2621. Adulteration of corn meal. TJ. S. v. 155 Bags, 340 Bags, 10 Bags, and 249 Bags of Corn Meal. Default decrees of condemnation and destruction. (F. B. C. Nos. 5806, 5918. Sample Nos. 67470-E, 67471-E, 67650-E.) Examination showed that this product contained rodent excreta and rodent hairs. On October 1, 1941, the United States attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas filed libels against 155 24-pound bags and 340 10-pound bags of corn meal at Blytheville, and 249 24-pound bags and 10 10-pound bags of the same product at Jonesboro, Ark., alleging that the article had been shipped in inter- state ' commerce on or about August 4 and 12 and September 6, 1941, by Hum- phreys Mills from Memphis, Tenn.; and charging that it was adulterated in that it consisted in whole and/or in part of a filthy, putrid, and decomposed substance and was otherwise unfit for food. The article was labeled in part: "Honey Suckle Cream Meal." On December 15 and 19, 1941, no claimant having appeared, judgments of condemnation were entered and the products were ordered destroyed.