360 ANNUAL EEPORTS OF DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 



Cotton seed (including seed cotton) of all species and varieties and 

 cottonseed hulls from all foreign localities and countries except the 

 States of Neuvo Leon, Tamaulipas, Coahuila, Durango, Chihuahua, 

 and Lower California, Mexico. Cotton seed (including seed cotton) 

 of aU species and varieties from the Mexican States mentioned may 

 be imported under jDermit and bond for manufacturing purposes 

 only. No restriction is placed on the use of cottonseed hulls imported 

 from said States, or which may be obtained from cotton seed imported 

 from said States. 



Cotton seed and cottonseed hulls from Hawaii. 



Seeds of the avocado or aUigator pear from Mexico and the coun- 

 tries of Central America. 



Oranges, sweet hmes, mangoes, Achras sapotes, peaches, guavas, 

 plums, and grapefruit, and their horticultural varieties, from Mexico. 



All citrus nursery stock, including buds, scions, and seeds, from all 

 foreign locaUties and countries. The term "citrus" as used here 

 includes all plants belonging to the subfamily or tribe Citratse. 



Any fruit or vegetable from Hawaii upon which the Mediterranean 

 fruit ny or the melon fly breeds, or which, from proximity of growth 

 or the requirement of packing and shipping, may carry infestation, 

 including aUigator pears, bananas, carambolas, Chinese ink berries, 

 Chinese oranges, Chinese plums, coffee berries, cucumbers, damson 

 plums, eugenias, figs, grapes, grapefruit, green peppers, guavas, 

 kamani nuts, kumquats, limes, loquats, mangoes, mock oranges, 

 mountain apples, melons, Natal or Kafir plums, oranges, papayas, 

 peaches, persimmons, pineapples, prickly pears, rose apples, star 

 apples, string beans, squashes, and tomatoes, except that bananas 

 and pineapples may be moved from the Territory of Hawaii in manner 

 or method or under conditions prescribed in the regulations of the 

 Secretary of Agriculture. 



Cotton lint from Hawaii may be shipped to the continental United 

 States only in accordance with the regulations prescribed in the notice 

 of quarantine. 



Living canes of sugar cane, or cuttings or parts thereof, from aU 

 foreign countries and from Hawaii and Porto Rico. There are no 

 restrictions on the entry of such material into Hawaii and Porto 

 Rico. 



Indian com from Java and India and Oceania, except AustraUa 

 and New Zealand. 



All fiv^e-leafed pines* from Europe and Asia. 



Date palms or date-palm offshoots from Riverside County, Cal., 

 east of the San Bernardino meridian; Imperial County, Cal.; Yuma, 

 Maricopa, and Pinal Counties, Ariz,; and Webb County, Tex., shall 

 be moved only in accordance with the rules and regulations applicable 

 thereto. 



Coniferous trees, such as spruce, fir, hemlock, pine, juniper (cedar), 

 and arbor vitse (white cedar), known and described as "Christmas 

 trees," and parts thereof, and decorative plants of the area quaran- 

 tined for the gipsy moth (certain parts of New England), such as 

 holly and laurel, known and described as ' ' Christmas greens or green- 

 ery," 2 shall not be moved or allowed to move interstate to points 

 outside the quarantined area. 



1 On and after July 1, 1915, all pines from all European countries and localities will be excluded. 



2 It is proposed to allow the movement of these articles on and after July 1, 1915, under regulation. 



