3V CR. E. H. Q. — Q. 3T) United States Department of Agriculture BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE NURSERY STOCK, PLANT, AND SEED QUARANTINE Notice of Quarantine No. 37, with Revised Regulations INTRODUCTORY NOTE The supply of the last revised edition of Notice of Quarantine No. 37 (effective I 22 tnd advantage has been taken of the In! i . Int, the i egula- 3 and 7, which became effective January 14, 1985. The name ol the Bureau administering this quarantine is correctly given in regulation 7. The administr mnlntlon referred to in the filiations as the Plant ad Control Administration is now known as the Bureau of -y and Plant Quarantine. Footnotes have heen corrected and the appoi. - inght up to date. In all other this is a mere reprint of tl - issued in December 1930. Lek A. Strong. Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Qua rani NOTICE OF QUARANTINE NO. 37 Nursery Stock, Plant, and Seed Quarantine The fact has been determined by the Secretary of Agriculture, and notice Is hereby given, that there exist in Europe, Asia, Africa, Mexico, Central and South America, and other foreign countries and localities certain injurious s and fungous diseases new to and not heretofore widely distributed within and throughout the United States, which affect and are carried by nurs. r plants and seeds, the words "nurse and other plants ai including, wherever used in this notice and the rules and regu -plemental hereto, field-grown florists' stock, trees, shrubs, vines, cuttings, grafts, » ruit pits and other seeds of fruit and orna- mental trees or si: field, vegetable, and flower seeds, bedding plants, and other herbaceous plants, bulbs, and roots, and other plants and plant products for, or capable of, propagation. nary of Agriculture, under the au- thors •; t>y the act of I 20, 1012 315). >y declare that it is necessary, in or<;^r t<> prevent the further introduction into the 1 f injurious insect is dis- B, to forbid, except as provided in the rules and n "ntal .:ion into the Ui ind fr<»m . ality or coir On and after June 1. 1910, and until further notice, by virtue of said act . 1012. the importation of tnd seeds I and all othor fort rries and local; ovided in the rules and regulal piementaJ This Quarantine shall not apply to nursery stock and other plants and : quarantines and other re- list of wi. . . x A of the rales and regulations supplemental 212.VJ7 hereto, nor to the importation by the United States Department of Agriculture of nursery stock and other plants and seeds for experimental or scientific purposes. Done in the District of Columbia this 18th day of November 1918. Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Department of Agriculture. [seal] D. F. Houston, Secretary of Agriculture. REVISED RULES AND REGULATIONS SUPPLEMENTAL TO NOTICE OF QUARANTINE NO. 37, GOVERNING THE IMPORTATION OF NURSERY STOCK AND OTHER PLANTS AND SEEDS INTO THE UNITED STATES [Effective on and after December 22, 1930, and superseding the regulations heretofore issued governing the importation of nursery stock] Regulation 1. Definitions For the purposes of these regulations the following words, names, and terms shall be construed, respectively, to mean : (a) Nursery stock and other plants and seeds: Field-grown florists' stock, trees, shrubs, vines, cuttings, grafts, scions, buds, fruit pits and other seeds of fruit and ornamental trees or shrubs; also field, vegetable, and flower seeds, bedding plants, and other herbaceous plants, bulbs, and roots, and other plants and plant products for, or capable of, propagation. (b) Field seeds: Seeds of cereal, forage, and other field crops. (c) Vegetable seeds: Seeds of garden vegetables and other truck crops. (d) Flower seeds: Seeds of annual, biennial, or even perennial flowering plants which are essentially herbaceous, namely, plants which perish annually down to, and sometimes including, the root (i. e., soft, succulent plants). (e) Seeds of hardy perennial plants: Seeds of woody or other plants which are not herbaceous and are either of a hardy and woody growth or are not killed to the ground in temperate zones. (f) Bulbs and conns: Bulb — an enlarged subterranean bud with fleshy scales or coats (for example, tulips, Spanish iris) : Corm — an enlarged fleshy base of a stem, bulb-like but solid (for example, gladiolus, cyclamen, crocus). (g) Plant roots, rhizomes, tubers: Plant roots — the more or less fibrous roots of any plant (for example, fruit seedlings, ornamentals, lily of the valley pips) ; rhizomes — a root stock or subterranean stem, usually fleshy and rooted at the nodes (for example, German iris, Aspidistra) ; tuber — a thickened, fleshy sub- terranean branch having numerous buds or eyes (for example, potatoes). (h) Nciv varieties: A new variety is understood to mean a novelty, i. e., a new plant, variety, strain, type, or form, either recognized by the trade as such or so listed or described in catalogs, trade journals, or other publications, or duly and properly certified as such by the originator or introducer. (i) Necessary propagating stock: Stock of old or standard varieties not avail- able in this country and imported for the multiplication of the plants in question as a nursery or florist enterprise as distinguished from importations for the immediate or ultimate sale of the stocks actually imported. (/) Limited quantities: As used in regulation 14 "limited quantities" is understood to mean such quantities as will supply any reasonable need for the establishment of commercial reproduction plantings or as may be necessary for the experimental, educational, or scientific purpose intended. Regulation 2. Plant products and seeds for which permit is not required Plant products capable of propagation, imported for medicinal, food, or manu- facturing purposes, and field, vegetable, and flower seeds, except such products and seeds as are governed by special quarantines and other restrictive orders now in force and such as may hereafter be made the subject of special quaran- tines or restrictive orders,1 may be imported without permit or other compliance 1 See appendix A to the Revised Ru'es and Regulations Supplemental to Notice of Quarantine No. 37 for list of such quarantines and restrictive orders. In addition to the quarantines and restrictive orders listed, a notice issued May 8. 1930, specifies that all species of Aglaonema may be imported ou and after June 1, 1930, only under the provi- sions of regulation 14. with these ii when free from sand, soil, or earth: P • That any such articles may be made subject to entry only under permit and on compli- wirii the iribed therein when it shall be determined grtculture that their entry for the purpose indicated may v of the lntrodnction into the United States of injurious b 3 Such determination with respect to any such articles due notice. Regulation 3. Nursery stock, other plants and parts of plants, including seeds, for which a permit is required (As revised Jan. 14, 19S5 ; effective Jan. 14, 19$5) The fu!U win - k. other plants and parts of plants, including seeds, , such other plants and parts of plants as are named in med by special quarantines and other restrictive s now in force, nor such as may hereafter be made the subject of special atines, may be imported, without limitation as to quantity or use, from countries which maintain inspection (appendix B), under permit upon compli- ions: (1) Bulbs, conns, or root stocks (pips) of the following genera: Liiiwn (lily) laria (lily-df-the-valley), Hyae-inthus (hyacinth). Tulipa (tulip), and ( further notice, Chionodoxa (glory-of-the-snow), Gatan- (snowdrop), Bcitta (squill), Fritillaria, Aluscari (grape-hyacinth), Ixia, and Eranthis (winter aconite) ; and, on and after December 15, 1930, yarclssaa (daffodil and jonqul and buds of fruits or nuts : Provided, That cuttings, : fruits or nuts may be imported from Asia, Japan, Philippine Islands, and Oceania (including Australia and New Zealand) under the pro- D 14 only. (Stocks of fruits or nubs may not be imported, mit or otherwise.) (3 1 B including Alanetti, Rosa multiflora (brier rose), and R. rugosa. < 4 i Nuts, including palm seeds for growing purposes: Prodded, That such hall be free from pulp. (5) Seeds of fruit, forest, ornamental, and shade trees, seeds of deciduous and evergreen ornamental shrubs, and seeds of hardy perennial plants: Pro- vided, Thai shall be free from pulp: P Chat citrus only through specified ports subject ro disinfection as '.:\ regulation 9: Provided further, That mango seeds may not be Imported under permit or otht except from the countries of Xorth America. Central America, and South America, and the West Indies. Importation* fr< m countries not maintaining inspection of nursery stock, other plants and parts of plants, including seeds, the entry of which is per- ; !e under this regulation, may be made under permit upon compliance in limited quantities for public-service purposes only, I at this limitation shall not apply to tree seeds. (6) Materials permitted entry under Quarantine No. 50 for consumption pur- poses are authorize"! entry under this regulation for propagation. Regulation 4. Application for permits for importation of nursery stock and other plants and seeds ' Persons contemplating the importation of nursery stock and other plants and seeds, the entry of which is permitted under regulation 3, shall first make D to the Plant Quarantine and Control Administration for a permit, • g in the application the exact designation of the nursery nt on r^qnest. Bach certificate and copy certificate shall give the date of inspection, name of the grower or e\i*>rtor, the district or locality and the country where grown, and a statement that t lie nursery stock and other plants and seeds been Inspected bj a duly authorized official and found, or believed to be, from Insect pests and plant dise;iscs. The original certificate shall be signed and sealed by, and the copy certificate shall bear the seal and the actual or reproduced signature of, a responsible inspection official of the country of origin. Lists of officials in foreign countries authorized to inspect nursery stoek and other plants and seeds, giving their names and official designations, will be furnished to collectors of customs through the Secretary of the Treasury. ox, or other container or covering of nursery stoek and other plants and seeds ottered for entry shall be plainly and correctly marked to show the Dumber of the permit, the general nature and quantity of the contents, the district or Locality and country where grown, the name and address of the ter, and the name and address of the consignee: Provided. That all im- portations of plaits authorized under regulation 14 shall be addressed to the United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, at the port designated in the permit. In addition to the address, as indicated, such shipments shall be marked with the permit number and name of the importer. All nursery stoek ancf other plants and seeds offered for import must be free from sand, soil, or earth, and all plant roots, rhizomes, tubers, etc., must be freed by washing or other means from such sand, soil, or earth: Provided, That this requirement shall not apply to plants imported from Canada under regulation 15: Provided further, That sand, soil, or earth may be employed for .eking of bulbs, corms, seeds, and nuts when such sand, soil, or earth has been sterilized, or otherwise safeguarded in accordance with the methods pre- scribed by the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine and is so certified by the duly authorized Inspector of t-he country of origin. The use of such sand, soil, or earth as packing for plants other than bulbs, corms, seeds, and nuts is not authorized. All packing materials employed in connection with importations of nursery stock and other plants and seeds are subject to approval as to such use by the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. Such packing material must not previously have been used as packing or otherwise in connection with living plants, and except as provided in the preceding paragraph for bulbs, corms, and nuts, must be free from sand, soil, or earth, and must be certified as meeting these conditions by the duly authorized inspector of the country of origin.* If a package of nursery stock and other plants and seeds offered for entry includes any prohibited article, or if any of the plants have not been freed from earth, the entire package may be refused entry- Regulation 8. Inspection In addition to the inspection at destination by the proper official of a State, Territory, or District of the United States, provided for in section 2 of the • Quarantine Act of 1012, nursery stock and other plants and seeds im- ported under regulations 3 and 15 shall be subject as a condition of entry to such preliminary inspect nail be required by the Plant Quarantine and Control Administration: Provided, That nursery stock and other plants and I under regulations 3 and 15 from countries which do not maintain inspection shall not be delivered to the importer or consignee until they have examined by an inspector of the Department of Agriculture and found to be free Prom plant diseases and insect pests, or if infested, capable, in the judgment of the Inspector, of being adequately safeguarded by disinfection. Regulation 9. Disinfection a condition of entry Nm k and other plants and seeds imported under regulations 3 and 15 shall Ih> subject, as a condition of entry, to such disinfection as shall be required by the inspector of the Department of Agriculture. When d'sinfec- * For detailed Instructions relative to packlnr materials. Including stprill/.pd soil for da, and nuts, s^p B. E. P. Q. — 360. 6 tion is required, the nursery stock and other plants and seeds involved will be delivered to the permittee for disinfection upon the filing with the collector of customs of a bond in the amount of $5,000, or in an amount equal to the invoice value if such value be less than $5,000, but in no case to be less than $100, with approved sureties, the condition of which shall be that the nursery stock and other plants and seeds shall be disinfected under the supervision of an inspector of the Department of Agriculture; that no case or other con tainer thereof shall be broken, opened, or removed from the port of entry unles> and until a written notice is given to such collector by an inspector of the Department of Agriculture that the nursery stock and other plants and seed- have been properly disinfected; and that the importation shall be redelivered to the collector of customs within 40 days from arrival at the port of entry. All charges incident to inspection and disinfection, other than the services oi the inspector, shall be paid by the importer. Regulation 10. Notice of arrival by permittee Immediately upon arrival of the nursery stock and other plants and seed* at the port of entry, the permittee shall submit in duplicate notice to the Secre- tary of Agriculture, through the collector of customs, on forms provided for that purpose, stating the number of the permit, date of entry, name of ship or vessel, the country and locality where grown, name of the foreign shipper, number of cases and marks and numbers on cases, the genera] nature and quan tity of the nursery stock and other piants and seeds, the port of entry, and the name of the importer or broker at the port of entry. Regulation 11. Notice of shipment by permittee After entry of the nursery stock and other plants and seeds and before removal from the port of entry for each separate shipment or consignment thereof the permittee shall notify the Secretary of Agriculture in duplicate, on forms provided for that purpose, stating the number of the permit, the date of entry, the port of entry, the customs entry number, name and address of the consignee to whom it is proposed to forward the shipment, the general nature and quantity of the nursery stock and other plants and seeds, the number of cases or other containers included in the shipment, and the case or container numbers and marks, together with the probable date of delivery for and route of transportation. A separate report is required for each ultimate consignee. At the same time a copy of the notice to the Secretary of Agriculture shall be sent by the permittee to the duly authorized inspector or other officer of the State, Territory, or District to which the nursery stock and other plants and seeds are to be shipped. A list of such inspectors and officers is appended. Should a consignee named in such a notice ship or deliver for shipment to any other State, Territory, or District such nursery stock and other plants or seeds before they have been Inspected by a duly authorized State, Territory, or Dis- trict inspector or officer, he shall, prior to such shipment, give like notices to the Secretary of Agriculture and to the duly authorized inspector or other officer of the State, Territory, or District to which the nursery stock and other plants and seeds are to be reshipped. Nursery stock and other plants and seeds which have been once inspected and passed by a duly authorized State, Territorial, or District inspector or other officer, will be allowed to move interstate without restrictions other than those imposed on the interstate movement of domestic nursery stock. Regulation 12. Marking a condition of interstate shipment of nursery stock and other plants and seeds not inspected No person shall ship or deliver for shipment from one State, Territory, or District of the United States into any other State, Territory, or District any imported nursery stock and other plants and seeds, the case, box, package, crate, bale, or bundle whereof is not plainly marked so as to show the general nature and quantity of the contents, the name and address of the consignee, and the country and locality where grown, unless and until such imported nursery stock and other plants and seeds have been inspected and passed by the proper official of a State, Territory, or District of the United States. Regulation 11 Cancellation of permit* for Htlfttiou of regulations pel ,'itinr - ■ • Plant Q on 14. Special permits fur importation m limited quantitiet : Ictod plants luiti for the :: LtB, of in; the purpose of k ■ any necessary Bd bv . quarantL ei a IK of i . . ill ai»pl\ ition IV PermiU for the importation of nni lanta and leedi from countries conti| wi • i Secretary thai the Imj i nlted Sta ■ ■ ■/ be : y >t- <-k and "i her I ition shall be . Dd held r to i ;• .f Aglaonema may be imported from any foreign country and locality, on and after June 1, 1930, only under special permit and upon compliance with the provisions of regulation 14 of the regula tions referred to above. Done at the city of Washington this 8th day of May, 1930. Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture. R. W. Dunlap, Acting Secretary of Agriculture. NOTICE OF PERMIT REQUIREMENT FOR THE ENTRY OF SEEDS OF LATHYRUS AND VICIA It has been determined by the Secretary of Agriculture that sweet pea (Latliyrus sp.) and vetch (Vicia spp. ) seeds imported into this country are frequently infested with one or more species of seed weevils, Bruchus spp.. including B. bracKialis Fahr., B. rvfipes Hbst.. and B. tristiculus Fahr. B. brachiali8 is reported as established in only a limited area of this country and B. nippes and B. tristiculus are not recorded as occurring in the United States. Lathyrus and Vicia seeds at present are admitted without inspection in accordance with the provisions of regulation 2 of the Rules and Regulations Supplemental to Nursery Slock, Plant, and Seed Quarantine No. 37. Since no inspection is made of these seeds t<» determine the presence of injurious insects and consequently no treatment Is given to eliminate such infestations when they exist, importations of these seeds constitute a pest risk. Their further entry, therefore, shall meet the requirements governing the entry of tree and shrub sei ds. Notice is. therefore, hereby given, in accordance with the provisions of regu- lation 2 of the Rales and Regulations Supplemental to Notice of Quarantine No. 37, that the seeds of all species and varieties of Lathyrus and Vicia 9 may be Imported from any foreign country and locality, on and after August 1. under permit and upon the compliance with the provisions for the entry of tree and shrub seeds the Importation of which is re- stricted by regulation :: of the regulations referred to above. Done in the city of Washington this 20th day of July 1936. my hand and the seal of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. W. R. Gbj Acting Secretary oi Agriculture. MODIFICATION OF NURSERY STOCK, PLANT, AND SEED QUARANTINE REGULATIONS INTRODUCTORY NOTE The only change involved in this revision of regulation 3 of the regulations supplemental to Notice of Quarantine No. 37 is to make provision for the entry of Begonia and Gloxinia tubers on and after December i. 1939, without limita- tion as to quantity or ase. Lee A. Strong. Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO REVISED RULES AND REGULATIONS SUPPLE- MENTAL TO NOTICE OF QUARANTINE NO. 37 (Approval November 30, 1938 ; effective December 1, 19:58) Under authority conferred by the Plant Quarantine Act of August 20, 1912 (37 Stat. 315), it is ordered that regulation 3 of the revised rules and regula- tions supplemental to Notice of Quarantine No. 37, on account of certain inju- rious insects and fungous diseases, which were promulgated December 17, 1930, and amended effective July 1, 1932, and January 14. 1935, he, and the same is hereby, further amended to read as follows : Regulation 3. Nursery Stock, Other Plants and Parts of Plants, Including Seeds, for Which a Permit Is Required The following nursery stock, other plants and parts of plants, including seeds, uot including, however, such other plants and parts of plants as are named in Appendix A, which are governed by special quarantines and oth t restrictive orders now in force, nor such as may hereafter be made the subject of special quarantines, may be imported, without limitation as to quantity or use, from countries which maintain inspection (Appendix B), under permit, upon compli- ance with these regulations: (1) Bulbs, conns, oi- rootstocks (pips) irf the following genera: Lilium (lily), aUaria (lily-of-th£-valley), Eyacinthus (hyacinth), Tulipa (tulip), Cn and Narcissus (daffodil and jonquil); until further notice, Ohionodowa (glory- of-the-snow), Galanthus (snowdrop). S idl), FritUlaria, Muscari (grape- anthis (winter aconite) ; and, on and after December 1, 1989, Bryonia and (2 1 Cuttings, scions, and buds of fruits or nuts: Provided, That cult 5, and buds Of fruits or nuts may be imported from Asia, Japan, Philippine Islands, and Oceania (including Australia and New Zealand) under the pro- visions of tt 14 only Its Of fruits or nuts may DOt be imported, under permit or otih (3) K including Manetti, Rosi multiflora (brier rose), and R. rugo (4) Nuts, Including palm seeds for growing purposes: Provided, That such nuts or seeds shall be free from pulp. 10 (5) Seeds of fruit, forest, ornamental, and shade trees, seeds of deciduous and evergreen ornamental shrubs, and seeds of hardy perennial plants: Pro- vided. That such seeds shall be free from pulp: Provided further, That citrus seeds may be imported only through specified ports subject to disinfection as provided in regulation 9: Provided further, That mango seeds may not be im- ported under permit or otherwise, except from the countries of North America, Central America, and South America, and the West Indies. Importations from countries not maintaining inspection of nursery stock, other plants and parts of plants, including seeds, the entry of which is permis- sible under this regulation, may be made under permit upon compliance with these regulations in limited quantities lor public-service purposes only, but this limitation shall not apply to tree seeds. (6) Materials permitted entry under Quarantine No. 56 for consumption pur- poses are authorized entry under this regulation for propagation. ■This amendment shall be effective on and after December 1, 1933, and shall on that date supersede amendment No. 2, which became effective January 14, 1935. Done in the city of Washington this 30th day of November 1938. Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. Hknby A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture. APPENDIX A The entry of the following plant material for propagation is prohibited or restricted by specific quarantines and other restrictive orders now in force: (a) Irish poiatoes from all countries except the Dominion of Canada and Bermuda. (o) All rive-leafed pines and all species and varieties of the genera Ribes and Qrossularia from each and every country of Europe and Asia and from the Dominion of Canada and Newfoundland. (c) Cottonseed (including seed cotton) of all species and varieties from any foreign locality and country. id) Seeds of the avocado or alligator pear from Mexico and the countries of Central America. (e) Canes of sugarcane or parts thereof from all foreign countries. (f) All citrus nursery stock (tribe Citrinae), including buds and scions from all foreign localities and countries. {(j) All pines not included in paragraph (6) from all European" countries and localities. (/).) Seed and all other portions in the raw or unmanufactured state of Indian corn or maize (Zea mays L.), and the closely related plants, including all species of Teosinte (Euchlaena), Job's tears (Coix), Polytoca, Chionachne, and Scterachne, from southeastern Asia (including India, Siam, Indo-China, and China), Malayan Archipelago, Australia, New Zealand, Oceania, Philippine Islands, Formosa, Japan, and adjacent islands. (i) All varieties of sweetpotatoes and yams (Ipomoea batatas and Dioscorea spp.) from all foreign countries and localities. (j) All species or varieties of banana plants (Musa spp.) from all foreign countries and localities. (fr) All varieties of bamboo seed, plants, or cuttings thereof capable of propagation, including all genera and species of the tribe Bambuseae, from all foreign countries. (Z) Seed or paddy rice from all foreign countries and localities. (ui) Wheat from Australia, India, Japan, Italy, China. Union of South Africa, and Spain. (n) Seed and all other portions in the raw or unmanufactured state of Indian corn or maize, broomcorn, sweet sorghums, grain sorghums, Sudan grass, Johnson grass, sugarcane, pearl millet, napier grass, teosinte, and Job's tears from all foreign countries and localities. (o) All plants, cuttings, scions, and seeds of elm and related plants from the Continent of Europe. 11 APPENDIX 15 Ltst of the Foreign Countries Which Hate Pbovtded for Inspection aim , i\ CONFORMITY WlTB TUE Requirements of THE Plant Quar- ami.nk Act of August 20. 1912 Australia, Austria. Azores. Barbados. Belgium. ; rada. Brazil. British Guiana. Canada. Cuba. Czechoslovakia Denmark i ad. Prance. Germany. Guatemala. Holland. Hong Kong. Hungary. Ireland. Italy. Jamaica. Japan. Java. Leeward [slands: Antigua. St. Christopher-Nevis Dominica. Montserrat Virgin Islands, (hand Duchy of Luxemburg. Mexico. Moroci o ( French). New Zealand. Philippine [elands. Scotland. Union of ►South Africa. Spain. Straits Settlements, Switzerland. Trinidad. Wales. Windward islands: Granada. St Lucia. St. Vincent APPENDIX C State Inspection Officials Alabama: Chief, Division of Plant Industry, Montgomery, Ala. Arizona: State Entomologist, Phoenix, Ariz. Arkansas: Thief Inspector, State Plant Board, Little Rock, Ark. California: Chief. Bureau of Plant Quarantine, State Department of Agricul- ture, Sacramento, Calif. Colorado: Bureau of Plant and Insect Control. Capitol Building, Denver, Colo. Connecticut: Matt' Entomologist, New Haven, Conn. Delaware: Plant Pathologist, State Board of Agriculture. Dover, Del. District of Columbia : United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Washington, D. C. Florida: Quarantine Inspector. State Plant Board. Gainesville, Fla. Georgia: State Entomologist, Atlanta, Ga. ii: Chiei' Plant Inspector, Board of Commissioners of Agriculture and Forestry, Honolulu, T. H. Idaho: Director, Bureau of Plant Industry. Boise, Idaho. Illinois: Chief Plant Inspector, State Entomologist Building, Urbana, M. Indiana: State Entomologist, Indianapolis, Ind. Iowa: Sfate Entomologist, Ames, Iowa. North: State Entomologist, Kansas State Agricultural College, Man- hattan. Kans. Kane b : State Entomologist. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kans. Kentucky: State Entomologist, Lexington, Ky. Louisiana : State Entomologist, Baton Rouge, La. Maine: State Horticulturis . A gusta, Maine. Maryland: State Entomologist, College Park. Md. Massachusetts: Director, Division of Plant Pest Control. State House, Boston. Mass. Mich! tor of Orchards and Nurseries, Slate Department of Agriculture, Lansing, Mich. Mini.- 3 te Entomologist. University Farm, St. Paul. Minn. m - jsippi: Bntom ifa Plan: Board, State College, Miss. Missouri: Plant Officer, Department of Agriculture, 3 Ity, Mo. ana: Chief, Division of Horticulture, Missoula, Mont Nebraska : Nursery Ins] ate Department of Agriculture, Lincoln, Nebr. Nevada: Director, Division of Plant Industry. B Hampshire: Deputy Commissioner of Agriculture, Durham, N. n New Jersey: chief. Bureau of Plant Industry, state Department of Agriculture, Trenton. N .!. New Mexico: Biologist. Agricultural Experiment Station, State College N UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA 12 3 1262 08721 6163 New York : Director, Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture and Markets, Albany, N. Y. North Carolina: State Entomologist, State Department of Agriculture, Raleigh, N North Dakota: State Entomologist, Fargo, N. Dak. Ohio: Chief, Division of Plant Industry, State Department of Agriculture, Columbus. Ohio. Oklahoma : State Plant Board. Oklahoma City, Okla. : For seeds: Attention, Seed Analyst. For other nursery stock : Attention, Nursery Inspector. Oregon : Chief, Division of Plant Industry, Agriculture Building, Salem, Oreg. Pennsylvania: Director, Bureau of Plant Industry, State Department of Agri- culture, Harrisbnrg, Pa. Puerto Rico : Chief Plant Quarantine Inspector, % Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor, San Juau, P. R. Rhode Island : Chief, Bureau of Entomology, State House, Providence, R. I. South Carolina : Chief, Division of Entomology, Clemson College, S. C South. Dakota : State Nursery Inspector, Pierre, S. Dak. Tennessee: State Entomologist, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Texas : Chief Inspector of Nurseries, Austin, Tex. Utah : State Agriculture Inspector, Salt Lake City, Utah. Vermont: State Nursery Inspector, Burlington. Vt. Virginia: State Entomologist. 1112 State Office Building, Richmond, Va. Washington : Supervisor of Horticulture, Olympia, Wash. West Virginia : State Department of Agriculture, Charleston, W. Va. Wisconsin : State Entomologist, Capitol Annex, Madison, Wis. Wyoming: State Entomologist. State Department of Agricnlture, Powell. Wyo. O » COVEHNMENT PRUCTIMC OFFICE. I»4»