86 
BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE 
[Oct.-Dec. 
grapefruit, and lemons must carry the name of the grower, the packing com- 
pany, or the exporter, as well as the country of origin. (See page 11, 
B. E. P. Q. 420.) 
Avery S. Hoyt, 
Acting Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
B. E. P. Q. 44S, Supplement No. 1. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, BELGIAN CONGO 
November 30, 1942. 
Banana Plants — Imports Subject to Quarantine Permit 
The importation of cultivated or wild banana plants into the Belgian Congo 
has been made subject to special permit from the Governor General, on sani- 
tary grounds, by ordinance No. 207/Agri. of July 16, 1942, published in the 
Bulletin Administratif du Congo Beige of July 25. 
P. N. Ann and, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
LIST OF CURRENT QUARANTINE AND OTHER RESTRICTIVE ORDERS 
AND MISCELLANEOUS REGULATIONS 
[The domestic and foreign quarantine and other restrictive orders summarized herein 
are issued under the authority of tlie Plant Quarantine Act of Aug. 20. 1912, as amende:!. 
The Mexican border regulations and the export-certification regulations are issued under 
specific acts of Congress.] 
QUARANTINE ORDERS 
The numbers assigned to these quarantines indicate merely the chronological 
order of issuance of both domestic and foreign quarantines in one numerical 
series. The quarantine numbers missing in this list are quarantines which have 
either been superseded or revoked. For convenience of reference these quaran- 
tines are here classified as domestic and foreign, the domestic quarantines being 
divided into (1) those applying primarily to the continental United States and 
(2) those applying primarily to shipments from and to the Territories of Hawaii 
and Puerto Rico. 
Domestic Plant Quarantines 
quarantines applying to the continental united states 
Black stem rust. — Quarantine No. 38, revised, effective September 1, 1937: 
Prohibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, 
revised, effective September 1, 1937. the movement into any of the protected 
States, namely, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa. Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, 
Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Virginia, 
West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, as well as the movement from any one 
of said protected States into any other protected State of the common barberry 
(Berberis vulgaris), or other species of Berberis or Mahonia or parts thereof 
capable of propagation, on account of the black stem rust of grains. The regula- 
tions place no restrictions on the interstate movement of Japanese barberry 
(B. thunbergii) or any of its rust-resistant varieties, or of cuttings (without 
roots) of Mahonia shipped for decorative purposes and not for propagation. 
Gypsy moth and brown-tail moth. — Quarantine No. 45, revised, effective Sep- 
tember 20, 1938: Prohibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations sup- 
plemental thereto, revised, effective September 29, 1938. the movement interstate 
to any point outside of the infested area, or from points in the generally infested 
area to points in the lightly infested area, of stone and quarry products, and of 
the plants and the plant products listed therein. The regulated area co\ers 
Rhode' Island and parts of the States of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New 
Hampshire, and Vermont. 
Japanese beetle. — Quarantine No. 48, revised, effective March 24, 1942: Pro- 
hibits, except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental thereto, 
revised, effective March 24, 1942, as amended, effective January 14, 1943, the 
