26 BUREAU 6Y ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Jan.-March 
Massachusetts : Director, division of plant pest control, State House, Boston, 
Mass. 
Michigan : State inspector of orchards and nurseries, State department of 
agriculture, Lansing, Mich. 
Minnesota : State entomologist, University Farm, St. Paul, Minn. 
Mississippi : Entomologist, State plant board, State College, Miss. 
Missouri: Plant officer, department of agriculture, Jefferson City, Mo. 
Montana : Chief, division of horticulture, Missoula, Mont. 
Nebraska: Nursery inspector, State department of agriculture, Lincoln, Nebr. 
Nevada : Director, division of plant industry, Reno, Nev. 
New Hampshire: Deputy commissioner of agriculture, Durham, N. H. 
New Jersey: Chief, bureau of plant industry, State department of agricul- 
ture, Trenton, N. J. 
New Mexico : Biologist, agricultural experiment station, State College, N. Mex. 
New York : Director, bureau of plant industry, department of agriculture and 
markets, Albany, N. Y. 
North Carolina : State entomologist, State department of agriculture, Raleigh, 
N. C. 
North Dakota : State entomologist, Fargo, N. Dak. 
Ohio: Chief, division of plant industry, State department of agriculture, 
Columbus, Ohio. 
Oklahoma : State plant board, Oklahoma City, Okla. 
For seeds : Attention, seed analyst. 
For other nursery stock : Attention, nursery inspector. 
Oregon : Chief, division of plant industry, Agriculture Building, Salem, Oreg. 
Pennsylvania: Director, bureau of plant industry, State department of agri- 
culture, Harrisburg, Pa. 
Puerto Rico: Chief plant quarantine inspector, care Commissioner of Agricul- 
ture and Labor, San Juan, P. R. 
Rhode Island : Chief, bureau of entomology, State House, Providence, R. I. 
South Carolina: Chief, division of entomology, Clemson College, S. C. 
South Dakota : State nursery inspector, Pierre, S. Dak. 
Tennessee : State entomologist, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. 
Texas : Chief inspector of nurseries, Austin, Tex. 
Utah : State agriculture inspector, Salt Lake City, Utah. 
Vermont : State nursery inspector, Burlington, Vt. 
Virginia : State entomologist, 1112 State Office Building, Richmond, Va. 
Washington : Supervisor of horticulture, Olympia, Wash. 
West Virginia : State department of agriculture, Charleston, W. Va. 
Wisconsin : State entomologist, Capitol Annex, Madison, Wis. 
Wyoming: State entomologist, State department of agriculture, Powell, Wyo. 
ANNOUNCEMENTS RELATING TO MEXICAN FRUIT FLY 
QUARANTINE (NO. 64) 
SHIPPING SEASON FOR TEXAS CITRUS FRUIT EXTENDED TO MARCH 31 
(Press notice) 
January 13, 1936. 
The season for shipping citrus fruit from Texas under the Mexican fruit fly 
quarantine regulations, which apply to Brooks, Willacy, Cameron, and Hidalgo 
Counties, has been extended provisionally to include March 31, 1936, Lee A. 
Strong, Chief of the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, announced 
today. If conditions of reinfestation occur or if growers fail to observe sanitary 
requirements and fail to comply with clean-up restrictions, it may be necessary 
to set an earlier date. The shipping season normally closes — under the quar- 
antine — in March. 
The extension was announced after consultation with the Texas State Depart- 
ment of Agriculture and is concurred in by J. E. McDonald, commissioner of 
agriculture. Quarantine officials of the State Department of Agriculture of 
Texas and of the United States Department of Agriculture anticipate the same 
cooperation heretofore extended in this work by growers and packers of the 
lower Rio Grande Valley. 
Mr. Strong pointed out that the United States Department of Agriculture de- 
sires to assist in every possible manner in the movement of the Texas citrus 
crop. At the same time there must be full appreciation of the Department's 
