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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, FEB. 22, 1941. ASSOCIATED PRESS CTURE' NEWS —_— DOGGY _Tuned to the ro- mantic beat of heart-shaped buttons is this gay spring suit worn by Pat Ryan at a N. ¥. preview of the Westminster Ken- nel club dog show. Suit has gray wool skirt, green flannel jacket. The dachshunde wore red. SHE TOES T H,E M A R K—Even so spry a swimmer as two-year-old Sherry Gabrielson gets weary now and then, and daddy's toes are handy to have around. Sherry the daughter of Bramwell Gabrielson, swim coach at Gustavur Adolphus college in St. Peter, Minn,, is such a good swimmer th* she appears & exhibitions. She thoroughly enjoys ‘he water, anparently has no fear of it. R STREET SEAM_when part of West Pitlston, 8,000, settled reeently due to unde. this fissure appeared in street. / taws, Shenandoah, was similarly affected last year. THERE SHE GOES_“Like a duck” Sherry Gabrielson, 2, tekes to water under the guidance of her father, Bramwell G.brielson (aboeve), swim coach at Gustavus Adoiphus ceilege in St. Peter, Minn. She's dropping into the U. of Minnesola pool. [ H 1 5 Zg ; s < ; ; ] e & 0 = et MAN ABOUT TOWN_with a striking diamond-ruby ensemble for hair, ears and gown, blonde Virginia Field drew the astention of other diners when she and wealthy Alfred Gwynne mittens; gas mask is standard in warm or. cold weath-~. Vanderbilt, horse enthusiast, appeared in a Holly vood night club. k i CHILLS FOR CHARITY _Freezing temperatures in Copenhagen were braved by these comely Danish girls who wore their bathing suits despite the cold, in a charity event for the ciiy's riredly, War Bas increased the démands for aid. VISIBILITY...GOOD _whai the well-dressed. Briion wears in a tank during cold weather is shown by a soldier whose cses are élsewhere. Qutfit includes a leather jackef, helmet and i SOMETHING A-FOOT—_Town wags who have been CHINA - BOUND—vaugh- : saying that the woodchopper’s ax must have slipped may regret the news that Robert Larter is returning to Oswego, Kas., to paint a foot on this mural woodchopper. Note the white square. A light fixture—now removed—kept Larter from including the foot when He® painted the mural for the postoffice in Oswego. $ lin Currie (above) is on his way to China where he’ll serve as emissary from U.S. to. Chiang Kai-shek, the general directing Chiness resistance to Japan. e ot COMMAND, IN AFRI!CA_since February, 1940, when this picture of Gen. Maxime Wey- gand (left) and Gen. Sir Archibald Wavell was made at a review in Cairo, much has happened, Wey- gand now commands France’s North African army;. One-eyed Wavell (lis 1éft is gone) commandr Britain’s army scattering Italians in Libya and wesiward toward Tripoli and French Tunisia ASKS UNITY_“The people of ‘Japan want good re- lations with you. I go to Wash- ington with great hope,” said Admiral Kichisaburo Nomura (above), 64, Japan’s new ambas- sador to U.S,, upon his arrival. s TO BRITAIN—_Key diplo- matic post goes to Jobhn G. Winant (above), former Republi- can governor of New Hampshire and a labor expert, who’s new U.S, ambassador to Great Britain, BIilTAIN'S HEART IS IN ‘MARYLAND’ “ 4 out by the Glenn L. Martin company in Baltimore: nporleil_y‘c :Ifllsed bc::”l’l':::::?n i by the British, this Martin attack bomber being turn 5.in aerial encounters of BEritain’s Libyan lcn:nolkl-“ . ’ 3 WORK AND PLAY FOR TENNIS STAR—Dorothy May Bundy, Santa Monica girl who' Winter Park, Fla., halts practice to talk with “Puny,” monkey zlvel’ Mr’ln ::hlyl, l‘rl:‘:ll, d':n.rl':g ‘(;odww‘:ll’ 'l::lnl!: t::\:r’ o‘: sl.flgm“:»‘l'l:kz:.