Catalogue of Works on Gardenings S)C. 155 



to cottagers ; and, undoubtedly, this would have been the case, 

 had not Dr. Arnott's invention appeared subsequently. Dr. Arw 

 nott's stove, we think, must have the preference for the poor 

 man ; because, though, to act in the best manner, it requires a 

 fuel not bituminous, or apt to cake, such as charcoal, stone coal, 

 or coke, yet it will act tolerably well with any kind of wood, 

 coal, peat, &c. Whereas Mr. Joyce's stove will not act at all, 

 without fuel prepared according to his patent. 



In the Architectural Magazine for this month, we liave gone 

 more into detail respecting Dr. Arnott's stove, illustrating the 

 subject with woodcuts; and we shall therefore defer any further 

 notice of it here till our next Number, when these cuts will be 

 disengaged, and at the service of the Ga7-de?ier's Magazijie. 



Art. V. Catalogue of Works on Gardening, Agriculture^ Botany^ 

 Rural Architecture, Sfc, lately published, tvith some Account of those 

 considered the more interesting. 



MoNOGRAPHlE de la Famille des ConifereSy par M. Jacques, Jar- 

 dinier en Chef du Domaine Royal de Neuilly, Membre de 

 la Societe d' Horticulture, &c. Extrait des " Annales de Flore 

 et de Pomone." Pamph. 8vo, 80 pages. 



A catalogue that will be useful to the cultivators in the neigh- 

 bourhood of Paris. The same genera are given, as belonging to 

 the Coniferae, as in the Arboretum Britanniamiy except that Tax- 

 aceae is included, and Casuarina added, as a genus related to the 

 Coniferae. Among the species of pines in cultivation in the 

 Paris gardens, which M. Jacques cannot refer to any of the 

 regular sections, are : Pinus cseriilea Lodd. Cat.^ which is ^^bies 

 cserulea; Pinus novazelandica Lodd. Cat., which is nothing 

 more than P. Pinaster; P. scarina Cels.y which is P. escarena 

 Risso; P. Pinaster escarenus Arb. Brit. ; P. nepalensis Hart, (a 

 name which, in England, is sometimes applied to P. excelsa, 

 sometimes to P. Geravdid?ia, and sometimes to P. longiftMia; so 

 that, unless we saw the plant, we cannot say what it is) ; and P. 

 Neosa, which is P. GGvardidna. 



The author confines himself chiefly to short popular descrip- 

 tions ; with occasional notices respecting culture, in the Paris 

 garden in which the species is contained. 



Histoire du Cedre du Liban, par M. Loiseleur Deslongchamps, 

 Membre de I'Acadcmie de Medecine, de la Societe lloyale et 

 Centrale d' Agriculture, de la Societe lloyale d'Horticulture, 

 &c. Pamph. Svo, 66 pages, one plate. 



M. Loiseleur Deslongchamps is well known among botanists 

 as the author of the article on the Pine and P'ir Tribe in the 

 Nouveau Du Hamcl. He has here reprinted the essence of what 

 he had there stated respecting the cedar, added some recent infor- 



