108 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [July-Sept. 
hereby given that baled cotton lint, baled cotton linters, and products thereof 
from all of Lea and Roosevelt Counties of the pink bollworm regulated area in 
New Mexico and from that part of the pink bollworm regulated area in Texas 
comprising the counties of Andrews, Cochran, Ector, Gaines, Hockley, Terry, 
and Yoakum, and those parts of the counties of Bailey, Dawson, Lamb, and 
Midland particularly described in regulation 3 of Quarantine No. 52 (revised), 
may be moved interstate 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 above-described areas during the 1935 season. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
[The above circular was sent to all common carriers in the States of Texas and New 
Mexico.] 
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS 
REGULATIONS GOVERNING SANITARY EXPORT CERTIFICATION 
INTRODUCTORY NOTE 
The service providing for the certification of plants and plant products to 
meet the sanitary requirements of foreign countries is conducted under 
authority granted in appropriation acts for the Department of Agriculture. In 
appropriation acts for the fiscal years prior to and including the fiscal year 
1934, authority was granted to certify "domestic fresh fruits, vegetables, and 
seeds, and nursery stock and other plants for propagation." In subsequent 
appropriation acts authority was granted to certify all domestic plants and 
plant products. The changes in this revision of the Inspection and Certification 
Regulations to meet foreign sanitary requirements takes cognizance of the 
extension of the authority to inspect products not heretofore certified for 
export. Provisions have also been made to certify plant products on the basis 
of the inspections made by cooperating State and Federal agencies. For the 
sake of brevity the title of the inspection and certification regulations to meet 
foreign sanitary requirements has been changed to Regulations Governing 
Sanitary Export Certification. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
Pursuant to the Agricultural Appropriation Act of May 17, 1935 (49 Stat. 
268), and repeated in subsequent appropriation acts "For the inspection, under 
such rules and regulations as the Secretary of Agriculture may prescribe, of 
domestic plants and plant products when offered for export and to certify to 
shippers and interested parties as to the freedom of such products from 
injurious plant diseases and insect pests according to the sanitary requirements 
of the foreign countries affected and to make such reasonable charges and to 
use such means as may be necessary to accomplish this object, * * * 
Provided, That moneys received on account of such inspection and certification 
shall be covered into the Treasury as miscellaneous receipts" — 
I, Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, in order to carry out the pur- 
pose of the aforesaid acts, do prescribe the following revised rules and regula- 
tions, which shall become and be effective on and after September 21, 1936. 
Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Department of Agricul- 
ture this 19th day of September 1936. 
[seal] H. A. Wallace. 
Secretary of Agriculture. 
