INSPECTION AND FUMIGATION LAWS 301 
Utah.—The State Board of Horticulture consists 
of three members, each representing a distri. It is 
the duty of every owner of an orchard, vineyard, or 
nursery to disinfect trees, vines, or nursery stock if 
affected with any fruit-destroying disease. All per- 
sons who make a general business of spraying trees 
must first get a certificate from the Board. It is the 
duty of the Board to have inspected all orchards and 
nurseries within the State. All persons or nursery- 
men shall report to the inspectors the receipt of any 
trees from points outside of the State, and such inspec- 
tors shall examine all such stock as well as stock 
grown or offered for sale in the State. General infor- 
mation can be secured from the State Board of Horti- 
culture at Logan, Utah. 
Virginia.—The rules regulating the inspection of 
orchards and nurseries are made by the Board of Crop 
Pest Commissioners. No person shall sell or trans- 
port any fruit trees or other plants when infested with 
woolly aphis, San José scale, peach yellows, black 
knot of the plum, fire blight of the pear, or crown gall. 
Any nursery found infested with these pests shall not 
be entitled to a certificate until such pests have been 
eliminated under the direction of the inspector. It is 
unlawful for a nursery to offer for sale nursery stock 
unless accompanied by a certificate of inspection. All 
nursery stock entering the State from without must 
be accompanied by a certificate from an official and a 
competent inspector. The State Entomologist and 
Pathologist at Blacksburg, Va., shall furnish to all 
nurserymen in other states doing business in Virginia 
an official tag upon request, if the certificate of inspec- 
