128 
BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE 
[ Oct -Dec. 1, 1932 
B. P. Q.— 346, Supplement No. 1. 
EUROPEAN CORN BORER 
December 27, 1932. 
STATE REGULATIONS 
The State of Colorado has issued a quarantine prohibiting the entry of all 
stalks, ears, cobs, or other parts or debris (except seed and shelled grain free from 
fragments of cob and other plant debris) of corn, broomcorn, sorghums, or 
Sudan grass; cut flowers or entire plants of chrysanthemum, aster, dahlia, and 
gladiolus, except corms, bulbs, or tubers, without stems; Lima beans in the pod, 
green shell beans in the pod, of the variety known as Cranberry or Horticultural, 
beets with tops, and rhubarb. The embargo applies to the States of Connecticut, 
Indiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New 
York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and West Virginia. 
Colorado may therefore be added to the list of States in group 1 of B. P. Q.-346. 
For full information address the State Entomologist, Fort Collins, Colo., re 
Quarantine Order No. 4 (second series), effective December 20, 1932. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Plant Quarantine. 
PENALTIES IMPOSED FOR VIOLATIONS OF THE PLANT QUARANTINE 
ACT 
QUARANTINES AFFECTING MEXICAN AND CANADIAN PRODUCTS 
In the case of the United States versus the persons listed below, for attempting 
to smuggle in contraband plant material, the penalties indicated were imposed 
by the United States customs officials at the following ports: 
Name 
Port 
Contraband 
Penalty 
A. R. Smith 
Detroit, Mich .. 
315 tulip bulbs 
$6.90 
C. W. Nye 
Eagle Pass, Tex 
12 avocados with seed 
1.00 
James W. Neal... 
El Paso, Tex 
12 sweet limes and 6 avocados 
3 oranges 
1.00 
Fabens, Tex 
1.00 
Mrs. R. W. Payne 
Blaine, Wash 
15 miscellaneous rooted plants 
5.00 
