THE CONCENTRATES 177 
for a good price at the oil mills, or exchanged for cotton-seed meal 
at the rate of 800 pounds per ton of seed: It has, therefore, now 
been largely replaced by cotton-seed meal in the feeding of farm 
animals,?? 
Literature on Forage and Grain Crops.—Hunt, “The Forage and 
Fiber Crops,” New York, 1907. Hunt, “ The Cereals in America,” New York, 
1904. Voorhees, “ Forage Crops,” New York, 1907. Shaw, “ Grasses and 
How to Grow Them,” New York, 1908. Shaw, “ Forage Crops,” New York, 
1907. Shaw, “Soiling Crops and the Silo,” New York, 1902. Shaw, 
“ Clovers and How to Grow Them,” 1906; Wallace, ‘“ Clover Farm,” 1898. 
Spillman, “‘ Farm Grasses of the United States,” New York, 1907. Wing, 
“‘ Meadows and Pastures,” Chicago. Wing, “ Alfalfa Farming in America,” 
Chicago, 1909. Coburn, “The Book of Alfalfa,” New York, 1908. Myrick, 
“The Book of Corn,” New York, 1903. Shoesmith, “The Study of Corn,” 
New York, 1910. Montgomery, “The Corn Crops,” New York. Holden, 
“A, B, C of Corn Culture,” 1906. Bowman and Crosley, “Corn,” Ames, 
Iowa, 1908. : 
Farmers’ Bulletins 11, “The Rape Plant,” 1893. 164, “Rape as a 
Forage Crop,” 1903. 16, ‘“‘Leguminous Plants for Green Manuring and 
Feeding,” 1894. 18, “Forage Plants for the South,” 1894. 102, “ Southern 
Forage Plants,” 1899. 300, “Some Important Grasses and. Forage Plants 
for the Gulf Coast Region,” 1907. 147, “ Winter Forage Crops for the 
South,” 1902. 436, “ Winter Oats for the South,” 1911. 25, “ Peanuts, 
Culture and Uses,” 1895. 26, “ Sweet Potatoes, Culture and Uses,” 1895. 129, 
“ Sweet Potatoes, Culture and Uses,” 1901. 31, “ Alfalfa or Lucern,” 1895. 
215, “ Alfalfa Growing,” 1905. 276, “ Alfalfa Culture in Eastern United 
States,” 1907. 339, ‘‘ Alfalfa,” 1908. 199, “ Corn Growing,” 1904. 36, ‘‘ Cot- 
ton Seed and its Products,” 1896. 37, “ Kafir Corn,” 1896 (see also Bulletin 
73). 552, “Kafir as a Grain Crop,” 1913. 50, “Sorghum as a Forage 
Crop,” 1897. 58, “ The Soybean as a Forage Crop,” 1897. 372, “Soy- 
beans,” 1909. 66, “ Meadows and Pastures,” 1897. 86, “ Thirty Poison- 
ous Plants,” 1898. 89, “ Cowpeas,” 1899. 318, ‘ Cowpeas,’” 1908. 101, 
“ Millets,” 1899. 168, “ Pearl Millet,” 1903. 108, “Salt Bushes,” 1900. 
110, “ Rice Culture in the United States,” 1900. 139, “ Emmer: A Grain 
for the Semi-arid Regions,’ 1901. 466, “ Winter Emmer,” 1911. 167, 
“ Cassava,” 1903. 224, “Canadian Field Peas,” 1905. 246, “ Saccharine, 
Sorghums for Forage,’ 1906. 458, “ The Two Best Sweet Sorghums for 
Forage,” 1911. 288, “The Non-saccharine Sorghums,” 1907. 322, “Milo 
as a Dry Land Grain Crop,” 1908. 448, “ Better Grain for Sorghum Crops,” 
1911. 356, “ Peanuts,” 1908. 431, “The Peanut,’ 1911. 361, “ Meadow 
Fescue, its Culture and Uses,” 1909. 362, “Conditions Affecting the 
Market Value of Hay,” 1909. 508, “ Market Hay,” 1912. 402, “ Canada 
Blue Grass, its Uses and Culture,” 1910. 420, “Oats, Distribution and 
Uses,” 1910. 427, “ Barley Culture in the Southern States,” 1910. 518, 
“Winter Barley,” 1912. 441, “ Lespedeza or Japan Clover,” 1911. 455, 
* Red Clover,” 1911. 485, ‘‘ Sweet Clover,” 1912. 550, “ Crimson Clover, 
Growing the Crop,’ 1913. 515, ‘‘ Vetches,” 1912. 529, ‘“ Vetch Growing in 
the South Atlantic States,” 1913. 483, “The Thornless Prickly Pears,” 
1912. 502, “Timothy Production on Irrigated Land in the Northwest.” 
509, “ Forage Crops for the Cotton Region,” 1912. 271, “‘ Forage Crop Prac- 
tices in Western Oregon and Western Washington,” 1906. 331, “ Forage 
Crops for Hogs in Kansas and Oklahoma,” 1908. 534, “ Durum Wheat,” 
1913. ‘ 
2 Farmers’ Bulletin 36. 
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