
Lovering, Mrs. Joseph S., Jr., 33 E.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Lovett, Miss Louise D., 46 K Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Low, Mrs. Howe, 8003 Navahoe St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Lucas, Miss Ethel, "The Pink House,"
Ardmore.
Luckenbach, Mrs. J. Lewis, 113 10th
Ave., Haddon Heights, N. J.
Ludington, Mrs. C. Townsend, Clo-
velly, Ardmore.
Ludington, Mr. Wright S., Ardmore.
Ludlam, Mrs. Howard W., 46 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Ludlum, Mrs. Sevmour DeWitt, 1827
Pine St., Philadelphia.
Lukens, Mrs. Charles K., 8051 Stenton
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Lukens, Mr. George E., 214 School St.,
North Wales. (C.)
Lukens, Mrs. J. N., 4 E. Langhome Ave.,
Upper Darby.
Lukens, Mrs. Lewis N., Jr., Towanda
St., Chestnut Hill.
Lummis, Mrs. George O., Washington
Lane and Noble Rd., Jenkintown.
Lummis, Mrs. William H., 509 Warwick
Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Lurio, Mrs. Benjamin, 1309 Wheatland
Ave., Lancaster.
Lycett, Miss Rebecca H., Haverford.
Lyman, Mrs. J. V. R., 330 Wister Rd.,
Ardmore.
Lyman, Mrs. Moses, 16 Westmoreland
Ave., Longmeadow, Mass.
Lyon, Mrs. LeRoy S., 2107 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Lyons, Mrs. E. M., 18 Maple Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Lyons, Miss Florence N., 208 S. Barrett
St., Audubon, N. J.
McAllister, Mrs. J. Rutherford, 8134
Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill.
McAllister, Miss Janet C, 326 W. State
St., Media.
McArel, Mr. E. P., care of H. A. Dreer,
Inc., 1306 Spring Garden St., Phila-
delphia.
McBurney, Mrs. Letah S., 314 Lees Ave.,
Collingswood, N. J.
McCahan, Mr. William J., Jr., New
Albany Rd., Moorestown, N. J.
MacCain, Mrs. C. S., The Cambridge,
Alden Park, Germantown.
McCaleb, Mr. William S. B., St. Davids.
McCarthy, Mrs. J. A., 125 Summit Ave.,
Jenkintown.
McCawley, Mr. Edmund S., Ithan. (L.)
McCawley, Mrs. William M., 2031 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
McClellan, Mrs. Emma B., Warburton
House, 20th and Sansom Sts., Philadel-
phia.
McClintic, Mrs. H. H., 1130 Beechwood
Blvd., Pittsburgh.
McCloskey, Mrs. John F., 8720 German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
McCloud, Mrs. Charles M., 1705 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
McCormick, Mrs. O. F., "Llanelew,"
Haverford.
MacCoy, Mrs. W. Logan, 69th and City
Line, Overbrook.
McCracken, Mr. D. K., care of Mrs.
T. Williams Roberts, Bala. (G.)
McCracken, Mrs. Robert T., 1009 West-
view St., Germantown.
McCreary, Mrs. George D., St. Martins,
Chestnut Hill. .
McCreary, Mrs. William H., 114 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
McCreery, Mrs. Samuel, "Spring Meadow
Farm," Valley Forge.
McCurdy, Mrs. J. Aubrey, 7315 Elbow
Lane, Mt. Airy.
McCurdy, Miss Mary C, 309 Llandrillo
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
114
McCurdy, Miss Mary M., 6023 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
Macdonald, Mrs. Robin, Box 582, Villa
Nova.
McDougal, Mrs. George, 533 Elkins Ave.,
Elkins Park.
McDowell, Miss Katherine D,, 815 Mont-
gomery Ave., Narberth.
McDowell, Miss Louise A., 3749 Wood-
land Ave., Drexel Hill.
McDowell, Miss Margaret R., 1525 Con-
lyn St., Roxborough.
McFadden, Mrs. Barclay, Rosemont.
McFadden, Mr. J. Franklin, Rosemont.
McFadden, Mrs. J. Franklin, Rosemont.
McFarland, Mrs. George K., "Wind-
ridge," West Chester.
McFarland, Mrs. Harold B., 268 Lenox
Rd., Jenkintown.
McFarland, Mr. J. Horace, 2101 Bellevue
Rd., Harrisburg.
MacFarland, Mr. Walter G., Jr., Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
McGee, Mr. Lynn B., 522 E. Gates St.,
Roxborough.
McGill, Miss Mary E., 700 Hazelhurst
Rd., Merion.
McGinnis, Mrs. Mary V., 328 S. Manoa
Rd., Manoa, Delaware Co.
MacGowan, Miss Viola, 411 Fishers Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
McGowin, Mrs. R. S., 322 Kent Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Mcllhenny, Mrs. Francis S., 8765 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Mcllhenny, Mrs. John D., Lincoln
Drive and Johnson St., Germantown.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Dickerson, "Pine Hill,"
Ardmore.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Hugh, Haverford.
Mcllvain, Mrs. J. Gibson, "Lowebrook,"
Downingtown.
Mcllvaine, Miss Frances Edge, "Glen
Isle Farm," Downingtown.
Mcllvaine, Mrs. Gilbert, Downingtown.
Mclnnes, Allr. Walter S., 1808 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
McKaig, Mrs. Edgar S., Radnor.
McKean, Mrs. Bispham, Tthan.
McKeever, Mrs. William, 331 Louella
Ave., Wayne.
McKinney. Mrs. James P., 1086 Shady
Ave., Pittsburgh.
McKinney, Mrs. Jay, 211 Upland Rd.,
Merion.
McKinny, Miss Edith, 5433 Morris St.,
Germantown.
McKoy, Mrs. Thomas H., Jr., "Lookafar
Farm," Chestnut Hill.
McLain, Miss Helen Louise, 509 Harvard
Ave., Swarthmore.
McLain, Mrs. Louis, 620 Pembroke Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
McLaughlin, Mr. W. J., Jr., 403 Green-
wood Ave., Wyncote.
McLean, Mrs. Robert, Fort Washing-
ton.
McLean, Mrs. Wm. L., Jr., St. Martin's
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
MacLeod, Mr. Alexander, "Stoneleigh,"
Villa Nova.
MacMeney, Miss Elizabeth, 439 Penn
Ave., Drexel Hill.
McMichael, Mr. Emory, Devon.
McMichael, Mrs. Emory, Devon.
McMicking, Miss Eliz. I. S., Girard Col-
lege, Philadelphia.
MacMillan, Mr. William, 7429 Bingham
St., Philadelphia.
McMullan, Mrs. David, Jr., 1919 Panama
St., Philadelphia.
McMullan, Mrs. James, 7030 Wissahickon
Ave., Mt. Airy.
MacMurchy, Mr. J. A., 504 Harrison St.,
Ridley Park.
McNaughton, Mr. Andrew D., Box 84,
Gladwyne. (G.)
McNeal, Mr. D. Raymond, Jericho Rd.,
Abington.
McNeely, Miss Florence, 444 N. High-
land Ave., Merion.
McNees, Mrs. C. B., 101 Hazel Ave.,
Kittanning.
McNees, Mrs. W. G., Providence Rd. at
5th St., Media.
McNichol, Mrs. James P., St. Davids.
McOwen, Mrs. F., 5871 Drexel Rd.,
Philadelphia.
Macpherson, Mrs. John C, 317 Llandrillo
Rd., Bala-Cynv\ryd.
McSparran, Miss Isabel K., 2028 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Madeira, Mrs. Crawford C, 208 Roberts
Rd., Ardmore.
Madeira, Mrs. E. W., School Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Magee, Mrs. Henry I., 6th St. and Me-
dary Ave., Oak Lane.
Magee, Miss Jane I., 315 Bala Ave., Cyn-
wyd.
Magill, Mrs. S. N., Elkins Ave., Elkins
Park.
Maguire, Mrs. Frank Hain, 146 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Majodeh, Miss Najave, Chew's P. O.
Box 24, N. J.
Makin, Mrs. Carrie, 7027 Greenway Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Malcom, Mrs. J. V., 3811 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Malehorn, Mr. C. J., 423 Grove Place,
Narberth.
Mallon, Miss Louise Baeder. N. E. cor.
13th and Pine Sts., Philadelphia.
Maimed, Mrs. A. T., 1021 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
115
Manda, Mr. Joseph, 130 Main St.,
West Orange, N. J. (C.)
Manda, Mr. W. A., South Orange, N. J.
(C.)
Mann, Mrs. George S., 408 Manor Ave.,
Millersville.
Mannix, Mrs. D. Pratt, Montgomery
Ave., Rosemont.
March, ]^Irs. In^in W., 501 N. FrankHn
St., Pottstown.
Alarkey, Aliss Catherine P., 2528 S. Chad-
wick St., Philadelphia.
Markle, Mrs. Alvan, "Highacres," Hazle-
ton.
Markle, ^Irs. Alvan, Jr., 338 W. Green
St.. Hazleton.
Markle, Miss Beulah N., 5638 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Markle, Mrs. George B., P. O. Box 426,
Hazleton.
Markoe, Mrs. John, 1630 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Maron, Miss Laura, 35 Berwick Rd.,
Overbrook.
Marr, Miss S. A.. 503 W. 12th St., Wil-
mington, Del.
Marsh, Mrs. J. C, Box F, Tunbridge
Rd., Haverford.
Marshall, Mrs. F. Warren, Radnor.
Marshall, Mrs. J. Warren, Yorklyn, Del.
Marshall, Mrs. John, 1718 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Marshall, Mrs. T. C, Yorklyn, Del.
Marston, Mrs. C. Harold, 6401 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Marti, Mrs. O. K., 206 E. Cottage Ave..
Haddonfield, N. J.
Martin, Airs. Alexander, 57 Sussex Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Martin, Mrs. Carl N., Pine Creek Farm.
Anselma.
Martin. AIrs._ Charles U., 205 S. 45th St.,
Philadelphia.
Martin, Mrs. Eugene. York Rd., Carlisle.
Martin, Mrs. J. Willis, 139 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Martin, Mrs. John C, "Wedgewood,"
Wyncote.
Alartin, Mrs. Sydney E., Elkins Park.
Masland, Airs. Charles W., 1202 Strat-
ford Ave., Alelrose Park.
Alasland, Airs. George H., 122 E. Alore-
land Ave., Hatboro.
Alasland, Mr. Walter E., Lenox Road,
Jenkintown.
Alason, Air. Alfred C. 103 Allen Lane.
Alt. Airy.
Mason, Miss Jane Graham, "Cerne,"
School House Lane, Germantown.
Alason, Aliss Laura K., 5528 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Alason, Aliss Alary Taylor, "Cerne,"
School House Lane, Germantown.
Alason, Air. W. Laurence, Golf View
Rd., Doylestown.
Alason, Air. William Clarke, 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Alaster, Rev. Dr. Henry B., "Glen-
thorne," Devon.
Alaster, Airs. Henry B., "Glenthorne,"
Devon.
Alasters, Aliss Jessie W., 3308 Baring
St., Philadelphia. _
Alather, Aliss Caroline T., Aleadowbrook.
Alathieu, Air. Alfred E., "Playwickey,"
Rydal.
Alathieu, Airs. Peter N., 1500 N. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Alatienzo. Airs. Alanuel, 441 E. State St..
Aledia.
Alattern, Airs. E. L.. R. D. No. 1, Erie.
Alatthes. Airs. P. E., Alerbrook Lane,
Alerion.
Mpttbews, Mr. Edvs^ard, care of Mr.
Geo. D. Rosengarten, Malvern. (G.)
Alatthews, Air. Edwin, Out Door Arts
Co., Flourtown. (N.)
Alattis, Air. J. Stafford, 4542 Manayunk
Ave., Roxborough. (S.)
Alattison, Dr. R. V.. Ambler.
Alattoon. Air. Harold G., 425 Tregaron
Rd., Cvnwyd.
Alaule, Air. Edmund W., 654 Chester
Ave., Aloorestown, X. T.
Alaule, Airs. Edmund W.. 654 Chester
Ave.. Aloorestown, N. J.
Alaurer, Airs. Joseph W., 2d, 402 Chapel
Rd., Elkins Park.
Alaxwell, Airs. John R., Villa Nova.
Alayberry, Airs. Charles B., 225 Lans-
downe Ave., Wayne.
Mayer, Airs. Alfred, 1851 N. 17th St..
Philadelphia.
Alayer. Airs. Clinton O.. 1520 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Alazer. Air. David. Three Point Gar-
dens, E. Stroudsburg. (N.)
Alecray, Airs. P. M., Oak Ave., Aloores-
town, N. J.
Aleeds. Airs. Hollyday S., Jr., "Good-
stav." Wilmington, Del.
Meehan. Mr. Charles E., 5 S. Mole St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Meehan, Air. T. Franklin, 400 Vernon
Road, Alt. Airy. (L.)
Aleehan. Air. S. Alendelson, 380 Vernon
Rd., Alt. Airy. CN.)
Mesrarsree. Airs. George AI., 6807 Quincy
St.. Germ,^ntow■n.
Aregargee, Airs. Gilbert, 65 Sussex Rd.,
^^'vnnewood.
Alegee, Airs. C. T., 615 Elkins Ave., El-
kins Park.
Aleier, Air. G. AI.. 1831 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Meigs, Airs. John F., 2d, Ithan.
no
Meirs, Mrs. Richard Wain, 2048 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Meister, Mr. Edwin, Maple Ave., Somer-
ton.
Melcher, Mrs. Webster A., State Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Mellor, Mr. Sigourney, 721 Old Lan-
caster Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Mercer, Mrs. William R., "Aldie,"
Doylestown.
Mercur, Mr. James Watts, Wallingford.
Mercur, Mrs. James Watts, Wallingford.
Meredith, Miss Helen C, 226 S. Church
St., West Chester.
Merrick, Mrs. R. R., Villa Nova.
Merrick, Mrs. Samuel V., Bell's Mill
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Merrill, Mrs. Edward K., 301 Main St.,
Riverton, N. J.
Merritt, Mrs. James S., 8031 .German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Alerritt, Mr. Morris H., 113 W. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Mertz, Mrs. Oscar E., 29 Pelham Road,
Germantown.
Mervine, Mrs. William G., Drexel Hill.
Metcalf, Mrs. W. G., 131 W. Pine St.,
Audubon, N. J.
Meter, Dr. Edward G., 25th and Grand-
view Sts., Mt. Penn.
Meyer, Miss Ada, 325 N. 34th St., Phila-
delphia.
Meyer, Mr. Frank B., Frandama Gardens,
Elkins Park. (C.)
Meyer, Mrs. Fred L., 1014 Prospect Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Meyer, Mrs._ Herman, 325 N. 34th St.,
Philadelphia.
Meyer, Mrs. Walter, 246 W. Upsal St.,
E 401, Philadelphia.
Michell, Mr. F. J., Jr., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Michell, Mr. Frank B., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Mickle, Mrs. Robert Thomas, 430 W.
Stafford St., Germantown.
Middleton, Mrs. Albert C, 232 E. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Middleton, Mrs. C. Wilmer, Haverford.
Middleton, Miss Clara, 1321 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Middleton, Mr. H. C, Jr., 7 Shirley Rd.,
Narberth.
Middleton, Miss Rena S., 1851 W. Mar-
shall St., Norristown.
Middleton, Mrs. Wilmer, 114 W. Ritten-
house St., Gennantown.
Miehle, Miss Edith, 571 E. Norwegian
St., Pottsville.
Miles, Mrs. Frank H.. 910 N. Front St.,
Milton.
Miles, Mr. John M., 541 Rock Spring
Drive, Clarendon, Va.
iMillard, Mrs. H. J., 7907 Rambler Rd.,
F llcins Prirk
Miller, Mrs. A. E., 6804 N. 10th St.,
Philadelphia.
Miller, Mrs. Augustus J., 413 Newbold
Road, Jenkintown.
Miller, Miss Carrie C, The Fenwick
Gardens, Box 212, Salem, N. J. (C.)
Miller, Mrs. Charles, 1520 Spruce St.,
Apt. 1002, Philadelphia.
Miller, Mrs. Clinton H., 3121 W. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Miller, Mrs. D. Yeakel, 500 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Miller, Dr. Edwin B., 204 W. Monument
Ave., Hatboro.
Miller, Mrs. Henry F., 3711 Bonsall
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Miller, Mrs. Merle Middour, Wissahickon
Ave. and Hortter St., Mt. Airy.
Miller, Mr. Walter P., 452 York Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Mills, Mrs. Everett W., 203 Sunset Ave.,
Jenkintown Manor.
Mills, Mr. M. P., 5323 Chester Ave.,
Philadelphia. (C.)
Milne, Mr. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Milne, Mrs. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Milne, Mrs. David, School House Lane,
Germantown.
Minehart, Mrs. John R., 4821 German-
town Ave., Germantown.
Mirkil, Mrs. Thomas H., 3027 Queen
Lane, Philadelphia.
Mitchell, Mrs. Charles Davis, P. O. Box
107, Wallingford.
Mitchell, Mrs. Charles F., 2003 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Mitchell, Mr. George L., 5990 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Mitchell, Mrs. J. B., 6432 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Mitchell, Airs. J. Clayton, North Wales.
Mitchell, Mrs. John J., Jr., Box 137, St.
Davids.
Mitchell, Mrs. John K., Reculver, West
Chester. .
Mitchell, Miss Mary B., 5149 Morris St.,
Germantown.
Monroe, Mr. William H., care of Mrs.
Bruce Ford, Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Montgomery, A'Irs. Kingsley, 20th St. and
Providence Ave., Chester.
Montgomery-, Air. Sidney, F 4, Winder-
mere Court, Wayne. (N.)
Montgomery, Mr. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Montgomery, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Moon, Airs. Owen, Winston Salem, N. C.
Moore, Mrs. A. O., Highland Park,
111.
Afoore, Airs. Bessie R., 299 ATaple Ave.,
Dovlestown.
117
Moore, Mr. Frederick H., care of Mrs.
Horatio Gates Lloyd, Haverford. (G.)
Moore, Mrs. H. McKnight, Box 96, Bryn
Mawr.
Moore, Mrs. H. W., 16 Elliott Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Moore, Mrs. Harold T., Wynnewood.
Moore, Mr. J. Clark, Jr., 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Moore, Mrs. James S., 63 Lodges Lane,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Moore, Mr. John, 233 Sagamore Rd.,
Brookline, Del. Co.
Moore, Mr. Philip H., 6644 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Moore, Mrs. Powers M., 19 Colwyn
Lane, Bala-Cynwyd.
Moore, Mrs. Springer H., Railroad and
Walnut Aves., Haverford.
Moore, Mrs. William G., 257 Kings
Highway, West, Haddonfield, N. J.
Moorhouse, Mrs. H. Wilson, Golf House
and Andover Rds., Haverford.
Morgan, Mrs. Clinton W., Willow Grove.
Morgan, Mrs. F. Corlies, Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. John B., 8635 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. Marshall S., Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Alorgan, Mrs. Ralph, Wyncote.
Morgan, Mrs. Randal, 398 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. Reed A., "Manatawna,"
Roxborough.
Morgan, Mr. Robert C, 314 W. Sey-
mour St., Germantown.
Morian, Mrs. Clarke H., 506 Anthwyn
Road, Merion.
M,ormann, Mrs. M., 355 Windemere Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Morrell, Mrs. Edward, Torresdale.
Alorris, Mrs. A. Saunders, Haverford.
Morris, Mr. Effingham B., Ardmore.
Morris, Miss Elizabeth Canby, 5442 Ger-
mantown Ave., Germantown.
Morris, Miss Ellen, Villa Nova.
Morris, Mrs. Herbert C, Scotforth Road,
Mt. Airy.
Morris, Mrs. J. Cheston, Spjing House.
Morris, Mr. Lawrence J., 212 La-
fayette Bldg., Philadelphia.
Morris, Miss Margaret E., Rosemont.
Morris, Mr. Samuel W., Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Morris, Mrs. Samuel W., Sunset and
Norwood Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Morris, Mrs. W. P., Berwyn.
Morrison, Mrs. J. L, 223 E. Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Morrison, Mr. John, West Gravers La.,
Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Morrison, Mr. John A., 8105 Flourtown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morrow, Mr. Robert J., Towanda St.,
Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Morton, Mrs. Arthur V., 1015 Clinton
St., Philadelphia.
Morton, Mr. George D., Honey Brook,
Chester Co.
Morton, Mr. WUliam, 148 N. 35th St.,
Camden, N. J. (G.)
Moss, Mr. Frank H., Bala.
Mott, Mrs. A. C, Jr., "The Woods,"
Lansdale.
Mott, Miss Marion, Radnor.
Mounce, Mr. Ralph R., 420 Taylor Ave.,
W. Collingswood, N. J.
Moyer, Mr. Alvin W., "Floral Croft,"
Box 106, Dublin. (F.)
Moyer, Mrs. D. Bruce, 701 W. Main St.,
Lansdale.
Moyer, Mr. William F., 229 E. Fomance
St., NorristowTi.
Moyer, Mrs. William F., 229 E. Fornance
St., Norristown.
Mudd, Mrs. Stuart, 734 Millbrook Lane,
Haverford.
Muench, Mrs. Alfred G., 11 Pennstone
Rd., Bryn MawT.
Muffly, Miss Anna J., Howard.
Muhly, Mrs. George C, 464 State Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Mulford, Mrs. S. K., Jr., Meadowbrook.
MuUer, Mr. Adolf, DeKalb Nurseries,
Norristown. (N.)
Muller, Mrs. Frank, St. Davids.
Muller, Airs. Joseph H., 410 Haakon Rd.,
Brooklawn. N. J.
Muller, Mr. O. A., Ambler. (G.)
Mullineaux, Airs. Joseph, 3d, 5 Union
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Murphey, Mrs. W. Rhoads, 423 W. Rit-
tenhouse St., Germantown.
Murphy, Miss Agatha, 16 N. Broadwav,
White Plains, N. Y.
Murtagh, Mrs. J. C, 310 N. High St.,
West Chester.
Musser, Mrs. Charles S., 25 Dudley Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Miss Alice Emily, Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. Frank H. Fleer, Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. Gilbert B., Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mrs. Gilbert B., Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. Gilbert B., Jr., Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. J. Burton, Rosemont.
Myers, Air. B. F., 7716 Navahoe St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Alyers, Mrs. Charles, St. Davids.
Alyers, Airs. J. Walter, 1849 N. Camac
St., Philadelphia.
Alyers, Mrs. Lawrence, 710 Spring Ave.,
Elkins Park,
118
Myers, Mrs. William Kurtz, 206 Winding
Way, Merion,
Nabenhauer, Mr. Fred P., Overhill Ave.,
Somerton.
Naegele, Mr. Herman E., 4920 Cedar
Ave., Philadelphia.
Nakayama, Miss Hana, 131 E. Spring-
field Rd., Springfield.
Nalle, Mrs. Jesse, Whitemarsh,
Nalle, Mrs. Richard T., E. Bells Mill
Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Neale, Mr. James B., Buck Run, Schuyl-
kill Co.
Neall, Miss Adelaide W., Roumfort Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Nearing, Mr. G. Guy, Guyencourt, Del.
(N.)
Neel, Mrs. Percy L., 449 Bo^vman Ave.,
Merion.
Neely, Mrs. Matthew A., Apt. 5, West
Chelten Apts., 146 W. Chelten Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Neff, Mrs. R. C, 76 Sussex Road,
Wynnewood.
Negus, Miss Olive, 2807 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Neilson, Mrs. Edward S., Alliquippa
Farm, Malvern.
Neilson, Mrs. H. R., St. Davids.
Neilson, Mrs. Lewis, St. Davids.
Nelke, Mrs. Herbert L., 1016 70th Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Netter, Mrs. Helen Staples, P. O. Box
25, Penllyn.
Nevin, Mrs. Charles W., 2021 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Nevin, Mrs. William L., Hill Top
Farm, Radnor.
Newbold, Mrs. David, Haverford.
Newbold, Mrs. Eugene S., St. Davids.
Newbold, Miss Frances C., 3300 Pacific
Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
Newbold, Mrs. John daCosta, Jr., Mead-
owbrook Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Newbold, Mrs. John S., Jenkintown.
Newbold, Miss Margaret E. L, Irvine,
Warren Co.
Newburger, Mrs. Frank L., 534 Elkins
Ave., Elkins Park.
Newcomer, Mrs. S. S., IZ Fraley St.,
Kane.
Newell, Miss Marie L., 187 E. Court St.,
Doylestown.
Newhall, Mr. D. A., Old Gulph Road,
Narberth.
Newhall, Mrs. D. A., Old Gulph Road,
Narberth.
Newhall, Mrs. David, 236 Roumfort Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Newhall, Mr. Thomas, Ithan.
Newhall, Mrs. Thomas, Ithan.
Newlin, Mrs. Arthur, 1804 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Newlin, Mrs. Richard M., Whitford.
Newton, Mrs. A. Edw., Berwyn.
Newtown, Mrs. E. Swift, Daylesford.
Nichol, Mrs. James P., 357 Pelham Rd.,
Germantown.
Nichols, Mrs. H. S. Prentiss, 346 Pel-
ham Rd., Germantown.
Nichols, Mr. Roy B., Torresdale.
Nicholson, Mrs. Edgar W., Rose Hedge,
Wynnewood.
Nicholson, Miss Edythe, 308 Florence
Ave., Jenkintown.
Nicholson, Mr. L. A., Rosemont.
Nicholson, Mrs. Percival, 16 W. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Nicholson, Mrs. W. R., 2023 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Nicholson, Mrs. Wm. H., Jr., 118 E.
Oak Ave., Moorestown, N, J.
Niessen, Mr. Arthur A., 507 Liberty
Trust Bldg., Broad and Arch Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Niessen, Mrs. Leo, Box 62, Meadow-
brook.
Noe, Miss Dorothy, 3234 N. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Norcross, Mrs. Clara B., 222 Roberts
Ave., Glenside.
Norcross, Mrs. Theodore F., Ivyland,
Bucks Co.
Norris, Mrs. Charles C, Mt. Pleasant
Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Norris, Mrs. Charles C, Jr., Box 336,
Haverford.
Norris, Miss Elizabeth F., 237 Montgom-
ery Ave., Haverford.
Norris, Mr. George W., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Norris, Mrs. George W., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Norris, Mrs. Wm. Fisher, P. O. Box 146,
Bryn Mawr.
Norstrom, Mr. R. M., 421 Taylor Ave.,
W. Collingswood, N. J.,
North, Mrs. Ralph H., 7301 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
Novelle, Mr. Daniel J., 219 E. Lancaster
Ave., Ardmore.
Nowland, Mrs. Paul J., 2325 W. 16th
St., Wilmington, Del.
Nyce, Mr. W. G., Pottstown.
Oakford, Miss Elsie, Mayfair House,
Lincoln Drive and Johnson St., Ger-
mantown.
Oakford, Mrs. J. W., "Lowlands,"
Waverly.
Obdyke, Miss Mary, Radnor.
Oberholtzer, Mr. Ellis P., 506 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
O'Connor, Mrs. Haldeman, 13 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
O'Donnell, Mrs. Frank P., 325 Syca-
more Ave., Merion.
Off, Mrs. Walter F., Remington Rd.,
Wynnewood.
119
Okeson, Airs. Walter R., Old Stone
House, Old Zionsville.
O'Neill, Mr. Andrew, 127 E. Alermaid
Lane, Philadelphia.
O'Neill, Mrs. W. Charles, Jr., Hunting-
don Valley.
O'Neill, Mrs. W. Paul, Rydal.
Onyx, Mr. Herbert P., R. F. D. 4, West
Chester.
Ord, Mrs. R. Laird, 2503 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Orr, Dr. A. V. B., 525 Welsh St., Ches-
ter.
Orr, Mrs. George P., Berwyn.
Orth, Mrs. C. J., 303 Forrest Ave.,
Ambler.
Osborn, Airs. H. Fairfield, Sheaff La.,
Whitemarsh.
Osborne, Mrs. Frank, Gladwyn, Alloway,
N.J.
Osborne, Mr. John F., 8542 West Chester
Pike, Kirklyn, Upper Darby.
Ostheimer, Aliss Elizabeth G., Jenkin-
town.
Ostheimer, Dr. Alaurice, "Grimmet,"
Whitford.
Ostheimer, Airs. Maurice, "Grimmet,"
Whitford.
Ott, Airs. George W., 128 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Germantown.
Ott, Airs. Lambert, Jr., 90 Alaple Ave.,
Bala-Cyn\vyd.
Otter, Airs. William C, 1016 Oak Lane
Ave., Oak Lane.
Ottey, Mrs. Sara P., 108 Ashby Rd.,
Upper Darby.
Outen, Dr. Charles Wesley, 1606 S. 4th
St., Philadelphia.
Owen, Mrs. W. P., 328 Kent Road, Bala-
Cynwyd.
Packard, Mrs. F. R., 304 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Packard, Mrs. Frederick A., W. Sunset
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Packard, Airs. George Randolph, Villa
Nova.
Packard, Air. George R., Jr., Valley
Forge.
Packard, Airs. John H., White Horse
Road, Berwryn.
Packard, Airs. John H., 3d, Cor. New St.
and Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Page, Mrs. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Edward Sydenham, Wayne.
Page, Mrs. George Bispham, Shipley
Farm, Secane.
Page, Air. George C, Beech Tree Lane,
Wayne.
Page, Mrs. George C, Beech Tree Lane,
Wayne.
Page, Mr. L. Rodman, 1510 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Page, Mrs. Robert H., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Air. Robert H., Jr., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Robert Holmes, "Willow-
brook Farm," Paoli.
Pallatt, Mrs. Winfield D., 7942 Mont-
gomery Ave., Elkins Park.
Palmer, Mrs. Florace J., 241 W. Maple
Ave., Langhorne.
Palmer, Aliss Lydia A., 400 N. 40th St.,
Philadelphia.
Palmer, Dr. Samuel C, Swarthmore Col-
lege, Swarthmore.
Pancoast, Airs. Albert, The Wellington,
Philadelphia.
Pancoast, Mrs. Henry K., Gray's La.,
Haverford.
Pardee, A'liss Olive, Whitemarsh.
Paret, Air. Louis F., 50 E. Oak Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Paret, Mrs. Louis F., 50 E. Oak Ave.,
Aloorestown, N. J.
Parish, Mrs. H. G., Enfield, Montg. Co.
Park, Airs. Frederick S., 343 Brookway
Ave., Merion.
Park, Mrs. Lewis A., Sewickley.
Parker, Air. Hiram, AIoylan-Rose Val-
ley.
Parkhurst, Mrs. Charles W., 130 Der-
wen Rd., Bala-Cynwyd.
Parmiter, A'Irs. Edward, Summit Ave.,
Fort Washington.
Parry, Air. Edward H., Box 84, Wyn-
cote.
Parry, Mrs. George, 307 Wyncote Rd.,
Jenkintown.
Parry, Mrs. Henry C., Langhorne.
Parry, Mrs. William B., Langhorne.
Parsons, Mrs. J. Clarence, S. Main St.,
Phoenixville.
Parsons, Mrs. Lewis H., Villa Nova.
Passmore, Airs. Benjamin J., Alalvern.
Passmore, Airs. E. P., 133 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Mt. Airy.
Passmore, Air. Gilbert E., 132 Lacey St.,
West Chester.
Passmore, Mrs. Lillian H., 1022 Alarlyn
Rd., Philadelphia.
Patrick, Airs. F. Al., Lafayette Rd., Co-
lonial Village, Wayne.
Patterson, Mrs. Charles L., Fair Hills
Farm, Chadds Ford.
Patterson, Air. Henry C, Church Rd.,
Wallingford.
Patterson, Airs. Henry C, Church Rd.,
Wallingford.
Patterson, Air. Samuel, 131 Stratford
Ave., Aldan.
Patterson, Airs. William T., Bethlehem
Pike, Ambler.
Patton, Mrs. Henry B., Rose and Laurel
Lanes, Haverford.
Paul, Mr. A. J. Drexel, Radnor.
Paul, Airs. Maurice Gordon, "Crosswicks
Farms," Rydal.
120
Paul, Mrs. Theodore S., 8009 Navahoe
St., Chestnut Hill.
Paulson, Mr. Arthur, 2644 Island RcL,
Philadelphia.
Paulson, Miss Frances E., 7209 Lincoln
Drive, Philadelphia.
Paxson, Miss Bertha R., 8764 Frankford
Ave., Holmesburg.
Paxson, Mrs. J. Warren, 219 Vassar Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Payne, Mr. W. Guy, 2104 Market St.,
Pottsville. (F.)
Peace, Mrs. Philip, Haverford.
Peace, Mrs. William S., Rydal.
Peachey, Dr. George F., 32 W. Upsal
St., Germantown.
Pearce, Mrs. H. G., Haverford.
Pearson, Mrs. Edwin, 106 Jefferson Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Pearson, Mr. Eric A., 215 W. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Pearson, Mrs. S. D., 421 Moody Ave.,
New Castle.
Pease, Mrs. Henry H., 2307 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Peck, Mrs. Frank C, 29 E. Benezet St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Peck, Mrs. Staunton B., Montgomery
Ave. and Birch Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Peck, Mr. William J., 220 Washington
St., Pittston.
Peeples, Miss Marjorie, Hammonton,
N.J.
Peirce, Mrs. Daniel N., Bryn Athyn.
Peirce, Mrs. Frederick, 370 Aubrey Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Peirce, Mrs. Harold, Haverford.
Peirce, Mr. Robert F., 1961 Woodvale
Ave., Mt. Penn.
Peirsol, Mrs. Henry A., 219 Lafayette
Ave., Swarthmore.
Peirson, Mrs. Edith M., 244 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Peirson, Mrs. Edwin J., Virginia Ave.,
Phoenixville.
Peirson, Mrs. Walter, Jr., King of Prus-
sia Road, Radnor.
Pemberton, Mrs. Ralph, Paoli.
Pennell, Miss Elizabeth S., Hildemere
Gardens, Wawa. (N.)
Pennington, Mrs. A. G., Radnor.
Pennock, Mrs. A. L., 6300 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Pennock, Mrs. Anna C, 35 Violet Lane,
Lansdowne.
Pennock, Mr. George L., 165 W. Essex
Ave., Lansdowne. (C.)
Pennock, Mrs. George L., 165 W. Essex
Ave., Lansdowne.
Pennock, Mr. J. Liddon, 1514 Chestnut
St., Philadelphia. (F.)
Pennock, Mr. Samuel S., 1612 Ludlow
St., Philadelphia. (W.)
Pennock, Mrs. Samuel S., Lansdowne
Court, Lansdowne.
Penrose, Miss Valeria F., 152 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Pepper, Mrs. Franklin, Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Devon.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Jr., St. Davids
Rd., St. Davids.
Pepper, Mrs. John W., Jenkintown.
Pepper, Mrs. O. H. Perry, Ithan.
Pepper, Mrs. William, Melrose Park.
Perkins, Mrs. Charles C., Box 82, Bryn
Mawr.
Perkins, Mrs. James G. B., East Lane
and Jarden Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Perkins, Mrs. Wilkins J., Garden Court,
47th and Pine Sts., Philadelphia.
Perrott, Mrs. Raymond F., 3119 Midvale
Ave., Philadelphia.
Perry, Mrs. Henry Hillman, Merion
Ave. and Gulph Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Pershing, Mrs. Edgar J., Penllyn.
Peter, Mr. Albert G., 6212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peter, Mrs. Albert G., 6212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peter, Mrs. Luther C, 121 E. Mt. Pleas-
ant Ave., Mt. Airy.
Peterman, Mr. C. W., 1115 Merrick Ave.,
CoUingswood, N. J.
Peters, Mrs. J. D., 812 Swede St., Nor-
ristown.
Peters, Mrs. William, 1011 Wakeling St.,
Frankford.
Pettit, Mrs. Hannah T., 429 W. Stafford
St., Germantown.
Petty, Mrs. David M., Paul and Beverly
Aves., Bethlehem.
Pew, Mrs, Arthur E., Jr., "Spring-
brook Farm," Bryn Mawr.
Pew, Mrs. J. Howard, Ardmore.
Pew, Mrs. John G., P. O. Box 23,
Moylan.
Pew, Mrs. Mary C, Roberts Rd. and
Morris Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Pfahler, Mrs. Alfred E., "Seven Acres,"
Whitehorse Rd., Paoli.
Pfahler, Dr. George E., 6463 Drexel Rd.,
Overbrook.
Pharo, Mrs. Albert E., 224 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Pharo, Mr. Robert T., 2d, 239 Brookline
Blvd., Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Pharo, Mrs. Walter W., Haverford.
Phelps, Mr. W. E., Guyencourt, Del.
Phillips, Mrs. Jos. L., Torresdale.
Phreaner, Dr. W. A., 1701 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Pickford, Mrs. Albert W., 206 Clwyd
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Pickles, Mr. William W., 4143 Paul St.,
Frankford.
121
Pierce, Mr. F. G., 205 Llanfair Rd., Ard-
more.
Pierce, Mr. F. Hastings, Center Bldg.,
69th and Market Sts., Upper Darby.
Piercy, Miss Mary K., 1107 Walnut St.,
Allentown.
Pilling, Mr. Charles J., 42 Windemere
Ave., Lansdowne.
Pilling, Mr. W. S., 229 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Piquemal, Mrs. Lisette, Lisette Farm,
Ambler.
Pitcairn, Mrs. Raymond, Bryn Athyn.
Piatt, Mr. Charles, 1681 Willow Grove
Ave., Laverock, Chestnut Hill.
Piatt, Mrs. Charles, 3d, Prospect Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Piatt, Mrs. Henry Norris, Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Piatt, Mr. J. C, Waverly.
Piatt, Mrs. John O., Paoli.
Plumly, Mrs. George, 2812 Midvale Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Plummer, Mrs. William T., Bleddyn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Poffenberger, Airs. G. L., 257 W. Pine
St., Audubon, N. J.
Poley, Mr. Corson, Salem Rd., Burling-
ton, N. J.
Pollock, Mrs. Roland D., 8319 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Pollock, Mrs. Walter, 7721 St. Martins
La., Chestnut Hill.
Pomeroy, Mrs. Charles Maull, 604 N.
Jackson St., Media.
Pond, Mrs. C P., 6712 N. 11th St., Oak
Lane.
Pond, Mr. Raymond, 237 W. Che ken
Ave., Germantown.
Poole, Mrs. Frank, Eagle Road, Bon Air,
Upper Darby.
Porter, Mr. Andrew, 405 Elm Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Porter, Mrs. Andrew, 405 Elm Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Porter, Miss Catherine B., 2215 Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
Porter, Miss Dorothy B., 209 St. James
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Porter, Miss Elva., 424 Owen Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Porter, Miss Lucille, Ashbourne .Rd.,
Cheltenham.
Porter, Miss Mary H., 209 St. James
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Porter, Miss Muriel A., 209 St. James
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Porter, Miss Ruth, "Spring Hill," Valley
Forge.
Porter, Mrs. W. Hobart, Woodleave Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Porter, Mrs. William W., Valley Forge.
Potsdamer, Mrs. J. B., 2201 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Potts, Mrs. Charles E., 313 E. Lancaster
Ave., Wayne.
Potts, Mr. Harrison L, 1006 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Potts, Mrs. Harrison I., 1006 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Potts, Miss Helen R., 901 Swede St.,
Norristown.
Potts, Mrs. Horace Miles, 1008 W. Hort-
ter St., Mt. Airy.
Potts, Mrs. Joseph, Walnut Ave., Wayne.
Potts, Mr. William M., Wyebrooke,
Chester Co,
Poultney, Mr. E. C, Box 381, Gwynedd
Valley.
Powell, Mrs. Charles, 41 E. Montgomery
Ave., Ardmore.
Powell, Mr. Gerald, 406 Woodland Ave.,
Wayne.
Powell, Mrs. Humbert Borton, Willow-
dale Farm, Devon.
Powell, Miss Marion, Radnor.
Powers, Mr, Thomas Harris, First
St., Broadmoor, Colorado Springs,
Colo.
Pratt, Mrs. Henry S., Haverford.
Pratt, Mrs. L. P., 5820 Morris St., Ger-
mantown.
Price, Mr. Edward Trotter, Spotts-
wood Farm, Broad Axe, Montg. Co.
I' rice, Mr. Eli Kirk, 709 V/alnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Price, Mrs. Eli Kirk, 1709 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Prichett, Mr. W. B., 6205 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Prime, Mrs. Alfred C, Darby Rd.,
Paoli.
Prince, Mrs. David Chandler, 150 Guern-
sey Rd., Swarthmore.
Prince, Mr. John W., 5439 Berks St.,
Philadelphia. (C.)
Propert, Mrs. Frank C, 139 Merion Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Pruss, Mrs. John, 119 Princeton Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Prytherch, Mr. Elmer E., 4700 Sansom
St., Philadelphia.
Pugh, Miss Anne J., City Line Ave.,
Overbrook.
Pugh, Mrs. William Barrow, 226 W.
Mowry St., Chester.
Purnell, Miss Alaude, Carson College,
Flourtown.
Pusey, Mrs. F. S., Aldwyn Lane, Villa
Nova.
Pusey, Mr. H. Carroll, Swarthmore.
Pusey, Mrs. Joseph M., 2200 Shallcross
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Putnam, Mrs. Earl B., 1926 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Pyle, Mr. Robert, Conard and Pyle
Co., West Grove. (C.)
122
Pyle, Mrs. Robert C, 3d, Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Quinn, Mrs. F. McD., 217 Whitemarsh
Rd., Merion Golf Manor, Ardmore.
Rader, Mrs. Archibald F., Box 1, Haver-
ford.
Raiguel, Miss Ellen M., 217 W. Michigan
Ave., DeLand, Fla.
Rakestraw, Mr. Frederick A., 5917
Drexel Road, Overbrook.
Rakestraw, Mrs. Frederick A., 5917
Drexel Road, Overbrook.
Ramsay, Mrs. William G., Guyencourt,
Del.
Rand, Mr. Louis M., 42 Ridley Ave.,
Norwood, Del. Co.
Randall, Mrs. Alexander, Laughlin Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Miss Anna, 218 W. Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Mr. Evan, Seminole and
Chestnut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Mrs. Evan, Seminole and
Chestnut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Rasmussen, Mr. Alfred O., 7 Heather-
bloom Apts., State College.
Rasmussen, Mr. Seren, care of Mr. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Ratcliff, Mr. Wayne W., 152 Montgom-
ery Ave., Cynwyd.
Rau, Dr. C. Fred, Rydal.
Ranch, Mrs. Rudolph S., Villa Nova.
Ravdin, Dr. L S., 4623 Larchwood Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Ravenel, Miss Clare W., 2100 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Rawle, Miss Louisa, Roberts Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Rawson, Mrs. Edmund G., 7 W. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Ray, Mr. C. Paul, Jr., Winsford Rd.,
Bryn Mawr.
Rayford, Mr. J. J., Henderson, Texas.
Raymond, Mr. Charles A., 302 Bewley
Rd., Llanerch.
Rea, Mrs. Samuel, Bryn Mawr.
Read, Mrs. Charles N., Elkins Park.
Read, Mrs. W. B., Conshohocken.
Reath, Mrs. Benjamin, The Wellington,
Philadelphia.
Reath, Mrs. Theodore W., Pont Read-
ing House, Ardmore.
Reath, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., P. O. Box 4357,
Chestnut Hill.
Reber, Mrs. J. Howard, 135 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Rebmann, Mrs. G. R., 216 Glenn Rd.,
Ardmore.
Rebmann, Mrs. G. R., Jr., Millbrook
Lane, Haverford.
Reckefus, Dr. Charles H., Jr., 506 N.
6th St., Philadelphia.
Redgrave, Mr. Arthur R. O., 308 Vassar
Ave., Swarthmore.
Reed, Mrs. Alan H.. Hall Rd., Wyn-
cote.
Reed, Mr. Thomas S., 4023 Bliss Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Reed, Mrs. William Gardner, 130 Glen-
view Ave., Wyncote.
Rees, Mrs. James L, R. D. 1, Bridgeport.
Reese, Mrs. Charles Lee, 16th and
Brinckle Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Reeve, Mrs. J. Stanley, Haverford.
Reeve, Miss Laura, 2222 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Reeve, Mrs. Percival J., 225 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Reeve, Mrs. W. F., 170 E. Main St.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Reeves, Miss Eleanor M., 519 W. Wal-
nut Lane, Germantown.
Reeves, Mr. Frank A., 95 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Reeves, Mrs. Horace A., 519 W. Walnut
La., Germantown.
Reeves, Mrs. S. K., 220 Pembroke Ave.,
St. Davids.
Register, Mrs. Henry C, Haverford.
Rehfuss, Mrs. Charles T., R. F. D. 1,
Norristown.
Reichert, Miss Emma H., 48 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Reid, Mr. Carn, 1611 Greenway Ave.,
Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Reid, Mr. William, 7000 Cresheim Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Reimann, Mrs. S. P., 516 Arbutus St.,
Germantown.
Reinhardt, Mrs. Henry B., Laurel Lane,
Haverford.
Renard, Miss Ella S., 201 E. Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Renner, Mrs. H. B., Valley and Circle
Rds., Paoli.
Rentschler, Mr. William H., Linwood,
N. J. (C.)
Repplier, Mrs. Sidney J., Z7Z Roumfort
Rd., Mt. Airy.
Reuss, Mrs. William, 504 Allen Lane,
Philadelphia.
Reynolds, Mrs. Harry L., 232 Haverford
Ave., Swarthmore.
Rhoads, Mrs. Charles J., 2839 Woodland
Drive, Washington, D. C.
Rhoads, Mrs. Logan, 2112 Delancey PI.,
Philadelphia.
Rhoads, Miss Lydia Wistar, 152 School
House Lane, Germantown.
Rhoads, Mr. William E., R. D. 3, Box
143, Moorestown, N. J.
Rhoads, Mrs. William E., R. D. 3, Box
143, Moorestown, N. J.
Rhodes, Mrs. Samuel N., Media.
Rice, Miss Gulielma R., Morton.
Rich, Mr. Lewis D., 4820 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
123
Richards, Miss Helen E., 809 Swede St.,
Norristown.
Richards, Mrs. J. Ernest, 49 E. 96th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Richards, Mrs. Robert H., 2102 Park-
way, Wilmington, Del.
Richards, Mrs. Samuel Bartram, 1811
DeLancey Place, Philadelphia.
Richards, JVIr. Thomas J., 4601 Market
St., Philadelphia.
Richardson, Mrs. E. Stanley, 326 W. Al-
len Lane, Mt. Airy.
Richardson, Mr. Frederick, 421 E. Lan-
caster Ave., St. Davids.
Richardson, Miss Grace, The Kenihvorth,
Alden Park, Germantown.
Richardson, Dr. Russell, 320 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Richardson, Mrs. Tolbert N., West
School House Lane, Germantown.
Ricketts, Miss Clara, 133 Bayard St.,
Kane.
Ridgely, Mrs. Henry, Dover, Del.
Riehm, Mr. George W., 2319 Fuller St..
Philadelphia.
Rieker, Mrs. Carl L., 119 Lynnwood Ave.,
Glenside.
Righter, Miss Jane, Dublin Rd., Green-
wich, Conn.
Riley, Mr. George J., 1634 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Rimmer, Miss Agatha E., 618 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ristine, Mrs. Charles S., Strafford.
Ritchie, Mrs. C. L., Livezev Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Riter, Mrs. Michael M., Jr., 119 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Rittenhouse, Mrs. Leon H., 6 College
Lane, Haverford.
Ritter, Dr. Frank G., 1132 Divinity St.,
Philadelphia.
Ritter, Mr. W. H., 5424 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Robb, Mrs. Henry B., 1726 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Robbins, Mrs. George A., Butler Pike,
Ambler.
Robbins, Mr. George S., Rose Lane,
Haverford.
Robbins, Mrs. George S., Rose La.,
Haverford.
Roberts, Mrs. A. C, Kimberton.
Roberts, Mrs. Algernon B., Bala.
Roberts, Miss Alice S., R. F. D. Box 133,
Willow Grove.
Roberts, Mr. Charles C, 75 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Roberts, Mr. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Mrs. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Mrs. G. W. B., 1806 DeLancey
PI., Philadelphia.
Roberts, Mrs. Isaac W., Bala.
Roberts, Miss Jane L., 6439 Cherokee
St., Germantown.
Roberts, Mrs. T. Williams, Pencoyd
Farm, Bala.
Roberts, Mr. Thomas, care of Mrs. Ed-
ward Morrell, Torresdale. (G.)
Roberts, Mrs. William H., Wynderley,
Moorestown, N. J.
Robertson, Mr. Isdale, 1501 W. 10th St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Robertson, Mrs. Tate MacEwen, Devon.
Robertson, Mr. W. H., Glenmeade
Farms, R. D. 1, Malvern.
Robertson, Mr. William, 238 Lenoir Ave.,
Wayne. (G.)
Robins, Mrs. Thomas, 618 Hazlehurst
Ave., Merion.
Robins, Mrs. William B., 38 E. Penn St.,
Germantown.
Robinson, Mrs. Alex., Jr., 31 Sproul Rd.,
Broomall.
Robinson, Mr. Anthony W., 780 Col-
lege Ave., Haverford.
Robmson, Mrs. H. N., 211 Franklin Ave.,
Norristown.
Robinson, Mrs. Louis Barclay, 235 S.
15th St., Philadelphia.
Robinson, Miss Lydia S. AL, Paoli.
Robinson, Mrs. M. D., 302 A, Oak Lane
Manor Apts., Valley Rd., Oak Lane.
Robinson, Mrs. Penrose, Emlen Arms,
6733 Emlen St., Germantown.
Robinson, Mr. V. Gilpin, 312 Baltimore
Ave., Clifton Heights.
Robinson, Mrs. V. Gilpin, 312 Baltimore
Ave., Clifton Heights.
Robison, Mrs. H. K., 3018 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Rockenbach, Miss Minnie, 127 W. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Rodeback, Miss Ella A., 413 9th St..
Upland, Del. Co.
Rodgers, Mrs. James, 630 W. Allen Lane,
Germantown.
Rodman, Mrs. J. Stewart, 51 Manor Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Rodney, Dr. Matilda W., Manheim Trust
Bldg., Germantown.
Roehm, Mrs. Mary J., 515 Hamilton St.,
Norristown.
Rogan, Mrs. John M., 313 St. Davids
Rd., Wayne.
Rogers, Mrs. Guy W., 36 Linden Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Rogers, Miss Irene, "Oaklands," Haver-
ford.
Rogers, Mrs. James S., 854 Buck Lane,
Haverford.
Rogers, Miss Lillian E., 1011 Larchmont
Ave., Penfield, Upper Darby.
Roney, Mrs. Henry R., 33 Lafayette Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Root, Miss Fannie A., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
124
Root, Miss Mary L., 631 E. Lever ington
Ave., Roxborough.
Root, Mr. Stanley W., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Root, Mrs. Stanley W., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Rorer, Miss Elizabeth U., 43 W. Logan
St., Germantown.
Rosenberg, Mrs. A., Majestic Hotel,
Broad St. and Girard Ave., Philadel-
phia.
Rosenbluth, Mr. Edwin M., WalHngford.
(C.)
Rosengarten. Mrs. Adolph, St. Davids.
Rosengarten, Mr. George D., Malvern.
Rosengarten, Mrs. George D., Mal-
vern.
Rosengarten, Mr. J. C, Villa Nova.
Rosengarten, Mrs. J. Clifford, Villa
Nova.
Rosengarten, Mr. Joseph G., Jr., 916
Parrish St., Philadelphia.
Rosenwald, Mrs. Lessing J., Abington.
Rosenwald, Mrs. William, Washington
Lane opp. Maple Ave., Wyncote.
Ross, Mrs. Adam A., 121 Bleddyn Road,
Ardmore.
Ross, Mrs. Donald P., Montchanin,
Del.
Ross, Mr. Harry, % Mrs. William O.
Lentz, Rydal. (G.)
Ross, Mrs. Henry A., Huron St. and
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ross, Mrs. John R., 256 W. Summit Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Ross, Mrs. Joseph, 6503 Wissahickon
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Ross, Miss Matilda, 7 Gordon Ave.,
Haverford.
Ross, Miss Sophia L., 8014 Crefeldt St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Ross, Mrs. T. Edward, 119 Bleddyn
Road, Ardmore.
Rossell, Mrs. Axel, Devon.
Rossmassler, Mrs. Richard, 208 Glenn
Rd., Ardmore.
Rotan, Mrs. Ellwood J., "Old Oak
Farm," Valley Forge.
Rotan, Mrs. Samuel P., E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Roth, Mrs. William H., 447 E. Mt. Pleas-
ant Ave., Germantown.
Rothe, Mr. Max H., 7142 Germantown
Ave., Mt. Airy. (F.)
Rothe, Mr. Richard, Limekiln Pike and
Church Rd., Glenside. (C.)
Rowland, Mrs. Louis H., Radnor.
Rowland, Mrs. William C., 145 Maple-
wood Ave., Germantown.
Rowland, Mrs. William L., Rose Tree
and Crum Creek Roads, Media.
Ruberg, Mrs. Morris, 504 Runnymede
Ave., Jenkintown.
Rucker, Mrs. T. W., Jr., 324 Kent Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Rudley, Mr. William I., 721 Girard Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Rue, Mrs. Howard S., Fisher Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Rumpp, Mr. H. C, 5th and Cherry Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Rumpp, Miss Marie W., 5710 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Rupert, Mrs. Charles G., "Sedgely," Wil-
mington, Del.
Ruschenberger, Mrs. Charles Wister,
Strafford.
Rush, Mrs. Arthur, Highland and Wyn-
cote Aves., Jenkintown.
Rush, Mr. Benjamin, 1600 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Rush, Mrs. Benjamin, West Chester.
Rush, Mrs. R. Stockton, Conestoga Rd.,
Wayne.
Russell, Mrs. John, Jr., Rosemont.
Russell, Mrs. William H., 215 Mattison
Ave., Ambler.
Rust, Mr. David, 1010 Fayette St.,
Conshohocken.
Ryder, Miss Grace G., Box 97, Berwyn.
Saam, Miss Amalia, 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Saam, Miss Anna S., 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Saam, Miss C. Elsa, 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Sackett, Mrs. Benjamin R., 6109 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Sackett, Mrs. Franklin Page, 410 Love
Lane, Wynnewood.
Sallade, Miss Florence D., 50 N. Wake-
field Road, Norristown.
Salmon, Dr. Leon T., New Hope,
Bucks Co.
Samuel, Miss Maria B., 2015 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Samuel, Mrs. Snowden, St. Davids Ave.,
St. Davids.
Sanson, Mrs. Albert W., 5826 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Sappington, Mrs. S. W., Box 81, Bryn
Mawr.
Sargent, Mr. Winthrop, Haverford.
Sargent, Mrs. Winthrop, Jr., Haverford.
Sartain, Miss Harriet, School of Design,
Broad and Master Sts., Philadelphia.
Satterthwaite, Mr. Walter B., 5936 Bel-
den St., Philadelphia.
Saul, Mrs. Maurice Bower, Moylan-Rose
Valley.
Saul, Mrs. Robert E., 108 Orchard Way,
Rosemont.
Saunders, Mrs. W. B., 5930 City Line
Ave., Overbrook.
Saunders, Mrs. W. L., Idlewild Farms,
Bryn Mawr.
125
Savage, Mrs. D. Fitzhugh, 4249 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia,
Savage, Mrs. Ernest C., E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Savage, Mr. Walter P., 2416 W. 78th
Ave., Philadelphia.
Savidge, Mrs. Frank R., Box 217, Devon.
Savidge, Mrs. Alary M., Ill Montgomery
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Savill, Mrs. Thomas M., 208 Cedar Lane,
Highland Park, Upper Darby P. O.
Saylor, Mrs. Kate L, Fallsington, Bucks
Co.
Sayres, Mrs. Edward S., Box 51, Haver-
ford.
Scatchard, Mr. Wm., 3911 Henry Rd.,
East Falls.
Scattergood, Mrs. Alfred G., "Awbury,"
Germantown.
Scattergood, Mrs. J. Henry, Villa Nova.
Scattergood, Mr. T. Walter, 75 N. Owen
Ave., Lansdowne.
Scattergood, Mrs. Thomas, 3515 Powel-
ton Ave., Philadelphia.
Schaal, Mr. Harry, S. W. cor. Albemarle
and Beverly Rds., Drexel Hill Gardens,
Del. Co.
Schaeffer, Airs. Charles F., 2217 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Schaffer, Hon. Wm. I., Haverford.
Schai¥er, Airs. Wm. I., Haverford.
Schaffhauser. Airs. Fred, 7151 Sprague
St., Alt. Air}'.
Schaible, Airs. Charles AI., 25 Columbia
Ave., Vineland, N. J.
Schearer, Air. H. F., 30 Princeton Rd.,
Brookline. (N.)
Schedin, Airs. P. H., School of Horticul-
ture, Ambler.
Scheetz, Airs. Francis H., 9 Gordon Ave.,
Haverford.
Scheetz, Mrs. William C, 433 Bryn
Alawr Ave., Cynwyd.
Scheffey, Airs. Lewis C, Alerion and
Rockland Rds., Merion.
Schellenger, Airs. E. A. Y., 33 Fithian
Ave., Alerchantville, N. J.
Schenck,_ Airs. William A., R. F. D. 2,
Phoenixville.
Schenker, Miss Florence J., 130 W. Ash-
mead St., Philadelphia.
Schierenbeck, Air. L., Curren Terrace,
Norristown.
Schimpf, Airs. Henry L., Jr., 7100 AIc-
Callum St., Alt. Airy.
Schindler, Aliss Alinnie, 2740 N. 11th St..
Philadelphia.
Schissler, Aliss Rose, 2605 W. Harold
St., Philadelphia.
Schlacks, Airs. Charles H., Bryn Alawr.
Schlichter, Aliss Carrie T., 3321 N. 16th
St., Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Airs. Charles E., 7837 York
Road, Elkins Park.
Schmidt, Air. Edward A., 127 Edward
St., Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Air. Fred W., 127 Edward St.,
Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Airs. Helene K., Ashwood Rd.,
Villa Nova.
Schmitt, Mr. Xavier E. E., Horticul-
tural Hall, West Park, Philadelphia.
(G.)
Schneider, Air. Herbert C, 803 E. Wash-
ington La., Germantown.
Schobinger, Airs. George, 301 Swarth-
more Ave., Swarthmore.
Schoeppe, Air. Edward, 331 AIar\an Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Schoeppe, Airs. Edward, 331 Alarvin Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Schoettle, Air. Edwin J., 533 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Schofield, Airs. Frank E., 212 Llanfair
Rd., Ardmore.
Schofield, Air. James D., 545 E. Hermi-
tage St., Roxborough.
Schoneman, Airs. R. A., 6429 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
Schraishuhn, Airs. Charles A., 703 N.
64th St., Philadelphia.
Schuck, Mrs. Leon H., 6 Fifth Ave.,
Haddon Heights. N. J.
Schuler, Airs. L. A., Rose Lane, Haver-
ford.
Schultz, Air. Elmer K., The Cambridge,
Alden Park, Germantown.
Schultz, Miss Emma K., Worcester.
Schultz. Aliss Rebecca L, 54 N. Wake-
field Rd., Norristown.
Schumacher, Air. William H., 226 Hewitt
Road, Glenside.
Schumacker. Airs. H. J., 1204 Wakeling
St., Frankford.
Schumann, Dr. Edward A., 15 Pelham
Rd.. Alt. Airy.
Schutt, Airs. Harold S., 2204 Grant Ave.,
Wilmington, Del.
Schuyler, Airs. James E., 35 N. Harwood
Rd., Upper Darby.
Scott, Mr. Alexander B., The Coving-
ton Hotel, 37th and Chestnut Sts.,
Philadelphia,
Scott. Aliss Alice A., 6070 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Scott, Mrs. Arthur Hoyt, Todmorden
Farm, Brookhaven Rd., Media,
Scott, Airs. Charles Henry, Jr., St.
Davids.
Scott, Airs. Edgar, Woodbourne, Lans-
downe.
Scott, Miss Florence B,, Box 119,
Wynnewood.
Scott, Air. Henry J., 1012 Fox Bldg.,
1612 Alarket St., Philadelphia.
Scott, Airs. Henry P., Delaware City,
Del.
126
Scott, Mrs. Hugh D., Jr., 348 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
Scott, Mr. Joseph M., 137 Hewett Rd.,
Wyncote.
Scott, Mrs. Samuel B., 1 Norman Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Scott, Mrs. W. M., Jr., 7207 Boyer St.,
Philadelphia.
Scott, Mrs. William R., 5439 North-
umberland St., Pittsburgh.
Scull, Mrs. Marshall, 8525 Ardmore Rd.,
Chestnut Hill.
Scull, Mrs. William C, Bryn Mawr.
Scull, Mrs. William S., Mayfair House,
Lincoln Drive and Johnson St., Ger-
mantown.
Seabrease, Mrs. N. McLean, Whitpain
Farm, Ambler.
Seal, Mrs. Joseph S., 230 Cornell Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Sealey, Mrs. William, Langhorne.
Search, Mrs. Hendrick W., 202 St.
Mark's Square, Philadelphia.
Sears, Mr. Thomas Warren, 1600 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia. (L.)
Seeburger, Mrs. Frank, 11 Maple Ave.,
Bala-Cyn\vyd.
Seeds, Mrs. Joseph R., 151 W. School
La., Germantown.
Seeler, Mrs. Edgar V., Dengleton Farm,
Newtown Square.
Seeley, Mrs. Oscar, White Horse Rd.,
Paoli.
Seifriz, Dr. William, Dept. of Botany,
University of Penna., Philadelphia.
Seipt, Mrs. Samuel A., 507 Wyndmoor
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Sellers, Mrs. Horace W., Ardmore.
Sellers, Mrs. Howard, "Shadowbrook,"
P. O. Box 249, Wynnewood.
Sellner, Miss Ema, Bryn Athyn.
Seltzer, Mr. Richard J., 5700 City Line,
Overbrook.
Semple, Miss Helen, Green Hill Farms,
Overbrook.
Senat, Mrs. Herbert D., 301 Glenolden
Ave., Glenolden, Del. Co.
Senter, Mrs. Ralph T., Lancaster and
Bowman Aves., Overbrook.
Serrill. Mr. John B., 1413 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Serrill, Mr. William J., Haverford.
Serrill, Mrs. William J., Haverford.
Service, Mrs. Charles A., City Ave., Bala.
Seufifert, Mrs. George W., 3936 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Sewall, Mr. Arthur W., 1311 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Sewall, Mrs. Arthur W., 1311 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Sewell, Mrs. Robert, Rydal.
Sewell, Mrs. W. J., Jr., St. Martins La.,
Chestnut Hill.
Seyler, Mr. H. G., Farr Nursery Co.,
Weiser Park. (N.)
Shafer, Miss Lillian, 6814 N. Carlisle St.,
Philadelphia.
Shaffer, Mrs. A. C, Forrest Ave.,
Wayne.
Shaffer, Miss Mary J. K., Malvern.
Shaffer, Mrs. Philip C, Jr., 2962 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Shallcross, Mrs. Frank A., 4015 Tyson
St., Tacony.
Shallcross, Mrs. J. Burton, 313 Manheim
St., Germantown.
Shand, Miss Helen E., 226 Upland Way,
Wayne.
Shannon, Mrs. T. Taylor, 4920 Cedar
Ave., Philadelphia.
Sharp, Miss Estelle L., Berwyn.
Sharp, Mrs. Henry E., 710 Stradone Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Sharp, Mrs. Marie B., Pembroke Ave.,
St. Davids.
Sharp, Mrs. Walter P., P. O. Box 7,
Ithan.
Sharpe, Mrs. John S., Haverford.
Sharpless, Mrs. S. F., 1919 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Sharpless, Mrs. W. W., 848 Turner Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Shaw, Mr. George F., Bowman and Hay-
wood Aves., Merion.
Shaw, Mrs. Joseph, 418 Vernon Road,
Jenkintown.
Shaw, Mr. Richard M., Box 3, Rose-
mont. (G.)
Sheafer, Mrs. Arthur W., 1443 Mahon-
tongo St., Pottsville.
Shearer, Mrs. Christine S., Worcester,
Montg. Co.
Shearman, Miss Margaret H., 231 Wi-
nona St., Germantown.
Sheas, Mr. Jerome J., Valley Forge Park,
Valley Forge.
Sheble, Mrs. Frank J., 311 Roumfort Rd.,
Mt. Airy.
Sheble, Mrs. J. Howard, Jr., Rydal.
Sheets, Mr. George, 39 E. Knowles Ave.,
Glenolden, Del. Co.
Sheldon, Mr. O. D., 416 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Shellenberger, Mrs. James M., Golf View
Rd., Doylestown.
Shelly, Mrs. Dayton, 6350 N. 8th St., Oak
Lane.
Shelton, Mrs. Frederick H._, 1830 S. Rit-
tenhouse Sq., Philadelphia.
Shepard, Mrs. Frederick M., 1 E. Hamp-
ton Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Sheppard, Mrs. E. M., Roumfort Inn, Mt.
Airy.
Sherk, Mr. David M., Garrett Hill.
Sherman, Mrs. C. Lester, Jr.. N. E. Cor.
Bala and Kent Roads, Bala-Cynwyd.
127
Shermer, Mrs. George Y., 100 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Sherrerd, Mrs. Henry D. M., 41 Chew's
Landing Rd., Haddonfield, N. J.
Shewbrooks, Dr. Daniel M., Mayfair
House, Lincoln Drive at Johnson St.,
Germantown.
Shewbrooks, Mrs. Daniel M., Mayfair
House, Lincoln Drive at Johnson St.,
Germantown.
Shimer, Miss Florence L., Riegelsville.
Shingle, Miss Anna A., 5127 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Shinn, Mr. Russel M., 1324 McKinlev
Ave., Colonial Manor, Westville P. O.,
N.J.
Shirley, Mrs. Harold R., 7303 Emlen St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Shoemaker, Miss Anialia L, 8203 Forest
Ave., Elkins Park.
Shoemaker, Mrs. B. H., 2d, 523 Church
Lane, Germantown.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Caroline B., Bon Air,
Upper Darby P. O.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Charles S., 1432 Ter-
mon Ave., N. S., Pittsburgh.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Edward C., 904 DeKalb
St., Norristown.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Edwin, Brookside
Farm, Paoli.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Harry, 255 W. Court
St., Doylestown.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Harvey, Church Rd.,
Wallingford.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Louis Jack, "Terwood,"
Huntingdon Valley.
Shoemaker, Mr. Samuel. 1214-1215
Franklin Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Shrigley, Mr. Arthur, 150 Hilldale Rd.,
Lansdowne.
Shrigley, Miss Ethel Austin, 60 S.
Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne.
Shrigley, Mrs. Leigh Hunt, Lenox Rd.,
Jenkintown.
Shryock, Miss G. A., The Clinton, 10th
and Clinton Sts., Philadelphia.
Shryock, Mr. James R., 5722 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Shute, Mrs. Albert Dement, 740 High
St., Pottstown.
Shute, Mr. E. L., 616 W. Upsal St.,
Philadelphia.
Sibley, Miss Florence, 1937 Panama St.,
Philadelphia.
Sibley, Mrs. Walter G., Meadowbrook.
Sibson, Mr. Walter W., 338 E. Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Sibson, Mrs. Walter, 338 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Siebrecht, Mrs. Frederick J., 46 Lincoln
Ave., Lansdowne.
Sigafoos, Mrs. Lewis, 190 W. State St.,
Doylestown.
Sigafoos. Mrs. Michael H., 6910 Hey-
ward St., Mt. Airy.
Sigel, Mr. George Henry, 548 W. Lind-
ley Ave., Philadelphia.
Sigel, Mrs. Louis, 8216 Seminole Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Sill, Mrs. James J., Wyncote.
Sill, Miss Marguerite, Wyncote.
Silver, Mrs. J. Robinson, 210 Lansdowne
Ave., Wayne.
Silverman, Mrs. Charles, 422 Ashbourne
Rd., Elkins Park.
Silverman. Mr. L H., 606 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Simkins. Mrs. Lena, 1200 Collings Ave.,
W. Collingswood, N. J.
Simon, Mr. Andrew, York Rd., Towson,
Md.
Simon, Mr. Edward P., 533 Arbutus St.,
Mt. Airy.
Simon, Mrs. Edward P., 533 Arbutus St.,
Mt. Airy.
Simpson, Hon. Alex., Jr., 5854 Drexel
Rd., Overbrook.
Simpson. Mr. Charles G., 213 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Simpson, Miss Ida., 906 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Simpson, Mr. Joseph F., 207 Forrest
Ave., Narberth. (C.)
Simpson. Miss Mary A., 116 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
Simpson, Mrs. Percy, Overbrook.
Sinkler. Miss Caroline S., 1604 Locust
St.. Philadelphia.
Sinkler, Mrs. Francis W.. Bryn Mawr.
Sinkler, Mr. Wharton, Elkins Park.
Sinkler, Mrs. Wharton, Elkins Park.
Sinnickson. Mr. George R.. Brvn Mawr.
Skerrett. Mrs. W. Henry W., Skeragay
Hill, Wayne.
Skillman, Mrs. Thomas J., 124 St.
Georges Road, Ardmore.
Slade. Mrs. Alexander T, Wynne-
wood.
Slaymaker, Mrs. S. E., Harrison Road,
Ithan.
Slifer, Dr. F. Sebring, Limekiln Pike and
Waverly Rd., Glenside.
Slifer. Miss Levina, 4250 N. Broad St..
Philadelphia.
Sloan, Mrs. Burrows, Ardmore.
Sloan, Mr. William, Eagleville.
Smalley, Miss Jean H., 352 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Smaltz, Miss Elizabeth F., 22 E. Sedg-
wick St., Mt. Airy.
Smaltz, Mrs. John H., 32 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Smedley, Mr. Samuel L., Newtown
Square, Delaware Co.
Smedley, Mr. William Henry, Church
and Tacony Sts., Frankford.
128
Smith, Mrs. Alfred, 163 Carpenter Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Smith, Mrs. Arthur D., Remington Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Smith, Mrs. Arthur D., Jr., 414 Chiches-
ter Lane, Ardmore.
Smith, Mrs. C. Elmer, "Brockie," York.
Smith, Mrs. C. Morton, 1718 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. Charles Harper, Davis Grove
Rd., Hatboro.
Smith, Miss Elizabeth, Gwynedd Valley.
Smith, Miss Elizabeth W., 131 Montgom-
ery Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Smith, Miss Emily Stewart, 240 E. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Smith, Mrs. G. G., 6812 Quincy St., Ger-
mantown.
Smith, Mrs. Geoffrey S., Ft. Washing-
ton.
Smith, Mrs. George Mark, 6470 Drexel
Road, Overbrook.
Smith, Mrs. Harrison, Radnor and
Clyde Rds., Bryn Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. Herbert Aubrey, 147 Fern-
brook Ave., Wyncote.
Smith, Mr. Horace E., Glyn-Wynne
Road, Haverford.
Smith, Mrs. Horace E., Glyn-Wynne
Road, Haverford.
Smith, Mrs. L H., 156 Mayland St., Ger-
mantown.
Smith, Mrs. Ira A., 828 W. Main St.,
Norristown.
Smith, Mrs. J. Somers, 6700 Wissahickon
Ave., Philadelphia.
Smith, Miss Jessie Willcox, "Cogshill,"
Allen Lane, Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. John T., 133 Upland Terrace,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Smith, Mr. Lewis D. G., 40 Ridley Ave.,
Norwood.
Smith, Mrs. Lewis Lawrence, Strafford,
Chester Co.
Smith, Mrs. M. Anna, 101 Congress St.,
Newton.
Smith, Mrs. Manning J., 103 W. More-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Smith, Mrs. Mary F., Box 21, Beth-
ayres.
Smith, Miss Mary Grubb, 2201 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
Smith, Miss Ruth C, 18 E. Walnut Ave.,
Merchantville, N. J.
Smith, Mr. W. Hinckle, Bryn Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. Walter Karsner, 339 E.
Wharton Road, Glenside.
Smith, Mrs. Wikoff, Morris Ave., Bryn
Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. William K., 332 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Smith, Mrs. William Watson, 5325 Wil-
kins Ave., Pittsburgh,
Smith, Mrs. Xanthus R., 325 West Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Smithson, Mrs. H. P., Cheyney, Dela-
ware Co.
Smyth, Mrs. Fanny Belle D., "Home-
acre," West End, Fairmount, W. Va.
Snader, Mrs. E. Roland, Jr., "Ogston
House," Sussex Road, Wvnnewood.
Snedaker, Mrs. E. R., 4921 Parkside
Ave., Wynnefield.
Snellenburg, Mrs. Harry, 811 Church
Rd., Elkins Park.
Snowden, Mrs. George Grant, "Highland
Hall," Rosemont.
Snyder, Mrs. George E., "Redyns," Bala-
Cynwyd.
Snyder, Mr. John M., Elkins Park.
Snyder, Mrs. R. Maurice, Germantown
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Solis-Cohen, Mrs. D. Hays, N. W. Cor.
City Line and Mountain Ave., Oak
Lane.
Solis-Cohen, Mrs. J., Jr., 709 Rambler
Rd., Elkins Park.
Somers, Mr. Lewis S., Jr., 6936 Ridge
Ave., Philadelphia.
Somers, Mrs. Lewis S., Jr., 6936 Ridge
Ave., Philadelphia.
Somervell, Mrs. Charles Stuart, 601 River
Bank, Riverton, N. J.
Sonneborn, Mrs. John G., 5019 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Sorg, Mr. C. A., 214 Brookdale Ave.,
Glenside.
Sowden, Miss Harriett, The Fairfax
Apts., Wayne Ave. and School La.,
Germantown.
Sowden, Air. Lee, 3823 The Oak Rd.,
Philadelphia.
Sparks, Mr. John W,, 5820 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Speers, Mrs. E., 720 Clifton Ave., Col-
lingdale.
Speese, Dr. John, 723 S. Latch's La.,
Merion.
Spellissy, Mrs. F. F., 308 W. Hortter St.,
Germantown.
Spooner, Mrs. H. T. H., 106 S. 38th St.,
Philadelphia.
Sproat, Mrs. Harris L., 605 S. High St.,
West Chester.
Sprogell, Miss Elizabeth Lewis, Lincoln
and Edgmont Sts., Media.
Spruance, Mrs. W. C, 2507 W. 17th
St., Wilmington, Del.
Squires, Mrs. H. C., 424 Wheeler Ave.,
Scranton.
Stackhouse, Mrs. D. T., 100 E. Maple
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Stafford, Mrs. William H., Clwyd Rd.,
Cynwyd.
Staley, Miss Barbara, Central Medical
Bldg., 18th and Chestnut Sts., Philadel-
phia.
129
Staples, Mrs. C. B., 803 Main St.,
Stroudsburg.
Starke, Mr. William, Box 4391, Chestnut
Hill. (G.)
Starr, Mrs. Charles S., Haverford.
Starr, Mrs. Edward, Jr., Laverock, Chest-
nut Hill.
Starr, Mrs. Isaac Tatnall, Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Starr, Mr. James, 1324 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Staufifer, Mrs. W. H., 5935 Pulaski Ave.,
Germantown.
Stead, Mr. Robert, 1817 DeLancey Place,
Philadelphia.
Stead, Mrs. Robert, 1817 DeLancey Place,
Philadelphia.
Steel, Mrs. A. G. B., "Sugar Loaf,"
Chestnut Hill.
Steele, Miss E. J., 6023 Drexel Rd.,
Overbrook.
Steele, Miss E. M., 306 Kenliworth Apts.,
Alden Park, Germantown.
Steele, Mrs. Edward A., 8212 St. Mar-
tins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Steele, Mrs. William, 126 Maple Ave.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Steele, Mrs. William, 3d, East Bells Mill
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Steere, Mrs. Jonathan, Walnut Lane,
Haverford.
Stein, Mrs. N. H., Silver Creek.
Stem, Mrs. S. G., Rolling Road, Bryn
Mawr.
Stengel, Dr. Alfred, 1728 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Stengel, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Stephani, Mr. W. J., Jr., Ridley Park.
Stephens, Mrs. Lucie L., 4335 Dakota St.,
Pittsburgh.
Stephenson, Mrs. W. B., Haverford.
Sterling, Miss Leila, 72 S. River St.,
Wilkes-Barre.
Stern, Mr. Arthur K., Hillcrest, Fox
Chase.
Stern, Mrs. Charles A., Baltimore and
Lincoln Aves., Swarthmore.
Sterrett, Mrs. Robert J., 4630 Hazel Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Stevenson, Mr. H. A., 60 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Stevenson, Miss Katharine M., 2600
Waterville Rd., Chester.
Stevenson, Mr. Markley, 225 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia. (L.)
Stevick, Mrs. Francis, 6325 Regent St.,
Philadelphia.
Stewardson, Miss E. P., 8611 Mont-
gomery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Stewardson, Miss M. M., 8611 Montgom-
ery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Stewart, Mrs. Charles H., St. Davids.
Stewart, Mrs. Daniel C, St. Davids.
Stewart, Miss Katharine, 1612 Pelham
Road, Beechwood Park, Upper Darby
P. O.
Stewart, Miss Nanna W., 755 Philadel-
phia Ave., Chambersburg.
Stewart, Mrs. Rowe, 652 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Germantown.
Stewart, Mrs. Stanley P., 300 Shrewsbury
Rd., Riverton, N. J.
Stewart, Mrs. Thomas D. W., 35 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Stewart, Mrs. Thomas S., 1532 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Stewart, Mr. W. Plunket, Murray House,
Villa Nova.
Stimson, Mrs. William B., 1920 Panama
St., Philadelphia.
Stiteler, Mr. Fred D., 665 N. 63d St.,
Philadelphia.
Stites, Mrs. Fletcher W., 413 Haverford
Road, Narberth.
Stoddart, Miss Frances S. Janney, 301
Highway, Riverton, N. J.
Stokes, Mrs. Charles P., "Lane's End,"
Narberth.
Stokes, Mrs. Francis J., 629 Church Lane,
Germantown.
Stokes, Mrs. Henry W., Media.
Stokes, Mrs. J. Stogdell, Spring Valley
Farm, Huntingdon Valley P. O.
Stone, Mrs. Harold Barton, 231 Washing-
ton Lane, Jenkintown.
Stone, Mrs. J. W., 424 Woodland Ave.,
Wayne.
Stonecipher, Miss Helen M., 604 Cattell
St., Easton.
Stoner, Mrs. A. B., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stoner, Miss Judith V., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stork, Mrs. Theophilus B., 600 Church
Lane, Germantown.
Stormfeltz, Mrs. Elvira K., 502 Har-
rison St., Ridley Park.
Stotesbury, Mrs. Edward T., White-
marsh Hall, Chestnut Hill.
Stout, Airs. A. L., 403 W. School Lane,
Germantown.
Stout, Mr. C. Frederick C, 2d St. and
Erie Ave., Camden, N. J.
Stout, Mrs. C. Frederick C, 214
Glenn Rd., Ardmore.
Stout, Mrs. F. Sturgis, Righters Ferry
Road. Cj'nwyd.
Stout, Mr. Morris A., ^1 E. Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Stout, Mrs. Morris A., Zl E. Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Stover, Mrs. John J., Erwinna, Bucks Co.
Strachan. Mr. Charles, Woodcrest, Rad-
nor. (G.)
Strassburger, Mr. Ralph B., Gwvnedd
Valley.
130
Strauss, Mrs. Berthold, Ashbourne Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Strawbridge, Mrs. George H., "Winder-
mere," Bala.
Strayer, Mr. Franklin R., Box 22, West
Chester.
Street, Mrs. Gerald Basil, 1901 Greenhill
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Street, Mr. R. D., 119 Rosemont Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Stritzinger, Mrs. B. F., 556 Hamilton St.,
Norristown.
Stritzinger, Mrs. Lewis G., 520 Hamil-
ton St., Norristown.
Stroh, Dr. Robert H., 278 Wyoming
Ave., Wyoming.
Strohlein, Mr. George A., 218 Fulton St.,
Riverton, N. J. (C.)
Stroman, Mrs. C. M., 21 W. Upsal St.,
Philadelphia.
Strong, Miss Elizabeth, Villa Nova.
Stroud, Mr. Edward A., 508 S. 41st St.,
Philadelphia.
Stroud, Mrs. Morris W., Jr., Villa
Nova.
Stroud, Mrs. William D., County Line
Road, Villa Nova.
Stuart, Mrs. George H., 3d, Villa Nova.
Stuart, Mrs. Kenneth E., 367 Baird Rd.,
Merion. (L.)
Stuart, Mrs. William H., 135 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Stuetz, Mrs. William A., 334 E. Phil-
Ellena St., Mt. Airy.
Stull, Mrs. George R., Moylan-Rose Val-
ley, Delaware Co.
Sturgis, Mrs. Robert, Wyncote.
Styer, Miss Ardella Gould. 309 Forest
Ave., Ambler.
Sullivan, Mr. J. J., Jr., Spring Knoll
Farm, Ambler.
Sullivan, Mrs. Marshall P., 8134 Cedar
Rd., Elkins Park.
Sulzer, Mrs. G. H., 441 S. Jackson St.,
Media.
Summers, Mrs. Clarence Lynne, War-
wick Rd., Wynnewood.
Suplee, Mrs. D. C, 427 N. 33d St., Phila-
delphia.
Suplee, Mrs. Horace B., 242 Monument
Ave., Malvern.
Supplee, Mrs. A. L, 1016 Fayette St.,
Conshohocken.
Supplee, Mrs. Walter B., Levering Mill
Rd. and Lodge's La., Bala-Cynwyd.
Supplee, Mrs. William L., Merion Sta-
tion.
Sutro, Mrs. Paul E., 5115 Wissahickon
Ave., Germantown.
Swab, Miss Jennie E., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swab, Miss Nellie A., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swartley, Mr. H. C, R. D. 3, Phoenix-
ville.
Swing, Mrs. Charles W., 564 Hansell Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Sykes, Mrs. Charles H., 334 Llandrillo
Rd., Bala-Cynwyd.
Synnestvedt, Mr. Arthur, Bryn Athyn.
Taggart, Miss Emily E., 126 Woodland
Ave., Wyncote.
Taggart, Mrs. Paul Leidy, 621 W. Clive-
den Ave., Germantown.
Talimer, Mrs. Bernard, The Warwick,
1701 Locust St., Philadelphia.
Tappan, Mrs. Paul, 108 Booth La.,
Haverford.
Tarburton, Mrs. C, 220 Volan St.,
Merchantville, N. J.
Tate, Mrs. Mercer B., Jr., 707 N. Mt.
Pleasant Rd., Mt. Airy.
Tatnall, Mrs. H. Chace, Whitemarsh.
Taylor, Mr. Charles D., 223 Oak Ter-
race, Merchantville, N. J.
Taylor, Mrs. Edward L., Colonial Apts.,
5427 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia.
Taylor, Mrs. Fred W., 239 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Taylor, Mrs. G. Coningsby, 410 Roberts
Ave., Glenside.
Taylor, Mrs. George B., 150 W. 6th St.,
Erie.
Taylor, Mrs. Herbert K., 8211 Cedar
Rd., Elkins Park.
Taylor, Mrs. Hollinshead N., "Ken-
wood," Bethayres, Montgomery Co.
Taylor, Mrs. John, 427 N. New St., Beth-
lehem.
Taylor, Mrs. Roland L., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Taylor, Mrs. W. J. Romeyn, 517 Cres-
heim Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Taylor, Mrs. William J., 1825 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Taylor, Mrs. William Rivers, 516 Auburn
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Teamer, Mr. Thomas A., 213 Wayne
Ave., Lansdowne.
Tees, Miss Beatrice F., 326 E. Lancaster
Ave., St. Davids.
Tees, Miss Grace M., 458 Locust Ave.,
Germantown.
Teeuwen, Mr. John, care of American
Shipping Co., 8-10 Bridge St., New
York, N. Y.
TempHn, Mrs. John C, Gay St. and Vir-
ginia Ave., Phoenixville.
Tenbrook, Mrs. Philip, Berwyn.
Thaw, Mrs. William, Jr., 5427 Forbes
St., Pittsburgh.
Thayer, Mrs. A. D., Gwynedd Valley.
Thayer, Mrs. Edmund, Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. G. C, Villa Nova.
Thayer, Mrs. John B., Redwood,
Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. Joseph T., Elkins Park.
131
Thayer, !Mrs. Sydney, Jr., Beaumont Rd.,
Devon.
Thiele, Miss Marguerite E., Orthodox
St. at Frankford Ave., Frankford.
(F.)
Thomas, Mrs. Arthur H., Haverford.
Thomas, Mrs. Clarence E., Oaks, Mont-
gomery Co.
Thomas, Mrs. Edward Osgood, 525 Cedar
Lane, Swarthmore.
Thomas, Miss Estelle, 623 W. Main St.,
Norristown.
Thomas, Mrs. Frank Wister, 27 E. Mt.
Airy Ave., Mt. Airy.
Thomas, Mrs. George, 3d, Whitford
Game, Whitford.
Thomas, Miss Martha G., Whitford,
Chester Co.
Thomas, Mrs. Samuel Hinds, Torres-
dale.
Thompson, Mrs. Arthur W., "Dun-
woodie," W. Chestnut Ave., Chestnut
Hill.
Thompson, Miss Harriet M., 124 W. Mt.
Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy.
Thompson, Mr. Horace E., 5016 Schuyler
St., Germantown.
Thompson, Mrs. Robert W., Haverford.
Thompson, Mrs. Rodman Ellison, Devon.
Thomson, Miss Anne, Bryn Mawr.
Thomson, Mrs. F. G., Devon.
Thomson, Miss Helen Georgia, 301
Chestnut Rd., Glenside.
Thomson, Mrs. Walter S., 1722 Spruce
St., Philadelnhia.
Thorington, Mrs. Richard W., Wynne-
wood.
Thorn, Mrs. C. W., 7 E. Ridley Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Thorn, Mr. Fred G., Jr., 307 West Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Thornley, Mrs. George H., 416 W.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Tilden, Mrs. Marmaduke, Skippack Pike,
Blue Bell.
Tillotson, Mrs. John A., "The Boulders,"
Wayne.
Tily, Miss Ethel H., 121 Montgomery
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Tily, Mrs. Harry C, 2d, 32 Overhill
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Timanus, Mrs. J. Herbert R., 431 W.
Johnson St., Germantown.
Tindle, Mrs. James R., "Valley Forge
Farms," Valley Forge.
Tingle, Miss Eleanor M., 1134 S. Wilton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Todd, Mr. H. Arnold, Doylestown.
Todd, Miss Jean Miller, 2115 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Toerring. Miss Helen C., 6399 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Tomlinson, Mrs. W. W., Medford Rd.,
Wynnewood.
Tonkin, Mr. John, "Compton," Chestnut
Hill. (G.)
Toren, Mrs. Emelia, 8840 Germantown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Torrey, Mrs. James C, 206 Greenwood
Ave., Jenkintown.
Torrey, Mrs. W, Edward, 203 West Ave., •
Jenkintown.
Totten, Mrs. John F., 830 Stanbridge St.,
Norristown.
Toulmin, Mrs. Harry, Haverford.
Towill, Mr. Edward, Roslyn, Montgom-
ery Co. (C.)
Town, Mrs. Edwin C, 200 N. Narberth
Ave., Narberth.
Townsend, Mr. B. F., care of DeHaven
and Townsend, 1415 Walnut St., Phila-
delphia.
Townsend, Mrs. Edward P., 128 Edge-
wood Rd., Ardmore.
Townsend, Mrs. John Barnes, Radnor.
Townsend, Mr. John W., Bryn Mawr.
Trainer, Mrs. M., 529 E. Tulpehocken
St., Germantown.
Trasel, Miss Marie L., Haverford.
Trask, Airs. John E. D., 2024 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Tresselt, Mr. Ralph E., 2419 Jefferson
St., Philadelphia.
Trimble, Mr. William, 204 S. Walnut
St., West Chester.
Troutman, Mrs. Albert C, 421 N. Main
St., Butler.
True, Dr. Rodney H., 4111 Baltimore
Ave., Philadelphia.
Tryon, Mrs. Charles Z., Rose Lane,
Haverford.
Tucker, Mr. Chester E., 630 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Tull, Mr. Herbert G., 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Tull, Mr. T. Mitchell, 6 Amherst Rd.,
Bala-Cynwyd. (S.)
Turner, Mrs. J. Archer, 801 Harvard
Ave., Swarthmore.
Turner, Mrs. J. R., 304 Florence Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Twining, Mrs. Iredell, Hatboro R. F. D.
Tyler, Miss Helen B., Villa Nova.
Tyler, Miss Mary G., 440 Haverford
Ave., Narberth.
Tyson, Mrs. Carroll S., Jr., Chestnut
Hill.
Tyson, Mrs. Edwin, 226 Wyncote Rd.,
Jenkintown.
Tyson, Miss Evelyn, 226 Wyncote Rd.,
Jenkintown.
Tyson, Miss Geraldine S., 226 Wyncote
Rd., Jenkintown.
Tyson, " Mrs. T. M., 400 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Ueland, Miss Elsa, Carson College,
Flourtown.
132
Ulizio, Mr. George, % Clementon P. O.
278, Pine Valley, N. J.
Ulizio, Miss Patricia, % Clementon P. O.
278, Pine Valley, N. J.
Ulizio, Mrs. Rosamond A., % Clementon
P. O. 278, Pine Valley, N. J.
Ullman, Mrs. A. M., 129 First Ave., Col-
legeville.
Underwood, Mrs. J. A., 130 W. Penn St.,
Germantown.
Ungevitter, Mr. Rudolf W., 9343 Stenton
Ave., Chestnut Hill. (L.)
Urban, Mr. Abram L., Jr., 922 Edge-
wood Ave., Trenton, N. J. (L.)
Uthoff, Mr. Frederick H., Bristol Road,
Churchville.
Valle, Mrs. I. Bodine, care of Mr. S. T.
Bodine, Villanova.
Vallier, _ Mrs. W. Taylor, State Rd.,
Phoenixville.
Vandegrift, Mrs. Anna D., 76 E. Logan
St., Germantown.
Vandegrift, Miss Dorothy A., 76 E.
Logan St., Germantown.
Van den Hengel, Mr. Walter, 2095 N.
63d St., Philadelphia. (C.)
van den Hoek, Mr. A. M., care of Koster
& Co., Bridgeton, N. J. (N.)
Vanderslice, Mrs. Charles M., 602 S.
Main St., Phoenixville.
Van Fossen, Miss Edith, 121 E. 4th St.,
Lansdale.
Van Hoesen, Mrs. Stephen G., Fanwood,
N- J-
Van Horn, Mrs. Lillian, 139 Township
Line, Jenkintown.
Van Horn, Mrs. R. W., 1202 Yarmouth
Rd., W. Overbrook.
Van Keuren, Mrs. J. S., 2908 Rising Sun
Rd., Ardmore.
Van Lear, Mrs. J. Findlay, 1701 Green-
hill Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Vansant, Mr. Joseph A., Lafayette Hill,
Montgomery Co.
Vare, Miss Katharine M., 350 W. Allen
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Vauclain, Mrs. Andrew C, 2416 N. 54th
St., Philadelphia.
Vauclain, Mrs. J. L., Buck Lane, Haver-
ford.
Vauclain, Mr. Samuel M., 123 S.
Broad St., Philadelphia.
Vaughan, Mrs. Cecil H., 24 Simpson Rd.,
Ardmore.
Vaughan, Mrs. Charles P., 58th and City
Ave., Philadelphia.
Vaughan, Mrs. Ira, Green Hill Farms,
Overbrook.
Vaux, Mrs. George, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Vaux, Mrs. J. Wain, Penllyn P. O.
Velie, Mr. Phil. J., 3 Yale Ave., River-
side, Claymont, Del.
Verlenden, Miss Mary, 99 E. Greenwood
Ave., Lansdowne.
Verner, Miss Anna M., 3811 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Verner, Mrs. William R., 326 Louella
Ave., Wayne.
Vick, Mr. A. F. W., Bentley Ave., Cyn-
wyd. (C.)
Vogdes, Miss Dorothy, 347 Llandrillo
Rd., Cynwyd.
Vogdes, Mr. James M., 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Vogel, Mr. Fred, 23 Ridley Ave., Aldan,
Delaware Co. (F.)
Vollmer, Mr. Adrien Winston, 27 Trans-
portation Bldg., 26 S. 15th St., Phila-
delphia.
Von Hiller, Baroness E., 7908 York Rd.,
Elkins Park.
Wagner, Mrs. Earl G., Righters Mill Rd.,
Narberth.
Wagner, Mrs. Edward S., 532 Lafayette
Rd., Merion Park, Merion.
Wagner, Mrs. Jesse L., 152 N. 6th St.,
Reading.
Wagner, Mr. John, School House Lane,
Germantown.
Wainwright, Mrs. F. King, Bryn Mawr.
Walbaum, Miss E. C, Glyn Ython Farm,
Ithan.
Walbridge, Mrs. C. C, Elbow Lane and
McCallum St., Mt. Airy.
Walcott, Mrs. Charles D., 1743 22nd
St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
Walker, Mrs. Arthur M., Gwynedd Val-
ley.
Walker, Miss Elizabeth F. L., 400 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia.
Walker, Mrs. Harry T., R. D. 1, Norris-
town.
Walker, Mrs. L C, 1202 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Walker, Miss Isabella, 40 Jacoby St.,
Norristown.
Walker, Mrs. John White, Meadowbrook.
Walker, Miss Loretta, 316 Tennis Ave.,
Ambler.
Walker, Mr. Thomas P., Ill E. Sedg-
wick St., Germantown.
Walker, Mrs. Thomas P., Ill E. Sedg-
wick St., Germantown.
Walker, Mrs. William W., 354 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
Wall, Mr. Eugene W., 310 Rosemore
Ave., Glenside.
Wallace, Mrs. J. H., 7832 Spring Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Wallace, Miss Kate S., 123 Walnut St.,
Jenkintown.
Walleigh, Mr. J. Walter, 110 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Wallem, Mrs. Axel B., 303 Bryn Alawr
Ave., Cynwyd.
Wallen, Mrs. Francis B., 250 Mountwell
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
133
Waller, Mrs. L. W. T., Jr., 5 Red Oak
Rd., Wilmington, Del.
Wall'is, Mrs. Allan D., "Annandale," King
Rd., Malvern.
Wallis, Mrs. Phillip, 310 Clwyde Road,
Cynwj'd.
Wain, Mrs. Charlotte M., West Chester.
Walsh, ]\liss Lydia Bourne, 715 College
Ave., Elmira, N. Y.
Walsh, Mr. Stephen, Church Rd., Wyn-
cote. (G.)
Walter, Air. C. S., 817 Seneca St., Beth-
lehem.
Walter, Mrs. Sargent, 403 N. Chester
Rd., Swarthmore.
Walters, Mr. Harry L., P. O. Box 152,
Mt. Holly, N. J.
Walther, Mrs. John L., Rolling Hill, El-
kins Park.
Walton, Mrs. Georgia Bonnell, St.
Davids.
Walton, Airs. H. W., 208 Township Line,
Jenkintown.
Walton, Miss Olive V., 534 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Wanamaker, Aliss Louise, 290 N. High-
land Ave., Merion.
Ward, Mr. Joseph T., 5809-19 Baynton
St., Germantown.
Ward, Airs. T. J., Alerion.
Warden, Mrs. C. A., Haverford.
Ware, Airs. K. P., 116 W. Wayne Ave.,
Wayne.
Ware, Mr. Romaine B., Bridgeton, N. J.
Warner, Airs. Arthur W., 7 E. Baltimore
Ave., Aledia.
Warner, Airs. Charles, 2311 W. 11th St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Warner, Airs. Frederick H.. Jr., 110 St.
Pauls Road, Ardmore.
Warner, Airs. Irving, 1109 Broome St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Warner, Aliss Iva B., Alalvern.
Warner, Mrs. AI. B., 421 Meadowbrooke
Ave., St. Davids.
Warner, Aliss Mildred S., 1211 Stratford
Ave., Melrose Park.
Warren, Airs. Francis A"., 517 Walnut
Lane, Swarthmore.
Warren, Airs. Frank B., 264 S. 46th St.,
Philadelphia.
Warren, Airs. Harold S., 409 Strathmore
Rd., Brookline, Upper Darby.
AVarren, Airs. Polly E., 7420 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
Warriner, Airs. Samuel D., 250 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
\v'arrington. Air. Theodore B., 7743 Ard-
leigh St., Chestnut Hill.
Washburn, Airs. Louis AI., 17 E. New-
field Way, Bala-Cynwyd.
Wass, Aliss Esther A. S., 447 York Rd.,
Tenkintown.
Wasserman, Airs. Joseph, Wissahickon
and Hortter Sts., Germantown.
Waterall, Airs. William, 4714 Springfield
Ave., Philadelphia.
Waterer, Air. Anthonv, 714 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Waterer, Air. Harry AI., 714 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Waters, Airs. Edward, Woodmont.
Waters, Airs. Henry, 107 Bentley Ave.,
Cynwj-d.
Waters, Airs. Thomas S., Jr., 259 Wash-
ington Lane, Jenkintown.
Watson, Airs. Charles, 342 Alerion Rd.,
Alerion.
Watson, Airs. F. R., Alontgomery Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Watson, Airs. Frank C, Providence Rd.,
Aledia, R. 3.
Watson, Mrs. L. V. G., 3936 Walnu;
St., Philadelphia.
Watson, Airs. Thomas Theodore, Wayne.
Wattles, Mr. W. P., 301 Hathaway Lane,
Wynnewood.
Watts, Airs. H. L., 527 E. Alermaid Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Watts, Airs. Henry M., Elkins Park.
Way, Mrs. Channing, N. High St., West
Chester.
Way, Mrs. Leland, 34 Upland Rd., Wyo-
missing Hills.
Wayman, Air. Robert, First St., Bayside,
Long Island, N. Y. (C.)
Wayne, Airs. Joseph, Jr., 8200 St. Mar-
tins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Wear, Mrs. Ario, 1133 Calypso St., Beth-
lehem.
Wear, Mrs. Joseph W., "Stony Alead-
ows," Penllyn.
Weaver, Aliss Florence S., 208 Summit
Ave., Jenkintown.
Weaver, Airs. William A., 6472 Lawnton
Ave., Oak Lane.
Weaver, Airs. William AL, Jenkintown.
\\'ebb, Airs. Walter, "Caswallen," West
Chester.
Webb, Mr. Walter W., 516 Brookline
Blvd., Upper Darby.
Webster, Airs. William, 218 Cameron Rd.,
Willow Grove.
Weckerle, Mrs. W. C, 425 Anthwyn
Road, Narberth.
Weeks, Airs. Horace F., Rosemont
Weidel, Airs. H. F., 701 S. Latches Lane,
Alerion.
Weihenmayer, Air. H. W., 1621 Diamond
St., Philadelphia.
Weihenmayer, Air. William J., Rydal.
Weihenmayer, Airs, William J., Rydal.
Weikel, Airs. William D., 116 E. Alaple
Ave., Alerchantville, N. J.
Weil, Air. AI. S., 130 Central Ave., North
Hills.
134
Weild, . Mrs. Charles M., 59th St. and
City Line, Overbrook.
Weir, Mrs. Campbell, P. O. Box 282,
Wilmington, Del.
Weir, Mrs. James, 671 Meetinghouse
Rd., Jenkintown.
Weisenbach, Mrs. Fred, 220 Audubon
Ave., Wayne.
Weitzenfeld, Mr. Jacob J., 18 S. Lynn
Blvd., Highland Park, Upper Darby.
Wells, Miss Annie D., 3305 Baring St.,
Philadelphia.
Wells, Mrs. Warren M., West Valley
Rd., Strafford.
Wells, Mrs. William B., Pine Hill,
Minersville.
Welsh, Mr. Edward L., 304 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Welsh, Mrs. Herbert S., Elbow Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Wendell, Mr. E. J., Wayne.
Wertsner, Miss Anne B., 79 Herman
St., Germantown.
Wertsner, Mr. George S., 79 Herman
St., Germantown.
Wertsner, Mrs. George S., 79 Herman
St., Germantown.
Wesp, Mr. Clarence A., 856 E. Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
West, Mrs. Oscar F., 4226 Chester Ave.,
Philadelphia.
West, Mrs. William T., 627 Walnut La.,
Haverford.
Weston, Mrs. J. M., 107 Walnut St.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Wetherill, Mrs. Francis M., 3012 W.
Coulter St., Philadelphia.
Wetherill, Mr. S. P., Jr., Rose Lane,
Haverford.
Wetherill, Miss Sara R., 215 W. 24th
St., Chester.
Wetherill, Mrs. W. Chattin, Box 4381,
Chestnut Hill.
Wetherill, Mrs. Webster K., Green Hill
Farms, Overbrook.
Weyl, Mrs. Julius, Elkins Park.
Weyl, Mr. Maurice N., 6506 Lincoln
Drive, Mt. Airy.
Wheaton, Mrs. T. C, 516 High St.,
Millville, N. J.
Wheeler, Mrs. Andrew, "LeChatelet,"
Ardmore.
Wheelock, Mrs. L. Ward, Jr., Highland
Rd., Devon.
Wheelwright, Mr. Robert. 225 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia. (L.)
Whelen, Mrs. T. Duncan, 5641 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wherry, Dr. Edgar T., Dept. of Botany,
University of Penna., Philadelphia.
Wherry, Mrs. Edgar T., 27 Oberlin Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Whitall, Miss Matilda F., 159 Delaware
St., Woodbury, N. J.
Whitall, Mrs. William H. B., 5363 Mag-
Qolia Ave., Germantown.
White, Dr. E. P. Corson, 1820 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
White, Mrs. Edward, Jr., 1322 Wakeling
St., Frankford.
White, Mr. Edward J., 9th and West-
moreland Sts., Philadelphia.
White, Miss Elizabeth C, New Lisbon,
N. J.
White, Miss Elizabeth Wade, Breakneck
Hill, Middlebury, Conn.
White, Mrs. Errol, Moylan-Rose Valley.
White, Miss Frances M., 525 Walnut
La., Swarthmore.
White, Mr. Holman, 135 E. Mt. Airy
Ave., Philadelphia.
White, Mrs. Holman, 135 E. Mt. Airy
Ave., Philadelphia.
White, Mrs. Howard, 120 Hilldale Rd.,
Lansdowne.
White, Mrs. J. M., 5806 Woodbine Ave.,
Overbrook.
White, Mrs. John, 824 Clifford Ave.,
Ardmore.
White, Miss Margaret G., 1530 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
White, Mrs. R. H., 304 Pembroke Rd.,
Cynwyd.
White, Mrs. Thomas Raeburn, Penllyn.
White, Mrs. Walter Rhoads, 130 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
White, Mrs. William, Cheswold Lane,
Haverford.
Whitesell, Mrs. James E., 92 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Whitney, Mrs. Frank E., 6653 Lawton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Whitney, Mrs. W. Beaumont, 300 W.
Gravers La., Chestnut Hill.
Whitridge, Mrs. Roland Barker, 135 S.
18th St., Philadelphia.
Whittaker, Mr. W. A., Sec, The Rut-
ledge Hort. Soc, P. O. Box 255, Rut-
Whyte, Mrs. Hilson H., 340 Rumford
Rd., Mt. Airy.
Wickham, Mrs. Addison S., 308 N. Ches-
ter Rd., Swarthmore.
Widener, Mr. George D., Chestnut
Hill.
Widener, Mr. Joseph E., Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Wiederhold, Mr. Louis, Jr., 414 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Wiederseim, Mr. William Caner, Abing-
ton.
Wigton, Mrs. Frank H., Grays Lane and
Mill Creek Rd., Ardmore.
Wilbur, Mrs. Rollin Henry, "Old Stone
House," St. Davids.
Wilcox, Mrs. Thomas L., 80 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
135
Wiley, Mrs. Earl C, 24 Park Rd., Llan-
erch, Upper Darby.
Wiley, Mrs. Harry E., 1440 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Wiley, Mrs. Maurice W., 306 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Wilford, Mrs. E. Burke, 300 Linden Lane,
Merion.
Wilford, Mrs. Jonathan S., 335 Brook-
way, Merion.
Wilkening, Mrs. Louise D., 33 Owen
Ave., Lansdowne.
Wilkins, Mr. George W., 138 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
Wilkinson, Mrs. Robert H., 688 S. High-
land Ave., Merion.
Willard, Mrs. DeForest P., 633 Wins-
ford Rd., Bryn Mawr.
Willcox, Mrs. J. Taney, Wawa.
Willcox, Mr. James M., 700 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Willcox, Mrs. William J., St. Davids.
Williams, Mr. Alfred H., 243 Ogden
Ave., Swarthmore.
Williams, Mrs. Charles S., Wrightstown.
Williams, Mrs. David E., Bala.
Williams, Miss Elizabeth D., Box 86,
Haverford.
Williams, Mrs. Henry S., 520 Panmure
Road, Haverford.
Williams, Mr. J. Randall, Jr., Wynne-
wood.
Williams, Mrs. J. Randall, Jr., Wynne-
wood.
Williams, Mr. John, Haverford.
Williams, Mrs. John J., 1101 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Williams, Mr. Leonard Willets, Box 566,
Haverford.
Williams, Mr. Parker S., 600 Provident
Trust Bldg., 17th and Chestnut Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Williams, Miss Rae, The Belgravia, 18th
and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Williams, Mrs. Robert Martin, Bala.
Williams, Mrs. Thomas S., Jenkintown.
Williamson, Mrs. H. H., 129 Levering
Mill Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Williamson, Mrs. John D., Latham Park,
Montgomery Co., Oak Lane P. O.
Williamson, Miss Margaret E., 7308 Ger-
mantown Ave., Mt. Airy.
Willing, Mrs. Charles, Hillcrest Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Willing, Mrs. E. S., Bryn Mawr.
Willing, Mrs. J. Kent, 1726 Rittenhouse
St., Philadelphia.
Willits, Dr. I. Pearson, 31 W. Walnut
La., Germantown.
Willits, Mrs. M. N., Jr., 609 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Wills, Mr. William M., 342 Merion Rd.,
Merion Station.
Wills, Mrs. William M., 342 Merion Rd.,
Merion Station.
Wilson, Mrs. Alan, Old Gulph Road,
Villa Nova.
Wilson, Mrs. Alexander, Jr., Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Wilson, Miss Alice, "Brookside Farm,"
Valley Forge.
Wilson, Mrs. C. Colket, Paoli.
Wilson, Mr. Clarence E.. Bryn Mawr.
Wilson, Mrs. Florence W., 13th and Pot-
ter Sts., Chester.
Wilson, Mrs. George F., 100 Pennsyl-
vania Ave., Easton.
Wilson, Mrs. Hail, 1108 Belfield Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Wilson, Miss Helen, 1509 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. John L., 309 Wellington
Rd., Jenkintown.
Wilson, Mrs. John Lewis, 1321 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. John O., 515 Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Wilson, Mrs. Stanley E., 400 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. William K., Box 44, Bala-
Cynwyd.
Wilt, Mrs. -M. D., 612 W. Hortter St.,
Germantown.
Windish, Mr. August, Willow Grove.
Windle, Mrs. W. Butler, Virginia Ave.,
West Chester.
Winlock, Mrs. G. L., Alden Park Manor,
Germantown.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Haverford.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Jr., Ardmore.
Winternitz, Mrs. Hiram, Jr., 320 Sum-
mit Ave., Wayne.
Winters, Mr. Ralph P., 1215 Bridge St.,
Frankford.
Wintersteen, Mrs. A. H., 142 Grays La,,
Haverford.
Wirz, Mrs. Henry M., Wallingford.
Wistar, Mrs. J. Morris, 200 Montgomery
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Wistar, Miss Rebecca B., 3515 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wister, Mr. John C, Wister and
Clarkson Sts., Germantown. (L.)
Wister, Mrs. L. Caspar, Wynnewood.
Wister, Mr. Owen, Bryn Mawr.
Wister, Mrs. William Rotch, 1112 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Witman, Miss Elsie F., 4301 Mitchell St.,
Roxborough.
Witmer, Mrs. L. J., 46 Linden Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Wohlert, Mr. A. E., Narberth. (N.)
Wolcott, Mrs. Darwin S., Colonial Vil-
lage, Waviie.
Wolf, Mrs. Albert, 250 S. 17th St.,
Philadelphia.
136
Wolf, Mr. H. Rey, 16 School Lane, Ard-
more.
Wolf, Mrs. H. Rey, 16 School Lane,
Ardmore.
Wolf, Mrs. Louis, Elkins Park.
Wolfe, Miss Katharine M., Glen Mary
Lane, Radnor.
Wolfe, Mrs. O. Howard, Glen Mary Rd.,
Radnor.
Wolfenden, Mr. David H., Creek Rd.,
Media.
Wolf gram, Mrs. Irving F., 563 Hamilton
St., Norristown.
Wonsetler, Mrs. Howard, 619 W. Main
St., Norristown.
Wood, Mrs. A. L, 334 Louella Ave.,
Wayne.
Wood, Mrs. Albert C., N. W. Cor. 52d
St. and Gainor Rd., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. Charles Martin, 5950 Drexel
Rd., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. Clement Biddle, Consho-
hocken.
Wood, Miss Dorothea, 1313 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. E. R., 2206 St. James' Place,
Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. K. Stearns, 2127 Sansom St.,
Philadelphia.
Wood, Mr. Edward Cope, 150 School
House Lane, Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. Edward F. R., N. W. cor.
Prospect Ave. & Gravers La., Chest-
nut Hill.
Wood, Mrs. George B., 329 Hathaway
La., Wynnewood.
Wood, Mrs. Grahame, Wawa.
Wood, Mr. Harry, 329 Cornell Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Wood, Mrs. Howard, Jr., Conshohocken.
Wood, Mrs. John H., Langhorne.
Wood, Miss Julia L., Wayne.
Wood, Miss Katharine H., Baltimore
Ave. and Monroe St., Media.
Wood, Miss M. Louise, Bryn Mawr.
Wood, Miss Marion B., Conshohocken.
Wood, Mrs. Richard D., Wawa.
Wood, Mrs. Robert F., 237 Forrest Ave.,
Narberth.
Wood, Mrs. Samuel W., 241 Merion Rd.,
Merion.
Wood, Miss Sarah Keen, 4326 Osage
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wood, Mr. Walter, 400 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Woodall, Mr. John, R. R. 5, Easton,
Talbot Co., Md.
Woodall, Mrs. John, 227 Washington
Lane, Jenkintown.
Woodbridge, Mrs. J. Lester, 524 Arbutus
St., Mt. Airy.
Woods, Mrs. Ralph, Rydal Rd., Noble.
Woods, Mrs. William, 2 Lehman Lane,
Germantown.
Woodward, Mrs. George, Chestnut
Hill.
Woodward, Miss Quita, Mermaid La.
and McCallum St., Chestnut Hill.
Woodwell, Mrs. John, 7012 Penn Ave.,
Pittsburgh.
Woolman, Miss Anna, 21 N. Highland
Ave., Lansdowne.
Woolman, Mr. Edward, Panmure Rd.,
Haverford.
Woolman, Mrs. Edward, Box 69,
Haverford.
Woolman, Miss Helen E., 601 River
Bank, Riverton, N. J.
Woolman, Mr. Henry N., 132 St.
George's Rd., Ardmore.
Woolman, Mrs. Walter Keen, 701 River
Bank, Riverton, N. J.
Woolverton, Mr. William, 224 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Philadelphia.
Worrell, Mrs. Granville, 2d, 110 Llanfair
Rd., Ardmore.
Worth, Mrs. Edward H., Claymont, Del.
Worth, Mrs. George S., St. Davids.
Worthley, Mr. Irving Tupper, R. D. 3,
Phoenixville.
Wriggins, Mrs. Charles C, 470 Locust
Ave., Germantown.
Wright, Mrs. Alfred W., 52 E. Elm St.,
Norristown.
Wright, Mrs. Franklin L., R. F. D. 4,
Norristown.
Wright, Mrs. Harrison B., Ithan Derl-
wyn, Radnor.
Wright, Mrs. John Castle, 44 Lincoln
Ave., Lansdowne.
Wright, Mrs. M. G., 11th and Oak Lane
Sts., Oak Lane.
Wright, Miss Mary F., R. D. 1, Ambler.
(N.)
Wright, Mrs. Minturn T., 130 W.
Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Minturn T., Jr., White-
marsh Road, Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Randolph, 1011 Swede St.,
Norristown.
Wright, Mrs. Raymond D. B., 300 W.
Gravers La., Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Robert C, Haverford.
Wright, Mrs. Sydney L., Jr., Endsmeet
Farm, Glens ide.
Wyatt, Mrs. Walter S., The Barclay,
E. Rittenhouse Sq., Philadelphia.
Wyers, Mrs. Herman F., 345 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
Wynn, Mrs. J. M., Wayne.
Wynn, Mrs. James H., Rose and Quarry
Lanes, Haverford.
Yarnall, Mr. Charlton, Devon.
Yarnall, Mr. F. H., 934 High St., Potts-
town.
Yarnall, Mr. William S., Box 152.
Haverford.
137
Yates, Mr. Harry O., Jr., Camden Co.
Vocational School, Merchantville, N. J.
Yeatman, Miss Georgina Pope, 520 E.
Graver's La., Chestnut Hill.
Yeatman, Mrs. Pope, 520 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Yerger, Mr. John A., 1401 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Yerger, Mrs. Wilson S., 7312 Elbow
La., Mt. Airy.
Yerkes, Mrs. Louise A., Box 560, Hat-
boro.
Yerkes, Mrs. M. R., 812 Old Lancaster
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Yerkes, Mr. Milton R., Bryn Mawr.
Yocom, Miss Mildred L., 5023 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Yocom, Mrs. Thomas Corson, 321 Cyn-
wyd Road, Bala-Cyn\vyd.
York, Mrs. Edward H., Jr., Ithan.
York, Dr. H. H., Botanical Lab., Univer-
sity of Penna., Philadelphia.
Yost, Mrs. John R., Virginia Ave.,
Phoenixville.
Young, Mr. Frederick C, P. O. Box 201,
Palmyra, N. J.
Young, Mr. John Welsh, Enfield. (C.)
Young, Mrs. Willard, 307 Springhill
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Yowell, Mr. W. H., Narberth.
Zantzinger, Mrs. C. C, 8500 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Zell, Mrs. John J., 129 Hastings Ave.,
S. Ardmore, Upper Darby.
Zieget, Mrs. Julius, 132 Edgewood Rd.,
Ardmore.
Zieget, Miss Marcia Stuart, 132 Edge-
wood Road, Ardmore.
Zeigler, Miss Elvie, 1603 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ziegler, Miss Helen D., 300 Glenolden
Ave., Glenolden.
Zimmer, Mrs. George, Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Zimmerman, Miss Anna W., The
Hedges, Rydal.
Zimmerman, Dr. Mason W., Rydal.
Zimmermann, Mr. William, 524 Cresheim
Valley Rd., Chestnut Hill.
Zinn, Mrs. Maurice C, 303 South Ave.,
Media.
Zipf, Mr. Carl H., 135 Bryn Mawr Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
SUMMARY
Honorary Members 14
Life Members 257
Annual Members 3254
Total Membership 3525
138
The following is a list of the members of tliis Society whose
deaths have been reported during the year 1931:
Honorary
Mr. Albert C. Burrage
Life
Mr. William W. Fitlcr
Mr. Henry M. Justi
Mrs. Susan F. Wheeler
Annual
Mr. George H. Allen
Mrs. G. F. Baker
Mr. Hugh B. Barclay
Mrs. Edward Chapman
Mrs. Julia N. Chapman
Mr. Charles Day
Mrs. John M. Fries
Miss Elizabeth Haslam
Mr. George McFadden
Mrs. Chester Martindale
Mrs. W. W. Montgomery
Mrs. Frank H. Moss
Dr. Richard M. Pearce
Mr. H. C. Pedrick
Mrs. H. C. Pedrick
Mrs. B. Selig
Mr. Morris Lewis Stovell
Mrs. C. Rodman Stull
Mr. Walter Thayer
Mrs. Joseph P. Tunis
Mr. James T. Wallis
Mr. Charles Wheeler
Miss Anna D. White
Miss Sarah D. Williams
FORM OF BEQUEST
I GIVE AND BEQUEATH to THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTI-
CULTURAL SOCIETY
FOR
Name
1933
YEAR
BOOK
THE
PENNSYLVANIA
HORTICULTURAL
SOCIETY
ORGANIZED 1827
19 3 3
YEAR BOOK
of
The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society
"'2^0 NOV. a*
With Reports and Membership List for
19 3 2
Edited by
John C. Wister
Secretary
Issued from the office of
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
Organized 1827
This Society welcomes gifts and bequests of mouey, and it is hoped that
all who desire to perpetuate its work will, iu disposing of their property,
include The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society among their beneficiaries.
FORM OF BEQUEST
I GRTE AXD BEQUEATH to THE PENNSYLVANIA HOETIOUL-
TURAL SOCIETY _....
FOR
Name
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Engraving and 1933 Calendar 4
Officers and Executive Council for 1933 5
Committees for 1933 6
Object and Privileges of the Society 7
Reports :
President 9
Annual Meeting 17
Secretary 18
Treasurer 21
Exhibition Committee 25
Awards— 1932 25
Committee on Garden Awards 31
Lecture Committee 32
Library Committee 35
Accessions — 1932 37
Periodicals 40
Garden Days 41
Consultant in Horticulture 43
Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania 43
Garden Division of State Federation of Pennsylvania Women 52
Arthur Hoyt Scott Horticultural Foundation — Swarthmore, Pa 53
Hardy Chrysanthemums at Swarthmore 59
Dedication of Two Kentucky Coffee Trees 66
Exploring and Plant Collecting in Northern British Columbia 68
Garden Calendar 76
Necrology 88
Membership List, preceded by Summary 89
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
C. Frederick G. Stout, President 8
Organization Chart 12
Jay V. Hare, Executive Council 16
George L. Fanium, Exhibition Committee 24
W. Atlee Burpee, Jr., Exhibition Committee 28
Library 34
Wall Garden, Brookmead Farm 36
David Rust, Consultant 42
French Garden, "Le Chatelet" : 44
Portion of Garden of Mr. and Mrs. C. Frederick C. Stout 46
Roadside Planting 48
Redfern Lake 70
Pack Train 71
Caribou Ridge 72
Spruce Trees "3
Henry River 74
The above engraving was made for the Society in 1836 and
was the work of John Coiisen (1804-1880), a famous English en-
graver of landscapes and bookplates. It was originally designed for
the Society's Diploma and served that purpose until a few years
ago, when the Diploma was discontinued and the design adopted
for the book plate and Certificate of Merit of the Society.
1933 CALENDAR 1933
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH
APRIL
S M T W T F S
12 3 4 5 6 7
8 91011121314
151617181920 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
S M T W T F S
12 3 4
5 6 7 8 91011
12131415161718
19 20 2122 23 24 25
26 2728
S M T W T F S
12 3 4
5 6 7 8 91011
12131415161718
19 20 2122 23 24 25
26 2728 29 30 31
S M T W T F S
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9101112131415
1617181920 2122
23 24 25 26 2728 29
30
MAY
JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
S M T W T F S
12 3 4 5 6
7 8 91011 1213
14151617181920
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28 29 30 31
S M T W T F S
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11121314151617
1819 20 2122 23 24
2526 272829 30
S M T W T F S
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9101112131415
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23 24 25 26 27 28 29
3031
S M T W T F S
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SEPTEMBER
S M T W T F S
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10111213141516
171819 20 2122 23
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OCTOBER
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
S M T W T F S
12 3 4 5 6 7
8 91011 121314
151617181920 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
S M T W T F S
12 3 4
5 6 7 8 91011
12131415161718
19 20 2122 23 24 25
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S M T W T F S
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10111213141516
171819 20 2122 23
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OFFICERS AND EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
President
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
Vice-Presidents
MRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
Honorary Vice-President
MR. C. HARTMAN KUHN
Treasurer Secretary
MR. S. S. PENNOCK MR. JOHN C. WISTER
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
Term ending December 31, 1933
MR. FITZ EUGENE DIXON
MRS. WILLIAM T. ELLIOTT
MR. GEORGE L. FARNUM
MR. FAIRMAN ROGERS FURNESS
MR. S. S. PENNOCK
MR. WILLIAM J. SERRILL
MR. C. FREDERICK C. STOUT
Term ending December 31, 1934
MR. JOHN P. HABERMEHL
MR. JAY V. HARE
MR. WILLIAM WARNER HARPER
MR. ALEXANDER MacLEOD
DR. J. HORACE McFARLAND
MRS. THOMAS NEWHALL
MRS. ARTHUR H. SCOTT
Term ending December 31, 1935
MR. MORRIS R. BOCKIUS
MR. W. ATLEE BURPEE, JR.
MRS. J. NORMAN HENRY
MRS. HORATIO GATES LLOYD
MR. J. FRANKLIN McFADDEN
MR. W. HINCKLE SMITH
MR. JOHN C. WISTER
COMMITTEES
The President, ex officio, is a member of all Committees.
Executive Committee
Mr. William J. Sereill, Chairman Me. W. Atlee Buepee, Ju.
Mr. Benjamin Bullock Mr. Jay Y. Hare
Mr. John C. Wister
Library Committee
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Chairman Mrs. Nathan Haywaru
Mrs. E. Page Allinson Mrs. John H. Packard
Miss Kitty Brinton Mrs. Alan H. Eeed
Mrs. Edward H. York, Jr.
Lecture Committee
Mrs. William T. Elliott, Chairman Mrs. Horatio Gates LloyI)
Mr. John C. Wistee
Finance Committee
Mr. Fitz Eugene Dixon, Chairman Mr. S. S. Pennock
Mr. W. Hinckle Smith
Exhibition Committee
]Mr. George L. Farnum, Chairman Mr. Jay V. Hare
Mr. W. Atlee Burpee, Jr., Yiee-Chairnian Me. Alexander MacLeod
Mes. William T. Elliott Mes. Arthue H. Scott
Me. Faieman E. Furness Mrs. Joseph P. Sims
Committee on Garden Awards
Mr. William J. Serrill, Chairman Mrs. Benjamin Bullock
Mrs. Kichard L. Barrows Mrs. A. F. M. Chandler
Mes. J. Thomas Ligget
Garden Committee
Mr. John C. Wistee, Chairman Mrs. Edward M. Cheston
Mrs. Benjamin Bullock Mk. Thomas W. Sears
De. Rodney H. True
6
OBJECT AND PRIVILEGES OF THE SOCIETY
The Society's object is to promote and encourage Horticulture
and to create a love for, and interest in, Plants and Flowers. It
desires to increase its membership in order that its work and
influence may be extended.
PRIVILEGES OF MEMBERSHIP INCLUDE
1. Subscription to Horticulture, a magazine published semi-
monthly in Boston for the Horticultural Societies of Massa-
chusetts, New York and Pennsylvania.
2. Services of Consultant in Horticulture — the only charge is
for actual traveling expenses when members' gardens are
visited. The Consultant may be seen at tlie rooms of the
Society by appointment.
3. Illustrated lectures by prominent horticulturists during the
winter season.
4. Admission to the Society's Exhibitions of Plants, Flowers,
Fruits and Vegetables.
5. One admission to the Philadelphia Flower Show.
6. Use of the Library, including circulating privilege. The
Library contains over 3000 volumes, in addition to current
horticultural magazines. The best of the new publications
are systematically added to the Library.
7. Garden Days. — In co-operation with the School of Horti-
culture for Women.
8. Year Book, including reports, list of members, etc.
CLASSES OF MEMBERSHIP
Patrons : Who contribute the sum of $10,000.
Benefactors : Who contribute the sum of $5,000.
Sustaining Members: Who contribute the sum of $1,000.
Life Members : Who contribute the sum of $100.
Annual Members : Who make an annual contribution of $3.00.
Make checks payable to
THE PENNSYLVANIA HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
7
C. FREDERICK C. STOUT, President
THE REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT
For those members who may not be familiar with the history
of the Society before the present regime, I present a brief review
of the trend of events during the past thirty or forty years, in the
liope it will provide proper background to the present picture and
explain how the organization which is now functioning came into
being.
To provide the proper background, it is logical that the time
to start such a review is the early ''nineties," as the period from
then to Mr. Boyd's administration, which began in 1919, is a very
well defined one with strongly marked characteristics. The member-
ship in 1886 had reached the high mark of 989, largely due to the
Chrysanthemum craze. In the late nineties and early ninteen hun-
dreds membership dropped to below three hundred, but as no mem-
bership records appear in the minutes, it is impossible to give exact
figures for each year. In 1904 the annual dues were advanced
from $3.00 to $5.00 (except that professional gardeners were al-
lowed to retain membership at $3.00), but the membership con-
tinued to decline until 1913, when there were only 150 members.
The Chrysanthemum was at its height throughout this period,
and the Annual Show of the Society in November cost the Society
from $5,000 to $7,000 or more. Leading members of the Society,
including the presidents and other officers, donated hundreds of
dollars for the shows from 1890 to 1917. In addition, contributions
were made by leading seedmen and the secretary solicited prize
money from tradesmen. Spring exhibitions were held in March
and in these, as in the Chrysanthemum Shows, commercial growers
and large private estates were the leading exhibitors.
These shows were the principal active duty of the Society.
The Library received scant attention and we find no reference to
accessions in the minutes. The books were kept in locked cases.
Although formal lectures were rare, horticultural authorities and
various professors of special subjects who were associated with the
Society often addressed the members at monthly meetings. There
were no other activities of which we have any record, although the
idea of the Society owning a garden came up from time to time at
meetings. The inside organization seemed to have been the Council
with its President, Treasurer and Secretary.
Digressing a little, we find during this period, several special
flower societies were organized at different places in the East. The
best known among them are the American Dahlia Society in 1895,
the American Rose Society in 1899, the American Peony Society
in 1903 and the American Gladiolus Society in 1910.
It would seem from the time of Mr. George W. Childs' presi-
dency, in 1890, until the administration of Mr. Boyd, the duties
of the president were in large part monopolized in the major financ-
ing operations of the Society, those arising out of the destruction,
rebuilding and occupancy of Horticultural Hall and in raising'
money for what appears to be the only horticultural activity that
remained — the giving of several flower shows a year. Mr. Samuel
M. Rhodes made a great effort to revive the Society (1899-1902),
but seems to have given up the undertaking in despair.
Mr. C. Hartman Kuhn, 1915-1919, also tried to improve the
condition of the Society, but the World War made this impossible.
The Society, however, was fortunate in having so able a man as
Mr. Kuhn to conserve its assets and direct its finances during that
period. Mr. Sydney W. Keith was treasurer from 1900 to 1923
and the Society owes a great deal to him also. It would seem from
the history, a great deal of the Secretary's time was apportioned,
for administrative affairs but he was, to some extent, directed by the
members who chose to attend the regular monthly meetings. These
were generally commercial and professional members and amateurs
took but little or no part in the Society's activities.
The financial situation of the Society was serious during this
period, because of the destruction by fire in 1893 of Horticultural
Hall on South Broad Street. In 1896 the Hall was rebuilt and cost
$250,000, $225,000 being provided by issuing income certificates,
subscribed to by members and others, and $25,000 through insur-
ance money. The idea was, that the new Hall should be used for
social affairs and a sinking fund established through rentals that
Avould retire the certificates in thirty years. For five years the
building earned enough to pay interest on the income certificates.
After that the receipts fell oft' considerably and barely enough was
earned to pay taxes and the cost of heating.
Mr. Rust had become Secretary in 1895 and his time was much
occupied in securing lessors of Horticultural Hall and in other
ways attending to the operation of the building, especially after
the first ten years or so when no regular agent was employed.
The financial condition of the new Horticultural Hall was
growing steadily worse. With the groAving use of hotels and country
clubs for private entertaining, the patronage of the building dimin-
ished. In 1909 the Society received an offer for the Hall, but con-
siderable litigation was necessary before a clear title to the prop-
erty could be established and the sale was not consummated until
1917. The price obtained was $550,000, and after deducting $200,-
000 to reimburse the certificate holders, and paying commissions
for the expense of sale, the net proceeds amounted to about $350,000,
which constituted the Elizabeth Schaffer Trust Fund, which the
Girard Trust Company administers for us today, and which pro-
vides about two-thirds of the present income of the Society. After
Horticultural Hall was sold in 1917 the Society rented a room in
the Finance Building for its office and Library.
During Mr. Kuhn's presidency he presided at all of the meet-
ings of the Executive Council and at some of the Society's meet-
ings. Unfortunately, however, according to the by-laws the Execu-
tive Council, which was supposed to be the governing body, was
obliged to have its actions reviewed by the Society's monthly meet-
ings, which were attended only by a few, and, under these circum-
stances, very little could be accomplished. The Secretary still con-
tinued to be an active officer and, betAveen instructions from the
10
Executive Council and from the Society's monthly meeting, hiy
position was decidedly difficult if not impossible. In 1919 Mr. Kuhn
was succeeded by Mr, James Boyd.
It was in the period from 1904 to 1919 that Mrs. J. Mauran
Rhodes started the Main Line Flower Show Association, which was
composed of persons who had gardens on the Main Line. It was
successful from the start and its shows, which were given at the
Merion Cricket Club, were always of high quality and beautifully
arranged and well attended. It was a local organization, but had
an active membership of 125 flower lovers and ahvays operated on
a balanced budget. I was elected Treasurer, and after Mrs. Rhodes
moved to California I became President.
So, it was to me that Mr. Boyd came with his problems of The
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society. The weaknesses that had caused
the decline of The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society were frankly
rehearsed. The outstanding fault we both saw lay in the by-laws,
Ijecause there was no directing force that was authoritatively cen-
tralized. Mr. Boyd told me he had acceptedl the Presidency with
the determination to change conditions.
At the first meeting of his administration he made a number
of suggestions, among them being the revision of the by-laws, the
creation of an active Executive Council, and the establishment of
a garden. The first year of his office, with the co-operation of other
officers and members, he effected through me a consolidation with
the Main Line Flower Show Association. This brought in 125 mem-
bers and increased the membership to about 300.
The number of Vice-Presidents was reduced from four to two,
and I was elected to be one of them in 1920. The number of Council
members was increased from fourteen to eighteen, six of whom were
elected annually for three years. At this time three women, Mrs.
William T. Elliott, Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd and Miss Elizabeth
Leighton Lee, were elected members of the Council, the first women
who had ever been chosen to serve. The Executive Council met
monthly, but the Society met only twice a year, and this has since
been changed to once a year. Members of the Council were elected
at the annual meeting in November. The dues were made uniform
at $3.00 and the membership began to increase. With these changes
in the by-laws, the sale of Horticultural Hall and the closing of the
World War, the Society began to regain prosperity.
In 1923 the Society moved from the Finance Building to the
building at Sixteenth and Walnut Streets. The Library was cata-
logued and arrangements made to accommodate readers. The Coun-
cil Room was large and attractive, and the quarters much more
adequate than in the Finance Building. The President became the
real executive and was in daily attendance. These rooms were
occupied for four years, and then the Society moved to 1600 Arch
Street, its present quarters, because of the uncertainty of the con-
tinuance of the lease.
I had become chairman of the Finance Committee, and there
were still weaknesses presenting themselves in the best use and
administration of our income. The question of establishing a budget
11
mm
THL PENNDYLVANIAH0RT1CULTUM.D0CIEIY
MADL UP or THE FOLLOWING CROUPS
Members of Oa^rden Clubs
Ge^rdcrrers
Lsysxdsc&^pe Arckliects
Norserymert
SeedsfTrer?
Wkoles&.le Florists
Retexu Florts-ts
CorTrrrTercle>-l Qnowers
TYPES OF MEMBERSHIPS
Ann^c^i ~ Lite - Hoaorc^r^ -
OFFICER5
Pr.e,side:,nt ~ C.F.C.Stout.
VlCE--PH.E.aiDE,NT-W.J.5errilJ.
Vice,-Preside:.nt ~ Mrs.H. G.Lloyd
SecE-ETAEy— JohtT C.Wlster
Tb.easue.e12_ ~ 3.5. PenrToclc_
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
M E..Dock.Kj3
VV. A.DurpceJr.
F.E.Dixo^T
Mia3.W.T.EIUot-1-
CLF^rnom-
E.R.Furrtess
J. D. Hevbertrrelr I
J.V.H^re
W.W.H5S.rper
Mrs. J.N.tieriry
J.F.McFe>.dden:
J.H.McF=^l.^d
Alex. Me>cLeod
Mrs.T.NewlTe.l[
MraA.H.Scolt
W-H.Smith
LANDING COMMITTt
E5
EJfECOTlVE.
COMM ITTEE
C Vrevi rn7d^r7 . — •
V7. J.Serrill
Cterrj. Bollock,
W. A.Durpec,Jr
J.V. H6J-e
Jofrir C.V/Lster
LIDRAR-Y
COMMITTEE
Mrs.H.O.LM
MrsLRAUisorr
MissliillyDrtfrlot?
MrsJ.H.fe.ckird
MrsA-H.Reed
MrsEH.YorlcJr
Cl?6-lrrrT&n
FE.Dixon
5. 5. Per7r?ock_
WH.5n7ah
COMMITTEE ON
OA^^DENA^WAT^D&
O It<Ni r me^r? —
W.J.SerrlU
Mr.^RL.&M'rows
Mrs 5eg.Dulloclc
Mr5A.rM,Ct76Kdler
MrsJTLlgget
OAEXiEN
COMMITTEE
JoWlrCWl&tcr
MrsEemDuWocL
MrsEMCkestor?
T.W.3e<5j-i3
Dr E.H.Troc
CtzeurrrrdsJT
Ct.LFi>rr7C)iT7
WADurpee,Jr;
MrsWTEKiott
FE,Furr7ess
J.V.Ha>,rc
Alcx.Me>cLcod
Hrs.A.H.5cotl
Mrs.J RSirTTS
Ct7eiJrr7T6^r7—
MroW.TZllloH
MrsH.O.LJqyd
Jo^^r?C.W^5tcr
OR.GANIZATI0N CHART
system and of establishing a garden were many times before the
Council. After spending some money for plans of a garden and
going into the matter very thoroughly, it was finally decided it was
impractical for the Horticultural Society to have a garden, unless
it could be endowed by some additional source of income. The
Society did, however, vote to establish a budget system and it was
out of this administrative feature came the formation of the stand-
ing committees of the Council that have done so much to properly
proportion our expenditures in various channels, predicated upon
their relative values to the Society and its members and, at the same
time, giving our members the gi'eatest benefit from each dollar we
spend.
It enabled the Council to extend a helping hand to the Sargent
Memorial Endowment of Arnold Arboretum, Bartram's Garden
and the School of Horticulture for Women, all worthy horticultural
activities. It also contributed toward the erection of a memorial to
Victor Lemoine at Nancy, France. The Society joined with the
Horticultural Society of New York in co-operating with the Massa-
chusetts Horticultural Society in the publication of ' ' Horticulture, ' '
and every member of all three Societies became a subscriber when
joining his Society.
Free use of the Council Rooms was extended to all clubs and
societies connected with horticulture having an officer who was a
member of this Society. In 1924 Garden Visiting Days were in-
augurated and a little later a special committee for garden awards
was established within the Council.
Beginning in 1920, exhibitions were held at armories at Broad
and Callowhill Streets and Thirty-second Street and Lancaster Ave-
nue and later, in 1924, in Memorial Hall in Fairmount Park. Shows
were held there from 1924 to 1927 and, so far as popularity was
conceraed, they were most successful. The orchid show held May.
7, 8, 9, 1926, recorded an attendance of 110,000. Unfortunately,
Memorial Hall was city property and we were compelled to find
another hall upon the request of the trustees, who were using it for
other purposes. The Society co-operated with the Florists' Club
and others in establishing the Philadelphia Flower Show. The first
exhibition was held in the Commercial Museum in March, 1925.
This show, as you know, has grown to rival the New York Show%
which is held about the same time. The Society w^as fortunate in
securing the co-operation of many of the garden clubs of Phila-
delphia and they exhibited as individuals and as clubs at our shows,
and to the clubs that held local shows the Society was glad to donate
silver cups and medals.
I have had a chart prepared which shows at a glance how our
membership is grouped, how the central authority is centered in the
Council, and how the Council is broken up into standing com-
mittees. Special committees are formed from time to time as needed.
Upon Mr. Boyd's death, which occurred December 2, 1929, I
was elected President. As Vice-President and Chairman of the
Finance Committee during the years of Mr. Boyd's Presidency, I
was in close contact with the Society's affairs and because he was
13
comi^elled to go away for several winters on account of his health,
I presided at many Council meetings at a time of year when the
Society's activities were at their peak.
I assisted Mr. Boyd in working out a further revision of the
by-laws, which took effect January, 1924, whereby practically all
the executive powers were delegated to the President and the Ex-
ecutive Council. The Council elected the Society's officers and new
members. The Society met annually in November and elected six
members to the Executive Council for a term of three years. In
1929, the number of Council members was changed and there were
seven elected each year for a three-year term.
When I assumed office there were things under way that had
only partially been accomplished and there were others that still
needed ironing out. Important among these was the fulfillment of
the movement to establish the Garden Club Federation of Penn-
sylvania, which, as you know, has become an established fact and is
now in a healthy gro^^^ng condition. There were difficulties to be
overcome arising in large part fi'om misunderstandings on the part
of the professional gardeners, and also with our relationship with
the Philadelphia Flower Show Association. AVe owe a great deal
to Mr. George L. Farnum, chairman of the Exliibition Committee,
and to our Secretary, Mr. John C. "Wister. in bringing about the
friendly and co-operative condition which exists today.
I have tried to continue all the activities started in Mr. Boyd's
tenure of office and I have enlarged upon them, Mr. Rust's depart-
ment of garden consultation was started shortly before Mr. Boyd's
death. I realized the importance of this work, especially to our
younger members, and it has been strengthened by placing on this
committee some of the scientific members of our Society.
The question box at the last two annual meetings has also
been a move to give our members the benefit of scientific informa-
tion from our professional members.
The Library is now settled in its new and enlarged quarters.
It has been built up and administered through the untiring efforts
of Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd and her committee.
The Lecture Committee has enlarged the number of lectures
and has begun to hold some of them in the evening for the benefit
of those who cannot attend in the afternoon. The splendid response
that our lectures have had is evidence of a most successful adminis-
tration of this acti\'ity by Mrs. William T. Elliott and her com-
mittee.
The Exhibition Committee, headed by ]\Ir. Farnum. is worthy
of praise from all of us. Its accomplishments have been meritorious
in all that it has undertaken. Its work, so far as contracts and scope
are concerned, is probably the greatest and most difficult of any of
our committees.
Our other committees have worked equally well — the Execu-
tive Committee, the Finance Committee and the Garden Awards
Committee. Above all, I have striven for harmony in all depart-
ments of the Society's affairs and have given such time and effort
as I could in ironing out difficulties that have arisen from time to
14
time, and our present healthy condition and success is due entirely
to the wholehearted interest and co-operation that the Council, with
its various committees, has show^n in the Society.
As a means of conveying the knowledge of our activities and
our work to our members, I have recognized the advantages of a
more comprehensive Year Book and have endeavored to give encour-
agement and helpful suggestions to this activity. In addition, I
feel that the Society should print from time to time valuable horti-
cultural information.
Before closing, let me say that since I have been connected
with the Society, I have been opposed to having it tie its money up
in real estate for a home, or place any of its capital outside of its
own control in the hands of other organizations, to the end that
our finances may always be controlled in their entirety by ourselves,
and that our income should be dispensed so that it becomes a real
service of increasing value in the interest of horticulture. We are
fortunate in having the Schaffer endowment and I am quite sure
by this means we are carrying out the spirit of the endowment, as
well as the spirit for which this Society was organized.
It would undoubtedly be a very fine thing for the Society to
have a hall of its own such as it had in days gone by, and it would
likewise be a fine thing for the Society to have a garden of its own.
Within our organization of membership we have all of the horti-
cultural knowledge and ability to plan, develop and care for such
a garden. However, unless endowments are given to us for these
purposes, it would be financially unwise for us to attempt them.
The Society is looking for increased memberships in annual, life,
sustaining, benefactor and patron classes, and the latter member-
ships would be of particular value in providing funds to endow
these objects.
In submitting this annual message, I must pay my respects to
our Secretary, Mr. John C. Wister, whose wide knowledge of horti-
culture and outstanding position in the horticultural w^orld have
been of immeasurable assistance to me and of help to the Society
and members at large.
C. FREDERICK C. STOUT,
President.
15
JAY V. HAEE
Member of Executive Couucil
ANNUAL MEETING
NOVEMBER 16, 1932
The Annual Meeting of The Pennsylvania Horticultural So-
ciety was held on November 16, 1932, in the auditorium of the
Insurance Company of North America Building, 1600 Arch Street,
Philadelphia.
The President, Mr. C. Frederick C. Stout, was in the Chair
and called the meeting to order.
The Secretary, Mr. John C. Wister, announced the re-election
of the following members to the Executive Council to serve during
1933, 1934 and 1935 : Mr. Morris R. Bockius, Mr. W. Atlee Burpee,
Jr., Mrs. J. Norman Henry, Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Mr. J.
Franklin McFadden, Mr. W. Hinckle Smith and Mr. John C.
Wister.
The President made a brief report for the year, covering the
following points: Membership, finances, the new Library, the Phila-
delphia Flower Show, the Society's relations with other organiza-
tions, its contributions to horticultural causes and the losses the
Society has suffered through death.
The Secretary reported in greater detail upon the activities of
the past year. ( See Secretary 's report. )
The Secretary's report was followed by the Question Box, the
special feature of the meeting, and written questions submitted by
members were referred to and answered by the following authori-
ties : Mr. James Bush-Brown, Landscape Architecture ; Mr. George
L. Farnum, Dahlias ; Mr. Charles K. Hallowell, Lawns ; Mr. Wen-
dell F. Oliver, Trees and Shrubs; Dr. J. Horace McFarland, Roses;
Mr. H. G. Mattoon, Insects and Plant Disease ; Dr. Rodney H. True
and Dr. H. H. York, Botany; Mr. David Rust, general gardening
questions, and Mr. Stout, the President, questions about the Society.
So many questions were presented that it was only possible in
the hour reserved for this part of the program to answer half of
them, and members were told that if they would send duplicate
questions, attaching their signatures, to the office, answers to their
inquiries would be mailed to them.
Special tables had been reserved for plants and flowers brought
to the meeting by members and these proved very interesting.
Among the exhibits were two unusual collections of berry-bearing
shrubs, displays of Chrysanthemums, a plant of Grevillea thele-
manniana in bloom and Osmanthus aquifolium in flower.
More than a hundred attended the meeting.
17
SECRETARY'S REPORT FOR 1932
Because finances occupy such an important place in all our
minds this year, I shall start my report with a brief reference to
the Society's financial condition. For the benefit of our new mem-
bers, I wish to explain that the Society receives its income from
two sources — an endowment fund, ■^^'liich provides about two-thirds
of its annual income, and the income from Annual and Life Mem-
berships, which makes up the remaining third. The endowment
fund was made possible through the generosity of AVilliam L.
Schaffer, who served as President of the Society from 1867 to 1884,
and his sister, Miss Elizabeth Schaffer. It is in the form of a Trust
Fund, of which the Girard Trust Company is the trustee. It has been
handled excellently and during this past year, when the economic
situation has been so acute, the Society has lost comparatively little
income. IMost of the fund is invested in mortgages on which some
interest payments have been reduced, some have been delayed and
only one is in actual default. Both the ]\Iassachusetts and the New
York Societies have much larger incomes than we have.
In regard to the income from membership dues, I am happy
to report that this is larger in 1932 than it has ever been in the
history of the Society — due to a net gain of 150 Annual jMembers,
and to the increasing interest from the Life Membership fund.
Life Membership fees, of course, are invested and only the income
is used. We hope in time to build up a really worth-while fund
from these fees. At present, our income from this source is not
quite $2,000.00, while our Annual Membership fees remain at the
nominal sum of $3.00 in spite of many suggestions that they be
raised on account of the many privileges we give. AVe hope that
more of our Annual Members may each year desire to become Life
Members, and thus show their interest in our work by helping us
build up a larger endowment fund.
The total membership for the j^ear 1932 is 3682 — not much larger
than the 3500 figure of last year, but a most encouraging gain
under present difficult conditions.
It seems proper to tell new members and to remind old mem-
bers that no salaries are paid to the President, the Vice-Presidents,
the Secretary, the Treasurer, or to any member of the Executive
Council or of our various committees. All of these officials serve,
and give much time to our work, without any compensation whatso-
ever, because they believe they can further the cause of horticulture
through the work of the Society. As all of them are busy people
and give their time to the Society at the sacrifice of other personal
affairs, it is proper that the members should not only know this and
appreciate what they do, but should also understand why it is im-
possible for them to give more time or their full time to the work
of the Society. They cannot be expected to keep regular office
houi's like persons on a paid staff. The regular paid staff numbers
four persons, but at times of exhibitions and meetings it is occa-
sionally necessary to hire extra help.
18
We are proud of the new quarters for the Library and hope
that all our members will use and enjoy the more pleasant sur-
roundings and the many new books and periodicals. In addition to
purchases through our regular appropriations, we have had several
valuable gifts of books, the most recent gift being a set of six vol-
umes on English gardens, presented by Mr. Alexander MacLeod,
a member of the Executive Council.
I should like to call attention to one of the problems that con-
tinues to worry us. We have no good central exhibition hall where
our shows can be held. Last spring we had a particularly beautiful
exhibition at the Merion Cricket Club. The exhibitors went to great
pains to bring and stage their choicest flowers, but the attendance
was very small. So many good local flower shows have come into
existence during recent years that after people have seen the one
in their own locality they may not wish to go to a distance to see
another. Co-operation with different local organizations may prove
the best solution, but many of these societies do not have large
enough halls to accommodate a joint show, so that the overflow
would have to occupy a tent, which is not a satisfactory arrange-
ment if we happen to strike a hot June day. Next spring a show
will be held in co-operation with the Rutledge Horticultural
Society.
While on the subject of exhibitions, I wish to report that the
Philadelphia Flower Show Association will give us, in 1933, one
ticket for each of our members instead of two, as they have so
generously done in the past. We are sorry that this change has
been necessary, but tliink that in view of our fast-growing mem-
bership it is perfectly justified. In consideration of the many
privileges which our members receive for their $3.00 dues, they
will, I believe, agree that they ought not to expect more than one
ticket. If they do feel aggrieved, may I remind them that the dues
in the New York Society are $10.00.
"Horticulture" has continued an outstanding privilege, being
a source of almost universal interest and value to members. In ad-
dition to the magazine which serves the interests of the three largest
Horticultural Societies of the East — Massachusetts, New York and
Pennsylvania — other contacts of these three groups have been
harmonious and helpful. We have exchanged Gold Medals with
both Massachusetts and New York as in other years, and we have
also established an exchange of Medals with the American Dahlia
Society. We have offered our medals, vases and plaquettes to
twenty-six other organizations in an effort to stimulate interest in
their Flower Shows. We have been glad to receive again this year
the Iris Cup offered by Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, and the Mrs.
J. Willis Martin Cup offered by Mrs. E. Florens Rivinus, for
award at our shows. We hope other members will wish to establish
individual trophies, as they promote interest among the exhibitors.
The Department of Garden Consultation, headed by Mr. David
Rust, has flourished and he has been of service to a large number
of our members. I hope our new members will feel no hesitancy in
calling upon him for advice — either at the Society's office or in
19
their own gardens. May I repeat for the benefit of new members
that there is absolutely no charge for Mr. Rust's services, except
his actual traveling expenses when he visits members' gardens.
Furthermore, there should be no hesitancy in calling upon him.
You are entitled by your membership to use this service and he is
paid by the Society for doing it. We particularly want our mem-
bers with small places to avail themselves of this privilege.
Members have been very liberal in supplying flowers for our
offices and Board room, and I wish to assure them that we appreci-
ate their thoughtfulness very much indeed. We have had some very
interesting and rare flowers that are worthy of a special exhibition.
We hope that more and more persons will want to bring us flowers
next year. Among the members who have brought us flowers,
plants or shrubs this year are Mr. W. Atlee Bur]3ee, Jr., Mr. F. E.
Dixon, Mr. George L. Farnum, Mr. Fairman R. Furness, Mr. and
Mrs. Jay V. Hare, Mrs. J. Norman Henry, Mrs. John AV. Hutchin-
son, Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Mr. Alexander MacLeod, Mr. S. S.
Pennock, Mrs. Alan Reed, Mr. W. H. Ritter, Mr. H. Arnold Todd,
Miss Anne Wertsner, Mrs. Edgar T. Wherry and Mrs. Lillian T.
Wright.
I know of no new developments in the status of the Painter
Arboretum, in whose final disposition many members are inter-
ested. In regard to the estate of Mr. John T, Morris and Miss Lydia
Morris, I presume that most members know from the papers that
this was left to the University of Pennsylvania to be administered
under a Board of Trustees as an arboretum and botanical garden,
and that it will be formally opened in 1933.
In closing, I wish to remind members that the usefulness of the
Society depends upon the interest and support of its members. If
any lasting benefits to horticulture are to be accomplished, they
must have their origin in the efforts of individuals. I hope that all
members will feel free to come to the office with suggestions, or
criticisms, or with any questions about our work.
JOHN C. WISTER,
Secretary.
20
STATEMENT OF CASH RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Year 1932
GENERAL FUND
RECEIPTS
deceived from:
Schaffer Fund — Girard Trust Company,
Trustee $19,089.16
Interest on Investments 1,847.04
Interest on Bank Balances 72.45
$21,008.65
Receipts from Sales of Equipment $39.70
Dues :
1932 Account $10,011.00
1933 Account 18.00
$10,029.00
$10,068.70
Total above Receipts $31,077.35
Expenditures by Committees :
Executive Committee:
Rent $3,412.50
Salaries — Office 4,165.75
Insurance 105.88
Postage 431.44
Treasurer's Bond 25.00
Printing and Stationery 433.30
Office Laundry and Ice Water 137.80
Telephone 192.67
Year Book 1,622.49
New Equipment 285.05
Garden at Powel House, 246 S. Third St. 100.00
Garden Club Federation 72.00
Miscellaneous 489.07
■ $11,472.95
Lecture Committee:
Fees— Lecturers $75.00
Rent of Auditorium 150.00
Lantern ajid Operation 45.00
Postage, Printing and Stationery 328.84
Lecturer's Traveling and Entertainment. 37.70
$636..54
Exliibition Committee :
Rent of Storeroom $500.04
Philadelphia Flower Show 1,570.93
June Show 870.55
Dahlia Show 1,076.07
Hardy Chrysanthemum Show 207.28
Salaries 1,300.00
Medals purchased for awards 472.37
Repairs and Miscellaneous 251.96
$6,249.20
21
Library Committee :
Subscriptions to Periodicals $152.02
Salary — Librarian 1,500.00
New Books 841.13
Rent 1,137.50
Rebinding 232.40
Office Expense 111.15
Total Expenditures out of Appro-
priation 13,974.20
Furniture purchased — not in Budget . . 1,117.52
Gardens Committee:
Salary — Garden Consultant $2,000.00
Awai-ds 10.44
Garden Visiting 1,010.40
Special :
Subscription to Horticulture #2,936.99
Brown Canker Fund 100.00
Membership Drive 455.28
Philadelphia Flower Show — Luncheon . . 196.50
$5,091.72
5,020.84
$3,688.77
Total above Expenditures $30,160.02
Excess of Receipts over Expenditures $917.33
Investments Made During the Year:
$3,000.00 United States Liberty Bonds,
4143 3,001.25
Excess of Expenditures over year's Receipts $2,083.92
Cash on Hand, January 1, 1932 4,288.38
Cash on Hand, December 31, 1932 $2,204.46
LIFE MEMBERSHIP FUND
Balance, January 1, 1932— Cash $1,000.00
Receipts during year — 28 New Members 1,400.00
$2,400.00
Investments Made During the Year :
$1,000.00 United States Liberty Bonds, First 414s 1,000.32
Cash on Hand, December 31, 1932 $1,399.68
LIBRARY FUND
Balance, January 1, 1932— Cash $312.70
Interest on Bank Balance 19.26
Balance, December 31, 1932 $331.96
22
STATEMENT OF CONDITION
Januar}'^ 1, 1933
ASSETS
Casli:
General Fund $2,384.63
Life Membership Fund 1,319.51
Library Committee Fund 381.96
$4,036.10
Sehaffer Fund:
Girard Trust Company, Trustee 354,920.84
Investments:
Life Membership Fund $23,960.49
General Fund 13,364.16
37,324.65
Equipment :
Office Furniture, etc $5,205.03
Library Books (not including donation by Mr.
Farnum) 8,143.25
Portraits 6,265.00
Exhibition Equipment 2,272.07
21,885.35
Supplies :
Medals on Hand 129.37
Stamps on Hand 40.88
— 170.25
Total Assets $418,337.19
LIABILITIES
None
Funds:
Sehaffer Fund : . . $354,920.84
Life Membership Fund 25,280.00
General Fund . 24,576.40
Appraisal Adjustment 13,227.99
Librai-y Committee Fund 331.96
Total Funds $418,337.19
S. S. PENNOCK,
Treasurer.
John P. Herr,
Certified Public Accountant.
2ii
GEOEGE L. FARNUM
Chairman, Exhibition Committee
REPORT OF EXHIBITION COMMITTEE FOR 1932
The Exhibition Committee is glad to report that there has been
no decrease in the interest shown or in the quality of flowers dis-
played at the various exhibitions directed by this committee, which
is indeed worthy of comment when we consider the difficulties under
which many have been working. This is particularly true of the
gardeners who, in spite of reduced forces and curtailed allowances
for new varieties and plant material, staged most interesting and
beautiful exhibits, which were highly commended by the judges.
The June Show was marked by a refinement of line with much
thought to detail and color, which is deserving of favorable com-
ment; and this refinement Avas ably carried out by the various
Garden Club classes. Great improvement was noted in all displays
and arrangements, giving a general effect which was altogether
pleasing. The Dahlia Show was a decided improvement on former
years, both in quality of bloom and in the general variety of
artistic displays. This was also true of the Hardy Chrysanthemum
Show.
A chronological arrangement of the exhibitions is as follows :
March 7-12. Garden Club and Amateur Classes in the Phila-
delphia Flower Show, Commercial Museum, Philadelphia. Total
attendance, about 86,000.
June 3-4. Peony and Spring Flower Show, Merion Cricket
Club, Haverford, Pa. Attendance very small.
September 30 and October 1. Dahlia Show, Bryn Mawr Horse
Show, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Large attendance.
November 2 and 3. Hardy Chrysanthemum Show, 1600 Arch
Street, Philadelphia. Attendance 324.
Respectfully submitted,
GEORGE L. FARNUM,
Chairman.
EXHIBITION AWARDS IN 1932
Given by the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society at its own
Exhibitions
Exhibition Gold Medals:
Henry A. Dreer, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., for rose garden, Hav-
erford, Pa., June, 1932.
W. Atlee Burpee Co., Philadelphia, Pa., for gladiolus display,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Robert C. Wright Silver Medal:
Mrs. Lillian T. Wright, Philadelphia, Pa., for the best rose
grown by an amateur, Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
25
Exhibition Silver Medals:
Mrs. Howard Eisenbrey, Haverford, Pa., for a flower arrange-
ment, Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. Alexander Maris Laverty, Merlon, Pa., for a collection of
roses, Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
J. J. Styer & Son, Concordville, Pa., for collection of peonies,
Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. Benjamin R. Hoffman, Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa., for
hybrid larch, Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mr. Frederick H. Moore, Haverford, Pa., for basket of peonies,
Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
W. Atlee Burpee Co., Philadelphia, Pa., for collection of gladi-
olus, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Major James B. Eastman, Laurel, Md., for seedling dahlia,
1930-31, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. George L. Parnum, Media, Pa., for collection of seedling
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. Reinhold Greinberg, Wayne, Pa., for display collection of
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. Reinhold Greinberg, AVayne, Pa., for dahlias display, Bryn
Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. Stanley Johnson, Cheltenham, Pa., for artistic basket of
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mrs. Carroll S. Tyson, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa., for
twenty-five dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Henry F. Michell Co., Philadelphia, Pa., for display of dahlias,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Dahliadel Nurseries, Vineland, N. J., for display of dahlias,
Bi^n Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Fisher & Masson, Trenton, N. J., for seedling dahlia, Bryn
Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Arthur Hoyt Scott Horticultural Foundation, Swarthmore,
Pa., for collection of hardy chrysanthemums, Philadelphia, Pa.,
November, 1932.
Henry A. Dreer, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa., for collection of hardy
chrysanthemums, Philadelphia, Pa., November, 1932.
Bronze Medals:
Mr. W. H. Monroe, Chadds Ford, Pa., for basket of peonies,
Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. Arthur Hoyt Scott, Media, Pa., for peony seedling, "Rose
Valley," Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. Robert C. Wright, Haverford, Pa., for collection of roses,
Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mr. Frank B. Meyer, Elkins Park, Pa., for collection of peonies,
Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. C. F. C. Stout, Ardmore, Pa., for flower arrangement,
Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
26
Mr. Reinhold Greinberg, Wayne,Pa., for collection of seedling
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. Alvin W. Moyer, Dublin, Pa., for collection of gladiolus,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
School of Horticulture, Ambler, Pa., for collection of vege-
tables, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. David M. Sherk, Rosemont, Pa., for twenty-five dahlias,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Miss Virginia Stout, Short Hills, N. J., for artistic basket of
dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Fisher & Masson, Trenton, N. J., for display of dahlias, Bryn
Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Challenge Cup:
The Weeders Garden Club, for collection of mixed dahlias,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Silver Flower Vases:
Mrs. C. F. C. Stout, Ardmore, Pa., for arrangement of flowers
in pair of vases, Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. Thomas C. Barton, Bryn Mawr, Pa., for bowl of flowers
grown outdoors, Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Certificates of Merit:
Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Haverford, Pa., for Rhynchosper-
mum jasminoides, Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. Arthur Hoyt Scott, Media, Pa., for collection of lilacs,
Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
Mrs. Maurice Bower Saul, Moylan-Rose Valley, Pa., for exhibit
of delphiniums, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Joseph J. White, Inc., New Lisbon, N. J., for Gordonia, Bryn
Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. W. H. Ritter, Philadelphia, Pa., for collection of hardy
chrysanthemums, Philadelphia, Pa., November, 1932.
Mrs. Robert Glendinning, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.,
for 1932 hardy chrysanthemum seedling, Philadelphia, Pa., No-
vember, 1932.
Blue Ribbons:
Major James B. Eastman, Laurel, Md., for dahlia seedling of
1932, semi-cactus type, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Fisher & Masson, Trenton, N. J., for dahlia seedling of 1932,
decorative type, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Fisher & Masson, Trenton, N. J., for dahlia seedling of 1932,
Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Mr. George L. Farnum, Media, Pa., for dahlia seedling of 1932,
pompon type, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
27
W. ATLEE BUEPEE, JR.
Vice-Chairman, Exhibition Committee
Cash Prizes:
June Show $324.00
Dahlia Show 410.00
Hardy Chrysanthemum Show 80.00
$814.00
EXHIBITION AWARDS IN 1932
Given by other organizations and individuals at exhibitions of The
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
Gold Medals:
The Gold Medal of The Horticultural Society of New York
(given in exchange) to Mrs. Arthur Hoj^t Scott, Media, Pa., for
the finest floral achievement in the Show (collection of seedling
peonies), Haverford, Pa., June, 1932.
The Gold Medal of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society
(given in exchange), to Mr. George L. Farnum, Media, Pa., for
display of dahlias, Bryn Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Silver Cup:
The Mrs. J. Willis Martin Cup, donated by Mrs. E. Florens
Rivinus, to the Weeders for Sweepstake Prize at the Philadelphia
Flower Show, March 7-12, 1932.
Silver Medal:
The Silver Medal of the American Dahlia Society to Mrs.
Edward Ilsley, Devon, Pa., for artistic basket of dahlias, Bryn
Mawr, Pa., September, 1932.
Bronze Medal:
The Bronze Medal of the American Dahlia Society to Mr. David
M. Sherk, Rosemont, Pa., for artistic basket of dahlias, Bryn Mawr,
Pa., September, 1932.
Flower Picture:
The Flower Picture painted and donated by Mrs. Alice Cope
Rehfuss to Mrs. Frank Adams Keen, West Chester, Pa., Sweep-
stake Prize to an individual, at the Philadelphia Flower Show,
March 7-12, 1932.
Commercial Orders:
Commercial orders were generously contributed by the follow-
ing firms (Philadelphia Flower Show) :
Conard-Pyle Company, West Grove, Pa. ; Andorra Nurseries,
Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa.; Flower Grower; Gardener's
29
Chronicle; Hengel Brothers, Ardmore, Pa. ; Henry A. Dreer, Phil-
adelphia, Pa. ; Henry F. Michell, Philadelphia, Pa. ; House and
Garden; John Albrecht Nurseries, Narberth, Pa. ; Outdoor Arts
Company, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. ; Upper Bank Nurseries,
Media, Pa. ; W. Atlee Burpee Company, Philadelphia, Pa. ; William
Henry Maule Company, Philadelphia, Pa.
EXHIBITION AWARDS IN 1932
Exhibitions of other organizations
SchafFer Memorial Gold Medal:
Given and awarded by The Pennsylvania Horticultural So-
ciety to Mr. John P. Habermehl and the Philadelphia Flower Show
Committee in recognition of the extremely interesting and beautiful
exhibition held at the Commercial Museum, March 7-12, 1932.
James Boyd Memorial Gold Medal:
Given by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society to the Ameri-
can Peony Society for award at their Annual Exhibition held at
Des Moines, Iowa, June 10-12, 1932. AVon by Brand Peony Farms,
Faribault, Minn., for the most outstanding exhibit in the Show.
Exhibition Gold Medals:
Given by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society to the Mass-
achusetts Horticultural Society for award at their Spring Flower
Show, Boston, Mass., March 10-14, 1932. Won by Mr. Jere A.
Downs, Winchester, Mass., for display of orchids.
Given by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society to The Hor-
ticultural Society of New York for award at their Annual Autum-
nal Exhibition held in New York, N. Y., November 3-6, 1932. Won
by Mrs. H. M. Tilford, Tuxedo Park, N. Y., as a Sweepstake Prize.
Exhibition Silver Medal:
Given by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society to the At-
lantic City Flower and Garden Pageant for award at their Third
Annual Exhibition held in Atlantic City, N. J., September 3-10,
1932. Won by Mr. A. Swoboda, Ridgefield Park, N. J., as a Sweep-
stake Prize.
Certificate of Merit:
Given and awarded by The Pennsylvania Horticultural So-
ciety to Andorra Nurseries, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa., for
their outstanding exhibit of a woodland planting at the Philadelphia
Flower Show, March 7-12, 1932.
30
Flower Vases:
Given by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society to the fol-
lowing local horticultural societies and garden clubs for award at
their exhibitions during 1932 :
Delaware County Horticultural Society
Doylestown Nature Club
Garden Club of Conshohocken
Lansdowne Flower Show Association (2 vases)
Women's Club of Germantown
Garden Club Plaquettes:
Given by The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society to the fol-
lowing local horticultural societies and garden clubs for award at
their exhibitions during 1932 :
Delaware County Horticultural Norwood Horticultural Societv
Society ' Plainfield (N. J.) Garden Club
Doylestown Nature Club Rutledge Horticultural Society
Garden Club of Bala-Cynwyd Suburban Horticultural Society
Garden Club of Conshohocken Twin Valleys Garden Club
Kearney and Arlington Garden Women's Club of Ardmore
Club
REPORT OF COMMITTEE ON GARDEN AWARDS
FOR 1932
The following awards were made to gardens of members dur-
ing 1932 upon the recommendation of the Committee on Garden
Awards :
A Silver Medal to Mrs. Andrew Wheeler, "le Chatelet," Ard-
more, for her beautiful and thoroughly consistent French Gar-
den. Laid out after the garden of Petit Trianon at Versailles, it
is perfectly executed in every detail. The tapis vert, herb bordered
on each side, is lined with allees of pleached European elms, the
only ones we know of in this country. The charming garden house
and rose garden show the intense interest of its owner, who person-
ally superintends the garden, both in its conception and main-
tenance.
A Silver Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Graham Thomson,
"Brookmead Farm," Devon, for their attractive and interesting
farm. The wall garden by the house, overlooking the meadows, is
of real beauty, and the collection of unusual shrubs is not only
most interesting but demonstrates the keen interest and knowledge
of Mrs. Thomson. An upper garden and woodland development
are in the making and give still greater promise.
A Bronze Medal to Mr. and Mrs. John H. Packard, 3rd, Chest-
nut Hill for their intimate garden. This garden, being an integral
31
part of the house, is charmingly planned and beautifully executed :
full of color and interest, it can be enjoyed from the terrace which
overlooks it.
A Bronze Medal to Mr. and Mrs. Jolm C. Gilpin, "Sugar Loaf
Orchard," Chestnut Hill. Their garden, ^Yhile very different in
type, is equally delightful, utilizing the beauty of its location on
the side of a hill, with an extensive view, and the natural advantages
of orchard and trees to make a charming whole. The color sense of
the owner is emphasized by her use of flowers and bulbs as they
blend first with the blossoms and later with the climbing roses which
trail along the low stone wall.
Respectfully submitted,
WILLIAM J. SERRILL,
Chairman.
REPORT OF THE LECTURE COMMITTEE FOR 1932
Four lectures were presented in 1932, as follows :
January 19, 3 P. M. "Rare and Unusual Plants," by Mr. B. Y.
Morrison, of "Washington, D. C.
February 2, 3 P. M. ' ' Gardens, a Community Asset, ' ' by ]\Ir.
John C. Wister, of Philadelphia (Secretary of the Society).
February 16, 3 P. M. "Small Fruits"^ for the Home' Garden,"
by Dr. S. W. Fletcher, of State College, Pa.
November 29, 8. P. M. "A Glimpse of the World in Koda-
color Movies," by Mrs. Caspar W. Hacker, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
The lectures were unusually interesting and were ably pre-
sented. The attendance varied from 125 to 300. Mrs. Hacker's
colored pictures, which she had taken herself on an around the
world cruise, were very beautiful, and her descriptive remarks
which accompanied the moving pictures helped make the evening
an enjoj^able one. Dr. Fletcher had given his lecture on "Small
Fruits for the Home Garden" before the Society several years ago,
and so many members w^ished it repeated the Lecture Committee
was delighted to include it in the 1932 series.
j\Ir, B. Y. Morrison spoke enthusiastically about the joy to be
derived in obtaining and growing "Rare and Unusual Plants," and
his talk stimulated many of his hearers to become interested in the
rarer things that are being introduced into commerce and to ask
for them from the seedsmen instead of being satisfied with the old
familiar favorites which we can all grow. There were so many
requests for a list of the plants which he shoAved on the screen that
we are pleased to include it in this report for the benefit of all the
members.
32
List of Plants shown by Mr. B. Y. Morrison in his talk before the
Society on January 19, 1932
Chimonanthus fragrans
Rhododendron mucronulatum
Ornithogalum nutans
Narcissus, Dawson City
Narcissus, Beersheba
Narcissus, Tapin and White
Conqueror
Narcissus, Nissa, Gallipoli
Narcissus, Tenedos, Waterlily
Narcissus, Crimson Braid, Sun-
star, Bacchus
Narcissus, Seville, Firetail, Har-
pagon
Narcissus, Raeburn, King Ed-
ward, Thelma
Narcissus, Medusa
Allium fiavum
Allium unif olium
Allium ostrowskianum
Allium recurvatum
Brodiaea hendersoni
Brodiaea grandifiora
Brodiaea congesta
Bloomeria aurea
Rhododendron racemosum
Syringa sweginzowii
Syringa Lutece
Syringa microphylla
Calochortus albus
Caloehortus benthami
Calochortus gunnisoni
Calochortus venustus citrinus
Calochortus El Dorado
Calochortus Vesta
Lilium cernuum
Lilium leichtlini
Lilium medeoloides
Lilium eentifolium
Sempervivum teetorum, sobo-
liferum
Sempervivum teetorum, vio-
laceum
Sempervivum assimile, faucon-
neti (Phlox amoena)
Sempervivum arachnoideum,
teetorum, atroviolaceum
Sempervivum arachnoideum
major
Crinum longifolium
Lonicera syringantha
Lonicera maackii
Cotoneaster foveolata
Cotoneaster acutifolia
Cotoneaster horizontalis
Cotoneaster divaricata
Cotoneaster lactea
Cotoneaster zabeli
Cotoneaster salicifolia floccosa
Stranvaesia davidiana
Rosa pomifera
Berberis julianae
Berberis pruinosa
Pyracantha coccinea lalandi
Pyracantha renulata kansuense
Pyracantha gibbsi yunnanensis
Begonia evansiana
Cyclamen neapolitanum
Gordonia alatamaha
Respectfully submitted,
ANNA ELLIOTT,
(Mrs. AVilliam T. Elliott),
Chairman.
33
UvcjIiiKi L'iKiiii ill llic Lihrdi-ji of Tlie Pennsylvania Horticulhinil Sdcictij
Book Stacks in the Lihrari/ of The Pennsyhnmia BnrticuUural Society
REPORT OF THE LIBRARY COMMITTEE FOR 1932
The Library Committee takes pleasure in reporting that early
in 1932 the Library was moved into larger and more adequate quar-
ters. The former Council Room was made into a commodious Read-
ing Room, with large tables upon which reference books can be
spread. Low leather chairs, small tables and good standard lamps
add to the comfort of the readers. Extra racks for the display of
i:eriodicals and catalogs and a case for recent accessions were also
added. A large room opening from the Reading Room has many
additional stacks that give much needed space for the growing
Library.
The Librarian's desk was moved to the Reading Room from
the crowded office and the Garden Consultant's desk was placed
in the well-lighted stack room. The Committee hopes that many
more of the members will avail themselves of the library privilege
and that those who are not members will feel free to use the Library
for reading and reference. The circulation privilege is reserved
for members. It is gratifying to record that nine hundred and
sixty-nine persons used the Library in 1932 as compared with seven
hundred and thirty-three in 1931.
The Library is open on weekdays from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. and
on Saturdays from 9 A. M. to 12 noon, and the Librarian is glad
to be of assistance to visitors. For the benefit of members who are
employed during the day and who would like to use the Library
in the evening, appointments may be made with the Librarian to
have the Library open one evening a week.
A catalog was published two years ago of the 2800 books then
in the Library and is available upon application. With the list of
accessions printed in the year books of 1932 and 1933, it forms a
complete record of the books in the Library — 3450 at the end of
1932. The Society subscribes to periodicals, among which are the
best English horticultural magazines and one French and one
German representative publication.
The Committee wishes to acknowledge with thanks the many
interesting and valuable books that have been given to the Library
through the generosity of the following members :
Mr. E. I. Farrington Mrs. Lorin Witmer
Miss Ernestine A. Goodman Mrs. John C. Gilpin
Mrs. George B. Junkin Mrs. J. Norman Henry
Mrs. J. Franklin McFadden Mr. Alexander MacLeod
Mr. B. Y. Morrison Mrs. Edward Sayres
An outstanding gift to the Library was "Gardens of Colony
and State," by Alice G. B. Lockwood (Mrs. Luke Vincent Lock-
wood), published by the Garden Club of America and presented
by The Gardeners.
Respectfully submitted,
MARY HELEN WINGATE LLOYD,
(Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd),
Chairman, Library Committee.
35
LIBRARY ACCESSIONS, 1932
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Yearbook, v. 79. 1928.
Addisonia. v. 15-16. 1930-31.
American forests, v. 37. 1931.
American Dahlia Society. Bulletin, nos. 51-58. 1930-31.
American fern journal, v. 19-21. 1929-31.
American forests, v. 37. 1931.
American Gladiolus Society. Bulletin, v. 8. 1931.
■ Descriptive gladiolus nomenclature. 1931.
American home. n.s. v. 6. 1931.
American Iris Society. Bulletin, nos. 34-41. 1930-31.
American Nature Association. Roadsides of North Carolina, n.d.
American Peony Society. Bulletin, nos. 41-48. 1930-1931.
American Rose Society. American rose annual, v. 17. 1932.
Arnold Arboretum. Bulletin of popular information. 3d ser. v. 3-5. 1929-31.
Bailey, Liberty Hyde. Botany for secondary schools. 1931.
Barron, Leonard. American home book of gardening. 1931.
Bartonia. nos. 1-10. 1908-28.
Beach, S. A., a7id others. Apples of New York. 2 v. 1905.
Bentham aiid Hooker. Genera plantarum. v. 1. 1862-65.
Bermuda — department of agriculture. Report for the year 1925.
Blaikie, Thomas. Diary of a Scotch gardener. 1932.
Boggs, Kate Doggett. Prints and plants of old gardens. 1932.
Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research. Contributions, v. 2-3. 1929-31.
Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Record, v. 19-20. 1930-31.
Browall, John. Caroli Linnaji. 1737.
Brown, N. E., a7id others. Mesembryanthema. 1931.
Canadian Horticultural Council. Report of the committee on horticultural
standards for exhibitions, n.d.
Castle and Castle. Our sentimental garden. 1914.
Chappell and Hunt. Gardener's friend and other pests. 1931.
Clute, Willard N. Useful plants of tlie world. 2d ed. 1932.
Coit, J. E. Peony check-list. 1907.
Comminges, Count de. Laura's garden. 1932.
Cox, E. H. M., ed. Gardener's cliapbook. 1931.
Cran, Marian. Gardens in America. 1931.
Culpepper House. Herbs, n.d.
Curtis's botanical magaine. Dedications, 1827-1927. 1931.
Daglish, Eric Fitch. How to see plants. 1932.
D'Albert. Cours theoritique et pratique de la taille des arbors fruitiere. 3d
ed. 1840.
Darlington, C. D. Chromosomes and jjlaut-breeding. 1932.
Darrah, James. Plants appearing in flower. 1882.
Doubleday, Neltje B. "Wild flowers worth knowing. 1926.
DriscoU, Louise. Garden grace. 1927.
• Garden of the west. 1922.
DuBreuil, M. A. Cours elementaire theorique et pratique d'arborieulture. 2 v.
1850-51.
Dumont, Courset. Botaniste eultivateur. v. 1-4. 1802.
Eaton, W. P. Everybody's garden. 1932.
Elizabeth and her German garden. 1899.
EUwanger and Barry. Descriptive catalogue of hardy ornamental trees. 1886.
Faris, J. T. Old gardens in and about Philadelphia. 1932.
Farrand, Beatrix. Landscape gardening at Princeton. 1931.
Farrington, E. I. Backyard garden. 1932.
Federated Garden Clubs of Maryland. Points and rules for judging. 1932.
Felt and Rankin. Insects and diseases of ornamental trees and shrubs. 1932.
Figures pour I'almanach du bou jardiniere. 12th ed. n.d.
Flemwell, G. Flower-fields of alpine S'witzerland. 1912.
Fletcher, S. W. History of fruit growing in Pennsylvania. 1932.
Historj' of fruit growing in Virginia. 1932.
37
Flower grower, v. 18. 1931.
Fox, H. M., trmis. Delectable garden. 1931.
Freeman and Williams. ' Useful and ornamental plants of Trinidad and Tobago.
1928.
Frothingham, Jessie. Success in gardening. 1913.
Gabrielson, Ira N. Western American alpines. 1932.
Gager, C. S. Fundamentals of botany. 1916.
Garden Club of America. Bulletin. 1931.
Garden gossip, v. 4-6. 1928-31.
Gardener's chronicle (English), v. 89-90. 1931.
Gardener's chronicle of America. 1930-31.
Gmelin, J. G. Flora sibirica. 2 v. 17-17-49.
Gress, E. M. Preservation of wild flowers. 1932.
Griffiths, David. American bulbs under glass. 1928.
Gustafson, A. E. Handbook of fertilizers. 1932.
Hall, Charles A. Plant life. 1925.
Hardy and half-hardy plants, v. 1. 1930.
Harshberger, John W. Vegetation of the New Jersey pine barrens. 1916.
Henderson, Peter. Practical floriculture, new ed. 1928.
Hillsborough Garden Club. Scoring systems for flowers and gardens. 1932.
Hitchcock, A. S. Methods of descriptive systematic botany. 1925.
Hitchcock and Zimmerman. Eoot of greenwood cuttings as influenced by the
age of tissue at the base. 1930.
Homes and gardens, v. 12. 1930-31.
Horticulture, v. 9. 1931.
Hottes, Alfred C. Book of trees. 1932.
House, Homer D. Annotated list of the ferns and flowering plants of New
York state. 1921.
House and garden, v. 1-60. 1901-31.
Hovey & Co. Amateur cultivator's guide. 1868.
Hume, H. Harold. Cultivation of the citrus fruits. 1926.
Hutchinson, J. Eamilies of flowering plants. I. Dicotyledons. 1926.
Illustrations of flowers, n.d.
International botanical congress. Eeport of the proceedings, v 5. 1931.
International Garden Club. Journal, v. 2, no. 2. 1918.
Iris Society (English). Bulletins. 1925-31.
Jackson, Benjamin D. Linnseus. 1923.
Jay, Mary Eutherford. Garden handbook. 1931.
Jellett, E. C. Gardens and gardeners of Germantown. 1914.
Johnson, A. M. Taxonomy of the flowering plants. 1931.
Journal of pomologj' and horticultural science, v. 8-9. 1930-31.
Kift and Hedenberg. Success with house plants. 1932.
Landscape architecture, v. 21. 1931.
Laurie and Chadwick. Modern nursery. 1931.
Lemaire, C. L'Horticulteur universel. v. 1-3. 1839-42.
Leroy, Andre. Dictionnaire de poniologie. 2 v. 1867-69.
Lesesne, T. P. Landmarks of Charleston. 1932.
Linden, J. Hortus lindeuianus. v. 1-2. 1859-60.
Lockwood, A. G. B. Gardens of colony and state, pt. 1. 1932.
Loddiges, Conrad & Sons. Orchidiae. n.d.
Lowell, Amy. Pictures of the floating world. 1928.
McCurdy, U. M. Book of garden flowers. 1932.
Macself, A. J. Amateur's greenhouse, n.d.
Delphiniums and how to excel with them. 1931.
Gladioli. 1925.
Maxwell, Sir Herbert. Trees; a woodland notebook. 1915.
Meehan, Thomas. Native flowers and ferns. 4 v. 1878-81.
Meehan's monthly, v. 4-6, 8-12. 1894-96, 98-1902.
Michelio, P. A. Nova plantarum genera. 1729.
Milman, Helen. My kalendar of country delights. 1903.
My roses and how I grew them. 1901.
Mitchell, Sydnej' B. From a sunset garden. 1932.
38
Morris, F. O., ed. Series of picturesque views of seats of the noblemen and
gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland. 8 v. n.d.
Morrison, B. Y. Yellow day lilies. 1928.
Muhlenberg, D. H. Deseriptio uberior graminum. 1817.
Murray, Pauline. Planning and planting the home garden. 1932.
National horticultural magazine, v. 9-10. 1930-31.
Nature magazine, v. 1-18. 1923-31.
Nees and others. Genera plantarum. 1849-59.
New flora and silva. v. 3. 1931.
New Jersey agricultural experiment station. Spray to prevent the attack of
Japanese beetle. 1924.
New Jersey gardens, v. 2-3. 1931.
New York Botanical Garden. Journal, v. 31-32. 1930-31.
Nichols, Beverley. Down the garden path. 1932.
Niederlein, Gustav. Eessources vegetales de colonies frangaises. 1902.
Ortloff, H. Stuart. Annuals in the garden. 1932.
Garden blue book of annuals and biennials. 1931.
— and Raymore, Henry B. Garden maintenance. 1932.
Palmer, F. E. Milady's house plants. 1929.
Pennsylvania agricultural experiment station. Annual report, v. 44. 1931.
department of highways. Pennsylvania highways beautiful, n.d.
— department of public instruction. Arbor days and bird days. 1922.
Persoon, C. H. Synopsis plantarum. 1805.
Poiteau, A. Bon jardiniere. 5 v. 1833-46.
Praeger, E. Lloyd. Sempervivums. 1932.
Ramsey and Lawrence. Outdoor living room. 1932.
Rexford, Eben Eugene. Amateur gardencraft. 1912.
Four seasons in the garden. 1907.
■ Home floriculture. 1928.
Richardson, Mis. Waldo, ed. Melody of earth. 1930.
Robinson, W. Wild garden. 1929.
Rogers, Julia Ellen. Tree book. 1931.
Trees worth knowing. 1928.
Rohde, Eleanour Sinclair. Oxford's college gardens. 1932.
S'cented garden. 2d imp. 1931.
Royal Horticultural Society. Conifers in cultivation. 1932.
Journal, v. 56. 1931.
Lily yearbook. 1932.
• Keport for the year 1931. 1932.
Report of the Primula conference. 1929.
Rydberg, Per Axel. Flora of the prairies and flora of central North America.
1932.
Sargent, Charles Sprague. Trees of Mount Vernon. 1926.
Schulz, Ellen D. Cactus culture. 1932.
Scott, O. M. & Sons. Lawn making. 1932.
Scott, Temple, comp. In praise of gardens. 1910.
Seward, A. C. Plants, what they are and what they do. 1932.
Shreve, Forrest. Cactus. 1931.
Sibthrop, John. Florae Graecae prodromus. v. 1-2. 1806-13.
Silberrad a7id Lyall. Dutch bulbs and gardens. 1909.
Simpson, C. T. Florida wild life. 1932.
Singleton, Esther. Shakespeare garden. 1931.
Smith, Dulcie L. What greater delight. 1931.
Smith and Hadley. Japanese beetle. 1926.
Societe Royale d'Horticulture de Paris. Annales. v. 2, 24-25. 1828, 1839.
Taylor, G. C. Garden making by example. 1932.
Thornber and Bonker. Fantastic elan. 1932.
United States department of agriculture. Yearbook. 1925-31.
Urban, A. L. My garden of dreams. 1913.
Voice of the garden. 1912.
Van Dyke, Henry. Blue flower. 1902.
Van Slyke, Lucius L. Fertilizers and crop production. 1932.
Verplanck, V. E. Every day in my garden. 1913.
39
Vick, James. Viek's floral guide. 1849-59.
Vilmorin, P. L. de. Hortus Vilmoriniauus. 1906.
Vilmorin-Andrieux et Cie. Description des plantes portageres. 1856.
Instructions pour les seim de fleurs. 1849.
"Walter, Thomas. Flora caroliniana. 1788.
Watson, Alexander. American home garden. 1859.
"Wells, B. W. Natural gardens of North Carolina. 1932.
Yearbook of agriculture. 1856.
"Weston, T. A. All about flowering bulbs. 1931.
Wilder, Louise Beebe. Fragrant path. 1932.
William, Saunders. 1900.
Wonders of the vegetable kingdom. 2d ed. 1884.
Wooley, R. V. G. Herbaceous borders for amateurs. 1926.
Worthley, H. N. Emergence cages and bait pails for timing codling moth
sprays. 1932.
Wright, Walter P. Alpine flowers and rock gardens. 3d ed. 1924.
Garden week by week. 1909.
Zimmer, George Frederick. Popular dictionary of botanical names and terms.
2d ed. n.d.
Zimmerman, Crocker mid Hitchcock. Relation of the growth of plants and
the H-ion concentration of rose soils. 1930.
LIST OF PERIODICALS RECEIVED BY THE PENNSYLVANIA
HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, 1932
Addisonia.
Agricultural Index.
Alpine Garden Society. Bulletin.
American Botanist.
American Dahlia Society. Bulletin.
American Delphinium Society. Bulletin.
American Fer7i Journal.
American Forests.
American Home.
American Iris Society. Bulletin.
American Peony Society. Bulletin.
American Rose Quarterly.
Arnold Arboretum. Bulletin of popular information.
Arnold Arboretum. Journal.
Bartonia.
Better Homes and Gardens.
Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research. Contributions.
Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research. Professional papers.
Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Leaflets.
Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Records.
California Bosarian.
*City Gardens Club. Bulletin.
*Common Speech.
Curtis's Botanical Magazine.
Desert.
Federated Garden Cluljs of Maryland. News.
*Florist's Exchange.
*Florist's Review.
Flower Grower.
Garden Club Excliange.
40
Garden Club of America. Bulletin.
Garden Digest.
Garden Glories.
Garden Gossip.
Garden Greetings.
Garden Path.
Gardener's Chronicle of America.
Gardener's Chronicle (English).
Gladiolus Bevieiv.
Hardy and Half-hardy Plants.
Homes and Gardens.
Horticulture.
House and Garden.
Iris Society (English). Yearbook.
Journal of Pomology and Horticultural Science.
*La7idmar]c.
Landscape Architecture.
Lexingto7i Leaflets.
Missouri Botanical Garden. Bulletin.
Morton Arboretum. Bulletin of popular information.
National Council of State Garden Club Federations. Bulletin.
National Horticultural Magazine.
Nature Magazine.
New Flora and Silva.
New Jersey Gardens.
New York Botanical Garden. Journal.
New Yoric Gardens.
Boadside Bulletin.
Koyal Horticultural Society. Journal.
Wisconsin Horticulturist.
*Periodicals not kept permanently.
GARDEN DAYS
In 1932 The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society again held
its Garden Days in co-operation with the School of Horticulture for
Women. As the ''Days" are an important source of revenue to the
School, the Society made a financial contribution to the School, as
it has done for the last few years. In return, the School arranged
the Garden Day program and members of the Society were allowed
the privilege of visiting all the gardens listed.
The program included fifty-seven gardens, the majority of
them being opened on Saturday afternoons in May, June and Octo-
ber. A group of ten beautiful places in the vicinity of Morristown,
N. J., however, was opened on a Tuesday (May 24th).
On account of the celebration of the anniversaries of William
Penn and George Washington, a special feature was made of his-
torical gardens and houses and visits to these places added much
interest to the 1932 program.
The Society wishes to express its appreciation to the persons
who so generously opened their places for the joint Garden Days,
and assures them that this privilege, wliich has a definite educa-
tional value, was greatly enjoyed by the members.
41
DAA'ID BUST
Consultant in Horticulture and Manager of Exhibitions
CONSULTANT IN HORTICULTURE
Mr. David Rust visited eighty-three gardens of members during
1932. The list of subjects about which he was most frequently con-
sulted follows, and is arranged according to the frequency of the
inquiries :
Group One Group Two
Pruning Location and Planting
Planting Perennials Moving of Trees
Treatment of Lawns Vegetable Gardens
Spraying Planting on Old Places
Treatment of Outdoor Roses Treatment of Orchids
Planting Evergreens AYall Gardens
Treatment of Evergreens Bulb Gardens
Japanese Beetle Enclosed Porches
Judging Shows Pools
Talks before Garden Clubs Rock Gardens
Flowering Shrubs Stepping Stone Walks
Treatment of Box
In addition to visiting gardens, Mr. Rust has had many office
consultations, has given much advice by telephone and letters, has
given fourteen talks before horticultural organizations and acted
as judge at seventeen flower shows. The work is extending to larger
territory each year. This past year one trip was made to Warren
County, Pa., one trip to Maryland and four trips to Southern New
Jersey.
Members are advised that they should make more use of this
service during the winter months, as at that time many insect pests
can be eradicated. Also members going away during the summer
months would do well to consult Mr. Rust before they go as to the
care of their gardens while away. This year a large number of
Azaleas, Rhododendrons and evergreens were very badly injured by
the dry weather.
Mr. Rust is at the service of all members. He will visit mem-
bers' gardens to give advice, the only charge being for traveling
expenses. He is also available for consultation at the office, prefer-
ably by appointment.
THE GARDEN CLUB FEDERATION OF
PENNSYLVANIA, 1932
A glance through the minutes of the Garden Club Federation
of Pennsylvania for the past year must give all the officers and
members of the Federation a certain feeling of gratification and
courage to go forward.
In January, 1932, a new activity was introduced — a Judging
Course. This was held in co-operation with the Pennsylvania Hor-
ticultural Society, in the auditorium at 1600 Arch Street. The
43
(s iz; f^
L
course was most successful and there were 113 enrollments. The
schedule was as follows :
January 11, Monday. Judging in Straight Garden Classes,
with demonstration. Mr. Leonard Barron.
January 12, Tuesday. Schedule for Flower Show, duties of
Chairmen and Judges. Mrs. Wheeler H. Peekham,
January 13, Wednesday. Japanese Flower Arrangements, Miss
Mary Louise Butcher; Modernisticc Arrangements, Mr. Eugene
Schoen.
January 14, Thursday. Judging for Artistic Arrangement.
Mr. Richardson Wright.
The Second Annual Meeting was held at Strawberry Mansion
on March 9, 1932, with 36 of the 62 member clubs represented.
Following the election of officers and presentation of the inspiring
reports by the committee chairmen and delegates of work accom-
plished during the year, it was a privilege and honor to unanimously
elect Mrs. J. Willis Martin Honorary President, which office she
very graciously accepted. No report would be complete without a
word of loving tribute to such a gallant leader who has left us.
After a buffet supper, Mrs. Duncan Brent told of the Maryland
Federation. Mrs. Norman Henry gave an account of plant hunting
in British Columbia, and ]\Ir. John C. Wister talked on plant ma-
terial. Mr. Wister prefaced his remarks with the assurance that
we, in Pennsylvania, can grow a greater variety of things than
most of the other states in the Union.
The 1932 Gold Medal of Achievement given by Mrs. George L.
Harrison was awarded to the Kittanning Garden Club, "for the
abundance and variety of their well-planned and well-executed
original and educational work for the furtherance of the knowledge
and love of horticulture among adults and children." First Hon-
orable Mention was awarded to the Carrie T. Watson Garden
Club, "for the continued beautification of their town, for their
formation of new garden clubs among school children, and for their
planting of nearly 9000 shade trees." Second Honorable Mention
awarded to the Westmoreland Garden Club, "for their planting of
trees and shrubs on the highway, their planting survej^ of the town,
for their making an oasis of the village jail grounds, and for their
lawn and garden contest for non-members." Third Honorable
Mention awarded to the Lawrence County Garden Club, ' ' for their
State highway planting of shrubs and flowers, for their enrollment
of Junior Club Members, and for their care of old forest trees in
the park" Fourth Honorable Mention awarded to the Village Gar-
den Club of Sewickley, "for their conservation of wild flowers, for
Their surveyance of trucks deporting rhododendrons and laurel from
the mountains, and for their civic gardens enterprise.
The semi-annual meeting was held at Erie, October 11 and 12,
1932, with the Carrie T. Watson Garden Club as hostess. The Fed-
eration wishes to again express its grateful appreciation of the
splendid program, which included drives on the Peninsula and
through beautiful estates, and of the efficient handling of the
meetings.
45
m
Monthly executive meetings have been held to direct the course
of activities. Mr. Garrett V. Clark, Treasurer, has been of great
assistance in managing the finances.
The third Annual Meeting of the Federation will be held in
Philadelphia on March 28-29, 1933.
KATHERINB C. REED,
(Mrs. Alan H. Reed),
President.
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS OF THE FEDERATION
President, Mrs. Alan H. Reed, Wyncote, Pa.
Treasurer, Mr. Garrett V. Clark, 4404 Locust Street, Phila-
delphia, Pa.
Corresponding Secretary, Mrs. Samuel P. Felix, Lansdowne, Pa.
Recording Secretary, Mrs. James M. Shellenberger, Doyles-
town. Pa.
Vice-Presidents
Eastern Division — Mrs. Clarence C. Zantzinger, Chestnut Hill.
Central Division — Mrs. Vance C. McCormick, Harrisburg.
Western Division — Mrs. Carroll P. Davis, Pittsburgh.
Directors
Eastern Division — Miss Estelle Thomas, Mrs. Boyle Irwin,
Mrs. Thomas Newhall.
Central Division — Mrs. Allan D. Thompson, Mrs. Arthur J.
Wood, Mrs. S. S. Newcomer.
AVestern Division — Mrs. Wm. Logan Fox, Mrs. George B. Tay-
lor, Mrs. John Barclay.
MEMBER CLUBS OF THE FEDERATION
Eastern Division
Bala-Cynwyd, Garden Olub of, Delaware Co., Suburban Garden
Mrs. Harry C. Tily, Pres., Club of,
32 Overhill Road, Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Mr. Edward Cnnningham, Pres.,
"S'picewood," Bon Air,
BushkiU Garden Club, xJpper Darby, Pa.
Mrs. George Young, Pres., Mrs. C. B. Shoemaker. See.,
BushkiU, Pa. Fairview Ave., Bon Air,
Mrs. William G. Cook, Sec, Upper Darby Pa
BushkiU, Pa.
Council for Presei-^'ation of Dingman's Ferry Garden Club,
Natural Beauty in Pennsylvania, ^rs- Lynne K. Lewis, Pres.,
Mrs. Wm. T. Elliott, Pres., 2004 W. Ontario St., Philadelphia, Pa.
117 Glenn Road, Ardmore, Pa. Mrs. Charles Cron, Sec,
Mrs. Alan Crawford, Sec, Box 31, Dingman's Ferry, Pa.
Devon, Pa.
-r> 1 ry Tj J-- n^ 1 o • + Four Counties Garden Club,
Delaware Co. Horticultural Society, ^ ^ ^^ , ' ^
Mr. H. F. Sehearer Pres., ^^^'®- Samuel J. Henderson, Pres.,
30 Princeton Road,' Brook'line, Pa. Media, Pa.
Miss M. Green, Sec, Mrs. Henry N. Piatt, Sec,
409 E. Darby Road, Llauerch, Pa. Laverock, Chestnut Hill, Pa.
47
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Gardeners, The (Haverford),
Mrs. Isaac H. Clothier, Pres.,
Radnor, Pa.
Mrs. Eichard L. Barrows. Sec,
Haverford, Pa.
Garden Workers (Haverford),
Mrs. Bernard T. Converse, Pres.,
Rosemont, Pa.
Mrs. Oliver McCormick, Sec.,
Haverford, Pa.
Germantown, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Francis J. Stokes, Pres.,
629 Church Lane, Germantown, Pa.
Mrs. Samuel Bradbury, Jr., Sec,
151 W. Coulter St., Gennantown, Pa.
Germantown Horticultural Society,
Mr. J. Franklin Meehan, Pres.,
400 Venion Rd., Mt. Airy, Phila., Pa.
Mr. Edwin Matthews, Sec,
237 E. Highland Ave., Cliestnut Hill,
Pa.
Glenside, Everywoman's Club of.
Garden Department,
Mrs. Orson W. Doolittle, Chairman,
Roberts Ave., Glenside, Pa.
Huntingdon Valley Garden Club,
Mrs. J. Howard Sheble, Jr., Pres.,
Rydal, Pa.
Mrs. Joseph H. Cochran, Sec,
Rydal, Pa.
Keystone Branch,
Woman's National Farm and Garden
Association,
Miss Emma Blakiston, Pres.,
Fort Washington, Pa.
Miss Frances E. Mcllvaine, Sec,
3209 Baring St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Lansdowne Flower Association,
Mr. C. W. Conard, Pres.,
"The Knoll," Lansdowne, Pa.
Mrs. George E. Allen, Sec,
22 E. Essex Ave., Lansdowne, Pa.
Lansdowne, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Samuel P. Felix, Pres.,
50 W. Plumstead St., Lansdowne, Pa.
Mrs. Cyril P. Fox, Sec,
94 Essex Ave., Lansdowne, Pa.
Little Gardens Unit,
Doylestown Nature Club,
Mrs. James M. Shellenberger, Pres.,
Golf View Road, Doylestown, Pa.
Media Garden Club,
Mrs. P. W. Janeway, Pres.,
Third and Edgewater Sts., Media, Pa.
Millville, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Francis Robbins, Pres.,
Millville, Pa.
Miss Helen M. Eves, Sec,
Millville, Pa.
Monroe County Garden Club,
Mrs. W. K. LaBar, Pres.,
Box 65, Stroudsburg, Pa.
Mrs. F. A. Heller, Sec,
R. F. D. 4, Stroudsburg, Pa.
Montrose Garden Club,
Mrs. H. Percival Read, Pres.,
Montrose, Pa.
Mrs. Henry A. Riley, Sec,
Montrose, Pa.
Norristown Garden Club,
Miss Rena S. Middleton, Pres.,
1851 W. Marshall St., Norristown, Pa.
Mrs. Harry P. Hiltner, Sec
1028 W. Marshall St., Norristown, Pa.
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society,
Mr. C. F. C. Stout, Pres.,
1600 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Mr. John C. Wister, Sec,
1600 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Penn Valley Garden Club,
Mrs. John A. Lafore, Pres.,
Narberth, Pa.
Mrs. Gibson Bell, Sec,
Wynnewood, Pa.
Philadelphia, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Frazer Harris, Pres.,
Paper Mill Road, Chestnut Hill, Pa.
Planters, The,
Mrs. F. Woodson Hancock, Jr., Pres.,
Valley Forge, Pa.
Mrs. W. Hobart Porter, Sec,
Biyn Mawr, Pa.
Scranton, Centui-y Club of.
Garden Department,
Mrs. G. J. Hensel, Chairman,
1009 Electric St., Scranton, Pa.
Miss Aline Besancon, Vice-Cliairmaii,
329 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa.
Society of Little Gardens (Philadel-
pliia) ,
Mrs. Howard W. Lewis, Pres.,
1928 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. Howard Wolf BLkle, Sec,
Strafford, Pa.
Trevose Horticultural Society,
Mr. Garrett V. Clark, Pres.,
4404 Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Mr. Jay V. Hare, Sec,
Trevose, Pa.
49
Trowellers, The (St. Davids),
Miss Sue D. Keeney, Pres.,
318 E. Lancaster Ave., Wayne, Pa.
Mrs. Duffield Ashmead, Sec,
Wayne, Pa.
Twin Valleys Garden Club (Valley
Forge),
Mrs. J. Howard Freeman, Pres.,
55 W. Eagle Road, Upper Darby, Pa.
Mrs. Seeley Dewees, Sec,
Berwyn, Pa.
Weeders, The,
Mrs. Wharton Sinkler, Pres.,
Elkins, Park, Pa.
Mrs. O. H. Perry Pepper, Sec,
Ithan, Pa.
West Chester Garden Club,
Mrs. Eoger B. Combs, Pres.,
Whitford, Pa.
Mrs. Vincent Gilpin, Sec,
West Chester, Pa.
West Philadelphia Garden Club,
Miss Sarah K. Wood, Pres.,
4326 Osage Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
Mrs. W. Ross Wilson, Sec,
808 S. 48th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Wyoming Valley Garden Club,
Mr. W. J. Peck, Pres.,
220 Washington St.,
West Pittston, Pa.
Central Division
Altoona Garden Club (Hollidays-
burg) ,
Dr. Frederick D. Willis, Pres.,
HoUidaysburg, Pa.
Mr. W. T. Reed, Sec,
HoUidaysburg, Pa.
Bradford, Garden Club of,
Mrs. Joseph H. Bovaird, Pres.,
119 Jackson Ave., Bradford, Pa.
Mrs. M. M. Hall, Sec,
Bradford, Pa.
Carlisle Garden Club,
Mrs. Allan D. Thompson, Pres.,
261 W. Louther St., Carlisle, Pa.
Mrs. Norton Goodyear, Sec,
Carlisle, Pa.
Chamber sburg Garden Club,
Mrs. Walter King Sharpe, Pres.,
315 Lincoln Way, East, Chambers-
burg, Pa.
Mrs. Barclay G. Orr, Sec,
Chambersburg, Pa..
Harrisburg Garden Club,
Mrs. Carl W. Davis, Pres.,
"Cheyney," River Road, Harrisburj
Pa.
Miss Martha Ludes, Sec,
223 State St., Harrisburg, Pa.
Kane, Garden Club of,
Mrs. A. A. Nicolas, Pres.,
123 Edgar St., Kane, Pa.
Mrs. Clara Ricketts, Sec,
Kane, Pa.
State College Garden Club,
Prof. A. C. Cloetingle, Pres.,
717 W. Foster St., State College, Pa.
Mrs. C. H. Harris, Sec,
Box 252, State College, Pa.
Williamsport Garden Club,
Mrs. George L. Holland, Pres.,
707 Campbell St., Williamsport, Pa.
Mrs. William D. Crooks, Jr., Sec,
22 E. Central Ave., Williamsport, Pa.
York and York County Conservation
Society,
Garden Club of,
Mrs. Charles B. Heinley, Pres.,
34 N. Keesey St., York Pa.
Miss Marian Wallace, Sec,
127 N. Beaver St., York, Pa.
Western Division
Allegheny County, Garden Club of
(Pittsburgh),
Miss Eleanor McC. Clialfant, Pres.,
5028 Morewood Place, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mrs. James D. Heard, Sec,
5720 Aylesboro Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Butler, Garden Club of,
Mrs. George H. Jackson," Pres.,
615 N. McKean St., Butler, Pa-
Mrs. Richard R. Campbell, Sec,
516 N. McKean St., Butler, Pa.
50
Clarion County, Garden Club of,
Mrs. M. R. Morgan, Pres.,
Foxburg, Clarion County, Pa.
Mrs. Percy Andrews, Sec,
New Bethlehem, Pa.
Club of Little Gardens (Pittsburgh),
Mrs. William R. Scott, Pres.,
5439 Northumberland St., Pittsburgh,
Pa.
Elk Valley Garden Club,
Mrs. W. T. Ryman, Pres., .
Girard, Pa.
Garden and Hobby Clu!) of
The Erie Public Museum,
Mrs. Katheiine B. Blake, Director,
Erie, Pa.
Irwin Garden Club,
Mrs. C. R. Keister, Pres.,
Irwin, Pa.
Mrs. W. R. Milburn, Sec,
Irwin, Pa.
Kittanning Garden Club,
Mrs. C. B. McNees, Pres.,
101 Hazel Ave., Kittanning, Pa.
Mrs. J. K. Eyler, Sec,
113 Jefferson St., Kittanning, Pa.
Lawrence County Garden Club,
Mrs. Walter Eckenroid, Pres.,
113 Fairfield Ave., New Castle, Pa.
Mrs. Marcus Funchtwanger, Sec,
Laurel Boulevard, New Castle, Pa.
Meadville Garden Club,
Mrs. F. C. Borst, Pres.,
163 Spring St., Meadville, Pa.
Miss Susan A. Ross, Sec,
425 N. Main St., Mead\dlle, Pa.
Neighborhood Garden Club
(North Side, Pittsburgh),
Mrs. R. R. Sanborn, Pres.,
430 Teece Ave., Bellevue, Pa.
Mrs. Sally Grifath, Sec,
1209 Pemberton St., N. S., Pittsburgh,
Pa.
New Kensington Garden Club,
Mr. D. M. MeBride, Pres.,
307 Sixth Ave., Parnassus, Pa.
Mrs. Harry Landerman, Sec,
1032 Parkview Ave., New Kensington,
Pa.
Oakmont Unit,
Woman's National Farm and Garden
Association,
Mrs. B. W. Dunham, Pres.,
Oakmont, Pa.
Mrs. C. A. Johnston, Sec,
Delaware Ave., Oakmont, Pa.
Sewickley, Little Garden Club of,
Mrs. Alexander Hunter, Pres.,
Pine Road, Sewickley, Pa.
Mrs. E. S. Painter, Sec,
Irwin Drive, Sewickley, Pa.
Sewickley, Village Garden Club of,
Mrs. Horace F. Baker, Pres.,
Sewickley, Pa.
Mrs. Joseph M. Browne, Sec,
529 Pine Road, Sewickley, Pa,
Shady Side Unit,
Woman's National Farm and Garden
Association,
Mrs. E. B. Mellor, Pres.,
D'Arlington Apts., Neville and
Bayard Sts.,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Somerset Garden Club,
Mrs. George J. Krebs, Pres.,
476 W. Main St., Somerset, Pa.
Miss Minnie Snyder, Sec,
165 E. Catherine St., Somerset, Pa.
Titusville Garden Club,
Miss Margaret E. Bayliss, Pres.,
316 W. Spruce St., Titusville, Pa.
Miss Leah S. Metzger, Sec,
105 E. Spruce St., Titusville, Pa,
Carrie T. Watson Garden Club
(Erie),
Mrs. Robert H. Neide, Pres.,
207 E. 12th St., Erie, Pa,
Mrs. Maxwell Lick, Sec,
149 W. 8th St., Erie, Pa,
Westminster Garden Club (Erie).
Mrs. E. C. Feidler, Pres.,
Colonial Drive, R. F. D. 2,
Westminster, Erie, Pa,
Mrs. George Willis, Sec,
516 Mohawk Drive, Eiie, Pa.
Westmoreland Garden Club (Greens-
burg) ,
Miss Margaret Coulter, Pres.,
Skara Glen, Greensburg, Pa.
Mrs. James Gregg, Sec,
144 Alexander Ave., Greensburg, Pa,
Members-at-Large
Miss Ruth Rapp,
47 E. Market St.,
Bethlehem, Pa.
Mrs. Gifford Pinchot,
Executive Mansion,
Harrisburg, Pa,
51
1932 REPORT OF GARDEN DIVISION OF STATE
FEDERATION OF PENNSYLVANIA WOMEN
The aim of the Garden Division is:
The stimulation of garden interest in all clubs in
the State Federation.
The organization of garden interest under the
leadership of chairmen and executive committees.
The expression of garden interest through pro-
grams for meetings and activities.
Gro^^i;h of interest is indicated by the increased requests for
program suggestions and calls for accurate information on many
garden topics.
Growth in organization is shown by the fact that over one hun-
dred and fifty groups in the clubs are planning for the increase of
gardens. These groups are being developed in many clubs organ-
ized primaril}^ to serve other interests. At the annual convention
of the State Federation in Philadelphia in October, 1932, the at-
tendance at the garden breakfast, the garden conference and the
garden exhibit showed the interest of delegates from all parts of
the State. County and district meetings show this same lively
interest.
Growth in the expression of garden interest is shown in better
personal gardens ; more community j^lantings ; increase in number
of garden centers; plant exchanges and other methods of sharing
garden beauty and plant material. Garden book libraries are being
established in clubs and garden-book weeks are being sponsored in
many of the public libraries in the State.
There is a very apparent trend toward better layout, the desire
being to have gardens wliich may be lived in and enjoyed inti-
mately. Yard and garden contests are a great factor in this.
Better plant culture and the use of better varieties are resulting
from our many flower shows.
Courses of study as well as one-da^' garden schools are growing
more numerous.
In short, gardening for women has passed the fad stage and is
becoming a serious interest.
Respectfully submitted,
ALICE PECK KAISER,
(Mrs. Frank A. Kaiser),
Chairman, Garden Division of State F ederation
of Pennsylvania Women.
52
ARTHUR HOYT SCOTT HORTICULTURAL
FOUNDATION
Swarthmore CoUege, Swarthmore, Pa.
By John C. Wister, Director
Arthur Hoyt Scott was one of many thousands of persons
whose interest in gardening began in the early years of the present
century. He had first a small city garden in West Philadelphia,
then a suburban garden of an acre or more in Oak Lane, and finally
a large farm in Media, and in all three of these places he grew
many beautiful flowers to unusual perfection. When I first knew
him in Oak Lane, about twenty years ago, his favorite flowers were
peonies, irises and lilacs. One of the first things he told me was
that he had had great trouble in learning about the different kinds
of peonies, and that before making his selection of varieties he had
gone to the American Peony Society Test Garden at Cornell to
study varieties. Later he had heard there were fine lilacs to see in
Rochester and had gone there to study and select the kinds he
wished for his own garden. Even then he was deploring the lack of
a public garden near Philadelphia where Philadelphians could see
the many kinds of flowers which they could grow in small city or
suburban gardens. He held this to be more important than the
privilege of seeing tropical plants in Horticultural Hall, Fairmount
Park, which only those persons with large gi'eenhouses and trained
gardeners could grow.
When Mr. Scott moved to Media and planted a larger garden
and had room for many large shrubs and flowering cherries, apples
and other flowering trees, he found this same difficulty — that he
could not within easy radius of Philadelphia see mature specimens
in bloom. It is true that he did see many plants before he planted
them, for being a member of The Pennsylvania Horticultural So-
ciety, he was able to visit many private gardens which were not
ordinarily opened to the public. He also visited many nurseries,
such as Krewson's, in Cheltenham, Moon's, in Morrisville, DeKalb,
in Norristown, Andorra, in Chestnut Hill, Wohlert's in Narberth,
Hoopes Brothers and Thomas', in West Chester, etc., and from
what he had learned in these places and what he read about in
books and garden magazines, he brought together a wonderful
collection of plants.
But still, in the back of his mind there remained a resentment
that he had not been able, as a beginner, to see these plants in some
nearby public garden, and gradually he developed the desire to help
make possible such a public garden. Being a graduate of Swarth-
more College, it was natural that his mind should turn to its campus
in this connection, and for a number of years he talked to the Col-
lege authorities, particularly Prof. Samuel A. Palmer, of the De-
partment of Botany, trying to work out some kind of a scheme by
which an Arboretum — not so much of scientific character but of
practical value — might be established there.
53
His long illness and imtimely death prevented his bringing
these plans into any definite shape, but Mrs. Scott had not for-
gotten his desire and in 1929 made possible by a generous endow-
ment a memorial in the form of the Arthur Hoyt Scott Horticul-
tural Foundation.
In 1930 I was asked to become the Director of this Foundation.
I was not given any specific directions as to what should or should
not be done, but I knew from long acquaintance with Mr. Scott
pretty well what he had in mind, and therefore I suggested to Mrs.
Scott and to the Swarthmore authorities that the type of planting
which would have pleased him most would have been one which
emphasized the many smaller flowering trees, the flowering shrubs
and the most important of the flowering herbaceous plants which
are hardy without expert care in the region around Philadelphia.
I was authorized to proceed with plans, giving the most prominent
positions to such plants, but to include as many other hardy trees,
shrubs and flowering garden plants as the space and funds available
would permit.
Swarthmore College owns about 237 acres of land in the bor-
ough of Swarthmore and also the Crum-Maitin Woods along Crum
Creek, about a mile north of the campus. The main campus of the
College is just north of the Pennsylvania Railroad along the Chester
Road. It is fairly level, with a gentle slope to the south. Like most
of the American colleges, the buildings have been placed from time
to time without any comprehensive scheme in mind and the plant-
ing has been done in the same manner. The present campus is
beautiful on account of many large trees, some of them dating back
long before the beginning of the College, and with great sweeps of
lawn the summer aspect of the grounds is most pleasing. In general,
however, the variety of trees was not before 1930 very great, cover-
ing only about 70 species in about 30 genera, and after the founders
of the College had begun well by planting fine oaks, hemlocks and
lindens, later generations unfortunately put in many Norway
maples and Norway spruce, which are now present in much greater
quantity than is desirable. The lack of evergreens is most notice-
able, particularly in a college campus which is used mostly in
winter and which, therefore, is quite bare during most of the college
year, and no attempt has ever been made to plant many flowering
trees or flowering shrubs.
The problem of replanting such a college campus with limited
expenditures is not an easy one. The beauty of the existing flne
trees must, of course, be kept and yet new planting must be fltted
into them, not only to make an attractive whole but to conform in
some way to an educational scheme for students and visitors. It is
not possible in a property of this kind to cut down many trees be-
cause of the sentimental association that many persons connected
with the College have for certain specimens. After long study it
seemed wise to rearrange the planting of the campus in a great
botanical scheme, running through from the lowest order of plants,
the ginkgo, yews and pines, on through the deciduous trees, until
the composite family, the most complex form of |)lant life, was
54
reached. This scheme has had to be superimposed upon the hap-
hazard planting of the past. While theoretically the new scheme
and the old cannot exist together, yet in practice it has been found
that the results are pleasing and are sufficiently scientific for the
use of the students.
In order that some impression can be had by the reader of the
scope of the planting, I should like to briefly review some of the
trees and shrubs which are being used in this circle-like planting.
We have at the beginning, in the southwest corner of the campus,
the ginkgos, of which there are a number of fine large specimens.
Following them comes the yew family, of which we have planted not
only the common dwarf Japanese yew but the various types of
upright Japanese yew and the English yew. Then comes the great
pine family, which includes the junipers, arborvitae, spruces, firs,
hemlocks, pines, and many others. These are planted in a great
screen along the Pennsylvania Railroad lines on the southerly edge
of the campus. This planting will give to Philadelphians an outline
of the large number of evergreen trees which will thrive in our
climate and which are ordinarily procurable in American nurseries.
The plants are now only from two to five feet high, but it will not
be many years before they begin to take their characteristic forms
and repay study.
Following the pine group, space is reserved for a few members
of the lily and grass families, of which the yucca and bamboo may
be mentioned. Next come willows and poplars, and then along
Chester Road there is space for a few specimen beeches, oaks,
elms, etc.
The important display of spring flowering trees and shrubs,
in which Mr. Scott was so much interested, begins near the library
with a collection of magnolias. We have already planted here mag-
nolia conspicua, magnolia soulangeana, magnolia soulangeana alba
superba, magnolia soulangeana alexandrina, and magnolia soul-
angeana speciosa. It is hoped to add half a dozen more varieties of
these wonderful spring blooming magnolias, of which only the type
is known to Philadelphia gardeners. Other spring flowering species
of magnolias, such as kobus and salicifolia, will, of course, be
represented here also.
Near this early April group of flowers follow the saxifrage
family, with its deutzias, mockoranges and hydrangeas. These
shrubs will be represented in a score of varieties near the College
library.
The botanical arrangement then brings us to the most im-
portant of all spring flowering plant families — the rose family —
which includes not only roses, but such shrubs as spiraea, aronia,
photinia, cydonia and cotoneaster, and such trees as the flowering
apples, cherries, peaches, plums and hawthorns. The shrubs of this
family are planted near Chester Road and Cedar Lane, in the
vicinity of Worth and Bond Halls, while the flowering trees occupy
the hillside above this, first with a collection of over twenty kinds
of fiowering apples and then a little further north a collection of
thirty-four kinds of Japanese flowering cherries — these being the
55
gift of Mrs. Allan K. White, of Atlantic City. As flowering cherries
and other spring flowers are much more effective with evergreen
background, a number of pines, spruces and hemlocks have been
used in this border, some of them being the gift of the Arboretum
of the Westtown School. In this connection, along Cedar Lane we
have taken temjDorary advantage of the fact that the cherries will
not at present occupy the entire area of land which has been well
prepared, and have here concentrated our planting of herbaceous
plants.
First we put in the iris and peony collection of the late Presi-
dent of this Society, Mr. James Boyd, the plants being given to
Swarthmore College by Mr. Boyd's children, in memory of their
mother, who was a Swarthmore graduate. There are about 100
varieties of each of these flowers, and to them have been added
about 100 varieties of daffodils and over 200 varieties of hardy,
outdoor flowering chrysanthemums. It was from these plants that
the Scott Foundation staged its first exliibit at The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society's Chrj^santhemum Show last November.
They were put in, not for competition, but to show to the Philadel-
phia public how many different kinds of chrysanthemums could
be grown here and let them know that in Swarthmore this collec-
tion was open to the public. It was, of course, a satisfaction but
also rather an embarrassment to the exhibitors, that the judges
thought the exhibit was so good that they gave it a Silver Medal,
for the exhibit had purposely been entered not for competition.
Leaving this part of the campus, we pass rapidly through a
number of plant families, such as the pea family, which is repre-
sented by the locust, the laburnum and other trees, the maple and
horse chestnut families, and finally come to the dogwood family
near the meeting house, and from it to the great heath family,
which is, of course, one of the most important of all American plant
families. The bit of woods by the meeting house gives an ideal place
for the planting of species of rhododendron, azalea, andromeda,
leucothoe, mountain laurel, and many other members of this great
family, while just to the north of these woods a small garden about
eighty feet square has been set aside for more than fifty named
varieties of azaleas, such as the ghent and mollis hybrids, kurumes,
ledifolias, etc. This garden was made possible through the gifts of
the Four Counties Garden Club.
In front of the meeting house, in one of the most prominent
positions in the campus, we have planted a lilac walk of forty plants
in twenty-five varieties. The first two plants in this walk are of the
variety "Madame F. Morel," which is one of the most magnificent
varieties of lilacs. It was one of Mr. Scott's favorites and the
plants were brought from his garden. There is room here for the
planting of nearly fifty more species and varieties of lilacs, which
will be put in in the near future.
We are now nearing the end of the great botanical order, and
after passing through a number of plant families with only one or
two representatives that are of gardening importance, we come, near
the Engineering building, to the honeysuckle family, which in-
56
chides not only the climbing and bush honeysuckle but the viburnum
and symphoricarpos and other shrubs. Near them there is space for
the few shrubs of the composite family.
This botanical arrangement that I have outlined will be of in-
terest, we believe, to all students of botany and lovers of plants,
but the thought that was in Mr. Scott 's mind will be most effectively
carried out by the planting of the spring flowering trees, shrubs
and garden plants, such as the magnolias, cherries and early flower-
ing shiiibs and the daffodils in April ; the apples, lilacs, hawthorn,
azaleas and irises in May; the rhododendron, laurel and peonies in
June, and chrysanthemums in October and November. The present
funds from the endowment do not permit of a larger program for
herbaceous plants, so that additions will have to be left for the
future.
The College campus, however, is but a part of the great College
property, and to many persons the wild, steep, wooded hillsides of
Crum Creek are more interesting than any campus or garden plant-
ing. These hillsides have been owned by the College for generations
but no funds have ever been available for their care, so that when
1 became Director of the Scott Foundation I found the woods in a
deplorable condition. They were filled with standing and fallen
dead trees, were a great fire hazard and were not accessible for
those who wished to enjoy them, except for a few trails worn by
visitors and one or two hastily constructed paths built only for the
purpose of taking out cut wood. Although the Scott Foundation
had no money in sight for the proper development of these woods,
plans were drawn up to show what might be done in the future,
and during the last two winters, owing to the serious unemploy-
ment situation, many of these plans have been carried out. The
Borough Committee on Unemployment joined with the College and
with the Scott Foundation in raising a special fund, and during the
past two winters from a dozen to twenty men have been given work
in the College woods from December to April. As a result, all the
dead timber has been cut and taken away and most of the fire
menace thus removed. Undesirable undergrowth, particularly of
the nature of poison ivy, cat briar and honeysuckle, has been re-
moved and a series of paths have been built, making the entire area
accessible to all those who love nature. It is now possible to walk
for miles along the creek or in the upper levels of the woods on
paths which are built on easy grades. That these paths are appreci-
ated is shown by the great number of persons who are now using
these beautiful woods as a park.
It is planned to use the woods north of the railroad as a great
demonstration of American trees, shrubs and wild flowers. The
upper half is to be devoted entirely to plants native to Swarthmore
and adjacent Delaware County. Here only such plants will be
planted as are believed by botanists to have been native in this
vicinity but which have been removed or destroyed by man. A
census of the species of trees, shrubs and wild flowers show that
the species growing there now are but a fraction of what probably
flourished before man came to pillage and to burn.
57
A small center section will have not only the native plants of
Delaware County but also any which are native to other sections
of Pennsylvania but not native here. Rhododendron maximum is
one of the plants which is being added here. In the southern quarter
of the property is an all-American tract, where species of trees
from other parts of the country will be had and where w^e have
already planted Carolina hemlock, Carolina rhododendron and
flame azalea.
South of the railroad the woods extend for nearly a mile and
here will be added species of plants from all parts of the world in
botanical arrangement such as has been described for the campus
but with the difference that here plants suited to wild forest con-
ditions rather than horticultural specimens will be used.
The planting on the campus and in these woods will make it
possible for all persons interested in gardens or in plants of any
description to come to Swarthmore any day in the year and see with
their own eyes plants which are suitable for planting in their own
gardens. The plants will be properly labeled and when funds permit
there will be attendants to answer questions and to help the visitors
with their problems. The entire planting, however, is a matter
which will take many years. Too much should not be expected in
the beginning, for unlike the Morris Arboretum, which is just now
much in the public eye, the endowment is not large and the work has
to go along slowly. For those who are impatient for quick results
it may be of some comfort to know that the Arnold Arboretum,
which was started in 1873, had at the beginning only a compara-
tively small endowment. The land was not as well suited for the
purpose as the SWarthmore property, and no plants were set in
their permanent location until about 1885, the first twelve years
being devoted entirely to the making of plans and the propagation
of plant material in nurseries for future use. The work at Swarth-
more is new, the oldest plants, those of the lilac walk, having been
set in the spring of 1931. Yet in two years plants have made a re-
markable growth and next year we may anticipate a good blossom-
ing of herbaceous plants and a scattering of bloom of trees and
shrubs. There were less than four hundred kinds of plants on the
property in 1930, and we now have over twelve hundred species
and varieties of trees and shrubs and over six hundred species and
varieties of herbaceous garden plants and wild flowers.
It was Mr. Scott's dream that such a garden should be estab-
lished to help the gardening public. Through the generosity of
Mrs. Scott and of Mrs. Owen Moon, Mr. Scott's sister, the work
has been begun. The relationship of this work to The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society is an intimate one, as Mr. Scott was a member
and IMrs. Scott is at present serving on the Executive Council. We
all hope that the members of the Society will be interested in
watching ]\Ir. Scott's dream develop and that they will visit Swarth-
more from time to time.
58
HARDY CHRYSANTHEMUMS AT SWARTHMORE
By John C. Wister, Director
When the Arthur Hoyt Scott Horticultural Foundation of
Swarthmore College exhibited at The Pennsylvania Horticultural
Society's Chrysanthemum Show in November, 1932, the largest
number of outdoor grown varieties of chrysanthemums that had
ever been publicly shown in Philadelphia, I was asked to write
something in the year book so that our members might know some-
thing about this collection and how it was brought together.
It was Robert Pyle, I believe, who urged me to plant at Swarth-
more certain quick-growing showy flowers which could be enjoyed
by the public while slower-growing plants like trees and shrubs
were maturing. I had long been interested in chrysanthemums and
had grown over one hundred varieties in my own garden as long
ago as 1912. Most of these varieties had succumbed to cold winters
and I had long wanted an opportunity to test the relative hardiness
of different varieties under our conditions in Eastern Pennsylvania.
Accordingly, in the autumn of 1931 I made a list of all chrys-
anthemums in Standardized Plant Names and in Manning's Find-
ing List, copied on this list my own garden notes made mostly be-
tween 1905 and 1915, added to these notes brief catalog descriptions
and notes from magazine articles, and armed with this formidable
document of about thirty typewritten pages I began a series of
visits to gardens, nurseries and shows, checking on the list each
variety seen. Varieties wanted were underlined ; relative season was
noted ; effect of frost, wind or rain was noted where observed. No
attempt was made to judge relative quality of similar varieties but
all plainly inferior varieties were marked as not wanted. The
largest collection visited Avas at the New York Botanical Garden,
where nearly three hundred varieties were seen and where relative
frost injury could be easily noted early in November.
My notes, voluminous as they were, gave me information on
but a small fraction of the great list, but did definitely eliminate
from further consideration several hundred varieties. During the
winter I added information from books and catalogs in the library
of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, trying particularly to
check blooming dates so as to eliminate varieties beginning to bloom
after the first week in November, as such late kinds can be successful
in the open, without any protection, around Philadelphia only in
very exceptional years.
All this may seem unnecessary trouble, but besides being inter-
ested in the study, I wanted to eliminate the expense of buying,
planting and caring for great numbers of varieties which would
have to be discarded as unsatisfactory or inferior. I wanted a large
and complete collection, yet not so big as to be unwieldy. I started
the collection with 250 varieties, with the intention to cut it to 100
varieties by careful study of relative hardiness and by elimination
of varieties too similar. I believe it will take about five years to do
this, but a start has been made.
59
Plants were secured by gift or exchange from various indi-
viduals and institutions, and by purchase from a number of nur-
series. The largest number of varieties came from the New York
Botanical Garden and from Dreer, Totty and Elmer D. Smith.
Divisions from outdoor-grown stock were planted in April. Indoor-
pot-grown plants were set early in May in ground that had been
well prepared the previous year. The}" were kept free from weeds
but were watered only about three times after planting. The plants
were pinched back the last time late in July. They received appli-
cations of sulphate of ammonia late in July and late in August.
In spite of the dry year, growth was strong. The first flowers
appeared on September 10th on the new variety "Aladdin." "AYin-
netka" and ''Wolverine" followed it on September 15th and
"Early Bronze" on September 20th. October was a month full of
bloom and the list below gives some of the important varieties
classified as to section, color and time of bloom. About twenty-five
varieties opened their flowers between November 1st and 12th, and
did not prove too late. That is, they bloomed well and were not
perceptibly injured by freezing, although quite cold weather was
experienced; a few varieties proved too late and have been dis-
carded, as it is not worthwhile to attempt to grow them without
frame protection, but these varieties are not included in any of the
lists below.
CLASSIFICATION BY TYPE, COLOR AND SEASON
Yellow
Bronze
Red
Purple
Pink
White
BUTTON
Ex. Early
(September)
Early
(Early October)
Mitzi
Little Barbee
Little Bob
Margot
Mid Season
(Late October)
Baby Doll
Gold Nugget
Petite
Skibo
Bronze Bessie
Ethel
Pride of
Riga
Little Tot
Nio
Late
(Early Nov.)
POMPON
Baby
Yellow Dot
Becky McLane
Bronzito
Buena
Dolora
Frank Wilcox, Jr.
Bright Eyes
Dainty Maid
Marguerita Clark
Mary Pickford
White Midget
Ex. Early
Early Bronze
Winnetka
Early
Cora Peck Buhl
Sydney Mitchell
Yellow Gem
Adironda
Bonnibel
Idolf
Rhoda
Tony
Irene
Mid Season
Golden Climax
Nuggets
Rodell
Wm. Westlake
Alicea
Iva
Ouray
Sheila
Doris
Claret
Donald
Ermalinda
Mary Ann
Xelma Putnam
Shaker Lady
Maid of Kent
Ruth Hatton
Snowbank
Late
.\gatha
Lugano
Anna L. Moran
New York
Ruth
Pink Dot
60
CLASSIFICATION BY TYPE, COLOR AND SEASON— (Continued]
Yellow
Bronze
Red
Purple
Pink
White
LARGE POM
Ex. Early
Aladdin
Early
R.MarionHatton
Alice Barham
Silver Ball
Mid Season
Arianna
Juliana
May Suj'dan
Mrs. H. F. Vincent
Mrs. J. Willis Mar-
tin
Red Doty
Anna Kulin
Capt. R. H. Cook
Frances Huckvale
Lilian Doty
Mrs. Nellie Kleris
Mrs. G. W.
Wickersham
Wanda
White.Doty
Late
SINGLE
Ball of Gold
Yellow Doty
Adelaide
.Julia deWitt
Cometo
Marie Antoinette
Adelphia
Early
Gold Lace
BufiF Beauty
Mrs. J. G. Fetter-
man
Old Gold
Dazzler
Cosmos
Attraction
Daybreak
Kitty Riches
Mrs. David Tim-
mons
Donald Wells
Mrs. W. H.
Waite
White Daisy
Mid Season
Daintj'
Gretchen Piper
Alice Howell
Bronze Bucking-
ham
Florence McNeely
Mrs. Max Behr
Mary Hillier
Mrs. Calvin
Coolidge
Red Bird
Bridesmaid
Joyce Strowgler
Maidens Blush
Mrs. Albert
Phillips
Mrs. W. E. Buck-
ingham
Late
Ruth Dennison
Mrs. Roberts
SEMI or FLAT
DOUBLE
Early
Boston
Mid Season
Ida
Mrs. John Gilpin
Gorgeous
Jiggs
M. Graincr
Mayellen
MEDIUM
DOUBLE
Early
Brick
Muldoon
Aletta
Delmar
October Girl
Uvalda
Mid Season
Edina
Nellie Blake
Ruth Cumming
October Dawn
Late
David Rust
LOOSE
DOUBLE
Ex. Early
Wolverine
September
Queen
Early
Comoleto
Yellow
Normandie
Zaza
Barbara Cumming
Isotta
October Gold
Somona
Wembly
Anna Louise
Pierce
Normandie
Provence
Jean Cumming
Tasiva
Mid Season
Gold Dame
Armorel
Bronze Buttercup
Bronze Goacher
Frances Whittlesby
Geo. Heuster
Verona
Brune
Poitevine
Champagne
Indian
T.uoifer
Romaine
Warren
Angelo
Glada
J. W., Jr.
Mrs. F. H.
Bergen
Late
Aline
Helios
Nacora
Pauline Wilcox
Snowdrift
61
On one year's records one cannot make statements as to dates
of bloom, as unusual weather conditions will undoubtedly affect
dates of flowering, but it may be noted that hardly a single variety
bloomed on the date noted in the catalogs. It has long been a com-
monplace that "September flowering" varieties introduced from
northern Europe did not bloom here until October, and it has been
assumed that this was caused by differences in light conditions as
well as differences in temperature. Therefore, instead of giving
actual dates on the above chart, I have marked my varieties extra
early, early, midseason and late, to indicate September, early Octo-
ber, late October and early November, respectively.
Under garden conditions I have found it impossible to follow
the elaborate system of classification used in Standardized Plant
Names. I have, therefore, confined the classification to Buttons,
Pompons, Large Pompons, Single, Semi-Doubles, Medium Doubles
and Large, Loose Doubles. Many of these types merge into each
other in a way that makes it difficult to draw a sharp dividing line.
I hope that someone will work out a better system built up solely
for outdoor garden flowers in this section, and not involved with the
intricacies of the many different forms of greenhouse-groAvn va-
rieties.
The alphabetical list below gives all the varieties now in the
collection with name of originator and date of introduction when
these facts could be obtained. I am able to present this list through
the kindness of Mr. Elmer D. Smith, who has kept records of all
chrysanthemum introductions for many years. As far as I know
these records have never before been published. I am glad to pub-
lish them here so that our gardeners may know at least the names
of the persons whose years of toil have made our autumns more
interesting and more beautiful. I shall be grateful for any informa-
tion as to originators of varieties about which I have not been able
to get any definite facts. Classification, general color, rating (xxx,
XX or x) and date of blooming are included on this alphabetical
list. I hope the list will interest the members of the Society and
extend to all an invitation to visit this collection in October, 1933,
when all these varieties and many more will be in bloom on the
college grounds near Cedar Lane and College Avenue, Swarthmore.
Mr. Harry Wood, the head gardener, who helped me in preparing
this article, will be glad to give any further information about the
collection.
CHRYSANTHEMUM LIST— ALPHABETICAL
Originator
Date of
Rat-
Variety
and Date of
Classification
Plants From
Description
First
ing
Introduction
Flowers
xxx
Adelaide
Totty 1921
Large Pom
Bristol
Rich mahogany
Nov. 15
X
Adelphia
Smith 1922
Large Pom
Smith
White
Nov 1
xxx
Adironda
Smith 1918
Pom
Dreer
Best early golden bronze
Oct. 15
xxx
Agatha
Smith 1931
Pom
Smith
Lemon vellow with tint of red
Nov. 5
xxx
Aladdin
Brack 1932
Large Pom
Wayside
Bronze. Still good Nov. 1
Sept. 10
xxx
Alecia
Smith 1929
Pom
Smith
Golden bronze
Oct. 30
XX
Aletta
Smith 1925
Double round
Dreer
Very light pink. Dwarf
Oct. 10
xxx
Alice Barham
Nonin 1914
Large Pom
Mo.B.G.
Orange bronze
Oct. 15
XX
Alice Howell
Pierson 1918
s.
N.Y.B.G.
Light bronze
Oct. 30
62
CHRYS ANTHEUM LIST— ALPHABETICAL— (Continued )
Originator
Date of
Rat-
Variety
and Date of
Classification
Plants From
Description
First
ing
Introduction
Flowers
XX
Aline
Totty 1925
Double loose
Dreer
Golden bronze
Nov. 5
XX
Angelo
Smith 1920
Double loose
Dreer
Light pink. Better color than
Lihan Doty
Oct. 20
XX
Anna Kuhn
Totty 1925
Large Pom
Totty
Old rose
Oct. 30
XX
Anna L. Moran
U.S.D.A. 1920
Pom
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze
Nov. 5
XXX
Ariana
Smith 1930
Large Pom
Smith
Golden buff
Oct. 30
XXX
Armorel
Double loose
Dreer
Large bronze
Oct. 30
XX
Attraction
S.
Dreer
Rose
Oct. 15
XXX
Baby
Japanese, int.
by Robt. Craig
1905
But.
Dreer
Yellow
Nov. 5
XX
Baby DoU
Smith 1920
But.
Smith
Light yellow. Opens with
bronze tinge. Poor foliage
Oct. 25
XXX
Ball of Gold
Smith 1928
Large Pom
Smith
Yellow
Nov. 10
XXX
Barbara Cumming
Cum. 1930
Double loose
Bristol
Yellow to orange bronze
Oct. 10
XXX
Becky McLane
Johnson, 1919
But.
Tottv
Golden bronze
Nov. 14
XXX
Bonnibel
Smith 1932
Pom
Smith
Orange buff
Oct. 15
XX
Boston
S.D.
Smith
Golden bronze
Oct. 10
XX
Brick
Ritter 1926
Double round
Ritter
Bronze red. Dwarf
Oct. 10
XX
Bridesmaid
S.
Dreer
Early blush pink
Oct. 20
XXX
Bright Eyes
Smith 1920
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Bluish white and orange apricot
XX
Bronze Buckingham
Fengar 1918
S.
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze
Oct. 20
XX
Bronze Buttercup
Godfrey
Double loose
Dreer
Large bronze
Oct. 20
Bronze Button
But.
Wavside
Bronze like Brown Bessie
Oct. 20
XX
Bronze Doty
Muller 1922
Large Pom
N.Y.B.G.
Deep terra cotta bronze. Lil e
May Suydham
Oct. 25
XXX
Bronze Goacher's
Goacher-W^ells
Double loose
Dreer
Large early bronze
Oct. 20
XXX
Bronzito
Smith 1923
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze
Nov. 1
XXX
Brown Bessie
But.
Wister
Bronze
Oct. 25
XXX
Brune Poitevine
Nonin 1916
Double loose
Wa^-side
Early, large reddish bronze
Oct. 20
XX
Buena
Smith 1919
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze
Nov. 5
XX
Buff Beauty
S.
Dreer
Early pale bronze
Oct. 15
X
Candida
Shawyer 1923
Double loose
Totty
White
Oct. 15
XX
Capt. R. H. Cook
Totty 1919
Large Pom.
Dreer
Pink
Oct. 20
X
Carmine
S.
Dreer
Carmine rose
Oct. 15
X
Champaign
Nonin 1908
Double loose
Smith
Ruby red
Oct. 22
XX
Clara Jameson
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze and scarlet
Oct. 15
XXX
Claret
U. of 111. 1925
Pom.
Smith
Dark claret
Oct. 25
XX
Cometo
Smith 1919
Large Pom.
Dreer
Dark rose shaded magenta
Nov. 1
X
Comoleta
Smith 1907
Double loose
Dreer
Yellow
Oct. 15
XXX
Cora Peck Buhl
Smith 1923
Pom.
Smith
Deep yellow
Oct. 15
XXX
Cosmos
S.
Dreer
Dark purplish carmine
Oct. 10
XX
Dainty
Waite 1918
S.
Dreer
Early orange
Oct. 10
XXX
Dainty Maid
Smith 1922
But.
N.Y.B.G.
White to light pink
Nov. 1
XX
David Rust
Ritter 1929
Double round
Ritter
Deep bronze
XX
Daybreak
Cum. 1932
S.
Bristol
Shell pink
Oct. 15
X
Dazzler
Godfrey 1902
S.
N.Y.B.G.
Red. Early
Oct. 15
X
Delmar
Diana
Smith 1925
Double round
Dreer
Early rose
White
Oct. 15
XXX
Dolora
Smith 1931
But.
Smith
Bronze _
Nov. 2
XX
Donald
Johnson 1913
Pom.
Totty
Light pink
Oct. 30
XX
Donald Wells
S.
Dreer
White
Oct. 10
XXX
Doris
Johnson 1913
Pom.
Mrs. Scott
Bronze
Oct. 30
XXX
Early Bronze
Grav & Cole
1926
Pom.
Gray & Cole
Bronze yellow
Sept. 20
XX
Ermalinda
Smith 1923
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Old rose with silver sheen
Oct. 25
XXX
Ethel
Smith 1923
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Red bronze. Like Little Barbee
Oct. 25
X
Etoile d'Or
Nonin 1906
But.
Wister
Yellow
Oct. 20
X
Excelsior
Pom.
Dreer
Early, bright yellow
Oct. 25
XX
Fain a
Smith 1930
Double round
N.Y.B.G.
Dark bronze
Oct. 30
X
Firelight
Nonin 1914
Double loose
Dreer
Carmine or bronze with light
cerise
Oct. 30
X
Florence McNeely
Ritter 1925
S.
Ritter
Light Bronze
XX
Frances Huckvale
U.S.D.A. 1920
Large Pom.
Totty
White with purple and yellow
Oct. 30
XXX
Frances Whittlesey
Cum. 1931
Double loose
Bristol
Rich bronze and garnet
Oct. 20
XXX
Frank Wilcox, Jr.
Smith 1920
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Orange bronze
Nov. 6
XX
George Heuster
Ritter 1926
Double loose
Ritter
Orange yellow to bronze. Like
Tints of Gold
Oct. 20
X
Gilda
Smith 1922
Pom.
Totty
Orange
Oct. 25
Globe d'Or
Bruant 1897
S.D.
Dreer
Bright yellow, poor form
Oct. 25
Ginza
Smith 1930
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow and red
XX
Glada
Smith 1930
Double loose
Mo.B.G.
Soft pink
Oct. 30
XX
Gold Dame
Double loose
Dreer
Orange bronze to yellow
Oct. 20
X
Gold Lace
s.
Dreer
Single early yellow
Oct. 10
XX
Gold Mine
Smith 1928
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Bright yellow
Oct. 25
XX
Gold Nugget
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 22
XXX
Golden Climax
Jolmson 1914
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Golden yellow
Oct. 22
XXX
Golden Crest
Smith 1925
Pom.
Dreer
Gold yellow
Oct. 22
XX
Golden Star
U. of 111. 1924
Pom.
Totty
Golden yellow
Oct. 22
XXX
Golden Sun
Jones 1925
S. to Sd.
Dreer
Single yellow
Oct. 30
63
CHRYSANTHEUM LIST— ALPHABETICAI^ (Continued)
Originator
Date of
Rat-
Variety
and Date of
Classification
Plants From
Description
First
ing
Introduction
Flowers
XXX
Gorgeous
Ritter 1927
Sd.
Ritter
Quilled bronze
Oct. 15
Gretchen
Wells 1908
Double loose
White
Oct. 22
XXX
Gretchen Piper
Koch 1927
S.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 15
Greta
Smith 1928
Large Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
White, after Irene and Minong
Oct. 20
X
Harvest Home
Thorp 1913
Double loose
Wayside
Golden yellow
Oct. 15
XX
Harvest Moon
Yoshiike 1891
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 15
XXX
Helios
Gaut 1918
Double loose
Dreer
Chestnut brown
Nov. 5
XX
Homestead
Double loose
Groshner
Light mauve pink
XXX
Ida
Tottv 1924
Single double
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 22
XX
Idolf
Smith 1918
Pom.
Mo.B.G.
Salmon pink
Oct. 10
X
Indian
Double loose
Wayside
Indian red
Oct. 30
XX
Indomitable
Double round
Groshner
Yellow
Oct. 15
XX
Irene
Smith 1923
Pom.
Dreer
Dwarf, white
Oct. 15
X
Isotta
Smith 1928
Double loose
Mo.B.G.
Bronze. Dwarf
Oct. 15
XXX
Iva
Smith 1908
Pom.
Wister
Yellow bronze
Oct. 20
XXX
Jean Cumming
Cum. 1931
Double loose
Bristol
White to soft yellow
Oct. 10
XXX
Jersey Beauty
Pom.
Wister
Yellow (anemone center)
Oct. 30
XXX
Jersey Gem
Pom.
Mrs. Scott
Yellow
Oct. 30
XX
Jiggs
Ritter 1925
Sd.
Ritter
Bronze
Oct. 30
Joyce Strowlger
Jones 1925
S.
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze salmon pmk
Oct. 20
XXX
Julia DeWitt
U.S.D.A. 1920
Large Pom.
Tottv
Bronze amber
Nov. 1
XXX
Juliana
Smith 1918
Large Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Golden vellow
Oct. 22
XX
Kitty Riches
Totty 1922
S.
Mo.B.G.
Pink
Oct. 15
Korean
Species
S. no flowers
White, golden center becoming
pink. 3 in. Needs light soil
XXX
La Garonne
1897
Double loose
Dreer
Early. Rose and buff
Oct. 20
X
La Somme
Nonin 1914
Double loose
Smith
Mauve pink
Oct. 10
XX
Leslie
Wells 1908
Pom.
Wister
Early yellow
Oct. 20
XX
Lillian Doty
int. by Totty
1914
LargePom
Dreer
Shell pink
Oct. 20
XXX
Little Barbee
Godfrey 1910
But.
Bristol
Red. Like Ethel, larger, better
Oct. 15
XXX
Little Bob
But.
Smith
Bronze. Like Brown Bessie
Oct. 15
XXX
Little Dot
But.
Dreer
Mahogany crimson. Like
Brown Bessie
Oct. 15
XXX
Little Tot
Smith 1920
But.
Smith
Pale rose pink
Oct. 30
XXX
I,ucifer
Double loose
Dreer
Red
Oct. 22
XXX
Lugano
Pom.
Totty
Yellow
Nov. 1
X
Maduse
I^moine 1896
Double loose
Bristol
Terra cotta bronze
XX
Maid of Kent
Cannell
Pom.
Wister
Wliite
Oct. 30
XX
Maiden's Blush
S.
Dreer
Blush white or pink
Oct. 20
X
M argot
Smith 1925
But.
Smith
Earliest white
Oct. 10
XXX
Marguerite Clark
Smith 1920
But.
Smith
Rose pink
Nov. 5
XXX
Marie Antoinette
Large Pom.
Wayside
Late deep pink
Nov. 1
XX
Mary Ann
U. of 111. 1925
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Light pink like Lillian Doty
Oct. 30
XX
Mary Hillier
Ritter 1930
S.
Ritter
Yellow bronze
Oct. 30
XXX
Mary Pickford
Smith 1921
But.
Smith
White
Nov. 1
XX
Mayellen
Smith 1925
Sd. (anemone)
Mo.B.G.
Cerise pink, yellow center
XXX
May Suydam
Large Pom.
Dreer
Golden bronze
Oct. 30
XX
M. Grainier
Sd.
N.Y.B.G.
Deep pink
Oct. 15
X
Minong
Smith 1926
Pom.
Smith
Opens greenish white, fades
pure white
Oct. 20
Mintje
Smith 1930
Double round
Dreer
Orange bronze
XXX
Mitzi
Smith 1922
But.
Dreer
Yellow bronze center while
opening
Oct. 15
X
Mrs. Albert Phillips
Totty 1917
S.
Dreer
Deep lavender. Early
Oct. 20
XXX
Mrs. Calvin Coolidge
U.S.D.A.
s.
Dreer
Red
XX
Mrs. David Timmons
Ritter 1929
s.
Ritter
Pink, yellow center
XX
Mrs. F. H. Bergen
Bergen
Double loose
Dreer
Creamy while with pink center
Oct. 20
X
Mrs. G. W. Wicker-
sham
Totty 1922
Large Pom.
Totty
White
Oct. 20
XX
Mrs. H. Craig
Double loose
Wayside
Early drawf, large .shaggy yel-
low with orange bronze
Oct. 20
xx
Mrs. H. F. Vincent
U.S.D.A. 1920
Large Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Fawn and bronze with salmon
pink shadings
Oct. 20
X
Mrs. H. Harrison
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Early. Blush pink
Oct. 15
XX
Mrs. J. G. Felterman
Ritter 1926
S.
Ritter
Yellow bronze
XXX
Mrs. J. Willis Martin
Totty 1925
L.nrge Pom.
Bristol
Crushed strawberry
Oct. 22
XX
Mrs. John Gilpin
Ritter 1928
Sd.
Ritter
Quilled orange bronze
Oct. 22
X
Mrs. L. Birchard
Large Pom.
Bristol
Bright shell pink
Oct. 22
XXX
Mrs. Max Behr
Godfrey 1918
S.
Dreer
Reddish bronze
Oct. 20
X
Mrs. Nellis Kleris
Totty 1919
Large Pom.
Totty
Pink
Oct. 22
XX
Mrs. E. Roberts
Wells 1907
s.
Dreer
Purplish pink
Nov. 10
XXX
Mrs. W. E. Bucking-
ham
s.
Dreer
Rose pink
Oct. 30
XXX
Mrs. W. H. Waite
Waite 1918
s.
Dreer
Flesh pink
Oct. 15
XX
Muldoon
Smith 1931
Double round
Smith
Purple amaranth
Oct. 15
Nacora
Smith 1926
Double loose
Dreer
Large yellow
Nov. 14
XX
Nellie Blake
Double round
Wayside
Reddish copper. Aster type
Oct. 20
XX
Nelma Putnam
U.S.D.A. 1920
Pom.
Tottv
Rose pink to pink bronze
Oct. 20
XXX
New York
Pierson 1922
Pom.
Smith
Bronze
Nov. 1
64
CHRYSANTHEUM LIST— ALPHABETICAL— (Continued)
Originator
Dale of
Rat-
Variety
and Date of
Classification
Plants From
Description
First
ing
Introduction
Flowers
XX
Nio
Smith 1906
But.
Dreer
Shell pink
Oct. 20
X
Normandie
Nonin 1908
Double loose
Mo.B.G.
Pale pink
Oct. 10
XXX
Nuggets
Baur-Stein-
kamp 1922
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 20
X
October Dawn
Cum. 1930
Double round
Bristol
Daybreak pink
Oct, 22
XX
October Girl
Sum. 1930
Double round
Bristol
Rose pink
Oct. 10
XX
October Gold
Wells 1913
Double loose
Dreer
Early orange. Aster type
Oct. 10
XX
Old Gold
Brunning 1905
S.
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze. Golden yellow. Foli-
age deeply cut
Oct. 10
XXX
Ouray
Smith 1919
Pom.
Dreer
Dark mahogany brown
Oct. 20
XXX
Padoka
Smith 1926
But.
Smith
Light salmon. Dwarf
Oct. 20
Pauline Wilcox
Pierson 1920
Double loose
Totty
Bronze, red and gold
Nov. 15
XXX
Petite
U. of 111. 1927
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Dwarf yellow
Oct. 25
XX
Petite Louise
Nonin 1914
Double loose
Dreer
Early large rose pink
Oct. 25
XXX
Pink Beauty
Jap. 1928
S.
Dreer
Pink
Oct. 25
Pink Dame
Double loose
Dreer
Pink
Oct. 15
Pink Dot
Baur-Stein-
kamp 1924
Pom.
Smith
White with pink center
Nov. 1
Pride of Riga
But.
Groshner
Bronze, red like Brown Bessie
Oct. 3
s
Provence
Nonin 1909
Double loose
Dreer
Soft pink with yellow
Oct. 15
Quaker Lady
S.
Groshner
Light, salmon bronze yellow
Oct. 22
XXX
R. Marion Hatton
Cum. 1930
Large Pom.
Bristol
Yellow
Oct. 15
XX
Red Bird
U. of 111. 1921
S.
N.Y.B.G.
Single red
Oct. 30
XX
Red Doty
J. L. Muller
1922
Large Pom.
Dreer
Wine red with silver
Oct. 25
X
Rhoda
Pom.
Dreer
Rose pink
Oct. 15
XXX
Rodell
Smith 1925
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Pale yellow
Oct. 25
X
Romaine Warren
Pautke 1917
Double loose
N.Y.B.G.
Red bronze
Oct. 30
X
Ruth
Johnson 1913
Pom.
Dreer
Deep claret
Nov. 1
X
Ruth C. Dennison
Totty 1924
S.
Dreer
Yellow, large center, short rays
Nov. 10
XXX
Ruth Gumming
Pierson 1920
Double round
Smith
Reddish bronze with terra cotta
Oct. 20
XXX
Ruth Hatton
Cum. 1930
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Ivory white to lemon yellow
Oct. 20
XXX
September Queen
Smith 1930
Double loose
Mo.B.G.
White
Oct. 1
XX
Shaker Lady
Totty 1921
Pom.
Totty
Bright pink
Oct. 25
XX
Sheila
Smith 1930
Pom.
Smith
Dark mahogany
Oct. 22
XXX
Shirly
S.
Dreer
Terra cotta
Oct. 22
XX
Shirly Pride
Double loose
Dreer
Pink
Oct. 21
XXX
Silver Ball
Smith 1928
Large Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
White. Earher than White Doty
Oct. 12
XX
Skibo
Smith 1905
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 25
XX
Snowbank
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
White (hurt by frost N.Y.B.G.)
Oct. 25
XX
Snowbird
Smith 1931
Large Pom.
Smith
White
Nov. 15
Snowdrift
Spauldingl888
Double loose
Groshner
White. Weak stems, need sup-
port
Nov. 3
XX
Snowdrop
int. by Hallock
1890
Pom.
Wayside
White
Oct. 28
XX
Sonoma
Smith 1931
Double loose
Smith
Bronze with golden
Oct. 15
X
Stanley Ven
Wells 1914
s.
Dreer
Pink like Mrs. Buckingham
Oct. 15
XXX
Sunshine
Wells 1912
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Nov. 1
XXX
Sydney Mitchell
Totty 1919
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
XXX
Tasiva
Smith 1928
Double loose
Mo.B.G.
White
Oct. 10
XX
Tints of Gold
Double loose
Dreer
Early golden bronze
Oct. 21
XX
Tony
Pom.
Dreer
White with pink
Oct. 10
XXX
Uvalda
Smith 1919
Double round
Dreer
Earliest white. Shows a little
pink when opening
XX
XXX
Varsity
Verona
U. of 111. 1919
Smith 1929
But.
Double loose
N.Y.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 30
(anemone)
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze
Oct. 22
XX
Wanda
Smith 1918
Large Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
White
Oct. 25
XXX
Wee Dot
Smith 1928
But.
N.Y.B.G.
Bronze, like Brown Bessie, but
smaller
Oct. 25
XXX
Wembly
Double loose
Dreer
Carmine maroon
Oct. 10
XX
White Daisy
s.
N.Y.B.G.
White
Oct. 10
XX
White Doty
Scott 1916
Large Pom.
Dreer
White
Oct. 25
XXX
White Midget
Smith 1920
But.
N.Y.B.G.
WTiite with pink
Nov. 4
XX
White Popcorn
Totty 1925
Pom.
Totty
White like White Doty
Oct. 30
XXX
William Sobey
Pom.
Dreer
Early yellow
Oct. 17
XX
William Westlake
int. by Spauld-
ing 1893
Smith 1914
Pom.
N.Y.B.G.
YeUow
Oct. 30
XXX
Winnetka
Pom.
Smith
White
Sept. 15
XXX
Wolverine
Smith 1923
Double loose
Smith
Yellow
Sept. 15
XXX
Yellow Dot
Smith 1931
But.
Smith
Lemon yellow, deeper than
Baby
Nov. 10
XX
Yellow Doty
Large Pom.
Dreer
Yellow
Nov. 1
XXX
Yellow Gem
Cum. 1932
Pom.
Bristol
Yellow
Oct. 10
XX
Yellow Normandie
Pierson 1917
Double loose
Mo.B.G.
Yellow
Oct. 15
XXX
Zaza
Smith 1931
Double loose
Smith
(Cactus quilled). Yellow with
orange. Dwarf
Oct. 15
XX
Zelia
Smith 1920
Double round
Dreer
Orange bronze
Oct. 22
XX
Zora
Smith 1915
Pom.
Dreer
Bear early, bright yellow
Oct. 15
Go
DEDICATION OF TWO KENTUCKY COFFEE TREES
IN THE GARDEN AT STENTON MANSION
On Thursday, October 20, 1932
In Memory of
WILLIAM PENN and HANNAH CALLOWHILL PENN, his mfe
Address by William J. Serrill
Vice-President, The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
We are met together to dedicate two noble trees in memory of
William Penn and Hannah Callowhill Penn. The ceremony con-
stitutes one in a series of celebrations held this week and next in
honor of the 250th anniversary of William Penn's first arrival in
the New World.
In selecting trees as the object of this dedication, The Penn-
sylvania Society of Colonial Dames and The Welcome So-
ciety of Pennsylvania have made a felicitous choice ; the tree
figures prominently in the legend of William Penn. On reach-
ing the site of his new city, which had been laid out in accordance
with his plan prior to his arrival, he at once changed the names
which had been given to the principal streets to the names of the
forest treeg which stood on them. The Treaty Elm, under whose
spreading branches Penn negotiated his treaty with the Indian
tribes, is one of the famous trees in history. AVilliam Penn's ex-
pressed ideal of the city he was founding, that it was to be "a fair
gi'een country town," show^s that an abundance of trees held his
imagination. The very name given to his new Province, Pennsyl-
vania, Penn's Woods, sufficiently testifies his liking for forests and
forest trees.
But the end is not yet. The subject of the tree looms large in
the list of the projects proposed as the proper means to celebrate
the 250th anniversary of Penn's arrival. In this lengthy list, cover-
ing a wide variety of proposals, the greater number of which proved
to be impracticable in this period of economic depression, occur the
following : An extensive roadside planting of trees on the highways
of the State ; the establislunent of a public park, to be known as
Penn Park, in each county of Pennsylvania ; and probably the most
attractive and fertile of all the proposals that were made, the es-
tablishment, at an appropriate site in the environment of Phila-
delphia, of an arboretum, the Penn Arboretum, to become for the
Middle States all that the Arnold Arboretum is for New England.
Surely an inspiring thought ! And the fulfilling of a real need !
The late Dr. Ernest H. Wilson, Director of the Arnold Arboretum,
and the liighest authority on the subject, gave expression of this
need, and stated that our milder climate permitted of the growth of
a large variety of trees and shrubs not possible in New England.
Lastly, we must not omit the widely advertised movement
started in the Public School System of Philadelphia, to list what
are known as Penn Trees, namely, those now standing, which, from
66
their size and characteristics, are known to have been growing at
the date of Penn's arrival. Surely trees form appropriate subjects
for dedication in memory of William Penn.
These particular trees which we dedicate today are known as
the Kentucky Coffee tree, Gymnocladus dioica, which, being trans-
lated, means naked-branched two-flowered tree, the generic name
in recognition of the relatively open character of its foliage, dis-
playing when in full leaf the architectural structure of the tree, a
beautiful feature, and an unusual one among American trees, which
commonly bear a thick foliage, and the specific name in reference
to its two types of flowers, staminate and pistillate flowers, usually
borne on separate trees. The Kentucky Coffee Tree is a native of
Pennsj^lvania, but apparently is not abundantly distributed within
the State. It has, however, since early Colonial days, been exten-
sively planted as an ornamental tree, and these two specimens were
undoubtedly planted where they now stand about 100 years ago.
In selecting, among the trees standing here at Stenton, those
two which might appropriately be made the subject.^ of this dedi-
cation, the choice soon fell upon these two stately trees. Their fine
structure renders them impressive subjects; their venerable age is
in keeping with the interests of the two Societies, both devoted to
a veneration of the things of the past, in whose names the dedica-
tion is made ; their happy location, standing in close proximity to
the Llansion, in the intimate seclusion of the back lawn and at the
entrance to the formal garden, formed a powerful argument in
their favor ; and finally, the fact that they so obviously form a
pair — mates to one another — quite naturally suggested the idea that
the faithful and loving wife of William Penn be included in the
dedication. That a woman should be so honored by The Colonial
Dames is so manifestly fitting, the balance at once swung to the
selection, of this pair of ancient trees, the only specimens on the
Stenton grounds which irresistibly suggest a pair.
These trees, standing thus together side by side through the
length of years, form a fitting emblem of the union of William and
Hannah Penn. Upstanding, unbending, above board, loving the
light of day, they withstand the onslaught of the elements even as
the Penns withstood the bludgeonings of Fate. We are prone to think
of William Penn only as the founder of Pennsylvania, his holy
experiment. It is, however, a question whether his greatest service
to mankind is not the valiant, unceasing fight he waged against
religious persecution, and in favor of complete liberty of conscience.
And in spite of persecution and imprisonment and untold diffi-
culties, he ever maintained his equanimity, his sweet reasonableness
and his catholicity of spirit.
And so we dedicate these trees, the easternmost of the two to
Hannah Penn and the one standing nearer to the Mansion to Wil-
liam Penn. May they live long to grace these historic lawns ! May
no great wind lay them prostrate ! May no stroke of lightning shat-
ter them ! May no ax be laid to their roots ! And may they hence-
forth be familiarly called by those who frequent this s]30t Mr. and
Mrs. William Penn !
67
EXPLORING AND PLANT COLLECTING IN NORTHERN
BRITISH COLUMBIA
By Mary G. Henry (Mrs. J. Norman Henry)
Member of the Executive Council of The Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society
We first heard of the existence of so-called ' ' Tropical Valleys ' '
in the summer of 1930. They were said to be near the Liard River,
in Northern British Columbia. Of course, we knew they could not
be really tropical or even semi-tropical, but when the surrounding^
country is ice and snow-bound, with winter temperatures of 50 to
60 degrees below zero, these valleys were reported never to freeze.
This part of the country, sometimes known as the "Blind
Spot" of Canada, has been usually considered jDractically inac-
cessible. Waterfalls and rapids in the rivers make traveling by
water impossible, while the distance by land is great over wide
stretches of bog and mountainous country still in its virgin rough-
ness and much of it yet unmapped.
Dr. Henry and I became interested, and so did our children,
Mary, Josephine, Norman, Jr., and Howard. Our correspondence
with the Canadian Department of the Interior was very discourag-
ing, owing to their absolute lack of information on the country.
We determined to go, however. I was anxious to collect plants and
the others wanted to go for the adventure.
The Canadian authorities were extremely courteous and gave
us all the help they could. The Topographical Department kindly
released Mr. K. F. McCusker, one of their foremost topographers,
to accompany us and map the country. It took us about nine months
to formulate our plans and complete our arrangements. Dr. B. H.
Chandlee, surgeon, agreed to accompany us, for being completely
out of touch with the world for such a long time and not knowing
what accident might befall our children, we felt happier in mind
to be prepared for any ordinary emergency or accident.
We left Philadelphia June 25, 1931, and arrived in Pouce
Coupe, Peace River Block, Northern British Columbia, June 30th.
Pouce Coupe is about 250 miles northwest of Jasper and about 425
miles northwest of Banff. AVe motored 65 miles, ferried across the
Peace River and arrived at our destination. Ft. St. John, the last
outpost of civilization, at 1 A. M. Our outfit of 9 men, 58 horses,
tents, food, etc., was camped just beyond the little town waiting
for us.
After four hours' rest, the horses were saddled and packed
and we started on our 80-day journey. During the first part of our
trip the sun rose so early and set so late that we had no real night
at all, for the sky began to grow light before darkness ever came.
The temperature fell below freezing nearly every night, even
in July. In August it was frequently 18 or 20 degrees at getting-
up time and in early September one morning it was but 12 degrees.
The mid-days, however, when clear and sunny, were a delightful
contrast to the cold nights. Frequently in July the temperature
rose to 80 degrees, and even in September the noon temperature was
over 60 degrees when the sun shone. I often wondered how beauti-
ful and fragile-looking flowers could stand such extremes of tem-
perature.
Often in the early mornings the frost caused them to appear
as though they had been sprinkled by tiny diamonds, and when the
first rays of the rising sun touched them they were so beautiful it
seemed as though they must belong to another world.
Collecting plants while riding with a pack is not always a
simple matter. A trowel goes in a leather sheath on one side of my
belt and a knife on the other side. A strong pair of saddle bags is
fastened to the pommel of my saddle, in which each morning are
placed several empty jam cans. Each evening all full cans are
aired and watered and in the morning are all carefully packed in
wooden packing cases on the horses. Quite frequently the cans were
frozen solid to the ground and I had to use my ax to chop them
loose.
There is, of course, a heavy mortality among newly collected
plants. About three-fourths of those from the Southern States usu-
ally live and these, as a rule, make themselves at home quite quickly.
Not so, however, do those from British Columbia. Only about one-
third survive first of our hot summers and they are then in such
a condition that it takes about two years to recover (or a short time
to die ! ) . Alas, these wild things of the Northland pine for their
native home, with ice and snow and low temperatures and a bright
arctic sun.
We traveled along rivers and through valleys the first week
or two, at an altitude of about 1800 to 2500 feet, but gradually
rising higher. In sheltered places there were many fine spruce for-
ests and groves of aspens and black poplars. The aspen, often called
white poplar, Populus tremuloides, with its chalk-white trunk and
small lace-like foliage, is to my mind more beautiful than the white
birch, and makes a far nobler tree.
There were many open grassy meadows and the countless num-
bers of the large pale blue flowers of Polemonimn acutifiorum made
them look like bits of fallen sky. Often Delphinium brownii in
many stemmed clumps over three feet tall grew among them, and
added its deeper shade of dark blue purple to the others. In many
places both in sun and shade, Mertensia strigosa grew with lavish
profusion about three feet high where the ground was moist, and
with individual flowers three-quarters inch long.
Penstemon procerus, with small sapphire blue flowers held
closely together in a little spike, grew in slightly drier places, but
very frequently they all lived in the friendly company of each
other, a veritable sea of blue, and with the mountains rising all
around them, I never imagined meadows could be so gloriously
beautiful.
Beginning to open its richest regal blue purple blooms while
all these others were still at their height, Aconitum delphinifolium
soon decorated the meadows where it formed handsome plants 18
69
to 24 inches. With its slenderer stem and larger tlowers, thongii
closely related, it is a far handsomer plant than the Delphin-
ium. This strikingly beautiful flower also frequently climbed
to about 6000 feet on the mountains and often dotted cold, bleak
mountain passes. In these places it was sometimes only three inches
tall and produced but one large gorgeous bloom.
One day early in our trip w^e passed a number of gently
sloping hillsides that were literally pink with wild roses and whose
scent perfumed the atmosphere for miles. However, blue in various
Medfern Lake
shades was very markedly the predominating color of the flowers
throughout our entire journey, and we rode through these wonder-
ful flower-filled meadows at intervals for about 200 miles and each
seemed more beautiful than the other.
As the days passed we worked our way into the mountains, and
the little Indian trails we were using became indistinct and hard to
follow. Sometimes w^e traveled along game trails and by the foot-
prints in them we saw they were used by grizzly bear, moose, deer,
goat, elk, wolves, sheep and caribou, all of which some of us ran
into at various times. Occasionally we had no trail at all.
After the end of a couple of weeks the rivers about us flowed
at an altitude of about 3000 to 3500 feet. We forded them very
frequently and swam our horses over the deepest.
We rode every day as far as our horses could go comfortably,
usually about fifteen to twenty miles. About once every week or ten
daj's we stopped a day to give them a rest, and these stops gave me
opportunities to climb mountains.
The grandeur of the scenery, the lavishness of nature and the
beauty of the flowers daily quite took my breath away.
Lupinus arcticus, another flower in brilliant blue, colored acres
on some of the mountain sides and could be seen for miles. In some
of the valleys there were many fine patches of Cypripedium pas-
70
serinum and assuredly this is one of the very loveliest blossoms of
the Northland; it is pure white and pale apple green. Linnaea
borealis americana grew almost everywhere, in damp, shady woods,
in the lower altitudes and on bare, bleak, stony mountain tops up
to 6000 feet, always exquisitely lovely and its delicious fragrance
usually told me where it was before I ever saw. it. Cornus cana-
densis frequently kept it company in the shady places.
Dryas drummondii was at home on many of the open stony
river bars, and D. integrifolia, an arctic gem, with flowers almost
the size of D. octopetala, and tiny foliage about one-quarter the
size, formed a good part of the turf on exposed places in the higher
altitudes.
The crowning glory of the mountains and perhaps the most
beautiful flower I have ever seen, was unquestionably a high Alpine
Polemonium species. Of the same pure pale, almost sky blue color
as its tall cousin of the meadows, its flowers were about the same
size, but they had a throat of orange gold. They were held in a
cluster four or five open at a time, proudly erect on slender stems
often only three or four inches tall, and the tiny leaflets were strung
along the stems like small green beads.
A '"close-up" of the pack train, on Caribou Ridge
I found three Campanulas. C. uniflora is a small thing, which
has little to recommend it. This grew numerously on a 6000-foot
pass. C. lasiocarpa is a very fine little plant in every way and
grows plentifully on many mountains, rarely below 6000 feet and
up to the snows at 6500. One of its deep blue bells, inverted, will
frequently cover the entire tiny plant. But Campanula rotundifolia
alaskana is even more beautiful. It has very graceful bright blue
flowers and its leaves are reddish with crisped and undulated mar-
gins and form pretty rosettes. It grows the farthest north of any,
in stonj' ground, altitude about 4800 feet.
71
A handsome little liliaceous plant, Zygadenus elegans, with a
bright orange zone instead of the customary green one also won
my unstinted admiration. This, too, on a mountain far north.
There were many Oxytropis, mostly exceedingly joretty dwarf
growlers, resembling greatly glorified clovers. The best one I saw
was a species with deliciously fragrant lemon yellow flowers in
large heads, well set oft' by the silvery foliage. O. Riehardsonii mth
blossoms in many shades of pink, lavender and pure white was a
very shoAvy plant also.
IJie pack ivinds like a snake over tlie Caribou Ridge
0. arctobia is a beautiful prostrate grower with pale purple
flowers. This also has silvery foliage. Myosotis Alpestris was just
as lovely as it should be and grew in many high places, always a
most welcome sight.
I found Chrysanthemum integrifolium only once. It was in
moist, rich soil, altitude about 5500 feet. It is a most attractive
plant with pretty white daisy-like flowers above a mat of deep
green foliage about two inches tall.
It took us 39 days to reach the so-called "Tropical Valley,"
but, unfortunately, it had been burned over about nine years pre-
viously. It was about three-quarters of a mile long and one-quarter
of a mile wide. Hot springs were numerous, the largest one, a cir-
cular pool, was about eight feet in diameter, temperature about 90
degrees. Some of the springs were too hot to hold a hand in. Every-
where there grew a lush, luxuriant growth of vegetation, the rankest
I ever saw anywhere, and difficult to penetrate. Delphinium over
six feet high, Roses, Rubus, Symphoricarpus oecidentalis, Actea Ar-
guta, Ribes Oxyacanthoides, Cornus stolonifera, Amelanchier flor-
ida. Viburnum pauciflorum, and Prunus demissa were abundant and
numerous Vetches tangled themselves amongst them.
72
The most interesting shrub I found during the summer was
Rhododendron lapponicum, which at its best formed perfectly sym-
metrical round-topped bushes about two and one-half feet tall and
over three feet in diameter. Dr. Rehder, of the Arnold Arboretum,
says this is an upright form and an extremely interesting discovery.
and that ''its occurrence in western North America is of great
phytogeographical interest." It grew mostly at altitudes of from
4000 feet to 5500 feet. The bloom had passed, but by climbing high
near the snows I found a few of its pretty magenta flowers for my
press.
Andromeda polifolia, with its beautiful tiny bright pink bells
and whose total height rarely exceeded two or three inches, was
irresistible in its charm. Eleagnus Argentea, one of the finest dwarf
trees of the north, grew near the Musqua River.
Spruce trees on the Prophet River
There were some ornamental shrubby willows, the most at-
tractive one, Salix brachycarpa in its best form, had small silken
silvery foliage against Avhich the pretty rose-colored catkins stood
out conspicuously. There was another handsome willow whose very
long, narrow, deep glossy green leaves decorated shiny mahogany-
colored branches.
Viburnum pauciflorum was splendid in September, with its
polished red fruit and autumn-tinted foliage. Arctostaphylos
rubra frequently made striking scarlet crimson mats on many other-
wise bare, gray mountainsides.
73
Coniferous trees were, of course, plentiful, though not in great
variety. Abies lasiocarpa, the Alpine Fir, is an exceedingly hand-
some blue-leaved balsam. It is never a large tree. It is seen growing
at high altitudes and on cold northern slopes, often as perfectly
symmetrical spire-like specimens. Picea canadensis and Picea mari-
ana, the common native spruces, were abundant almost everywhere.
In some x^laces there were pine trees, particularly in burnt-over
land, and these resembled the "lodge pole" pines.
Among the interesting variations in plant life were lovely
white Aconitums and white, lavender and pinky-plum Delphiniums
Henry River, near Lake Mary
and pretty pure pink Penstemons. Although there were literally
hundreds of thousands of Mertensia, I saw onlj^ one white one. a
most excjuisitely beautiful plant. There were, however, quite a few
albino Polemoniums and Myosotis.
After covering over 1000 miles on horseback and many more
on foot we ended our journey at Hudson Hope on September 18th.
No one of the sixteen of us was sick a minute nor did we have one
unpleasant incident of any kind the entire 80 days.
The mountains were our home these eleven weeks. The floor
of the forest or the alpine meadow was our bed and the world about
us was unmarred by the hand of man.
The trip is but a memory now, like a wonderful dream that
really did come true.
Far, far north there is a chaos of wild and rugged mountainous
country. It is only visited by the untamed things who make their
home there and who for years to come will still roam this region in
peace.
One mountain stands forth pre-eminently, its siiow-crowned
summit towering above the others, the highest mountain we saw all
summer. It is Mt. Mary Henry. Beautiful lakes and rivers are
74
named for other members of the party by IMr. McCusker, and I un-
derstand the Canadian Government has done us the great honor to
say that these names are to remain.
I made a collection of herbarium specimens for the Royal Bo-
tanic Garden, Edinburgh, and another for the Academy of Natural
Sciences, Philadelphia, gathered 76 packages of seeds for the Royal
Botanic Garden, and brought home about 50 cans of living plants
for my experimental garden in Gladwyne.
I am indebted to Sir William Wright Smith, Royal Botanic
Garden, Edinburgh, and Dr. Francis W. Pennell, Academy of
Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, and Dr. Alfred Rehder and Dr. H.
Raup, of the Arnold Arboretum, who have identified these plants.
LOG:
Left Ft. St. John July 1, 1931.
Rode north along Halfway River.
Arrived Redfern Lake July 14th.
Crossed Prophet River July 19tli.
Crossed Musqua River July 23d.
Crossed Howard River July 26th. (lat. 58°, long. 123° 44 feet,
altitude 2550 feet).
Crossed Henry River July 30th (lat. 58° 30 ft., long. 123°
56 feet, altitude 2300 feet).
Crossed Norman River August 4th (altitude 2830 feet).
Saw Mt. Mary Henry August 5th. (lat. 58° 35 feet, long. 124°
30 feet, altitude 9000 feet) .
Crossed Tetsa River August 6th. (Met Sikanni Indians and
Chief's son, who led us to Hot Springs on Toad River.)
Crossed Racing River at junction of Toad River and visited
so-called Tropical Valley August 9th (lat. 58° 59.7 feet, long. 125°
25 feet, altitude 2150 feet). Valley about three-quarters mile long
and one-quarter mile wide.
Saw Mt. Gibson August 13th (lat. 57° 53 feet, long. 124° 25
feet, altitude 9000 feet).
Visited Lake Mary August 19th (lat. 58° 24 feet, long. 124°
25 feet, 5 miles long, altitude 4100 feet).
Visited Lake Josephine August 20th, one mile west of Lake
Mary, ten miles long.
Returned Hudson Hope September 17th.
75
But who can paint
Like Nature? Can Imagination boa^t
TMteoAT Amid its gay creation, hues like hers? PAsciNAnoN
Or can it rnix them, with that matchless skill,
And lose them in each other as appears
In every hud that Mows?
Thompson.
For the convenience of members, the following Calendar
of Garden Work has been reprinted, through the courtesy
of the editor, from the 1932 file of "HORTICULTURE."
Branches of Christmas trees may be used as a mulch over the
roses, bulb beds, the rock garden, perennials which have evergreen
foliage and plants in the coldframe. The boughs make a light, airy
mulch, which is most desirable.
All specimen evergreens, particularly arborvitaes, junipers and
retinosporas, which are located where they will get the drips from
overhanging eaves and which have several main trunks, should be
wound about with soft twine to keep them from bending over and
splitting when ladened with snow and ice. It is sometimes advisable
to erect a roof over small evergreens in a foundation planting if they
are likely to become encased in ice from the dripping eaves.
If tulips begin to show through the ground as the result of an
untimely warm spell, no harm will be done. Merely cover the tops
with a light, coarse mulch such as Christmas tree boughs.
After poinsettias have dropped their leaves and become un-
sightly, take them to the cellar for storage until spring, when new
growth should begin. Water the plants once a week until that time ;
they may be kept nearly dry.
Ferns in the window garden will become sickly if illuminating
or coal gas is present in the air. The plants cannot stand cold
drafts, which are likely to occur when dusting and other domestic
duties are being performed.
If palms are in a part of the house where the temperature is
low they will not need much water during the middle of the winter ;
in fact, palms in any situation should be kept on the dry side now.
Hyacinths will flower with short stems unless the bud is made
to develop in the dark. As soon as the young leaves start to unfold
and the buds appear, cover the pot with a cornucopia of paper or an
inverted pot. If the latter is used keep it on until the spike has
nearly reached the top inside.
Fuchsias, which have been ripening while in storage, are now
ready for forcing into bloom. As soon as the shoots have made a
good start, cuttings may be taken and rooted in sand. Other plants
which may be propagated by cuttings are heliotropes and stevias.
All cuttings should be of young wood.
Brush the snow from the tops of evergreen hedges with an old
broom.
76
"Glowing bright
Beneath the various foliage
VVATER. BEARER ^^r■^J^ j J ^ -u^n,^ ■■
Wildly spreads charm
The arbutus, and rears his scarlet fruit
Luxuriant mantling o'er
The craggy steeps."
Branches of a number of shrubs may be cut now for forcing
indoors. Pussywillows start easily if the caps are picked off and
the branches kept in warm water for a few hours. Then they should
be placed in a sunny window. Forsythias also force easily.
Clumps of astilbe or spiraea may be potted now for forcing in-
doors or in the conservatory. The plants need drainage, and it is
important, too, that the soil be made firm around the roots. After
they are potted, soak the plants thoroughly and place them in a
cool cellar. Keep the plants well watered at all times. When the
new growth is three inches high, place the plants in a cool, sunny
window. When the flower buds begin to show, give the plants a
weak stimulant occasionally.
Although cacti are native of arid regions, they need a constant
water supply when they are used for house plants. Too heavy
watering, however, will cause them to rot.
All bulbs should be kept in active growth until the tops die
down before the pots are set away in the cellar. Tulips, hyacinths
and narcissi should be set out in the garden next autumn.
Keep the cool section of the conservatory at a temperature of
50 to 55 degrees at night and warm section at 65 to 75 degrees.
Ventilation should be given early in the day in warm fine weather.
Sprinkle stovehouse plants with warm water once or twice a day.
Calla lilies will flower more freely if they are given plenty of
water and a weak liquid fertilizer every week or two. This plant is
a gross feeder. There should be good drainage in the pot.
Seeds of many perennials may be sown now in a conservatory
that is kept at a moderate temperature. Some perennials will flower
the first season from seeds started now. Delphiniums and gaillardias
are in this class.
When the hotbed is ready, sow seeds of cabbages, cauliflowers,
kohlrabi and lettuce. Sow, also, hardy and half-hardy annuals, and
even biennials and perennials. Hotbeds for early planting should
have a two-foot deep pit, in the bottom of which should be tramped
18 inches of manure.
This is a good time of yeav to clean out the bird houses or to set
up new ones. If some of the houses were not occupied during the
last season, relocate them in positions similar to those of the most
popular houses.
77
Beside a fading banlc of snow
A lovely anemone blew,
•me-FiiHEs Unfolding to the sun's bright glow
Its lea/ves af Heaven's serenest hue.
"Percival."
Heavy pruning of j^oiing fruit trees is not advisable. It pre-
vents the trees from making normal growth. Prune by thinning out
weak branches and shortening lateral growths just enough to keep
the tree in shape. This applies to established trees, not newly
planted whips.
This is not the time to uncover plants and bulbs but to protect
them from the variable March weather. Keep bulbs and perennials
dormant as long as possible with a light covering of boughs or straw.
Sow seeds of annuals indoors, especially those of vines which
need a long season, such as the moonflower.
Violas and pansies may be brought into flower many weeks
ahead of time in a coldframe.
Force alpines growing in pots into bloom by plunging them in
a coldframe. Use them for home decoration.
In sections of the country infested with tent caterpillar and
gypsy moths, gather the egg clusters or paint them with creosote.
Rhubarb growing in a bright sunny spot may be started into
growth early by covering each plant with half a wooden barrel, or
better still, by erecting a frame over the plants. Keep the glass on
and bank the frame on the outside with soil or manure. Cover with
heavy mats on cold nights.
Grafting of fruit trees may be done soon. Cut the scions now
and store them in sand or peat moss. Try the newer varieties.
Lily-of-the-valley may be forced at any time during the winter.
Try flowering a few pips for Easter.
Wood ashes are a valuable fertilizer in the garden, but unless
the soil is very acid do not use wood ashes on lawns.
Asparagus starts early in the season and, for this reason, the
soil should be enriched and cultivated as soon as possible. Spread
salt over the bed to check the weeds.
Set grape trellises, arbors and latticework in order when the
frost leaves the ground.
Transplanting of ornamentals may be done to advantage in the
Southern states now.
j^PRIL
gase upon her violet beds,
Laiurnum's golden tress'd, ^"^iA^^i/^
iwE RAM ^gj. flower-spiJced almonds; breath perfume Faithfulness-
From lilac and syringa blo^'m,
And cry, 'I love spring besi!'"
Harden off pot-grown sweet peas in the coldf rame for late April
planting. Do not let them become frosted, however.
Prnne the garden roses, more particularly hybrid teas, as soon
as the weather is warm enough. Remove dead wood and cut back
the live canes two-thirds.
Begin to plant all kinds of roses as soon as they arrive from
the nursery. Protect the roots from drying winds. Hill soil around
the plants for the first two weeks. This is a very useful practice.
Plant early cabbage plants and lettuce on well-drained ground
in sections of the country where the soil is settled.
Sow flower seeds indoors in boxes or flower pots. Water care-
fully or the plants will damp off. Use only part of the seeds in the
packet ; insure a second planting. Sow thinly.
Uncover the perennial borders and rock garden gradually.
Use care not to break off any new shoots. Do not be too hasty.
Do not cultivate in the perennial garden until the ground has
dried sufficiently. Consult the garden plan to recall where slow-
starting perennials and bulbs are hidden.
Set out shrubs soon. Prepare the ground well and give the
roots plenty of room. Keep active fertilizer away from the plants.
Top prune in proportion to the loss of roots.
The last of the shrub pruning may be finished now. Put shrub
prunings, particularly rose canes, on the fire.
Lilacs, ash trees and other woody plants infested with scale
insects may be given a last-minute dormant spray with an approved
oil solution before the leaf buds start to open.
Euonymus scale is becoming a serious pest. It appears sud-
denly. Look for the small, flat bodies on euonymus stems and leaves.
Spray now with an oil spray at a strength of one to thirty parts of
water.
Set out pansy plants by the middle of the month to get a long
season of bloom.
Asters, phlox, boltonias and heleniums, to name a few peren-
nials, should be divided every third year or so. Chrysanthemums
can be divided every spring. With all of them, save the youngest
parts of the plants.
Many annuals wath long tap roots, such as lupines, may be
successfully transplanted if the seeds are sown in paper bands. In
fact, all annuals may be set out easily if grown in this manner.
Soil is ready to work if it will crumble when squeezed in the
hand. Much harm is done by working soil which is still Avet.
79
M^y^^
"Thou art the 'Iris'
Who, armed with Golden Rod,
THEBOLi. ^^^ winged with celestial, azure, Nearest mcssace-
The message of some god."
Fill window boxes with rich soil. For shady places, use ferns
(the Boston fern especially), Asparagus sprengeri, begonias,
fuchsias and balsams. Trailing plants to use are the vincas, German
and Kenilworth ivy, English ivy and tradescantias. The ivy-leaved
geranium is good. Use petunias, verbenas, lobelias, lantanas, brow-
allis and alyssums in sunny windows.
Set out evergreens now as well as other ornamentals and flower-
ing trees that are balled and burlapped.
Almost any perennial may be transplanted on the home grounds
at this time provided that a good ball of soil is taken around the
roots.
Irises troubled with iris borers may be sprayed beginning now
with a stomach poison spray to kill the young borers as they begin
to hatch. Spray twice at two-week intervals.
Annuals such as nasturtiums, lupines, mignonette, poppies, an-
nual mallows and phacelia should be sown where they are to bloom.
Make an effort to have better fruits in the garden this year.
Make timely sprayings, following the state college schedules.
Spring flowering shrubs should be pruned after flowering, and
for this reason one may as well cut branches freely for use indoors.
Begin to dust the roses with green sulphur dust to protect the
foliage from black spot and mildew.
Spray continually for aphids, using nicotine or pyrethrum so-
lution. Aphids are likely to appear in hoards now.
Transplant the growing tuberous-rooted begonias from pots to
a shady bed, border or window box. These begonias may be used as
summer house plants, but keep them out of the bright sunlight.
One may even grow them under trees.
Summer flowering bulbs may go in the ground now, such as
tuberoses and tigridias. Montbretias are available in many colors.
Summer hyacinth bulbs should be set six inches deep in a sunny
location where the soil is rich and well drained.
Spray delphiniums to prevent blacks and smut with bordeaux
mixture or copper powder.
80
"The cowslip startles in meadows green,
The buttercup catches the sun in its
there's never a leaf nor a blade too
To be some happy creature's palace."
0V./3H P
The buttercup catches the sun m its chalice, ^tMM^BTd
-rWt TWINS > J j7 , 1 J T,7 J i PENSlVE-NtSi
Ana there s never a leaf nor a blade too mean
The squash vine borer moth lays eggs on the plants near the
roots in late June and July. The borer can be controlled during
the egg stage by spraying the stems near the roots with a strong
solution of nicotine sulphate. Spray thoroughly once a week until
the end of July.
If tulips have been diseased, be sure to gather and burn all
tops and dried flowers to prevent the spread of ''Fire disease."
If there is a rainy period, beans in the garden may become dis-
eased with bean anthracnose. This disease makes small angular dead
areas on the leaves and sunken brown spots on the bean pods. To
control it, dust the plants with dry bordeaux from the time they
are six inches high until the pods are formed.
Rust on snapdragons is one of the most serious diseases that
this plant has. Rust is spread from plant to plant by spraying the
foliage with the hose. Avoid doing this and, furthermore, take care
not to wet the plants at all at night. Dust frequently and thor-
oughly with sulphur, covering the undersides of the leaves.
Hollyhock rust, which will soon make its appearance as brown
blisters on the lowest leaves, may be considerably checked by clean-
ing away and burning all the old foliage at the base of the plants
as soon as it starts to become infected. Dust with sulphur thor-
oughly.
Aster yellows, the virus disease that turns China aster plants a
sickly yellow color and that makes the flowers green, is spread by an
insect called the leaf hopper. There is no sure control known for
this insect, although nicotine spray or dust will give temporary
relief. Be sure to pull up and destroy immediately any sickly
aster plants to prevent any further spread of this disease.
81
"When the heat like a mist-veil floats,
And poppies flame in the rye,
And the silver note in the streamlet's throat
Has softened almost to a sigh,
It is July."
COMiOLATi*
AVlien dividing chimps of bearded irises for resetting, separate
them into single rhizomes consisting usually of a center bloom
stalk with one or more "toes" on each side. Cut the tops back to
less than six inches. Remove all diseased roots. Allow six or eight
inches between plants. Transplanting can be done throughout July
and August.
Pansy seed to be obtained from a distance should be ordered
now to have it on hand for early August sowing.
The best peaches, apples and plums result if the fruit is
thinned. Snip off the culls first ; then tliin the remaining fruit so
that no two are touching. If only one side of the tree is fruiting,
the thinning need not be as heavy as though the tree were in full
bearing.
Raspberries, blackberries and even climbing roses that are los-
ing their tips as a result of girdling are infested probably with the
raspberry cane borer. Cut the stems back to sound, green wood
and burn the tips.
Bagged grapes are of the highest quality. Put on the bags
now. Grocery store bags will do. Fasten the bags securely and snip
off the bottom corners to allow water to drain away.
Brussels sprouts thrive during cool moist weather. Sow seeds
late in July for a fall crop.
If roses show signs of drying, mulch the beds well with peat
moss to conserve moisture. Avoid mixing the peat with the soil
later on, as it lightens it too much.
As soon as oriental poppy leaves turn ])rown the plants may be
lifted and divided or moved in clumps to a new part of the per-
ennial border to improve the color combination. One may set out
new plants, too.
Rambler roses such as Dorothj^ Perkins can be easily multiplied
by pegging doAvn some of the canes and covering them ^Wtli soil
near the tip end.
The strongest varieties of garden roses, including climbing
roses, can be increased by cuttings made of firm, green wood taken
after the flowers fall and inserted deeply in sand and covered with
fruit jars or other glass containers until they root.
Keep garden plants free of seed pods if they are expected to
continue flowering.
82
The sunflower turns to her
God, when he sets,
^^^""^ The same look which she turned
When he rose.
"More."
Crab grass, one of the most persistent lawn weeds to appear
late in summer, may best be controlled by constantly raking the
grass several ways and keeping it cut short. A dandelion rake Ib
best for the purpose. Clean up all clippings to prevent reseeding.
Prune wisteria vines in August to encourage flowering next
spring. Cut the new straggling shoots back to within four feet of
the old wood of last season's growth.
Set out roots of mertensias or Virginia cowslips as soon as they
can be obtained from nurserymen. Continue to plant Oriental
poppies and irises.
Seeds of hardy lupines may be sown throughout August. Try
some of the choice hybrids. Sow where the plants are to grow.
Tie up cauliflower heads as soon as the white curds show to
keep them from getting brown.
Order Madonna lily bulbs and plant them upon arrival. Set
them only two inches deep. Lay them on their sides on a layer of
sand.
Fall crocus and colchicums, which bloom in autumn, should be
ordered now and planted upon arrival later in the month.
Sow seeds of English daisies and forget-me nots. Also sow
Canterbury bells and foxgloves.
In the northernmost states, sow grass seed late in August ; else-
where, sow in September. Prepare the ground now.
Make new strawberry beds. Pot-grown plants take hold
quickly. Set the crowns of the plants even with the soil level. If
the plants have been shipped some distance or the weather is hot
and dry, cut off all but one or two leaves. Water thoroughly at
intervals.
Most evergreens can now be transplanted with perfect safety
if the plants are properly dug with a good ball of soil around the
roots. Give them a heavy watering when transplanting and several
times during autumn.
Prune rambler roses of the Dorothy Perkins type, cutting the
old canes to the ground.
Cut away and burn all old canes of raspberries and black-
berries as soon as they have finished fruiting.
Keep the mature fruits of egg plants and peppers picked.
83
EPTEMBEFL
"It is the Autumn 'breeze
That lightly floating on,
Just sTcims the weedy leas,
THtviRsiN jy^gf stirs the glowing trees, tears ■
And is gone."
By the end of the month, ornamental trees, shrubs, bush fruits
and some fruit trees (not stone fruits) may be set out. They will
become established before cold weather. Water them heavily if
necessary.
Spring flowering perennials and rock plants may go into the
ground. Firm them well.
Take cuttings of geraniums and other tender plants that are to
be kept over winter indoors.
Plant narcissi at once. Many of the native grown lilies are
ready. Most of the lesser bulbs (crocuses, etc.) are best planted at
this time. Prepare the ground for other bulbs as soon as possible.
Many kind of perennial seeds can be sown to advantage at this
time in coldframes. They will start early in spring.
Begin to gather leaves and garden refuse to be added to the
compost pile or reduced to manure with chemicals.
This is the best time to set out peonies. Irises, particularly
Siberian and Japanese varieties, may still be set out.
Grass seed should be sown at once, but the ground must be
kept moist by means of the hose if there is little rainfall.
Straw flowers intended for winter decoration should be cut
with long stems and tied tightly in bunches, hanging the bunches
upside down to dry.
Stake all the hardy asters before they come into bloom. Many
of the hardy chrysanthemums will also need some support.
Tulips, particularly the Due van Tholl varieties, can be potted
now for early winter forcing. Bury the pots in a moist shady spot
until the ground begins to freeze, when they should be taken to a
cool cellar until ready for forcing.
The perennial border may be entirely renovated at this time.
Although trees and shrubs may be pruned at this time, under
no circumstances should spring-flowering subjects be pruned if flow-
ers are wanted next spring.
As long as lawns are in active growth, they should be mown.
Prepare trenches now for sweet peas to be sowoi later, digging
them deeply and enriching the lower depths with manure.
Before it is too late, pot a few plants of the lemon verbena
(Lippia citriodora) to keep over winter indoors from which cuttings
may be taken next season.
Keep the strawberry bed free from weeds.
A handful each of bone meal and w^ood ashes may be added
with advantage around each peony ])lant.
Start a few cuttings of the clioicest coleus either in water or
well-drained, moist soil.
84
THE 5CALES
OCTOBER
"When gentians roll their fringes tight
To save them for the morning,
And chestnuts fall from, satin burrs
Without a word of warning."
, - UOVEL '■
Roman hyacinths are very easy to force indoors. Bulbs may
be potted every two weeks until Thanksgiving so that there may
always be a pot or two in bloom during the early winter months.
Except in the states that have little snow during the winter and
very severe freezing, cane fruits such as raspberries and black-
berries may be planted to advantage in the fall. There will not be
much time for this work, however ; set out the plants as soon as the
foliage has dropped.
Grape vines may be set out in the fall in many sections of the
country. Set the plants at least as deep as they were in the nursery.
Prune the roots severely before planting and cut the tops back to
only a few eyes or buds.
Dig up the roots of the red hot poker plant, known as tritoma
or kniphofia, and put them in storage for the winter. This applies
to Northern states, where this plant is not hardy.
Bare spots under evergreen trees and shrubs are ideal situa-
tions for small spring-flowering bulbs, especially crocuses, grape
hyacinths and snowdrops.
It is too early yet to set out garden roses in practically all sec-
tions of the country, but the beds should be prepared at once and
orders sent forward for delivery in November, or even December
or January in the Southern States.
Some of the earliest flowering shrubs, such as Daphne mezer-
eum, are best set out in the fall.
Practically all rearrangements of the garden, including the
setting out of trees, shrubs and perennials, can be made at this
time. Water the plants heavily if the soil is in the least dry.
Tuberous begonias will not be injured by light frost, but it is
wise to lift them earl3\ Lay the plants in shallow boxes in an airy
warm place to dry thoroughly before being stored away in dry sand
for the winter. The stems should not be broken off but permitted
to drop off naturally, which they will do as they dry.
Montbretia bulbs should be dug, dried and stored where they
will be safe from frost in boxes of dry soil.
85
On the moors it dwelleth free,
Like a fearless mountain child,
THEicoapioN With a rosy cheek, a lightsome look, ^v*'^
And a spirit strong and wild.
TWAMLEY.
To keep tuberose bulbs healthy over winter, dry them well in
a frost-proof room and then store them in layers of cotton. Keep
the box in a dry, warm closet.
All kinds of garden roses are now sufficiently dormant to be
transplanted or purchased from nurseries. Although authorities say
that ordinary garden soil will be satisfactory, deep beds of thor-
oughly prepared loam and compost will give better results.
Continue to plant all kinds of bulbs, especially tulips and
lilies. Some imported lilies are not yet available ; prepare the
ground for them and mulch it heavily with manure or straw.
After the first heavy freezing of the ground, mulch the straw-
berry bed with a light two-inch covering of any material such as
salt hay or straw that will not mat down. Avoid coverings that
might contain weed seeds. Pine needles make an excellent mulch.
Let the brown fern fronds remain on the plants over winter.
They will mat down and make a permanent mulch.
The tops of any perennials that show disease, as for instance
delphiniums, peonies and hollyhocks, should not be added to the
compost pile but burned.
The water in garden pools should be considerably lower in
winter than in summer to allow for expansion and to prevent ice
from getting under the coping and lifting it. Hardy gold fish may
be left in the pool over winter if the water is deep enough so that
the pool will not freeze solid.
A thorough check should be made of all labels in the garden to
see that they are in their proper places and legible.
Christmas roses (helleborus) do not need winter protection,
but the blooms will be cleaner if a few plants are moved to a cold-
frame for the winter. Dig the plants with a large ball of soil.
Lilies-of-the-valley will be much finer next spring if they are
given a light mulch for the winter of very well-rotted manure or
leaf mold.
This is an excellent month in which to transplant deciduous
trees and shrubs.
The Virginia cowslip, Mertensia virginica, can be forced in a
cool sunny window indoors. Dig a root and pot it now and keep
it in cool storage for awhile.
86
"Warmth within, all snow outside,
Gay wreaths upon your door,
ler, cheerier Christmas-tide
Than you have Tcnown before."
Gay wreaths upon your door, ■ coopc^ut
THtARtMER . - •=' , y-,f . J ..J FORESIGHT
A finer, cheerier Christmas-tide
When the ground has become stiffened with frost, give all
evergreens, especially those transplanted late this fall, a heavy
mulch of straw or well-rotted manure. This applies to woody
ornamentals, too. When mulching boxwood do not get the mulch
directly against the plants.
Windbreaks for rhododendrons and similar plants should, of
course, be in place. This work is bothersome, however, and it
would be wise to consider planting hardy evergreens as a natural
windbreak next season. Pines may be used or even deciduous trees
and tall shrubs.
Apply the winter mulch for the perennial border during dry
weather when the plants are dry and the ground is frozen. Oak
leaves are good, although salt hay is neater and more easily applied.
Hold the mulch in place with branches or clods of soil.
Poinsettias should be watered daily and kept at a room tem-
perature of not over seventy degrees. Cut poinsettia blooms as
well as those of EupJiorhia jacquinoeflora will not keep well unless
the ends of the stems are seared over a flame or dipped quickly into
hot water.
Jerusalem cherries and Christmas peppers will lose their foli-
age and fruit if there is the slightest trace of coal or illuminating
gas in the air. Dry air is also injurious, but this may be counter-
acted by sprinkling the plants with an atomizer.
Primroses do well in a cool place. Cyclamen, too, prefer a cool
position, but they require sunlight for several hours during the day.
The large flowering begonias are difficult to keep for a long
time in the house. Give the plants plenty of water and be sure
that they do not become chilled. Morning sun is best. Avoid get-
ting water on the leaves of rex begonias.
Christmas will be a happy day for the birds if they find the
feeding stations well supplied with food, especially if the ground is
covered with glistening snow. Chickadees, nuthatches and wood-
peckers like suet particularly.
All bird foods should be placed out of the reach of cats. Hang
suet from the branches of trees or tall shrubs. The special wire
feeding baskets are very satisfactory. Many birds enjoy dough-
nuts ; the grease keeps them warm in cold weather.
Sunflower seeds, finely ground chicken feed, pork rinds, rolled
oats, pumpkin or squash seeds and the especially mixed bird foods
are recommended.
Birds need grit during the winter. Keep a dish of sand or
coal ashes handy. Even fine poultry grit will do. The special bird
foods contain the proper amount of coarse material.
87
N^rrnlogy
The following is a list of the meBibers of this Society whose
deaths have been reported during the year 1932:
Honorary
Dr. Ida A. Keller
Mr. George C. Thomas
Life
Miss Emily W. Biddle
Mr. Samuel T. Bodine
Mrs. Sabin W. Colton, Jr.
Mr. Jay Cooke
Mr. Thomas Long
Mr. William J. McCahan, Jr.
Mrs. J. Willis Martin
Miss Lydia T. Morris
Mr. Winthrop Sargent
Mr. William Trimble
innu
al
Mrs. Alljert L. Baily
Mrs. Horace Brock
Mr. Samuel B. Brown
Mr. Thomas Brown
Mrs. Albert P. Brubaker
Mr. S. M. Cornett
Miss Dorothea Emleii
Mrs. Samuel Howell
Mrs. William Henry Hughes
Mrs. Elizabeth W. Laedlein
Mrs. James T. Lazarus
Mr. Horace G. Lippincott
Miss Caroline T. Mather
Mr. Henry F. Michell
Mrs. Ralph H. North
Mrs. Frederick A. Eakestraw
Mrs. D. G. Rombach
Miss Elizabeth Scarborough
Mrs. William H. Steigerwalt
Dr. George C. Stout
Mr. P. H. Strubing
Miss Sarah E. Thompson
]\Irs. J. P. Whitehorn
ilrs. James D. Winsor
Mrs. Grahame Wood
The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
LIST OF MEMBERS
Additions and corrections to February 1, 1933
Members of the Society tcill confer a favor by giving the Secretary notice of any
change ivhich they may desire to have made in their addresses or of any inaccuracies
in the spelling of names or the classification of profession or business, etc., which may
be found in this list.
SUMMARY
Honorary Members 16
Life Members 275
Annual Members 3357
Total Membership 3648
HONORARY MEMBERS
ELECTED
1931 Ames, Mr. John S., North Easton,
Mass.
1930 Bailey, Dr. L. H., Ithaca, N. Y.
1931 Bertron, Mr. Samuel E., 40 Wall
St., New York, N. Y.
1932 Correvon, Mr. Henri, Chene-Bourg,
Geneva, Switzerland.
1932 DeLaMare, Mr. A. T., Box 100
Times Square Station, New York,
N. Y.
1931 Farrington, Mr. Edward I., 300
Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass.
1926 Havenieyer, Mr. T. A., 25 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
1930 Keith, Mrs. Sidney W., 226 S. 21st
St., Philadelphia.
ELECTED
1929 Macfarlane, Dr. John M., 220 Wi-
nona Ave., Germantown.
1932 Morrison, Mr. B. Y., 116 Chestnut
St., Takoma Park, D. C.
1922 Pennell, Dr. Francis W., 1900 Race
St., Philadelphia.
1930 Purdy, Mr. Carl, Ukiah, Calif.
1932 Rehder, Mr. Alfred, Arnold Ar-
boretum, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
1875 Thunder, Mrs. Henry Gordon, 272
S'. 23d St., PhUadelphia.
1931 Webster, Mr. Edwin S., 300 Massa-
chusetts Ave., Boston, Mass.
1931 Wright, Mr. Richardson, Graybar
■Building, 420 Lexington Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
LIFE AND ANNUAL MEMBERS
Life Members in bold-face type
C. Commercial Growers. F. Retail Florists. G. Gardeners. L. Landscape Architects.
N. Nurserymen. S. Seedsmen. W. Wholesale Florists.
Abbot, Miss Elizabeth S., 220 W. Allen's
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Abbott, Miss Gertrude, 400 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Achenbach, Mr. Leonard J., 509 Wynd-
moor Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Achenbach, Mrs. Leonard J., 509 Wynd-
moor Ave.. Chestnut Hill.
Achtermann, Mrs. Ernest, 211 Leamy
Ave., Springfield.
Acker, Mrs. Finley, 4943 Rubicam Ave.,
Germantown.
Acker, Mrs. J. H. R., Devon.
Acton, Mrs. Frank M., 323 Harrison
Ave., Elkinsi Park.
Acton, Mrs. J. W., 32 Oak St., Salem,
N. J.
Adam, Mrs. J. N., R. D. 5, West Chester.
Adams, Mr. Percy, care of Mr. Maurice
Bower Saul, Moylan-Rose Valley. (G.)
Adamson, Mrs. C. B., 415 W. Price St.,
Germantown.
Adee, Mrs. John N., Horsham.
Aiken, Mr. David, care of Mrs. A. H.
Geai-y, Rosemont. (G.)
Aitken, Mrs. John N., 233 W. Hortter
St., Philadelphia.
Albert, Mrs. John S., Wallingford.
Albrecht, Mrs. A. C, 1207 W. Allegheny
Ave., Philadelphia.
Albrecht, Mr. H. Carl, 1207 W. Alle-
gheny Ave., Philadelphia.
Albrecht, Mr. John, Jr., Albrecht Nur-
series, Narberth. (N.)
Alcorn, Mr. William Neely, Jr., "Keen-
acre," Ambler.
89
Alexander, Mrs. E. G., Wyucote.
Alexander, Mrs. J. S., Box 377 Bryn
Mawr.
Alexander, Mr. W. W. Stoklej^ and Coul-
ter Sts., Germantown.
Algeo, Miss Elisabeth W., 612 Columbia
Allen, Mrs. C. P., Jr., 7101 X. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Allen, Mrs. Charles J., 321 E. Oak Ave.,
Moorestown, X. J.
Allen, Mrs. Frank B., Box 283, Narberth.
Allen, Mr. Fred H., 3915 Henry St.,
Philadelphia.
Allen, Mr. George P., 22 E. Essex Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Allen, Miss Gertrude S., Norwood Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Allen, Mr. H. C, 21 N. Highland Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Allen, Miss Laura, 2100 Walnut St., Phila-
delphia.
Allinson, Mrs. E. Page, "Town's End
Farm," West Chester.
Alpera, Mrs. M., 6622 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Altemus, Mrs. Cliarles A., 117 Bucking-
ham Drive, Trenton, X. J.
Ambler, Miss Alice H., Plymouth Meet-
ing.
Ambler, Mrs. Annie F., Plymouth Meet-
ing.
Ambler, Mrs. Harry S., Jr., Woodland
Eoad and Cloverly Lane, Abington.
Anders, Mr. Monroe, Simpson and Argyle
Eoads, Ardmore.
Anders, Mrs. Warren Z., 477 Main St.,
Collegeville.
Anderson, Mrs. Dorsey C, 522 Valley
View Road, Merion.
Anderson, Mrs. Howard S., Worcester.
Anderson, Miss Margaret L., 6304 Moy-
lan St., Germantown.
Anderson, Mrs. Robert M., 6308 Moylan
St., Philadelphia.
Anderson, Mrs. William M., Box 142,
Wjmnewood.
Andre, Mr. John R., Lower State Road,
Doylestown. (C.)
Andrews, Mrs. Brice F., Ferry Lane, Val-
ley Forge.
Andrews, Mr. James C, Moylan Ave.,
Moylan.
Andrews, Mr. James W. R., Atco, N. J.
Andrews, Mrs. Schofield, 9002 Crefeldt
St., Chestnut Hill.
Annett, Mr. Cecil B., 310 E. Central Ave ,
Moorestown, N. J.
Appel, Mrs. William N., 419 E. King St.,
Lancaster.
Arader, Mr. Walter Graham, 1920 N. 61st
St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Archambault, Miss A. Margaretta, 426
S'. 40th St., Philadelphia.
Archer, Mrs. F. Morse, 570 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Armentrout, Miss Clara B., 6320 Bur-
bridge St., Germantown.
Armistead, Mr. W. M., 223 S. Aberdeen
Ave., Wayne.
Armitage, Mrs. Harry, 2506 Chestnut St.,
Chester.
Armstrong, Mrs. F. Wallis, Meadowview
Farms, Moorestown, X. J.
Armstrong, Mr. William, Box 115, Ber-
wyn.
Arnold, Mrs. M. E., 1717 Jefferson St.,
Philadelphia.
Arthur, Mr. Alec, care of Mrs. F. A. C.
Perrine, 413 W. State St., Trenton,
X. J. (G.)
Arthur, Mr. B. D., 157 Carpenter Lane,
Germantown.
Arthur, Mrs. Burch D., 157 Carpenter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Ash, Miss Florence, 5636 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Ashbridge, Miss Eleanor, Downingtown.
Ashbridge, Miss Emily, Rosemont.
Ashbridge, Miss Lida, Rosemont.
Ashbridge, Mr. Richard I. D., Downing-
town.
Ashenfelter, Mrs. I. B., 2846 X. 26th St..
Philadelphia.
Ashenfelter, Mrs. R. B., 103 Llanfair
Road, Ardmore.
Asher, Mrs. Chester A., 5520 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Ashmead, Mrs. Duffiold, Jr., 205 Poplar
Ave., WajTie.
Ashton, Mrs. Leonard, Elm Ave., Swarth-
more.
Ashton, Dr. Thomas G., Wynnewood.
Ashton, Mrs. Thomas G., Wynnewood.
Atherholt, Miss Helen E., 8 Bartol Ave.,
Ridley Park.
Athertou, Mrs. Charles, Jr., 105 W. Upsal
St., Germantown.
Atkinson, Dr. Darnel A., 132 Oakwood
Ave., West View, Pittsburgh.
Atkinson, Mrs. Ellen D., 299 Maple Ave.,
Doylestown.
Atkinson, Miss Gertrude, 4106 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Atkinson, Mr. William H., Eiverview
Cemetery, Trenton, X. J.
Atkiss, Mr. William, 1145 Herbert St.,
Frankford.
Atlee, Mrs. John L., "Wild Acres," Lan-
caster.
Atlee, Miss Ruth A., care of Penn Mutual
Life Ins. Co., 6th and Walnut Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Atterbury, Mrs. W. W., Radnor.
Atwater, Miss Sophia M., Chadds Ford.
Atwood, Mrs. John C, Jr., 325 Roumfort
Road, Mt. Airy.
Audenried, Mrs. Lewis, 1800 DeLancey
St., Philadelphia.
Aull, Mrs. William F., 305 Audubon Ave.,
Wayne.
Austin, Miss Anna A.. Rosemont.
90
Austin, Miss Lucyelle, Chestnut Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Austin, Mrs. William, 407 Roberts Ave.,
Glenside.
Austin, Mrs. William L., Rosemont.
Bachman, Mr. Frank H., Jenkintown.
Bacon, Mrs. Albert E., 6705 Springbank
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Bacon, Mrs. Ellis W., Wallingford.
Bader, Mr. George G., 122 Edgehill Road,
Bala-Cynv7yd.
Badger, Mrs. Daniel, Millstream Farm,
Paoli.
Bailey, Mr. Charles H., 19 Greenfield Ave.,
Ardmore.
Bailey, Mr. James B., Church Road, Bryn
Mawr.
Bailey, Mrs. James B., Church Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Bailey, Mrs. Walter A., "High Point,"
Merion.
Baily, Mr. Albert L., Jr., Westtovpn.
Baily, Mrs. Antoinette C, Bryn Mawr
Court Apartments, Bryn Mawr.
Baily, Mrs. S'amuel L., Jr., 124 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Bains, Mr. Edward, 1018 Westview St.,
Philadelphia.
Baird, Mrs. John, Malvern.
Baker, Mr. Albert E., 345 Woodlawn
Ave., Glenside.
Balderston, Mrs. John Peck, The Kenil-
worth, Alden Park, Germantown.
Balderston, Mrs. Mary L., "Fairhope
Farm," Glen Mills.
Balderston, Mrs. Rohert W., Vista Homes,
Apt. 15 F., 5840 Stony Island Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Baldi, Mrs. Fred. S., Green Lane and
Dexter St., Philadelphia.-
Baldi, Mrs. V. A., S. E. Cor. Parker and
Jackson Aves., Collingdale.
Baldwin, Mrs. Laura F., 230 E. Fornance
St., Norristown.
BaJdy, Mrs. J. Montgomery, Devon.
Ball, Mrs. Herbert K., 59 Sussex Road,
Wynnewood.
Ball, Miss Mary L., 901 Glenside Ave.,
Wyncote.
Ballinger, Mrs. Walter F., 6733 Emlen
St., Germantown.
Bancroft, Mrs. S'amuel;, Jr., Rockford,
Wilmington, Del.
Bancroft, Mrs. Wilfred, 615 Railroad
Ave., Haverford.
Barber, Mrs. Charles William, Ardmore.
Barbour, Mrs. Charles E., 244 School
House Laiie, Germantown.
Barclay, Miss Emily, 612 E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Barclay, Mrs. John, 320 West Pittsburgh
St., Greensburg.
Barclay, Mrs. William K., Golf House
Road, Haverford.
Bard, Mrs. Leon, 725 Whitmore Road,
Detroit, Mich.
Baringer, Mrs. Milton F., Bend Terrace,
Wyncote.
Barker, Dr. T. Ridgway, R. D. 1, Bridge-
port.
Barnard, Mrs. Everett P., 1820 S. Rit-
tenhouse Square, Philadelphia.
Barnard, Mrs. Montrose, Lincoln Court,
Overbrook.
Barnes, Mrs. A. C, Latch's Lane, Merion.
Barnes, Mrs. E. H., 113 Warwick Road,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Barnes, Mrs. John Hampton, Devon.
Barnes, Mr. Parker T., 908 Highland
Ave., Palmyra, N. J.
Barnett, Mrs. William, Jr., Box 50,
Media.
Barr, Mrs. George W., Villa Nova.
Barrett, Mr. Franklin, 401-415 E. Wyom-
ing Ave., Philadelphia.
Barrows, Mr. Richard L.^, Haverford.
Barrows, Mrs. Richard L., Haverford.
Bartilucci, Mr. Joseph P., 6835 Anderson
St., Philadelphia.
Barton, Mrs. Harry L., 315 South Ave.,
Media.
Barton, Mrs. Thomas C, Pennway Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Bartow, Mrs. J. B., 515 E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Bartram, Mr. Frank M., Kennett Square.
(L.)
Bartram, Miss Mary S., Kennett Square.
Easier, Mrs. W. J., Box 6, West Lees-
port.
Bassett, Mrs. Edward M., 315 N. Chester
Road, Swarthmore.
Bassett, Mrs. R. M., 29 Wellington Road,
Upper Darby.
Batchelor, Dr. Marjorie D., 117 Columbia
Ave., Palmerton.
Bates, Miss Jane, care of Miss M. E
Morris, Rosemont.
Battey, Mrs. William A., 605 Walnut
Lane, Haverford.
Battles, Mr. H. H., 114 S. 12th St., Phila
delphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mr. Charles, 119 S. 20th St.
Philadelphia. (F.)
Baxter, Mrs. J. Barry, Gordon Heights
Wilmington, Del.
Baxter, Mr. Samuel N., S. W. Cor. Mor
ris and Abbotsford Roads, German
town. (L.)
Bayer, Miss Elizabeth, The Tracy, 36th
and Chestnut S'ts., Philadelphia.
Bayliss, Mrs. C. W., 210 Pembroke Ave.,
Wayne.
Bazley, Mrs. J. Robert^ 18th and Oak
Road, Pottsville.
Beach, Mr. Chester L., 300 Main Street,
Riverton, N. J.
Beach, Mrs. Chester L., 300 Main St.,
Riverton, N. J,
Bean, Miss Anna M., 1729 N. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
91
Beardwood, Miss Alice, 802 N. 24th St.,
Philadelphia.
Beardwood, Mrs. Joseph T., Jr., Melrose
Park.
Beaumont^ Mrs. G. Berry, Bryn Mawr.
Becht«l, Mrs. John C, 6608 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Beck, Mrs. Charles W., Jr., Crescent Eoad,
Wyncote.
Becker, Dr. C. Fred., 620 Benson St.,
Camden, N. J.
Becker, Miss Leona, Kulpsville.
Beckurts, Mrs. Charles L., Haverford.
Beeber, Mrs. William P., 4 College Lane,
Haverford.
Bein, Miss Amelia E., 1729 Wallace St.,
Philadelphia.
Belding, Mrs. W. S., Bryn Mawr.
Belk, Mrs. William P., 433 Owen Eoad,
Ardmore.
Belknap, Mrs. Maurice G., 311 Bank
Ave., Riverton, N. J.
BeU, Mr. Edward J., 1428 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Bell, Mrs. Frank T., 120 Delmont Eoad,
N. Larchmont, Delaware County.
Bell, Mrs. Gibson, Wynnewood.
Bell, Dr. Thomas, 1520 S'pruce St., Phila-
delphia.
Belmont, Mrs. L. A., Latches Lane,
Merion.
Bencker, Mrs. Ealph B., Haverford.
Benn, Mrs. James S., Wynnewood.
Benner, Mr, Maurice F., Washington
Square, Norristown.
Bennett, Mrs. Killani E., "Eiverbank,"
Eiverton, N. J.
Benz, Mr. C. J., 14th Ave. and Fayette
St., Conshohocken.
Berger, Mr. John, 1640 Ludlow St., Phila-
delphia. (W.)
Berger, Mrs. Thomas W., Eolling Acres,
Valley Forge.
Bergner, Mrs. Amy Brooks, 236 Kenmore
Road, Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Berlinger, Mrs. William G., 1104 Valley
Eoad, Melrose Park, Oak Lane Station.
Bernstein, Mr. Walter, North Wales. (C.)
Berry, Mrs. Homer H., 816 N. 63d St.,
Philadelphia.
Berwind, Mrs. Charles G., Eadnor.
Berwind, Mrs. Henry A., 2112 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Bettison, Mrs. H. R., "Wilmarlyn,"
Wayne.
Beury, Mrs. Charles E., 112 W. Upsal
St., Germantown.
Beyer, Mrs. Erich, 4 Wellington Eoad,
Stonehurst, Delaware County.
Bicking, Mrs. S. Austin, 223 E. Lancas-
ter Ave., Downingtown.
Bickley, Mrs. I. Walter, 341 Pelham
Eoad, Germantown.
Biddle, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Biddle, Mrs. Arthur, 1821 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Charles, Andalusia.
Biddle, Mrs. Charles J., Andalusia, Bucks
County.
Biddle, Miss Christine W., Route 5, West
Chester.
Biddle, Mrs. Clement, 1829 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Miss Edith F., 1821 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. George, 2017 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. H. W., Three Tuns Farm,
Frazer, Chester County.
Biddle, Mrs. Hugh Mcllvain, 201 Bank
Ave., Eiverton, N. J.
Biddle, Mrs. Moncure, Valley Forge
Farms, Devon.
Biddle, Mrs. Nicholas, Jenkintown.
Biddle, Mrs. Eobert, Hotel Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia.
Biddle, Mrs. Eobert, 2d, 607 Bank Ave.,
Eiverton, N. J.
Bieg, Mrs. O. H., Ill E. Sedgwick St.,
Germantown.
Biggs, Mrs. L. V., 606 66th Ave., Oak
Lane.
Bikle, Mrs. Henry Wolf, Strafford.
Billings, Mrs. Packard, Villa Nova.
Binner, Miss Elizabeth I., 617 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Birch, Mrs. Milton, 110 Harvey St., Ger-
mantown.
Bird, Mrs. Minna M., 233 W. Hortter St.,
Philadelphia.
Birdsell, Mrs. David C, Enfield.
Birdsell, Mrs. E. W., McOallum and
Hortter Sts., Germantown.
Birdsell, Mrs. E. W., Jr., 732 Meeting-
house Eoad, Elkins Park.
Birkinbine, Miss Helen, Cynwyd.
Birkiubine, Miss Kate E., Bala-Cj'nwyd.
(L.)
Birubrauer, Mr. Frank, 15th St. abovo
72nd Ave., Oak Lane. (C.)
Bishop, Mrs. Eichard E., Springbauk
Lane, Germantown.
Bissell, Miss Sarah E., 717 Amberson
Ave., E. E., Pittsburgh.
Bisset, Miss Annie A., 2519 S. Garnet
St., Philadelphia.
Bitler, Mrs. Harry Y., 21 Oak Ave.,
Sharon Hill.
Black, Miss M., 1831 Venango St., Phila-
delpMa.
Black, Mrs. Ealph A., 513 W. Cliestnut
St., Lancaster.
Blackburne, Mrs. John S., Box 111, Eose-
mont.
Blades, Mrs. H. P., 622 N. Chester Eoad,
Swarthmore.
Blakiston, Miss Emma, Fort Washington.
Blakiston, Miss Mary, Fort Washington.
Bland, Mrs. William, Cape May, N. J.
Bleehschmidt, Dr. J., 2203 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
92
Bleloch, Mr. James Cameron, 40 E. Mt.
Carmel Ave., Glenside.
Blizard, Mr. J. W. F., 411 Noble Road,
Jenkintown P. O.
Blood, Mrs. Ernest, Cor. Lincoln Drive
and Mermaid Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Blounts, Mr. John, Sackville Road, R. D.
3, Media.
Blumenthal, Mrs. A., 1125 Stratford
Ave., Melrose Park.
Blumenthal, Mrs. M. L., 416 Shoemaker
Road, Elkins Park.
Bobbink, Mr. L. C, East Rutherford,
N. J. (N.)
Bobrow, Mrs. Charles, 246 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Bockius, Mr. Morris R., 2107 Fidelity-
Philadelphia Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Bodine, Mrs. S. Laurence, "Greenbank
Farm," Newtown Square.
Bodman, Mrs. F. L., Eagle Road, Wayne.
Boenning, Mr. Henry D., 1606 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Boericke, Mrs. Gideon, Wynnewood.
Bogan, Mrs. John C, 618 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Bohlen, Mrs. Woodville, Berwyn.
Boinet, Mr. Robert C, 1742 S. 2d St.,
second floor, Philadelphia. (G.)
Bok, Mrs. Edward, Marion.
Bok, Mrs. W. Curtis, Pennstone Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Boles, Mrs. Russell S'., Penn Valley, Nar-
berth.
Bollinger, Mr. LeVan, 314 American
Casualty Bldg., Reading.
Bomberger, Miss Jeaiiette L., 826 N.
Beechwood St., Philadelphia.
Bond, Mrs. Charles, 319 Ashbourne Road,
Elkins Park.
Bond, Mrs. James, Jr.^ 426 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Bond, Miss M. Florence, 345 Harrison
Ave., Elkins Park.
Bonnell, Mrs. Henry H., Ill W. More-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Bonsall, Mrs. R. T., 222 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Borie, Mrs. Beauveau, Abington, Mont-
gomery County.
Borie, Mr. C. L., Jr., Architects' Bldg.,
Nth and Sansom Sts., Philadelphia.
Borie, Mrs. Charles Louis, 3d, Rydal.
Borie, Mrs. W. J. Sewell, Washington
Lane, Rydal.
Borzell, Mrs. F. F., 4940 Penn St., Frank-
ford.
Bostock, Mrs. Mary E., South Ave., Bryn
Athyn.
Bostwick, Mrs. J. V., 139 Grays Lane,
Haverford.
Boswell, Mrs. Arthur, 127 W. Hortter
St., Mt. Airy.
Boswell, Mrs. J. Iverson, 305 Kent Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Bottomley, Mrs. Harold S., 16 Spring-
field Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Boulter, Mrs. Harry, Wayne Manor, Ger-
mantown.
Bovard, Mi-s. H. F., Seminary Ave.,
Greensburg.
Bowman, Mrs. C. M., R. D. 2, Willow
Grove.
Boyd, Mr. Fisher L., Haverford.
Boyd, Mrs. Fisher L., Haverford.
Boyd, Mrs. Herbert W., 307 Waring
Road, Elkins Park.
Boyd, Mr. Roy Martin, 130 Strathmore
Road, Brookline, Delaware County.
Boyd, Mr. William, 250 W. Tulpehocken
St., Germantown.
Boyer, Mrs. Charles S., 205 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Bracken, Mr. Francis B., 430 Allen's
Lane, Philadelphia.
Bradbury, Miss Emilie, 221 Winona Ave.,
Germantown.
Bradbury, Mrs. Samuel, Jr., 151 W.
Coulter St., Germantown.
Bradford, Mrs. John M., 136 Coulter
Ave., Ardmore.
Bradley, Mrs. Thomas W., 7437 Devon
St., Mt. Airy.
Bradley, Mrs. William H., 407 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
Brakeley, Mr. George A., 300 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Brand, Mr. Oscar L., Covington Hotel,
37th and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Branson, Mrs. Thomas F., Box 44, Rose-
mont.
Braugham, Mrs. Dorothy Eastman,
Smethport., McKean County. (N.)
Brautigam, Miss HoUis, Bethlehem Pike,
Ambler.
Brazier, Miss E. Josephine, Kennebunk-
port, Maine.
Brazier, Mr. H. Bartol, Haverford.
Brecht, Mrs. A. H., 537 E. Leverington
Ave., Roxborough.
Breck, Mrs. William R., Rosemont.
Bregy, Mrs. Louis, 5941 Woodbine Ave.,
Overbrook.
Brengle, Mr. Henry G., Radnor.
Brenneman, Mrs. J. E., Wister and Rob-
erts Roads, Ardmore.
Brewer, Mrs. Robert W., P. 0. Box 152,
Jenkintown.
Bright, Miss Anna Linn, Cliveden Hall,
Germantown.
Bright, Miss Maiy DeHaven, 215 Walnut
Ave., Wa5Tie.
Bringhurst, Mr. Edward, "Rockwood,"
rWilmington, Del.
Bringhurst, Mrs. Henry R., 1306 Dela-
ware Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Brinker, Mrs. Edwin H., Paoli.
Brinton, Miss Elizabeth, 4540 Adams
Ave., Frankford.
Brinton, Mrs. Joseph Hill, 414 S. Car-
lisle St., Philadelphia.
93
Brinton, Miss Kitty, care of Mr. G. Brin-
ton Roberts, Bala.
Brinton, Miss Mary H., Jr., R. D. 4,
West Chester.
Brinton, Mrs. Robert F., "Tlie Lindens,"
West Chester.
Brock, Mrs. John Penn, Lebanon.
Brock, Mrs. John W., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Brockie, Mrs. Arthur H., Box 4359,
Chestnut Hill.
Bromer, Mrs. Jacob A., Schwenksville,
Montgomery County.
Bromer, Mrs. Ralph' S., 629 Pembroke
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Brooke, Mrs. Francis M., Morris Ave.,
Bryii Mawr.
Brooke, Mrs. H. Carroll, 105 Lismore
Ave., Glenside.
Brooks, Mrs. John Jay, 7925 Park Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Brooks, Mrs. Paul, Leopard Road, Ber-
wyn.
Brown, Mrs. Ada A., 8012 Frankford
Ave., Philadelphia.
Brovm, Mr. Andrew V., Bryn Athyn.
Brown, Mrs. Charles T., Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Brown, Mrs. Crosby, R. D. 2, Malvern.
Brown, Mrs. Everett H., Jr., 5720 Wis-
sahickon Ave., Germantown.
Browii, Mrs. George H., 104 Sunset Lane,
Haverford.
Brown, Mr. Harry M., 7440 Devon St.,
Mt. Airy.
Brown, Mrs. Harry M., 7440 Devon St.,
Mt. Airy.
Brown, Miss Helen M., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Brown, Mrs. J. Howard, 131 Edgewood
Road, Ardmore.
Brown, Mrs. John A., Jr., Wayne.
Brown, Mrs. Medford J., Haywood Road,
Merion.
Brown, Mrs. Norman, 104 N. Jefferson
Ave., Wenonah, N. J.
Brown, Mrs. Samuel B., Box 67, Haver-
ford.
Brown, Mrs. T., Wistar, 3d, 5920 City
Ave., Overbrook.
Brown, Mrs. William Findlay, Box 4380,
Chestnut Hill.
Browne, Mrs. Joseph M., 529 Pine Road,
Sewickley.
Brownell, Miss Eleanor O., Bryn Mawr.
Browning, Mrs. Edward, Rosemont.
Brubaker, Miss Ethel, The Fairfax, 43d
and Locust Sts., Philadelphia.
Brumbaugh, Mrs. G. Edwin, Gwynedd
Valley.
Bruncel, Mrs. C. J., 506 Beechwood Lane,
Narbcrth.
Bruner, Mrs. J. M., Bryn Mawr Farms,
Bryn Mawr.
Brunner, Mrs. F. Sands, 6033 Webster
St., Philadelphia.
Brunot, Miss P. M., Kitchen's Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Bryan, Miss Elizabeth, 1620 Widener
Place, Gennantown.
Bryans, Mrs. H. B., Germantown Pike,
R. D. 3, Norristown.
Bryce, Mrs. Edith, 224 S. Easton Road,
Glenside.
Buchanan, Mrs. William, Fort Washing-
ton.
Bucher, Mr. Otto, Gardener, Eagleville
Sanatorium, Eagleville. (G.)
Buck, Mr. C. A., Prospect Ave., Bethle-
hem.
Buck, Mrs. C. Douglass, "Buena Vista,"
Wilmington, Del.
Buck, Mrs. Stuart W., Cleverly Lane, Ry-
dal.
Buckenham, Dr. J. E. Burnett, 8601 Ger-
mantown Ave., Chestnut Hill
Buckman, Miss Ida, 1 Barrie Road, Nar-
berth.
Buckwalter, Mrs. Samuel, R. D. 3, Phoe-
nixville.
Budd, Mrs. Edward G., 157 Pelham
Road, Germantown.
Buek, Mrs. Tycho, Penn Road, Wyime-
wood.
Buell, Miss Frances M., Bryn Athjai.
Buffum, Mrs. William P., 41 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Bullitt, Mrs. O. H., Whitemarsh.
Bullock, Mr. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Road, Ardmore.
Bullock, Mrs. Benjamin, 110 Edgewood
Road, Ardmore.
Bullock, Mrs. Horace, P. O. Box 7609,
Ardmore.
Bullock, Mrs. William B., 515 Cedar Lane,
Swarthmore.
Burdick, Mrs. C. Lalor, R. D. 1, Wil-
mington, Del.
Burk, Mr. Louis, 1200 N. 3d St., Phila-
delphia.
Burk, Mrs. William Cooper, 42 E. Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Burnham, Mrs. George, 3d, 367 Aubrey
Road, Wynnewood.
Burns, Mrs. Robert Bruce, Warner Road,
Colonial Village, Wayne.
Burns, Mr. William H., 515 Hensel Road,
Narberth.
Burpee, Mr. David, 485 N. 5th St., Phila-
delphia. (S.)
Burpee, Mr. W. Atlee, Jr., 485 N. 5th St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Burroughs, Mr. A. W., 262 Mansion Ave.,
Audubon, N. J.
Bursk, Mr. R. G., 216 S. Front St., Phila-
delphia.
Burston, Mrs. A., 339 Roberts Ave., Glen-
side.
Burt, Miss Edith B., 1203 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Burt, Miss M. Theodora, 1203 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
94
Burton, Mr. Alfred, 1001 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill. (C).
Burton, Mra. Alfred, 1001 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Burton, Mr. George, Wyndmoor and Ard-
more Aves., Chestnut Hill. (C).
Burton, Mr. John, 1103 E. Willow Grove
Ave., Chestnut Hill. (C.)
Busch, Mr. Edward J., R. D. 4, Millvale
Branch, Pittsburgh.
Bush, Miss Iretta J. P., 7915 Montgom-
ery Ave., Elkins Park.
Bush-Brown, Mr. James, Architects'
Bldg., 17th and Sansom Sts., Philadel-
phia. (L.)
Bush-Brown, Mrs. James, Quarry Farm,
Ambler.
Bussell, Mr. G. E., Valley Forge.
Busser, Mrs. Frank S., 720 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Butcher, Mrs. Howard, Jr., Llaiifair and
Wister Eoads, Ardmore.
Butcher, Miss Margaret, Llanfair and
Wister Eoads, Ardmore.
Butler, Mrs. Edgar H., W. Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Butler, Mrs. George Thomas, 513 W.
Front St., Media.
Butler, Mrs. John L., Eydal.
Butler, Mrs. William, Jr., 424 N. High
St., West Chester.
Butler, Mrs. William H., 7105 Greene St.,
Mt. Airy.
Button, Miss Helen E., 249 Harvey St.,
Germantown.
Butts, Mrs. Mary H., 6733 Emlen St.,
GeiTiiantown.
Buzby, Miss H. L. M., 505 W. Chelten
Ave., Germantown.
Buzby, Miss Idella Haines, 505 W. Chel-
ten Ave., Germantown.
Cabeen, Mrs. F. Von A., Old Conestoga
Eoad, Devon.
Cadbury, Miss Eleanor A., 19' S. White
Hall Eoad, Norristo^vn.
Cadbury, Mrs. William E., E. D. 2, West
Chester.
Cadden, Mrs. B. J., Bristol Eoad, Church-
ville.
Cadwalader, Mrs. John, Jr., 2100 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwalader, Mrs. Lambert, Villa Nova.
Cadwalader, Miss Sophia, 1519 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Cadwallader, Mrs. T. Sidney, Yardley.
Cahall, Mrs. Thomas, WaJlingford.
Cahan, Mrs. M. C, 6035 Christian St.,
Philadelphia.
Calm, Mrs. Tillman, 529 Elkins Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Caldwell, Mrs. J. Emott, Bryn Mawr.
Calvert, Mrs. Alan, 310 Pembroke Ave.,
St. Davids.
Calvert, Mrs. Amelia S., Appletop Farm,
Box 14, Cheyney.
Calwell, Mrs. Charles S., Westview and
Wissahiekon Aves., Mt. Airy P. 0.
Cameron, Mrs. S. P., 2927 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Camp, Mrs. George E., "Maple Creelc
Fann," Malvern
Campbell, Mr. Alfred M., Strafford. (C.)
Campbell, Mrs. E. Perry, 8117 Eastern
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Campbell, Mrs. G. A., Elkins Park.
Campbell, Mrs. I. H., 1624 Hartranft
Drive, Norristown.
Campbell, Mrs. J. S., Jr., 446 N. Main
St., Butler.
Campbell, Mrs. Wilson A., Creek Drive,
Sewickley.
Campion, Mrs. Howard F., 513 Wynd-
moor Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Canby, Mrs. William Marriott, Wissa-
hiekon and Westview Aves., German-
town.
Candoni, Mrs. Blanche W., 419 W. Orange
St., Lancaster.
Canizares, Mrs. A., 305 E. Lancaster
Ave., Wajaie.
Cannon, Harry L., Bridgeville, Del.
Capelle, Mrs. George S., Jr., 1303 Dela-
ware Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Capp, Mr. Seth Bunker, P. O. Box 2054,
Philadelphia.
Cardeza, Mr. T. D. M., E. Washington
Lane, Germantown.
Carels, Mrs. Eobert E., Eiverview Eoad,
Swarthmore.
Carnwath, Mrs. James, Jr., 309 Washing-
ton Lane, Jenkintown.
Carpenter, Mrs. J. S., Jr., 1335 Howard
Ave., Pottsville.
Carpenter, Mrs. John T., Eadnor.
Carpenter, Mrs. W. S., Jr., ISth and Eis-
ing Sun Lane, Wilmington, Del.
Carr, Mrs. Campbell M., 116 Argyle
Eoad, Ardmore.
Carr, Mrs. James Wilson, Holicong,
Bucks County.
Carroll, Mr. E. A., Box 166, Lansdale.
Carson, Mrs. John B., 1802 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Carson, Mrs. John T., 5344 Magnolia
Ave., Germantown.
Carson, Mr. Joseph, Winsford Eoad,
Bryn Mawr.
Carson, Miss Mildred Lee, 54 E. Stewart
Ave., Lansdowne.
Carson, Mrs. Robert J., 147 E. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Carter, Mrs. Charles L., Willow Dell
Farm, Gwynedd Valley.
Carter, Mrs. James N., "Westover,"
Chadds Ford, Delaware Co.
Carter, Mrs. Louis M., Lock Box 58,
Fallsington, Bucks Co.
Carter, Miss Sarah J., 57 S. Eagle Eoad,
Mauoa, Upper Darby.
Cartmell, Mr. B. G., care Harold Pit-
cairn, Bryn Athyn.
95
Gary, Mrs. C. Eeed, Ellet Lane and Wis-
sahickou Ave., Mt. Airy.
Case, Miss Marion Roby, Hillcrest Gar-
dens, Weston, Mass. (C).
Casey, Mr. Bertram T., National Park,
X. J.
Casey, Miss Eleanor S., Central Ave.,
Paoli.
Casey, Mrs. Herbert S., Villa Nova.
Cass, Mrs. Philip, 213 Kent Road, Ard-
more.
Cassedy, Mr. Frank; W., 545 Shadeland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Casselberry, Mrs. A. H., Oaks, Montgom-
ery Co.
Casaelman, Mr. William S., 317 Penn St.,
Camden, N. J.
Cassidy, Miss Sarah Truemau, E. Wash-
ington Lane and City Line, German -
town.
Catlin, Mrs. Sheldon, Eagle Road, Rad-
nor.
Cavendish, Mrs. George S. G., Cedar Hill
Farms, Media.
Chadwick, Miss Eva, 12 Pelham Road,
Mt. Airy.
Cliaffee, Mrs. Carl H., 395 Swartlimore
Ave., Swarthmore.
Chamberlain, Mr. John R., St. Davids.
Chambers, Miss Blanche Arnold, 914 N.
63d St., Philadelphia.
Chambers, Miss Mary B., Newtown,
Bucks Co.
Cliambers, Mr. Samuel H., Penna. Inst.
for the Deaf, Mt. Airj^
Cliandler, Mrs. A. F. M., Haverford.
Channell, Mrs. James, 1811 Mahantongo
St., Pottsville.
Chapman, Mr. Ellwood B., 731 Harvard
Ave., Swartlimore.
Chapman, Mrs. Ellwood B., 731 Harvard
Ave., Swarthmore
Cliapman, Mrs. Joseph, Haverford.
Chapman, Mr. Joseph C, 544 St. Davids
Road, St. Davids.
Chappell, Miss Elizabeth D., 419 Green
Lane, Roxborough.
Chase, Miss Clara T., 261 &. Van Pelt
St., Philadelphia.
Chase, Mrs. Clement E., 410 Oak Lane,
WaJ^le.
Chase, Mrs. Philip, 125 Levering Mill
Road, Cynwyd.
Chase, Mrs. Randall, 8241 Ctittenden St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Chase, Mr. Samuel Hart, 557 Pelham
Road, Germantown.
Chauncey, Mrs. G. Sheldon, Wyoming
Ave., South Orange, N. J.
Chauveau, Miss Blanche, 310 Wjmcote
Road, Jenkintown.
Cheston, Mrs. Charles S., Whitemarsh.
Cheston, Mrs. Edward M., Ambler.
Cheston, Mr. James, Jr., care of Girard
Trust Co., Philadelphia.
Chew, Mrs. Benjamin, "Vanor," Radnor.
Chew, Miss Elizabeth B., Cliveden, Ger-
mantown.
Chew, Mrs. Samuel C, 10 Woodleave
Road, Bryn IVIawi'.
Chillas, Miss Marie de la R., 233 Winona
Ave., Germantown.
Chrismau, Mr. C. S., 435 W. Miner St.,
West Chester.
Church, Mrs. Herbert, Axilla Nova.
Churchman, Mrs. W. Morgan, Peullyn.
Clair, Mrs. Maurice, 12 N. Lynn wood
Ave., Glenside.
Clamer, Mrs. G. H., 128 Woodland Road,
Asheville, N. C.
Clark, Mr. C. M., Queen Lane, Falls of
Schuylkill.
Clark, Mrs. Charles Davis, 2215 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Clark, Mr. Clarence H., P. O. Box 146,
Bryn Mawr.
Clark, Mrs. Clarence H., P. 0. Box 146,
Bryn Mawr.
Clark, Miss Darthela, Stenton and Abing-
ton Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Clark, Mrs. Frederick L., Wissahickon
Ave. and Strafford St., Germantown.
Clark, Mr. Garrett V., 4404 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Clark, Mrs. Garrett V., 4404 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Clark, Mrs. H. H., 61 N. Broad St.,
Woodbury, N. J.
Clark, Mr. Herbert L., Bryn Mawr.
Clark, Mrs. Joseph S., Kates Hall, Chest-
nut Hill.
Clark, Mrs. Lewis N., Meadowbrook.
Clark, Mrs. Percy H., Cynwj^d.
Clark, Mrs. Roy E., 62 Lodges Lane,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Clark, Mrs. S^'dney P., 8128 St. Martin's
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Clarke, Mrs. J. O., 402 W. School Lane,
Germantown.
Clattenburg, Mrs. A. Edmn, St. John's
Rectory, Bala-Cynwyd.
Clay, Mrs. Alfred G., 1935 Panama St.,
Philadelphia.
Clemens, Miss Emily A., 220 Mattison
Ave., Ambler.
Clemens, Mrs. Frank G., 8212 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Clemens, Miss Isabella C, 220 Mattison
Ave., Ambler.
Clemens, Dr. Thomas J., 908 Elverson
Bldg., Broad and Callowhill Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Clemens, Mrs. Thomas J., Southampton.
Clement, Mrs. Allen B., 224 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield^ N. J.
Cliff, Miss Anna Search, Langhorne
Manor, Bucks County.
Cline, Miss Gertrude, ' 218 E. Philadel-
phia St., York.
Cline, Mrs. Sarah M., 36 E. Moreland
Ave., Hatboro.
96
Clothier, Miss Caroline, "The Farm
House," Wynnewood.
Clothier, Mrs. Clarkson, Haverf ord. '
Clothier, Mrs. Isaac H., Jr., Eadnor.
Clothier, Mrs. Morris L., Villa Nova.
Clothier, Mrs. Walter, Wynnewood.
Clothier, Mrs. William J., Valley Hill
Farm, Valley Forge.
Cloud, Miss Katharine M-P., Ardmore.
(L.)
Clough, Mrs. Lillian S'chofield, E. D. 2,
Media.
Clower, Miss Eleanor V., 3723 N. Park
Ave., Philadelphia.
Clyde, Mrs. Caroline B., Box 12, Bryn
Mawr.
Clyde, Miss Margaret, The Bellevue-
Stratford, Philadelphia.
Clyde, Mrs. Samuel Dyer, corner Swarth-
more and Ogden Aves., Swarthmore.
Coale, Miss Edith S., 100 Lippineott
Ave., Eiverton, N. J.
Coale, Mrs. James S., 805 Thomas Ave.,
Eiverton, N. J.
Coates, Mrs. J. Lloyd, Golf House Road,
Ardmore.
Cobb, Mr. E. F., 510 Merwyn Eoad,
Merion.
Cobb, Mrs. Murray A., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Cobb, Mrs. Palmer, Whitehall, Haver-
ford.
Cochran, Mrs. William Allison, Wyncote.
Coe, Mrs. Margaret S., 807 Earlington
Road, Upper Darby P. O.
Cogswell, Miss Elizabeth Eae, 352 W.
Mt. Airy Avenue, Mt. Airy.
Coho, Mrs. Eugene P., Cold S'priug Farm,
Ambler.
Coho, Mrs. Ealph W., 611 College Ave.,
Lancaster.
Colby, Miss A. L., Torresdale.
Colegrove, Mr. John I., Box 731, Shef-
field. (0.)
Coleman, Mrs. G. Dawson, Haverford
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Coleman, Mr. Leonard W., "Sunny Cor-
ners," Prospect Ave., Cliestnut Hill.
Coles, Mrs. Henry B., 224 E. Main St.,
Moorestowm, N. J.
Coles, Miss Mary R., 2010 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Colket, Mrs. C. Howard, The Eittenhouse
Plaza, Philadelphia.
Colket, Mrs. Tristan C, 2d, Villa Nova.
Collier, Mrs. Clarence Bispham, 319 W.
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Colliugs, Miss Emily W., 1 Shrewsbury
Eoad, Eiverton, N. J.
Collingwood, Miss Jennie, 3941 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Collingwood, Mrs. Joseph R., 510 S. 41st
St., Philadelphia.
Collins, Mrs. Alan C, Rydal.
Collins, Mrs. Arthur J., Jr., "Orchard
Edge," Moorestown, N. J.
Collins, Mrs. Lester, Moorestown, Bur-
lington Co., N. J.
Collins, Mrs. Philip S., Wyncote.
Collins, Mrs. William J., N. W. Cor.
Chelten Ave. and 7th St., Oak Lane.
Colt, Mrs. Lyman R., E. Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Combs, Mrs. Roger B., "The Meadow
House" Whitford.
Comegys, Miss Amy, 4205 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Comfort, Mr. William, care Mr. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Comly, Miss Emilie C, Hartford, Bur-
lington County, N. J.
Comly, Mr. G. Norwood, Moylan-Rose
Valley.
Comly, Miss Marion S., Moylan-Rose Val-
ley.
Conard, Mr. C. Wilfred, Lansdowne.
Condit, Mrs. Kenneth H., 34 Westcott
Road, Princeton, N. J.
Connelly, Miss Gladys, "Wayside," Corn-
wells,
Conner, Mrs. J. Barrett, 320 Cynwyd
Road, Cynwyd.
Connor, Mrs. Daniel F., 6900 Wayne Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Conrad, Mr. William Y., Devon.
Constable, Mr. Martin L., 4941 N. 6th
St., Pliiladelphia.
Converse, Mrs. Bernard T., Rosemont.
Converse, Miss Mary E., Rosemont.
Conway, Miss Florence H., 147 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lausdowaie.
Cook, Mrs. C. P., N. Rockland Road,
Merion.
Cook, Mrs. Edmund Garretson, Pennock
Terrace, Lansdowne.
Cook, Mrs. Gustavo W., Wynnewood.
Cook, Mrs. Henry W., 5339 Knox St.,
Germantown.
Cooke, Mrs. George J., The Garden
House, Lewis Lane, Ambler.
Cooke, Mrs. Jay, "Brookfield," New and
Stenton Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Jay, 2d, Montgomery Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Cooke, Mrs. Morris Llewellyn, St.
Georges Road, Mt. Airy.
Cooper, Mrs. L. N., 121 E. Mt. Carmel
Ave., Glenside.
Cooper, Mrs. Stuart, 54 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Cooper, Mrs. Walter I., Haverford.
Copeland, Mrs. Arthur E., 512 E. 21st
St., Chester.
Cornell, Miss Ella C, Boothwyn, R. D.
Corning, Mrs. Erastus, 2d, Box 431, Al-
bany, N. Y.
Cornogg, Miss Margaret S., care T. W.
Scattergood, 75 Owen Ave., Lansdo\vne.
Corson, Mr. C. Russell, Curren Terrace,
Norristown.
Corson, Mrs. Edward F., Maple Hill,
Plymouth Meeting. ,
97
Corson, Mrs. George, Plymouth Meeting.
Corson, Mrs. N. W., 367 Brookway, Mer-
ion.
Costain, Mrs. T. B., The Crest, Beth-
ayres.
Coster, Mrs. William H., Jr., 159 Ehoads
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Coulbourne, Mrs. J. E., 3409 Warden
Drive, Germantowii.
Coulter, Mrs. Richard, Hawksworth,
Greensburg.
Counts, Mrs. George, 21 Claremont Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Cover, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Cowan, Miss Julia A., 600 Columbia Ave.,
Lansdale.
Cox, Mrs. Gerry W., Phoenixville.
Cox, Mrs. T. B., Wyncote.
Coxa, Mrs. A. B., Paoli.
Coxe, Mrs. Charles Edmund, Malvern.
Coxe, Mrs. Henry B., Penllyn.
Cozens, Miss Henrietta, "Cogshill," Allen
Lane, Philadelphia.
Craft, Miss A. E., Mt. Pleasant Ave.,
Ambler.
Craft, Mrs. E. F., Race St., Ambler.
Craig, Mrs. C. Cliester, 41 W. Walnut
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Craig, Mr. James A., 125 W. Louden St.,
Philadelphia.
Grain, Mr. Edmund C, 6345 Overbrook
Ave., Overbrook.
Crain, Mrs. Edmund C, 6345 Overbrook
Ave., Overbrook.
Crampton, Mrs. Richard S., N. E. Cor.
King of Prussia and Old Gulph Roads,
Radnor.
Crane, Mrs. Theron I., Bellevue-Stratford
Hotel, Broad and Walnut Sts., Philadel-
phia.
Cranmer, Miss Frances, 48 E. Sedgwick
St., Philadelphia. (L.)
Cranmer, Mr. Walter S., 48 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Cranmer, Mrs. Walter S., 48 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Craven, Mrs. D. S., Wisteria Lodge, Sa-
lem, N. J.
Craven, Miss Jessie T., Nantucket, Mass.
Craven, Mrs. W. A., 510 Grove Ave.,
Noble, Jenkintown, P. O.
Craven, Mr. William H., Enfield.
Craven, Mrs. William H., Enfield.
Crawford, Mrs. Alan, White Horse Road,
Devon.
Crawford, Mrs. Baxter L., Wyncote.
Crawford, Mr. John, care Mr. S. M. Vau-
clain, Rosemont. (G.)
Crawford, Mrs. L. B., 201 Mt. Vernon
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Crellin, Miss Elizabeth E., 1005 Vine St.,
Scranton.
Cresson, Mrs. Caleb, Oak Hall, Oaks.
Cresson, Miss Caroline C, N. E. Cor.
Clapier and Schuyler Sts., German-
town.
Cresson, Miss Nancy Corson, 721 Sandy
St., Norristown.
Cresswell, Mrs. Charles T., 15 W. Bells
Mill Road, Chestnut Hill.
Cridland, Mr. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside. (L.)
Cridland, Mrs. Robert B., P. O. Box 149,
Glenside.
Crittenden, Mrs. William J., Shields,
Allegheny Co.
Crofoot, Mr. George E., 4535 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Croft, Mrs. S. Harold, 435 State Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Cronin, Mrs. Charles I., 78 E. Stewart
Ave., Lansdowne.
Crosman, Mrs. J. H., Jr., Glenn Road,
Ardmore.
Crossan, Dr. Edward T., 5324 Wayne
Ave., Philadelphia.
Crossan, Mrs. Edward T., 5324 Wayne
Ave., Philadelphia.
Crowder, Miss Emma A., W. Upsal St.,
Germantowii.
Crowninshield, Mrs. F. B., Montchanin,
Del.
Crozer, Mr. George K. Jr., Montgomery
Ave. and Cherry Lane, Wynnewood.
Culin, Mrs. Charles H., 220 Cliurch Road,
Elkins Park.
CuUinaii, Mrs. Thomas H., 349 Lodges
Lane, Cynwyd.
Culver, Dr. Ma.rtin B., 332 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Culver, Mrs. Theodore B., 201 Greenwood
Ave., Jenkintown.
Cummings, Mr. George, Drexel Hill, Dela-
ware Co. (C.)
Cunningham, Mr. Edward, "Spicewood,"
Bon Air, Upper Darby P. 0.
Cunningham, Mr. John W., 266 W. 3d
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Cunningham, Mrs. R. G., 3930 Henry
Ave., Germantown.
Curll, Mrs. Harold E., 1335 Locust St.,
Norristown.
Curry, Mrs. Grant, 814 Morewood Ave.,
Pittsburgh.
Curtis Mr. John R., 302 N. Jericho Road,
Abington.
Curtis, Mrs. Melville G., Bala.
Curwen, Mr. George F., Villa Nova.
Dager, Mrs. Mary T., R. D. 1, Hatboro.
Dale, Mr. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Dancy, Mrs. Henry H., Main and Bridge
Sts., Phoenixville.
Daniel, Mrs. Channing W., St. Davids.
Daniels, Miss Mabel, 55 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Dannenbaum, Mr. Edwin M., Mountain
Ave., Oak Ijane.
Dannenbaum, Mr. Harry M., 6315 N.
Park Ave., Philadelphia.
98
Dannenbaum, Mrs. Harry M., 6315 N.
Park Ave., Philadelphia.
Dannenbaum, Mrs. Walter, 1011 Sharp-
less Ave., Melrose Park.
Darby, Mrs. J. Mortimer, 501 W. Allen
Lane, Germantown.
Darlington, Miss Isabel, 16 E. Market
St., West Chester.
Darlington, Dr. Lewis W., 24 Pennock
Terrace, Lansdo^vne.
Darlington Mrs. Percy Smedley, 418 N.
High St., West Chester.
David, Mrs. Edward W., 310 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
David, Miss Emily, 305 W. Sedgwick St.,
Mt. Airy.
Davidson, Mrs. David, Chatham Hotel,
20th and Walnut Sts., Philadelpliia.
Davidson, Mrs. William G., Brentwood
Farms, Abington.
Davies, Miss Anna F., The College Set-
tlement, 433 Christian St., Philadel-
phia.
Davies, Mrs. James A., Eose Tree Eoad,
Media.
Davies, Mrs. John E., Jr., 2 E. Chestnut
Ave., Cliestnut Hill.
Davis, Miss Amanda Melvin, 5148 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Davis, Mrs. Carroll P., Shields.
Davis, Mrs. Howard B. F., 106 W. Lan-
caster Ave., Downingtown.
Davis, Mrs. J. Leslie, Haverford.
Davis, Mrs. Lena M., Bryn Athyn.
Davis, Miss Mildred, 713 Eedwood Ave.,
Yeadon.
Davis, Mrs. Sallie H., 1008 High St.,
Pottstown.
Davis, Mr. William George, Bryncoed
Farms, Kimberton. (G.)
Davison, Mrs. C. Herbert, Edgerstowne
Eoad, Princeton, N. J.
Davison, Miss Mary Louise, Edgeworth,
Sewickley. (L.)
Davison, Mrs. William M., Jr., 90 W.
Mermaid Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Dawson, Mr. George Walter, University
of Pennsylvania Dormitories, Philadel-
phia.
Day, Mrs. Charles, St. George's Road, Mt.
Airy.
Day, Mrs. Frank Miles, Allen Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Day, Mrs. Eodney, P. O. Box 7606, Ard-
more.
Deacon, Miss Bessie, 15 Oak Ave., Sharon
Hill.
Deacon, Mrs. G. H., McKean Ave. and
Clapier St., Germantown.
Deacon, Mrs. Horace P., 445 W. Price St.,
Germantown.
Deal, Miss Emma, 308 W. Lancaster Ave.,
Wayne.
Dean, Mrs. J. Simpson, Montchanin, Del.
Deardon, Mr. Henry, care Harrison,
Mertz & Emlen, 5328 Greene St., Ger-
mantown. (L.)
Dechert, Mrs. Eobert, Eosemont.
DeCoursey, Mrs. George E., Paoli.
deForest, Mrs. George W., 621 University
Place, Swarthmore.
Degener, Dr. Lyda May, "Barryhurst,"
Holland, Bucks Co.
Degn, Mrs. William L., Hope Lodge,
Whiteniarsh.
DeGroat, Mrs. H. E., 1913 Diamond St.,
Philadelphia.
DeHaven, Miss Clara B., Jr., 320 N.
Church St., West Cliester.
DeLangh, Miss Mary D., 5116 Greene
St., Germantown.
DeLangh, Mrs. William F., 5116 Greene
St., Germantown.
Delany, Mrs. Charles, 1900 Eittenhouse
Square, Philadelpliia.
Delaplaine, Miss Meribah, Merion Sta-
tion.
DeLima, Mrs. M. E. A., 106 Pine Eidge
Eoad, Media.
DeLong, Mrs. Perce, Princeton Eoad,
Cynwyd.
Demuth, Mr. Howard E., 210 Garrett
Ave., Swarthmore.
Denegre, Mrs. William P., Eydal.
Dengler, Mr. C. G., 4513 N. Carlisle St.,
Philadelphia.
Dennisson, Miss Ruth, Madison, N. J.
Denny, Mrs. George Addison, 225 Sum-
mit Ave., Jenkintown.
DePuy, Miss Clara, 312 Florence Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Derby, Mrs. Charles F., The Ashwood,
Apt. 504, 6050 Overbrook Ave., Over-
brook.
deSchauensee, Baron Eodolphe Meyer,
Devon.
deSchauensee, Baroness Eodolphe Meyer,
Devon.
DeSherbinin, Mrs. H. K., Green Hill
Farms Hotel, Overbrook.
Deubler, Dr. E. C, 3805 Walnut St., Phil-
adelphia.
DeVorsey, Mrs. B. F., Brookhaven Eoad,
Media.
Dewees, Mrs. Lovett, Sweetwater Farm,
Glen Mills, Delaware Co.
Dewees, Mrs. Sesley, Box 161, Berwyn.
deWitt, Miss Ellen, 510 W. 10th St., Erie.
Diament, Mrs. A. L., Box 145, Wayne.
Dick, Mr. John, Jr., 616 Longacre Blvd.,
Yeadon.
Dick, Mrs. William A., 8240 Crittenden
St., Chestnut Hill.
Dickel, Miss Agnes K., 1004 Sharpless
Ave., Melrose Park.
Dickerman, Miss Doris, Box 83, Straf-
ford.
Dickey, Mrs. Charles D., Jr., Chestnut
Hill.
99
Dickey, Miss Eloise P., The Barclay, 18th
and Rittenhouse Square, Philadelpliia.
Dickey, Miss Maria Donnell, West St.,
Media.
Dickinson, Mrs. H. L., Warwick Eoad,
Wyunewood.
Dickson, Miss Agnes MacA., "Hill-0-
Skye," Wawa.
Dickson, Mrs. Alexander, Box 30.5, Wyn-
newood.
Dilks, Mrs. Walter H., 8201 St. Martins
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Dill, Mrs. William A., 902 S. 4Sth SL,
Philadelphia.
Dillon, Mr. James L., Radnor.
Dilworth, Mrs. J. Dale, "Cravenhurst,"
Salem, N. J.
Dinger, Mrs. J. H., 1530 Locust St., Phil-
adelphia.
Dintenfass, Mrs. Benjamin, 1031 W. Up-
aal St., Mt. Airy.
Disque, Mr. Robert C, Strath Haven Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Disston, Mrs. Jacob S., Chestnut Hill.
Diven, Mrs. Louis, 119 Derwen Road,
Bala Cjaiw^'d.
Dixon, Mr. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Mrs. F. E., Elkins Park.
Dixon, Mr. Gilbert Willoughby, P. O.
Box 68, Rydal.
Dixon, Mrs. J. Shipley, Villa Nova.
Dixon, Mrs. T. Henry, Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Doak, Mrs. S. E., 436 W. School Lane,
Germantown.
Doan, Mrs. Clarence E., Blue Bell, Mont
gomery Co.
Dodds, Mr. John H., 344 Walnut St.,
Jenkintown.
Dodge, Mr. Donald D., 32 Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Dodson, Mr. Leonidas, 356 W. Durham
St., Mt. Airy.
Dodson, Mrs. Leonidas, 356 W. Durham
St., Mt. Airy.
Dohan, Mrs. Joseph M., Darling P. O.,
Delaware Co.
D'Olier, Mrs. Franklin, 98 Madison Ave.,
Morristown, N. J.
Donaghy, Mr. Albert, Jr., 7811 Chelwynde
Ave., Philadelphia.
Donaldson, Mr. Henry H., 4417 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Donaldson, Mrs. Wharton, 14tli and Wal
nut Sts., Chester.
Donnaldson, Miss Helen, Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Ambler.
Donnelly, Mrs. Eulalia M., 8 S. Windsor
Ave., Highland Park, Delaware Co.
Donnelly, Mrs. Harold L, 58 Mercer St.,
Princeton, N. J.
Donnelly, Mrs. L. R., 208 Washington
Ave., Manoa, Delaware Co.
Doolittle, Mr. Fred. J., Oak Lane.
Dooner, Mrs. Richard T., 523 Kenilwortli
Road, Merion.
Dorp, Mr. Louis V., R. D. 3, Norristown.
(C.)
Dorp, Mr. V. V., 1170 N. 63d St., Phila-
delphia.
Dorrance, Mrs. John T., R. D., Riverton,
N.J.
Dorrell, Miss Helen I., "Ten Acres," Al-
loway, Salem Co., N. J.
Dothard, Mrs. Robert J., 221 Wyunewood
Ave., Narberth.
Dothard, Mrs. W. I., 417 Haverford
Road, Narberth.
Dougherty, Mrs. James L., 219 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Dougherty, Mr. Thomas H., Jr., Wayne.
Doughten, Mrs. M. B., 70 E. Penn St.,
Norristown.
Doughten, Mrs. William W., 228 S. 20th
St., Philadelphia.
Douglas, Mrs. Edward V., 30 W. Cliest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Douglas, Mr. Malcolm G., 30 W. Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Douglass, Mrs. Lois H., 6745 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Dowlin, Mrs. Cornell M., 8102 Ardmore
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Downing, Mrs. F. B., Box 564, Erie.
Downs, Mrs. Norton, Mt. Pleasant Road,
Eryn Mawr.
Downs, Dr. T. McKean, Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Doyle, Mr. William H., Cassatt Ave.,
Berwyn. (N.)
Drake, Miss Helen P., 4256 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Draper, Mrs. J. A., Jr., Pennsylvania
Ave. and Tower Road, Wilmington,
Del.
Drayton, Mrs. Frederick R., Villa Nova.
Drear, Mrs. William F., Rosemont.
Drew, Mrs. Ernest C, Box 331, Narberth.
Drew-Bear, Mrs. Jessie, care The Lon-
don Flower Shop, 1800 Cliestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Drexel, Mr. George W. C, 350 Drexel
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Drinker, Mrs. James B., Fox Cliase Road,
Jenkintown.
Dripps, Miss Ethel L., 19 St. Paul Road,
Ardmore.
Dripps, Mrs. Harold, 310 Brentford
Road, Haverford.
Dripps, Mrs. J. Hai-per, The Emlen
Arms, 6733 Emlen St., Germantown.
Drueding, Miss L., 69th and Lawnton
Ave., Oak Lane.
Duane, Mrs. William, Devon.
Dubs, Mr. J. George, 505 E. Tulpehocken
St., Germantown.
Dubs, Mrs. J. George, 505 E. Tulpehocken
St., Germantown.
Dudley, Mrs. E. Lawrence, 336 S. 19th
St., Philadelphia,
Duerr, Miss Amelia B., 2049 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
100
Duerr, Miss Mary A., Naaman's-on-the-
Delaware, Claymont, Del.
Duffield, Miss Louise C, 212 S. 39th St.,
Philadelphia.
Dufour, Mrs. Frank O., 452 Sabine Road,
Wynnewood.
Duhring, Miss Lucy B., 71 Bethlehem
PiJte, Chestnut Hill.
Duke, Miss Florence B., 1508 W. Alle-
gheny Ave., Philadelphia.
Duke, Mrs. J. O., Swarthmore.
Dulles, Miss Elizabeth W., 140 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Dulles, Mrs. Heatiey C, ViUa Nova.
Duncan, Mrs. Stephen Gardner, 6386
Church Eoad, Overbrook.
Dunkelberger, Mr. George G., P. O. Box
6, Flourtown.
Duulap, Miss Annie M., Nutts Road,
Phoenixville.
Dunlap, Mr. Geoge M., Jr., Chester Pilce
and Clifton Ave., Sharon Hill.
Dunlap, Mrs. James Ashmore, 4619 Osage
Ave., Philadelphia.
Dunleavy, Mr. Joseph, 8222 Ardleigh St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Dunn, Mrs. Charles B., 8928 Norwood
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Dunn, Mr. Sydney B., Haverford.
duPont, Mrs. A. FelLx, Box 31, Wilming-
ton, Del.
duPont, Miss Aileen M., 1026 duPont
Bldg., Wiliuington, Del.
duPont, Mrs. Alfred I., Nemours, Wil-
mington, Del.
duPont, Mrs. E. Paul, Montchanin, Del.
duPont, Mrs. Ernest, Box 545, Wilming-
ton, Del.
duPont, Mrs. Eugene, "Owl's Nest,"
Greenville, Del.
duPont, Mrs. H. B., "Crestlea," Ardmoro.
duPont, Mr. H. F., Winterthur, Del.
duPont, Mr. Pierre S., "Longwood," Ken-
nett Square.
duPont, Mrs. Pierre S., Kennett Square.
duPont, Mrs. William, Jr., Rosemont.
duPont, Mrs. William K., Box 52, Wil-
mington, Del.
Durgin, Miss Mary E., 332 Kathmere
Road, Brookline, Delaware Co.
Dursch, Mrs. Frank C. J., 318 E. Chelten
Ave., Germantown.
Dutton, Miss K. M., Rosemont.
Dwight, Mr. Edmund Waterman, 1729
Walnut St., Philadelphia.
Eagleson, Mrs. John, Wyncote.
Eagleson, Mrs. William B., Wyncote.
Earle, Miss Elinor, 8840 Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Earle, Mrs. Ralph, Haverford.
Earnest, Mrs. John K., 313 Euclid Ave.,
Amljler.
Earp, Miss Anne Tucker, 4619 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia.
Easby, Mrs. Francis H., 3316 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Easby, Mr. John P., 112 Rockland Road,
Merion.
Eastman, Mrs. B. Dobson, Falls of
Schuylkill.
Eastwick, Mr. Andrew M., Wallingford.
Eavenson, Mrs. Lewis L., Masonville,
N. J.
Eavenson, Mrs. William J., 2201 Chest-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Eberbach, Miss Margaret S., 17 Colwyn
Lane, Bala-Cynwj'd.
Eberbach, Mrs. Nelson F., 441 W. Straf-
ford St., Germantown.
Eckardt, Mrs. Carrie M., 26 N. Elm-
wood Ave., Glenolden.
Eckels, Mrs. Howard S., Wyncote.
Edel, Mr. Alexander, Erdeuheim.
Edelman, Mr. Samuel, 474 N. 6th St.,
Philadelphia.
Edgcomb, Mr. Ervin R., 239 Harvey St.,
Germantown.
Edmonds, Mrs. Franklin S., Whitemarsh.
Edmonds, Mrs. George, Westover Hills,
Wilmington, Del.
Edwards, Mr. George W., 135 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Edwards, Mrs. J. R. Lincoln, Lansdowne
and Lincoln Aves., Lansdowne.
Edwards, Mr. W. E., Rosemont. (L.)
Egmore, Mrs. Herbert J., Box 232,
Wayne.
Ehrmann, Mrs. J. William, 311 Lenox
Road, Brookline, Delaware Co.
Eisele, Mr. Jacob D., Riverton, N. J. (C.)
Eisenbrey, Mrs. R. Howard, College Ave.,
Haverford.
Eisenmenger, Mrs. Carl H., Arden, Del.
Elder, Mr. Herman, Blue Bell, Montgom-
ery Co.
Elgin, Miss Haftie, R. D. 3, Vienna, Fair-
fax Co., Va.
Elkins, Mrs. George W., Elkins Park.
Elliot, Mrs. R. McCall, Pembroke, Bryn
Mawr.
Elliott, Mrs. George A., 1 Red Oak Road,
Wilmington, Del.
Elliott, Mrs. Harold H., 106 Argyle Road,
Ardmore.
EUiott, Mrs. William J., P. O. Box 233,
Bryn Mawr.
Elliott, Mrs. William T., 117 Glenn Road,
Ardmore.
Ellis, Mr. Frank H., 3d, "Casa Blanca,"
Ijansdowne.
Ellis, Mrs. Thomas S., "Green Acres,"
Ellis Farm, West Chester.
Ellis, Mrs. William J., 906 Morgan Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Ellis, Mr. William S., Fox Fields, Bryn
Mawr.
Ellis, Mrs. William S., Fox Fields, Bryn
Mawr.
Ellison, Mrs. H. Howard, Jr., "Cremona,"
Villa Nova.
Elwyn, Mr. Thomas L., 1606 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
]01
Ely, Mrs. Olive E., 119 Euunymede Ave.,
Wayne.
Ely, Mrs. Van Horn, Haverford.
Ely, Mrs. William Newbold, 8210 Ard-
more Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ely, Mrs. William Newbold, Jr., E. D. 1,
Ambler.
Embery, Mr. William, 4932 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Emlen, Mr. Arthur C, 5328 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Emnions, Mrs. H., 430 Carpenter Lane,
Germanto"vvn.
Enburg, Mr. John M., 5141 Baltimore
Ave., Philadelphia.
Engel, Mrs. Gibson Colby, Greene St. and
Mt. Airy Ave., Mt. Airy.
Engelhart, Mr. John, 208 N. Maple St.,
Lansdowne.
Engle, Mrs. J. Linton, 140 Westmout
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Englerth, Dr. Louis D., 5030 Oxford
Ave., Frankford.
Englerth, Mrs. Louis D., 5030 Oxford
Ave., Frankford.
Enos, Mrs. Franklin J., 9 College Lane,
Haverford.
Ensslen, Mrs. Carl, 321 Summit Ave.,
West Eeading.
Erdman, Mrs. Henry P., 1020 Westview
Ave., Mt. Airy Station.
Ergood, Mrs. M. H., 6439 Morris Park
Eoad, Overbrook.
Ervin, Mrs. Spencer, Bala.
Ervin, Mr. Walter, 7504 Buist Ave., West
Philadelphia.
Esherick, Mrs. Joseph, 7201 Sherman St.,
Mt. Airy.
Eshlemau, Miss Margaret D., 141 E.
Lemon St., Lancastei'.
Eshner, Mrs. A. A., 1019 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Espen, Miss Hannali, 235 S. 15th St.,
Pliiladelphia.
Estabrook, Mrs. E. B., 3101 W. Coulter
St., Philadelphia.
Esty, Mrs. Eobert P., 207 Llanfair Eoad,
Ardmore.
Evans, Miss Anna Cope, Awbury, Ger-
mantown.
Evans, Mrs. David, Gwynedd.
Evans, Miss Florence, 650 S. Highland
Ave., Merion.
Evans, Mrs. George B., Eosemont.
Evans, Mrs. Harold, "Awbury," German-
town.
Evans, Mr. Herbert B., 58 Price St.,
Lansdowne.
Evans, Mrs. J. Wister, 318 S. Orange
St., Media.
Evans, Mrs. Lawrence E., Box 229, Eut-
ledge.
Evans, Miss Mary, Bryn Mawr.
Evans, Mrs. Ealph, Haverford.
Evans, Mrs. William S'., 518 Cedar Lane,
Swarthmore.
Everham, Mrs. H. V., Forest Ave., Am-
bler.
Evoy, Mrs. Charles H., 6 Eoyal Ave.,
Glenside.
Exley, Miss Emily, Wayne. (L.)
Eysmans, Mr. J. L., 1524 Broad Street
Station Bldg., Philadelphia.
Eyster, Mr. L. Bert., 432 State Eoad,
Bala-Cjaiwyd.
Fahnestock, Miss Euth, Southampton.
Fairchild, Mrs. S. E., Jr., 6910 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Falconer, Mr. Allan, 924 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia.
Fales, Mrs. Samuel W., Elmbridge, Am-
bler.
Fancourt, Mr. E. J., 1612 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Faries, Mrs. C. T., Box 47, Wynnewood.
Faries, Mrs. Eobert, St. Davids.
Farnum, Mrs. E. S. W., 101 W. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Farnum, Mr. George Leiper, The Acres,
Media.
Farnum, Mrs. Henry W., Morris Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Farrell, Miss Alice M., 7928 Oxford Ave.,
Fox Chase.
Faulconer, Miss Margaret C, 254 S. 22d
St., Philadelphia.
Faunce, Mrs. W. W., Villa Nova.
Faust, Mr. Hemy I., Merion. (C.)
Faux, Miss Ida, 737 Allen Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Fay, Dr. Temple, Elbow Lane, Mt. Airy.
Fearon, Mr. Charles, 6720 Emlen St., Ger-
mantown.
Fearon, Mrs. Charles, 6720 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Fegley, Mrs. Nelson P., 1956 W. Main
St., Norristown.
Feigley, Mrs. H. P., 32 S. 10th St., Quak-
ertown.
Felin, Mr. Charles F., 280 South Grand
Ave., Pasadena, Calif.
Felix, Mrs. Harry, 5441 Waj'ne Ave.,
Germantown.
Fell, Mrs. F. J., Jr., E. D. 1, Phoenix-
ville.
Fels, Miss Eosena, Garden Court, 47th
and Pine Sts., Philadelphia.
Felton, Mrs. Alvenia E., Oak Eidge
Farms, Terwood Eoad, Huntingdon
Valley.
Felton, Mrs. Edgar C, Haverford.
Fenimore, Miss M. E., Evergreens Com-
pany, Lionville, Chester County.
Fenno, Mrs. George F., 309 Swarthmore
Ave., Swarthmore.
Ferguson, Mrs. Bassett, Eidley Park.
Ferguson, Mr. Frank M., 53 W. Tulpe-
hocken St., Germantown.
Ferguson, Mrs. James A., 124 W. Thomp-
son St., Pliiladelphia.
Ferguson, Mrs. Lincoln, 8031 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
102
Fernley, Miss Prances Sabena, 6110
Wayne Ave., Germantown.
Fernley, Miss Hattie M., 6110 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Fettennan, Mrs. J. Gordon, Media.
Fife, Mrs. Charles A., 3421 Powelton Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Finch, Mrs. W. E., Bird-in-Hand, Eoute
1, Lancaster County.
Findlay, Mrs. James F., Corner Beech
and Elm Aves., Bethlehem.
Fink, Mrs. Harold J., Box 85, Eiverton,
N. J.
Finletter, Mrs. Edwin M., 204 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill. (L.)
Fischer, Mr. Charles W., 1622 Pacific
Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
Fischer, Dr. Henry G., 108 Bloomingdale
Ave.. Wajrne.
Fischer, Dr. Herbert L., 3420 Warden
Drive, East Falls P. O.
Fisher, Mrs. Carrie E., 41 Green St.,
Lansdale.
Fisher, Mrs. E. Monroe, 421 Govpen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Fisher, Mrs. Henry M., Jenkintown.
Fisher, Mrs. Howard W., 327 E. Wal-
nut Lane, Germantown.
Fisher, Mrs. Philip B., 7801 Cresheim
Eoad, Chestnut Hill.
Fitzgerald, Mrs. W. C, Eydal.
Fitzgibbons, Mrs. T. J., 1721 Elm St.,
Bethlehem.
Fitzpatrick, Mrs. Florence B., 141 E.
Gorgas Lane, Germantown.
Flack, Dr. Arthur M., 3414 Baring St.,
Philadelphia.
Flagg, Mrs. H. W., Collegeville.
Flagg, Mrs. Stanley G., Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Flagler, Mr. Joseph H., 1740 Broad
Street Station Bldg., Philadelphia.
Flanigen, Mrs. Donald, 5939 Drexel
Eoad, Philadelphia.
Flanigen, Miss Jessy, Haverford.
Fleck, Mrs. Frederick W., 335 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
Fleer, Mrs. Henry, 15 Woodside Ave.,
Narberth.
Fleisher, Mrs. Alfred W., Peacock
Hedges, Wyncote.
Fleisher, Mr. Horace T., 1901 Archi-
tects' Bldg., Philadelphia.
Fleisher, Mrs. Walter A., Corner City
Line and Lakeside Ave., Oak Lane.
Fletcher, Prof. S. W., State College.
Flood, Mrs. Edward A., 807 Carpenter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Foerderer, Mrs. Percival E., Bryn Mawr.
Folwell, Mrs. P. Donald, 227 Bowman
Ave., Merion.
Foote, Mrs. A. Girand, "Beech Terrace,"
Merion.
Forbes, Mrs. Eobert E., Mt. Holly, N. J.
Ford, Mrs. Bruce, Sugar Loaf, Chestnut
Hill.
l-'ord, Mrs. Clara M., Fort Washington.
Ford, Miss Frances L., 902 Oak Lane,
Philadelphia.
Forstall, Mr. Walton, 1401 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Fortesque, Mrs. Horace, 387 E. Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Foster, Mrs. Frank B., Haverford.
Foster, Mrs. William B., 1101 Westover
Eoad, Wilmington, Del.
Foulds, Mrs. W. C, 421 Church Lane,
Germantown.
Foulkrod, Mrs. Collin, 3910 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Fowler, Mrs. J. Scott, 1014 70th Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Fox, Mrs. Adolph, 2350 N. Park Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Fox, Mrs. C. F., Jr., Elkins Park.
Fox, Mr. Charles Y., 422 Sabine Ave.,
Wynnewood.
Fox, Mrs. Gilbert E., 909 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Fox, Mrs. Herbert, Haverford.
Fox, Mrs. Joseph M., 7913 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Fox, Mrs. Joseph M., Torresdale.
Fox, Mr. Milford C, 156 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mrs. Milford C, 156 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Fox, Mrs. William Logan, E. D. 4, Nor-
ristown.
Fraley, Mrs. Frederick, Norwynden,
Overbrook.
Francis, Miss Jeannette M., Bethayres.
Frankel, Mrs. Perry, The Warwick, 17th
and Locust Sts., Philadelphia.
Franz, Mrs. Henry, Jr., 420 Vernon
Eoad, Jenkintown.
Frazier, Mrs. G. Harrison, Jr., 100 W.
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Frazier, Mrs. George H., Jenkintown.
Frazier, Mrs. Herbert, 45 Lincoln Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Frazier, Mr. John W., Jr., 904 City Cen-
ter Bldg., Philadelphia.
Frazier, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Jenkintown.
Freedman, Mrs. Lionel, Gypsy and School
Lanes, Germantown.
Freeman, Mrs. Harold A., St. Davids.
Freeman, Mrs. J. Howard, 55 W. Eagle
Eoad, Upper Darby.
Freeman, Mrs. M. M., Valley Eoad, Mel-
rose Park.
Freeman, Mrs. E. L., 607 Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Freihofer, Mrs. William J., Box 7621,
Ardmore.
French, Mrs. C. Dunning, 145 E. Coulter
St., Germantown.
French, Mrs. J. Hansell, Collegeville.
Fretz, Mrs. William F., Pipersville.
Fretz, Mrs. William H., 503 Cedar St.,
Jenkintown.
Frick, Mr. Charles E., 6915 Clearview
St., Mt. Airy.
103
Frick, Mr. George G., 393 S. Center St.,
Pottsville.
Frick, Mrs. John A., Salisbury House,
Allentown.
Friday, Mrs. Conrad, 12 Hilbum Eoad,
Scarsdale, N. Y.
Friebely, Mrs. Margaret H., 6336 Greene
St., Germantown.
Fries, Miss Emma E., 2031 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Fries, Mrs. William P., 323 Cynwyd
Eoad, Bala-Cynwyd.
Fritz, Mrs. J. A., S. E. Cor. 34th and
Hamilton Sts., Philadelphia.
Fromuth, Mrs. August G., 5101 Castor
Eoad, Frankford.
Fromuth, Mr. Harry C, Holland, Bucks
County.
Fronefield, Mrs. J. M., 225 Audubon Ave.,
Wayne.
Frorer, Mr. Henry E., Wayne. (N.)
Fry, Mrs. Henry S., 110 Llanfair Eoad,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Fry, Mrs. James Woods, 4612 Chester
Ave., Philadelphia.
Fry, Mrs. T. Y. Dietz, 410 Waring Eoad,
Elkins Park.
Fry, Mrs. Wilfred Eyles, 2312 Belmont
Ave., Ardmore.
Fuguet, Mr. Eaymond, "Fairacre," Edge-
water Park, N. J.
Fuller, Mrs. Daniel H., 521 Strathmore
Eoad, Penfield, Upper Darby.
Fuller, Mrs. Horace F., 6834 Anderson
St., Mt. Airy.
Fuller, Mrs. Sara K., N. Merion Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Fuller, Mr. W. D., Penn Valley, Narberth.
Fuller, Mrs. William A. M., Germantown
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Fulton, Mrs. V. M., 106 Browning Eoad,
Merchantville, N. J.
Furness, Mr. Fairman R., Upper Bank
Farm, Media. (N.)
Furness, Mrs. Eadclyffe, 207 Sunmiit
Ave., Jenkintown.
Fussell, Miss Alice, 24 E. Jefferson St.,
Media.
Fussell, Mr. Eobert, 24 E. Jefferson St.,
Media.
Gable, Mr. Joseph B., Jr., Stewartstown.
Gadsby, Mrs. Edmund J., 3129 Queen
Lane, East Falls.
Gallagher, Mrs. David, Bristol Pike,
Edgley.
Gallagher, Mr. Thomas G., "Edgley,"
Bristol.
Gallagher, Mrs. W. M., Hilldale Eoad,
ViUa Nova.
Galloway, Mrs. C. D., 520 Jarden Eoad,
Chestnut Hill.
Gamble, Mrs. Clarence J., 537 Allen
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Gardiner, Mrs. John, Jr., 614 Pembroke
Eoad, Bryn Mawr.
Garratt, Mrs. L. W., 220 Lansdowne Ave.,
Wayne.
Garrett, Mrs. Thomas Cresson, 5301 Old
York Eoad, Logan.
Garrigues, Miss Hannah, Haverford.
Garrigues, Mr. John S., 742 College Ave.,
Haverford.
Garrison, Mr. E. M., 87 W. Broadway,
Salem, N. J. (C.)
Gaskill, Mrs. J. Franklin, 104 Tenby
Eoad, Llanerch.
Gaskill, Mrs. Marion M., 957 West Ches-
ter Pike, Manoa, Upper Darby P. O.
Gaskill, Mrs. Samuel E., 2525 S. Cleve-
land Ave., Philadelphia.
Gaston, Miss Lilian, 309-A, Alden Park
Manor, Germantown.
Gattman, Miss Ethel, 2350 N. Park Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Gaul, Miss Myrtle E., 836 Whitby Ave.,
Yeadon.
Gause, Mrs. C. IngersoU, Greenville, Del.
Gawthrop, Mrs. Eobert S., 325 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
Gay, Mrs. James H., Paoli.
Gayley, Mrs. William Crichton, General
Knox Eoad, Wayne.
Gearhart, Mrs. William M., 929 W. Mar-
shall St., Norristown.
Geary, Mrs. A. H., Eosemont.
Geckeler, Dr. E. O., 504 Oak Eoad, Mer-
ion.
Geckeler, Dr. George D., Old York Eoad,
Jenkintown.
Geist, Mrs. Clarence H., Launfal, Villa
Nova.
Gellhaus, Miss Olga E., Ashton Eoad and
Grant Ave., Holmesburg.
Gendell, Miss Elizabeth B., 320 Maple
Ave., Drexel HUl.
Gendell, Miss Lucy C., 320 Maple Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Genzmer, Mrs. George V., Box 7609 Ard-
more.
Gerhard, Mrs. Albert Pepper, 5635 Over-
brook Ave., Overbrook.
Gerhard, Mrs. S. L., 3405 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Gerstley, Mrs. I., 421 Ashbourne Eoad,
Elkins Park.
Gest, Miss Margaret E., 5620 City Ave.,
Overbrook.
Gest, Mrs. Williami P., Merion Station.
Getze, Mr. E. Bioren, Jr., 6005 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Getze, Mrs. Edward Bioren, 6005 Over-
brook Ave., Philadelphia.
Geyelin, Mrs. Emile C, Devon.
Gibb, Mrs. Walton, 330 Fairhill Eoad,
Wynnewood.
Gibbon, Mrs. John H., 1608 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Gibbons, Mrs. J. E., 2311 N. 17th St.,
Philadelphia.
Giblin, Miss Margaret, Arden, Del.
Gibson, Mrs. Henry C, Jenkintown.
104
Gibson, Mr. Julian, Bancroft Road, Moy-
lan.
Gibson, Miss Mary K., Wynnewood.
Gibson, Mr. William R., 735 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Gideon, Mrs. George D., 7015 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
Gideon, Mrs. Henry J., 215 E. S'edgwick
St., Philadelphia.
Gilbert, Mrs. George L., 7104 Hazel Ave.,
Bywood.
Gilbert, Mrs. John, Bydal.
Gilbert, Mrs. Samuel H., Rydal.
Gilchrist, Mr. Douglas, 41 W. Stratford
Ave., Lansdowne.
Giles, Mrs. Florence M., 109 Menlo Ave.,
Glen side.
Gill, Mr. Logan B., 6626 Morris Park
Road, Overbrook.
Gill, Mrs. Logan B., 6626 Morris Park
Ave., Overbrook.
Gill, Miss Mary Esther, 37 Wynnewood
Ave., Wynnewood.
Gillespie, Miss Jannie F., 79 Wynnewood
Ave., Merion.
Gillin, Mr. James R., Ambler Nurseries,
Ambler. (0.)
Gillin, Mrs. James R., E. Tennis Ave.,
Ambler.
Gillinder, Mrs. Caroline A., Faraway
Farm, Southampton.
Gilmore, Mrs. Femley P., Box 44, Reho-
both Beach, Sussex Co., Del.
Gilmour, Miss Dora, 64 Harvey St., Ger-
mantown.
Gilpin, Mrs. John C, Sugar Loaf, Chest-
nut Hill.
Gilpin, Mrs. Vincent, West Chester.
Gipson, Dr. Lawrence H., P. O. Box 183,
Bethlehem.
Gipson, Mrs. Lawrence H., P. 0. Box 183,
Bethlehem.
Girvin, Miss Mary, 2120 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Glasgow, Mrs. W. A., 81 Haws Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Gleason, Mrs. James F., 212 Greenwood
Ave., Jenkintown.
Glendinning, Mrs. H. Percival, 529 E.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Glendinning, Mr. Robert, Packard Bldg.,
15th and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia.
Glendinning, Mrs. Robert, The Squirrels,
Chestnut Hill.
Glenn, Mr. Donald, Franklin.
Glover, Miss Debora A., Acorn Club,
1715 Locust St., Philadelphia.
Godfrey, Mr. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. Chester N., Lansdowne.
Godfrey, Mrs. M. Helen, 126 Woodland
Ave., Wyncote.
Godfrey, Mrs. William S., Ardmore.
Goff, Mrs. LeRoy, 2d, Ithan.
Goheen, Mrs. John P., 610 W. Upsal St.,
Mt. Airy.
Goldbaum, Mr. J. S., 4234 Spruce St., W.
Philadelphia.
Goldbaum, Mrs. J. S., 4234 Spruce St.,
W. Philadelphia.
Goldey, Mrs. F. H., 614 W. Allen Lane,
Philadelphia.
Goldey, Mr. Robert P., Holly Oak, Del.
Goldsmith, Mrs. Arthur, Montgomery
Ave. and Mill Road, Wynnewood.
Goll, Mr. George, Hobby-Nobby Farm,
Soniers Point, N. J.
Goodall, Mr. H. W., 8315 Seminole Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Goodall, Mrs. William Baily, 108 Dudley
Ave., Narberth.
Goodhue, Mrs. Francis, 340 Louella Ave.,
Wayne.
Goodman, Mr. Charles E., Fishers Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Goodman, Miss Ernestine A., 140 Bethle-
hem Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Goodwin, Dr. A. Helena, 321 Bala Ave..
Cynwyd.
Goodwin, Mrs. Walter L., Jr., Rydal.
Goshorn, Mrs. C. B., King Road, Malvern.
Gossling, Mr. John H., 1027 Allengrove
St., Frankford.
Gotwals, Mrs. Leo A., S. Gay St., Phoe-
nixville.
Graf, Miss Emma, 36 S. 5th St., Pliila-
delphia.
Graff, Miss Isabella A., 409 Lancaster
Ave., Haverford.
Graham, Mrs. J. W., 537 Orchard Ave.,
Yeadon.
Graham, Mrs. John, Jr., Roumfort Inn,
Chestnut Hill.
Graham, Mrs. Warren C, Ashwood Road,
Villa Nova.
Grakelow, Mr. Charles H., Broad and
Cumberland Sts., Philadelphia. (F.)
Grange, Mrs. William Drayton, Morris
Ave., Bryn MaAvr.
Grant, Mrs. F. C, 9012 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Grau, Miss Mary R., 204 E. Glenolden
Ave., Glenolden.
Gray, Mrs. Alfred M., 5965 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Gray, Mrs. Alfred P., 4702 Castor Ave.,
Frankford.
Gray, Mrs. Ellen M., 432 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Gray, Miss May M., 1112 Allengrove St.,
Philadelphia.
Gray, Mrs. Wilfrid, 1021 Dyre St., Frank-
ford.
Green, Mrs. Edward A., 20 W. Montgom-
ery Ave., Ardmore.
Green, Miss Gertrude E., 29 E. Jefferson
St., Media.
Greene, Mr. Ryland W., Rose Lane, Hav-
erford.
Greene, Mrs. William Houston, 2128
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
105
Greenwood, Mrs. A. S., Trevor Lane,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Gregory, Mrs. A. K., 115 Moutgomeiy
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Greinberg, Mr. Rcinhold, Wayne. (C)
Gribbel, Mrs. J. Baueker, 135 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Gribbel, Mrs. John, Wyncote.
Gribbel, Mrs. W. Griffin, Meimaid and
St. Martins Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Griffin, Mrs. Frank H., Wawa.
Griffith, Mrs. Arthur B., 501 Monroe St.,
Media.
Griffith, Dr. J. P. Ci-ozer, 1810 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Griffith, Miss Julia W., Laurel Lane, Hav-
erford.
Griffith, Miss Mary F., Laurel Lane, Hav-
erford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert E., Haverford.
Griffith, Mrs. Robert M., Gwalia, Ambler.
Grim, Dr. Ella W., Rose VaUey Road,
R. D. 3, Media.
Grimditch, Mrs. William, Geneva and Syl-
vania Aves., Glenside.
Griscom, Miss Frances 0., Haverford.
Griscom, Mr. Rodman E., Haverford.
Griseom, Mrs. William B., Old Gulph
Road and Bryn Mawr Ave., Narbcrth.
Grissinger, Mr. John S., 1403 Packard
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Griswold, Mrs. Frank T., "Hothorpe,"
Radnor.
Griswold, Mrs. Matthew, Jr., 265 W. 10th
St., Erie.
Groat, Mrs. Myrtle, 410 Sprenkle Ave..
Hanover.
Groff, Mrs. John Charles, 519 N. High
St., West Chester.
Groome, Mrs. Daingerfield M., Clover Hill
Farms, Media.
Groome, Mrs. John C, 1615 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Gross, Dr. F. O., 1816 W. Erie Ave., Phil-
adelphia.
Groth, Dr. Geneva E., 3436 N. 13th St.,
Philadelphia.
Groves, Miss Juliet F., 735 Westview St.,
Germantown.
Grubnau, Mr. Carl, Erie Ave. at 2d St.,
Philadelphia.
Grullemans, Mr. J. J., care Wayside Gar-
dens, Mentor, Ohio. (C.)
Guckes, Mrs. E. M., 6200 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Guckes, Mrs. P. E., 123 Bleddyn Road,
Ardmore.
Guest, Mi-s. Arthur B., 5111 Newhall St.,
Germantown.
Guinn, Mr. Harper J., 889 N. Brooklyn
St., Philadelphia.
Gumbes, Mrs. Charles Wetherill, Box 6,
Oaks, Montgomery Co.
Gunning, Miss Agnes, 310 Ashbourne
Road, Elkins Park.
Gurley, Mrs. W. B., 301 W. School Lane,
Germantown.
Gustin, Mrs. Richard J., 101 Walnut St.,
Jenkintown.
Guthrie, Mrs. Tracy W., Beaver Road at
Newberry Lane, Edgeworth, Sevsdckley.
Gutman, Mrs. Milton R., 330 Marvin
Road, Elkins Park.
Gwyer, Mrs. Frederick D., 210 Roberts
Road, Ardmore.
Haas, Mrs. H. J., Haverford.
Haas, Mrs. Otto, Fishers Road, Haver-
ford.
Haber, Mrs. Henry, 502 Westview Ave.,
Germantown.
Habermehl, Mr. John P., 2139 Diamond
St., PhHadelphia. (F.)
Hacker, Mr. Caspar W., Bryn Mawr.
Hacker, Mrs. Caspar W., Bryn Mawr.
Hacker, Miss Elizabeth D., 152 School
Lane, Germantown.
Hacker, Mrs. William P., 8711 Navajo
St., Chestnut Hill.
Haehnlen, Mr. Walter L., Colwyn and
Rhyle Lanes, Cynwyd.
Haeseler, Mrs. Alice P. S., 2006 W. Tioga
St., Philadelpliia.
Haggart, Mrs. W. R., 6341 Ridge Ave.,
Roxborough.
Haggerty, Mrs. George I., 4330 Sansom
St., Philadelphia.
Hagner, Mrs. Samuel D., 274 Harvey St.,
Philadelphia.
Hahn, Mrs. Elizabeth G., 5528 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Hahn, Mrs. Frances S., 238 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Haines, Mrs. Benjamin W., 326 N.
Church St., West Chester.
Haines, Miss Edith Stokes, Fort Wash-
ington.
Haines, Miss Jane B., Cheltenham.
Haines, Mrs. Joseph, 516 E. Durham St.,
Mt. Airy.
Haines, Mrs. Joseph, Jr., Meadowbrook.
Haines, Mrs. Robert B., Jr., 156 School
Lane, GermantoAvn.
Haines, Mrs. W. H., 606 Zollinger Way,
Menon.
Haldeman, Miss Pearl, 8110 West Chester
Pike, Highland Park, Upper Darby.
Hale, Mrs. Stephen G., 6428 N. Fairhill
St., Oak Lane.
Halford, Mrs. John H., Hartranft Woods,
Norristown.
Hall, Mrs. Clarence A., 7951 Winston
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Hall, Miss Elizalieth, Front and Lemon
Sts., Media.
Hall, Mr. H. F., 416 Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J. (C.)
Hall, Mr. Henry P., 106 North St., W.
Pittston.
Hall, Mrs. Perry E., Darby and Paoli
Roads, Villa Nova.
Halhnan, Mrs. Thomas, Collegeville.
106
Hallowell, Miss H. E., 2100 Walnut St.,
Philadelpliia.
Hallowell, Mrs. Israel E., Moreland Eoad,
Bethayres.
Hallowell, Miss Martha, Meadowbrook,
Montgomery Co.
Halsey, Mrs. Edward B., Eadnor.
Halstead, Mrs. David, 301 W. Johnson St.,
Germantown.
Hamersly, Mr. Edmund G., Devon.
Haonilton, Miss Emma F., 50 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Hamilton, Mrs. J. M. H., Glenburn,
Phoenixville.
Hamilton, Mrs. Eobert Devitt, Cliurch
Eoad, Wyncote.
Hamilton, Mr. Warner S., Eosemont.
Hammond, Dr. Julian T., 3d, 1042 Wide-
ner Bldg., Philadelphia.
Hancock, Mrs. F. Woodson, Jr., Phoenix-
ville.
Hankele, Mr. Allen J., care Alanwold
Nursery, Neshaminy P. 0., Bucks Co.
(N.)
Hansen, Mrs. Frank E., Eddington Farm,
Eddington.
Hanson, Miss Lillian C, The Cambridge,
Alden Park, Germantown.
Har bridge, Mr. Herbert J., care Mrs.
John A. Brown, Jr., "Dunminning,"
Wayiie. (G.)
Hardt, Mrs. Walter K., Tunbridge Eoad,
Haverford.
Hare, Miss Esther B., Eadnor.
Hare, Mr. J. V., Eeading Terminal, Phil-
adelphia.
Hare, Mrs. J. V., Trevose.
Harjes, Mrs. F. H., Valley Forge'.
Harkins, Mr. George W., Jr., 422 W.
Strafford St., Germantown. '
Harlan, Mrs. S. P., Idle Dell, Hatboro.
Harley, Mrs. W. Wallace, 725 S'. 60th
St., Philadelphia.
Harper, Mr. B. Frank, 133 S. 12th St.,
Philadelphia.
Harper, Mrs. George V., Shippensburg.
Harper, Mrs. William Eoss, 626 W.
Hortter St., Germantown.
Harper, Mr. William Warner, Andorra
Nurseries, Chestnut Hill. (N.)
Harrar, Mrs. John J., 311 Washington
Ave., Haddontield, N. J.
Harrington, Mrs. A. M., Sheaff Eoad,
Whitemarsh.
Harrington, Miss Jessie, King's Highway,
Dover, Del.
Harrington, Mrs. Melvin H., 1016 West-
view St., Mt. Aii-y.
Harrington, Mrs. Willis F., 16th St. and
Mt. Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del.
Harris, Mrs. Frank B., "Wee House,"
Eosemont.
Harris, Mr. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. H. Frazer, Chestnut Hill.
Harris, Mrs. J. Andrews, Jr., Lincoln
Drive and Willow Grove Ave., Chestnut
Hill.
HJarris, Miss Mary, The Lenox, 1301
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Harris, Mrs. Morrison, 2307 N. 58th St.,
Overbrook.
Harris, Mrs. Myron L., 6603 N. 12th St.,
Oak Lane.
Harris, Mrs. Nelson S., 6418 N. 12th St.,
Philadelphia.
Harris, Mrs. Eichard H., 7836 Spring
Ave., Elkins Park.
Harris, Mr. Wharton E., Union League,
Philadelphia.
Harris, Mr. William K., 1406 S. 51st St.,
Philadelphia. (C.)
Harrison, Mr. George L., St. Davids.
Harrison, Mrs. George L., St. Davids.
Harrity, Mrs. W. F., Apt. 601-B, Aldsn
Park Manor, Germantown.
Harshberger, Miss Eiyonta C, The
School of Horticulture, Ambler.
Hart, Mrs. William H., Susquehanna
Eoad, Ambler.
Hartley, Mrs. Thomas E., 5825 5th Ave.,
Pittsburgh.
Hartshorne, Miss Amy, Haverford.
Hartshorne, Mr. E. Y., Haverford.
Harvey, Mr. Charles B., Linda Vista and
Cheltena. Ave., Jenkintown.
Harvey, Mr. Frederick W., 2241 N. 4th
St., Pliiladelphia.
Harvey, Mrs. J. S. Curtis, Jr., Eadnor.
Harvey, Mr. John S. C, Eadnor.
Haskell, Mr. Harry G.,"Mt. Salem Lane,
Wilmington, Del.
Haskins, Mrs. Harold, Conestoga Eoad,
Ithan.
Hastings, Mr. John V., Jr., Box 591,
Haverford.
Hatfield, Mr. Henry Eeed, 1725 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Hatton, Miss Edith J., E. D. 5, West
Chester.
Hatton, Mr. George, care Dr. Strieker
Coles, Fisher Lane, Bryn Mawr. (G.)
Hauenstein, Mr. Arthur, 612 Edge Hill
Eoad, Ardsley, Montgomery Co. (G.)
Haug, Mr. John S., 9509 Germantown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Haughton, Mrs. J. Paul, Sugartown Eoad,
Malvern.
Haughton, Mrs. Eichard, Paoli.
Haun, Mrs. Eay. H., 432 Owen Eoad,
Ardmore.
Haupt, Mrs. William K., 2112 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Hause, Mrs. F., 614 W. Market St., Potts-
ville.
Haviland, Mrs. A. M., 118 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
Hawkes, Mrs. T. G., "Edgely," Bristol.
Hawlk, Mrs. L. J., 8024 York Eoad,
Elkins Park.
107
Haydoek, Mrs. Amelia G., 2726 W. Som-
erst St., Philadelphia.
Haydoek, Miss Emily G., 309 Trainer
St., Ridley Park.
Haydoek, Mrs. Roger, Kent Road, Wyn-
cote.
Hayes, Mrs. Ernest B., 501 Parker Ave.,
Collingdale.
Hayes, Mr. Robert L., 3 Chatham Road,
Stonehurst, Delaware Co.
Hayhurst, Mrs. G. Lamar, 343 E. Hortter
St., Mt. Airy.
Hays, Mrs. Raphael S., Box 287, Carlisle.
Hayward, Mrs. Charles E., Westtown.
Hayward, Mrs. Nathan, Brook Road,
Wayne.
Haywood, Mrs. C. William, "Armasmead
Farm," Ambler.
Haywood, Mrs. J. Maurice, 5 Lindenwold
Terrace, Ambler.
Hazard, Mr. C. W., 300 Midland Ave.,
St. Davids.
Heacoek, Miss Esther, 135 Mather Ave.,
Wyncote.
Heacoek, Mr. James W., Wyncote. (C.)
Heacoek, Mrs. Joseph Linden, 26 Car-
penter Lane, Mt. Airy.
Head, Mrs. Joseph, 7125 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Heald, Mrs. Lawrence R., 5127 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
Heaton, Mrs. Harold J., 124 Rex Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Heckscher, Mr. Gustave A., Strafford.
Heckscher, Mrs. Ledyard, Radnor.
Heckscher, Mrs. Lucretia Stevens, "Tre-
goze," Radnor.
Hedley, Mrs. T. Wilson, 1015 S. 47th
St., Philadelphia.
Heebner, Mrs. Oliarles, The Mermont,
Bi-yn Mawr.
Heebner, Miss Julia E., 320 E. Ever-
green Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Heebner, Mrs. W. D., Box 94, Oak Park,
Heergeist, Miss Anna K., 6606 N. 6tl)
St., Oak Lane.
HefPner, Mrs. Harry E., 305 Shadeland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
HefPner, Mrs. Warren S., 1009 Belfield
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Heim, Miss Christine, 115 Biddle St.,
Kane.
Heimerdinger, Mrs. Leo H., 1001 Valley
Road, Oak Lane.
Heindel, Mrs. E. B., Out of Bounds,
Douglassville.
Heineg, Mrs. Frieda W., 309 Hartel Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Heinly, Mrs. William O., 450 State St.,
Hamburg.
Heisler, Mrs. G., 6407 N. 6th St., Phila-
delphia.
Heist, Mrs. Lee H., 6445 Emlen St., Mt.
Airy.
Heizmann, Mr. William A., 1133 Read-
ing Blvd., Wyomissing.
Helbert, Mrs. George K., 305 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Hellerman, Mrs. Harry H., 49th St. and
Monument Road, Wynnefield.
Hellwig, Miss Anna, 2325 N. 52d St.,
Philadelphia.
Helme, Mrs. William E., St. Davids.
Hemphill, Mrs. John M., 210 E. Biddle
St., West Cliester.
Hemsley, Mrs. Frederick, 2018 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Hendershot, Mr. Joseph, 2201 E. Darby
Road, Upper Darby P. 0.
Hendershot, Mrs. Joseph, 2201 E. Darby
Road, Upper Darby P. O.
Henderson, Mrs. George, 2013 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Henderson, Mrs. Lawrence, 211 Dudley
Ave., Narberth.
Henderson, Mrs. Samuel J., Fordel Farm,
Media.
Henderson, Mrs. W. Alan, Oak Lane
Manor, Oak Lane.
Henderson, Mrs. William J., 240 Merlon
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Hendrickson, Mrs. H. S., Spruce Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Henkels, Mr. John B., Jr., 446 Church
Lane, Germantown. (L.)
Henning, Miss Mary E., 50 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Henry, Mrs. Bayard, W. Walnut Lane,
Germantown.
Henry, Mrs. Charles W., Chestnut Hill.
Henry, Mrs. J. Norman, Gladwyne.
Hensel, Mrs. E. Caven, Ardmore.
Hensel, Mrs. William H., 346 Roumfort
Road, Mt. Airy.
Henson, Miss Hannah, 5025 N. 12th St.,
Philadelphia.
Heppe, Mr. Florence J., 1300 N. 6th St.,
Philadelphia.
Hergesheimer, Mr. Russell U., 1616 Wal-
nut St., Philadelphia.
Herkner, Miss Anne, Krisheim Lodge,
Chestnut Hill.
Herold, Mrs. Otto, 127 Harrison Ave.,
Glenside.
Herr, Mrs. Albert M., "Cedar Crest,"
Lancaster.
Herr, Mr. John P., 52 Stewart Ave., Lans-
downe.
Herr. Mrs. William, 122 Tyson Ave.,
Glenside.
Herring, Miss L. K., 2807 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Herring, Mrs. Willard E., Jenkintown.
Herzog, Mr. Adolph, Box 16, Narberth.
Herzog, Mrs. Adolph, Box 16, Narberth.
Hessenbruch, Mrs. Hermann M., Wynne-
wood.
Hetherington, Mrs. Robert, 208 Garvin
Blvd., Sharon Hill.
108
Heun, Sister Elizabeth, Mary J. Drexel
Home, 2200 W. Girard Ave., Philadel-
phia.
Heyl, Mrs. Jacob E., 124 Springfield
Ave., St. Martins.
Heyl, Mrs. John B., 209 Kent Eoad,
Wynnewood.
Heyl, Mrs. Eobert C, 120 Bleddyn Road,
Ardmore.
Heymann, Mr. Joseph C, 1420 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Heyser, Mr. Ellsworth, E. D. 3, Norris-
town.
Heyward, Mrs. E. B., 6730 Emlen S't.,
Mt. Airy.
Hibbert, Mrs. Walter, Providence Eoad,
Wallingford.
Hibbs, Miss Helen, Sycamore Ave.,
Merion.
Hibbs, Mrs. Jonathan K., 24 E. Mt.
Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy.
Hibbs, Mrs. Shelton A., 109 E. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Hiestand, Mrs. George, 303 Main St..
Phoenix ville.
Hiester, Mrs. George B., Eeading.
Hiester, Mrs. Isaac, 1501 Mineral Spring
Eoad^ Eeading.
Higgins, Mrs. Charles, Westover Hills,
Wilmington, Del.
Higgins, Miss Helen T., E. D. 3, Norris-
town.
High, Miss Flora M., 3436 Warden
Drive, Germantown.
High, Mrs. Walter L., 523 Hamilton St.,
Norristown.
Highley, Mrs. George N., 314 Fayette
S't., Conshohocken.
Hildabrand, Mrs. Frank A., 220 Noreg
Place, Brooklawn^ N. J.
Hildebrand, Mrs. Jesse, Box 154, Shill-
ington.
Hill, Mrs. G. Elliott, 316 Meehan Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Hill, Mrs. George H., Jr., 116 Birch Ave.,
Bala-Cyn-n^d.
Hill, Mr. J. Bennett, Wynnewood.
Hill, Mrs. Julian W., Wawaset Park
Apartments, Wilmington, Del.
Hill, Mrs. Llewellyn G., 55 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Hillborn, Miss Annie, 508 N. Chester
Eoad, Swarthmore.
Hilles, Miss Elizabeth, 965 Orthodox St.,
Philadelphia.
Hilles, Mr. Eobert L., 4530 Adams Ave.,
Frankford.
Hilles, Mi^,s. Williaan S., Wilmington,
Del.
Hilliai-d, Mrs. James, E. D. 1, Hatboro.
Hilsee, Mrs. David E., 4940 Eubicam
Ave., Germantown.
Hilsee, Mrs. Donald Ashcraft, 1410 Prin-
cess Ave., Camden, N. J.
Hinchman, Miss Margaretta S., Haver-
ford.
Hinkel, Mrs. Harry W., 813 W. Broad
St., Quakertown.
Hinkson, Mrs. Joseph H., 224 Chester
Pike, Eidley Park.
Hires, Mrs. Charles E., Jr., Wynnewood.
Hires, Mrs. Harrison S., Bervryn.
Hires, Mrs. J. Edgar, 107 Linwood Ave.,
Ardmore.
Hitzrot, Mrs. Lewis H., 4953 McKean
Ave., Germantown.
Hoag, Mr. C. G., Haverford.
Hoard, Mrs. Susan, 2927 Midvale Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Hoban, Mrs. Jennie, S'. Broad St., Lans-
dale.
Hockaday, Miss Elizabeth, 316 Shade-
land Ave., Drexel Hill.
Hockman, Miss Hannah S., 2805 Queen
Lane, Germantown.
Hodge, Mrs. Edward B., 2019 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Hodge, Mrs. Henry L., 300 Wheatsheaf
Lane, Abington.
Hodge, Miss Katharine C, 112 West
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Hodge, Mrs. T. L., 301 W. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Hodgskin, Mrs. N. N., 213 Eex Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Hoelscher, Mr. A. W., Box 52c, Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
Hoff, Mrs. L. P., 124 Levering Mill Eoad,
Bala-Cynwyd.
HofP, Miss Lola, 121 E. Main St., Lans-
dale.
Hoffman, Mr. Benjamin R., "The
Grange," City Line, West Overbrook.
Hoffman, Mrs. C. Fenno, Eadnor Eoad,
Eadnor.
Hoffman, Mrs. Mary E., 341 Mansion
Ave., Audubon, N. J.
Hoffman, Dr. Norbert L., 231 Oneida
St., Mt. Washington Station, Pitts-
burgh.
Hogeland, Miss Helen B., 245 Hansberry
St., Germantown.
Holcombe, Mrs. Alexander Henry, 343
Bala Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Holden, Mrs. George, Tunkhannock.
Holden, Miss Hallie K., 1832 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Holgate, Mr. Stuart J., 201 Crestmout
Terrace, Collingswood, N. J.
Holladay, Mrs. Charles B., Chadd's Ford.
Holland, Mrs. W. E., 710 W. Allen's
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Hollerith, Mr. Eichard, 307 Shrewsbury
Eoad, Riverton, N. J.
Hollingsworth, Mrs. I. Pemberton P.,
411 N. Walnut St., West Chester.
Holmes, Miss Harriet F., Selborne, S.
Batavia Road, Batavia, 111.
Holmes, Mr. Joshua M., Elkins Park.
Holmes, Mrs. Lynwood E., 235 S. 15th
St., Philadelphia.
109
Holmes, Miss Mary S'., 147 Manheim St.,
Philadelphia.
Holmes, Mrs. William L., 7005 N. 12th
St., Oat Lane.
Holt, Mrs. John, Jr., 589 Hansel Eoad,
Narberth P. O.
Holtsizer, Mrs. Leon, Skippack Pike,
Blue Bell, Montgomery Coimty.
Holtzhausser, Mrs. Ealph S., 2300 E.
York St., Philadelphia.
Hood, Mrs. Albert L., Wissahiekon Ave.
and Hortter St., Mt. Airy.
Hooper, Mrs. Robert P., "Wolverton,"
Chestnut Hill.
Hoopes, Mrs. Henry, 1304 Rodney St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Hoopes, Mrs. Maemillan, P. O. Box 831,
Wilmington, Del.
Hoot, Mr. Henry I., 301 Lafayette Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Hopkins, Mrs. Thomas S'., 264 E. Kings
Highway, Haddonfield, N. J.
Hopper, Mrs. Harry S., 211 Roberts
Road, Ardmore.
Hopper, Miss Marie Louise, 211 Roberts
Road, Ardmore.
Horn, Mr. Herman, Jr., 132 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Horner, Miss Hannah Mee, 24 Kent Eoad,
Upper Darby.
Hornor, Mr. Harold, E. Garden St., Mt.
Holly, N. J.
Hornor, Miss Euth, E. Garden St., Mt.
Holly, N. J.
Horsey, Miss Elizabeth L., Manchester
Ave., Media.
Horst, Mr. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave., Nar-
berth.
Horst, Mrs. A. L., 206 Forrest Ave.,
Narberth.
Horst, Mrs. George D., E. D. 1, Eeading.
Horst, Mrs. John D., P. O. Box 734,
Eeading.
Horstmann, Mrs. Walt^-r, 1900 Eitten-
house Scjuare, Philadelphia.
Horstmann, Mrs. William H., "Norwyn-
den," Overbrook.
Hoskins, Mrs. Albert L., Eosemont.
Hottle, Miss Mildred, 437 Hansberry St.,
Germantown.
House, Mrs. M. A., Chadd's Ford, Dela-
ware County.
Housman, Mr. G. S., Norristown.
Houston, Mrs. George H., The Barclay,
Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia.
Houston, Mrs. Samuel F., St. Martins.
Hovenden, Miss Martha M., Plymouth
Meeting.
How, Mrs. Harold W., Rosemont.
Howard, Mrs. Edgar B., Bryn Mawr.
Howarth, Mrs. H. A. S., "Tall Oaks,"
Torresdale.
Howe, Mrs. A. Leighton, 2037 Upland
Way, Philadelphia.
Howe, Mrs. George, 9189 Germantown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Howell, Mrs. Aubrey, 1206 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Howell, Mrs. Cooper, Blue Bell.
Howell, Miss Josephine E., 1206 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Howell, Mrs. Lardner, Whitford.
Howell, Mr. Samuel L., The Lenox, 1301
Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Howland, Miss Alice G., The Shipley
School, Bryn Mawr.
Howland, Mrs. C. A., 340 Glen Echo
Eoad, Mt. Airy.
Howland, Mrs. Ealph B.. Stirling Head-
quarters, Echo Valley Farms, Malvern.
How^son, Mrs. Charles H., 134 Walnut
Ave., Wayne.
Hubard, Mrs. Archibald B., 7908 York
Eoad, Elkins Park.
Hubbs, Mrs. John H., 620 W. Upsal St.,
Philadelphia.
Huber, Dr. Dawson H., 1823 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Huey, Mr. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huey, Mrs. Arthur B., 1816 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Huff, Miss Emelie DeGalley, 5925 Wood-
bine Ave., Overbrook.
Huff, Mrs. George F., Valley Brook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Huggins, Mrs. George A., 8309 Stenton
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Hughes, Mr. Hugh M., 814 Stanbridge St.,
Norristo\vTi. (G.)
Hughes, Mrs. Percy, 819 Tioga Ave.,
Bethlehem.
Hughes, Mr. William D., 3300 Race St.,
Philadelphia.
Humphreys, Miss Belle G., Box 156,
Woodstown, N. J.
Humpton, Mrs. Charles F., 562 Lincoln
Highway, Coatesville.
Huneker, Mrs. John, Brown's Mills, N. J,
Hungerbuehler, Miss Alberta H., 1530 N.
Franklin St., Philadelphia.
Hunt, Mrs. C. E., Enfield.
Hunt, Miss Edna, 17 Kings Highway
West, Haddonfield, N. J.
Huston, Mrs. A. F., "Graystone," Coates-
ville.
Huston, Miss Laetitia P., 219 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Huston, Miss Mary P., 219 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Hutchinson, Mrs. Joseph B., 1304 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Hutchinson, Mrs. E. P., Bethlehem.
Hutchison, Mrs. John W., 108 Harnpden
Ave., Narberth.
Hyatt, Mrs. Fred E., 6 W. Oak Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Hyde, Mrs. Charles L., 6632 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Ickler, Mrs. William A., 433 Vernon
Eoad, Jenkintown.
110
Iclell, Mrs. George S., 210 E. Goweu
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Iliff, Mrs. Arthur R., Old Ambler Home-
stead, Ambler.
Ilsley, Mrs. Edward, Devon.
Indahl, Mrs. Mauritz C, Panther Road,
Rydal.
IngersoU, Miss Anna Warren, Penllyn.
IngersoU, Mrs. C. Jared, Fort Washing-
ton.
IngersoU, Mrs. Edward, PeuUyn.
IngersoU, Mr. Henry McKean, S'pring
House, Montgomery County.
Ingraham, Mrs. Clayton C, The Drake,
1512 Spruce St., Philadelphia.
Ingram, Mrs. James E., Jr., Horseshoe
Lane, Paoli.
Ireland, Miss Sarah A., 4635 Leiper St.,
Erankford.
Irvine, Mrs. James, P. O. Box 145,
Devon.
Irvine, Mr. John, Grove Avenue, Flour-
tovoi, Montgomery County.
Irwin, Mrs. Boyle, R. D. 2, Phoenixville.
Irwin, Mrs. Eranklin K., Haverford
Court, Haverford.
Irwin, Mrs. Samuel B., 530 Spring Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Iszard, Mrs. Ralph J., 101 King's High-
way, West, Haddonfield_, N. J.
Jack, Dr. L. Foster, Haverford.
Jackson, Mrs. Albert Atlee, Chestnut
Hill.
Jackson, Mrs. George H., 615 N. McKean
St., Butler.
Jackson, Mrs. Henry W., Montgomery
and Bowman Aves., Merion.
Jackson, Mrs. John, Owen and Stewart
Aves., Lansdowne.
Jacobs, Mrs. John, Bryn Mawr.
Jacobs, Mrs. M. L., 837 Tioga Ave., Beth-
lehem.
Jacobs, Mrs. Reginald, Haverford.
Jacoby, Mrs. Edward C, Gulf Road and
Montgomery Ave., Radnor.
James, Miss Elizabeth S., 908 Darby
Road, Llanerch, Upper Darby P. O.
James, Mrs. Irvin M., 115 W. Court St.,
Doylestown.
James, Mrs. John E., Jr., Devon.
James, Miss Winifred L., Southampton.
Jameson, Mrs. Norman L., South Bow-
man Ave., Merion.
Jamison, Mrs. B. K., Jr., 250 South 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Janeway, Mrs. P. W., 3d and Edgemont
Sts., Media.
Janney, Mrs. Walter C, Bryn Mawr.
Jarden, Mrs. Charles P., 242 Wyncote
Road, Jenkintown.
Jarden, Mrs. Walter H., 7048 German-
town Ave., Mt. Airy.
Jarrett, Miss Anna, Hallowell.
Jarrett, Mrs. F. H., Jarrett's Gardens,
Bethayres. (C.)
Jeanes, Mrs. Henry S'., Devon.
Jeanes, Mrs. Isaac W., Moreland Ave.
and St. Martin's Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Jeanes, Mrs. Joseph Y., Villa Nova.
Jeffords, Mr. Walter M., Glen Riddle.
Jelinek, Miss Anne, Krisheim Lodge,
Chestnut Hill.
Jenkins, Mrs. Charles F., Kitchens Lane,
Germantown.
Jenkins, Mrs. Edward A., 506 N. Chester
Road, Swarthmore.
Jenkins, Mrs. H. Lawrence, Beaumont
Lodge, Devon.
Jenkins, Mr. Horace C, Gwynedd.
Jenkins, Mrs. Mary S. A., Box 87,
Gwynedd.
Jenks, Mrs. Charles T., 611 Winsford
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Jenks, Mrs. Horace H., College Ave., Hav-
erford.
Jenks, Mrs. John S., Seminole and Chest-
nut Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Jennings, Mrs. W. Beatty, 6012 Greene
St., Germantovra.
Jetter, Mrs. William F., Academy and
LoUer Roads, Hatboro.
Joachim, Miss Reba E., 939 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia. .
John, Mrs. R. H., 27 St. Paul's Road,
Ardmore.
Johnson, Mr. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Rosemont.
Johnson, Mrs. Alba B., Jr., Villa Nova.
Johnson, Mr. Archibald T., R. D. 2, Wil-
low Grove.
Johnson, Mrs. Archibald T., R. D. 2,
Willow Grove.
Johnson, Mrs. C. W., "Deanewald Acres,"
Fletcher Road, Wayne.
Johnson, Mrs. George, Sweet Air Farm,
Leslie, Maryland.
Johnson, Mrs. Guy R., Birchrunville,
Chester County.
Johnson, Mrs. Joseph Esrey, Jr., Valley
View Farm, Whitford.
Johnson, Mjrs. Lester B., "Gwyncroft
Farm," North Wales.
Johnson, Miss Margaret P., R. D. 2, Wil-
low Grove.
Johnson, Miss Marian K., 441 Berkeley
Road, Haverford.
Johnson, Mrs. Russell H., Jr., R. D. 2,
Norristown.
Johnson, Mr. W. Keating, 326 W. Spring-
field Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Johnson, Mrs. Walter H., City Ave. and
Green Hill Farms Road, Overbrook.
Johnson, Mrs. Walter J., 158 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Johnson, Mrs. William F. B., 314 Car-
penter Lane, Gennantown.
Johnson, Mrs. William J., St. Davids
Ave., St. Davids.
Johnson, Dr. William T., 512 Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Johnson, Mrs. William T., 512 Ogden
Ave., Swarthmore.
Ill
Johnston, Mr. Harry Clay, 247 W. Gorgas
Lane, Germantown.
Johnston, Mrs. Harry Clay, 247 W. Gor-
gas Lane, Gemiantown.
Johnston, Mr. J. W., 383 Bourse Bldg.,
Pliiladelphia.
Johnston, Mrs. William S., Lindsay Lane,
Eydal.
Jones, Miss Ada, 2107 Walnut St., Phila-
delphia.
Jones, Mrs. C. Clothier, 144 Valley Eoad,
Ardmore.
Jones, Mrs. E. Thompson, 520 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Cliestnut Hill.
Jones, Mr. Edward Morris, 654 Cai-peuter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Jones, Mrs. Edward Morris, 654 Carpen-
ter Lane, Mt. Airy.
Jones, Miss Florence M., 142 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
Jones, Mrs. Frank J. C, 926 Fayette St.,
Conshohocken.
Jones, Mr. Hem-y W., 25 E. 5th St., Ches-
ter.
Jones, Mr. Horace C, 5th and Fayette
Sta., Conshohocken.
Jones, Mrs. Horace M., 215 Pelham Eoad,
Germantown.
Jones, Mrs. J. Clifford, Wynnewood.
Jones, Mr. Joseph L., 200 Wyncote Road,
Jenkintown.
Jones, Mrs. Joseph L., 3d, 324 Waring
Eoad, Elkins Park.
Jones, Mrs. Margaret S., 27 Sellers Ave.,
Millbourne, Delaware Co.
Jones, Mrs. Spencer L., Conshohocken.
Jones, Mrs. Thomas E., Ashwood Eoad,
Villa Nova,
Jones, Mr. V. H., 5817 Cedarhurst St.,
Philadelphia.
Jones, Mr. William B., Supt., Highwood
CemeteiT, 2800 Brighton Eoad, Pitts-
burgh.
Jordan, Mrs. Frederick, Jordan's Pond,
Glenside.
Jump, Mr. John Austin, Swarthmore
College, Swarthmore.
Junkin, Mrs. George B., Bryn Mawr.
Justi, Mrs. Charles M., 237 Montgomery
Ave., Haverford.
Justice, Miss Hilda, St. George's Eoad,
Mt. Airy.
Justice, Mrs. Eandolph F., Wynnewood.
Kadel, Mrs. Mary I., Avon Apartments,
Narberth.
Kain, Mrs. Eobert E., 38 Linwood Ave.,
Ardmore.
Kaiser, Mrs. Frank A., 1710 Mousey Ave.,
Scranton.
Kane, Mrs. Bayard, Boot Eoad, West
Chester.
Kane, Mrs. John Kent, Shirley Farm,
West Chester.
Karb, Mrs. John, 305 Eodman St., Jenk-
intown.
Karr, Mrs. Joseph, Windy Corner, Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
Kaufmann, Mrs. Eugene M., Lenox Apts.,
13th and Spruce Sts., Philadelphia.
Kaufmann, Mrs. Morris A., Elkins Park.
Kaupp, Mr. O. H., 4th and Vine Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Kay, Miss Elizabeth E., 100 Warwick
Eoad, Haddonfield, N. J.
Keator, Mrs. John Frisbee, The Oak
Eoad and School House Lane, East
Falls P. 0.
Keen, Mrs. Carl T., 323 E. Phil-Ellena
St., Mt. Airy.
Keen, Mr. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
PhiladelpMa.
Keen, Mrs. Edwin F., 1816 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia,
Keen, Mrs. Frank A., 603 N. Walnut St.,
West Chester.
Keen, Mrs. Harold Perot, "Kynlyn,"
Bellevue, Del.
Keen, Mr. Harry E., 305 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Keenest, Mr. Esker L., 28 W. Fairview
St., Bethlehem.
Keeney, Miss Susan Dorothea, 318 E.
Lancaster Pike, Wayne.
Keffer. Dr. E. I., 5991 Drexel Eoad,
Overbrook.
Keim, Mi-s. Milton Newton, 6345 Wood-
bine Ave., Overbrook.
Keiser, Mrs. David H., E. D. 1, Sinking
Spring.
Kelley, Mrs. EdAvard, Bent Eoad, Wyn-
cote.
Kelley, Mr. John J., 752 Buck Eoad,
Haverford.
Kellogg, Mrs. Thomas M., 9253 German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Kelly, Mrs. Fred, "Little Gardens," Lans-
downe.
Kelly, Mr. Gregory C, 7 Snowden Eoad,
Bala-Cynwyd.
KeUy, Miss Margaret K., Box 328, West
Chester.
Kelly, Mrs. Thomas, 110 Llandaff Eoad,
Llanerch.
Kemble, Miss Annie L., 522 Parker Ave.,
Collingdale.
Kemble, Mrs. Francis W., Devon.
Kendall, Mrs. Paul, Haverford..
Kenderdine, Dr. Clarence, 6331 Greene
St., Mt. Airy.
Kendrick, Mrs. Murdock, 242 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Kennard, Mrs. William, 122 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, Burlington Co., N.
J.
Kennedy, Mr. Andrew, 55 Franklin Ave.,
Eosemont. (G.)
Kennedy, Mrs. B. H., 2405 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia,
Kennedy, Miss Katharine, 2405 Spruce
St., Philadelphia,
112
Kennedy, Miss Marie E., 2131 Cypress
St., Philadelphia.
Kent, Mrs. A. Atwater, Ardmore.
Kent, Mrs. William C, Wyneote.
Kenworthy, Mrs. N. Paul, Meadowbrook.
Kern, Mr. Addison D., 222 W. Linton St.,
Philadelphia.
Kerr, Mrs. Anna W., Downingtown.
Kerr, Mrs. William M., Trainer.
Ketchain, Mrs. Howard, Sunset Farm,
Whitemarsli.
Ketcham, Mrs. O. W., Stenton and Wil-
low Grove Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Keyser, Mr. C. N., "Brookcroft," Plym-
outh Meeting. (N.)
Keyser, Mrs. Herman J., Panther Eoad,
Eydal.
Keyser, Mrs. Eomaine, Colton Manor, At-
lantic City, N. J.
Kieferle, Mr. Charles J., 334 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kieferle, Mrs. Charles J., 334 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kift, Mr. Eobert, 4044 Haverford Ave.,
Philadelpliia.
Kille, Miss Helen, Wheat Eoad, Vineland,
N. J.
Killian, Mr. Edward J., 2d, 6320 Newton
Eoad, Lawndale.
Kimber, Miss N. B., 538 Locust Ave.,
Germantown.
Kind, Mrs. Philip, Lenox Eoad, Jenkin-
town.
Kindig, Mr. Eli, Jr., 225 N. Lansdowiie
Ave., Lansdowne.
King, Mrs. Caroline B., 1610 Pelhani
Eoad, Beechwood Park, Delaware Co.
King, Mrs. Florence B., 3622 Hamilton
St., Philadelphia.
King, Mrs. Joseph B., 7315 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
King, Mrs. Mary L., 316 Ehodes Place,
New Castle.
Kiimard, Mrs. Leonard H., Wynnewood.
Kintz, Miss Ella, Box 146, Pittston.
Kircher, Mr. Walter C, 2671 N. Napa
St., Philadelphia.
Kirehner, Mrs. Edward J., Eemington
Eoad, Overbrook.
Kirk, Mrs. John, 5 Tenby Eoad, Llan-
erch.
Kirkpatrick, Mr. M. Glen, 203 Morgan
Ave., Collingswood, N. J.
Kirsehbaum, Mr. Alan B., 8112 Cedar
Eoad, Elkins Park.
Kirsopp, Mr. E. C. B., Houston Eoad,
Eadnor.
Kittredge, Mr. Benjamin E., Strawberry,
S. C.
Klapp, Mrs. Wilbur P., Jr., Chew Eoad
and Lancaster Pike, Eadnor.
Klapp, Mrs. Wilbur Paddock, 1716
Spruce St., Pliiladelphia.
Klein, Mr. A. H., 3112 N. 27th St., Phil-
adelphia.
Klein, Mrs. Thomas, Brentford Eoad,
Haverford.
Kleinheinz, Mr. William, care Mr. Jo-
seph E. Widener, Elkins Park. (G.)
Klemm, Miss Eva E., Montgomery Ave.,
Villa Nova.
Klevan, Mrs. Oscar J., 506 N. Church
St., West Chester.
Kline, Miss Arlien, 536 Columbia. Ave.,
Lansdale.
Klose, Mr. Henry C, 1130 Yeadon Ave.,
Yeadon.
Klose, Mrs. Henry C, 1130 Yeadon Ave.,
Yeadon.
Knauf, Mrs. Paul W., 5 Cynwyd Eoad,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Kneedler, Mrs. Howard S., Jr., 121 W.
Cliestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Knight, Mr. D. Allen, 7201 McCallum St.,
Germantown.
Knight, Mrs. D. Allen, 7201 McCallum
St., Germantown.
Knight, Miss Helen, Haverford.
Knight, Mrs. Thomas L., Serpentine
Lane, Wyneote.
Knight, Mrs. W. B., 101 Congress St.,
Newtown.
Knipe, Mrs. Jay C, 6629 N. 8th St., Oak
Lane.
Knox, Mr. Irwin H., care Mrs. F. G.
Thomson, Devon. (G.)
Knox, Mrs. Jay, 34 Lakeview Drive,
Moorestown, N. J.
Knox, Mrs. Kerro, 420 Wister Eoad,
Wynnewood.
Koch, Mrs. E. E., 140 Valley Eoad, Ard-
more.
Koehler, Miss Mary H., 4815 Hazel Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Koehn, Mrs. H. W., 107 Orchard Way,
Eosemont.
Kohn, Mrs. Bernard, 1516 N. 15th St.,
Philadelphia.
Kohn, Mrs. Harry E., 682 S. Highland
Ave., Merion Station.
Kohn, Mrs. Irving, 1830 S. Eittenhouse
Square, Philadelphia.
Kolb, Mr. Bert. Charles, 411 Haddon
Ave., Collingswood, N. J.
Kolb, Mr. Emmanuel, 1925 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Kolb, Mrs. Louis J., W. School House
Lane, Germantown.
Kommer, Mr. John T., 519 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Koons, Mrs. Andora S., 507 Cherry St.,
Norristown.
Kraeger, Mr. Eobert H., Harper Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Krause, Mr. G. Fred, 215 E. Church St.,
Bethlehem.
Krause, Miss Idella M., 718 Haws Ave.,
Norristown.
Krauskopf, Mrs. Joseph, 4715 Pulaski
Ave., Germantown.
113
Krauss, Mr. George, 8019 Hillerest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Krebs, Mrs. George J., 476 W. Main St.,
Somerset.
Kreidel, Miss Martha, Art Dept., Board.
of Edueation, 21st St. and Parkway,
Philadelphia.
Krick, Mrs. 0. S., St. Davids.
Kriebel, Mrs. Samuel C, 217 N. Main
St., North Wales.
Kruger, Mrs. Charles K., 3115 W. Coul-
ter St., Germautown.
Krumbhaar, Mrs. E. B., Chestnut Hill.
Krusen, Mrs. Mabel A., 214 E. FreedJey
St., Norristown.
Kuhn, Mr. C. Hartman, 1430 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Kuhn, Mr. John, 405 W. Tabor Road,
Olney. (F.)
Kuhn, Mrs. John, Jr., 547 Olney Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Kunde, Mrs. Carl O., 549 S. Wycombe
Ave., Lansdowne.
Kunkel, Mrs. William B., "Dunroamin,"
Glenn E-oad, Ardmore.
Kunze, Miss Hedwig M., 6399 Woodbine
Ave., Philadelphia.
Kunzig, Mrs. August P., 2003 W. Tioga
St., Philadelphia.
Kurrie, Mr. George R., 333 S. 21st St.,
Philadelphia.
Kurtz, Mrs. Walter B., Jr., 202 Roberts
Road, Ardmore.
Kurtz, Mrs. William F., 7002 Wissahickon
Ave., GermantovsTi.
Kyle, Mrs. D. Braden, St. Davids.
Kynett, Mr. H. H., Box 22, Wayne.
LaBar, Mrs. W. K., Box 65, Stroudsburg.
La Boiteaux, Mrs. Isaac, Bryn Mawr.
Laeey, Mr. J. Madison, 329 Waring Road,
Elkins Park.
Lacey, Mrs. J. Madison, 329 Waring
Road, Elkins Park.
Laessle, Mrs. Albert, 511 Runnymede
Ave., Jenkintown.
Lafore, Mrs. J. A., Penn Valley Farm,
Narberth.
Laird, Mrs. J. Packard, Chesterbrook
Farm, Berwyn.
Laird, Mrs. John L., 2d, Chestnut Hill
Apts.. Chestnut Hill.
Laird, Mrs. W. W., 3200 W. 17th St., Wil-
mington, Del.
Lamb, Mrs. John G., 6329 X. 6th St., Oak
Lane.
Lamb, Mrs. Robert E., "Springdale
Farm," Egypt Road, R. D. 1, Norris-
town,
Lammot, Miss Dorothy, 495 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
LaMotte, Mrs. F., Jr., 1111 Berkeley
Road, Wilmington, Del.
Landis, Miss Bertha L., The Ontario,
Washington, D. 0.
Landreth, Mr. Burnet, Jr., 245 W. High-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill. (S.)
Landreth, Mr. S. Phillips, Bristol. (S.)
Landry, Mrs. W. A., 620 N. Chester Road,
Swarthmore.
Laudt, Mrs. G. E., Ourren Terrace, Nor-
ristown.
Lane, Mrs. 0. E., Woodcock Farm, West-
town.
Laugdon, Mrs. H. Maxwell, Gray's Lane,
Haverford.
Lankford, Mrs. Floyd, 4101 St. Paul St.,
Guilford, Baltimore, Md.
Lansdale, Mrs. W. Moylan, St. Davids.
Lapp, Mrs. P. C. Hollis, Malvern.
Lapp, Miss Peggy, West Chester.
Lapp, Mr. Walter S., 724 Derstine Ave.,
Lansdale,
Larzelere, Mrs. Walter D., "Thornhedge,"
St. Davids.
Lathrop, Mr. Francis C, Frazer Nurser-
ies, Lincoln Highway, Frazer. (N.)
Latimer, Mr. J. D., 5420 Westford Road,
Olney.
Latimer, Mrs. J. D., 5420 Westford Road,
Olney.
Lauer, Mr. Conrad N., P. 0, Box 147,
Penllyn, Montgomery Co.
Laughlin, Mrs. George M., Jr., Woodland
Road, Pittsburgh.
Laughlin, Mrs. Ledlie I., Princeton, N. J.
Laverty, Mrs. Maris Alexander, 229 Der-
wen Road, Merion.
Laverty, Mrs. William M., 115 Edge Hill
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Laviuo, Mr. Edwin M., Twin Willows,
Cresheim Valley Road, Chestnut Hill.
Lawser, Mrs. Henry C, 612 Carpenter
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Lay, JMiss Harriet M., 4015 Pine St.,
PMladelphia.
Lay, Mr. J. Tracy, 4015 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Lea, Mrs. Charles M., '^Vest Thorpe
Farm," Devon.
Lea, Mrs. Francis C, 421 Owen Road,
Wynnewood.
Lea, Mrs. Langdou, Calvert and Syca-
more Roads, Merion. (L.)
League, Mr. H. M., Bryn Mawr.
Leaming, Mrs. E. B., 228 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Lear, Mrs. Jolm B., 319 W. Mermaid
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Leas, Mrs. Donald S., Haverford.
Leas, Mrs. LeRoy P., Overbrook, West
Park Station.
Leas, Miss Mabel Alice, Roberts Road
and Wyndon Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Leatherman, Mrs. J. Kirk, 254 Green St.,
Doylestown.
Lebo, Mrs. EUerslie A., 37 Jackson Ave.,
Northfield, N. J.
LeBoutillier, Mrs. Benjamin Homer, Pa-
oli.
LeBoutillier, Mrs. Edward H., Haver-
ford.
114
Lederle, Mrs. Robert B., 45 Linwood
Ave., Ardmore.
Ledwith, Mr. William L., 6460 Sherwood
Eoad, Overbrook.
Ledwith, Mrs. William L., 6460 Sher-
wood Eoad, Overbrook.
Lee, Mr. Arthur, A. and V Sts., Swede-
land.
Lee, Miss Elizabeth Leighton, 12 Snow-
den Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Lee, Mrs. Horace H.^ 727 Panmure Road,
Haverford.
Lee, Mrs. Russell Morris, 308 Rex Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Lee, Mrs. William C, 219 W. Gravers
Lane, Claestnut Hill.
Leedom, Mrs. Charles, Rose Tree Farm,
Media.
Leedom, Mrs. Elizabeth D., 108 Tenby
Road, Llanereh, Delaware Co.
Leeds, Mr. M. E., 4901 Stentou Ave.,
Germantown.
Leeds, Miss Mary R., 162 S. Pennsylvania
Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
Leeds, Mrs. Morris E., 5321 Baynton St.,
Germantown.
Leeds, Miss Sarah B., 84 Branch St.,
Mount Holly, N. J.
Legters, Miss Alice I., Sherman, N. Y.
Lehman, Mr. Harry A., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Leibert, Miss E. Pauline, 421 N. New
St., Bethlehem.
Leighton, Mrs. Archibald O., Rosemont,
Lentz, Mrs. William 0., Rydal.
LeRoy, Miss Charlotte Otis, 26 Summit
St., Chestnut Hill.
Lesley, Mrs. Hugh, 155 W. Washington
Lane, Germantown.
Lesley, Mrs. Robert W., Haverford.
Lester, Mr. Joseph G., 2220 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Lever, Mrs. G. P., 4304 Frankford Ave.,
Frankford.
Levering, Mr. J. Walter, 567 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Levering, Mrs. J. Walter, 567 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Levis, Mr. Edward H., 438 Main St., Mt.
Holly, N. J.
Levy, Mr. Howard S., 220 W. Roberts
Road, Philadelphia.
Levy, Mrs. Lionel Faraday, 1016 West-
view St., Germantown.
Lewis, Mrs. Clifford, Jr., 240 S. 4th St.,
Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Effie M., 12th and Fayette
Sts., Conslioliocken.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 2207 St. James
Place, Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Francis A., 3d, Fishers Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Lewis, Mrs. Howard W., 1928 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. John Frederick, Morestein,
Chester County.
Lewis, Mrs. Leon E., 26 Spruce Lane,
Mahanoy City.
Lewis, Mrs. Leroy Moody, Curwen Road,
Rosemont.
Lewis, Mrs. Lynne K., 2004 W. Ontario
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Miss Maud E., 803 Mahantango
St., Pottsville.
Lewis, Mrs. O. G. L., Valley Road, Paoli.
Lewis, Mrs. Owen B., 3917 Vaux St.,
Queen Lane Manor, Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Paul, Strafford.
Lewis, Mrs. Saunders, 240 South 21st
St., Philadelphia.
Lewis, Mrs. Thomas H., Paoli.
Lewis, Mrs. William Draper, "Awbury,"
Germantown.
Ligget, Mrs. Howard B., Jr., Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Ligget, Mrs. J. Thomas, Haverford.
Ligget, Miss M. Elizabeth, Merion
Manor, Merion.
Ligget, Mrs. Robert C, Valley Forge.
Liggett, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., 302 Florence
Ave., Jenkintown.
Lightfoot, Mrs. J. C, Jr., Box 267, Villa
Nova.
Linden, Miss Clara, 7023 Lincoln Drive,
Mt. Airy.
Lindenmayer, Miss Josephine A., Box 66,
R. D. 1, Newtown.
Lindenmeyr, Mrs. Martha M., 7316 El-
bow Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Lindroth, Mr. Axel, Box 38, Bryn Mawr.
(G.)
Lineaweaver, Mrs. Charles P., Tlie
Quarry, Laurel Lane, Haverford.
Ling, Mr. Edward S., 100 E. Lynnwood
Ave., Glenside.
Linn, Mrs. G. R., Bowling Green, Media.
Linton, Mrs. M. Albert, 315 E. Oak Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Lippincott, Mr. C. Carroll, 135 Hilldale
Road, Lansdowne.
Lippincott, Mr. H. R., Mullica Hill, N. J.
Lippincott, Mrs. J. Bertram, 1712 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Lippincott, Mrs. J. Lawrence, Riverton
N. J.
Lippincott, Mrs. Joseph, 219 E. Main St.
Moorestown, N. J.
Lippincott, Mrs. Joseph W., Bethayres.
Lippincott, Miss Mary W., Wyncote.
Lippincott, Mrs. Robert C, 266 W. Tul
pehocken St., Germantown.
Lippincott, Mrs. Walter H., Wynnewood
Little, Miss Frances Russel, 1245 Nor-
wegian St., Pottsville.
Little, Mrs. Royal, 51 Thayer St., Provi
dence, R. I.
Littleton, Mr. Arthur, 24 E. Newfield
Way, Bala-Cynwyd.
Littleton, Mrs. Arthur, 24 E. Newfield
Way, Bala-Cynwyd.
Liversidge, Mrs. Horace, 202 Clwyd
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
115
Lloyd, Mr«. Horatio Gates, "Allgates,"
Haverford.
Lloyd, Mrs. Horatio Gates, "Allgates,"
Haverford.
Lloyd, Mr. Malcolm, Jr., 701 Commercial
Trust Bldg., Philadelphia.
Lloyd, Mrs. Stacy B., Ardmore.
Leber, Mrs. William D., 347 Aubrey
Eoad, Wynnewood.
Loder, Mrs. William H., 271 Prospect
St., East Stroudsburg.
Loeb, Mrs. Adolf, S. E. Cor. Wissahickoii
and Cliveden Sts., Germantown.
Loeb, Mrs. Howard A., Elkins Park.
Loeffler, Miss Helen, 427 Ruscomb St.,
Philadelphia.
Logan, Mrs. A. S., 3924 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Logan, Miss Alice, The Patch Box, West
Chester.
Logan, Miss Maria Dickinson, 4650 Ger-
mantown Ave., Philadelphia.
Logan, Mr. Michael L., Ridge Pike and
City Line, Eoxborough.
Logan, Mrs. Robert R., Eddington, Bucks
County.
Long, Mr. Bayard, 250 Ashmead Road,
Elkins Park.
Long, Mrs. Charles, Evergreen Farm, Ox-
ford, Talbot Co., Md.
Long, Mr. Chudleigh E., 239 Kathmere
Road, Brookline.
Long, Mr. William Merrill, 309 Waring
Road, Elkins Park. (N.)
Longsdorf, Mr. Paul W., Church Road
and Park Ave., Elkins Park.
Longshore, Mr. Frank H., Parish House,
E. Cumberland and Collins Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Loomis, Mrs. Harlow Henry, Jr., 412
Oak Lane, Wayne.
Loos, Miss Fanny H., 417 Haverford
Road, Narberth.
Lord, Mrs. Philip S., 320 W. Springfield
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Lorimer, Mr. George H., Wyncote.
Lorimer, Mrs. Graeme, Meadowbrook.
Louchheim, Mrs. Joseph A., Meeting-
House and York Roads, Elkins Park.
Lovering, Mrs. Joseph S., Jr., 33 E.
Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Low, Mrs. Howe, 8003 Navahoe St.,
Cliestnut Hill.
Lowe, Mrs. H. Otto, 228 Plymouth Place,
Merehantville, N. J.
Lucas, Miss Ethel, The Pink House, Ard-
more.
Luckenbach, Mrs. J. Lewis, 113 10th
Ave., Haddon Heights, N. J.
Ludington, Mrs. C. Townsend, Clovelly,
Ardmore.
Ludington, Mr. Wright S., Ardmore.
Ludlam, Mrs. Howard W., 46 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Ludlum, Mrs. L. M., Gladwyne.
Ludlum, Mrs. Seymour DeWitt, 1827
Pine St., Philadelphia.
Lukens, Mrs. Charles K., 8051 Stenton
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Lukens, Mr. George E., 214 School St.,
North Wales. (C.)
Lukens, Mrs. J. N., 4 E. Langhorne Ave.,
Upper Darby.
Lukens, Mrs. Lewis N., Jr., Towanda St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Lummis, Mrs. George 0., Washington
Lane and Noble Road, Jenkintown.
Lummis, Miss Helen K., 407 Cooper St.,
Camden, N. J.
Lummis, Miss Martha B., 407 Cooper St.,
Camden, N. J.
Lummis, Mrs. William H., 509 Warwick
Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Lurio, Mrs. Benjamin, 1309 Wheatland
Ave., Lancaster.
Lycett, Miss Rebecca H., Haverford.
Lyman, Mrs. J. V. R., 330 Wister Road,
Ardmore.
Lyman, Mrs. Moses, 16 Westmoreland
Ave., Longmeadow, Mass.
Lyon, Mrs. LeRoy S., 2107 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Lyons, Mrs. E. M., 18 Maple Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Lyons, Miss Florence N., 208 S. Barrett
St., Audubon, N. J.
McAllister, Mrs. J. Rutherford, 8134
Seminole Ave., Chestnut Hill.
McAllister, Miss Janet C, 326 W. State
St., Media.
McArel, Mr. E. P., care H. A. Dreer, Inc.,
1306 Spring Garden St., Philadelplna,
McAvoy, Mrs. Thomas B., Phoenixville.
MacCain, Mrs. C. S., The Cambridge,
Alden Park, Germantown.
McOaleb, Mr. William S. B., St. Davids.
McCallan, Mrs. John A., Greenwood
Apts., Jenkintown.
McCarthy, Mrs. E. B., Devon.
McCarthy, Mrs. J. A., 125 Summit Ave.,
Jenkintown.
MeCawley, Mr. Edmund S., Ithan. (L.)
MeCawley, Mrs. William N., 2031 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
McClelland, Mrs. Harry, Jr., Jarrettown.
McClintic, Mrs. H. H., 1130 Beechwood
Blvd., Pittsburgh.
MeCloskey, Mrs. John F., 8720 German-
town Ave., Chestnut Hill.
McCloud, Mrs. Charles M., 1705 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
MeCormick, Mrs. O. F., "Llanelew,"
Haverford.
McCornijick, Mrs. Vance, Cedar Cliff
Farms, Harrisburg.
MacCoy, Mrs. W. Logan, 69th St. and
City Line, Overbrook.
McCracken, Mr. D. K., care Mrs. T. Wil-
liams Roberts, Bala-Cynwyd. (G.)
McCracken, Mrs. Robert T., 1009 West
view St., Germantown.
116
McCreary, Mrs. George D., St. Martins,
Chestnut Hill.
McCreai-y, Mrs. William H., 114 Glenn
Road, Ardmore.
MeCreery, Mrs. Samuel, "Spring Meadow
Farm," Valley Forge.
McCurdy, Mr. Harold E., 309 Llandrillo
Eoad, Bala-Cynwyd.
McCurdy, Mr. J. Aubrey, 7315 Elbow
Lane, Mt. Airy.
McCurdy, Mrs. J. Aubrey, 7315 Elbow
Lane, Mt. Airy.
McCurdy, Miss Mary C, 309 Llandrillo
Eoad, Bala-Cynwyd.
McCurdy, Miss Mary M., 6023 Drexel
Road, Overbrook.
Macdonald, Mrs. Eobiai, Box 582, Villa
Nova.
McDougal, Mrs. George, 533 Elkins Ave.,
Elkins Park.
McDowell, Miss Katherine D., 815 Mont-
gomery Ave., Narberth.
McDowell, Miss Louise A., 3749 Wood-
land Ave., Drexel Hill.
McDowell, Miss Margaret E., 1525 Con-
lyn St., Philadelphia.
McDowell, Miss Martha, Wayne Manor,
Germantown.
McFadden, Mr. J. Fraidclin, Eosemont.
McFadden, Mrs. J. Fraitklin, Eosemont.
McFarland, Mrs. George K., "Winridge,"
West Chester.
McFarland, Mrs. Harold B., 268 Lenox
Eoad, Jeukintowm.
McFarland, Mr. J. Horace, Box 687, Har-
risburg.
MacFarland, Mr. Walter G., Jr., Hunt-
ingdon Valley.
McGill, Miss Mary E., 700 Hazelhurst
Eoad, Meriou.
McGinnis, Mrs. Mary V., 328 S. Manoa
Eoad, Manoa, Delaware Co.
McGonigle, Mr. Michael F., 6700 Trinity
St., Philadelphia.
MacGowan, Miss Viola, 411 Fishers Road,
Bryn Mawr.
McGowin, Mrs. E. S., 322 Kent Eoad,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Mcllhenny, Mrs. John D., Lincoln Drive
and Johnson St., Germantown.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Dickerson, "Pine Hill,"
Ardmore.
Mcllvain, Mrs. Hugh, Haverford.
Mcllvain, Mrs. J. Gibson, "Lowebrook,"
Downingtown.
Mcllvaine, Miss Frances Edge, "Glen Isle
Farm," Downingtown.
Mclnnes, Mr. Walter S., 1808 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
McKaig, Mrs. Edgar S., Radnor.
McKean, Mrs. Bispham, Ithan.
McKeever, Mrs. William, 331 Louella
Ave., Wayne.
Mackenzie, Mrs. James, 24 Narbrook
Park, Narberth.
McKinney, Miss Edith, 5433 Morris St.,
Germantown.
McLain, Miss Helen Louise, 509 Harvard
Ave., Swarthmore.
McLain, Mrs. Louis, 620 Pembroke Eoad,
Bryn Mawr.
McLean, Mrs. Eobert, Fort Washington.
McLean, Mrs. William L., Jr., St. Mar-
tin's Lane, Chestnut Hill.
MacLeod, Mr. Alexander, "Stoneleigh,"
Villa Nova.
McLeod, Mr. D. Harry, Todmorden
Farm, Media. (G.)
Macmeney, Miss Elizabeth, 439 Penn
Ave., Drexel Hill.
McMichael, Mr. Emory, Devon.
McMichael, Mrs. Emory, Devon.
McMichael, Mrs. Harrison, 13 St. Asaph
Eoad, Bala.
McMicking, Miss Elizabeth I. S., Girard
College, Philadelphia.
McMullau, Mrs. James, 7030 Wissahickon
Ave., Mt. Airy.
MacMuUen, Mrs. C. Wallace, 6 E. New-
field Way, Bala-Cynwyd.
McMullin, Mrs. David, Jr., 1919 Pan-
ama St., Philadelphia.
MoNeal, Mr. D. Eaymond, Jericho Eoad,
Abington.
McNeal, Mrs. James Hector, Newtown
Square.
McNeely, Miss Florence, 444 N. Highland
Ave., Marion.
McNees, Mrs. C. B., 101 Hazel Ave., Kit-
tanning.
McNees, Mrs. W. G., Providence Eoad at
5th St., Media.
McNeills, Mr. John F., S. W. cor. Park
Ave. and 65th Ave., Oak Lane.
McNichol, Mrs. James P., St. Davids.
McQwen, Mrs. F., 5871 Drexel Eoad,
Philadelphia.
Macpherson, Mrs. Duncan P., 110 Web-
ster Ave., Wyncote.
Macpherson, Mrs. John C, 317 Llandrillo
Eoad, Bala-Cynwyd.
McSparran, Miss Isabel K., Fumiss, Lan-
caster Co.
MacWilliams, Miss Elizabeth, State
Teachers College, Shippensburg.
Madeira, Mrs. E. W., School Lane, Ger-
mantown.
Magee, Miss Agnes D., 409 Newbold
Eoad, Jenkintown.
Magee, Mrs. Henry I., 6th St. and Me-
dary Ave., Oak Lane.
Magee, Miss Jane I., 315 Bala Ave., Cyn-
wyd.
Magill, Mrs. John T., 8229 Manor Eoad,
Elkins Park.
Magill, Mrs. S. N., Elkins Ave., Elkins
Park.
Maguire, Mrs. Frank Hain, 146 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Maguire, Mrs. John G., 7015 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
117
Majodeh, Miss Najave, Chew's P. O., Box
24, N. J.
Major, Mrs. C. P., 10th St. and Oak Lane
Ave., Oak Lane.
Makin, Mrs. Carrie, 7027 Greenway Ave.,
Philadelpliia.
Malehorn, Mr. C. J., 423 Grove Place,
Nar berth.
Mallon, Miss Louise Baeder, care Miss
Dorothy Mallon, 247 S. Juniper St.,
Philadelphia.
Maimed, Mrs. A. T., 1021 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Manda, Mr. Joseph, 130 Main St., W.
Orange, N. J. (C.)
Manda, Mr. W. A., S. Orange, N. J. (C.)
Mann, Mrs. Georg-e S., 408 Manor Ave.,
Millersville.
Mann, Mrs. Levis L., 7711 S't. Martins
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Mannix, Mrs. D. Pratt, Montgomery Ave.,
Rosemont.
March, Mrs. Irwin W., 501 N. Franklin
St., Pottstown.
Markey, Miss Catherine P., 2528 S.
Chadwick St., Philadelphia.
Markle, Mrs. Alvan, "Highacres," Hazle-
ton.
Markle, Mrs. Alvan, Jr., 338 W. Green
St., Hazleton.
Markle, Mrs. George B., P. O. Box 426,
Hazleton.
Markoe, Mrs. Harry, Penllyn.
Markoe, Mrs. John, 1630 Locust St., Phil-
adelphia.
Maron, Miss Laura, 35 Bei-wick Road,
Overbrook.
Marr, Miss S. A., 503 W. 12th St., Wil-
mington, Del.
Marsh, Mrs. J. C, Box F, Tunbridge
Road, Haverford.
Marshall, Mrs. F. Warren, Radnor.
Marshall, Mrs. J. Warren, Yorklyn, Del.
Marshall, Mrs. John, 1718 Pine St., Phil-
adelphia.
Marshall, Mrs. T. C, Yorklyn, Del.
Marston, Mrs. C. Harold, 6401 Wissa-
liickon Ave., Germantown.
Martin, Mr. Carl N., Pine Creek Farm,
Anselma.
Martin, Mrs. Carl N., Pine Creek Farm,
Anselma.
Martin, Mrs. Charles U., 205 S. 45th St.,
Philadelphia.
Martin, Dr. Edward, "Orchard Farm,"
Media.
Martin, Mrs. John C, Wedgewood, Wyn-
cote.
Martin, Mrs. Sydney E., Elkins Park.
Masland, Mrs. Charles W., 1202 Strat-
ford Ave., Melrose Park.
Masland, Mr. Walter E., Lenox Road,
Jenkintown.
Mason, Mr. Alfred C, 103 Allen Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Mason, Miss Jane Graham, "Cerne,"
School House Lane, Germantown.
Mason, Miss Laura K., 5528 Greene St.,
Germantown.
Mason, Miss Mary Taylor, "Cerne,"
School House Lane, Germantown.
Mason, Mr. W. Laurence, Golf View
Road, Doylestown.
Mason, Mr. William Clarke, 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Master, Rev. Dr. Henry B., "Glenthorne,"
Devon.
Master, Mrs. Henry B., "Glenthorne,"
Devon.
Masters, Miss Jessie W., 3308 Baring
St., Philadelphia.
Mathieu, Mr. Alfred E., "Playwickey,"
Rydal.
Matliieu, Mrs. Peter N., 1500 N. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Matienzo, Mrs. Manuel, 441 E. State St.,
Media.
Matthes, Mrs. P. E., Merbrook Lane,
Merion.
Matthews, Miss Alice E., Langhorne.
Matthews, Mr. Edward, care Mr. George
D. Rosengarten, Malvern. (G.)
Matthews, Mr. Edwin, Out Door Arts
Co., Flourtown. (N.)
Mattis, Mr. J. Stafford, 4542 Manayunk
Ave., Roxborough. (S.)
Mattoon, Mr. Harold G., 425 Tregaron
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Maule, Mr. Edmund W., 654 Chester
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Maule, Mrs. Edmund W., 654 Chester
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Maurer, Mrs. Joseph W., 2d, 402 Chapel
Road, Elkins Park.
Mayberry, Mrs. Charles B., 225 Lans-
downe Ave., Wayne.
Mayer, Mrs. Clinton 0., 1520 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia,
Mazer, Mr. David, Three Point Gardens,
E. Stroudsburg. (N.)
Mechling, Mrs. B. Franklin, Flourtown.
Meehling, Mrs. Benjamin S., 303 River
Bank, Riverton, N. J.
Mecray, Mrs. P. M., Oak Ave., Moores-
town, N. J.
Meeds, Mrs. Hollyday S., Jr., "Good
stay," Wilmington, Del.
Meehan, Mr. Charles E., 5 S. Mole St.,
PhUadelphia. (W.)
Meehan, Mr. J. Franklin, 400 Vernon
Road, Mt. Airy. (L.)
Meehan, Mr. S. Mendelson, Pemiview
Ave., Larclmiont, Newtown Square. (N.)
Megargee, Mrs. George M., 6807 Quincy
St., Germantown.
Megargee, Mrs. Gilbert, 527 Sussex Road,
Wynnewood.
Meier, Mr. G. M., 1831 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Meigs, Mrs. Arthur V., 1322 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
118
Meigs, Mrs. John F., 2d, Ithan.
Meirs, Mrs. Eichard Wain, 2048 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Melcher, Mrs. Webster A., State Eoad,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Mellor, Mr. Sigoumey, 721 Old Lancaster
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Mercer, Mrs. William R., "Aldie,"
Doylestown.
Meredith, Miss Helen C, 226 S. Church
St., West Chester.
Meredith, Mrs. Howard Carr, 164 W.
Sharpnaek St., Mt. Airy.
Merrick, Mrs. R. R., Villa Nova.
Merrick, Mrs. Samuel V., Bell's Mill
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Merritt, Mrs. James S., Abington, Mont-
gomery Co.
Merritt, Mr. Morris H., 113 W. Willow
Grove Ave., Cliestnut Hill.
Mertz, Mrs. Oscar E., 29 Pelham Road,
Germantown.
Mervine, Mrs. William G., 905 Drexel
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Merz, Mrs. Millard, Jr., 124 Township
Line, Jenkintown.
Metcalf, Mrs. W. G., 131 W. Pine St.,
Audubon, N. J.
Meter, Dr. Edward G., 25th and Grand -
view Sts., Mt. Penn.
Meyer, Miss Ada, 325 N. 34th St., Phil-
adelphia.
Meyer, Mr. Frank B., Frandama Gar-
dens, Elkins Park. (C.)
Meyer, Mrs. Fred L., 1014 Prospect Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Meyer, Mrs. Herman, 325 N. 34th St.,
Philadelphia.
Meyer, Mrs. Walter, 246 W. Upsal St.,
E. 401, Philadelphia.
Michelin, Mrs. G. H., Milltown, N. J.
Michell, Mr. F. J., Jr., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Michell, Mr. Frank B., 518 Market St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
Mickle, Mrs. Robert Thomas, 430 W.
Strafford St., Germantown.
Middleton, Mrs. Albert C, 232 E. Main
St., Moorestown, N. J.
Middleton, Mrs. C. Wilmer, Hotel War-
wick, 17th and Locust Sts., Philadel-
phia.
Middleton, Mrs. Clara, 1321 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Middleton, Mr. Fenton H., 1416 S. Penn
Square, Philadelphia.
Middleton, Miss May A., Methodist Epis-
copal Hospital, Broad and Wolf Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Middleton, Miss Rena S., 1851 W. Mar-
shall St., Norristown.
Middleton, Mrs. Wilmer, 114 W. Ritten-
house St., Germantown.
Miehle, Miss Edith, 571 E. Norwegian
St., Pottsville.
Miesse, Mrs. Katharine, 1611 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Miles, Mr. John M., 541 Rock Spring
Drive, Clarendon, Va.
Miller, Mrs. A. E., 6804 N. 10th St.,
Philadelphia.
Miller, Mrs. Augustus J., 413 Newbold
Road, Jenkintown.
Miller, Mrs. Clinton H., 3121 W. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Miller, Mrs. D. Yeakel, 500 Bethlehem
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Miller, Dr. Edwin B., 204 W. Monument
Ave., Hatboro.
Miller, Mrs. John Faber, 333 DeKalb
St., Norristown.
Miller, Mrs. Merle Middor, Wissaliickon
Ave. and Hortter St., Mt. Airy.
Miller, Mrs. R. M., Jr., 95 Stratford
Ave., Lansdowne.
Miller, Mrs. T. Grier, Penn Valley, Nar-
berth.
Miller, Mr. Walter P., 452 York Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Mills, Mrs. Everett W., 203 Sunset Ave.,
Jenkintown Manor.
Mills, Mr. M. P., 5323 Chester Ave.,
Philadelphia. (C.)
Milne, Mr. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Milne, Mrs. Caleb J., Jr., 6611 Wissa-
hickon Ave., Germantown.
Milne, Mrs. David, School House Lane,
Germantown.
Mirkil, Mrs. Thomas H., 3027 Queen
Lane, East Falls.
Mitchell, Mrs. Charles Davis, P. O, Box
107, Wallingford.
Mitchell, Mrs. Charles F., 2003 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Mitchell, Mr. George L., 5990 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Mitchell, Mrs. J. B., 6432 Emlen St.,
Germantown.
Mitchell, Mrs. J. Clayton, North Wales.
Mitchell, Mrs. Jolm J., Jr., Box 137, St.
Davids.
Mitchell, Mrs. John K., Reeulver, West
Chester.
Mitchell, Miss Mary B., 5149 Mon-is St..
Germantown.
Moffett, Mrs. Louis B., 450 Spruce Lane,
Woodbury, N. J.
Moffly, Mrs. William T., 624 W. Allen
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Monroe, Mr. William H., care Mrs. Bruce
Ford, Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Montgomery, Mr. Gilbert M., Devon.
Montgomery, Mrs. Kingsley, 20th St. and
Providence Ave., Chester.
Montgomeiy, Mr. Sidney, P. 4, Winder-
mere Court, Wayne. (N.)
Montgomery, Mr. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Montgomery, Mrs. W. W., Jr., Radnor.
Moon, Mrs. Owen, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Moore, Mrs. A. O., Highland Park, 111.
119
Moore, Mrs. Bessie R., 299 Maple Ave.,
Doylestown.
Moore, Mr. Frederick H., care Mrs. H. G.
Lloyd, Haverford. (G.)
Moore, Mrs. George W., 316 Cynwyd
Road, Cynwyd.
Moore, Mrs. H. McKnight, Box 96, Bryu
Mawr.
Moore, Mrs. H. W., 16 Elliott Ave., Bryn
Mawr.
Moore, Mrs. Harold T., Wynnewood.
Moore, Mr. J. Clark, Jr., 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Moore, Mr. James S., 63 Lodges Lane,
Cynwyd.
Moore, Mrs. James S., 63 Lodges Lane,
Cynwyd.
Moore, Mr. John, 233 Sagamore Road,
Brookline, Delaware Co.
Moore, Mr. Philip H., 6644 Germantown
Ave., Pliiladelphia.
Moore, Mrs. Powers M., 19 Colwyn Lane,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Moore, Mrs. Springer H., cor. Railroad
and Walnut Aves., Haverford.
Moore, Mrs. Walter T., 121 W. Coulter
St., Germantown.
Moore, Mrs. William G., 257 Kings High-
way, West, Haddonfield, N. J.
Moorehouse, Mrs. H. Wilson, Golf House
and Andover Roads, Haverford.
Morgan, Mrs. Clinton W., Willow Grove.
Morgan, Mrs. F. Corlies, Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. John B., 8635 Montgomery
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. Marshall S., Stenton Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. Ralph, Wyncote.
Morgan, Mrs. Randal, 398 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morgan, Mrs. Reed A., "Manatawna,"
Roxborough.
Morian, Mrs. Clarke H., 506 Anthwyn
Road, Merion.
Mormann, Mrs. M., 355 Windemere Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Morrell, Mrs. Edward, Torresdale.
Morris, Mrs. A. Saunders, Haverford.
Morris, Mr. Effingham B., Ardmore.
Morris, Miss Elizabeth Canby, 5442 Ger-
mantown Ave., Germantown.
Morris, Miss Ellen, Villa Nova.
Morris, Mrs. Harrison S., Pear Hill, Oak
Lane.
Morris, Mrs. Herbert C, Scotforth Road,
Mt. Airy.
Morris, Mrs. I. Wistar, 38 Summit St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Morris, Mrs. J. Cheston, Spring House.
Morris, Mr. Lawrence J., 212 Lafayette
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Morris, Miss Margaret E., Rosemont.
Morris, Miss Marion O., School of Horti-
culture, Ambler.
Morris, Miss Mary W., 2129 St. James
Place, Philadelpliia.
Morris, Mr. Samuel W., Sunset Ave.,
Chestnut HilL
Morris, Mrs. Samuel W., Sunset and Nor-
wood Aves., Chestnut Hill.
Morris, Mrs. W. P., Berwyn.
Morrison, Mrs. J. I., 223 E. Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Morrison, Mr. John, W. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut HUl. (G.)
Morrison, Mr. John A., 8105 Flourtown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Morrison, Dr. Mary A., Mecum Bldg.,
Salem, N. J.
Morrow, Mrs. L. B., 710 Franklin St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Morrow, Mr. Robert J., Towanda St.,
Chestnut Hill. (G.)
Morse, Mr. Norman K., 1204 E. Wash-
ington Lane, Germantown.
Morton, Mrs. Arthur V., 1015 Clinton
St., Philadelphia.
Morton, Dr. George D., Honey Brook,
Morton, Mr. William, 148 N. 35th St.,
Camden, N. J. (G.)
Mosier, Mr. Eugene O., 6349 Drexel Road,
Overbrook.
Moss, Mr. Frank H., Bala-Cynwyd.
Moss, Mrs. Joseph, 6625 Greene St., Ger-
mantown.
Mott, Mrs. A. C, Jr., "The Woods,"
Lansdale.
Mott, Miss Marion, Radnor.
Motteram, Mrs. William C, 703 E. Wil-
low Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Moyer, Mr. Alvin W., "Floral Croft,"
Box 106, Dublin. (F.)
Moyer, Mrs. D. Brace, 701 W. Main St.,
Lansdale.
Moyer, Mrs. Joseph S., Pelham Court,
Germantown.
Moyer, Mr. William F., 229 E. Fornance
St., Norristown.
Moyer, Mrs. William F., 229 E. Fornance
St., Norristown.
Mudd, Mrs. Stuart, 734 Millbrook Lane,
Haverford.
Muench, Mrs. Alfred G., 11 Pennstone
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Muehlenberg, Miss Kate H., 212 Cherry
Drive, Wyomissing.
Muhly, Mrs. George C, 464 State Road,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Mulford, Mrs. S. K., Jr., Meadowbrook.
Muller, Mr. Adolf, DeKalb Nurseries,
Norristown. (N.)
Muller, Mrs. Frank, St. Davids.
Muller, Mr. O. A., Ambler. (G.)
Mulligan, Miss Helen S., 309 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Murtagh, Mrs. J. C, 310 N. High St.,
West Chester.
Musser, Mrs. Cliarles S., 25 Dudley Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Miss Alice Emily, Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
120
Mustin, Mr. Frank H. Fleer, Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. Gilbert B., Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mrs. Gilbert B., Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. Gilbert B., Jr., Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Mustin, Mr. J. Burton, Rosemont.
Muth, Mrs. Russell A., 1204 Dyre St.,
Frankford.
Myers, Mr. B. F., 7716 Navahoe St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Myers, Mrs. Charles, St. Davids.
Myers, Mrs. Edward B., Abington Ave.
west of Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Myers, Mrs. Lawrence, 710 S'pring Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Myers, Miss Sara Anne, Kenridge Farms,
Bethlehem.
Myers, Mrs. William Kurtz, 206 Winding
Way, Merion.
Nabenhauer, Mr. Fred P., Overhill Ave.,
Somerton.
Nalle, Mrs. Jesse, Whitemarsh.
Nalle, Mrs. Richard T., E. Bell's Mill
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Nassau, Mrs. William L., Jr., R. D. 1,
Downingtown.
Natt, Miss Josephine A., 311 S. 13th St.,
Philadelphia.
Neale, Mr. James B., Buck Run, Schuyl-
kill Co.
Neall, Miss Adelaide W., Roumfort Road,
Mt. Airy.
Nearing, Mr. G. Guy, Guyencourt, Del.
(N.)
Neel, Mrs. Percy L., 449 Bowman Ave.,
Merion.
Neely, Mrs. Matthew A., Apt. 5, West
Chelten Apts., 146 W. Chelten Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Neff, Mrs. R. C, 546 Sussex Road, Wyn-
newood.
Neilson, Mrs. Edward S., AUiquippa
Faiin, Malvern.
Neilson, Mr. H. R., St. Davids.
Neilson, Mrs. Lewis, St. Davids.
Nelke, Mrs. Herbert L., 1016 70th Ave.,
Oak Lane.
Netter, Mrs. Helen Staples, P. O. Box 25,
Penllyn.
Nevin, Mrs. Charles W., 2021- Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Nevin, Mrs. William L., Hill Top Farm,
Radnor.
Newbold, Mrs. David, Haverford.
Newbold, Mrs. Eugene S., St. Davids.
Newbold, Miss Frances C, 3300 Pacific
Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
Newbold, Mrs. John daCosta, Jr., Mead-
owbrook Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Newbold, Mrs. John S., Jenkintown.
Newbold, Miss Margaret E. I., Irvine,
Warren Co.
Newburger, Mrs. Frank L., 534 ELkins
Ave., Elkins Park.
Newcomer, Mrs. S. S., 73 Fraley St.,
Kane.
Newell, Miss Marie L., 187 E. Court St.,
Doylestown.
Newhall, Mrs. D. A., Old Gulph Road,
Narberth.
Newhall, Miss E. S., "Carlton," Midvale
Ave., Germantown.
Newhall, Mr. Thomas, Ithan.
Newhall, Mrs. Thomas, Ithan.
Newlin, Mrs. Arthur, 1804 Pine St., Phil-
adelphia.
Newlin, Mrs. Richard M., Whitford.
Newlon, Mrs. Jesse H., 420 Riverside
Drive, New York, N. Y.
Newton, Mrs. A. Edward, Berwyn.
Newton, Mrs. E. Swift, Daylesford.
Nichol, Mrs. James P., 357 Pelham Road,
Germantown.
Nichols, Mrs. H. S. Prentiss, 346 Pelham
Road, Germantown.
Nichols, Mr. Roy B., Torresdale.
Nicholson, Mrs. Edgar W., Rose Hedge,
Wynnewood.
Nicholson, Miss Edythe, 308 Florence
Ave., Jenkintown.
Nicholson, Mr. L. A., Rosemont.
Nicholson, Mrs. Percival, 16 W. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Nicholson, Mrs. W. R., 2023 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Nicholson, Mrs. William H., Jr., 118 E.
Oak Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Nicolls, Mrs. Frederick W, 1531 Mineral
Spring Road, Reading.
Nields, Mrs. John P., 1401 Broome St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Niessen, Mr. Arthur A., 507 Liberty
Trust Bldg., Broad and Arch Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Niessen, Mrs. Leo, Box 62, Meadowbrook.
Nimlet, Miss Virginia C, 6834 Anderson
St., Mt. Airy.
Nixon, Mrs. Horace F., 8104 St. Martins
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Norcross, Mrs. Clara B., 222 Roberts
Ave., Glenside.
Normand, Mr. H. Benjamin, 304 S. 50th
St., Philadelphia.
Norris, Mrs. Charles C, Mt. Pleasant
Road, Bryn Mawr.
Norris, Mrs. Charles C, Jr., Box 336,
Haverford.
Norris, Mr. George W., Gwynedd Valley.
Norris, Mrs. George W., Gwynedd Valley.
Norris, Mrs. William Fisher, P. O. Box
146, Bryn Mawr.
North, Miss Ruth M., Red Lion Road,
Bustleton.
Nyce, Mr. W. G., Pottstown.
Oakford, Miss Elsie, Mayfair House,
Lincoln Drive and Johnson St., Ger-
mantown.
121
Oakford, Mrs. J. W., "Lowlands," Wav-
erly.
Obdyke, Miss Mary, Radnor.
Oberholtzer, Mr. Ellis P., 506 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Obermayer, Mrs. Leon J., 821 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
O'Connor, Mrs. Haldeman, 13 N. Front
St., Harrisburg.
Off, Mrs. Walter P., Eeniingion Eoad,
Wynnewood.
O'Leary, Mrs. J. J., 712 S. Alden St.,
West Philadelphia.
O'Neill, Mrs. W. Charles, Jr., Hunting-
don Valley.
O'Neill, Mrs. W. Paul, Rydal.
Onyx, Mr. Herbert P., E. D. 4, West
Chester.
Ord, Mrs. R. Laird, 2523 S. Cleveland
St., Philadelphia.
Oruston, Dr. D. G., 6771 Gennantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Orr, Mrs. George P., Berwyn.
Orth, Mrs. C. J., 303 Forrest Ave., Am-
bler.
Osborn, Mrs. H. Fairfield, Sheaff Lane,
Wliitemarsh.
Osborne, Mrs. Frank, Gladwyn, AUoway,
N. J.
Osborne, Mr. John F., 8542 West Chester
Pike, Kirklyn, Upper Darby.
Ostheinier, Miss Elizabeth G., Jenkintown.
Ostheimer, Dr. Maurice, Grimmet, Whit-
ford.
Ostheinier, Mrs. Maurice, Grimmet, Whit-
ford.
Ott, Mrs. George W., 128 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Germantown.
Ott, Mrs. Lambert, Jr., 90 Maple Ave.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Otter, Mrs. William C, 1016 Oak Lane
Ave., Oak Lane.
Ottey, Mrs. Sara P., 108 Ashby Road,
Upper Darby.
Oughton, Mr. Cliarles T., 209 Meeting-
house Road, Jenkintown.
Outen, Dr. Charles Wesley, 1606 S. 4th
St., Philadelphia.
Packard, Mrs. F. R., 304 S. 19th St.,
Philadelphia.
Packard, Mrs. Frederick A., W. Sunset
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Packard, Mrs. George Randolph, Villa
Nova.
Packard, Mrs. John H., White Horse
Road, Berwyn.
Packard, Mrs. John H., 3d, cor. New St.
and Stenton Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Page, Mrs. Edward C, Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Edward Sydenham, Wayne.
Page, Mrs. George Bispham, Shipley
Farm, Secane.
Page, Mr. George C, Beech Tree Lane,
Wayne.
Page, Mrs. George C, Beech Tree Lane,
Wayne.
Page, Mr. L. Rodman, 1510 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Page, Mrs. Robert H., Winsford Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mr. Eobert H., Jr., Winsford Eoad,
Bryn Mawr.
Page, Mrs. Eobert Holmes, Willowbrook
Farm, Paoli.
Page, Mrs. Walter, Haverford.
Paley, Mrs. Samuel, 614 E. Sedgwick St.,
Mt. Airy.
Pallatt, Mrs. Winfield D., 7942 Montgom-
ei-y Ave., Elkins Park.
Palmer, Mrs. Charles C, 311 Summit
Ave., Jenkintown.
Palmer, Miss Lydia A., 400 N. 40th St.,
Philadelphia.
Palmer, Dr. Samuel C, Swartlunore Col-
lege, Swarthmore.
Pancoast, Mrs. Albert, The Wellington,
Philadelphia.
Pancoast, Mrs. Henry K., Box 592, Gray's
Lane, Haverford.
Pardee, Miss Olive, Whitemarsh.
Paret, Mr. Louis F., 50 E. Oak Lane
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Paret, Mrs. Louis F., 50 E. Oak Ave.,
Moorestowai, N. J.
Parish, Dr. Benjamin D., Enfield, Mont-
gomery Co.
Parish, Mrs. H. G., Enfield, Montgomery
Co.
Park, Mrs. Frederick S., 343 Brookway
Ave., Merion.
Park, Mrs. Lewis A., Sewickley.
Parker, Mrs. Heber, 1154 Eeading Blvd.,
Wyomissing.
Parker, Mr. Hiram, Moylan-Eose Valley.
Parkhurst, Mrs. Charles W., 130 Derwen
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Parmiter, Mrs. Edward, Summit Ave.,
Fort Washington.
Parry, Mrs. George, 307 Wyncote Road,
Jenkintown.
Parry, Mrs. Heni-y C, Langhorne.
Parry, Mrs. William B., Langhorne.
Parsons, Mrs. J. Clarence, S. Main St.,
Phoenixville.
Parsons, Mrs. Lems H., Villa Nova.
Passmore, Mrs. Benjamin J., Malvern.
Passmore, Mrs. E. P., 133 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Mt. Airy.
Passmore, Mrs. Lillian H., 4 E. Lang-
horne Ave., Upper Darby.
Patrick, Mrs. F. M., Lafayette Road, Co-
lonial Village, Wayne.
Patterson, Mrs. Charles L., Fair Hills
Farm, Chadds Ford.
Patterson, Mr. Samuel, 131 Stratford
Ave., Aldan.
Patterson, Mrs. William T., Bethlehem
Pike, Ambler.
Patton, Mrs. Henry B., Rose and Laurel
Lanes, Haverford.
Paul, Mr. A. J. Drexel, Radnor.
122
Paul, Mrs. Henry N., 550 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Paul, Mrs. Theodore S., 8009 Navahoe
St., Chestnut Hill.
Paulson, Mr. Arthur, 2644 Island Eoad,
Philadelphia.
Paulson, Miss Frances E., 7209 Lincoln
Drive, Philadelphia.
Paxon, Miss Bertha E., 8764 Frankford
Ave., Holmesburg.
Paxton, Miss Myra E., St. Davids.
Payne, Mrs. Julius A., 1324 Hillside
Eoad, Wynnewood.
Payne, Mr. W. Guy, 2104 Market St.,
Pottsville. (F.)
Peace, Mrs. Philip, Haverford.
Peace, Mrs. William S., Eydal.
Peachey, Dr. George F., 32 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Peacock, Mrs. Ealph, Colonial Gardens,
5427 Wayne Ave., Germantown.
Pearce, Miss Amy M., 4323 Larchwood
Ave., Philadelphia.
Pearson, Mrs. Edward M., 43 W. La-
Grosse Ave., Lansdowne.
Pearson, Mrs. Edwin, 106 Jefferson Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Pearson, Miss Kathryn F., 234 Summit
Ave., Jenkintown.
Pearson, Mrs. S. D., 421 Moody Ave.,
New Castle.
Pease, Mrs. Henry H., 2307 Delancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Peck, Mrs. Frank C, 29 E. Beiiezet St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Peck, Mr. William J., 220 Wasliington
St., Pittston.
Peckham, Mrs. Wheeler H., Davenport
Neck, New Eochelle, N. Y.
Peirce, Mrs. Frederick, 370 Aubrey Eoad,
Wynnewood.
Peirce, Mrs. Harold, Haverford.
Peirce, Mr. Eobert F., 1961 Woodvale
Ave., Mt. Penn.
Peirsol, Mrs. Heni-y A., 219 Lafayette
Ave., Swarthmore.
Peirson, Mrs. Edwin J., Virginia Ave.,
Phoenixville.
Peirson, Mrs. H. C, 244 E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Peirson, Mrs. Walter, Jr., King of Prus-
sia Eoad, Eadnor.
Pemberton, Mrs. Henry, Jr., Prospect
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Pemberton, Mrs. Ealph, Paoli.
Pennell, Miss Elizabeth S., Hildemere
Gardens, Wawa. (N.)
Pennington, Mrs. A. G., Eadnor.
Pennock, Mrs. A. J., 21 N. Highland
Ave., Lansdowne.
Pennock, Mrs. A. L., 6300 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Pennock, Mrs. Anna C, 35 Violet Lane,
Lansdowne.
Pennock, Mr. George L., 165 W. Essex
Ave., Lansdowne. (C.)
Pennock, Mrs. George L., 165 W. Essex
Ave., Lansdowne.
Pennock, Mr. J. Liddon, Villa Nova. (F.)
Pennock, Mrs. Eichard M., 12 E. Lodges
Lane, Bala-Cynwyd.
Pennock, Mr. Samuel S., 1612 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia. (W.)
Pennock, Mrs. Samuel S., Lansdowne
Court, Lansdowne.
Pennypacker, Mrs. Bevan A., 240 W. Tul-
pehocken St., Gennantown.
Penrose, Mrs. d'Este, 7926 Lincoln Drive,
Chestnut Hill.
Penrose, Miss Ellen W., 34 E. High St.,
Carlisle.
Penrose, Miss Emily L., 5349 Greene St.,
Germantovoi.
Penrose, Miss Valeria F., 152 W. Penn
St., Germantown.
Pepper, Mrs. Franklin, Cref eld St., Chest-
nut Hill.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Devon.
Pepper, Mrs. George W., Jr., St. Davids
Eoad, St. Davids.
Pepper, Mrs. John W., Jenkintown.
Pepper, Mrs. O. H. Perry, Ithan.
Pepper, Mrs. William, Melrose Park.
Perkins, Mrs. Charles C, Box 82, Bryn
Mawr.
Perkins, Mrs. Wilkins J., The Kenil-
worth, Germantown.
Perrott, Mrs. Eaymond F., 3119 Midvale
Ave., Philadelphia.
Perry, Mrs. Henry Hillman, Merion Ave.
and Gulph Eoad, Bryn Mawr.
Pershing, Mrs. Edgar J., Penllyn.
Peter, Mr. Albert G., 6212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peter, Mrs. Albert G., 6212 Ogontz Ave.,
Germantown.
Peter, Mrs. Luther C, 121 E. Mt. Pleas-
ant Ave., Mt. Airy.
Peterman, Mr. C. W., 1115 Merrick Ave.,
Collingswood, N. J.
Peters, Mrs. J. D., 812 Swede St., Nor-
ristown.
Peters, Mrs. William, 1011 Wakeling St.,
Frankford.
Peterson, Miss Marion W., Brook Hall,
Media.
Pettit, Mrs. Hannah T., 429 W. Stafford
St., Germantown.
Petty, Mrs. David M., Paul and Beverly
Aves., Bethlehem.
Pew, Mrs. Arthur E., Jr., Springbrook
Farm, Bryn Mawr.
Pew, Mrs. J. Howard, Ardmore.
Pew, Mrs. John G., P. O. Box 23, Moy-
lan.
Pew, Mrs. Mary C, Eoberts Eoad and
Morris Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Pfahler, Dr. George E., 6463 Drexel Eoad,
Overbrook.
Pfahler, Mrs. George E., 6463 Drexel
Eoad, Overbrook.
123
Pharo, Mrs. Albert E., 224 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Pharo, Mr. Kobert T., 2d, 239 Brookline
Blvd., Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Pharo, Mrs. Walter W., Haverford.
Phelps, Mr. W. E., Guyeneourt, Del.
Phillips, Mrs. Joseph L., Torresdale.
Phraener, Dr. W. A., 1701 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Pickford, Mrs. Albert W., 206 Clwyd
Eoad, Bala-Cynwyd.
Pickles, Mr. William W., 4143 Paul St.,
Frankford.
Pierce, Mr. Edward S., 166 W. Chew St.,
Olney.
Pierce, Mr. F. G., 205 Llanfair Eoad,
Ardmore.
Pietruszkiewiez, Mr. Anthony J., Grand-
View-on-Hudson, N. Y.
Pilling, Mr. Charles J., 42 Windemere
Ave., Lansdowne.
Pilling, Mr. W. S., 229 W. Upsal St.,
Germantown.
Piuder, Mrs. Elizabeth S. B., 173 2d
Ave., Phoenixville.
Piquemal, Mrs. Lisette, "Lisette Farm,"
Ambler.
Pitcairn, Mrs. Eaymond, Bryn Athj^Ti.
Piatt, Mr. Charles, Morris Eoad, Ambler.
Piatt, Mrs. Charles, 3d, Prospect Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Piatt, Mrs. Henry Norris, Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Piatt, Mr. J. C, Waverly.
Piatt, Mrs. John 0., Paoli.
Pleasants, Mr. Dallas Franklin, Darby
Eoad, Paoli.
Plumly, Mrs. George, 2812 Midvale Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Plunmier, Mrs. William T., Bleddyn
Eoad, Ardmore.
Plusch, Mrs. H. A., 6401 N. 11th St., Oak
Lane.
Poe, Mrs. Edgar Allan, 8765 Montgom-
ery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Poffenberger, Mrs. G. L., 257 W. Pine
St., Audubon, N. J.
Foley, Mr. Corson, Salem Eoad, Bur-
lington, N. J.
Polk, Mrs. William D., "Hornblende,"
Kennett Square.
Pollock, Mrs. Eoland D., 8319 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Pollock, Mrs. Walter, 7721 St. Martins
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Pomeroy, Mrs. John Nevin, 219 Pelham
Eoad, Germantown.
Pond, Mrs. C. P., 6712 N. 11th St., Oak
Lane.
Pond, Mr. Eaymond, E. D. 1, Doylestown.
Pool, Mrs. Eussell B., Oak Park, Lans-
dale.
Poole, Mrs. Frank, 620 S. Eagle Eoad,
Manoa, Delaware Co.
Porter, Mr. Andrew, 405 Elm Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Porter, Mrs. Andrew, 405 Elm Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Porter, Miss Catherine B., 2215 Eitten-
house St., Philadelphia.
Porter, Miss Dorothy B., 209 St. James
Ave., MerchantvUle, N. J.
Porter, Miss Elva, 424 Owen Eoad, Wyn-
newood.
Porter, Miss Lucille, Ashbourne Eoad,
Cheltenham.
Porter, Miss Mary H., 209 St. James
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Porter, Miss Muriel A., 209 St. James
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Porter, Miss Euth, "Spring Hill," Valley
Forge.
Porter, Mrs. W. Hobart, Woodleave Eoad,
Biyn Mawr.
Porter, Mrs. William W., Valley Forge.
Potts, Mrs. Charles E., 313 E. Lancaster
Ave., Wayne.
Potts, Mr. Harrison I., 1006 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Potts, Mrs. Harrison I., 1006 Westview
Ave., Germantown.
Potts, Miss Helen E., 901 Swede St.,
Norristown.
Potts, Mrs. Horace Miles, 1008 W.
Hortter St., Mt. Airy.
Potts, Mrs. Joseph, Walnut Ave., Wayne.
Potts, Mrs. WiUiam M., Wyebrook, Ches-
ter Co.
Poultney, Mr. E. C, Box 381, Gwjmedd
Valley.
Powell, Mrs. Charles, 41 E. Montgomery
Ave., Ardmore.
Powell, Mr. Gerald, 406 Woodland Ave.,
Wayne.
Powell, Mrs. Humbert Borton, Willow-
dale Farm, Devon.
Powell, Mrs. Jesse W., 231 N. Eolling
Eoad, Springfield, Delaware Co.
Powell, Miss Marion, Eadnor.
Powers, Mr. Thomas Harris, 1st St.,
Broadmoor, Colorado Springs, Colo.
Pratt, Mrs. Henry S., Haverford.
Pratt, Mrs. L. P., 5820 Morris St., Ger-
mantown.
Price, Mr. Edward Trotter, Spottswood
Farm, Broad Axe, Montgomery Co.
Price, Mrs. Eli Kirk, 1709 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Pritchett, Mr. W. B., 6205 Germantown
Ave., Philadelphia.
Prime, Mrs. Alfred C, Darby Road, Pa-
oli.
Prince, Mrs. David Chandler, 150 Guern-
sey Eoad, Swarthmore.
Prince, Mr. John W., 5439 Berks St.,
Philadelphia. (G.)
Pringle, Mrs. William T., 304 Bent Eoad,
WjTieote.
Propert, Mrs. Frank C, 139 Merion Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Pugh, Miss Anne J., 31o Clwyd Eoad,
CjmAvyd.
124
Purnell, Miss Maude, Carson College,
Flourtown.
Pusey, Mrs. F. S., Aldwyn Lane, Villa
Nova.
Pusey, Mr. H. Carroll, Swarthmore.
Pusey, Mrs. Joseph M., 2200 Shalleross
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Putnam, Mrs. Earl B., 1926 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Pyle, Mr. Robert, Conard & Pyle Co.,
West Grove. (C.)
Pyle, Mrs. Robert C, 3d, Herford Place,
Lansdowne.
Eaiguel, Miss Ellen M., 217 W. Michigan
Ave., Deland, Fla.
Ramey, Miss Mary Grace, 608 Lawson
Ave., Penfield, Upper Darby P. O.
Ramsay, Mrs. William G., Guyencourt,
Del.
Rand, Mr. Louis M., 42 Ridley Ave., Nor-
wood, Delaware Co.
Randall, Mrs. Alexander, Laughlin Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Miss Anna, 218 W. Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Randolph, Mr. Evan, Seminole and Chest-
nut Aves., Cliestnut Hill.
Randolph, Mrs. Evan, Seminole and
Chestnut Aves. Chestnut Hill.
Rasmussen, Mr. Alfred O., 103 Horticul-
tural Bldg., Pennsylvania State Col-
lege.
Rasmussen, Mr. Seren, care Mr. A. B.
Johnson, Rosemont. (G.)
Ratcliffe, Mr. Wayne W., 152 Montgom-
ery Ave., Cynwyd.
Rau, Dr. C. Fred, Rydal.
Ranch, Mrs. Rudolph S., Villa Nova.
Rauchenberger, Miss Philopena E., 5944
N. 3d St., Philadelphia.
Ravenel, Miss Clare W., 2100 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Rawle, Miss Louisa, Roberts Road, Bryn
Mawr.
Rawson, Mrs. Edmund G., 7 W. Mont-
gomery Ave., Ardmore.
Ray, Mr. C. Paul, Jr., Winsford Road,
Bryn Mawr.
Rayford, Mr. J. J., Henderson, Texas.
Raymond, Mr. Charles A., 302 Bewley
Road, Llanerch.
Read, Mrs. Charles N., Elkins Park.
Read, Mrs. W. B., Conshohocken.
Reath, Mrs. Benjamin, The Wellington,
Philadelphia.
Reath, Mrs. Theodore W., Pont Reading
House, Ardmore.
Reath, Mrs. Thomas, Jr., Box 4357, Chest-
nut Hill.
Reber, Mrs. J. Howard, 135 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Rebmann, Mrs. G. R., 216 Glenn Road,
Ardmore.
Rebmann, Mrs. G. R., Jr., Millbrook
Lane, Haverford.
Reckefus, Dr. Charles H., Jr., 506 N. 6th
St., Philadelphia.
Redgrave, Mr. Arthur R. 0., 308 Vassar
Ave., Swarthmore.
Reed, Mrs. Alan H., Hall Road, Wyncote.
Reed, Miss Eleanor G., 419 Lancaster
Ave., Haverford.
Reed, Mr. William Gardner, 130 Glen-
view Ave., Wyncote.
Reed, Mrs. William Gardner, 130 Glen-
view Ave., Wyncote.
Rees, Mrs. James I., R. D. 1, Bridgeport.
Reese, Mrs. Charles Lee, 16th and Brinckle
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Reeve, Mrs. J. Stanley, Haverford.
Reeve, Miss Laura, 2222 Spruce St., Phil-
adelphia.
Reeve, Mrs. Percival J., 225 Washington
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Reeve, Mrs. W. F., 170 E. Main St.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Reeves, Miss Eleanor M., 519 W. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Reeves, Mrs. Horace A., 519 W. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Reeves, Mrs. S. K., 220 Pembroke Ave.,
St. Davids.
Register, Mrs. Henry C, Haverford.
Rehbaum, Mrs. B., 6929 N. 12th St.,
Philadelphia.
Rehfuss, Mrs. Cliarles T., R. D. 1, Norris-
town.
Reid, Mr. Carn, 1611 Greenway Ave.,
Brookline, Upper Darby P. O.
Reilly, Mr. Garrett, Rosemont.
Reimann, Mrs. S. P., 516 Arbutus St.,
Germantown.
Reinhardt, Mrs. Henry B., Laurel Lane,
Haverford.
Renard, Miss Ella S., 201 E. Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Renner, Mrs. H. B., Valley and Circle
Roads, Paoli.
Retz, Mr. H. L., Bancroft Road, Moylan-
Rose Valley.
Reynolds, Mrs. Harry L., 232 Haverford
Ave., Swarthmore.
Rhoads, Mrs. Charles J., 2839 Woodland
Drive, Washington, D. C.
Rhoads, Mrs. Logan, 2112 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Rhoads, Miss Lydia Wister, 152 School
House Lane, Germantown.
Roads, Miss Ruth Ely, 147 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Rhoads, Mr. William E., Moorestown,
N. J.
Rhoads, Mrs. William E., R. D. 3, Box
143, Moorestown, N. J.
Rice, Mrs. William F., Morton.
Rich, Mr. Lewis D., 4820 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia. (F.)
Rich, Mr. S. F., Crescent Road, Wyn-
cote.
Rich, Mrs. Seton H., Crescent Road, Wyn-
cote.
125
Richards, Miss Helen E., 809 Swede St.,
Nori'istown.
Richards, Mrs. Perry D., Ill Glenn Road,
Ardmore.
Richards, Mrs. Robert H., 2102 Parkway,
Wilming-ton, Del.
Richards, Mrs. Samuel Bartram, 1811 De-
Lancey Place, Philadelphia.
Richardson, Mrs. E. Stanley, 326 W.
Allen Lane, Mt. Airy.
Richardson, Mr. Frederick, 421 E. Lan-
caster Ave., St. Davids.
Richardson, Miss Grace, The Kenilworth,
Alden Park, Gerinantowii.
Richardson, Mrs. Tolbert N., W. School
House Lane, Germantown.
Rick, Mrs. James, Jr., 930 Centre Ave.,
Reading.
Riddle, Miss Katharine C, 115 Herman
St., Germantown.
Ridgely, Mrs. Henry, Dover, Del.
Ridgway, Mrs. George R., Mullica Hill,
N. J.
Ridgway, Mrs. William H., 524 E. Lin-
coln Highway, Coatesville.
Riehm, Mr. George W., 2319 Fuller St.,
Philadelphia.
Righter, Mr. C. Arthur, 6524 Ridge Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Righter, Miss Jane, Dublin Road, Green-
wich, Coiui.
Rinuner, Miss Agatha E., 618 E. Willow
Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Ristine, Mrs. Charles S., Strafford.
Ritchie, Mrs. C. L., Livezey Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Riter, Mrs. Michael M., Jr., 119 Glenn
Road, Ardmore.
Rittenhouse, Mrs. Leon H., 6 College
Lane, Haverford.
Ritter, Dr. Frank G., 1132 Divinity St.,
Philadelphia.
Ritter, Mr. W. H., 5424 Baltimore Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Robb, Mrs. Henry B., 1726 Spruce St.,
Philadelpliia.
Robbins, Mrs. George A., Butler Pike,
Ambler.
Robbins, Mr. George S., Rose Lane, Hav-
erford.
Robbins, Mrs. George S., Rose Lane, Hav-
erford.
Roberts, Mrs. A. C, Kimberton.
Roberts, Mrs. Algernon B., Haverford.
Roberts, Miss Alice S., R. D. Box 133.
Willow Grove.
Roberts, Mr. Charles C, 75 W. LaCrosse
Ave., Lansdowne.
Roberts, Mr. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Mrs. G. Brinton, Bala.
Roberts, Mrs. G. W. B., 1806 DeLancey
Place, Philadelphia.
Roberts, Mrs. H. C, 6518 N. 8th St., Oak
Lane.
Roberts, Miss Irene S., 4618 Leiper St.,
Frank ford.
Roberts, Mrs. Isaac W., Bala-Cynwyd.
Roberts, Miss Jane L., 6439 Cherokee
St., Germantown.
Roberts, Miss Louise B., 181 Maplewood
Ave., Germantown.
Roberts, Mrs. T. Williams, Peneoyd
Farm, Bala-Cynwyd.
Roberts, Mr. Thomas, care Mrs. Edward
Morrell, Torresdale. (G.)
Roberts, Mrs. William H., Wynderly,
Moorestown, N. J.
Robertson, Mr. Isdale, 1501 W. 10th St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Robertson, Miss Ola A., 331 E. Phil-
Ellena St., Mt. Aii-y.
Robertson, Mrs. Tate MacEwen, Devon.
Robertson, Mr. W. H., Glenmeade Farms,
R. D. 1, Malvern.
Robertson, Mr. William, 238 Lenoir Ave.,
Wayne. (G.)
Robins, Mrs. Thomas, 618 Hazelhurst
Ave., Merion.
Robins, Mrs. William B., 38 E. Penn St.,
Germantown.
Robinson, Mrs. Alexander, Jr., 31 Sproul
Road, Broomall.
Robinson, Miss Anne B., Waverly.
Robinson, Mr. Anthony W., 780 College
Ave., Haverford.
Robinson, Mrs. H. N., 211 Franklin Ave.,
Norristown.
Robinson, Mrs. Louis Barclay, care Mr.
James Boone, 4025 Sansom St., Phila-
delphia.
Robinson, Miss Lydia S. M., Paoli.
Robinson, Mrs. M. D., 302-A, Oak Lane
Manor Apts., Valley Road, Oak Lane.
Robinson, Mrs. Penrose, Emlen Arms,
6733 Emlen St., Germantown.
Robinson, Mrs. R. Elizabeth, Washing-
ton Ave. and Colonial Ridge, Haddon-
field, N. J.
Robinson, Mr. V. Gilpin, 312 Baltimore
Ave., Clifton Heights.
Robinson, Mrs. V. Gilpin, 312 Baltimore
Ave., Clifton Heights.
Robison, Mrs. H. K., 3018 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Rock, Mrs. Arthur E., 145 W. Higliland
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Rockenbach, Miss Minnie, 127 W. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Rockwell, Mrs. Charles K., Belrose Lane,
Radnor.
Roeback, Miss Ella A., 413 9th St., Up-
land, DeLaware Co.
Rodgers, Mrs. Robert S., 523 Orkney
Road, Govans, Baltimore, Md.
Rodman, Mrs. J. Stewart, 524 Manor
Road, Wynnewood.
Roehm, Mrs. Maiy J., 515 Hamilton St.,
Norristown.
Rogan, Mrs. John M., 313 St. Davids
Road, Wayne.
Rogers, Mrs. Guy W., 36 Linden Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
126
Eogers, Miss Irene E., "Oaklands," Hav-
erford.
Eog-ers, Mrs. James S., 854 Buck Lane,
Haverford.
Rogers, Miss Lillian E., 1011 Larelmiont
Ave., Penfield, Upper Darby.
Eoney, Mrs. Henry E., 33 Lafayette Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Root, Miss Fannie A., 8427 Prospect Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Eoot, Miss Mary L., 631 E. Leverington
Ave., Eoxborough.
Eoot, Mr. Stanley W., 8427 Prospect Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Eoot, Mrs. Stanley W., 8427 Prospect
Ave., Oliestnut Hill.
Eorer, Miss Elizabeth U., 43 W. Logan
St., Germantown.
Eosenau, Mrs. S., 235 S. loth St., Phila-
delphia.
Eosenbluth, Mr. Edwin M., Wallingford.
(0.)
Eosengarten, Mrs. Adolph, St. Davids.
Eosengarten, Mrs. Frederic, Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Rosengarten, Mr. George D., Malvern.
Rosengarten, Mrs. George D., Malvern.
Eosengarten, Mr. J. C, Villa Nova.
Eosengarten, Mrs. J. Clifford, Villa Nova.
Rosengarten, Mr. Joseph G., Jr., 916 Par-
rish St., Philadelphia.
Eosenwald, Mrs. Lessing J., Abington.
Eosenwald, Mrs. William, Washington
Lane opposite Maple Ave., Wyncote.
Eosewater, Mrs. Victor, 1530 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Eoss, Mrs. Adam A., 424 Montgomery
Ave., Haverford.
Ross, Mrs. Donald P., Montchanin, Del.
Eoss, Mrs. Hem-y A., Huron St. and
Moreland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Eoss, Mrs. John E., 256 W. Summit Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Eoss, Mrs. Joseph, 6503 Wissahickon
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Eoss, Miss Matilda, 7 Gordon Ave., Hav-
erford.
Eoss, Miss Sophia L., 8014 Crefeld St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Eoss, Mrs. T. Edward, 119 Bleddyn Eoad,
Ardmore.
Eossell, Mrs. Axel, Devon.
Rossmassler, Mrs. Richard, 208 Glenn
Road, Ardmore.
Eossmassler, Mrs. Walter H., 423 W.
Walnut Lane, Germantown.
Eotan, Mrs. EUwood J., "Old Oak Farm,"
Valley Forge.
Eotan, Mrs. Samuel P., E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Eoth, Mr. Henry W., St. Davids.
Eoth, Mrs. William H., 447 E. Mt. Pleas-
ant Ave., Germantown.
Eothe, Mr. Max H., 7142 Germantown
Ave., Mt. Airy. (F.)
Eothe, Mr. Eichard, Limekiln Pike and
Church Eoad, Glenside. (C.)
Eowland, Miss Ella B., Fort Washington.
Eowland, Mrs. Louis H., Eadnor.
Eowland, Mrs. William C, 145 Maple-
wood Ave., Germantown.
Eowland, Mrs. William L., Eose Tree and
Crum Creek Eoads, Media.
Ruberg, Mrs. Morris, 504 Eunnymede
Ave., Jenkintown.
Eudley, Mr. William I., 721 Girard Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Rue, Mrs. Howard S., Fisher Eoad, Bryn
Mawr.
Eumpp, Mr. H. C, 5th and Cherry Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Rumpp, Miss Marie W., 5710 Wissahickon
Ave., Germantown.
Rupert, Mrs. Charles G., "Sedgley," Wil-
mington, Del.
Eupp, Mrs. Eobert A., 44 N. 3d St.,
Hamburg.
Eush, Mr. Benjamin, 1600 Arch St., Phil-
adelphia.
Rush, Mrs. Benjamin, West Chester.
Russell, Dr. Evans D., Ephrata.
Russell, Mrs. John, Jr., Rosemont.
Russell, Mrs. William H., 215 Mattison
Ave., Ambler.
Rust, Mr. David, 1010 Fayette St., Con-
shohocken.
Ryan, Mr. Stephen V., 232 Upland Road,
Merion.
Ryan, Mrs. Stephen V., 232 Upland Road,
Merion.
Ryder, Miss Grace G., Box 97, Berwyn.
Saam. Miss Amalia, 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Saam, Miss C. Elsa, 8203 Forest Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Sackett, Mrs. Benjamin R., 6109 Wayne
Ave., Germantown.
Sackett, Mrs. Franklin Page, 410 Love
Lane, Wynnewood.
Sagebeer, Mrs. Joseph E., Berwyn.
Sallade, Miss Florence D., 50 N. Wake-
field Road, Norristown.
Salmon, Dr. Leon T., New Hope, Bucks
Co.
Samuel, Miss Lois, 2015 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Samuel, Miss Maria B., 2015 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Samuel, Mrs. Snowden, St. Davids Ave.,
St. Davids.
Sanson, Mrs. Albert W., 5826 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Sappington, Mrs. S. W., Box 81, Bryn
Mawr.
Sargent, Mrs. Winthrop, Jr., Haverford.
Sartain, Miss Harriet, Dean, The School
of Design, Broad and Master Sts.,
Philadelphia.
Saul, Mrs. Maurice Bower, Moylan-Rose
Valley.
127
Saul, Mrs. Robert E., 108 Orchard Way,
Eosemont.
Saunders, Mrs. W. B., 5930 City Line
Ave., Overbrook.
Saunders, Mrs. W. L., Idlewild Farms,
Bryn Mawr.
Saur, Mr. Henry, 8230 Manor Eoad,
Elkins Park.
Savage, Mrs. D. Fitzliugh, 4249 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Savage, Mrs. Ernest C, E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Savage, Mr. Walter P., 2416 W. 78th
Ave., Philadelphia.
Savidge, Mrs. Frank R., Box 217, Devon.
Savidge, Mrs. Mary M., Ill Montgom-
ery Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Saylor, Mr. Hemian J., 355 Walnut St.,
Pottstown.
Saylor, Mrs. Kate I., Fallsington, Bucks
Co.
Sayre, Mrs. Frank G., 3026 Midvale Ave.,
Germantown.
Sayres, Mrs. Edward S., Box 51, Haver-
ford.
Scatchard, Mr. William, 3911 Henry Road,
East Falls.
Scattergood, Mrs. Alfred G., "Awbury,"
Germantown.
Scattergood, Mrs. J. Henry, Villa Nova.
Scattergood, Miss Julia B., 327 Green-
wood Ave., Jenkintown.
Scattergood, Mr. T. Walter, 75 N. Owen
Ave., Lansdowne.
Scattergood, Mrs. Thomas, 3515 Powel-
ton Ave., Philadelphia.
Schaefer, Mrs. W. H., 188 W. Durham
St., Mt. Airy.
Schaeffer, Mrs. Cliarles F., 2217 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Schaeffer, Mrs. Frederick C, 317 S. 22d
St., Philadelplua.
Schaffer, Mrs. John, 7727 Erwig Ave.,
West Philadelphia.
Schaffer, Hon. William I., Haverford.
Schaffer, Mrs. William I., Haverford.
Schaible, Mrs. Cliarles M., 25 Columbia
Ave., Vineland, N. J.
Schearer, Mr. H. F., 30 Princeton Road,
Brookline. (N.)
Schedin, Mrs. P. H., School of Horti-
culture, Ambler.
Scheetz, Mrs. Francis H., 9 Gordon Ave.,
Haverford.
Scheetz, Mrs. William C, 433 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Scheffey, Mrs. Lewis C, Meriou and
Rockland Roads, Merion.
Schellenger, Mrs. E. A. Y., 33 Fithian
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Schenck, Mrs. William A., R. D. 2,
Phoenixville.
Schick, Miss Elma H., 1905 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Schierenbeck, Mr. L., Curren Terrace,
Norristown.
Schindler, Miss Minnie, 2740 N. 11th
St., Philadelphia.
Schlacks, Mrs. Charles H., Bryn Mawr.
Schley, Miss Claire P., 1220 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia.
Schlichter, Miss Carrie T., 3321 N. 16th
St., Philadelphia.
Schmelz, Dr. Ella E., 228 S. 45th St.,
Philadelphia.
Schmidt, Mrs. Charles E., 7837 York
Road, Elkins Park.
Schmidt, Mrs. Helene K., Ashwood Road,
Villa Nova.
Schmidt, Mr. John P., 423 Belgrade St.,
Philadelphia.
Schmitt, Mr. Xavier E. E., Horticultural
Hall, West Park, Philadelphia. (G.)
Schneider, Mr. Herbert C, 803 E. Wash-
ington Lane, Germantown.
Schobinger, Mrs. George, 301 Swarth-
more Ave., Swarthmore.
Schoettle, Mr. Edward J., 533 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Scholz, Mrs. Anne E., P. O. Box 163,
Jenkintown,
Scholz, Dr. Samuel B., Jr., P. 0. Box
163, Jenkintown.
Schoneman, Mrs. R. A., 6429 Drexel
Road, Overbrook.
Schuck, Mrs. Leon H., 6 5th Ave., Had-
don Heights, N. J.
Schuler, Mrs. L. A., Rose Lane, Haver-
ford.
Schultz, Mr. Elmer K., The Cambridge,
Alden Park, Gennantown.
Schultz, Miss Emma K., Worcester.
Schumacher, Mr. William H., 226 Hewitt
Road, Glenside.
Schumacker, Mrs. H. J., 1204 Wakeling
St., Frankford.
Schumann, Dr. Edward A., 15 Pelham
Road, Mt. Airy.
Sehutt, Mrs. Harold S., 2204 Grant Ave.,
Wilmington, Del.
Schuyler, Mrs. James E., 35 N. Harwood
Road, Upper Darby.
Scott, Mr. Alexander B., The Covington
Hotel, 37th and Chestnut Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Scott, Miss Alice A., 6070 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Scott, Mrs. Arthur Hoyt, Todmorden
Farm, Brookhaven Road, Media.
Scott, Mrs. Edgar, Green Valley Road,
Brj'n Mawr.
Scott, Miss Florence B., Box 119, Wyn-
newood.
Scott, Mrs. Frazier, Wayne.
Scott, Mr. Henry J., Room 1210, 1700
Walnut St., Philadelphia.
Scott, Mrs. Henry P., Delaware City, Del.
Scott, Mrs. J. Alison, 336 S. 16th St.,
Philadelphia.
Scott, Mr. Joseph M., 137 Hemtt Road,
WjTicote.
128
Scott, Mrs. Samuel B., 1 Norman Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Scott, Mrs. William R., 5439 Northum-
berland St.. Pittsburgh.
Scull, Mi's. Marshall, 8525 Ardmore Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Scull, Mrs. William C, Bryn Mawr.
Scull, Mrs. William S., Mayfair House.
Lincoln Drive and Johnson St., Ger-
mantown.
Seabrease, Mrs. N. McLean, Whitpaiii
Farm, Ambler.
Seal, Mrs. Joseph S., 230 Cornell Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Sealey, Mrs. William, Langhorne.
Search, Mrs. Hendrick W., 202 St.
Mark's Square, Pliiladelphia.
Sears, Mr. Thomas Warren, Girard Trust
Bldg., S. Penn Square, Philadelphia.
(L.)
Seeburger, Mrs. Frank, 11 Maple Ave.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Seeds, Mrs. Joseph R., 151 W. School
Lane, Germantown.
Seeler, Mrs. Edgar V., Dengleton Farm,
Newtown Square.
Seeley, Mrs. Oscar, White Horse Eoad,
Paoli.
Seipt, Mrs. Samuel A., 507 Wyndmoor
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Sellers, Mrs. Horace W., Ardmore.
Sellers, Mrs. Howard, "Shadowbrook,"
P. 0. Box 249, Wynnewood.
Seltzer, Mr. Richard J., 5700 City Line,
Overbrook.
Semple, Miss Helen, "Helen's Tower,"
Ithan.
Senat, Mrs. Herbert D., 301 Glenolden
Ave., Glenolden, Delaware Co.
Senter, Mrs. Ralph T., Lancaster and
Bowman Aves., Overbrook.
Serrill, Mr. John B., 1413 N. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Serrill, Mr. William J., Haverford.
Serrill, Mrs. William J., Haverford.
Service, Mrs. Charles A., City Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd.
Seuffert, Mrs. George W., 3936 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Severs, Miss Mary E., 123 Birch Ave.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Sewall, Mr. Arthur W., 1311 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Sewall, Mrs. Arthur W., 1311 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Sewell, Mrs. Robert, Rydal.
Sewell, Mrs. W. J., Jr., St. Martin's Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Shafer, Miss Lillian, 6814 N. Carlisle St.,
Philadelphia.
Shaffer, Mrs. A. C, Forrest Ave., Wayne.
Shaffer, Miss Maiy J. K., Rush Hospital,
Malvern.
Shaffer, Mrs. Philip C, Jr., 2962 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Shallcross, Mrs. Frank A., 4015 Tyson
St., Tacony.
Shand, Miss Helen E., 226 Upland Way,
Wayne.
Shannon, Mrs. T. Taylor, 4920 Cedar Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Shai-p, Mrs. Allison, "Greystone," Creigh-
ton Road, Villa Nova.
Sharp, Miss Estelle L., Berwyn.
Sharp, Mrs. Henry E., 710 Stradone
Road, Cynwyd.
Sharp, Mrs. Marie B., Pembroke Ave., St.
Davids.
Sharpe, Mrs. John S., Haverford.
Sharpies, Mrs. Francis W,, 1922 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Sharpless, Mrs. S. F., 1919 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Sharpless, Mrs. W. W., 848 Turner Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Shaw, Mr. George F., Bowman and Hay-
wood Aves., Meriou.
Shaw, Mrs. Joseph, 418 Vernon Road,
Jenkintown.
Shaw, Mr. Richard M., Box 3, Rosemont.
(G.)
Sheafer, Mrs. Arthur W., 1443 Mahan-
tongo St., Pottsville.
Shearer, Mrs. Christine S., Worcester,
Montgomery Co.
Shearman, Miss Margaret H., 231 Winona
St., Germantown.
Sheas, Mr. Jerome J., Valley Forge Park,
Valley Forge.
Sheble, Mrs. Frank J., 311 Roumfort
Road, Mt. Aii-y.
Sheble, Mrs. J. Howard, Jr., Rydal.
Sheehan, Mrs. WiUiam C, The Cresheim
Anns, 41 W. Allen Lane, Philadelphia.
Sheets, Mr. George, 39 E. Knowles Ave.,
Glenolden, Delaware Co.
Shellenberger, Mrs. J. F., Wai-wick Road,
Wynnewood.
Shellenberger, Mrs. James M., Golf View
Road, Doylestown.
Shelly, Mrs. Dayton, 6350 N. 8th St., Oak
Lane.
Shelton, Mrs. Frederick H., 1830 S. Rit-
tenhouse Square, Philadelphia..
Sherk, Mr. David M., Garrett Hill.
Sherman, Mr. C. Lester, Jr., N. E. cor.
Bala and Kent Roads, Bala-Cynwyd.
Sherman, Mrs. C. Lester, Jr., N. E. cor.
Bala and Kent Roads, Bala-Cynwyd.
Shermer, Mrs. George Y., 100 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Sherrerd, Mrs. Henry D. M., 41 Chew's
Landing Road, Haddonfield, N. J.
Shields, Mr. Frank G., 709 S. 60th St.,
Philadelphia.
Shields, Mrs. L. H., 341 W. Barnard St.,
West Cliester.
Shimer, Miss Florence L., Riegelsville.
Shiun, Mr. Russel M., 1324 McKinley
Ave., Colonial Manor, Westville P. O.,
N. J.,
129
Shirley, Mrs. Harold B., 7303 Emlen St.,
Chestuut Hill.
Shmidheiser, Mrs. Edward G., Beech Hill
Road, Wynnewood.
Shoemaker, Miss Amalia I., 8203 Forest
Ave., Elkins Park.
Shoemaker, Mrs. B. H., 2d, 523 Church
Lane, Germaiitown.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Charles S., 1432 Termoii
Ave., N. S. Pittsburgh.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Edward C, 904 DeKalb
St., Norristown.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Edwin, Brookside Farm,
Paoli.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Hari-y, 255 W. Court St.,
Doylestown.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Harvey, Church Boad,
Walliugford.
Shoemaker, Mrs. Louis Jack, Terwood,
Hunting-don Valley.
Shoemaker, Mr. Samuel, 1214-1215 Frank-
lin Trust Bldg., Philadelpliia.
Shoemaker, Mrs. William H., 913 S. 48th
St., Philadelphia.
Shrigley, Mr. Arthur, Lansdowne Ave.
and Scottdale Road, Lansdowne.
Shrigley, Miss Ethel Austin, 60 S. Lans-
downe Ave., Lansdowne.
Shryock, Miss G. A., The Qinton, lOtli
and Clinton Sts., Philadelphia.
Shute, Mrs. Albert Clement, 740 High
St., Pottstown.
Shute, Mr. E. L., 616 W. Upsal St., Phil-
adelphia.
Sibley, Miss Florence, 1937 Panama St.,
Philadelphia.
Sibley, Mrs. Walter G., Meadowbrook.
Sidebotham, Mrs. J. B., 4731 Northwood
Ave., Frankford.
Siebrecht, Mrs. Frederick J., 46 Lincoln
Ave., Lansdowne.
Sigafoos, Mrs. Lewis, 190 W. State St.,
Doylestown.
Sigel, Mrs. Louis, 8216 Seminole Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Sill, Mrs. James J., Wyncote.
Silliman, Mrs. E. S., 44 N. Main St.,
Mahanoy City.
Silver, Mrs. J. Robinson, 210 Lansdowne
Ave., Wayne.
Silverman, Mrs. Charles, 422 Ashbourne
Road, Elkins Park.
Silverman, Mr. I. H., 606 Land Title
Bldg., Philadelpliia.
Simkins, Mrs. Lena, 1200 Collings Ave.,
West Collingswood, N. J.
Simons, Mrs. Laird H., 1239 Remington
Road, Wynnewood.
Simpson, Hon. Alexander, Jr., 5854
Drexel Road, Overbrook.
Simpson, Mr. Charles G., 213 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Simpson, Miss Ida, 906 Pine St., Phila-
delphia.
Simpson, Miss Mary A., 116 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
Simpson, Mrs. Percy, Overbrook.
Sims, Mrs. Joseph P., 319 E. Gravers
Lane, Cliestnut Hill.
Sinclair, Mrs. Donald B., 140 Hodge
Road, Princeton, N. J.
Siiikler, Miss Caroline S., 1604 Locust
St., Pliiladelphia.
Sinkler, Mrs. Francis W., Bryn Mawr.
Sinkler, Mr. Wharton, Elkins Park.
Sinkler, Mrs. Wharton, Elkins Park.
Sinnickson, Miss Adeline, 61 Broadway,
Salem, N. J.
Sinnickson, Mr. George R., Bryn Mawr.
Skillman, Mrs. Thomas J., 124 St.
George's Road, Ardmore.
Skinner, Mrs. James M., 124 W. Phil-
Ellena St., Mt. Airy.
Slack, Miss Llewellyn G., 639 N. 11th St.,
Philadelphia.
Slade, Mrs. Alexander T., Wynnewood.
Slaymaker, Mrs. S. E., Harrison Road,
Ithan.
Slifer, Dr. F. Sebring, Limekiln Pike and
Waverly Road, Glenside.
Slifer, Miss Levina, 4250 N. Broad St.,
Philadelpliia.
Sloan, Mrs. Burrows, Ardmore.
Sloan, Mr. William, Eagleville.
Snialley, Miss Jean H., 352 W. Mt. Airy
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Smaltz, Miss Elizabeth F., 22 E. Sedg-
wick St., Mt. Airy.
Smaltz, Mrs. John H., 32 E. Sedgwick
St., Mt. Airy.
Smedley, Mr. Samuel L., Newtown Square,
Delaware Co.
Smedley, Mr. William Henry, Church and
Tacony Sts., Frankford.
Smith, Mrs. Arthur D., Remington Road,
Wynnewood.
Smith, Mrs. C. Elmer, "Brockie," York.
Smith, Mrs. C. Morton, 1718 Locust St.,
Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. Charles Harper, Davis Grove
Road, Hatboro.
Smith, Miss Elizabeth, Gwynedd Valley.
Smith, Miss Elizabeth W., 131 Montgom-
ery Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Smith, Mrs. Frederic J., 6300 Greene St.,
Germaiitown.
Smith, Mrs. G. G., 6812 Quincy St., Ger-
mantown.
Smith, Mrs. Geoffrey S., Fort Washing-
ton.
Smith, Mrs. George Mark, 6470 Drexel
Road, Overbrook.
Smith, Mrs. Harrison, Radnor and Clyde
Roads, Bryn Mawr.
Smith, Mr. Henry C, 412 W. State St.,
Media.
Smith, Mrs. Herbert Aubrey, 147 Fern-
brook Ave., Wyncote.
Smith, Mr. Horace E., Glyn-Wynne Road,
Haverford.
Smith, Mrs. Horace E., Glyn-Wynne
Road, Haverford.
130
k
Smith, Mrs. I. H., 156 Maylaud St., Ger-
maiitowii.
Smith, Mrs. Ira A., 828 W. Main St.,
Norristown.
Smith, Mrs. J. Somers, 6700 Wissahickoii
Ave., Philadelphia.
Smith, Miss Jessie Wileox, "Cogshill,"
Allen Lane, Philadelphia.
Smith, Mrs. John T., 133 Upland Ter-
race, Bala-Cynwj'd.
Smith, Mr. Lewis D. G., 40 Ridley Ave.,
Norwood.
Smith, Mrs. Lewis Lawrence, Strafford,
Chester Co.
Smith, Mrs. M. Anna, 101 Congress St.,
Newtown.
Smith, Mrs. Manning- J., 103 W. More-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Smith, Mrs. Mary F., Box 21, Bethayres.
Smith, Miss Pauline, 341 W. Lancaster
Ave., Haverford.
Smith, Mrs. Perry L., 18 E. Walnut Ave.,
Merchantville, N. J.
Smith, Miss Ruth C, 18 E. Walnut Ave.,
Merchantville, N. J.
Smith, Mr. W. Hinckle, Bryn Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. Walter Karsner, 339 E.
Wharton Eoad, Glenside.
Smith, Mrs. Wikoff, Morris Ave., Bryn
Mawr.
Smith, Mrs. William Watson, 5325 Wil-
kins Ave., Pittsburgh.
Smith, Mrs. Xanthus R., 325 West Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Smithson, Mrs. Harry P., "Oakhurst,"
Cheyney, Delaware Co.
Smyth, Mrs. Fanny Belle D., "Home-
acre," West End, Fairmount, W. Va.
Snader, Mrs. E. Roland, Jr., "Ogston
House," Sussex Road, Wynnewood.
Snedaker, Mrs. E. R., 4921 Parkside Ave.,
Wynnefield.
Snellenburg, Mrs. Harry, 811 Church
Road, Elkins Park.
Snow, Mr. Stanley C, 1401 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Snyder, Mr. John M., Elkins Park.
Snyder, Mrs. M. Estelle H., 7128 Ogontz
Ave., Philadelphia.
Snyder, Mrs. R. Maurice, Germantown
Pike, Chestnut Hill.
Solis-Cohen, Mrs. D. Hays, N. W. cor.
City Line and Mountain Ave., Oak
Lane.
Solis-Cohen, Mrs. J., Jr., 709 Rambler
Road, Elkins Park.
Somervell, Mrs. Charles Stuart, 601
River Bank, Riverton, N. J.
Sonneborn, Mrs. John G., 5019 Penn St.,
Frankford.
Sorg, Mr. C. A., 214 Brookdale Ave.,
Glenside.
Sowden, Miss Harriet, The Fairfax Apts.,
Wayne Ave. and School Lane, German-
town.
Sowden, Mr. Lee, 3823 The Oak Road,
Philadelphia.
Spackman, Mrs. G. Donald, Hill Farm,
Coatesville.
Spaeth, Mrs. William L. C, 5000 Jackson
St., Frankford.
Sparks, Mr. John W., 5820 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Speakman, Miss Elisabeth B., 209 Euclid
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Speers, Mrs. E., 720 Clifton Ave., Col-
lingdale.
Speese, Dr. John, 723 S. Latches Lane,
Merion.
Spellissy, Mrs. F. F., 308 W. Hortter St.,
Germantown.
Spielmann, Mr. Edward H., 6635 N. 17th
St., W. Oak Lane.
Spooner, Mrs. H. T. H., 106 S. 38th St.,
Philadelphia.
Springer, Mrs. N. B., Cliveden Hall, Lin-
coln Drive., Philadelphia.
Sproat, Mrs. Harris L., 605 S. High St.,
West Chester.
Sprogell, Misa Elizabeth Lewis, Lincoln
and Edgemont Sts., Media.
Spruanee, Mrs. W. C, 2507 W. 17th St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Squires, Mrs. H. C, Dalton.
Stackhouse, Mrs. D. T., 100 E. Maple
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Stackhouse, Mrs. H. Rex, 121 E. Cliveden
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Stackhouse, Miss Minerva C, 3342 Spring-
field Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Stafford, Mrs. William H., Clwyd Road,
Cynwyd.
Stamm, Mrs. C. J., 417 W. Hortter St.,
Philadelphia.
Starke, Mr. William, Box 4391, Chestnut
Hill. (G.)
Starr, Mrs. Charles S., Haverford.
Starr, Mrs. Edward, Jr., Laverock, Chest-
nut Hill.
Starr, Mrs. Isaac Tatnall, Laverock,
Chestnut Hill.
Starr, Mr. James, 1324 Walnut St., Phila-
delphia.
Stauffer, Mrs. W. H., 5935 Pulaski Ave.,
Germantown.
Stead, Mr. Robert, 1817 DeLaucey Place,
Philadelphia.
Stead, Mrs. Robert, 1817 DeLancey Place,
Philadelphia.
Steel, Mrs. A, G. B., Sugar Loaf, Chestnut
Hill.
Steel, Miss E. J., 6023 Drexel RoaJ, Over-
brook.
Steele, Miss E. M., 306 Kenilworth Apts.,
Alden Park, Germantown.
Steele, Mrs. Edward A., 8212 St. Martin's
Ijane, Chestnut Hill.
Steele, Mrs. John L., Cambridge, Alden
Park, Germantown.
Steele, Mrs. William, 126 Maple Ave.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
331
Steele, Mr. William, 3d, 126 Maple Ave.,
Bala Cynwyd.
Steele, Mrs. William, 3d, E. Bell's Mill
Eoad, Chestnut Hill.
Steinmetz, Mrs. Edward G., 410 Green-
wood Ave., Wyncote.
Stem, Mrs. S. G., EoUing Eoad, Bryu
Mawr.
Stengel, Dr. Alfred, 1728 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Stengel, Mrs. Alfred, Newtown Square.
Stephani, Mr. W. J., Jr., Eidley Park.
Stephens, Mrs. Lucie L., Moylan-Eose
Valley.
Stephenson, Mrs. W. B., Haverford.
Sterrett, Mrs. Eobert J., 4630 Hazel Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Stevenson, Miss Grace D., 5206 Morris
St., Philadelphia.
Stevenson, Mr. H. A., Box 621, Ardsley,
N. Y.
Stevenson, Mrs. James S., Jr., 145 W.
Highland Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Stevenson, Miss Katharine M., "Samokla,"
2600 Waterville Eoad, Chester.
Stevenson, Mr. Markley, 225 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia. (L.)
Stevenson, Mrs. Walter Newhall, 4916
Wynnefield Ave., Wynnefield.
Steviek, Mrs. Francis, 6325 Eegent St.,
Philadelphia.
Stewardson, Miss E. P., 8611 Montgomery
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Stewardson, Miss M. M., 8611 Montgom-
ery Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Stewart, Mrs. Charles H., St. Davids.
Stewart, Mrs. Daniel C, St. Davids.
Stewart, Mrs. Henry, 8233 Seminole Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Stewart, Miss Katharine, 1612 Pelham
Eoad, Beechwood Park, Upper Darby
P. O.
Stewart, Miss M. M., 810 Market Street
National Bank Bldg., Philadelphia.
Stewart, Miss Nanna W., 755 Philadel-
phia Ave., Chambersburg.
Stewart, Mrs. Eowe, 652 W. Phil-Ellena
St., Germantown.
Stewart, Mrs. Stanley P., 300 Shrewsbury
Eoad, Eiverton, N. J.
Stewart, Mrs. Thomas D. W., 35 Gowen
Ave., Mt. Airy.
Stewart, Mrs. Thomas S., 1532 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Stewart, Mr. W. Plunket, Murray House,
Villa Nova.
Stiefel, Mr. Frank C, 305 Woodside Ave.,
Narberth.
Stiles, Mrs. Merritt H., 113 W. Cliestnut
Ave., Cliestnut Hill.
Stiteler, Mr. Fred D., 665 N. 63d St.,
Philadelphia.
Stites, Mrs. Fletcher W., 413 Haverford
Eoad, Narberth.
Stoddart, Dr. Frances S. Janney, 301
Highway, Eiverton, N. J.
Stokes, Mrs. Charles P., "Lane's End,"
Narbei'th.
Stokes, Mrs. Francis J., 629 Church Lane,
Germantown.
Stokes, Mrs. Henry W., Media.
Stokes, Mrs. J. Stogdell, Spring Valley
Farm, Huntingdon Valley P. O.
Stone, Mrs. Harold Barton, 231 Washing-
ton Lane, Jenkintown.
Stone, Mrs. J. W., 424 Woodland Ave.,
Wayne.
Stone, Mrs. M. Bergen, 226 Collings Ave.,
CoUingswood, N. J.
Stoner, Mrs. A. B., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stoner, Miss Judith V., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stoner, Miss Mary H., 602 Drexel Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
Stork, Mrs. Theophilus B., 600 Church
Lane, Germantown.
Stormfeltz, Mrs. Elvira K., 502 Harrison
St., Eidley Park.
Stotesbury, Mrs. E. T., Whitemarsh Hall,
Chestnut Hill.
Stout, Mrs. A. L., 403 W. School Lane,
Germantown.
Stout, Mr. C. Frederick C, 2d St. and
Erie Ave., Camden, N. J.
Stout, Mrs. C. Frederick C, 214 Glenn
Ave., Ardmore.
Stout, Mrs. F. Sturgis, Eighters Ferry
Eoad, Cynwyd.
Stout, Mr. Morris A., 37 E. Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Stout, Mrs. Morris A., 37 E. Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Stover, Mr. John J., Erwinna, Bucks Co.
Stover, Mrs. John J., Erwinna, Bucks Co.
Strachan, Mr. Charles, Woodcrest, Ead-
nor. (G.)
Strassburger, Mr. Ealph B., Gwynedd
Valley.
Stratton, Mr. George S., 1201 Newton
Ave.. W. CoUingswood, N. J.
Strausburg, Mrs. E. E., 1840 Paul Ave.,
Betlilehem.
Strawbridge, Mrs. Frederic H., W. More-
land Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Strawbridge, Miss Louise, Cheltenham
Eoad, ChestJiut Hill.
Strayer, Mr. Franklin E., Box 22, West
Chester.
Street, Mrs. Gerald Basil, 1901 Greenhill
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Street, Mr. E. D., 119 Eosemont Ave.,
Eidley Park.
Stritzinger, Mrs. B. F., 556 Hamilton St.,
Norristown.
Stritzinger, Mrs. Lewis G., 520 Hamilton
St., Norristown.
Strohlein, Mr. George A., 218 Fulton St.,
Eiverton, N. J. (C.)
Stromal!, Mrs. C. M., 21 W. Upsal St.,
Philadelphia,
Strong, Miss Elizabeth, Villa Nova,
132
Stroud, Mr. Edward A., 508 S. 41st St.,
Philadelphia.
Stroud, Mrs. Morris W., Jr., Villa Nova.
Stroud, Mrs. William D., Couuty Line
Eoad, Villa Nova.
Strumpf, Mrs. David, 6505 N. 12th St.,
Philadelphia.
Stuart, Mrs. George H., 3d, Villa Nova.
Stuart, Mrs. Kenneth E., 367 Baird Road,
Merion. (L.)
Stuart, Mrs. William H., 135 S. 18th St.,
Philadelphia.
Stuetz, Mrs. William A., 334 E. Phil-
EUena St., Mt. Airy.
StuU, Mrs. George R., Moylan-Rose Val-
ley, Delaware Co.
Sturgis, Mrs. Robert, Wyncote.
Styer, Miss Ardella Gould, 309 Forest
Ave., Ambler.
Styer, Mr. J. P., care J. J. Styer & Son,
Coneordville.
Sullivan, Mrs. Marshall P., 8134 Cedar
Road, Elkius Park.
Sulzer, Mrs. G. H., 441 S. Jackson St.,
Media.
Summers, Mrs. Clarence Lynn, Warwick
Road, Wynnewood.
Suplee, Mrs. D. C, Plaza Apts., 63d and
Walnut Sts., Philadelphia,
Suplee, Mrs. Horace B., 242 Monument
Ave., Malvern.
Supplee, Mrs. A. I., 1016 Fayette St.,
Conshohocken.
Supplee, Mrs. Walter B., Levering Mill
Road and Lodges Lane, Bala-Cyuwyd.
Supplee, Mrs. William L., Mayfair, Ger-
mantown.
Sutley, Dr. Margaret H., Warburton
House, 20th and Sansom Sts., Philadel-
phia,
Sutro, Mrs. Paul E., Montgomei-y Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Sutro, Mrs, Paul W., 7700 Navajo St.,
Chestnut Hill.
Sutton, Mrs. Isaac C, 5409 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Swab, Miss Jennie E., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swab, Miss Nellie A., 222 S. Lynn Blvd.,
Upper Darby P. O.
Swalm, Mrs. John M., 1327 Howard Ave.,
Pottsville.
Swartley, Miss Grace E., 516 Broad St.,
Lansdale.
Swartley, Mr. H. C, R. D. 3, Phoenix-
ville.
Sweney, Mrs. Maurice V., 6378 Overbrook
Ave., Overbrook.
Sykes, Mrs. Charles H., 334 Llandrillo
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Synnestvedt, Mr. Arthur, Bryn Athyn.
Taggart, Miss Emily E., 126 Woodland
Ave., Wyncote.
Taggart, Mrs. Paul Leidy, 621 W. Clive-
den Ave., Germantown.
Talimer, Mrs. Bernard, The Warwick,
1701 Locust St., Philadelphia,
Talmon, Miss Carrie M., 5425 N. 12th
St., Philadelphia.
Tanrni, Miss Agnes, Strafford.
Tanger, Mrs. Charles Y., 318 N. President
Ave., Lancaster.
Tappan, Mrs. Paul, 108 Booth Lane, Hav-
erford.
Tarburton, Mrs. C, 220 Volan St., Mer-
chantville, N. J.
Tate, Mrs. Mercer B., Jr., 707 N. Mt.
Pleasant Road, Mt. Airy.
Tatnall, Mrs. H. Chace, Whitemarsh,
TatnaU, Mrs, Samuel A., 503 Hansberry
St., Germantown.
Tattersfield, Mrs. Percival, 6807 Lincoln
Drive, Mt. Airy.
Taylor, Miss Alice, St. Davids.
Taylor, Miss Bertha A., 72 Linden Place,
Sewickley.
Taylor, Mr. Charles D., 223 Oak Terrace,
Merchantville, N. J.
Taylor, Mrs. Edward L., Colonial Apts,.
5427 Wayne Ave., Philadelphia,
Taylor, Mr. Franklin S., 506 Old Gulph
Road, Penn Valley, Narberth.
Taylor, Mrs. Fred W., 239 Gowen Ave.,
Mt. Airy.
Taylor, Mrs. George B., 150 W. 6th St.,
Erie.
Taylor, Mrs. Herbert K., 8211 Cedar
Road, Elkins Park.
Taylor, Mrs. John, 427 N. New St., Beth-
lehem.
Taylor, Miss Sarah A., 2035 N. 62d St.,
Philadelphia.
Taylor, Miss Stella H.. 70 Linden Ave.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Taylor, Mrs. W. J. Romeyn, 517 Cresheim
Valley Road, Chestnut Hill.
Taylor, Mrs. WUliam J., 1825 Pine St.,
Philadelphia.
Tees, Miss Beatrice F., 326 E. Lancaster
Ave., St, Davids.
Tees, Miss Grace M., 458 Locust Ave.,
Germantown.
Teeuwen, Mr. John, care American Ship-
ping Co., 8-10 Bridge St., New York,
N. Y.
Templin, Mrs. John C, Gay St. and Vir-
ginia Ave., Phoenixville.
Tenbrook, Mrs. Philip, Berwyn.
Thayer, Mrs. Edmund, Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. G. C, Villa Nova.
Thayer, Mrs. John B., Redwood, Haver-
ford.
Thayer, Mrs. John B., 3d, Gray's Lane,
Haverford.
Thayer, Mrs. Joseph T., Elkins Park.
Thayer, Mrs. Sydney, Jr., Beaumont
Road, Devon.
Thiele, Miss Marguerite E., Orthodox St.
and Frankford Ave., Frankford. (F.)
Thielking, Mrs. W. F., 514 Grand Ave..
Bon Air, Upper Darby.
133
Thomas, Mrs. Arthur H., Haverford.
Thomas, Mrs. Clarence E., Oaks, Mont-
gomery Co.
Thomas, Mrs. Edward Osgood, 525 Cedar
Lane, Swartlimore.
Thomas, Miss Estelle, 623 W. Main St.,
Norristowu.
Thomas, Mrs. Florence, 338 Walnut St.,
Royersford.
Thomas, Mrs. Fraiik Wister, 27 E. Mt.
Airy Ave., Mt. Airy.
Thomas, Mrs. George, 3d, Whitford
Game, WMtford.
Thomas, Miss Lillie V. C, R. D. 1, Lang-
horne.
Thomas, Miss Marjorie N., Gwynedd.
Thomas, Miss Martha G., Whitford, Ches-
ter Co.
Thomas, Mrs. Samuel Hinds, Torresdale.
Thompson, Mrs. Arthur W., Dunwoodie,
W. Chestnut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Thompson, Mrs. Barry E., 14 E. Lodge
Lane, Bala-Cynwyd.
Thompson, Miss Harriet M., 124 W. Mt.
Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy.
Thompson, Mr. Horace E., 5016 Schuyler
St., Germantown.
Thompson, Mrs. Eobert W., Haverford.
Thompson, Mrs. Eodman Ellison, Devon.
Thompson, Mrs. Walter G., 218 W. Sus-
quehanna Eoad, Abingtou.
Thompson, Mr. Wesley E., P. 0. Box 81,
South Langhorne.
Thompson, Mrs. William R., 7834 Mont-
gomery Ave., ELkins Park.
Thomson, Miss Anne, Bryn Mawr.
Thomson, Mrs. F. G., Devon.
Thomson, Miss Helen Georgia, 301 Chest-
nut Eoad, Glenside.
Thomson, Mrs. Walter S., 1722 Spruce
St., Pliiladelphia.
Thorn, Mrs. 0. W., 7 E. Eidley Ave., Rid-
ley Park.
Thorn, Mrs. Fred G., 307 West Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Thorn, Mr. Fred G., Jr., 307 West Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Thornley, Mrs. George H., 416 W. Spring-
field Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Thurlow, Mrs. Frank T., 611 N. Lime St.,
Lancaster.
Tilden, Mrs. Marmaduke, Skippack Pike,
Blue Bell.
Tillinghast, Mrs. Henry W., Crescent
Eoad, Wyncote.
Tillotson, Mrs. John A., "The Boulders,"
Wayne.
Tily, Miss Ethel H., 121 Montgomery
Ave., Bala-Cynwyd.
Tily, Mrs. Harry C, 2d, 32 Overhill Eoad,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Tily, Mrs. L. Herbert, 42 Overliill Eoad,
Cynwyd.
Timanus, Mrs. J. Herbert E., 431 W.
Johnson St., Germantown.
Tindle, Mrs. James R., Valley Forge
Farm, Valley Forge.
Tingle, Miss Eleanor M., 1134 S. Wilton
Ave., Philadeli^hia.
Tobin, Miss Edith M., 6214 Morton St.,
Germantown.
Todd, Mr. H. Arnold, Doylestown.
Toerring, Miss Helen C, 6399 Woodbine
Ave., Overbrook.
Tomlinson, Mrs. W. W., Medford Road,
Wynnewood.
Tonkin, Mr. John, "Compton," Chestnut
Hill. (G.)
Toiuier, Mrs. William T., "Glen Foerd,"
Torresdale.
Toren, Mrs. Emelia, 8840 Germantown
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Torpin, Mr. Richard, Jr., 313 Ashbourne
Road, Elkins Park.
Torrey, Mrs. James C, "Cedarmount,"
Meeting House Road, Jenkintown.
Torrey, Mrs. W. Edward, 203 West Ave.,
Jenkintown,
Totten, Mrs. John F., 830 Stanbridge St.,
Norristown.
Toulmin, Mrs. Harry, Haverford.
Town, Mrs. Edwin C, 200 N. Narberth
Ave., Narberth.
Townsend, Mr. B. F., care DeHaven &
Townsend, 1415 Walnut St., Philadel-
phia.
Townsend, Mrs. Edward P., 128 Edge-
wood Road, Ardmore.
Townsend, Mr. Edward Y., 813 Montgom-
ery Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Townsend, Mrs. John Barnes, Radnor.
Townsend, Mr. John W., Bryn Mawr.
Tracy, Mrs. Joseph H., 303 West Ave.,
Jenkintown.
Trasel, Miss Marie L., Haverford.
Trask, Mrs. John E. D., 2024 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Treat, Mrs. F. H., Brook Road, Wayne.
Tresselt, Mr. Ralph E., 2419 Jefferson
St., Philadelphia.
Troutmau, Mrs. Albert C, 421 N. Main
St., Butler.
Trudell, Mr. Harry W., 2030 E. Madison
St., Philadelphia.
True, Dr. Rodney H., 4111 Baltimore
Ave., Philadelphia.
Tryon, Mrs. Charles Z., Rose Lane, Hav-
erford.
Tucker, Mr. Chester E., 630 E. Gravers
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Tucker, Mrs. L. B., 5404 Wayne Ave.,
Germantown.
Tull, Mrs. Edward R. S., Jr., 445 Bur-
mo nt Road, Drexel liill.
Tull, Mr. T. Mitchell, 6 Amherst Road,
Bala-Cynwyd. (S.)
Turner, Mi-s. J. Archer, 801 Harvard
Ave., Swartlimore.
Turner, Mrs. J. R., 304 Florence Ave.,
Jenkintown.
134
Turner, Mrs. William W., 731 Yale Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Tuttle, Mrs. J. H., County Line, Bryn
Mawr.
Twining, Mrs. Iredell, Hatboro E. D.
Tyler, Miss Helen B., Villa Nova.
Tyler, Mrs. Joseph Beck, 2 Park St., Eiv-
erton, N. J.
Tyler, Miss Mary G., 440 Haverford
Ave., Narberth.
Tyson, Mrs. Carroll S., Jr., Chestnut Hill.
Tyson, Mrs. Edwin, 226 Wyncote Eoad,
Jenkintown.
Tyson, Miss Evelyn, 226 Wyncote Road,
Jenkintown.
Tyson, Miss Geraldine S., 226 Wyncote
Road, Jenkintown.
Tyson, Mrs. T. M., 400 S. 18th St., Phila-
delphia.
Ueland, Miss Elsa, Carson College, Flour-
town.
Uhlman, Mrs. Carl H., 5632 N. Camac St.,
Philadelphia.
Ulizio, Mr. George, care Clementon P. O.
278, Pine Valley, N. J.
Ulizio, Miss Patricia, care Clementon P.
O. 278, Pine Valley, N. J.
Ulizio, Mrs. Rosamond A., care Clemen-
ton P. O. 278, Pine Valley, N. J.
Ullman, Mrs. A. M., 129 1st Ave., Col-
legeville.
Ungevitter, Mrs. Ruth, care Mr. Marston,
Newtown Square.
Urban, Mr. Abram L., Jr., 922 Edge-
wood Ave., Trenton, N. J. (L.)
Valle, Mrs. I. Bodine, The Cosmopolitan
Club, 1616 Latimer St., Philadelphia.
Vallier, Mrs. W. Taylor, State Road,
PhoenLxville.
Vandegrift, Mrs. Anna D., 76 E. Logan
St., Germantown.
Vandegrift, Miss Dorothy A., 76 E. Lo-
gan St., Germantown.
van den Hoek, Mr. A. M., care Koster «fc
Co., Bridgeton, N. J. (N.)
Vanderslice, Mrs. Charles M., 602 S. Main
St., Phoenixville.
VanDeventer, Mrs. Harry B., Rosemont.
Van Hoesen, Mrs. Stephen G., Fanwood,
N. J.
Van Horn, Mrs. Lillian, 139 Township
Line, Jenkintown.
Van Horn, Mrs. R. W., 1202 Yarmouth
Road, West Overbrook.
Van Keuren, Mrs. J. S., 2908 Rising Sun
Road, Ardmore.
VanLear, Mrs. J. Findlay, 1701 Greenhill
Ave., Wilmington, Del.
Vansant, Mr. Joseph A., Lafayette Hill,
Montgomery Co.
VanSciver, Mr. Joseph B., Bethlehem
Pike and Lynnebrook Road, Chestnut
Hill.
Van Sciver, Mrs. Joseph B., Bethlehem
Pike and Lynnebrook Road, Cliestnut
Hill.
Vare, Miss Katharine M., 350 W. Allen
Lane, Mt. Airy.
Vauclain, Mrs. Andrew C, 2416 N. 54th
St., Philadelphia.
Vauclain, Mrs. J. L., Buck Lane, Haver-
ford.
Vauclain, Mr. Samuel M., 123 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Vaughan, Mrs. Cecil H., 24 Simpson
Road, Ardmore.
Vaughan, Mrs. Charles P., 58th St. and
City Ave., Philadelphia.
Vaughan, Mrs. Ira, Green Hill Farms,
Overbrook.
Vaux, Mrs. George, Jr., Bryn Mawr.
Vaux, Mrs. J. Wain, Penllyn P. O.
Verlenden, Miss Mary, 99 E. Gi'eenwood
Ave., Lansdowne.
Verner, Miss Anna M., 3811 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Verner, Mrs. William R., 326 Louella
Ave., Wayne.
Vick, Mr. A. F. W., Bentley Ave., Bala-
Cynwyd. (C.)
Vogdes, Miss Dorothy, 347 Llandrillo
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
Vogdes, Mr. James M., 1306 Spring Gar-
den St., Philadelphia. (S.)
Vogdes, Mr. Jesse T., 347 Llandrillo
Road, Cynwyd.
Vogel, Mr. Fred, 23 Ridley Ave., Aldan,
Delaware Co. (F.)
Vollmer, Mr. Adrien Winston, 1007 Com-
mercial Trust Bldg., S. E. cor. 15th
and Market Sts., Philadelphia.
vonHiller, Baroness E., 7908 York Road,
Elkins Park.
Wagner, Mrs. Earl G., Righters Mill
Road, Narberth.
Wagner, Mrs. Edward S., 532 Lafayette
Road, Merion Park, Merion.
Wagner, Mrs. George Ellwood, 6612 Em-
len St., Germantown.
Wagner, Mrs. Jesse L., 152 N. 6th St.,
Reading.
Wagner, Mr. John, School House Lane,
Germantown.
Wagner, Mrs. Robert J., 3214 Highland
Ave., Drexel Hill.
Wagner, Mrs. William, 121 Sutton Eoad,
Ardmore.
Wainwright, Mrs. F. King, Bryn Mawr.
Walbaum, Miss E. C, Glyn Ython Farm,
Ithan.
Walbridge, Mrs. C. C, Elbow Lane and
McCallum St., Mt. Airy.
Walcott, Mrs. Charles D., 1743 22d St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
Walker, Mrs. Arthur M., Gwynedd Valley.
Walker, Mrs. I. C, 1202 DeKalb St.,
Norristown.
Walker, Miss Isabella, 40 Jacoby St., Nor-
ristown.
Walker, Mrs. John White, Meadowbrook.
Walker, Miss Loretta, 316 Tennis Ave.,
Ambler.
135
Walker, Mr. Thomas P., Ill E. Sedgwick
St., Germantowu.
Walker, Mrs. Thomas P., Ill E. Sedg-
wick St., Germantowu.
Walker, Mrs. William W., 354 Sycamore
Ave., Merion.
Wall, Mr. Eugene W., 310 Eosemore Ave.,
Glenside.
Wallace, Mrs. J. H., 7832 Spring Ave.,
Elkins Park.
Wallace, Miss Kate S., 123 Walnut St.,
Jeukintown.
Wallem, Mrs. Axel B., 303 Bryn Mawr
Ave., Cynwyd.
Wallen, Mrs. Fi-ancis B., 250 Mountwell
Ave., Haddonfield, N. J.
Waller, Mrs. L. W. T., Jr., Meadowbrook.
Wallis, Mr. Allan D., 630 Widener Bldg.,
Philadelphia.
Wallis, Airs. Allan D., "Annandale,"
King Road, Malvern.
Wallis, Mrs. Pliilip, 310 Clwyd Eoad, Cj-n-
wyd.
Wain, Mrs. Charlotte M., West Chester.
Walnut, Mrs. T. Henry, 1 Lehman Lane,
Germantowu.
Walsh, Miss Lydia Bourne, 902 College
Ave., Elmira, N. Y.
Walsh, Mr. Stephen, Church Road, Wyn-
cote. (G.)
Walter, Mr. C. S., 817 Seneca St., Beth-
lehem.
Walter, Mrs. W. 0., 520 W. State St.,
Kennett Sciuare.
Walters, Mr. Harry L., P. 0. Box 152,
Mount Holly, N. J.
Walton, Mrs. Georgia Bonnell, St. Davids.
Walton, Mr. Thomas W., 23 Bala Ave.,
Bala-Cynwyd.
Walton, Mrs. Thomas W., 23 Bala Ave.,
Bala-CjTiwyd.
Wanamaker, Aliss Louise, 290 N. High-
land Ave., Merion.
Ward, Mrs. T. J., Merion.
Warden, Mrs. C. A., Haverford.
Ware, Mrs. K. P., 116 W. Wayne Ave.,
Wayne.
Ware, Mr. Romaine B., Bridgeton, N. J.
Warner, Airs. Charles, 2311 W. 11th St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Warner, Airs. Frederick H., Jr., 110 St.
Paul's Road, Ardmore.
Warner, Airs. Irving, 1109 Broome St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Warner, Aliss Iva B., Alalvern.
Warner, Airs. AI. B., 421 Aleadowbrook
Ave., St. Davids.
Warner, Air. Alauriee E., Cassatt Ave.,
Benvyn.
Warner, Aliss Alildred S., 1211 Stratford
Ave., Alelrose Park.
Warren, Airs. Francis V., 517 Walnut
Lane, Swartlimore.
Warren, Airs. Frank B., 264 S. 46th St.,
Philadelphia.
Warren, AIi's. Polly E., 7420 Boyer St.,
Mt. Airy.
Warriner, Mrs. Samuel D., 250 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Warrington, Air. Theodore B., 7743 Ard-
leigh St., Chestnut Hill.
Washburn, Airs. Louis AI., 17 E. New-
field Way, Bala-Cj-nwj-d.
Wass, Miss Esther A. S., 447 York Road,
Jeukintown.
Wasserman, Airs. Joseph, Wissahickon
Ave. and Hortter St., Germantown.
Waterer, Mr. Anthony, 714 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
W^aterer, Air. Harry AI., 714 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. (S.)
W'aters, Airs. Edward, Woodmont.
Waters, Airs. Heniy, 107 Beutley Ave.,
Cynwyd.
Waters, Airs. Thomas S., Jr., 259 Wash-
ington Lane, Jenkinto-\vn.
Watson, Mrs. Charles, 342 Alerion Road,
Alerion.
Watson, Airs. F. R., Alontgomery Ave.,
Chestnut Hill.
Watson, Airs. Frank C, Providence Road,
Aledia, R. D. 3.
Watson, Mrs. L. V. G., 3936 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Wattles, Air. W. P., 301 Hathaway Lane,
Wynnewood.
Watts, Air. H. L., 527 E. Alermaid Lane,
Chestnut Hill.
Watts, Airs. H. L., 527 E. Alermaid Lane,
Cliestnut Hill.
Way, Mrs. Channing, N. High St., West
Chester.
Way, Airs. John, The Knoll, Lansdowne.
Way, Mrs. Lelaud, 34 Upland Road, West
Lawn.
WajTuan, Mr. Robert, 1st St., Bayside,
L. I., N. Y. (C.)
Wayne, Mrs. Joseph, Jr., 8200 St. Mar-
tiu's Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Wear, Airs. Ario, 1133 CaljTpso St., Beth-
lehem.
Wear, Airs. Joseph W., "Stony Mead-
ows," PeuUyn.
Weatherly, Mrs. J. L., 128 Wistar Road,
Ardmore.
Weaver, Aliss Florence S., 208 Summit
Ave., Jeukintown.
Webb, Airs. Walter, "Caswallen," West
Chester.
Webster, Airs. Lydia P., R. D. 2, Con-
shohockeu.
Webster, Airs. William, 218 Cameron
Road, Willow Grove.
Weeks, Mrs. Horace F., Rosemont.
Weidel, Airs. H. F., 701 S. Latclies Lane,
Alerion.
Weihenmayer, Air. H. W., 1621 Diamond
St., Philadelphia.
Weihenmayer, Air. William .7., Rydal.
Weihenmayer, Airs. William J., Rydal.
136
Weikel, Mr. William D., 116 E. Maple
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Weikel, Mrs. William D., 116 E. Maple
Ave., Merchantville, N. J.
Weil, Mr. M. S., 130 Central Ave., North
Hills.
Weild, Mrs. Charles M., 59th St. and City
Line, Overbrook.
Weile, Miss Emily E., 134 Windsor St.,
Reading.
Weile, Mrs. Harry P., 134 Windsor St.,
Eeading.
Weill, Mrs. Alfred S., 201 W. Chestnut
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Weir, Mrs. Campbell, P. 0. Box 282, Wil-
mington, Del.
Weir, Mrs. James, 671 Meeting House
Road, Jenkintown.
Weisenbach, Mrs. Fred, 220 Audubon
Ave., Wayne.
Weitzenfeld, Mr. Jacob J., 18 S. Lynn
Blvd., Highland Park, Upper Darby.
Wells, Mrs. WaiTen M., West Valley
Road, Strafford.
Wells, Mrs. William B., Pine Hill, Miners
ville.
Welsh, Mr. Edward L., 304 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Welsh, Mrs. Herbert S., Elbow Lane, Mt.
Airy.
Wendell, Mr. E. J., Wayne.
Wenger, Mrs. Morris, 1320 Montgomery
Ave., Rosemont.
Wentz, Mr. Walter E., Jr., 19 W. Balti-
more Ave., Media.
Wertsner, Miss Anne B., 79 Herman St.,
Germantown.
Wertsner, Mrs. George S., 79 Herman St.,
Geiinantown.
Wesp, Mr. Clarence A., 856 E. Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
Wesp, Mrs. Clarence A., 856 E. Ritten-
house St., Philadelphia.
West, Mrs. Oscar F., 4226 Chester Ave.,
Philadelphia.
West, Mrs. William T., 281 Hathaway
Lane, Wynnewood.
Weston, Mrs. J. M., 107 Walnut St.,
Haddonfield, N. J.
Wetherill, Mrs. Francis M., 3012 W. Coul-
ter St., Philadelphia.
Wetherill, Mrs. John L., 413 E. 19th St.,
Chester.
Wetherill, Mr. S. P., Jr., Rose Lane, Hav-
erford.
Wetherill, Miss Sara R., 215 W. 24th St.,
Cheater.
Wetherill, Mrs. W. Chattin, Box 4381,
Chestnut Hill.
Wetherill, Mrs. Webster K., 2031 Locust
St., Philadelphia.
Weyl, Mrs. Julius, Elkins Park.
Weyl, Mr. Maurice N., 6506 Lincoln
Drive, Mt. Airy.
Wheaton, Mrs. T. C, 516 High St., Mill-
ville, N. J.
Wheeler, Mrs. Andrew, "Le Chatelet,"
Ardmore.
Wheelock, Mrs. L. Ward, Jr., Highland
Road, Devon.
Wheelwright, Mr. Robert, 225 S. 15th St.,
Philadelphia. (L.)
Whelen, Mrs. T. Duncan, 5641 Overbrook
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wherry, Dr. Edgar T., Dept. of Botany,
University of Penna., Philadelphia.
Wherry, Mrs. Edgar T., 27 Oberlin Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Whipple, Dr. Dorothy V., 3105 Coulter
St., Philadelphia.
Whitall, Miss Matilda F., 159 Delaware
St., Woodbury, N. J.
White, Mrs. Edward, Jr., 1322 Wakeling
St., Frankford.
White, Mr. Edward J., 9th and Westmore-
land Sts., Philadelphia.
White, Miss Elizabeth C, New Lisbon,
N. J.
White, Miss Elizabeth Wade, Breakneck
Hill, Middlebury, Conn.
White, Mrs. Errol, Moylan-Rose Valley.
White, Miss Frances M., 525 Walnut
Lane, Swarthmore.
White, Mrs. Howard, 120 HUldale Road,
Lansdowne.
White, Mrs. J. M., 5806 Woodbine Ave.,
Overbrook.
White, Mrs. John, 824 Clifford Ave., Ard-
more.
White, Miss Margaret G., 1530 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
White, Mrs. R. H., 304 Pembroke Road,
Cynwyd.
White, Mrs. Thomas Raebuni, Penllyn.
White, Mrs. Walter Rhoads, Wakefield
Manor, Westtown.
White, Mrs. William, Cheswold Lane,
Haverford.
Whitmer, Miss Ellen, 7817 St. Martin's
Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Whitney, Mrs. W. Beaumont, 300 W.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Whitridge, Dr. Roland B., 135 S. 18th
St., Philadelphia.
Whitridge, Mrs. Roland Barker, 135 S.
18th St., Philadelphia.
Whittaker, Mr. W. A., Secretary, The
Rutledge Horticultural Society, P. O.
Box 255, Rutledge.
Whyte, Mrs. Hilson H., 340 Rumford
Road, Mt. Airy.
Wickham, Mrs. Addison S., 308 N. Ches-
ter Road, Swarthmore.
Widener, Mr. George D., Chestnut Hill.
Widener, Mr. Joseph E., Land Title
Bldg., Philadelphia.
Wiederhold, Mr. Louis, Jr., 414 Walnut
St., Philadelphia.
Wiederseim, Mr. William Caner, Abing-
ton.
Wiese, Mr. 6. F., 3745 Taylor Ave.,
Drexel Hill.
137
Wigton, Mrs. Frank H., Gray's Lane and
Mill Creek Eoad, Ardmore.
Wilbur, Mrs. KoULa Henry, "Old Stone
House," St. Davids.
Wilcox, Mrs. Thomas L., 80 W. Johnson
St., Germantown.
Wilder, Mrs. Theodore, 627 Glen Echo
Eoad, Mt. Airy.
Wiley, Mrs. Earl C, 24 Park Eoad, Llan-
erch. Upper Darby.
Wiley, Mrs. Harry E., 1440 S. Broad St.,
Philadelphia.
Wiley, Mrs. Maurice W., 306 E. Central
Ave., Moorestown, N. J.
Wilford, Mrs. E. Burke, 300 Linden Lane,
Merion.
Wilford, Mrs. Jonathan S., 335 Brook-
way, Merion.
Wilkeuing, Mrs. Louise D., 33 Owen Ave.,
Lansdowne.
Wilkins, Mr. George W., 138 Hilldale
Eoad, Lansdowne.
Wilkinson, Mrs. E. Powers, 1613 S. Broad
St., Philadelphia.
Willard, Mrs. deForest P., 633 Winsford
Eoad, Bryn Mawr.
Willcox, Mrs. J. Taney, Wawa.
Willcox, Mr. James M., 700 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Willcox, Mrs. William J., St. Davids.
Williams, Mr. Alfred H., 243 Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Williams, Mrs. Charles S., Wrightstown.
Williams, Mrs. David E., Bala-Cynwyd.
Williams, Miss Elizabeth D., Box 86,
Haverford.
Williams, Mrs. J. Eandall, Jr., Wynne-
wood.
Williams, Mr. John, Haverford.
Williams, Mrs. John J., 1101 DeKalb
St., Norristown.
Williams, Mr. Parker S., Provident Trust
Bldg., 17th and Chestnut Sts., Phila-
delphia.
Williams, Miss Eae, The Barclay, 18th
and Eittenhouse Sts., Philadelphia.
Williams, Mrs. Eobert Martin, Bala.
Williams, Mrs. Thomas S., Jenkintown.
Williamson, Mrs. H. H., 129 Levering
Mill Eoad, Bala-Cynwyd.
Williamson, Mrs. John D., Latham Park,
Montgomery Co., Oak Lane P. O.
Williamson, Miss Margaret E., 7308 Ger-
mantown Ave., Mt. Airy.
Willing, Mrs. Charles, Hillcrest Ave.,
Cliestnut Hill.
Willing, Mr. E. S., Bryn Mawr.
Willing, Mrs. E. S., Bryn Mawr.
Willing, Mrs. J. Kent, 1726 Eittenhouse
St., Philadelphia.
Willits Dr. L Pearson, 31 W. Walnut
Lane, Germantown.
Willits, Mrs. M. N., Jr., 609 W. Hortter
St., Germantown.
Wills, Mr. William M., 342 Merion Eoad,
Merion.
Wills, Mrs. William M., 342 Merion Eoad,
Merion.
Wilson, Mrs. Alan, Old Gulph Eoad, Villa
Nova.
Wilson, Mrs. Alexander, Jr., Herford
Place, Lansdowne.
Wilson, Miss Alice, Brookside Farm, Val-
ley Forge.
Wilson, Mrs. C. Colket, Wilson Farm,
Paoli.
Wilson, Mr. Clarence E., Bryn Mawr.
Wilson, Mrs. E. D., 621 Evergreen Eoad,
Elkins Park.
Wilson, Mrs. Florence W., 13th and Pot-
ter Sts., Chester.
Wilson, Mrs. George, Old Gulph and
Hagy's Ford Eoads, Penn Valley, Nar-
berth P. 0.
Wilson, Mrs. George F., 100 Pennsylvania
Ave., Easton.
Wilson, Miss Helen, 1509 Walnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. John L., 309 Wellington
Eoad, Jenkintown.
Wilson, Mrs. John Lewis, 1321 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. John 0., 515 Chester Ave.,
Moorestown, N. J.
Wilson, Mrs. Stanley E., 400 S. loth St.,
Philadelphia.
Wilson, Mrs. William K., Box 44, Bala-
Cynwyd.
Wilt, Mrs. M. D., 612 W. Hortter St.,
Germantown.
Windle, Mrs. W. Butler, Virginia Ave.,
West Chester.
Winlock, Mrs. G. L., Alden Park Manor,
Germantown.
Winsor, Mrs. James D., Jr., Ardmore.
Winternitz, Mrs. Hiram, Jr., 320 Summit
Ave., Wayne.
Winters, Mr. Ealph P., 1215 Bridge St.,
Frankford.
Wintersteen, Mrs. A. H., 142 Gray's Lane,
Haverford.
Wirz, Mrs. Henry M., Wallingford.
Wistar, Mrs. J. Morris, 200 Montgomery
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Wistar, Miss Eebecca B., 3515 Powelton
Ave., Philadelphia.
Wister, Mr. John C, Wister St. and
Clarkson Ave., Germantown. (L.)
Wister, Mrs. L. Caspar, Wynnewood.
Wister, Mr. Owen, Brjn Mawi-.
Wister, Mrs. William Eotch, 1112 Spruce
St., Philadelphia.
Witman, Miss Elsie F., 4301 Mitchell St.,
Eoxborough.
Witmer, Mrs. L. J., 46 Linden Ave., Lans-
downe.
Wohlert, Mr. A. E., Narberth. (N.)
Wolcott, Mrs. Darwin S., Colonial Vil-
lage, Wayne.
Wolf, Mrs. Albert, 250 S. ITtJi St., Phila-
delphia.
138
Wolf, Mrs. Benjamin, 250 S. 17th St.,
Philadelphia.
Wolf, Mr. H. Rey, 16 School Lane, Ard-
more.
Wolf, Mrs. H. Eey, 16 School Lane, Ard-
more.
Wolf, Dr. John H., 734 E. Penn St., Ger-
mantown.
Wolf, Mrs. Louis, Elkins Park.
Wolfe, Miss Katharine M., Glen Mary
Lane, Radnor.
Wolfe, Mrs. 0. Howard, Glen Mary Road,
Radnor.
Wolfenden, Mr. David H., Creek Road,
Media.
Wolfgram, Mrs. Irving F., 563 Hamilton
St., Norristown.
Wolle, Mrs. J. A., 270 Harvard Ave.,
CoUiagswood, N. J.
Wonsetler, Mrs. Howard, 619 W. Main
St., Norristown.
Wood, Mrs. A. L, 334 Louella Ave.,
Wayne.
Wood, Mrs. Charles Martin, 222 Gray's
Lane, Haverford.
Wood, Mrs. Clement Biddle, Consho-
hocken.
Wood, Miss Dorothea, 1313 Spruce St.,
Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs. E. R., Richland, N. J.
Wood, Mrs. E. Stearns, 2127 Sansom St.,
Philadelphia.
Wood, Mrs, Edward F. R., N. W. cor.
Prospect Ave. and Gravers Lane, Chest-
nut Hill.
Wood, Mrs. George B., 329 Hathaway
Lane, Wynnewood.
Wood, Mr. Harry, 329 Cornell Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Wood, Mrs. Howard, Jr., Conshohocken.
Wood, Mrs. John H., Langhorne.
Wood, Mrs. Joseph, Jr., R. D. 1, Hatboro.
Wood, Miss Julia L., Wayne.
Wood, Miss Katharine H., Baltimore Ave.
and Monroe St., Media.
Wood, Miss M. Louise, Bryn Mawr.
Wood, Miss Marion B., Conshohocken.
Wood, Mrs. Richard D., Wawa.
Wood, Mrs. Robert F., 237 Fon-est Ave.,
Narberth.
Wood, Mrs. Samuel W., 241 Merion Road,
Merion.
Wood, Miss Sarah Keen, 4326 Osage Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Wood, Mr. Walter, 400 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia.
Woodall, Mr. John, R. R. 5, Easton, Tal-
bot Co., Md.
Woodall, Mrs. John, 227 Washington
Lane, Jenkintown.
Woodbridge, Mrs. J. Lester, 524 Arbutus
St., Mt. Airy.
Woods, Mrs. Ralph, Rydal Road, Noble.
Woods, Mrs. William, 2 Lehman Lane,
Germantown.
Woodward, Mrs. George, Chestnut Hill.
Woodward, Miss Lois R., care Andorra
Nurseries, Chestnut Hill.
Woodward, Miss Quita, Mermaid Lane
and McCallum St., Chestnut Hill.
Woodward, Mr. Samuel, 1900 Rittenhouse
Square, Philadelphia.
Woodward, Mrs. Samuel, 1900 Ritten-
house Square, Philadelphia.
Woolman, Miss Anna, 21 N. Highland
Ave., Lansdowne.
Woolman, Mr. Edward, Panmure Road,
Haverford.
Woolman, Mrs. Edward, Panmure Road,
Haverford.
Woolman, Miss Helen E., 601 River Bank,
Riverton, N. J.
Woolman, Mr. Henry N., 132 St. George's
Road, Ardmore.
Woolman, Mrs. Walter Keen, 701 River
Bank, Riverton, N. J.
Worrall, Miss Laura K., 127 W. State
St., Kennett Square.
Worrell, Mrs. Granville, 2d, 110 Llanfair
Road, Ardmore.
Worrell, Miss N. M., Apt. D-2, 81 E.
High St., Germantown.
Worth, Mrs. Edward H., Claymont, Del.
Worth, Mrs. George S., St. Davids.
Woznicki, Mrs. Margaretta DeB., 318 E.
Meehan Ave., Mt. AiTy.
Wright, Mrs. A. S. H., Wallingford.
Wright, Mrs. Alfred W., 52 E. Elm S't.,
Norristown.
Wright, Mrs. Franklin L., R. D. 4, Nor-
ristown.
Wright, Mrs. Harrison B., Ithan Derlwyn,
Radnor.
Wright, Mrs. John Castle, 44 Lincoln
Ave., Lansdowne.
Wright, Mrs. M. G., 11th and Oak Lane
Sts., Oak Lane.
Wright, Miss Mary F., E. D. 1, Ambler.
(N.)
Wright, Miss Mary P., 1920 N. Park Ave.,
Philadelphia.
Wright, Mrs. Minturn T., 130 W. Chest-
nut Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Minturn T., Jr., Whitemarsh
Road, Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Philip H., 228 Kent Road,
Ardmore.
Wright, Mrs. Randolph, 1011 Swede St.,
Norristown.
Wright, Mrs. Raymond D. B., 300 W.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Wright, Mrs. Robert C, Haverford.
Wright, Mr. Sydney L., Jr., Endsmeet
Farm, Glenside.
Wurts, Mrs. C. S., 926 Spruce St., Phila-
delphia.
Wyatt, Mrs. Walter S., The Barclay, E.
Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia.
Wyers, Mrs. Herman F., 345 W. Miner
St., West Chester.
Wynn, Mrs. J. M., Wayne.
139
Wynn, Mrs. James H., Rose and Quarry
Lanes, Haverford.
Yarnall, Mr. Charlton, Newtown Square.
Yarnall, Mr. F. H., 934 High St., Potts-
town.
Yarnall, Mr. William S., Box 152, Haver-
ford.
Yates, Mr. Harry 0., Jr., Camden Co.
Vocational School, Merchantville, N. J.
Yeatman, Miss Georgina Pope, 520 E.
Gravers Lane, Chestnut Hill.
Yeatman, Mrs. Pope, 520 E. Gravers Lane,
Chestnut HUl.
Yerger, Mr. John A., 1401 Arch St.,
Philadelphia.
Yerger, Mrs. Wilson S., 7312 Elbow Lane,
Mt. Airy.
Yerkes, Mr. Milton E., Ill Pennsylvania
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Yerkes, Mrs. Milton R., Ill Pennsylvania
Ave., Bryn Mawr.
Yerkes, Mrs. R. K., 212 Valley Road,
Merion.
Yocom, Miss Mildred L., Gramacy Gar-
dens, Douglassville, Berks Co.
Yocom, Mrs. Thomas Corson, 321 Cynwyd
Road, Bala-Cynwyd.
York, Mrs. Edward H., Jr., Ithan.
York, Dr. H. H., Botanical Laboratory,
University of Penna,, Philadelphia.
Young, Mr. Frederick C, P. O. Box 146,
Palmyra, N. J.
Young, Mr. John Welsh, Enfield. (C.)
Young, Mrs. Willard, 307 Springhill Ave.,
Wilmington, Del.
Zantzinger, Mrs. C. C, 8500 Seminole
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Zeigler, Miss Elvie, 1603 E. Willow Grove
Ave., Chestnut Hill.
Zell, Mrs. John J., 129 Hastings Ave., S.
Ardmore, Upper Darby.
Zieget, Mrs. Julius, 132 Edgewood Road,
Ardmore.
Zieget, Miss Marcia Stuart, 132 Edge-
wood Road, Ardmore.
Ziegler, Miss Helen D., 300 Glenolden
Ave., Glenolden.
Ziegler, Mr. William H., 7427 Boyer St.,
Philadelphia.
Zimmer, Mrs. George, Ogden Ave.,
Swarthmore.
Zimmerman, Miss Anna W., The Hedges,
Rydal.
Zimmerman, Dr. Mason W., Rydal.
Zimmerman, Mrs. Graham, 7808 Lincoln
Drive, Chestnut Hill.
Zimmerman, Mr. William, 524 Cresheim
Valley Road, Chestnut Hill.
Zipf, Mr. Carl H., 135 Bryn Mawr Ave.,
Bryn Mawr.
Zorn, Mrs. George, 522 Hampshire Road,
Drexel Hill.
140