168 BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE [January March. 
to the appropriate official of the State concerned. (See list of State officials 
"ii page 170.) It is also possible that quarantine orders or revisions have heen 
Issued which have not reached the Department. 
INFESTED STATES 
All the States which have enacted quarantines place the regulations on the 
entry of the restricted articles from any part of the following States: Con- 
necticut, Indiana. Maine Massachusetts. Michigan. New Hampshire. New Jersey. 
New York. Ohio. Pennsylvania, Rhode Island. Vermont, and West Virginia. 
The Oklahoma quarantine includes Wisconsin among the States from which 
shipments of such articles are restricted. 
The Tennessee quarantine includes Kentucky, Virginia, and Wisconsin, 
among the Suites from winch shipments of such articles are restricted, and the 
California quarantine includes Kentucky. Maryland. Virginia, and Wisconsin. 
The quarantines of Arkansas. Florida, Georgia. Louisiana. Mississippi. Ne- 
vada. Oklahoma. South Carolina, and Texas apply to the 13 above-listed States, 
and also to any other States in which the corn borer may be found. 
STATES WHICH HAVE ENACTED QUARANTINE REGULATIONS 
Arizona. Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida. Georgia, Illinois. Iowa, 
Kansas. Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi. Missouri. Nebraska, Nevada. New 
Mexico. Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina. South Dakota. Tennessee. Texas. 
Utah. Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. 
SUMMARY OF QUARANTINE REGULATIONS 
The orders in the following summary are divided yito three groups, as the 
various States have issued different types of quarantine regulations. 
-NO CERTIFICATE 
The State of Wyoming prohibits entirely the entry of the following articles 
from the infe'sted States. 
Restricted articles. — Cornstalks, corn on the cob, cobs or any other debris 
of corn, broomcorn, all sorghums and Sudan grass (except the clean shelled 
seeds of these plants), celery, beans in the pod. beets with tops, rhubarb, oat 
or rye straw as such or when used as packing, cut flowers or entire plants 
of chrysanthemums, asters, cosmos, zinnias, hollyhocks, and cut flowers or 
entire plants of gladioli and dahlias except the bulbs or corms " which are 
free from other plant growth whether grown or stored in the infested district." 
GROUP 2. STATES ACCEPTING ONLY FEDERAL CERTIFICATES 
Quarantines largely uniform have been issued by the following States which 
require Federal certificates for entry of the restricted articles: Arizona, Cali- 
fornia, Colorado, Georgia, Louisiana, Neveda, 8 Oregon, 8 and Utah. 
Restriction*. — Cornstalks, ears. cobs, or other parts or debris of corn and 
broomcorn plants, or sorghums and Sudan grass (except clean, shelled corn, 
broomcorn seed, sorghum seed, and Sudan-grass seed) are not certified by 
Federal inspectors for movement from the infested States. The Colorado 
quarantine provides, however, that they may enter that State without cer- 
tification, when manufactured or processed in such a manner as to eliminate 
all risk of carrying the borer. 
Lima beans in the pod, green-shell beans in the pod (of the variety known 
as Cranberry or Horticultural), beets with tops, rhubarb.'' cut flowers, or 
entire plants of chrysanthemums, asters, gladioli, and dahlias, except the bulbs 
or corms without stems, are accepted by States in group 2 when certified by 
a duly authorized Federal inspector to be free from the borer, and are con- 
tained in a car, box. or other container to which is attached a copy of said 
certificate. Articles named in this paragraph may be admitted into Colorado, 
however, either when so certified or when manufactured or processed. 
■Embargoes formerly placed by Arizona, California, Colorado. Georgia, Louisiana. South 
Dakota, and Utah have been modified (see groups :.' and 3) and a similar modification is 
pending with respect to the Nevada regulations; in the case of Oregon arrangements 
have been made administratively to accept certification. 
9 The Louisiana quarantine does not include rhubarb. 
