1936] SERVICE AND REGULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS 45 
Osmunda fiber, osmundine, or orchid poat (Osmunda cinnamomea and 
O. claytoniana). 
Resurrection plant or bird's-nest moss (Selaginella lepidophyila) . 
Sheet moss (Calliergon schriberi and Thuridium recognition). 
Sphagnum moss, bog moss, or peat moss, when dried and baled (Sphag- 
naceae). 
Submerged aquatic plants, including — 
Crytoeoryne spp. 
Eelgrass or tape grass (Vallisncria spiralis). 
False loosestrife (Ludwigia mulerttu). 
Fish grass. Washington plant, or fanwort (Calromba caroliniana). 
Hornwort or coontail (Oeratophyllum demersum). 
Water milfoil (Myriophyllum spp.). 
Water weed, ditch moss, water thyme, or anacharis (Elodea canadensis) . 
Lee; A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
ANNOUNCEMENT RELATING TO PINK BOLLWORM QUARANTINE 
(NO. 52) 
B. E. P. Q. 393 
ADMINISTRATIVE INSTRUCTIONS— TREATMENT' REQUIREMENTS REMOVED AS A 
CONDITION FOR INTERSTATE SHIPMENT OF BALED LINT AND LINTERS, AND 
PRODUCTS THEREOF PRODUCED OR MANUFACTURED FROM STERILIZED COT- 
TONSEED, FROM THE PINK BOLLWORM REGULATED AREA IN FLORIDA 
(Issued under regulations 8, 9, 10, and 11 of Quarantine No. 52 — domestic) 
April 13, 1936. 
In accordance with the authorizations contained in regulations 8, 9, 10, and 11 
of Quarantine No. 52 (domestic), on account of the pink hollworm, notice is 
hereby given that baled cotton lint, baled cotton linters, and products thereof 
produced or manufactured from sterilized cottonseed may be moved interstate 
from the regulated area in Florida without restriction, other than that a permit 
issued by the United States Department of Agriculture must be secured and 
attached to the articles or shipping papers in accordance with the methods 
prescribed in regulation 15 of said quarantine. 
The removal of treatment requirements for the above-mentioned products is 
considered safe due to the fact that no pink bollworm infestation has been found 
in the regulated area of Florida during the 1935 season. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
ANNOUNCEMENT RELATING TO DUTCH ELM DISEASE QUARANTINE 
(NO. 71) 
INSTRUCTIONS TO POSTMASTERS 
Post Office Department, 
Third Assistant Postmaster General, 
Washington, D. C, April 27, 1936. 
Postmaster: 
My Dear Sir: Your attention is invited to the enclosed copy of the latest revi- 
sion of Quarantine Order No. 71 of the United States Department of Agriculture, 
extending the Dutch elm disease quarantine, by which you will be governed. See 
paragraph 1, section 595, Postal Laws and Regulations. 
Very truly yours, 
C. B. Eilenberoer, 
Third Assistant Postmaster General. 
