22 
BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE 
[Jan. -Mar. 
Art. 5. Grasses, leaves, or other vegetable matter used as packing for goods 
imported from any place not mentioned in article 1 shall be destroyed at the cus- 
tomhouse at the port of arrival, except when such packing is in the form of 
manufactured wrappers of dry straw, which may be admitted. 
Importation of grapevines prohibited 
Art. 6. The importation of the grapevine, including the fresh or dry parts 
thereof, but excluding raisins and currants, is prohibited unless the special per- 
mission of the Governor is first obtained. 
Unrestricted products 
Art. 7. Nothing contained in this order shall be deemed to prohibit the importa- 
tion of the following: Wheat, barley, and other cereals, and all dry seeds (except 
cottonseed) properly cleaned from the husk, straw, and earth; acorns, valonia; 
almonds, walnuts, chestnuts, and other nuts, including ground nuts, free from the 
outer husks, leaves, stalks, and branches; preserves, crystallized fruits; bottled 
and canned fruits and vegetables hermetically sealed in proper receptacles; flour 
and meal of all kinds, and every preparation thereof; tamarind, saponaria wood; 
vegetables desiccated by artificial heat and enclosed in packages; dry and aro- 
matic plants used for medicinal purposes and for dyeing, if free from earth: 
dried fruits and vegetables, provided the proper officer of customs is satisfied 
that they are bona fide dried fruit and vegetables, and subject to inspection by 
any officer of the Agricultural Department and to any treatment at the expense 
and risk of the importer which may be required by such officer; carobs, if free 
from earth. 
Art. 8. No articles, goods, or merchandise, the importation of which is in any 
way prohibited or restricted under the provisions of this order, shall be allowed 
to be imported from any place or country from which the importation of such 
articles, goods, or merchandise is not prohibited or restricted, unless the proper 
officer of customs is satisfied that such articles, goods, or merchandise do not 
originate in any place or country from w T hich the importation of the same is 
prohibited or restricted, and that the other requirements of the order have been 
complied with in respect of such articles, goods, or merchandise. 
Art. 9. Nothing contained in this order shall prevent the importation by the 
Director of Agriculture on behalf of the Government of any articles, goods, or 
merchandise dealt with under this order for the purposes of experimental cultiva- 
tion or scientific investigation. 
P.Q.C.A.-314, Supplement No. 4 March 20, 1934. 
PLANT QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS , BRITISH HONDURAS 
Proclamation no. 19, of July 21, 1932, superseding proclamation no. 3, of 
Mav 27, 1931 (see Supplement No. 1 to P.Q.C.A.-314), and effective Julv 23 r 
1932, declares: 
The importation prohibited into British Honduras from all sources except 
Canada, the United Kingdom and Ireland, and the United States of America, of 
fruits (except green bananas, nuts, and dried or processed fruits) ; and vegetables 
(except potatoes, onions, canned or processed vegetables, grains, seeds, dried 
beans, and peas). 
Each shipment of fruits and vegetables from Canada and from the United 
Kingdom and Ireland shall be accompanied by a certificate affirming that the 
products are of home origin. 
Fruits (except bananas and plantains) grown in Jamaica may be imported only 
when each shipment is accompanied by a certificate of origin and inspection issued 
by the agricultural officer. 
Plants packed or growing in soil (except citrus plants) may be imported only 
when a certificate of introduction is granted by the agricultural officer after 
inspection and, if necessary, fumigation. 
All such plants and plant products, offered for entry into the Colony, which do 
not comply with the above regulations, shall be destroyed by the Government. 
This proclamation shall not apply to materials required by the Agricultural 
Department. 
Avery S. Hoyt, 
Acting Chief, Bureau of Plant Quarantine. 
