The Annual Meeting of this Society was held on the evening of the 5th of January. This Society, we learn, is in a flourishing condition. The following were the officers elected for the present year:

D. E. UNDERWOOD, President; L. G. Berry, Vice President; F. C. Beaman, Secretary; S. Lathrop, Treasurer; B. F. Strong, Librarian; W. II. Scott, B. F. Strong, B. W. Steer, J. W. Helme, W. II. Waldby, Executive Committee.

The Adrian Horticultural Society #1

The fifth annual meeting of this Society was held last evening, and was in every respect a spirited and satisfactory one.

Mr. Lathrop, the Treasurer, made a report on the finances of the Society, showing it to be out of debt and to have a respectable surplus on hand, notwithstanding its payments for seeds and for additions to its library the past year.

An election of officers for the year was then gone into, and Dr. Underwood declining to act longer as President, the following result was announced:

SAMUEL LATHROP, President Wm H. Scott, Flee President. Thomas M Cooley, Secretary. B. F. Strong, Treasurer and Librarian. E. H. Pilcher, B. W. STEER, W. W. Owen, A. J. Eastman, A. J. Dean, W. H. Soott, Directors. The President, the Secretary, E. H. Pllcher, B. W. Stear, W. Own, A. G. Eastman, W. H Scott, A. J. Dean, Executive Board.

Adrian Horticultural Society #2

At a recent meeting of the citizens of Adrian, a Horticultural Society was formed, and D. K. Underwood was chosen President: L. G. Berry Vice-President; P. Raymond, Treasurer; F. R. Stebbins Secretary.

Adrian Horticultural Society #3

The following gentlemen were elected officers of this Society, at its last annual meeting:

President, Wm. H. Scott; Vice-President, L. G. Berry; Secretary, Dr. W. Owen; Treasurer, Sam'l Lothrop; Librarian, B. F. Strong. Executive Committee, D. K. Underwood, L. G. Berry, Mr. Perkins, B. F. Strong, S. Lothrop.

This Society has now been in existence a number of years. It has from time to time received such liberal additions to its library, that those of our citizens who are fond of beautifying their homes, and who would make the best use of their time in their hours of leisure from business, could not do better than to take advantage of the varied information they afford, by becoming members. All the standard works on House Architecture, on Fruits and Flowers, and on Arboriculture generally, including Michaux's expensive colored edition of our North American Sylva - in all, making a library of over one hundred and fifty volumes; and all the best monthly and weekly Horticultural periodicals in this country may be found in the Society's library, and freely drawn by all members. - Michigan Paper.