1936] SERVICE AND REGULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS 175 
SECTION B. INSPECTION 
A system of inspection shall be carried on throughout the year to provide for 
the efficient enforcement of sections A and C of this regulation and for the 
prompt discovery of any infestations which occur and for the enforcement of 
such conditions in and around citrus groves and packing and preserving plants as 
shall prevent the possibility of fruit worm development therein. 
SECTION C. INFESTED ZONES 
Upon the determination of a Mexican fruit-worm infestation within a regu- 
lated area, an infested zone shall be designated by the State of Texas in a 
manner approved by the United States Department of Agriculture and all host 
fruits in. susceptible stages of maturity produced within such zone and remain- 
ing in the regulated area shall be destroyed or processed in such a manner as 
to render them free from infestation. 
This amendment shall be effective on and after November 16, 1936. 
Done at the city of Washington this 14th day of November 1936. 
Witness my band and the seal of the United States Department of 
Agriculture. 
[seal] R. G. Tugwell, 
Acting Secretary of Agriculture. 
[Copies of the foregoing amendment were sent to all common carriers doing business in 
or through the State of Texas.] 
Notice to General Public Through Newspapers 
United States Department of Agriculture, 
Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, 
Washington, D. C, November U h 1036. 
Notice is hereby given that the Secretary of Agriculture, under authority 
conferred on him by the Plant Quarantine Act of August 20, 1912 (37 Stat. 
315), as amended, has promulgated amendment no. 2 to the revised rules 
and regulations supplemental to Notice of Quarantine No. 64, on account 
of the Mexican Fruit Worm, effective on and after November 16. 1036. The 
purpose of the amendment is to authorize the Chief of the Bureau of Ento- 
mology and Plant Quarantine to make such modifications as may be con- 
sidered necessary with respect to the duration and dates of commencement 
and termination of the host-free period within the regulated area. Copies 
of the amendment may be obtained from the Bureau of Entomology and 
Plant Quarantine, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, 
D. C. 
R. G. Tugwell. 
Acting Secretary of Agriculture. 
[Published in the Brownsville Herald, Brownsville, Tex., Nov. 24, 1936.] 
ANNOUNCEMENTS RELATING TO DUTCH ELM DISEASE 
QUARANTINE (NO. 71) (DOMESTIC) 
DUTCH ELM DISEASE QUARANTINE INCLUDES NEW AREAS 
(Press notice) 
November 6, 1936. 
New areas were added today in the district in the vicinity of New York City 
now under quarantine on account of the Dutch elm disease. " The regulated area 
was extended under an order by Secretary of Agriculture Wallace because of 
discovery of new infections of elm trees in the newly quarantined areas. 
The amendment to the Dutch elm quarantine added to the regulated areas: 
Two towns in Connecticut, Ridgefield and Wilton, in Fairfield County; four 
towns in New York, Goshen. Minisink, and Wawayanda, in Orange County, 
and Huntington, in Suffolk County; and numerous townships and boroughs 
in New Jersey, Flemington borough, and townships of East Amwell and Rari- 
tan, in Hunterdon County, boroughs of Hopewell and Pennington, and town- 
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