j},6;- Adulteration of oranges. V. S. v. 13 Cases of Oranges. Default de- SSj;'. .cree ot condemnation^ forfeiture, and destruction. (F. & D. No. ** *,. 21819. I.S. No. 16431-x. S. No. E-6082.) i^March 24, 1927, the United States attorney for the District of Massa- |tts, acting upon a report by the Secretary of Agriculture, filed in the pet. Court of the United States for said district a libel praying seizure and Jfemnation of 13 cases of oranges, remaining in the original unbroken [fages at Boston, Mass., consigned about March 19, 1927, alleging that the c)e had been shipped by the Fruitland Peninsular Packing Assn., George- i,jFla., and transported from the State of Florida into the State of Massa- jjetts, and charging adulteration in violation of the food and drugs act. tamination of the article by this department showed that it consisted in |ele.or in part of fruit-damaged fruit. " was alleged in the libel that the article was adulterated, in that it con- t'd in whole or in part of a decomposed vegetable substance. %. May 5, 1927, no claimant having appeared for the property, judgment of fdemnation and forfeiture was entered, and it was ordered by the court that ^product be destroyed by the United States marshal. W. M. JABDINE, Secretary of Agriculture,