14912.?Adulteration of scallops. TJ. S. v. Sixteen 1-Gallon Cans of Scallops. Default decree of condemnation and forfeiture. Product ordered? delivered to charitable institution or destroyed. (F. & D. No. 21678.? I. S. No. 16022-x. S. No. E-5970.) On February 8, 1927, the United States attorney for the Southern District? of New York, acting upon a report by the Secretary of Agriculture, filed in the? District Court of the United States for said district a libel praying seizure and? condemnation of sixteen 1-gallon cans of scallops, remaining in the original? unbroken packages at New York, N. Y., alleging that the article had been? shipped by A. L. Charnock, from Exmore, Va., on or about February 4, 1927,? and transported from the State of Virginia into the State of New York, and? charging adulteration in violation of the food and drugs act. It was alleged in the libel that the article was adulterated, in that a sub?? stance, water, had been mixed and packed with and substituted in part for? scallops. On February 24, 1927, no claimant having appeared for the property, judg?? ment of condemnation and forfeiture was entered, and it was ordered by the? court that the portion of the product passed by this department as fit for? human consumption be delivered to a charitable institution, and the remainder? destroyed. W. M. JARDINE, Secretary of Agriculture.