42 BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY AND PLANT QUARANTINE [Apr.-June 
B. P. Q.-363, Supplement No. 1 May 9, 1935. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS 
FEESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES NOW ADMITTED FROM NEW ZEALAND, TASMANIA, AND 
VICTORIA 
The notice of the director of plant industry, dated December 27, 1934, approved 
December 29, 1934, by the Secretaries of Agriculture and Commerce, lifts the 
quarantine prohibition against the importation of fruits and vegetables, estab- 
lished by administrative order no. 12, of May 8, 1933 (approved June 14, 1933; 
see pp. 6, 7, and 8 of B. P. Q-363), from New Zealand, and from the States of 
Tasmania and Victoria of the Commonwealth of Australia. 
Consequently, fruits and vegetables from those sources will, on and after 
January 1, 1935, be allowed entry into the Philippine Islands through the port 
of Manila only, subject, however, to the plant quarantine regulations of the 
Bureau of Plant Industry, among which are the requirements that every ship- 
ment of fruits and/or vegetables proceeding from those sources shall be accom- 
panied by a certificate of inspection issued by a duly authorized plant quaran- 
tine officer of the said places, and that every such shipment shall, upon arrival 
in the Philippine Islands, be subject to inspection by the plant quarantine 
officers of this Bureau, and to such other precautionary treatment as may be 
considered necessary. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
B. E. P. Q.-374 May 25, 1935. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, PRESIDENCY OF ANTIGUA, BRITISH 
WEST INDIES 
This summary of the plant-quarantine import restrictions of the Presidency 
of Antigua, British West Indies, has been prepared for the information of 
nurserymen, plant-quarantine officials, and others interested in the exportation 
of plants and plant products to that island. 
The summary was prepared by Harry B. Shaw, pathologist in charge, for- 
eign service information, from proclamation no. 1, of March 8, 1935, and re- 
viewed by the agricultural superintendent, of the colony of the Leeward 
Islands. 
The information contained in this circular is believed to be correct and com- 
plete up to the time of its preparation, but it is not intended to be used inde- 
pendently of, nor as a substitute for, the original text of the proclamation, and 
it is not to be interpreted as legally authoritative. The proclamation itself 
should be consulted for the exact text. 
Lee A. Strong, 
Chief, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. 
PLANT-QUARANTINE IMPORT RESTRICTIONS, PRESIDENCY OF ANTIGUA, BRITISH 
WEST INDIES 
(Including the islands of Barbuda and Redonda) 
Concise Summary 
Applicable to plant material originating in the United States. 
Importation prohibited. None. 
Importation conditional. Sugarcane plants and parts thereof; rooted citrus 
plants ; cottonseed, cotton lint, and seed cotton ; soil and plants growing in 
soil: Importation into the presidency subject to a license granted by the 
governor. 
With the above exceptions, plants and plant products, free from soil, may be 
imported into the presidency of Antigua, without a phytosanitary certificate 
or other restriction. 
Basic Legislation 
ordinance no. 16 of december 20, 1923, known as the plant protection 
ordinance, 192 3 
This ordinance authorizes the governor to impose restrictions or prohibitions 
on the importation into Antigua of plants and plant products in the following 
terms : 
