42 MISC. PUBLICATION 2 81, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 



Stanford, E. E. (751) 



economic plants. 571 pp., illus. New York and London. 1934. 



Steele, E. S. (752) 



CAN PERFUMERY FARMING SUCCEED IN THE UNITED STATES? U. S. Dept. 



Agr. Yearbook 1898: 377-398, illus. 1899. 



Stevens, O. A. (753) 



uses of plants by the Indians. Science (n. s.) 52: 99-101. 1920. 



StevensoN| M. C. (754) 



ethnobotany of the zuni Indians. Smithsn. Inst., Bur. Amer. Ethnol., 

 Ann. Rept. 30: 35-102, illus. 1915. 



Stockberger, W. W. (755) 



drug plants under cultivation. U. S. Dept. Agr. Farmers' Bull. 663, 

 rev., 38 pp., illus. 1935. 



Thompson, C. H. (756) 



ornamental cacti: their culture and decorative value. U. S. Bur. 

 Plant Indus. Bull. 262, 24 pp., illus. 1912. 



Trelease, W. . (757) 



PLANT MATERIALS OF DECORATIVE GARDENING: THE WOODY PLANTS. Ed. 2, 



177 pp. Urbana, 111. 1921. 

 Vansell, G. H. (758) 



NECTAR AND POLLEN PLANTS OF CALIFORNIA. Calif. Agr. Expt. Sta. Bull. 



517, 55 pp., illus. 1931. 

 Vasey, G. (759) 



SPECIAL USES AND PROPERTIES OF SOME MEXICAN GRASSES. Bull. Torrey 



Bot. Club 14: 98-100. 1887. 

 Veitch, F. P., and Rogers, J. S. (760) 



AMERICAN SUMAC: A VALUABLE TANNING MATERIAL AND DYESTUFF. U. S. 



Dept. Agr. Bull. 706, 12 pp., illus. 1918. 

 Wahlenberg, W. G. (761) 



EFFECT OF CEANOTHUS BRUSH ON WESTERN YELLOW PINE PLANTATIONS IN 



the northern rocky mountains. Jour. Agr. Research 41: 601-612, 

 illus. 1930. 



Yanovsky, E. (762) 



FOOD PLANTS OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS. U. S. Dept. Agr. Misc. 



Pub. 237, 84 pp. 1936. 



See also Apgar (ISO), Bates (6553), Coville (691), Dillman (6626- A), 

 Edwards (8288), Hattuck (889), Hitchcock (541, 550, 6671), Korstian (1553), 

 Lamson-Scribner (871, 6699, 6700), Meinzer (2226), Shantz (2234), 

 Shantz and others (2236), Simmons (6820), Wooton (347, 348), and Wight 

 (264D. 



FORAGE VALUE 



Publications treating of the palatability, nutritive, and general value of range 

 plants as forage including those cultivated pasture and hay plants which are also 

 common range plants, but excluding poisonous and mechanically injurious range 

 plants. 



See also sections on Poisonous Plants and Enemies of Range Livestock; and 

 Artificial Reseeding and Feeds and Feeding for closely related references. 



Anonymous. (763) 



karroo bush and melons. grasses from africa and siberia may become 

 important range plants in Arizona. Ariz. Producer 11 (3): 1, 5, illus. 

 1932. 



(764) 



these pasture grasses have done best, can be considered as proved 

 grazing crops for half of state. Okla. Farmer-Stockman 45: 130, 155. 

 1932. 



Akers, T. F., and Westover, H. L. (765) 



FORAGE-CROP FIELD EXPERIMENTS AT WEST POINT, MISS. U. S. Dept. Agr. 



Tech. Bull. 419, 20 pp., illus. 1934. 



