1094. Adulteration of packing-stock butter. U. S. v. 2 Drums of Packing-Stock Butter. Default decree of condemnation and destruction. (F. D. C. No. 2583. Sample No. 28433-B.) Samples of this product were found to contain various types of filth such as maggots, flies, ants, rodent hairs, fragments of insects, mold, and other extraneous matter. On July 31, 1940, the United States attorney for the District of Maryland filed a libel against two drums of packing-stock butter at Baltimore, Md., alleging that the article had been shipped in interstate commerce on or about July 29, 1940, from Hiddenite, N. C, by truck owned by B. M. Miller and operated by Roy D. Hines.; and charging that it was adulterated in that it consisted in whole or in part of a filthy substance and was otherwise unfit for food. On September 11, 1940, no claimant, having appeared, judgment of condemna- tion was entered and the product was ordered destroyed.