1932] SERVICE AND REGULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS 113 
It appears necessary, therefore, to consider the advisability of revising the 
quarantine on account of this insect to include the State of Florida and of pro- 
hibiting or restricting to such an extent as may be necessary the interstate 
movement from that State or from the infested parts thereof of (1) cotton, includ- 
ing all parts of the plant, seed cotton, cotton lint, linters, and all other forms of 
unmanufactured cotton lint, gin waste, cottonseed, cottonseed hulls, cottonseed 
cake and meal; (2) bagging and other containers and wrappers of cotton and 
cotton products; (3) railway cars, boats, and other vehicles which have been 
used in conveying cotton and cotton products or which are fouled with such 
products; (4) hay and other farm products; and (5) farm household goods, farm 
equipment, and, if contaminated with cotton, any other articles. 
Notice is therefore hereby given that in accordance with the plant quarantine 
act of August 20, 1912 (37 Stat. 315), as amended bv 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, in 
the auditorium of the Interior Department Building, Eighteenth and F Streets 
NW., Washington, D. C, at 10 a. m., on October 24, 1932, in order that any 
person interested in the proposed extension of the quarantine may appear and 
be heard, either in person or by attorney. 
Arthur M. Hyde, 
Secretary of Agriculture. 
REVISION OF PINK-BOLL WORM QUARANTINE AND REGULATIONS 
INTRODUCTORY NOTE 
The following revision of the pink-bollworm quarantine and regulations adds 
six counties of north-central Florida to the regulated areas, and makes provision 
for the compression of cotton lint, and the crushing of cottonseed, produced or 
ginned therein. 
SUMMARY 
The regulated areas under this revision include 5 counties of southern Arizona, 
6 counties of north-central Florida, 7 counties of southern New Mexico, and 
16 entire counties and parts of 1 additional county of western Texas. [See 
regulation 3.] 
Cotton lint, cottonseed, cottonseed cake and meal, and bagging, wrappers, 
and containers which have been used for cotton products must not be trans- 
ported interstate from any regulated area except under permit. [For the con- 
ditions governing the issuance of permits, see regulation 5, A; regulation 5, B 
(7-10); and regulation 7.] 
No stalks, bolls, or other parts of either cultivated or wild cotton plants and 
no gin waste are allowed to be transported interstate from any regulated area 
and no permits will be issued for such movement. [See regulation 5, B (5) .] 
Seed cotton and cottonseed hulls must not be transported interstate from any 
regulated area, except between contiguous regulated areas, and cottonseed hulls 
may be moved between such areas only under permit. [See regulation 5, B (6) 
and (8).] 
Railway cars, boats, and other vehicles, farm household goods, farm equip- 
ment, and other articles, must not be moved interstate from regulated areas 
unless free from contamination with cotton and cotton products. [See regula- 
tion 5, B (11), and regulation 8.] 
Permits are required to accompany the waybills covering shipments of re- 
stricted articles, or in the case of highway vehicles, they must accompany the 
vehicle. [See regulation 6.] 
To secure permits, address the Bureau of Plant Quarantine, P. O. Box 798, 
San Antonio, Tex., or the nearest branch office. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Plant Quarantine. 
NOTICE OF QUARANTINE NO. 52 (REVISED) 
[Approved October 26, 1932; effective October 29, 1932] 
I, C. F. Marvin, Acting Secretary of Agriculture, have determined that it is 
necessary to quarantine the States of Arizona, Florida, New Mexico, and Texas 
to prevent the spread of the pink bollworm (Pectinophora gossypiella Saunders), 
