130 BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE [Oct.-Dec. 
with such products; (4) hay and other farm products; and (5) farm household 
goods, farm equipment, and, if contaminated with cotton, any other articles. 
Satin moth. — Quarantine No. 53, revised, effective January 1, 1929: Prohibits, 
except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, revised 
effective December 1, 1931, the interstate movement to points outside of the 
regulated areas in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode 
Island, Connecticut, and Washington, of all species or varieties of poplar and 
willow trees or parts thereof capable of propagation. 
Thurberia weevil. — Quarantine No. 61, revised, effective August 1, 1927: 
Prohibits the interstate movement of Thurberia, including all parts of the plant, 
from any point in Arizona and prohibits, except as provided in the rules and regu- 
lations supplemental thereto, effective August 1, 1927, amended effective June 
2, 1930, the interstate movement from the regulated area of Arizona of (1) 
cotton, including all parts of the plant, seed cotton, cotton lint, linters, and all 
other forms of unmanufactured cotton lint, gin waste, cottonseed, cottonseed 
hulls, and cottonseed cake and meal; (2) bagging and other containers and wrap- 
pers 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 house- 
hold goods, farm equipment, and, if contaminated with cotton, any other articles. 
Narcissus bulbs. — Quarantine No. 62, effective July 15, 1926: Prohibits, 
except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, revised 
effective May 15, 1928, and amended effective June 20, 1932, the interstate 
movement from every State in the continental United States and the District of 
Columbia of narcissus bulbs, on account of certain injurious bulb pests, including 
the greater bulb fly (Merodon equestris Fab.), the lesser bulb fly {Eumerus strigatus 
Fallen), and the bulb eelworm (Tylenchus dipsaci Kuehn). 
White-pine blister rust. — Quarantine No. 63, effective October 1, 1926: Prohibits, 
except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, revised 
effective January 1, 1933, the interstate movement from every State in the 
continental United States and the District of Columbia of 5-leafed pines (Pinus) 
or currant and gooseberry plants (Ribes and Grossularia) including cultivated 
or wild or ornamental sorts. 
Mexican fruit worm. — Quarantine No. 64, effective August 15, 1927: Prohibits, 
except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, revised 
effective September 1, 1932, the interstate movement from the regulated area of 
Texas of fruits of all varieties. 
Woodgate rust. — Quarantine No. 65, effective November 1, 1928: Prohibits, 
except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, effective 
November 1, 1928, amended effective April 1, 1929, the interstate movement from 
the regulated area in the State of New York of trees, branches, limbs, or twigs 
of Scotch pine (Pinus sylvestris) , Canary Island pine (P. canariensis) , Slash pine 
(P. caribaed) , Japanese red pine (P. densiflora) , Corsican pine (P. nigra poiretiana) , 
Stone pine (P. pinea), Western yellow pine (P. ponderosa), Monterey pine 
(P. radiata), Loblolly pine (P. taeda), or Jersey pine (P. virginiana), or of any 
variety thereof, or of any species or variety of hard pine hereafter found to be 
susceptible to the Woodgate rust. 
Phony-peach disease. — Quarantine No. 67, revised, effective November 30, 1931: 14 
Prohibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, 
effective November 30, 1931, the interstate movement from Alabama, Georgia, 
Louisiana, Mississippi, and South Carolina, and from the regulated areas of 
Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas, of peach trees, 
peach roots, nectarine trees, nectarine roots, and all kinds and varieties of trees 
or shrubs grafted or budded on peach or nectarine roots. 
QUARANTINES APPLYING TO THE TERRITORIES OF HAWAII AND PUERTO RICO 
Hawaiian fruits and vegetables. — Quarantine No. 13, revised, effective June 1, 
1917: Prohibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental 
thereto, revised, effective June 1, 1930, the movement from the Territory of 
Hawaii into or through any other Territory, State, or District of the United 
States of all fruits and vegetables in the natural or raw state, on account of the 
Mediterranean fruit fly (Ceratilis capitata) and the melon fly (Dacus cucurbitae). 
Sugarcane. — Quarantine No. 16, effective June 6, 1914: Prohibits the move- 
ment from the Territories of Hawaii and Puerto Rico into or through any other 
Territory, State, or District of the United States of living canes of sugarcane, or 
cuttings or parts thereof, on account of certain injurious insects and fungus 
diseases. 
n Subsequently lifted effective Mar. 1, 1933. 
