12 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Jan.-Mar. 
AMENDMENT NO. 2 TO REVISED RULES AND REGULATIONS SUPPLEMENTAL TO 
NOTICE OF QUARANTINE NO. 37 
(Approved Jan. 14, 1935; effective Jan. 14, 1935) 
Under authority conferred by the Plant Quarantine Act of August 20, 1912 
(37 Stat. 315), it is ordered that regulations 3 and 7 of the revised rules and 
regulations supplemental to Notice of Quarantine No. 37, on account of certain 
injurious insects and fungous diseases, which were promulgated December 17. 
1930, and amended effective July 1, 1932, be, and the same are hereby, further 
amended to read as follows : 
Regulation 3. Nursery Stock, other Plants and Parts of Plants, Including 
Seeds, for which a Permit Is Required 
The following nursery stock, other plants and parts of plants, including 
seeds, not including, however, such other plants and parts of plants as are 
named in Appendix A, which are governed by special quarantines and other 
restrictive orders now in force, nor such as may hereafter be made the subject 
of special quarantines, may be imported, without limitation as to quantity or 
use r from countries which maintain inspection (Appendix B), under permit 
upon compliance with these regulations: 
(1) Bulbs, corms, or root stocks (pips) of the following genera: Lilium 
(lily), Convallaria (lily-of-the-valley), Hyacinthus (hyacinth), Tulipa (tulip), 
and Crocus; and, until further notice, Chionodoxa (glory-of-the-snow), Galan- 
thus (snowdrop), Scttla (squill), FritiUaria, Muscari (grape-hyacinth), Tana, 
and Eranthis (winter aconite) ; and, on and after December 15, 1936, Narcissus 
(daffodil and jonquil). 
(2) Cuttings, scions, and buds of fruits or nuts: Provided. That cuttings, 
scions, and buds of fruits or nuts may be imported from Asia, Japan, Philippine 
Islands, and Oceania (including Australia and New Zealand) under the pro- 
visions of regulation 14 only. (Stocks of fruits or nuts may not be imported, 
under permit or otherwise.) 
(3) Rose stocks, including Manetti, Rosa multiflora (brier rose), and R. 
rugosa. 
(4) Nuts, including palm seeds for growing purposes: Provided, That such 
nuts or seeds shall be free from pulp. 
(5) Seeds of fruit, forest, ornamental, and shade trees, seeds of deciduous 
and evergreen ornamental shrubs, and seeds of hardy perennial plants : 
Provided, That such seeds shall be free from pulp: Provided further. That 
citrus seeds may be imported only through specified ports subject to disinfec- 
tion as provided in regulation 9 : Provided further. That mango seeds may 
not be imported under permit or otherwise, except from the countries of 
North America, Central America, and South America, and the West Indies. 
Importations from countries not maintaining inspection of nursery stock, 
other plants and parts of plants, including seeds, the entry of which is permis- 
sible under this regulation, may be made under permit upon compliance 
with these regulations in limited quantities for public-service purposes only, 
but this limitation shall not apply to tree seeds. 
(6) Materials permitted entry under Quarantine No. 56 for consumption 
purposes are authorized entry under this regulation for propagation. 
Regulation 7. Certification, Marking, Freedom from Sand, Soil, or Earth, 
and Approved Packing Material. 
The importation of nursery stock and other plants and seeds from countries 
which maintain inspection will not be allowed unless the invoice is accompanied 
by an original certificate, and unless each container bears a copy certificate 
issued by a duly authorized official of the country from which it is exported 
stating that the nursery stock and other plants and seeds covered by the 
certificate have been thoroughly inspected by him or under his direction at 
the time of packing, and found, or believed to be, free from injurious plant 
diseases and insect pests. 
Each certificate and copy certificate shall give the date of inspection, name of 
the grower or exporter, the district or locality and the country where grown, and 
a statement that the nursery stock and other plants and seeds have been in- 
spected by a duly auth lized official and found, or believed to be, free from insect 
