3440. Adulteration of corn meal. U. S. v. 625 Bags of Corn Meal. Consent de¬ cree of condemnation. Product ordered released under bond to be dena- tured into animal feed. (F. D. C. No. 7487. Sample No. 48680-E.) Examination showed that this product contained rodent excreta, rodent hair fragments, and insect fragments. \ On May 12,1942, the United States attorney for the Southern District of Florida jfiled a libel against 625 unlabeled 96-pound bags of corn meal at Tampa, Fla., 7 alleging that the article had been shipped in interstate commerce on or about May 2,1942, by Eelbeck Milling Co., from Omaha, Ga.; 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. 6n May 20, 1942, Eelbeck Milling Co., claimant, having consented to the entry of a decree, judgment of condemnation was entered and the product was ordered released under bond conditioned that it be reconditioned under the supervision of the Food and Drug Administration for sale as animal feed.