F. & D. No. 59-C. Issued June 4, 1910. United States Department of Agriculture, OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. NOTICE OF JUDGMENT NO. 338, FOOD AND DRUGS ACT. ADULTERATION OF MILK. On or about February 21, 1910, Edgar W. Feaster, of Adams-? town, Md., sold and delivered at the Union Station, Washington,? D. C., a quantity of milk. Dr. William C. Woodward, health officer? of the District of Columbia, acting by authority of the Secretary of? Agriculture, caused a sample of the above delivery to be procured and? analyzed. As the findings of the analyst and report thereon indicated? that the milk was adulterated within the meaning of the Food and? Drugs Act of June 30, 1906, the said Edgar W. Feaster was afforded? an opportunity for hearing, and as it appeared after the hearing? was held that this sale was in violation of the Act, the said health? officer reported the facts to the United States attorney for the District? of Columbia. In due course a criminal information against the said Edgar W.? Feaster was filed in the Police Court of the District of Columbia? charging that the milk was adulterated, in that a valuable constituent,? namely, cream, had been abstracted wholly or in part. On April 9, 1910, the defendant entered a plea of guilty and the? court imposed a fine of $10. This notice is given pursuant to section 4 of the Food and Drugs? Act of June 30, 1906. JAMES WILSON,? Secretary of Agriculture. WASHINGTON, D. C, May 12,1910. 43554?No. 338?10