40 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Apr.-June 
Lily bulbs originating in a country other than Canada may not be forwarded 
from Vancouver, British Columbia, or Victoria, British Columbia, under the 
provisions of articles 914 to 919, inclusive, of the customs regulations of 1931, 
as amended by T. D. 46752, unless such shipments are routed to arrive in the 
United States through Blaine or Sumas, Wash., Port Huron or Detroit, Mich.. 
or Buffalo or Niagara Falls, N. Y., or unless such shipments are routed under 
the foreign bonded manifests (customs form 7512), to Bellingham or Seattle, 
Wash., Chicago, 111., Boston, Mass., New York, N. Y., or Philadelphia, Pa., as 
the port of destination. Such shipments arriving at Blaine or Sumas, Wash., 
Port Huron or Detroit, Mich., or Buffalo or Niagara Falls, N. Y., whether in 
sealed cars or otherwise, must be inspected by an inspector of the Bureau of 
Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Department of Agriculture, before they may 
go forward in bond or otherwise, regardless of whether or not destined to a 
port at which inspection by the Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine 
may be had. 
Shipments of lily bulbs arriving at a Canadian border port other than Blaine 
or Sumas, Wash., Port Huron or Detroit, Mich., or Buffalo or Niagara Falls, 
N. Y., may not be entered for consumption at the port of arrival but must be 
forwarded in bond under an immediate transportation entry to one of the 
approved ports of inspection named herein, under the provisions of article 
561 (a) (1) (2) of the customs regulations of 1931. 
The privilege of diversion authorized in article 881 of the customs regula- 
tions of 1931, as amended by T. D. 46032, shall not extend to shipments of 
lily bulbs in bond unless permission for such diversion is first secured from the 
Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Department of Agriculture. A 
notation to this effect shall be plainly stamped on the manifests (customs 
form 7512). 
In all cases the original inspection certificate and the quadruplicate copy of 
the consular invoice must be presented at the port of inspection. 
These instructions leave in full force and effect the provisions of articles 
560 (d) and 916 (c) of the customs regulations of 1931, as amended by T. D. 
46752, re'ative to the entry of plants and plant products arriving from con- 
tiguous countries in sealed cars, with the exception of lily bulbs from the 
Orient by way of Vancouver, British Columbia, or Victoria, British Columbia, 
forwarded in the manner herein provided. 
The provisions of T. D. 43579 are hereby revoked and superseded. 
Frank Dow. 
Acting Commissioner of Customs. 
Approved May 31, 1935 : 
T. J. COOLIDGE, 
Acting Secretary of the Treasunj. 
B. E. P. Q.-373 Apeil 23, 1935. 
NARCISSUS INSPECTION RECORDS FOR 1934 
Table 1 gives a record of the narcissus plantings inspected during the cal- 
endar year 1934 under the Federal quarantine for the prevention of spread 
of bulb pests. The figures given are summarized from the reports sent to this 
Bureau by the nursery inspectors of the various States who act as Federal 
collaborators in making such inspections. 
Similar tables have been issued in previous years, that for 1933 being given 
on pages 12-14 of no. 118 of the Service and Regulatory Announcements of 
the Bureau of Plant Quarantine. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
