180 Twenty-Second Annual Report of the 



tag of the Georgia State Board of Entomology and also a duplicate certificate 

 of inspection of the State from which the shipment is made. Prof. E. Lee 

 Worsham, State Entomologist, Atlanta, Ga. 



IDAHO. — No person, firm or corporation shall import or sell nursery stock 

 without first applying to the State Board of Horticultural Inspection and 

 filing a bond in the sum of $5,000 and securing annual license upon payment 

 of $10. Shipments into the State should bear a copy of an official certificate 

 of fumigation emanating from the place where the stock was grown. All 

 shipments into the State must bear a label showing the name of the shipper, 

 the locality where grown and variety of nursery stock. All nursery stock, 

 fruit trees or horticultural plants sold or delivered by principal or agents 

 shall be true to name and variety as represented. All nursery stock shipped 

 into this State, whether bearing certificate of inspection or not, must be 

 inspected again upon its arrival, the consignee paying for such inspection. 

 Every nursery firm doing business in this State must pay annually $1 addi- 

 tional for each agent who represents them. Guy Graham, State Horticultural 

 Inspector, Boise, Idaho. 



ILLINOIS. — State nurseries are inspected and certified not later than Oc- 

 tober 1. An inspection certificate shall be valid for one year from date of 

 inspection. The State Entomologist is authorized to revoke a certificate if 

 he finds it is being used in violation of the law. He is also required to furnish 

 all Illinois nurserymen with a list of State and government inspectors whose 

 certificates may be received as equivalent to his own, and the nurseryman 

 receiving stock under such certificates is authorized to substitute for them the 

 Hlinois certificate of inspection. Each dealer in nursery stock who has no 

 nursery of his own and each agent for a nursery located outside of Illinois 

 is required to furnish to the State Entomologist annually a sworn statement 

 showing that the stock in which he deals has been duly inspected, and to sub- 

 mit for approval a copy of the certificate of inspection, and to attach a copy 

 of such certificate, if approved, to every parcel of nursery stock delivered. 

 Nursery stock shipped into the State must bear a certificate of inspection 

 attached to each car, box, bale, bundle or package. Dr. S. A. Forbes, State 

 Entomologist; F. Way, Chief Inspector, Urbana, 111. 



INDIANA. — All nurseries are inspected between June 1 and October 1 and 

 at such other times as the head of the inspection department may consider 

 advisable. Stock sent into or within the State must be plainly labeled with 

 the name of the consignor and the consignee and must bear a certificate 

 signed by a State or government official showing that the inclosed stock has 

 been inspected and found free from injurious insects and plant diseases. All 

 foreign-grown stock must be inspected upon arrival at its destination in 

 Indiana. All dealers and agents engaged in selling or soliciting orders for 

 nursery stock in the State of Indiana must take out a license which is issued 

 by the State Entomologist. All nursery firms or other persons whose place 

 of business is outside the State of Indiana and who ship nursery stock into 

 Indiana are required to file with the State Entomologist a copy of their valid 



