106 misc. PUBLICATION 797, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 
individual noteworthy trees (1: 297); periodicals and serials relating to 
arboriculture, gardening, and uses of plants (3: 18-28. 1915); works on 
collections, gardens, arboretums, museums, and exhibitions (not herbaria) 
(3: 29); history of agriculture and gardening (3: 338); dendrological, 
pomological, economical, and miscellaneous works dealing with both wild 
and cultivated plants (3: 83-88); manuals and general treatises on arbori- 
culture and horticulture (3: 110-114); miscellaneous works on arboriculture 
and horticulture (3: 124-126); pharmacopoeias and dispensatories (3: 255); 
economic products in general (3: 271); periodicals and serials relating to 
forestry, timber uses, etc. (4: 12-13. 1914); forestry exhibitions (4: 20); 
history of forests (4: 27-28); dendrography (4: 85); descriptions of forests 
(4: 359-362). Various minor sections of no floristic significance have been 
omitted from this summary.—See also Deniker, above, and additional 
references there given. 
Rey-Pailhade, Constantin de. Les fougéres de France. 2 p.1., 183 p. 56 
pl. 25 cm. Paris [pref. 1893]. 
Descriptive account of Filicineae (Hymenophyllaceae, Ophioglossaceae, 
Osmundaceae, Polypodiaceae), with synonymy, habitat, altitude, and locali- 
ties, and plate (or part of a plate) of each species; the genera and species 
arranged alphabetically. A companion work announced as in preparation, 
Les cryptogames vasculaires de la France (suite aux Fougéres), apparently 
was never published, but Lorenz (Cat. gén. de la librairie francaise 15: 683) 
lists his Les selaginelles de France. 8vo. illus. 1899.—See also Dhien, René, 
and Dubois, Genevieve. Répartition géographique des fougéres francaises. 
Bul. Soc. Hist. Nat. Toulouse 73: 192-208 incl. illus. (maps). 1939. (List 
of French Filicineae (Hymenophyllaceae, Ophioglossaceae, Osmundaceae, 
Polypodiaceae; 56 species) with list of departments in which each is known 
and small maps showing the range of most of the species; bibliography, 
including most of the departmental floras and some others.) 
Rodin, Hippolyte. Les plantes médicinales et usuelles des champs, jardins, 
foréts. Description et usages des plantes comestibles, suspectes, vénéneuses 
2. . o» ed. xx, 478 p. 200 fig. “16.5 cm.” Paris,,1876..(ist.ed, 1872.) 
General properties (chiefly medicinal) of various plant families; popular 
account of medicinal plants (mostly French), grouped by uses, short account 
of poisonous plants. Later editions, including the undated 8th, do not differ 
from the 3d.—See also Ansberque, above, and additional references there 
given. 
Rolland, Eugéne. Flore populaire ou histoire naturelle des plantes dans 
leurs rapports avec la linguistique et le folklore. 11 v. 23 cm. Paris, 
1896-1914. 
Bibliography (1: 257-270, with supplements in v. 1-7); systematic list 
of plants with their vernacular names in different languages (in most 
European languages in v. 1-3, mostly in French in v. 4-11) with localities 
and authorities for use, notes on uses and folklore, and lists of personal and 
locality names derived from them. Covered at first ancient and modern 
Europe, extreme northern Africa and western Asia, but later consisted 
mostly of French names. Includes dicotyledons, gymnosperms, Characeae, 
and some lichens, fungi, and algae; the monocotyledons were omitted, except 
for Lemnaceae, Potamogetonaceae, and Zosteraceae; presumably they were 
to be included in v. 12-13, which were never published. Vol. 8-11 edited by 
Henri Gaidoz (1842-1932); these volumes contain extensive lists of additions 
and corrections.—See also Gatin, above, and additional references there given. 
Rothschild, Jules, and others. Botanique populaire illustrée. Flore 
pittoresque de la France. Anatomie, physiologie, classification, description 
des plantes indigénes et cultivées au point de vue de l’agriculture, de 
Vhorticulture et de la sylviculture . . . Avec le concours de MM. Gustave 
Heuzé, Bouquet de La Grye [etc.] 2. éd. xvi, 473 p. 989 fig., 82 col. pl., 
map. 28 cm. Paris, [n.d.]. (1st ed., 1885). 
Glossary, etc.; popular account of wild and cultivated vascular and cellular 
plants, with brief descriptions and uses; account of agriculture, horticulture, 
forests, and fossil flora, with description of regions and zones, mention of 
principal species, ete——See also Ansberque, above, and additional references 
there given. 
