26696. Adulteration of apples. IT. S. v. 63 Bushels of Apples. Default decree of condemnation and destruction. (F. & D. no. 38402. Sample nos. 14006-C, 14024-C.) This case involved a shipment of apples that were contaminated with arsenic and lead. On September 19, 1936, the United States attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, acting upon a report by the Secretary of Agriculture, filed in the district court a libel praying seizure and condemnation of 63 bushels of apples at Chicago, Ill., alleging that the article had been shipped in interstate com- merce on or about September 14, 1936, by Glenn Marr from Breathe, Mich., and charging adulteration in violation of the Food and Drugs Act. The article was alleged to be adulterated in that it contained added poisonous and deleterious ingredients, arsenic and lead, in amounts which might have rendered it injurious to health. On December 4,1936, no claimant having appeared, judgment of condemnation was entered and it was ordered that the product be destroyed. M. L. WILSON, Acting Secretary of Agriculture.