4504. Adulteration of farina. IT. S. v. 19 Bags of Farina. Default decree of con¬ demnation. Product ordered sold for purposes other than buman con- sumption. (F. D. C. No. 8057. Sample No. 17379-F.) On or about August 6, 1942, the United States attorney for the District of Connecticut filed a libel against 19 98-pound bags of farina in possession of Miner, Read & Tullock, New Haven, Conn., alleging that the article had been shipped in interstate commerce on or about March 12 and 19, 1942, from Buffalo,, N. Y.; and charging that it-was adulterated in that it had been held under insanitary conditions whereby it might have become contaminated with, filth. The article was labeled in part: "Gold Medal Flour * * * Farina Manu- factured by General Mills, Inc. * * * Minneapolis, Minnesota." On December 7,1942, no claimant having appeared, judgment of condemnation was entered and the product was ordered sold for purposes other than human consumption.