1941] 
SERVICE AND REGULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS 
69 
berth, Pennsburg, Red Hill, Souderton, West Consholiocken, and West Telford, in 
Montgomery County; townships of Bethlehem, Hanover, Lower Mount Bethel, 
Lower Saucon, Upper Mount Bethel, and Williams, the city of Easton, and the 
boroughs of Freemansburg, Glendon, Hellertown, Portland, West Easton, and 
Wilson, in Northampton County; ward 35, in the city of Philadelphia, in Phila- 
delphia County; and the townships of Harmony and Jackson, and the borough 
of Lanesboro, in Susquehanna County. 
§ 301.71-4. Control of movement of elm plants and elm products. — Elm plants 
or parts thereof of all species of the genus Ulmus, irrespective of whether 
nursery, forest, or privately grown, including (1) trees, plants, leaves, twigs, 
branches, bark, roots, trunks, cuttings, and scions of such plan s; (2) loss or 
cordwood of such plants; and (3) lumber, crates, boxes, barrels, packing cases, 
and other containers manufactured in whole or in part from such plants, if the 
wood is not free from bark, shall not be moved interstate from any regulated 
area to or through any point outside thereof. 
Plants and plant products enumerated in this regulation may be moved inter- 
state from an area not under regulation through a regulated area to a ncnregu- 
lated area only when such movement is on through billing: Provided, That such 
movement by truck or other road vehicle may not be made during the period 
from April 1 to October 31, inclusive, of any 12-month period unless the restricted 
products contained therein while passing through any regulated area are 
covered or otherwise protected, to the satisfaction of an inspector, from contami- 
nation by insect vectors of the Dutch elm disease. 
§ 301.71-5. Shipments for experimental and scientific purposes. — Articles sub- 
ject to restriction in these regulations may be moved interstate for experimental 
or scientific purposes, on such conditions and under such safeguards as may be 
prescribed by the Chief of the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
The container of articles so moved shall bear, securely attached to the outside 
thereof, an identifying tag from the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quaran- 
tine showing compliance with such conditi* ns. 
Done at Washington, D. C, this 20th day of September 1941. 
Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Department of Agriculture. 
[seal] Grover B. Hill. 
Acting Secretary. 
[Copies of foregoing quarantine sent to all common carriers doing business in or 
through the quarantined States.] 
[Filed with the Division of the Federal Register September 22, 1941, 11:30 a. m. ; 
6 F. R. 4834.3 
Notice to General Public Through Newspapers 
United States Department of Agriculture, 
Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, 
Washington, D. C, September 20, 1941. 
Notice is hereby given that the Secretary of Agriculture, under an h rity 
conferred by the Plant Quarantine Act of August 20, 1912, as amended (7 U. S C. 
161), has promulgated a revision, effective on and after October 1, 1941 of the 
Dutch elm disease quarantine (Notice of Quarantine No. 71) and rules and 
regulations supplemental thereto. The purpose of the revision is to bring under 
regulation parts of nine Pennsylvania counties, additional sections of Connecti- 
cut, New Jersey, and New York, where the Dutch elm disease has been located, 
and remove from regulation the town of Huntington, Suffolk County, New York. 
The quarantine has been further revised to authorize the ('l ief of the Bureau 
of Entomology and Plant Quarantine to modify, by making less strii gent, 
the restrictions of the regulations. 
Copies of the quarantine as revised may be obtained from the Bureau <>f 
Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Department of Agriculture, Washington, 
D. C. 
Grover B. Hill, 
Acting Secretary. 
[Published in the following newspapers: The New York Times, New York, N. Y.. Sep- 
tember :',<), 1941 ; the Newark News. NYwark. N. J., September •*:<>, L94] : )\w Bulletin, 
Philadelphia, Pa., September 29, 1941; the Times, Hartford, Conn., September 29, 1941.] 
