id32| SERVICE AND REGULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS 125 
LouisiaDa — State entomologist, Baton Rouge, La., European corn borer 
quarantine, effective July 26, 1932. 
(Note: Louisiana does not include rhubarb among the restricted articles.) 
Revised effective August 2, 1932. 
Nevada — State quarantine officer, Reno, Nev., a proclamation by the 
governor, effective September 1, 1932. 
Oregon — Director of agriculture, Agricultural Building, Salem, Oreg., 
Quarantine Order No. 26 (new series), effective October 11, 1932. 
Utah — Commissioner of agriculture, Salt Lake City, Utah, Quarantine 
No. 11, effective September 8, 1932. 
GROUP 2. EMBARGOES — SPECIAL PROVISIONS 
Wyoming has issued an embargo which covers the following articles: 
Cornstalks, corn on the cob, cobs or any other debris of corn, broomcorn, all 
sorghums and Sudan grass (except the clean, shelled seeds of these plants which 
are free from portions of the plants), celery, beans in the pod, beets with tops, 
rhubarb, oat or rye straw as such or when used for packing, cut flowers or entire 
plants of chrysanthemums, aster, cosmos, zinnia, hollyhock, and cut flowers 
or entire plants of gladiolus and dahlia, except the roots, bulbs, or corms thereof 
"which are free from other plant growth whether grown or stored in the infested 
district. " The shipment of these products from the infested States to Wyoming 
is forbidden. 
The quarantine reference is as follows: 
Wyoming — Commissioner of agriculture, Cheyenne, Wyo., Quarantine 
Order No. 5, effective November 1, 1932. 
GROUP 3. STATE CERTIFICATION OP CERTAIN PRODUCTS ACCEPTED 
States. — Restrictive quarantines, largely uniform, have been issued by the States 
of Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, South Carolina, and Wisconsin. 
Restricted articles. — Class (a). Cornstalks, ears, cobs or other parts or debris 
of corn or broomcorn plants, sorghums and Sudan grass (except clean shelled corn, 
broomcorn seed, sorghum seed and Sudan-grass seed), which have originated in 
the States listed below. 
Class (6). Celery, beans in the pod, beets with tops, rhubarb, oat or rye straw 
as such or when used as packing, cut flowers or entire plants of chrysanthemums, 
asters, cosmos, zinnias, hollyhocks, and cut flowers or entire plants of gladioli 
and dahlia's except the roots, bulbs, or corms thereof, without stems, which have 
been grown or stored in the States listed below. 
Restrictions. — Articles of class (a) are admitted only when they have been 
manufactured or processed in such manner as to eliminate all risk of carriage of 
the European corn borer. Articles of class (b) are admitted either when they have 
been so manufactured or processed, or when they have been inspected by a duly 
authorized State or Federal inspector and certified to be free from the European 
corn borer, and are contained in a car, box, bale, or other container to which is 
attached a copy of said certificate. 
The States named above place these restrictions on shipments of the restricted 
articles originating in any part of the following States: 12 Connecticut, Indiana, 
Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, 
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and West Virginia. 
References.— The State orders of group 3 have the following titles, and infor- 
mation concerning them may be secured from the officers named: 
Illinois — State department of agriculture, Springfield, 111., a proclamation 
by the governor, effective July 27, 1932. 
(Note. — The Illinois quarantine places oat and rye straw in class (a) instead 
of class (6) . It also provides for the admittance of seed corn on the cob in small 
quantities, for exhibition purposes, under certificate that it has been subjected 
to a temperature of 150° F. for not less than three hours.) 
Iowa — State entomologist, Ames, Iowa, warning and Quarantine No. 3, 
effective July 25, 1932. 
Kansas — State entomological commission, Topeka, Kans., Quarantine No. 
5, effective Aug. 5, 1932. 
Missouri — Plant commissioner, Jefferson City, Mo., Quarantine No. 3, 
effective July 20, 1932. 
Nebraska — State department of agriculture, Lincoln, Nebr., Quarantine 
No. 2, effective Juiy 29, 1932. 
» The South Carolina quarantine also covers "other States in which the European corn borer may be 
found to exist." 
