84 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Jan-March 
Cynoglossum, Dahlia, Delphinium, Dianthus, Digitalis, Dimorphotheca, Eccremo- 
carpus {Calampelis), Eschscholtzia, GaiUardia, Gcrardia, Gerhera, Gilia, Glox- 
inia, Gomphrena, Gypsophila, Helianthus, Helichrysum, Heliotropium, Helip- 
terum {AcrocUnium, Rhodanthe) , Hibiscus, Ihvris, Impatiens, Inula, Ipomoea, 
Kniphofia (Tritonia), Leptosiphon, Linaria, Lobelia, Lunaria, Lychnis, Matri- 
caria, Matthiola, Maurandia, Mediola, Mimulus, Mirabilis, Myosotis, Nemesia, 
NemopJiila, Nicotiana, Nigella, Nycterinia, Oenothera, Passiflora, Pelargonium, 
Pentstemon, Perilla, Petunia, Phacelia, Phlox, Physalis, Poinsettia, Portulaca, 
Potentilla, Primula, Pyrethrum, Quamoclit (Mina), Reseda, Ricinus, Rosa, 
Rudbeckia, Salpiglossis, Salvia, Sanvitalia, Saponaria, Scabiosa, Schizanthus, 
Senecio, Silene, Solanum, Stevia, Stokesia, Strepto'carpus, Tagetes, Thelesperma 
{Cosmidium), Thnnbergia, Tithonia, Torenia, Trachelium, Tropaeolum, Ver- 
hent, Vinca {Lochnera), Viola, Volutarella {Amberboa) , and Zinnia. 
(c) As amended by decree No. 7345-A, August 12, 1929: 
1. Vegetables, onions, bulbous plants (except potatoes), beets, and root crops 
intended for consumption or medicinal purposes. 
2. Shallots and garlic. 
3. Dried fruits and parts thereof, such as almonds, peanuts, grain, chestnuts, 
caraway seeds, cloves, Jesuit's nut (Trapa bicoruis L., T. nataus L., ling-kok), 
nutmegs, walnuts, pakwo, pepper, rice, etc., for consumption or medicinal 
purposes. 
(d) Coconuts from which the husks have been removed. 
(e) Spawn of edible mushrooms. 
if) Sugarcane cuttings imported through Tandjoenk Priok and Soerabaja 
for scientific purposes and addressed to the director of the experiment station 
of the Java sugar industry at Pasoeroean. 
SECTION 5. IMPOBT EESTBICTIONS ON PLANT MATEBIAL 
With respect to the permissible importation of living plant material into the 
Netherlands East Indies, the following provisions are applicable: 
Phytosanitary certificate required 
Article 1. (1) The importation of the plant material referred to in article 
2 of the decree of September 27, 1926 (except as indicated in the following 
paragraphs) is permitted only when each shipment is accompanied by a cer- 
tificate signed by a competent official of the government of the country of origin 
or one of the branches thereof. 
{a) Indicating the species to which the plant material belongs or from 
which it was derived. 
(&) The quantity and weight thereof. 
(r) AflEirming that at the time of shipment the said material was, accord- 
ing to his conviction, free from pests and diseases of cultivated plants. 
Restrictions on the importation of potatoes 
(2) Without prejudice to the provisions of the preceding paragraph, the im- 
portation of potatoes from the Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, Poland, Eng- 
land and Wales, Ireland, Scotland, United States, and Canada is permitted 
only when each shipment is accompanied by a certificate issued by an oflOicial 
phytopathological institution of the country of origin aflfirming that the potatoes 
were found free from wart disease {Synchytrium rndobioticum (Schilb.) Perc), 
and that this disease does not occur in the field in which the potatoes vv^ere 
grown, nor within a radius of 500 meters therefrom. (See also the decree of 
Oct. 21, 1929, p. 10.) 
Restrictions on the importation of Hcvea 
(3) Without prejudice to the provision.^ of paragraph 1 of this article, the 
importation of seeds, living plants and parts thereof of Hevea b7'asiliensis is 
permitted only when the shipment is accompanied by a certificate issued by 
the phytopathological institute of the country of origin, affirming that the 
trees from which the plant material was taken are free from the South Ameri- 
can leaf disease (Mclanopsrnnniopsis ulci (Henn. ) = {Fusiclndium mac- 
rosporium Kuyper) and from phytophthora leaf-fall diseases (Phytophthora 
