264 BUKEAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE [Oct.-Dec. 
gossypiella Saunders), a dangerous insect new to and not heretofore widely- 
prevalent or distributed within and throughout the United States. 
Now, therefore, under the authority conferred by section 8 of the Plant 
Quarantine Act of August 20, 1912 (37 Stat. 315). as amended by the act 
of Congress approved March 4, 1917 (39 Stat. 1134, 1165), and having duly 
given the public hearing as required thereby, I do quarantine the said States 
of Arizona, Florida, Georgia, New Mexico, and Texas, effective on and after 
December 23, 1933. Hereafter, under the authority of said act of August 20, 
1912, amended as aforesaid, (1) cotton, wild cotton, including all parts of 
either cotton or wild cotton plants, seed cotton, cotton lint, linters, and all other 
forms of unmanufactured cotton fiber, gin waste, cottonseed, cottonseed hulls, 
cottonseed cake, and meal; (2) bagging and other containers and wrappers of 
cotton and cotton products; (3) railway cars, boats, and other vehicles which 
have been used in conveying cotton or cotton products or which are 
fouled with such products; (4) hay and other farm products; and (5) farm 
household goods, farm equipment, and, if contaminated with cotton, any other 
articles, shall not be shipped, offered for shipment to a common carrier, 
received for transportation or transported by a common carrier, or carried, 
transported, moved or allowed to be moved from the States of Arizona, Florida, 
Georgia, New Mexico, or Texas, into or through any other State or Territory 
or District of the United States in manner or method or under conditions 
other than those prescribed in the rules and regulations hereinafter made and 
amendments thereto : Provided, That the restrictions of this quarantine and 
of the rules and regulations supplemental thereto may be limited to the areas 
in a quarantined State now, or which may be hereafter, designated by the 
Secretary of Agriculture as regulated areas when, in the judgment of the 
Secretary of Agriculture, the enforcement of the aforesaid rules and regulations 
as to such regulated areas shall be adequate to prevent the spread of the pink 
bollworm : Provided further. That such limitation shall be conditioned upon 
the said State providing for and enforcing such control measures with respect to 
such regulated areas as in the judgment of the Secretary of Agriculture shall 
be deemed adequate to prevent the spread of the pink bollworm therefrom 
to other parts of the State. 
Done at the city of Washington this 11th day of December 1933. 
Witness my hand and the seal of the United States Department of Agricul- 
ture. 
[seal] R. G. Tugwell, 
Acting Secretary of Agriculture. 
REVISED RULES AND REGULATIONS SUPPLEMENTAL TO NOTICE OF QUARANTINE 
NO. 52 
(Approved Dec. 11, 1933; effective Dec. 23, 1933) 
Regulation 1. Definitions 
For the purpose of these regulations the following words, names, and terms 
shall be construed, respectively, to mean : 
(a) Pink bollicorm. — The insect known as the pink bollworm of cotton (Pec- 
tinophora gossypiella Saunders), in any stage of development. 
(b) Cotton and cotton products. — Cotton, wild cotton, including all parts 
of cotton or wild cotton plants (plants of any species of the genera Gossypiu-tn 
and Thurberia) ; seed cotton ; cotton lint, and linters, including all forms of 
unmanufactured cotton fiber ; gin waste ; cottonseed ; cottonseed hulls, cake, 
and meal. 
(c) Lint. — All forms of unmanufactured fiber produced from seed cotton. 
(d) Linters. — All forms of unmanufactured fiber produced from cottonseed. 
(e) Sterilized seed. — Cottonseed which has been sterilized as a part of the 
continuous process of ginning at a temperature of not less than 145° F. in an 
approved plant, under the supervision of an inspector, for such a period and in 
such manner and method as is authorized by the Bureau of Plant Quarantine. 
(/) Inspector. — An inspector of the United States Department of Agriculture. 
(g) Moved or allowed to be moved interstate. — Shipped, offered for ship- 
ment to a common carrier, received for transportation or transported by a com- 
