140 THE AFTER TREATMENT OF NURSERY STOCK 



well insulated against the cold that the men may work 

 comfortably. The majority of such buildings consist 

 mainly of walls and roof as the floors are mostly of dirt. 

 The interior is divided off into stalls or apartments by the 

 posts or pillars that support the roof. 



FIG. 66. A Fumigating Building with Load of Trees Ready for the 



Gas. 



As the trees are brought in from the field or fumigating 

 house they are placed in these stalls. The bundles are 

 tiered to a height of eight or ten feet, placing the roots to 

 the outside the same as they were loaded on the truck. 

 Narrow alleys are left when needed for the men to make 

 examinations from time to time. The sections are filled 

 with single varieties and no effort is made to label the 



