THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



••^EnwAM TiLKt, Nurseryman, Seedsman, and Florist, 

 ' SBW~HARDY HYBRID RHODODENDRON. 



fTlt .pure white with t 



&CrE^Iw^rotag'«J 



iS'M^Ka 





OHOICE FLOWER SEEDS FOR PRESENT AND 



^' b ^ aU Strawberries, £ 







saw? ski 





^©arumns' Chronicle, 



^TUSDA Y, SEPTEMBER 8, 1840. 



W| MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 



should follow, with all i 



That cholera 

 the presence 

 , especially in low, ill-drained 

 hat might have been anticipated, 

 indicates, in fact, a state of the 

 weather which is almost unexampled near London, 

 i will be evident from the following table, which 

 is been prepared by Mr. R. Thompson : 

 he following Table exhibits the Highest Temperature 

 during the day, and the Lowest during the night, for 



August and 4 th of September, compared with the 



. From this we gather the following remarkabh 

 facts. Up to the 6th of August the day tempera 

 ture had been lower than usual, and that at nigh 

 considerably so ; on the 3d it was within 7° o 



::■ :-■. 



e of this rapid advanci 

 he 24 hours. From t 



: was only 1 



,':t,: 



18th it was 13° lower. There then 



rise of 10°, and on 



nearly 8° above the average. 



night tempt 



average, on one occasion 



15 degrees and a half. 



been constantly < 

 (the 29th) as 





temperatures are not always connected i 

 sp.mdin- heat. Thus on the 29th August, when t 

 night was 154° above the average, the day was h 

 than half a degree above it. In fact the mean bight 

 temperature by day in all " 



only 74.03°, 



. is ::: ■: 



average highes 



How far these circumstances may affect vegeta 

 remains to be seen ; all newly planted trees 1 

 of course made striking progress, for they have 1 

 exposed, during more than a month, to the clit 



favourable to tb 



i moment would seem, however, to be highly 

 ible to the transplantation of - i 

 garden of the Horticultural Society there is 

 . progress on that subject a pi- 4 



■■U ■'■■ ■■!■..'■■:■■ ' ' 



;■ in \ ::_ 



nparatively | exhibitors' vans. The process is aided by a dressing 



. Evergreens of great sizi 

 It will be remembered 



Indeed our own nostrils ha 

 offensiveness of the place e 

 what may be supposed to bt 

 intendence. 1' 



■ justice nl ■ 



by the following statemen 



,• ::;-.•' •■ !;■■■ - ;.:. 



plaintiff. In the ll'id./i, '< 

 ia>t is B Liter from this gei 



rs 



by them during the ni^ht. Simpson's ope- 

 There is not a single cherr, - 



looking man amongst them. They are the 'mere 

 shreds and ends ' of men. d 

 they put one in mind o! I 



march through Coventry. The Roman poet has hit 

 • 



that Doctors A. and B. have Bignally 



figure in the ranks of modern alchymy can render them 



And this must be the fal 

 permits these pestilential 

 heads within a couple of t 



everybody who ras 

 of their property. 



to 40 feet in height. 



ia. acc< l ling to Mr. I. 

 w in the interior of 



point out the real value 

 be offered for sale. Fo 



Fagrts obliqua is an 

 beauty, growing from l 



m, at an elevation of 1000 

 ■ 



■ 

 and of value for its heavy wood. It occupies, how- 



I Ireland. 



Alerse are spoken of 24 a 

 from the ground ; others 

 to 40 feet round, and 80 

 first branches ; above whi< 





