10007.?Adulteration of color. U. S. * * * v. 2 Cams of Color. Default decree of condemnation, forfeiture, and destruction. (F. & D. No. 15157. I. S. Nos. 13621-t, 13622-t. S. No. R-3220.) On September 17, 1921, the United States attorney for the Northern District? of Georgia, acting upon a report by the Secretary of Agriculture, filed in the? District Court of the United States for said district a libel for the seizure and? condemnation of 2 cans of color, consisting of one 5-pound can of red shade? and one 5-pound can of yellow shade, remaining in the original unbroken pack?? ages at Atlanta, Ga., alleging that the article had been shipped by the W. B.? Wood Mfg. Co., St. Louis, Mo., on or about March 31, 1921, and transported? from the State of Missouri into the State of Georgia, and charging adulteration? in violation of the Food and Drugs Act. Adulteration of the article was alleged in the libel for the reason that sodium? sulphate and sodium chlorid had been mixed and packed with, and substituted? wholly or in part for, the said article. Adulteration was alleged for the further? reason that the said article contained an added poisonous and deleterious ingre?? dient, to wit, arsenic, which might render it injurious to health. On November 1, 1921, no claimant having appeared for the property, judg?? ment of condemnation and forfeiture was entered, and it was ordered by the? court that the product be destroyed by the United States marshal. C. W. PUGSLEY, Acting Secretary of Agriculture.