1855. Adulteration of candy. IT. S. v. 86 Boxes and 34 Boxes of Candy. Default deerees of condemnation and destruction. (F. D. G. Nos. 4093, 4096. Sample Nos. 3C890-E, 36891-E, 40549-E.) Examination showed that this product was contaminated with rodent hairs. On March 31, 1941, the United States attorneys for the District of Massachu- setts and the Eastern District of Pennsylvania filed libels against 36 boxes of candy at Lawrence, Mass., and 34 boxes of candy eggs at Philadelphia, Pa., alleging that the article had been shipped in interstate commerce on or about February 21, 1941, by John H. Dockman & Son, Inc., from Baltimore, Md.; and- charging that it was adulterated in that it consisted in whole or in part of a filthy substance, and in that it had been prepared under insanitary conditions whereby it might have become contaminated with filth. On April 19 and May 12, 1941, no claimant having appeared, judgments of condemnation were entered and the product was ordered destroyed.