218 BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE [July-Sept. 
Regulation 15. Shipments by the United States Department of Agriculture 
Products and articles subject to restriction in these regulations may be 
moved interstate by the United States Department of Agriculture for experi- 
mental or scientific purposes, on such conditions and under such safeguards 
as may be prescribed by the Bureau of Plant Quarantine. The container of 
articles so moved shall bear, securely attached to the outside thereof, an 
identifying tag from the Bureau of Plant Quarantine showing compliance with 
such conditions. 
These rules and regulations shall be effective on and after October 2, 1933, 
and shall supersede on that date the rules and regulations issued under Notice 
of Quarantine No. 01 (revised), on July 9, 1927, as amended to date. 
Done at the city of Washington this 30th day of September 1933. 
Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Department of Agriculture. 
[seal] H. A. Wallace, 
Secretary of Agriculture. 
[Copies of foregoing revised regulations sent to all common carriers doing business 
in or through the regulated area.] 
Notice to General Public Through Newspapers 
United States Department of Agriculture, 
Bureau of Plant Quarantine. 
Washington, D.C., September 30, 1933. 
Notice is hereby given that the Secretary of Agriculture, under authority 
conferred on him by the plant quarantine act of August 20, 1912 (37 Stat. 315), 
as amended, has promulgated a revision of the rules and regulations supple- 
mental to Notice of Quarantine No. 61, on account of the Thurberia weevil, 
effective October 2, 1933. Under the revision the regulated areas include 
Cochise and Santa Cruz Counties, and parts of Graham. Pima, and Pinal 
Counties in Arizona. The revision authorizes the use of various improved 
treatments and other safeguards that have been developed by the department in 
recent years, and makes various other changes with regard to treatment and 
transportation, of interest to growers and shippers of cotton and cotton prod- 
ucts. Copies of said revision may be obtained from the Bureau of Plant 
Quarantine, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 
H. A. Wallace, 
Secretary of Agriculture. 
[Published in the Arizona Republican, Phoenix, Ariz., Oct. 10, 1933.] 
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS 
P.Q.C.A.— 306, Supplement No. 1. August 25, 1933. 
PLANT QUARANTINE RESTRICTIONS, NEW ZEALAND 
New Zealand Gazette No. 50, July 13, 1933, publishes Notice No. Ag. 3131, 
amending regulations under the Orchard and Garden Diseases Act, 1928, in 
regard to the importation of fruits or plants into New Zealand. 
This notice amends regulation 6 and the inspector's certificate of the sixth 
schedule, and reads as follows: 
Regulations 
1. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the principal regulations 
insofar as they relate to the admission of fruit, the introduction into New 
Zealand of any fruit from any country in which Mediterranean or West Aus- 
tralian fruit fly (Halterophora oapitata, described also as Ccratitis capitata), 
is known to exist, is absolutely prohibited. 
2. Every shipment of fruit which by the principal regulations and these 
regulations may be introduced into New Zealand shall, in addition to the 
