384 ANNUAL REPORTS OF DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 



(1) 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 

 towns and territory quarantined for the gipsy moth (certain parts 

 of New England), such as holly and laurel, known and described 

 as "Christmas greens or greenery"; (2) forest plant products, 

 including logs, tan bark, posts, poles, railroad ties, cordwood, and 

 lumber; and (3) field-grown florists' stock, trees, shrubs, vines, 

 cuttings, and other plants and plant products for planting or propa- 

 gation, of the towns and territory quarantined for the gipsy 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 towns and territory, or from points in the generally infested 

 area to points in the lightly infested area, unless and until such plants 

 and plant products have been inspected by the United States Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture and certified to be free from the gipsy moth and 

 the brown-tail moth. 



Deciduous trees and shrubs, or such parts thereof as bear leaves, 

 of the towns and territory quarantined for the brown-tail moth only 

 (certain parts of New England), 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 towns and territory 

 unless and until such plants and plant products have been inspected 

 by the United States Department of Agriculture and certified to be 

 free from the brown-tail moth. Coniferous trees and other evergreen 

 trees are not covered by the brown-tail moth regulations 



