1«37] SERVICE AND REGULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS 287 
Sisymhrium — see Radicula-nasttirtium-aquaticum; and Trifolium, clover, with- 
out prejudice to the applicability of the other provisions of this decree, the 
importation into the Netherlands East Indies of the above-named seeds and the 
packing material in which they were shipped is not permitted until they have 
been disinfectel in accordance with the provisions of sections II and III. 
(Sections II and III authorize the designation of inspectors of plants and of 
fresh fruits, respectively, at authorized ports of entry.) 
The provision in the first paragraph of this article does not apply with 
respect to shipments of seeds of the plants named in that paragraph, except 
cotton, if the declaration is made in the phytosanitary certificate issued by 
the phytopathological service at Wageningen, that the seeds have been disin- 
fected in a disinfection plant operating under the supervision of the service. 
Avery S. Hoyt, 
Acting Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
B. P. Q. 350, Supplement No. 2. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, KINGDOM OF NORWAY 
October 26, 1937. 
Importation Prohibited of Plants From the United States and Certain 
Other Countries 
[Royal decree of September 24, 1937 — Effective immediately] 
Article 1. In conformity with the law of July 21, 1926, Section 2 (a) con- 
cerning the suppression of injurious insects and plant diseases, the importation 
into Norway of living plants with roots, as well as roots, rhizomes, tubers, 
bulbs, tomatoes, and eggplants from the United States of America, Canada, 
France, Belgium, and Luxemburg is prohibited to prevent the introduction of 
the Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemUneata Say). 
Art. 2. The Norwegian Department of Agriculture (Landbruksdepartementet) 
Is authorized to dispense with the above regulation under conditions stipulated 
by that Department. 
Avery S. Hoyt, 
Acting Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
B. E. P. Q. 433, Supplement No. 1. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, COLONY OF BARBADOS, BRITISH 
WEST INDIES 
October 11, 1937. 
Cotton Restrictions Extended 
An amendment dated August 7, 1937, has been made to the Cotton Diseases 
Prevention Act of 1928, in consequence of which the following item should be 
substituted for the first item on page 2 of B. E. P. Q. 433 : 
Cottonseed, seed cotton, lint, or part of the cotton plant, or any other plant 
belonging to the family Malvaceae, or any article stuffed with or containing 
any of the same: May be imported only by permission of the Governor-in- 
Bxecutive-Committee. (Cotton Diseases Prevention [Amendment] Act, August 
7, 1937.) 
Lee a. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
B. E. P. Q. 434, Revised. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, COLONY OF ST. LUCIA. BRITISH 
WEST INDIES 
October 14, 1937. 
This revision of the digest of the plant-quarantine import restrictions of the 
Colony of St. Lucia has been prepared for the information of nurserymen, 
