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1942 PAGEFOUR ~ ~ __THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, | tralia, it is the 7 . D .l l Sk E ire | Midway, or the southern from A [ “f mmmw? —" al A aska mp lonly land invasion road. Also it is the only short | from H RN of conac an ana conce i || HAPPY BIRTHDAY 1|} 20 YEARS AGO i Societ Published every evening except Sunday by the i l;’r F""f““[ WI“:’ A R‘_"""m_'t‘ ,,al"d'f Sy ana THE EMPIRE Fraternal Societies EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY | ecause of these l‘C\S.lVE strategic 1a Al s Gmm cll s] Becond and Main Streets, Juneau, Alsska. | the rapidly approaching winter in the world’s worst anne HELEN TROY MONSEN - - - - - President weather zone, the Andreanof move comes not a mig- | NOVEMBER 10, 1922 = E - - Vice-President and Business M 3 ¢ dri y out | L 3 ¢ R L. BERNARD __ Vice-President and Busin anager ::;L ;éofk :o(‘,:l \(Thes:;:: rg;u?m‘r‘x:;: ly'::.(mx::“h:\'e NOVEMBER 10 Regarding the National election which gave the Democrats a con- MOUNT IUNMUNIISODGE NO. Ml'; i Entered In the Post Office In Jupeau as Second Class Matter. iska is very s 3 v 8 1, % “ i i - 5 o * w & SECO! and FOURT! ! e L s Bt weather stations and airfields only 280 rulles away, Ruth Allen siderable increase in Congress, William G. McAdoo stated, “The Repub Drs. Kaser and [+ it et ‘B Delivered by carrier in Juneau and Dousias for $1.50 per month, Pl 3 i lican Party has suffered one of the most extgagrdinary defeats in the onday & By mail, postage paid, at the following rates: | from which we have- been softening up the enemy | Herman G. Gentry : e ] 2 P F b in Scottish Rite Temple # One vear, in advance, $15.00; six months, In advance, $7.80; | gorifications at, Kiska during recent months, there | Helen Lomimer history of the nation.” John T. Adams, Chairman of the Republican Na- ree. urger beginning at 7:30.p. m., |\ th, in advance, $1.25 2 A d g 4 i 2 3 *® Guhaeibets will califer & favor 4 ¢ty Wil Dromily Dbl |is 8 good clancs: of EuCCess. | Pete Schneider, Jr tional Committee, said, “This is a political off-year and with few excep DENTISTS o R. W. COWLING, Wor- |+ o g e el e ol The weather, which has befriended the enemy in Joseph Flakne tions Coniresmonal elections in off-years have resulted in the election| | o Bullding P 56 | |shiptal Master; JAMES W. LEIV- Telephones: News Office, 602; Business Office, 374, the western Aleutians, helped us in the Andreanof | Mrs. F. M. Kelly of those of opposite party to the Administration. ERS, Secretary. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS |landing. Our forces, landed in fog and raip without | Ruth M. Singleton < AL I 7 The Assoolated Press i exclusively entitled to mn-n n;hlu | discovery by enemy air patrols, and had 10 days or| Richard Tanaka “The Liars,” farce-comedy sponsored by the American Legion for the B P 0 ELKS 18 Fise credited in "this paper and sise the locsl ‘mews publishgd | more of peace in which to dig in [ benefit of the building fund, which opened at the Coliseum Theatre the| | Dr, A, W. Stewart every Wednesday at 8| erein. o A8 - In addition to cutting in half the distance he- ——— | Previous evening kept the audience in gales of laughter throughout. High DENTIST Meets EV:Zt Bhothen wel-‘ ALASKA CIRCULATION GUARANTEED TO BE LARGER tween our nearest base and the enemy, we are now praise was given the members of the cast and stage crew while the direc- P. M, ing Broth 2 £ 'TION. i | | come. ARTHUR ADAMS, Ex-({ S UA TRAE OF SIS TIIAE SUDCE in good position o bloek e Japs' anticipated | R 0 S c 0 P E tion of Elmer A. Friend was enthusiastically commended for his work. 20TH CENTURY BUILDING ey M Se I s NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES — Alaska Newspapers, 1011 | northern 'swing through the Bering Sea to flank | & Office Phone 469 57 er, M. H. d Seo-‘ American Buflding, Seattle, Wash. both Siberia and Alaska. | . oy ] 2 4 . . g tary. 5 ra = E 1y Aviator Roy I. Jones left Juneau shortly before noon in his seaplane g | Best of all, our forces are nearer the Jap Kurile The stars incline but do not compel” Northbird for Ketchikan after being in Juneau since September 30. During | stepping stones to Tokyo. | his stay in Juneau, Jones took more than fifty residents for sightseeing Of course they don't realize that|and you will hear from him again are produced a year in New York|poison a istance of sevel 2 1 | e Goverer 30 s and | WORLD Wall VETERAN s Vorgs, 10 ¢ dwtance ot severatl Phare ig no substitute for newspaper advertising! : R L ‘ —-==3 | flights in his plane. Clare Krough, of Juncau, accompanied Jones as Dr. John H. Geyar PIGGLY WIGGLY | Ivaging the Nermandie | — mechanic. DENTIST e WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11 — Room 9—Valentine Bidg For BETTER Groceries (New York Times) —_— Charles Perelle was elected Noble Grand of Silver Bow Lodge, 2-A, 1 It was a sad sight that met the reporters who| Adverse planetary aspects rule|r o O, F, at a meeting the preceding night. Other officers elected were PHONE 762 Fhone 1534 were permitted to inspect the ill-fated Lafayette.|today which may be disappointng.|wayren Wilson, M. P. Morgan, E. W. Carter, John Krugness, W. W. Casey once the Normandie. In a maze of pipes and sal-|Navy and Army come under threat- |, 4 Gunnar Gustafson. vaging apparatus they groped their way through |ening sway. : ROBERT SIMPSON,Opt.D. ”Th B flll i an enormous hulk which was once the utmost in| HEART AND HOME: Limiation| s gigh sonool pirls basketoall team was in training for the season || - Graauate Los Angeles College e Rexall Store % ocean luxury. A topsy-turvy world of gl::n was | of flummeblil? \:so will l“"‘;x“'emIL and regular rules of training were adopted. Several practice games had of Optometry and Your Reliable Pharmacists : this, with sides beecoming floors and decks oming ' good discipline for younger % ¥ 3 aRaliNea; tad ot 14 |sides; for the ship lies on her port side, her bow |bers of the family who will adjust b""“b:“f“d Po AR gl team GRAVEREER CLCAHL DREUPERS Pty Opthalmology BUTLER-MAURO ; resting on a ledge of rock, her stern in mud. Yet|themselves to changed conditions [MeMDErs. J Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground DRUG CO. : — e b some time next year, and at an indefinite cost, the jonly after lessons emphasizing war | % Al e e e 5 G - — ARMISTICE DAY. 1912 Normandie will again ply the seas, carrying troops|regulations. This is not a fortunate Reorgan.imuon UI<"]|“ ‘7’ “;"’(‘1_ ?1(1’:"\"\‘11]‘:(:%:‘ f‘ bc(l‘x’::v‘l:::du:’)} am::;t:: ‘ o T T to the scene of fighting. date for women who may be in-|of the Juneau High Schoo « ', poee d it 1 The Charlesw Carter TIDE CALENDARS There is serious doubt as to whether Juneauites| TDis 15 the largest yet not the most difficult sal- |clined to deceive themselves as‘for“!‘he Orgflmz.a.tl(;x‘l “h»l“4h)vl:;;'((lvlli:'l'l:)t.'lhx(;\::‘\un since , & committee . otk ba ohil to,give, Actnistiss Dy (s cutiniy: sely- | YOS task ever undertaken. The Ttalians have |well as others in t}xell' npparmu;nr ree members from each class was S Moriual’y FREE 7 o X % raised capsized warships in worse positions, but the |self-sacrifices. Hoarding will be_a = " bration this year. Certalnly, it saems pointiess and Lafayette'’s hulk is the biggest that has thus far|temptation to many who should| Sixth annual roll call of the Americin Red Cross was to begin Fourth and Frankiin Sts. g futile to attempt to recapture the spirit of the ori- | yen the resourees of the engineer. One of the fin- I resist whatever is contrary to November 11 and continue until Christmas under the direction of John PHONE 136 Harry Race, Drnggisl - ginal Armistic Day—November 11, 1918—when We gt ships ever built by human ingenuity must be|patriotic purposes. Accidents may | Newmarker, local chairman < 9 celebrated the end of the war that was to end all | jequced to a mere shell and that shell patiently con-|be numerous today. Aged persons | . . — ¥ wars, verted into a bubble which will float after the water |may suffer from falls ! H. S. Graves returned to Juneau after spending several weeks in the FIRST AID HEADQUARTERS “The Store for Men” But at the same time, it is not the fault of the has been pumped out. A thousand openings big and | BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Superior- vicinity of Petersburg looking over operations of the Sukoi Island Fox FOR ABUSED HAIR men who were in uniform in 1918 that their hopes little must be closed, many of them in a murk|ity ' of American resourcefulness Company in which he was interested. * Parker Herbex Treatments Will 3 SAB'N,S and those of Americans in general, were not realized. of mud, oil and water. Giant bulkheads must sub-‘w:ll be revealed in many chemical G 3 Correct Halr Problems So whatever form this Armistice Day's celebra- divide the hulk so that the water can be pumped out | devices that cause novel enter- | + was fair with a maximum temperature of 42 and a mini- - o s « tion takes in speeches and other events, there should |under control. Tt is slow work, and especially dis- | pirlaes té be estabiished, Ttems mat;mu::?g;“ | b : Sigrld’s Front St.—Triangle Bldg. , be grateful remembrance of what our fighting men |COUraging at a time when shipping is taxed to the|prove extraordinary nmagmumgn,} $el undertook in 1917 and 18, urxmn.xL.l Such t:]s the price !lh.n \lw m :L ;my fur}.scmnunc_kuowlcdxs t'«mdl ““’f‘lm‘li; I T e You'll Find Food Finer and On this Armistic Day, we might devote a little Uhe nesligence that resulted when the work of trans- jgenius will contribute to curren | f ¢ > 2 Service More Complete at e to ik sbou by the end o the T, OTANE (he Normandie no & iursport vas begun | hekds a5 they. e, Although Daily Lessons in English % . corpon ||| Jomes-Stevens Shop THE B ARANOF World War failed to bring a lasting peace. H?“ much of the propelling machinery can be | Washington warns of beru‘) .:w S 5" LADIES'—MISSES’ o b g : s o« Saved? Reporters who voiced the views of the sal-|of many sorts astrologers foretell R I Dh 1 By READY-TO-WEAR When the men now in uniform, and those Who | .oy expressed the opinion that the starboard tur-|that substitutes will prevent seri- | <=~ COFFEE SHUP are yet o go, come marching home again, there will | jines and motors which lie above water are still|ous inconvenience in the United WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not say, “Here is a third alternative.”| | Seward Street Near Third | be another national holiday to commemorate the yserul But it is likely that American engineers, who | States. Prosperity will take on new | ALTERNATIVE means a choice of TWO things % achievements of two generations of fighting men |have ideas of their own, will attempt to reproduce | phases but it will continue. | OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED: Halcyon. Pronounce hal-si-un, A as FINE ) and the completion of a job which was started a | that half of the French machinery which lies under| NATIONAL ISSUES: Until the in AT, I as in IT, U as in RUN unstressed, accent first syllable I . quarter of a century ago. water and which must now beruined? It seems not. | beginning of the new year all-out | OFTEN MISSPELLED: Goddess: two D's and two S's. JAMES C COOPEB Wa!:h_and J."Wflry Repairing | e it 08 There is even the question whether it is desirable to | consciousness of wartime responsi- SYNONYMS: Quarrel, row, argument, altercation, brawl, controversy, s SELTID AShopsUle Thiag Aleutian Offensive drive the reconditioned vessel at anything approach- |bilitles will be delayed, it is fore- | contention, dispute, dissension, disturbance. C.P. A Paul Bloedhom [ 5 i sl i ing her old-time maximum speed of well over 30 |told. Thoughtlessness will be mani- ' WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours”” Let us Business Counselor S° FRANKLIN STREET } (Washington Daily News) knots. An enormous amount of space must be given |fested among many selfish grouPs 'y;crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: | COOPER BUILDING i After helping most of the 40 other Allied fronts UP in a record-breaking liner to fuel tanks, boilers|but it will vanish as battles bring LUDICROUS; adapted to excite laughter; ridiculous. “I was in a ludicrous ; around the world, the United States is moving to|and engines, especially if the original 160.000 horse-{home to them losses of relatives predicament.” BcA Victor nadios recover our Aleutian backyard which the Japs seized | POWer is to be developed. It would not astonishand friends. The seers long have T L C. Smith and Corons | e s either shipping men or naval engineers if the Gov- | predicted terrible waste of life as - TYPEWRITERS and RECORDS Washington announces a peaceful occupation of ernment decided to make a somewhat slower but|well as war materials. They warn b ola . aod Scviied; by JUNEAU MELODY HOUSE the Andreanof Islands in the mid-Aleutians, which | more serviceable carrier of troops out of the old|{now of ill health that will be one MODERN ETIOUETTE ¥ Next to Juneau Drug Co. y apparently began the last week in August, Consid- Nolx'mandul\ v,lhaxl1 she Lcould have 1I)een originally— | of the numerous handicaps of the ROBERTA LEE J. B. Bur‘ord & co. Seward Street Phone 65 ering the long delay and preparation for that most Wless indeed she is to carry airplanes, a *function|coming winter. Nervous diseases, | ST RIS - e o neglected of all fronts, “,L |§xhhc now has a right Which she might well serve if her new stacks nrv!lunu infections and stomach dis- LR it S e e ‘Our Doorstep Is Won?, by ‘ s it o bonidien mounted at one side in the accepted fashion to con- | orders are presaged. i 380 A dnadaliin 108 Kporl pRecdinRI Whin' & Deton Rae wiidy Bt Ui Much more than American pride is involved. Vert her top deck into the finest of seagoing run-| INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS: and artificial manner of conversing? & The Aleutians are the short route for a Jap of- | W8¥s | Uprisings and revolutions are en- A. No. This is due either to timidity and nervousness, or the person fensive against our Pacific mainland, and for an | couraged by the stars. Subjugated |is attempting to impress the ones to whomv he is talking. y DR H VANCE » American attack on Japan. The northern route is Dan Cupid’s little arrow often makes unerring | Peoples are warned to be as pa- Q. 'What should the father of ‘the bride do after he gives her away? e 5 not only shorter than the central route through aims. But even at that, he makes a lot of Mrs. tient as possible through coming A. He takes his place next fo his wife, at the end of the first pew on SSTROPATR —_— —— < - 2 ¢ weeks Inasmuch as the time of |the left of the church. Consultation and examination 'w deluged that the most helpful | (who didn’t sign his name) Write | their liberation from Nazi rule m Q. What is the proper way to serve soup at a luncheon? free. Bours 10 to l.tzn.u:w 5; “fim | thing would be for local commu- |again. Your stuff jibes with mine|clearly indicated as not vet at A. Soup should be served in two-handled cups, and should be eaten 7 to 8:00 by appointment. c A I. l r o n “ l A K. nities to go out on their own, and |, . . C.B., Sioux City, Ia ,,Rem,m‘;haud although it is positively fore- |with a bouillon spoon or teaspoon. Gastineau Hotel Annex Grocery and Meat Market > |take the initiative, thus transfer- {that U.S. planes ferrying to En;.‘shfifmwed- This_ iy !hf? end of a‘ South Franklin St. Phone 177 478—PHONES—371 i h_hm“ ring the burden away from Wash-{land are led off the beam by Ger-|Year of preparation by the United | High Quality Foods at ington. man radio, and land in ncarpy|States and 1943 will mark accom- | I.O OK d l.E A R N by Moderate Prices | " All it takes is the same old spirit | Norway, are sheer Nazi propagan-|Plishment as part of the United | a n A. C. GORDON . (Continued from Page One) lot our forefathers—the old neigh- |da. The Germans haven't been ge(- Nations. Preliminary successes will | i £ “Say It With Flowers” but [ Tt e e | borly mnotion of borrowing a pinch|ting any free planes from us as|continue to cheer us. e e e v S e b e et “SAY IT WITH OURS!” 2 A here Senator|©1 SAlt: of turning out for your leagily as that. | Persons whose birthdate it is; 1. What is the most common family name in the world? 3 H s GRAVES (L,xnfgre.,v) 2 here v1.~ f‘ Tu. le':il zlu neighbor’s barn-raising, of shar-| POREIGN MINISTER OSWAL- have the augury of a year of unu- | 2. What is estimated to be the value of the world’s gold supply? Juneau Flonsls 2% i > |)‘t‘m:x)fi;—:‘:}l )::vnu‘x“.\llx\x‘\:‘x‘::z‘run 88%0ing tools, helping with the har-|po ARANHA, Rio de Janeiro - |Sual ex?erlences Deception and | 3. Who was the more famous of Martha Dandridge’s two husbands? Bhotie 311 “The Clothing Man' : i [ vest | Congratulations on the neat job|Misunderstanding may cause per-| ' iy o tne only bird that can fly backwards? HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER | Gt 4 e |y As1say agreat many commu-iof taking over the six hig LatijRieSities. Love atfatrs should be| ., wicy 0 she Gldest State capital clig? & MARX CLOTHING | | KEEPING AHEAD OF nities already are doing this. But|flying boats from Fascist Italy [Dappy. | ANSWERS : ‘ \\'f_snleToN |a lot of them still are looking toland using them for' a new service| Children born on.mlsv day prob- 1 Wong s by P R e nice & Ahlars co "_ DAVID BOEmm, west Los An-|Washington. And you have no idea yup th. Amazon. Perhaps we can|aPly will be exceedingly intelligent | 3 I okeess or a8 bt PP A % 2 i geles—I like your idea of COM- of the burden which could beinow get a little rubber instead of |*nd Senerous. They should be able| 2 It excess of 25 billions of dollars. Plumbing—Oil Burners ZORIC MUNITY = COOPERATORS FOR | taken off this red-tape-snarled,iletting the Argentines use the|l0 Overcome obstacles in the way 3 George Washington. Heating SYSTEM CLEANING 1 VICTORY. It seems to me that|sweating city if, so far as possible,|planes for smuggling war supplies|Of distinguished careers | 4 The hummingbird. g Phone 34 Sheet Metal one of the unfortunate results of lwe got back to the good old-|to Mussolini (Copyright, 1942) | 5 Santa Fe, New Mexico, founded in 1605. Phone 15 the last ten years of increasingly fashioned system of doing things| WALTER WINCHELL, New York B - — centralized government is that|back home. —Speaking of typewriter strote- i . Bi b Alaska Lanndry people il over the country ave| P, T took o newspaper in thelgune st s mreen swonece | APPLICATIONS The Ladies Take On a Big Job | JUNEAU- YOUNG come, more and more, to look to- heart of the midwest, the Omahalgld boss, Woodrow Wilson, who ® d d Washington. I see it every|World-Herald, to really show Wash- |said: “We do not need less criti- Fon Sluov 'lo " " Hardware Company I ¥ ¢ day in the streams of people jam- ington how to run a scrap iron|{eism, but more. It is hoped thai E E‘ STENDEB. f iing this city, most of them patri- | collection campaign. \eritieism will be constructive, but ! PAINTS—OLL—GLASS . | For Expert Radio Scr otic people trying to find ways e §beuer unfair criticism than auto- BE A((EPIED Shelf and Heavy Hardware TELEPHONE Bllf),“-‘,.-( X. of helping win the war faster, and SCRAPPED SHIPS | cratic repression. Honesty and com: - g Guns and Ammunition g N . thinking that by coming to Wash-, S TOR TYDINGS of MAary-ipetency requite no shield of se-| As a result of the Business and ington they can help do it | land ugh the Maritime Com-crecy.” Professional Women's Club Schol- That is their big mistake mission isn't very proud of it, I| (Copyright, 1942, by United Fea- arship Ball, held recently, it was P What most of them don't realize|now find that some of the ships|ture Syndicate, Ine.) reported at the business meeting "GllY Smith-Drugs % is that the place where we are which they withheld from your >+ f the club last night - s ik | acis . f 5 ght that Supjl (Careful Prescriptionists) going to win the war. in the long|scrap iron constituent, to be used cations for .a scholarship will now r X run, is back home. That's where|by the Government for opemtion,' l(o“IEST Yo Aepeptsd, NYAL Family Remedies ® Perfect comfort i rlm_pmducuun is, and the war bond | later were sold for scrap and sub- - S : Club members would prefer that flo"{‘ucxs DANISH ‘ selling and the real sacrifice. | sequently found their way to Ger-| EXTENDED Io girls applying be interested in CE CREAM = L o seaaly Jaated That's where the hope of America | many. Thus you and your consti- stenographic work with an eve Large Rooms e Splendid food l is. tuent certainly don't deserve ecri-| NOVEMBER 21 toward entering defense work, but all with s The President came back from|ticism for doing what the Govern- other applications will be accepted, bath. S mpevice his recent trip apparently sur-|ment did. Sale of these particwar| Bl Any girl interested in a scholar- cALL AH aw‘, Special Rates to Permanent Guests mN—,u that the country was aheadlshnps for scrap occurred during| poodiine for the Dollie Sewing|ship to aid ber in taking work past ALASKANS LIKE THE of Washington. He found out some- | the brief period when Joe Kennedy| uioct of the Juneau Business|Ber high school education. 1o wrsos FPhone 63 thing that has been true for a took over the Commission from|...q professional ‘Women'’s Clubhas|to write full particulars on what Stand Oppesite Coliseum long time. And I think the coun- |Secretary of Commerce Roper. Later been extended until Saturday, No-:she hopes to study, her monetary Theatre try would be even farther ahead if |the Maritime Commission reversed:‘,mflm 21, it was announced fol-|needs and other details, in care ) '- the President went on the radio| the Kennedy policy, so that, ac- lowing the club’s business meeting|of Lila Sinclair, Box 854, Juneau. 2 2 some day and eln;)l?aflu‘d in detail | cording to the Commission, 32 of |}, night Letters will be confidential, :u::z i:iéuhdib ul;euu) mx:\m .al in | the sluw‘\:um:eld from your scrap‘ Dolls dressed by Juneau and - - - & . 8 : alks with friends—namely, that it|iron constituent are now in opera- o ore - 4 N . would be a good idea for commu- |tion—or at least were until some 2‘0‘\:5“; "l;;,d: :_S:::;Lf“;;:: a.‘\: ms ARE To MEET lssl.—lau a cenh"y " B“hg_!“l nities 1o set up their own organi- | were sunk by submarines. 'turned in before November 20. ? EARI.V WED 1 zations and become absolutely in-| SAM HAHN, Los Angeles—WDheD oy nay be left at Garnick's m‘vl . W dependent of Washington | Jimmy Doolittle tried to get back Grocery or the Forget-Me-Not - “@B M Behrends A lot of communities already have | into the Army more than a YEarighop in Juneau and eaeh doll| OWing to the Armistice Day . done this. But others haven't. There |ago, the brasshats at first balked | 1114 have the full name of the|dance tomorrow night in the Elks - are thousands of men and women |at giving him his old World Warloiy w0 entered it pinned to the | B2llroom, the regular weekly meet- Bank all over the country, anxious, itch- |1 rank of major. He had been one | groc ing of the Elks Lodge will be # 3 ing to do anything to help win|of the most spectacular civilian —pujec for the contest are still|Shoved ahead and will be called at i lled by men is being taken over by women— i i the war. Representatives of war|fliers since 1918, but they Wanted o gispiay in i window, of Gar-|7:30 'lock instead of § gelogk.| AuHer feM praviouslpfiled by men in being taken orer b X ored Oldest Bank in Alaska ! veterans, service clubs, all sorts|to give him the rank of captein.'picks Grocery, and include threel THiS is the announcement made by entirely of women are now working at the Morris Park shops of the PR of people write to me every day| He was too unorthodox, SINCe nequfirully dressed dolls, Exalted Ruler Arthur Adams. Long Island Railroad in New York. Two of the girls are shown getting | saying that the Government doesn’t | Jimmy bombed Tokyo, however e s ———— the big driving wheels of an engine ready for a run. COMMEBCIAL sAmfis tell them what they can do. he has become a brigadier geneia’, Nearly g 100 million dozen eggs| Certain cobras can eject their|%— oo Gy