102 BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE [Oct.-Dec. 
shipped, are not and can not be a means of conveying injurious insects, including 
the West Indian fruit fly or the bean pod borer. 
Allium spp. (onion, garlic, leek) Ginger root 
Arrowroot (Maranta arundinacea) Kudzu 
Artichoke (Jerusalem) (Helianthus tuberosus) Leren— sweet corn root (Calathea allouia) 
Artocarpus spp. (breadfruit, jackfruit) Lettuce 
Asparagus Melon (cantaloupe, muskmelon, watermelon, 
Avocado casaba, honey dew) 
Balsam-pear Mustard greens 
Banana Parsley 
Bean (faba, string, Lima) 2 Parsnip 
Beet (including Swiss chard) Pea (in pod) 
Brassica oleracea (cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels Pepper (Capsicum sp.) 
sprouts, etc.) Pigeon pea (gandule) 2 
Cacao bean pod Pineapple 
Carrot Plantain 
Cassava root (yuca) Potato 
Celery Pumpkin 
Chayote Radish 
Cichorium (endive, chicory) Rhubarb 
Citrus fruits (citron, orange, lemon, lime, grape- Rutabaga 
fruit, etc.) Spinach 
Corn, sweet (Zea mays) Squash or calabaza 
Cucumber, including Angolo cucumber (Sicania Strawberry 
odorifera) Tamarind bean pod 
Dasheen— malanga, taro (Colocasia or Caladium Tomato 
spp.) Turnip 
Eggplant Vegetable marrow 
Fennel Watercress 
Genip (quenepa, Melicocca bijuga) Waterlily root 
Yautia— tanier (Xanthosoma spp.) 
This amendment shall be effective on and after January 1, 1933. 
Done at the city of Washington, this 13th day of December, 1932. 
Witness n^ hand and the seal of the United States Department of Agriculture. 
[seal.] R. W. Dunlap, 
Acting Secretary of Agriculture. 
[Foregoing amendment sent to all steamship lines plying between Puerto Rico and the mainland.] 
Notice to General Public Through Newspapers 
United States Department of Agriculture, 
Bureau of Plant Quarantine, 
Washington, D. C, December 80, 1982. 
Notice is hereby given that the Secretary of Agriculture, under authority of 
the act approved August 30, 1912, known as the plant quarantine act (37 Stat. 
315), as amended by the act of Congress approved March 4, 1917 (39 Stat. 
1134, 1165), has amended regulation 3 of the rules and regulations supplemental 
to Notice of quarantine No. 58, on account of certain injurious insects including 
the West Indian fruit fly and the bean pod borer in Puerto Rico, this amendment 
to become effective January 1, 1933. 
The effect of this amendment is hereafter to permit entry from Puerto Rico of 
some 52 listed fruit and vegetable products instead of the limited number for 
which entry was originally definitely provided in this regulation. 
Copies of this amendment, referred to as Amendment No. 1 to Notice of 
quarantine No. 58, may be obtained on request from the Bureau of Plant quaran- 
tine, Washington, D. C. 
Arthur M. Hyde, 
Secretary of Agriculture. 
[Published in El Mundo, San Juan, P. R., January 14, 1933.] 
1 Shelled beans and pigeon peas are admitted at all ports throughout the year; if in pods, at the port of 
New York only and during the season November to March, inclusive. 
