112 BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE [Oct.-Dec. 
Vermont, and Virginia, and the District of Columbia, to prevent the spread of 
the Japanese beetle, and has ordered that (1) fruits and vegetables; (2) nursery, 
ornamental, and greenhouse stock, and other plants, and (3) sand, soil, earth, 
peat, compost, and manure, shall not be shipped, offered for shipment to a com- 
mon carrier, received for transportation or transported by a common carrier, or 
carried, transported, moved, or allowed to be moved interstate from the said 
quarantined States or District in manner or method or under conditions other than 
those prescribed in the revised rules' and regulations supplemental to said quar- 
antine or in amendments thereto. The revision brings parts of the States of New 
Hampshire and Vermont under restriction, modifies the boundaries of the regu- 
lated areas in Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, 
and makes other changes of interest to shippers of the articles enumerated. 
Copies of said quarantine and revised rules and regulations may be obtained from 
the Bureau of Plant Quarantine, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C 
R. W. Dunlap, 
Acting Secretary of Agriculture. 
[Published in the following newspapers: The Hartford Times, Hartford, Conn., January 8, 1933; the 
Journal, Wilmington, Del., January 4, 1933; the Boston Transcript, Boston, Mass., January 6, 1933; the 
Providence Journal, Providence, R. I., January 5, 1933; the Sun, Baltimore, Md., January 5, 1933; the 
Union, Manchester, N. H., January 6, 1933; Albany News, Albany, N. Y., January 5, 1933; the News, 
Harrisburg, Pa., March, 1933; News-Leader, Richmond, Va., January 4, 1933; the News, Newark, N. J., 
January 4, 1933; the Herald, Rutland, Vt., January 5, 1933; Washington Evening Star, Washington, D. C, 
January 5, 1933] 
ANNOUNCEMENT RELATING TO PHONY-PEACH DISEASE 
QUARANTINE (NO. 67) 
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING AT MEMPHIS, TENN., TO CONSIDER THE ADVISABHITY 
OF EXTENDING THE QUARANTINE ON ACCOUNT OF THE PHONY-PEACH DISEASE 
TO THE STATES OF MISSOURI AND OKLAHOMA 
November 25, 1932. 
The Secretary of Agriculture has information that the phony-peach disease, a 
dangerous plant disease not heretofore widely prevalent or distributed within 
and throughout the United States, which has Been known for some time to exist 
in the States of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Missis- 
sippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas, has recently been 
discovered in the States of Missouri and Oklahoma. 
It appears necessary, therefore, to consider the advisability of extending the 
quarantine on account of the phony-peach disease to include the States of Mis- 
souri and Oklahoma within the quarantined area and of restricting the movement 
of peach trees, peach roots, nectarine trees, nectarine roots, or any kinds or 
varieties of trees or shrubs grafted or budded on peach or nectarine roots, from 
the said States or from any infected districts determined therein. 
Notice is, therefore, hereby given that in accordance with the plant quarantine 
act of August 20, 1912 (37 Stat. 315), as amended by the act of Congress approved 
March 4, 1917 (39 Stat. 1134, 1165), a public hearing will be held before the 
Bureau of Plant Quarantine of the United States Department of Agriculture at 
20-26 Front Street, Memphis, Tenn. (room 1128), at 10 a. m., on December 13, 
1932, in order that any person interested in the proposed extension of the quar- 
antine may appear and be heard either in person or by attorney. 
R. W. Dunlap, 
Acting Secretary of Agriculture. 
ANNOUNCEMENTS RELATING TO PINK-BOLLWORM QUARANTINE 
(NO. 52) 
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO CONSIDER THE ADVISABILITY OF EXTENDING THE 
QUARANTINE ON ACCOUNT OF THE PINK BOLLWORM OF COTTON TO THE STATE 
OF FLORIDA OR TO CERTAIN INFESTED SECTIONS THEREOF 
October 17, 1932. 
The Secretary of Agriculture has information that the pink bollworm (Pecti- 
nophora gossypiella Saunders) , a dangerous insect new to and not heretofore widely 
prevalent or distributed within or throughout the United States, which is known 
to exist in portions of the States of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, has recently 
been discovered in certain parts of the State of Florida. 
