30 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Jan.-March 
5. It will not be necessary to issue customs mail entry (Form 3419) nor 
to require formal entry of the shipments. Copies of customs Form 7513 shall 
be furnished the Comptroller and the Section of Customs Statistics at New 
York, respectively. 
The mail shipments referred to shall be accorded special handling only at 
the live points specified in paragraph 2. 
The foregoing procedure shall not affect the movement of plant material 
in the international mails in transit through the United States. 
(B) In order to facilitate the transmission by air transportation of articles 
imported through the international mail service intended for immediate exporta- 
tion through private air transportation agencies, the following regulations are 
promulgated with the concurrence of the Post Office Department : 
1. Mail articles of foreign origin, addressed to, or in care of an air transporta- 
tion agency in the United States (located at a customs port), containing mer- 
chandise intended for immediate exportation by such agency, may be exported 
free of duty, under customs supervision, subject to the following conditions: 
The postmaster shall, upon written authority of the addressee, and in the pres- 
ence of a customs officer, rewrap and readdress the mail article, which should 
be retained in postal custody until a reasonable time before the departure of the 
exporting aircraft. Thereafter the postmaster shall have the article dispatched 
in postal equipment to the point of departure of the aircraft and delivered to 
the customs officer, who shall, in turn, deliver it on board the departing air- 
craft after the latter has cleared for a foreign destination. 
2. If the mail article reaches the post office of address in the United States with 
mail entry attached, the latter should be forwarded to the Bureau of Customs, 
with report of the particulars of the exportation of the merchandise. It will 
not be necessary to prepare mail entry in cases where the article reaches the 
port of exportation unaccompanied thereby. Formal entry may be dispensed 
with at the port of exportation and Form 3509, if issued, should be forwarded 
to the Bureau of Customs with appropriate report. 
James H. Moyle, 
Commissioner of Customs. 
Approved March 20, 1936 : 
Wayne C. Taylor, 
Acting Secretary of the Treasury. 
P. Q. C. A.-306, Supplement No. 3. March 9, 1936. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, DOMINION OF NEW ZEALAND 
The New Zealand Orchard and Diseases Act of September 13, 1928, defines 
"disease" as any of the diseases named in the first schedule to the act. In the 
prescribed forms of certificate set forth in P. Q. C. A.-306, certification of free- 
dom from disease as above defined is required. The first schedule naming the 
declared diseases was not included in Circular P. Q. C. A.-306. It is now 
deemed desirable, for the guidance of plant quarantine inspectors, to present 
that list, as supplemented since its publication. 
Regulation 13 of the regulations approved August 23, 1915, prescribes that if 
any fruits or plants are introduced or attempted to be introduced into New 
Zealand which, though accompanied by the certificates prescribed as necessary 
for such fruits or plants, are yet found on examination by an inspector to be 
infected with disease, such fruit or plants shall, together with any packages, 
wrappings, etc., containing the same, be dealt with as hereinafter provided : 
Fruit, plants, or things infected with the diseases named in the twelfth sched- 
ule shall be held and fumigated. 
Fruit, plants, or things infected with the diseases named in the thirteenth 
schedule shall be seized and destroyed. 
Fruit, plants, or things inieted with the diseases named in the fourteenth 
schedule shall be held and dipped. 
Fruits, plants, and things infected with the diseases named in the fifteenth 
schedule shall either be reshipped at once by the importer to a place beyond 
schedule shall be seized and destroyed. 
Since the pests named in the twelfth schedule represent chiefly coccids and 
mites which are believed susceptible to destruction on arrival in New Zealand 
