INSPECTION AND FUMIGATION LAWS 295 
New Jersey.—Any nurseryman or grower of plants 
offered for sale may require the State Entomologist 
at New Brunswick, N. J., to examine or have examined 
the stock grown by him. If no injurious inse¢ts liable 
to spread are discovered he may demand a certificate to 
that effect. All nursery stock shipped into the State 
must be accompanied by a proper certificate. Any 
stock received without a certificate may be detained by 
the State Entomologist or his deputy, and in case it is 
found infested it may be destroyed or reshipped to the 
original shipper. Florists’ stock is exempt under this 
act. Not more than three commissioners are appointed 
for each county. ‘They are empowered to report the 
presence of any injurious insects or diseases liable to 
spread to the State Entomologist, who may order such 
treatment as seems best. Persons failing to carry out 
the instructions of the State Entomologist shall be 
fined. 
New York.—The orchards and nurseries of the State 
are inspected annually under the direction of the Com- 
missioner of Agriculture, Albany, N. Y. Prior to the 
first of September each year every nursery or other 
place where trees, shrubs, or plants, commonly known 
as nursery stock, are grown for sale must be inspected 
and proper certificates issued to the owner. All 
nursery stock transported in any manner shall be 
accompanied by a copy of said certificate attached to 
each car, box, bale, or package. All transportation 
companies within the State receiving or carrying - 
nursery stock from any point without the State to any 
point within shall immediately upon receipt of such 
consignment notify the Commissioner of Agriculture, 
