FEDERAL HORTICULTURAL BOARD. 361 



Forest plant products, including logs, tan bark, posts, poles, rail- 

 road ties, cordwood, and lumber, and field-grown florists' stock, trees, 

 shrubs, vines, cuttings, and other plants and plant products for 

 planting or propagation, of the area quarantined for the gypsy moth 

 (certain parts of New England), excepting fruit pits, seeds of fruit 

 and ornamental trees and shrubs, field, vegetable, and flower seeds, 

 bedding plants, and other herbaceous plants and roots, shall not be 

 moved or allowed to move interstate to any point outside the quar- 

 antined area imless and until such plants and plant products have 

 been inspected by the United States Department of Agriculture and 

 pronounced free from the gipsy moth. 



Deciduous trees or shrubs of the area quarantined for the brown- 

 tail moth (certain parts of New England), or such parts thereof as 

 bear leaves, including all deciduous field-grown florists' stock, vines, 

 cuttings, grafts, and scions, but excepting forest-plant products, such 

 as logs, tan bark, posts, poles, railroad ties, cordwood, and lumber, 

 shall not be moved or allowed to move interstate to points outside 

 the quarantined area unless and until such plants and plant products 

 have been inspected by the United States Department of Agriculture 

 and pronounced to be free from the brown-tail moth. Coniferous 

 trees and other evergreen trees are not affected by the brown-tail 

 moth regulations. 



In the case of all foreign quarantines the embargo is absolute. 



