1933] SERVICE AND REGULATORY ANNOUNCEMENTS 139 
Hereafter, and until further notice, by virtue of said act of Congress ap- 
proved August 20, 1912, the importation into the United States of the stalk 
and all other parts of the plants enumerated above from all foreign countries 
and localities except as provided in the rules and regulations supplemental 
hereto, is prohibited. 
Done at the city of Washington this 23d day of April, 1926. 
Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Department of Agri- 
culture. 
[seal.] W. M. Jabdine, 
Secretary of Agriculture. 
REVISED RULES AND REGULATIONS SUPPLEMENTAL TO NOTICE OF QUARANTINE 
NO. 41 (SECOND REVISION), GOVERNING THE IMPORTATION OF INDIAN CORN 
OR MAIZE, BROOMCORN, AND SEEDS OF RELATED PLANTS 
(Effective on and after March 1, 1933) 
Regulation 1. Plant Products Permitted Entry 1 
Except as restricted from certain countries and localities by special quaran- 
tines and other orders now in force, 2 and by such as may hereafter be promul- 
gated, the following articles may be imported : 
A. Subject only to the requirements of the first three paragraphs of 
regulation 5: 
(1) Green corn on the cob, in small lots for local use only, from adjacent 
areas of Canada. 
(2) Articles made of the stalks, leaves, or cobs of corn, when prepared, 
manufactured, or processed in such manner that in the judgment of the inspec- 
tor no pest risk is involved in their entry. 
(3) Corn silk. 
B. Upon compliance with these regulations: 
(1) Broomcorn for manufacturing purposes, brooms or similar articles made 
of broomcorn, clean shelled corn, and clean seed of the other plants covered 
by this quarantine. 
(2) Corn on the cob, green or mature, from the provinces of Canada west 
of and including Manitoba, 3 and from Mexico, Central America, South America, 
the West Indies, the Bahamas, and Bermuda. 
Regulation 2. Application for Permits 
Persons contemplating the importation of any of the articles specified in 
regulation 1, B, shall first make application to the Bureau of Plant Quarantine 
for a permit, stating in the application the name and address of the exporter, 
the country and locality where grown, the port of arrival, and the name and 
address of the importer in the United States to whom the permit should be sent. 
Unless otherwise stated in the permit, all permits will be valid from date of 
issuance until revoked. 
, Applications for permits should be made in advance of the proposed ship- 
ments; but if, through no fault of the importer, a shipment should arrive 
before a permit is received, the importation will be held in customs custody 
at the risk and expense of the importer for a period not exceeding 20 days 
pending the receipt of the permit. 
Applications may be made by telegraph, in which case the information 
required above must be given. 
ij Except as provided in regulation 6, these regulations do not authorize importations 
through the mails. 
2 The entry of the following plants and plant products is prohibited or restricted bv 
specific quarantines and other restrictive orders now in force umuxLeu or restricted oy 
(a) Living canes of sugarcane, or cuttings or parts thereof, from all foreign countries. 
( .yxi3.ro n tino no. ID.) 
(6) Seed and all other portions in the raw or unmanufactured state of Indian corn or 
maize (Zea mays L.), and the closely related plants, including all species of Teosinte 
(Evchlaena) ... Jobs-tears {Coix) Polytoca, CMonachne, and Sclerachne, from south |ast?rn 
Asia (including India, Siam, Indo-China, and China), Malavan Archipelago Australia 
^QuanSttMno^T)*' Phllippine Islands ' Taiwan (Formosa), Japan, and adjacent islands! 
#*££ +^ a f ant1 ?^ ' maintained by Canada to prevent spread of the European corn borer 
from the infested eastern areas to the still uninfested Provinces west of Ontario. 
