78 AGRICULTURE OF MAINE. 



Oakham, Spencer, Sturbridge, Charlton, Dudley, and Webster, 

 Massachusetts; Burrillville, Gloucester, Johnston, Cranston, 

 Warwick, and North Kingstown, Rhode Island; excepting the 

 towns of Newport, Tiverton, and Little Compton, Rhode Is- 

 land; Westport, Fall River. Somerset, Dighton, Freetown, 

 Dartmouth, Fairhaven, and Mattapoisett, Massachusetts. 



GIPSY MOTH REGULATIONS. 



Coniferous trees of the area quarantined for the gipsy moth, 

 such as spruce, fir, hemlock, pine, juniper (cedar), and arbor- 

 vitae (white cedar), known and described as "Christrtias trees," 

 and parts thereof, and decorative plants of the area quarantined 

 for the gipsy moth, such as holly and laurel, known and de- 

 scribed as "Christmas greens or greenery," shall not be moved 

 or allowed to move interstate to points outside the quarantined 

 area. 



Forest plant products of the area quarantined for the gipsy 

 moth, including logs, tan bark, posts, poles, railroad ties, cord- 

 wood, and lumber, and field-grown florist's stock, trees, shrubs, 

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

 or propagation, of the area quarantined for the gipsy moth, 

 excepting buds, 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 quarantined 

 area unless and until such plants and plant products have been 

 inspected by the United States Department of Agriculture and 

 pronounced free from the gipsy moth. 



BROWN-TAIL MOTH REGULATIONS. 



Deciduous trees or shrubs of the area quarantined for the 

 brown-tail moth, or parts thereof, including all deciduous field- 

 grown florist's stock, vines, cuttings, grafts, and scions 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. 



