Fesruaky 11, 1860.} 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
121 
SS -a E a Tae A ae par a ————— 
ail back on Annuals to make their gardens attractive | cooked, the texture and flavour reminding one strongly | hands) around a small central ‘Iull’—was fro to nearly 80 
and gay through the summer, which they can do with | of a Bri er ving and as it retains its ss ad it a mie AE ana yee = north-westward of its cen » the 
wind appeared to ‘back’ o; t 
ei Crag me ai dew. A S od soil, Eo pting "The aran a Mp ch. does not Te through north-east and er ie sae wae pp een 
we ug an 9 = i eastward of its central passage, the apparent chan: e, i 
3, une rifling matter, tig nee to a es litis tos i ew it slowly, after fi edison i peia, from it through. south-east, 50 th, ih-west, and 
m 5 P , not far from the Eddystone, 
ordinary bedding plants. Nor should we omit to |in a small quantity of ‘veal stock, adding a "Tittle pe bist pet a, POIRAN cd od Misa 
notice another reason bearing on our subject, which | and cayenne, with a blade of Mace. e Fungus | e ETA pr a nt h bo near, 
vries with it a strong motive for the increasing inte- | is tender a small cratitey of finely Rites Pas ley and | the central lull; while, r as at Guernsey, the wind 
rest now felt for this class. A nuals, like other popular | Cherv ; ith a minute portion of Garlic, should te | Meg round by south, regularly, out any lull. “This 
owers, have been greatly im by careful cultiva- | added, together with some good cream, and the whole | 3ft Sisk at saath fear eget: petra eigen ra 
tion and judicious hybridising. The mn Sap oon served ne ein sippeta of tie bread. Paulet recom- | westward of which the central lull p: his south- 
perceives when a class of plants is susceptible o ends for id isp ag a sauce composed of blanched | eastern part of England, the central portion of the storm 
provement th this agency, and advan ae A A tipie beat ar with a little water, Wi coeteue mone ren) rear oa er aoe : anoh 
quickly taken f the fact; to this result the many | which is add Gario, Back Pepper, Olive-oil and | nearly later thancthe-anhadk F: England. Whee, the «Royal 
splendid varieties of Annuals which year by year are | Lemon-juice till the whole the consistence Sharter’ was wrecked, Aberdeen and Banffshire ‘ot 
ice are ov Both in this country | common Mustard, so as S ftiin ort of Mayonnoise, | disturbed by wind; but when it blew hardest, ae to 
b into notic 1 ys th e y ’ | north, on that = posea oer = ma d abated o ost 
and on the Continent great attention has o e years |in the composition of w. hi ceased in the 3 uth enast of "Trelan d. 
‘Satay Phloxes, Vinnias, Sto 
re 
besi paid to the Bae of obtaining ing the a varieties | lei is the 
A mpar | 
cks, ‘Trop ias, failure. 
and fra other genera of Annuals; fad. koking at on iP 
Though Are Fun em has a pee ay acrid taste w 
conclu sive fa of the improve 
ment which has taken place in the 
fannie they represen 
0 grow w Annualsas they should 
a fies and to lope their 
i d for 
be 
* them should - ee and = 
(as is necessa rapid 
ing plants), a ‘the, plants sh ould 
a 
the common way of committing 
the seed of Annuals to the ground. 
remained to 
n 
room, ed upwards into bloom, 
wen the first ite dry weather 
their What figure, 
which form such sand objects 
wh singly E. 
they n left to starve, at the 
rate of ropes per square foot of 
ground? No; Annuals, to do justice 
aust be treated individually 
as we treat a specimen plant, and. 
then you i a freedom of growth 
combined a profusion. of Boot; ; 
and what i the dee nd 
ntinue in perfection. Editorial 
Notice i in the Florist for February. 
LOGY.—No. V. 
PANDUM, Linn.— 
is te is vn once arts 
of 
gt by tie gill-like platen i which 
cover the under side of the pileus 
er towards t 
stem, andeitherending abru: A e Natural 
reach it pote bore Ser ee 
a to it. There are, 
other Fungi which resemble i 
habit a “4 
Hyda A, whioh are rn are en for ha ies bymeninm 
it i rie which may be 
-eastward. Of both these gales the 
meter, besides other AA gave ample 
DRS as telegraphic notice mi: er hae ore given in 
eastern 
cient time from the southern ports the 
a cam renee chs irg ar Ts l anda. 
it is the est half the cyclone 
pear 
negatively lected or over ‘oh 
e part re affected 
overpo' 
the rrr 
polar half of Foon pei 
sup) hat side, The visible ie etek 
= a oe 
eter ; aid on the equai side, 
overpowering sopra of eno moist 
hai ible nia pplie a s 
ustible tro supplies—pus! 
the north-east as long as their impetus 
ii Win sro it Wile sia 
{i ii nC 
yii u KUN an 
y i 
lasts (however originated), and are suc- 
poet y chilled, dried, and intermingled 
with alwa; resisting, though at 
first recoiling, polar current. After such 
struggles these two currents unite ina 
varying interniediate state and di 
one or o vailing grad y. Very 
plain and. practical conclusions de- 
ducible from these considerations :—One, 
and the important, is that in a gale 
which likely to be near the $ 
part of a sl be (of course) 
avoided by a shi gers 9 vhs room: & 
seaman, ing the win that 
centre is on right in the 
northern h here, on his left in the 
of a storm’s approach to places then 
some hi distant, not other- 
wise fore ings of the Royal 
Societ; 
SRRI 
RDENERY’ 
ROY se BENEVOLENT 
INSTITUTION. j 
Tue foll the pua son 
Committee for 1859, 
read at 
meeting, which took booed 
HYDNUM REPANDUM. 
areata h Cryptogamic Flora.) the Horticultural Society’s Rooms, St. 
Martin’ 
| is in E i 1 d | ©The Committee t the report of 
en It fl: , seldom occurs in | proceedings during the y 
~ sufficient gona A make it of ‘the terpertaes 1 it pleasure to them to congratulate | the subscribers 
kt for ketchnp, m and. cannot be advantageously em- 
“During the only one niione Masail, 
brotan ploy viz, Jas. Seat at the prego sero in the 
from which they are | The word Hydnum is y derived from the Greek po | same t eight have been added, two ae an elec. 
gradually a att enuated upward so as to exhibit the form | for a sort of white m which it has bee tion i in jaras with Rule 9, and six by 
metromely elongated gga O | thinifetred khone sufficient eld to the teeth-bear-| | among the subscribers. 
it » the subject of our park illus- | ing Fungi. The species have no vernacular name in he anniversary dinner took place at the Crystal 
siona be teeth of this description, - | English, but on t Palace. Sydenham, ‘under the presidency of Mr. _ Justice 
g less cómpre and Barit, and | Chevrotines, Steccherino, and other names Whisk ee | Haliburton, 
though seldom in 
s 3 or 4 inches broad, at first convex but | 
r- | more or less clearly to the toothed Hymen 
> | scarcely necessary to say t ce 
mn | sometimes assumed by the a shows no immediate 
a n in| 
t Epe with the spore hag i the spores 
the one case being o; paaa Ma ths teeth, int ‘ae 
warmest thanks for his exertions on behalt of the 
that the tibla 4 a inia charity; also to the gentlemen who acted as stewards 
for their Pee ae their i 
other in this ieee saan of the tubes. The 
fy sotaewhat flattened, and ultimately d t fer a f 
inthe con latte lepressed | n na nane a does not ses as oa aryf supposes 
peek the rest of the plant is of a rich cream colour, | form which the plans Sonos waar et 
The surface is v 
minutely downy, the down, however, bein; eevee and 
depressed, so as not to be conspicuo J 
ttre are very brittle, and oft give way 
and in this se sometimes 
the stem, 
THE GREAT STORMS OF LAST sean 
EAR-ADMIRAL Frrzroy. 
lle ot te Oishi lat bE I interested in 
and character of that ‘storm a ee Y 
Straits wih rei aa 
“of wobec E oe the very : 
all the journals connected with horti 
to 
