THG DAY’S N0WS IN PICTURGS Fashions of the Fashionable < ■■■ ■!.■■■ ■' i .■» .. SPORTS COAT—Ann Shirley, Sim actress, wears a novel sports coat. The farment Is of brown, and white tweed, flecked with green and yellow The coat swings loosely from the raglan shoulders. SPAIN’S PRESIDENT LEAVES MADRID—President Manual Azana and other members of the Spanish government came to Bar celona as Fascist troops tightened their ring around beleaguered Madrid. Rumor had it that the government might be transferred to this Loyalist stronghold. BEHIND THE SCENE IN PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN—The camera takes you behind the scene of the presidential campaign— showing workers in both Republican and Democratic headquarters. They are clicking off copies of press releases of speeches made by the campaigners. At the top, the Republican office in Chicago; be low, Democratic headquarters in New York, ENVOY BULLITT PRESENTS HIS CREDENTIALS—After presenting his credentials to President Le Brun of France, William C. Bullitt, new U. S. ambassador to France, poses for a picture outside the Elysee palace in Paris. On Bullitt's right is M. De Fouquieres, chief of the protocole of the French government k—■ —II III I I I ■■ . I COMMUNISTS PARADE IN LONDON—Demanding, among other things, that arms be sent from Eng land to Spain’s hard-pressed Loyalist government, several thousand Communists are seen parading in London. When Fascist sympathisers attempted to break up a recent parade similar to this, a riot ensued. PAGE 1- CELEBRITIES CHAT—Paulette Goddard, about rumored marriage to Charlie Chaplin, newspapermen still specu and Nini Martini, the opera singer who made page 1 when Lily i refused to appear with him in a picture in equal billing, are snap dining and talking in New York, v LAST RITES FOR ARCTIC EXPLORER AND CREW—A scene outside the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris as funeral services an held for Dr. Jean Charcot, Arctic explorer, and his 21 companioni who perished when their ship foundered off Iceland. mm ipRAJXUfi SCHOOKEK A G. O. P BANDWAGON—When women Re publicans of Montclair. N. J- found it difficult to rent suitable space tor their headquarters, they dug up an old prairie schooner, filled |t with antique furniture, and opened up shop. Those present are Mrs.H. M. Malcolm, Mrs. C H. Marsh and Mrs. R. N. Flippen./ THEY KNOW THEIR BUTTER!—Indeed they do!. For they are college boys in a butter-taating cham pionship, following a year's research in dairy work. The competition, held in Atlantic City, was in con nection with the Dairy Industries exposition. More than 50 students from 18 colleges competed. Ohio State’s team won the team trophy and Joseph Adams of Cleveland the individual prise./ ELJSANOR CHRISTENS A PLANE WITH CHAMPAGNE—With a shattering of glass and a bubbly, frothy splash, Eleanor Holm Jar rett, the woman swimmer, christens the Flying Box Car eiant plane which inaugurates the first all-freight air service from New York to Chicago. Eleanor, you may recall, was the center of quite a squabble over champagne en route to the Berlin Olympics Central Press Association. 1836 VtUasasoWn'' 5.000. 000TH VISITOH - Armijo Jane Magee, 18, of Wichita Tex., and a co-ed at Soul Methodist university. 'va’^ 5.000. 000th visitor to the^ Centennial exposition »> As a result she was quean of the cotton