24 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Jan-March 
111 the ease of shipments of fivo-Ieafed pines from infected States to or 
between the New Enghind States and New York, rej^nhitioii 2, A (1), provides 
that "a control-area permit secured from the proper officer of the State of desti- 
nation may, until further notice, be substituted for the Federal pine-shipping 
l)erinit" required as to all other interstate shipments from infected States. This 
provision is made to enable the State concerned to record the locations of pine 
planted therein in order that provision may be made for the protection of the 
pine by Ribes eradication around the areas in which such planting is done. 
State 
Federal inspector designated to act in the State into which shipment is to 
be made 
Connecticut 
Idaho... 
Maine 
Maryland 
Massachusetts.. 
Michigan 
Minnesota 
New Hampshire 
New York 
Ohio... 
Pennsylvania... 
Rhode Island... 
Vermont 
Wisconsin 
State Entomologist. Agricultural Experiment Station, New Haven, Conn. 
Director, Bureau of Plant Industry, Boise, Idaho. 
State Horticulturist, Augusta, Maine. 
State Plant Pathologist, College Park, Md. 
Director, Division of Plant Pest Control, Statehouse, Boston, Mass. 
Inspector in Charge, Orchard and Nursery Inspection, Department of Agriculture, 
Lansing, Mich. 
Commissioner of Conservation, State Office Building, St. Paul, Minn. 
State Nursery Inspector, Durham, N. H. 
Director, Bureau of Plant Industry, Albany, N. Y. 
Chief, Division of Plant Industry, Columbus, Ohio. 
Chief, Division of Forest Protection, Harrisburg, Pa. 
State Entomologist, 310 Statehouse, Providence, R. I. 
Forest Commissioner, Montpelier, Vt. 
State Entomologist, Madison, Wis. 
Roy M. North, 
Acting Third Assistant Postmaster General. 
ANNOUNCEMENT RELATING TO REGULATIONS GOVERNING THE 
ENTRY OF POTATOES INTO THE UNITED STATES 
ENTRY OF POTATOES FROM LATVIA AUTHORIZED 
[Press notice] 
March 27, 1937. 
Latvia has been added to the list of countries from which potatoes may be 
shipped to the United States, the Department of Agriculture announced today. 
Officials of the Latvian Government have presented evidence that their 
country is free from the potato wart and other injurious potato diseases and 
insect pests which are new to or not widely prevalent in the United States. 
The Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine finds that Latvia has met 
all the conditions of the regulations governing the imi)ortatioii of potatoes into 
the United States and in consequence that Bureau will issue, effective imme- 
diately, permits for the entry of potatoes certified as having been grown 
in Latvia. 
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS 
NO FEDERAL QUARANTINE ON PEACH MOSAIC DISEASE 
[Press notice] 
January 21, 1937. 
The Secretary of Agriculture announced today that the Department of 
Agriculture will not act at this time to restrict the interstate movement of 
host plants of the peach mosaic disease, which is known to occur in parts of 
Arizona, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah. 
This announcement is made, the Secretary stated, as a result of careful 
consideration of the evidence submitted at tlie public hearing, September 21, 
at Albufpierque, N. Mex., which was attended by representatives of the United 
States Department of Agriculture, State officials from Colorado, New Mexico, 
Utah, California, Georgia, and Texas, and by nurserymen, orchardists, and 
others interested in peach production in the affected States. 
